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Mutual Funds Frequently Ask Questions
  You are here  :  Moneycontrol   Mutual Funds  FAQs
Questions      
1. Do mutual funds offer a periodic investment plan?
2. Do any mutual funds invest in both stocks and bonds?
3. What are the time-tested investment strategies that work?
4. What are the different types of Mutual Funds?
5. How significant are fund costs while choosing a scheme?
6. Ideally how many different schemes should one invest in?
7. How do you select a mutual fund scheme?
8. Are investments in mutual funds liquid?
9. Why should you invest through Mutual Funds?
10. What is the role of a Fund Manager?
11. How are mutual funds regulated?
12. What is an Asset Management Company (AMC)?
13. Are investments in mutual fund units risk-free or safe?
14. How is NAV calculated?
15. What is Net Asset Value (NAV)?
16. What is an entry load and an exit load?
17. What are Offshore Funds?
18. What are Index Funds?
19. What are Tax-Saving Schemes?
20. What are Money Market Schemes?
21. What are Balanced Schemes?
22. What are Income Schemes?
23. What are Growth Schemes?
24. What are Interval Schemes?
25. What are close-ended mutual fund schemes?
26. What are open-ended mutual fund schemes?
27. What is the difference between an open-ended and close-ended scheme?
28. What are the different types of Mutual Funds?
29. What is a Mutual Fund?
30. What is venture capital? What are venture capital funds?
31. How do I invest with a limited amount?
32. How do you evaluate mutual funds performance?
33. What are the time-tested investment strategies that work?
34. How many funds or stocks should you diversify your portfolio over?
35. Is it good to buy a fund just before it goes ex-dividend?
36. Do any mutual funds invest in both stocks and bonds?
37. Do mutual funds offer a periodic investment plan?
38. What mutual fund is suitable for you?
39. How does "entry load" eat into your investment returns?
 
# Do mutual funds offer a periodic investment plan?

Most private sector funds provide you the convenience of periodic purchase plans (through a Systematic Investment Plan), automatic withdrawal plans and the automatic reinvestment of dividends. You would basically need to give post-dated cheques (monthly or quarterly, periodic date of the cheque is fixed by the Asset Management Company). Most funds allow a monthly investment of as little as Rs500 with a provision of giving 4-6 post-dated cheques and follow up later with more. Regular monthly investments are a good way to build a long-term portfolio and add discipline to your investment process.

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# Do any mutual funds invest in both stocks and bonds?

Yes, balanced funds invest in a combination of stocks and bonds, a typical mix is 60:40 in favour of stocks. Returns from balanced funds are normally lower than pure equity mutual funds when markets are rising, however if the market declines, the losses are also normally lower. Balanced funds are best suited for investors who do not plan their asset allocation and yet want to invest in equities. Buying separate equity and income funds for your portfolio also achieves the same results as buying a balanced fund. The advantage with the former option is that you can choose your own split (between stocks and bonds i.e fixed income) rather than let the fund manager decide the same.

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# What are the time-tested investment strategies that work?
  • Start investing as early as possible - the power of compounding is the single most important reason for you to start investing right now as even a relatively small amount invested early will grow over the course of your working life into a substantial nest egg. Remember, every day that your money is invested, is a day that your money is working for you.
  • Buy stocks or equity mutual funds and hold long-term – historically, world over, and even in India, stocks have outperformed every other asset class over the long run.
  • Invest regularly – use the Dollar Cost Averaging approach – this will help you to adopt a disciplined approach to investing and works equally well for both buying and selling decisions. Importantly, it increases your potential gains when acting against the market trend, reduces risk when you are playing the market trend and relieves you from the pressures of forecasting tops and bottoms. Dollar Cost Averaging can effectively convert a regular savings plan into a regular investing approach.

And, Diversify your investment - by diversifying across assets, you can reduce your risk without necessarily having to reduce your returns. To get the maximum benefit of reducing your risk through diversification spread your portfolio across different assets whose returns are not 100% correlated.

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# What are the different types of Mutual Funds?

Mutual Funds are classified by structure in to:

  • Open - Ended Schemes
  • Close-Ended Schemes
  • Interval Schemes

and by objective in to

  • Equity (Growth) Schemes
  • Income Schemes
  • Money Market Schemes
  • Tax Saving Schemes
  • Balanced Schemes
  • Offshore funds
  • Special Schemes like index schemes etc
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# How significant are fund costs while choosing a scheme?

The cost of investing through a mutual fund is not insignificant and deserves due consideration, especially when it comes to fixed income funds. Management fees, annual expenses of the fund and sales loads can take away a significant portion of your returns. As a general rule, 1% towards management fees and 0.6% towards other annual expenses should be acceptable. Carefully examine the fee a fund charges for getting in and out of the fund. Again, you can query on entry and exit loads under our Find-A-Fund query module or get a pre-defined shortlist of funds on the load specification structure through the Mutual Fund Directory section.

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# Ideally how many different schemes should one invest in?

Don't just zero in on one mutual fund (to avoid the risk of being overly dependent on any one fund). Pick two, preferably three mutual funds that would match you investment objective in each asset allocation category and spread your investment. We recommend a 60:40 split if you have shortlisted 2 funds and a 40:30:30 split if you have short-listed 3 funds for investment.

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