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Just as you would buy a computer that fits your needs and budget, you should choose a mutual fund that meets your risk tolerance and your risk capacity levels (i.e. has similar investment objectives as your own). Typical investment objectives of mutual funds include fixed income or equity, general equity or sector-focused, high risk or low risk, blue-chips or turnarounds, long-term or short-term liquidity focus. You can use our Find-A-Fund query module to find funds whose investment objectives match yours.
You can also read our expert article on Investment in Mutual Funds to understand how best to find a mutual fund to meet your needs and what other factors to consider while evaluating mutual funds for investment.
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A 2.25% entry load sounds small. But it still bites a chunk off your returns over a long period of time. For instance, Rs 1 lakh invested directly in the no-load option of an equity fund that grows at a rate of 15% over a period of 20 years yields around Rs 16.36 lakh against Rs 15.99 lakh that a load fund would return—a difference of Rs 36,820. This is because even a small sum of 2.25% gets compounded over the years.
The pinch remains the same even in a systematic investment plan (SIP). As SIPs entail investments on a regular basis, say every month, you end up paying entry loads on all your investment instalments. Assume you had invested Rs 5,000 in Reliance Vision Fund (RVF) on January 1, 2003 through a monthly SIP. If you had withdrawn your entire investment after five years, on December 31, 2007, you would have got back Rs 11.52 lakh in the no-load option and Rs 11.25 lakh in a load option, a difference of a cool Rs 25,914.
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