मैगज़्टर गोल्ड के साथ असीमित हो जाओ

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Debt MFs: Should You Take Credit or Duration Risk?

Mint Bangalore

|

March 18, 2025

Prioritize mid-maturity corporate bond funds for balanced risk and returns

- Rushabh Desai

The 10-year Indian bond yield, trading at 12-13% in the late 90s, has now dropped from its 5-year high of around 7.5% to 6.7% as of February-end. With the start of interest rate cut cycle, yields are likely to fall further. And with no indexation benefits in debt mutual funds, this raises an important question: "How can investors maximize their fixed income returns?"

Typically, there are two ways to maximize debt mutual fund returns: 1) By taking credit risk (investing in risky lower-graded debt instruments), and 2) By taking duration risk (investing in safer, high-graded long maturity debt instruments). Let us see how these strategies have played out.

We have considered popular funds in equal allocation from these three debt categories: 1) Credit risk funds (HDFC, Kotak, ICICI and SBI), 2) Corporate bond funds (HDFC, Kotak, ICICI and ABSL) and 3) Constant maturity gilt funds (ICICI and SBI).

In terms of a 3-year-daily rolling CAGR returns from 1 January 2018 to 28 February 2025, credit risk funds generated a 7% CAGR on average, an 8.8% CAGR at the maximum and 5.4% CAGR at the minimum, corporate bond funds at 7.3% CAGR on average, 9.2% CAGR at the maximum and 4.9% at the minimum and lastly constant maturity gilt funds at a 7.8% CAGR on average, 11.7% CAGR at the maximum and 3.2% CAGR at the minimum.

Mint Bangalore से और कहानियाँ

Mint Bangalore

Crack the code: Inside Instagram’s password-protected Reels feature

When Shah Rukh Khan dropped a behind-the-scenes reel from Aryan Khan's directorial debut Ba***ds of Bollywood, fans were puzzled to find it locked behind a password.

time to read

2 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

A hiking death roils a fashion empire and the heirs to a fortune

The rock-strewn path hugs the jagged peaks of the Montserrat mountains, winding along a deep ravine for much of the way.

time to read

6 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Empathy is the core to winning trust: Narayana Health’s Abhishek Misra

Marketing healthcare is no easy task—costs are rising, consumers are more vocal than ever online, and trust is fragile.

time to read

2 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Why reasons needn't be ascribed for poor mental health

A few days ago, Baek Sehee died. She was 35. Her memoir about her suspicion that she was mentally ill, I Want to Die but I Want to Eat Tteokbokki, sold more than a million copies in several languages since its publication in South Korea in 2018. Her family did not disclose the cause of death, a silence that now commonly implies something dark.

time to read

4 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

The tech sector should reinvent work to harness the power of AI

Instead of infusing operations with AI, businesses should rebuild delivery processes at the task level

time to read

3 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Reliance AI investments may top $12-15 bn: Report

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd may spend about $12-15 billion over the next few years on AI infrastructure that could include a giant IGW data centre, Morgan Stanley said ina report.

time to read

1 min

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Unilever, L'Oréal ride e-commerce wave

Multinational consumer goods companies Unilever and L’Oréal are witnessing strong growth on e-commerce platforms in many markets, with India emerging as a standout performer.

time to read

1 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Swadeshi drives record festive sales, says PM Modi

The renewed swadeshi pitch coincides with India’s strained trade relations with the US

time to read

1 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Harness the power of debt funds to meet your key financial targets

Debt funds help achieve short- to medium-term goals if your risk profile aligns with your investment horizon

time to read

4 mins

October 27, 2025

Mint Bangalore

Optimize subsidies

In line with India's goal of rais- ing its factory output from about 13% of GDP to 25%, the government plans to boost its outlay for the National Manu- facturing Mission to ₹10,000 crore, as reported. Its aim is to fund project viability gaps in identified sunrise sectors for factories to arise in India that can join global value chains. As part of a broad industrial policy, output and export targets would be set to help manufacturing account for a quarter of our economy within a decade. Will this push work? Some fear that the subsidy will get spread too thin, while others point to unfinished land, labour and regulatory reforms as weak links. Ultimately, the success of this mission's export ambitions may depend less on US tariffs, which ongoing trade talks might settle, than on China's industrial policy. Beijing has long deployed state resources to sharpen an edge that lets it dominate key sectors. The US seems unable to glare it down. For better odds of India's push proving able to counter China's clout, we may need either an accord with Beijing or inventive leaps of R&D that grant us an industrial edge well beyond cost competitiveness. Let's optimize our subsidy regime accordingly.

time to read

1 min

October 27, 2025

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