Educational Article by AMFI Registered Mutual Fund Distributor | ARN-349400 Verifiable at amfiindia.com | Website: mfd.co.in | WhatsApp: +91-76510-32666
⚠️ IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER – READ BEFORE PROCEEDING
Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully.
This article is purely educational and does not constitute investment advice, recommendation, solicitation, or suitability assessment of any kind. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Actual returns may be higher, lower, or negative. All examples, illustrations, and tables are hypothetical and for educational purposes only.
SIP does not assure a profit or guarantee protection against loss in a declining market.
This material is issued by an AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor. Distributor services are optional.
Introduction: Why Financial Literacy Begins at Home
India’s mutual fund industry has grown significantly over the past decade. According to AMFI’s publicly released data, the industry’s total Assets Under Management (AUM) stood at approximately ₹73.73 lakh crore as of March 31, 2026 – more than six times the ₹12.33 lakh crore recorded in March 2016. SIP contributions reached a record ₹32,087 crore in March 2026, with approximately 9.72 crore active SIP accounts across the country. Equity mutual fund net inflows have remained positive for over 61 consecutive months.
Yet for many families, the language of mutual funds remains unfamiliar territory. Terms like NAV, XIRR, Duration, Risk-o-Meter, TER, and IDCW appear in fund documents and distributor communications but are rarely explained in plain, accessible language.
This illustrated guide aims to change that. It covers over 65 mutual fund concepts and terms, organized across structured sections, using simple language, hypothetical numerical examples, and visual reference tables. Familiarity with these concepts may help members of a family, across generations, become more comfortable when reviewing fund documents or discussing investments.
📖 How to Use This Guide: This guide may be read from start to finish or used as a reference for specific terms. All numerical examples are hypothetical and for educational illustration only. No part of this guide constitutes investment advice of any kind.
Table of Contents
- What Are Mutual Funds? – The Family Analogy
- Investment Facilities – SIP, SWP, STP, and Lump Sum
- Mathematical Concepts – Compounding and Rupee Cost Averaging
- Understanding Risk – The SEBI Risk-o-Meter
- Performance Metrics – How Returns Are Measured
- SEBI-Mandated Fund Categories
- Debt Fund Concepts
- Investor Documentation and the Regulatory Framework
- Alphabetical Glossary of 60+ Terms
- Comprehensive Disclaimer
Part One: What Are Mutual Funds? – The Family Analogy
A Simple Structural Description
A mutual fund pools money from multiple investors and invests that combined corpus in a diversified portfolio of securities, such as equities (company shares), debt instruments (government and corporate bonds), or money market instruments. The fund is managed by a professionally qualified team at an Asset Management Company (AMC), operating under the regulatory oversight of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).
Each investor who contributes receives units in proportion to the amount invested. The value of each unit on any given business day is called the Net Asset Value (NAV). As the value of the underlying portfolio changes, the NAV changes accordingly.
The Family Contribution Analogy (Hypothetical – For Illustration Only)
Imagine five members of an extended family who each contribute a fixed amount every month toward a shared household fund. A designated family member manages the pooled money, investing it in groceries, utilities, savings, and assets, on behalf of everyone. Each contributor holds a proportional share of whatever the pooled fund owns.
⚠️ Note: This analogy is a simplified conceptual illustration only. Actual mutual fund structures, legal frameworks, and regulations are significantly more complex and are fully described in each scheme’s Scheme Information Document (SID).
Mutual Fund Structure – Key Terms
| Term | Educational Definition |
|---|---|
| AMC (Asset Management Company) | The company that manages the fund’s portfolio. Employs fund managers, analysts, and risk teams. |
| AUM (Assets Under Management) | The total current market value of all assets managed by the scheme. Also called the corpus. Published monthly by AMFI. |
| Units | The standardized portions of the fund held by each investor. Value = Number of Units × Current NAV. |
| NAV (Net Asset Value) | The per-unit price of the fund on any given business day. Formula: (Total Assets − Total Liabilities) ÷ Total Units Outstanding. |
| Portfolio | The collection of all securities held by the scheme. |
| Corpus / Fund Size | Total value of assets under the scheme. Synonymous with AUM. |
| Folio | Unique account number assigned by a fund house to an investor. |
| RTA (Registrar and Transfer Agent) | Handles investor services including unit allotment, statements, and redemption processing. |
⚠️ Educational Note on NAV: A lower NAV does not indicate better value or a cheaper fund. This is one of the most common misconceptions in mutual fund investing. A fund with a NAV of ₹12 and one with a NAV of ₹120 may deliver identical percentage returns if their underlying portfolios perform identically. What matters is the quality and performance of the portfolio, not the NAV number itself.
Hypothetical NAV Formula Example: Total assets ₹500 crore, total liabilities ₹2 crore, 25 crore units outstanding → NAV = (₹500 crore − ₹2 crore) ÷ 25 crore = ₹19.92 per unit.
Part Two: Investment Facilities – SIP, SWP, STP, and Lump Sum
Mutual funds offer several transaction facilities. These are defined below for general educational reference.
Comparative Overview
| Facility | Definition | Direction | Common Interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| SIP – Systematic Investment Plan | Fixed amount invested into a scheme at regular intervals | Into the scheme | Weekly / Monthly / Quarterly |
| SWP – Systematic Withdrawal Plan | Fixed amount withdrawn from a scheme at regular intervals | Out of the scheme | Monthly / Quarterly |
| STP – Systematic Transfer Plan | Fixed amount transferred from one scheme to another within the same fund house | Between schemes | Weekly / Monthly |
| Lump Sum | One-time single-amount investment into a scheme | Into the scheme | One-time |
⚠️ Important: All four facilities carry market risk. Returns are not guaranteed. SIP does not assure a profit or guarantee protection against loss in a declining market.
SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) – Detailed Definition
Definition: A facility that allows an investor to invest a fixed, pre-determined amount into a mutual fund scheme at regular intervals. Each SIP instalment purchases units at the NAV prevailing on that date. Bank debits are processed automatically via NACH (National Automated Clearing House).
Hypothetical Illustration: An investor sets up a monthly SIP of ₹5,000 into a scheme on the 10th of each month. If NAV = ₹50 in Month 1, the investor receives 100 units. If NAV = ₹40 in Month 2, the investor receives 125 units. More units are purchased when NAV is lower.
⚠️ Educational Note: SIP is an investment facility, not a financial product or return guarantee. The mathematical feature of buying more units when NAV is low is called Rupee Cost Averaging (explained in Part Three). SIP does not assure a profit or guarantee protection against loss in a declining market.
SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) – Detailed Definition
Definition: A facility that allows an investor to redeem a fixed amount from their mutual fund holding at regular intervals. Each SWP instalment redeems units equivalent to the specified amount at the prevailing NAV on the withdrawal date.
Hypothetical Illustration: An investor holds 10,000 units in a scheme at NAV ₹30 (total value ₹3,00,000). They set up a monthly SWP of ₹10,000. Each month, units worth ₹10,000 at the prevailing NAV are redeemed and credited to the bank account.
⚠️ Educational Note: Each SWP redemption may be a taxable event. Capital gains tax may apply depending on fund type, holding period, and prevailing tax laws. Investors are encouraged to consult a qualified tax advisor before setting up an SWP.
STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) – Detailed Definition
Definition: A facility that automatically transfers a fixed amount from one mutual fund scheme to another, both within the same fund house, at regular intervals. Each transfer is processed as a redemption from the source scheme and a subscription in the destination scheme.
Hypothetical Illustration: An investor places ₹12,00,000 in a liquid fund and sets up a monthly STP of ₹1,00,000 into an equity fund. Over 12 months, the amount is gradually moved from the liquid fund to the equity fund.
⚠️ Educational Note: Each STP transfer may attract exit load or capital gains tax depending on the source scheme’s terms and the investor’s holding period.
Lump Sum – Detailed Definition
Definition: A one-time, single-amount investment in a mutual fund scheme. Units are allotted at the NAV prevailing on the date of the transaction, subject to cut-off time rules.
Hypothetical Illustration: An investor invests ₹2,00,000 in a single transaction. If the applicable NAV is ₹40, the investor receives 5,000 units.
⚠️ Educational Note: Lump sum investments are exposed to timing risk, the entire amount is invested at one NAV, and a subsequent market decline will affect the full investment immediately. Neither lump sum nor SIP eliminates market risk.
Part Three: Mathematical Concepts – Compounding and Rupee Cost Averaging
Compounding – Definition and Hypothetical Illustration
Definition: Compounding is the mathematical process by which returns generated on an investment are reinvested, and those reinvested returns themselves generate additional returns over time. In mutual funds, under the Growth Option, all gains remain invested within the scheme, allowing the compounding effect to operate continuously.
⚠️ Important: The table below uses a hypothetical constant return of 10% per annum for illustration only. Mutual fund returns are not constant, not guaranteed, and will vary based on market conditions. Actual returns may be higher, lower, or negative. This is not a return projection.
Hypothetical Compounding Illustration (₹1,00,000 starting investment)
| Period | Starting Value (Hypothetical) | Assumed Annual Return | Ending Value (Hypothetical) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | ₹1,00,000 | 10% | ₹1,10,000 |
| Year 2 | ₹1,10,000 | 10% | ₹1,21,000 |
| Year 3 | ₹1,21,000 | 10% | ₹1,33,100 |
| Year 5 | ₹1,46,410 | 10% | ₹1,61,051 |
| Year 10 | ₹2,35,795 | 10% | ₹2,59,374 |
| Year 15 | ₹3,79,750 | 10% | ₹4,17,725 |
| Year 20 | ₹6,11,591 | 10% | ₹6,72,750 |
The key variables that affect compounding outcomes are: (1) the rate of return, (2) the time period, and (3) the reinvestment of gains. All three are subject to uncertainty in real investments.
Rupee Cost Averaging – Definition and Hypothetical Illustration
Definition: Rupee Cost Averaging is the mathematical feature that occurs when a fixed amount is invested at regular intervals regardless of the market price. Because the amount is fixed, more units are purchased when NAV is low and fewer when NAV is high. Over time, this may result in an average cost per unit that is lower than the simple average of all NAVs over the period.
⚠️ Important: The NAV figures below are entirely hypothetical and for educational illustration only. They do not represent any real scheme or real market movement.
Hypothetical 12-Month SIP Illustration (₹5,000/month)
| Month | Hypothetical NAV (₹) | Fixed SIP Amount | Units Purchased |
|---|---|---|---|
| Month 1 | ₹120 | ₹5,000 | 41.67 |
| Month 2 | ₹110 | ₹5,000 | 45.45 |
| Month 3 | ₹95 | ₹5,000 | 52.63 |
| Month 4 | ₹85 | ₹5,000 | 58.82 |
| Month 5 | ₹100 | ₹5,000 | 50.00 |
| Month 6 | ₹115 | ₹5,000 | 43.48 |
| Month 7 | ₹105 | ₹5,000 | 47.62 |
| Month 8 | ₹90 | ₹5,000 | 55.56 |
| Month 9 | ₹98 | ₹5,000 | 51.02 |
| Month 10 | ₹112 | ₹5,000 | 44.64 |
| Month 11 | ₹118 | ₹5,000 | 42.37 |
| Month 12 | ₹125 | ₹5,000 | 40.00 |
| TOTAL / AVERAGE | ₹106.08 (avg) | ₹60,000 (total) | 573.26 (total units) |
Key observation: Total invested: ₹60,000. Total units: 573.26. Average purchase cost: ₹60,000 ÷ 573.26 = ₹104.67. The simple average of the 12 hypothetical NAVs was ₹106.08. The average purchase cost (₹104.67) is lower than the average NAV (₹106.08) – this difference illustrates the Rupee Cost Averaging effect.
⚠️ Educational Note: Rupee Cost Averaging is a mathematical feature of fixed-amount regular investing. It may reduce the average purchase cost relative to the average NAV over the investment period but does not assure a profit, prevent loss, or guarantee any return. If NAV declines consistently throughout the investment period, the portfolio may still show a loss despite the averaging effect.
Diversification – Definition
Definition: Spreading investments across multiple securities, sectors, or asset classes to reduce the impact of any single investment’s poor performance on the overall portfolio. Mutual funds achieve diversification structurally by holding a portfolio of many securities.
What diversification does: Reduces concentration risk – the risk that failure of a single security or sector will severely damage the portfolio.
What diversification does not do: Diversification does not eliminate market risk (systematic risk) – the risk that the overall market falls, affecting all securities simultaneously.
Part Four: Understanding Risk – The SEBI Risk-o-Meter
What Is Market Risk?
Market risk is the possibility that the value of an investment may fall due to factors such as economic downturns, interest rate changes, geopolitical events, or broad market corrections. All mutual fund investments carry some degree of market risk. The nature and magnitude of risk vary by fund category.
The SEBI Risk-o-Meter – Six Risk Categories
SEBI requires every mutual fund scheme to display a Risk-o-Meter on all communications. The Risk-o-Meter is updated monthly based on the scheme’s actual portfolio composition.
| Risk Level | General Description (Educational Reference Only) |
|---|---|
| 🔵 LOW | Minimal market fluctuation expected |
| 🟢 LOW TO MODERATE | Low but slightly higher variation possible |
| 🟡 MODERATE | Moderate NAV fluctuation |
| 🟠 MODERATELY HIGH | Above-average price variation |
| 🔴 HIGH | Significant NAV fluctuation possible |
| 🟣 VERY HIGH | Very high NAV fluctuation; most volatile |
⚠️ Important: The Risk-o-Meter represents the scheme’s inherent risk classification based on its current portfolio. It does not guarantee that losses will not occur. It is a reference tool for general awareness, not a predictor of returns.
Key Risk Metrics – Reference Definitions
Standard Deviation: A statistical measure of how widely a fund’s historical returns have varied around its average return. Higher standard deviation = greater historical volatility.
Hypothetical: Fund A averages 12% annually with a standard deviation of 5% (returns typically between 7%–17%). Fund B also averages 12% but has a standard deviation of 18% (returns have swung between −6% and 30%). Fund A has shown more historically consistent returns.
Beta: A measure of a fund’s historical sensitivity to its benchmark movements. Beta of 1.0 = moves in line with benchmark. Beta above 1.0 = amplified movement. Beta below 1.0 = muted movement.
Maximum Drawdown: The largest peak-to-trough percentage decline in a fund’s NAV during a specified historical period. Hypothetical: NAV rises from ₹100 to ₹180, then falls to ₹108. Maximum drawdown = (₹180 − ₹108) ÷ ₹180 = 40%.
Tracking Error: For index funds, how closely the fund has historically followed its benchmark. Lower = better replication.
Part Five: Performance Metrics – How Returns Are Measured
Comparative Reference Table
| Metric | What It Measures | Best Used For | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| XIRR | Annualized return for irregular cash flows | SIP portfolios | Backward-looking only |
| CAGR | Compound annual growth for a single investment | Lump sum investments | Assumes constant growth rate |
| Absolute Return | Total % gain/loss without time adjustment | Short-period snapshots | Not comparable across periods |
| Trailing Return | Fund return over a period ending today | Point-in-time comparison | Sensitive to start/end dates |
| Rolling Return | Returns over multiple overlapping time windows | Consistency assessment | Requires historical data |
| Sharpe Ratio | Risk-adjusted return per unit of total volatility | Same-category comparison | Uses total, not just downside, volatility |
| Sortino Ratio | Risk-adjusted return per unit of downside risk | Downside risk focus | Less commonly published |
| Alpha | Manager outperformance vs. benchmark (risk-adjusted) | Active fund evaluation | Past alpha ≠ future alpha |
| Beta | Fund sensitivity to benchmark movements | Market risk assessment | Less relevant for non-equity funds |
| Standard Deviation | Historical return volatility around the average | Volatility comparison | Treats upside and downside equally |
Key Metrics – Detailed Definitions
XIRR (Extended Internal Rate of Return): A financial formula that calculates the single annualized return accounting for multiple cash flows occurring at irregular dates. XIRR is the most appropriate metric for evaluating SIP investment returns.
Hypothetical: An investor made 36 monthly SIP payments of ₹5,000 each (total ₹1,80,000) and the current portfolio value is ₹2,28,000. XIRR accounts for the fact that the first instalment has been held for 36 months, the second for 35 months, and so on. A simple return calculation (₹48,000 ÷ ₹1,80,000 = 26.7%) would not account for time and would be misleading.
Educational Note: For SIP investors, XIRR is the most informative return metric. CAGR is appropriate for lump sum investments.
CAGR (Compounded Annual Growth Rate): The rate at which a one-time investment would need to have grown each year – compounding annually – to reach its current value.
Hypothetical: ₹1,00,000 grows to ₹2,59,374 over 10 years. CAGR = (₹2,59,374 ÷ ₹1,00,000)^(1/10) − 1 ≈ 10% per annum.
Trailing Return: A fund’s return over a specific past period ending on the current date (e.g., 1-year, 3-year, 5-year). Sensitive to the choice of start and end dates.
Rolling Return: Returns calculated over multiple overlapping time windows of the same length – a more comprehensive and robust performance measure than trailing returns.
Sharpe Ratio: Historical risk-adjusted return per unit of total volatility. Higher = more historical return per unit of risk.
Hypothetical: Fund returns 14% p.a., standard deviation 10%, risk-free rate 6%. Sharpe Ratio = (14% − 6%) ÷ 10% = 0.8.
Alpha: Historical excess return generated above what the fund’s risk level would have predicted. Positive alpha suggests historical outperformance. Past alpha does not predict future alpha.
Part Six: SEBI-Mandated Fund Categories
SEBI has categorized all mutual fund schemes into well-defined categories with specific portfolio mandates. The tables below are for educational reference only and do not constitute recommendations.
Equity-Oriented Fund Categories
| SEBI Category | Portfolio Mandate (Per SEBI Circular) | Typical Risk-o-Meter |
|---|---|---|
| Large Cap Fund | Min. 80% in top 100 companies by market cap | High |
| Mid Cap Fund | Min. 65% in companies ranked 101–250 by market cap | Very High |
| Small Cap Fund | Min. 65% in companies ranked 251+ by market cap | Very High |
| Large & Mid Cap Fund | Min. 35% each in large cap and mid cap | Very High |
| Multi Cap Fund | Min. 25% each in large, mid, and small cap | Very High |
| Flexi Cap Fund | Min. 65% in equities; flexible cap allocation | Very High |
| ELSS | Min. 80% in equities; 3-year statutory lock-in per instalment | Very High |
| Focused Fund | Max. 30 stocks; min. 65% in equity | Very High |
| Dividend Yield Fund | Min. 65% in dividend-yielding stocks | High / Very High |
| Value / Contra Fund | Min. 65% in equity following value or contrarian strategy | Very High |
| Sectoral / Thematic Fund | Min. 80% in a specific sector or theme | Very High |
Debt-Oriented Fund Categories
| SEBI Category | Portfolio Mandate / Duration | Typical Risk-o-Meter |
|---|---|---|
| Overnight Fund | Securities with maturity of 1 day | Low |
| Liquid Fund | Securities with maturity up to 91 days | Low to Moderate |
| Ultra Short Duration | Macaulay Duration: 3–6 months | Low to Moderate |
| Low Duration Fund | Macaulay Duration: 6–12 months | Low to Moderate |
| Money Market Fund | Money market instruments up to 12 months | Low to Moderate |
| Short Duration Fund | Macaulay Duration: 1–3 years | Moderate |
| Medium Duration Fund | Macaulay Duration: 3–4 years | Moderate |
| Long Duration Fund | Macaulay Duration: greater than 7 years | Moderately High |
| Corporate Bond Fund | Min. 80% in highest-rated corporate bonds (AA+ and above) | Moderate |
| Credit Risk Fund | Min. 65% in bonds rated below highest rating | Moderately High |
| Gilt Fund | Min. 80% in government securities | Moderate |
| Banking & PSU Fund | Min. 80% in instruments of banks, PSUs, and public bodies | Moderate |
Hybrid Fund Categories
| SEBI Category | Portfolio Mandate | Typical Risk-o-Meter |
|---|---|---|
| Conservative Hybrid Fund | Debt: 75–90%; Equity: 10–25% | Moderately High |
| Balanced Hybrid Fund | Equity: 40–60%; Debt: 40–60% | Moderately High |
| Aggressive Hybrid Fund | Equity: 65–80%; Debt: 20–35% | Very High |
| Dynamic Asset Allocation (BAF) | Equity-debt ratio managed dynamically | Very High |
| Multi Asset Allocation Fund | Min. 10% each in at least three asset classes | Very High |
| Arbitrage Fund | Min. 65% in arbitrage opportunities | Low to Moderate |
| Equity Savings Fund | Min. 65% equity; min. 10% debt; some arbitrage | Moderately High |
⚠️ Important: The above are SEBI-defined category mandates for educational reference only. They are not recommendations to invest in any category.
Part Seven: Debt Fund Concepts – Reference Definitions
| Term | Educational Definition | Key Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Macaulay Duration | Weighted average time (in years) until a bond’s cash flows are received | Longer duration = higher interest rate sensitivity |
| Modified Duration | Direct measure of % NAV change per 1% change in interest rates | Duration of 4 years → NAV falls ~4% if rates rise 1% (hypothetical) |
| YTM (Yield to Maturity) | Estimated annual return if bonds held to maturity with coupons reinvested | Forward estimate; actual returns may differ |
| Current Yield | Annual coupon income as % of current bond price | Income-only measure; excludes capital gains/losses |
| Credit Rating | Assessment of bond issuer’s ability to repay debt, by SEBI-registered agencies | Ratings can change; not a guarantee of repayment |
| Credit Spread | Yield difference between a corporate bond and G-Sec of the same maturity | Wider spread = higher credit risk |
| Yield Curve | Graph of bond yields across different maturities | Shape indicates interest rate environment |
| Accrual Strategy | Earning returns primarily from coupon income, not price movements | More predictable returns in stable rate environments |
Duration and Interest Rate Sensitivity – Hypothetical Illustration
⚠️ The figures below are purely hypothetical illustrations of the mathematical relationship between Modified Duration and NAV sensitivity. They are not return projections.
| Modified Duration | Hypothetical NAV Impact: Rates Rise 1% | Hypothetical NAV Impact: Rates Fall 1% | Typical Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.08 years | ≈ −0.08% | ≈ +0.08% | Overnight Fund |
| 0.5 years | ≈ −0.50% | ≈ +0.50% | Ultra Short Duration |
| 1.0 years | ≈ −1.00% | ≈ +1.00% | Low Duration |
| 2.0 years | ≈ −2.00% | ≈ +2.00% | Short Duration |
| 4.0 years | ≈ −4.00% | ≈ +4.00% | Medium Duration |
| 6.0 years | ≈ −6.00% | ≈ +6.00% | Long Duration / Gilt |
Part Eight: Investor Documentation and the Regulatory Framework
Key Documents – Reference Overview
| Document | Purpose | Typical Length | When to Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| SID – Scheme Information Document | Primary legal document with complete scheme details, risks, costs, and terms | 50–100+ pages | Before investing in any scheme |
| KIM – Key Information Memorandum | Concise summary of the SID’s most important points | 2–4 pages | At the point of investment |
| Fact Sheet | Monthly snapshot of portfolio, performance, AUM, and fund commentary | 4–8 pages | Periodically for general reference |
| SAI – Statement of Additional Information | Supplementary legal and operational information about the fund house | 20–40 pages | For deeper general reference |
Transaction Terms – Reference Definitions
Cut-off Time: The specific time of day by which a transaction request must be received – and funds credited – to qualify for that business day’s NAV. Requests received after the cut-off time receive the next business day’s NAV. Investors may find it useful to confirm applicable cut-off times with their distributor before transacting.
Exit Load: A fee charged when units are redeemed before a specified holding period. Deducted from redemption proceeds. Under SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026, the maximum permissible exit load is 3%.
Hypothetical: 1% exit load, investment value ₹1,20,000, redeemed within one year. Exit load = ₹1,200. Net proceeds = ₹1,18,800.
NFO (New Fund Offer): The period during which a new mutual fund scheme is first offered to investors before it officially launches. During an NFO, investors subscribe at a defined price (typically ₹10 per unit).
Educational Note: An NFO price of ₹10 does not imply the fund is cheaper or better value than an existing fund with a higher NAV. The fund has no historical performance record at the time of NFO.
IDCW Option (Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal): Formerly called the ‘Dividend Option’, renamed by SEBI in 2021. Under this option, a portion of the scheme’s distributable surplus may be paid out to investors periodically, subject to availability.
Educational Note: IDCW payouts are not additional income. When a distribution is made, the fund’s NAV falls by exactly the payout amount – there is no net gain from the distribution itself. IDCW payouts are also taxable as income in the investor’s hands.
ELSS and Lock-in Period: ELSS (Equity Linked Savings Scheme) funds have a mandatory statutory lock-in of 3 years per SIP instalment. Tax deduction eligibility under Section 80C is subject to prevailing tax laws. Investors are encouraged to consult a qualified tax advisor for current personalised tax guidance.
TER / Expense Ratio – 2026 Regulatory Update
The Total Expense Ratio (TER) is the annual fee charged by a mutual fund scheme, expressed as a percentage of AUM and deducted daily from the NAV. Under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026 (effective April 1, 2026), the TER has been unbundled into three components:
- Base Expense Ratio (BER): The fund house’s core management and operational fee
- Brokerage: Charges for securities transactions within the portfolio
- Statutory Levies: GST, STT, stamp duty, and other regulatory charges, recovered on actuals
This unbundling provides greater transparency. SEBI has also reduced maximum TER caps under the 2026 regulations – approximately 2.10% for equity funds and 1.85% for debt funds for smaller AUM-sized schemes, stepping down further as AUM increases.
Key Regulatory Bodies
| Entity | Educational Description |
|---|---|
| SEBI | Securities and Exchange Board of India – apex market regulator. The SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026, effective April 1, 2026, represents the most comprehensive regulatory overhaul since 1996. |
| AMFI | Association of Mutual Funds in India – non-profit industry body. Publishes daily NAVs, monthly AUM data, and maintains the ARN system for distributors. |
| ARN | AMFI Registration Number – mandatory license for mutual fund distributors. Verifiable at www.amfiindia.com. |
| KYC | Know Your Customer – mandatory one-time identity verification, centralized through SEBI-registered KRAs. Valid across all fund houses. |
| NACH | National Automated Clearing House – RBI’s electronic mandate system for automatic SIP bank debits. |
| PAN | Permanent Account Number – mandatory tax identification required for all mutual fund investments. |
Part Nine: Alphabetical Glossary of 60+ Terms
⚠️ Disclaimer: This glossary is for quick educational reference only. It does not constitute investment advice. Refer to the relevant sections above for complete definitions, examples, and caveats.
| Term / Abbreviation | Educational Definition |
|---|---|
| Absolute Return | Simple % gain or loss on an investment without annualizing |
| Accrual Strategy | Earning returns primarily from bond coupon income, not price trading |
| Alpha | Historical excess return vs. benchmark, adjusted for risk |
| AMC | Asset Management Company – manages the fund’s portfolio |
| AMFI | Association of Mutual Funds in India – industry body |
| Annualized Return | Total return expressed as a per-year percentage |
| ARN | AMFI Registration Number – mandatory distributor license |
| AUM / Corpus | Total current market value of assets managed by the scheme |
| Benchmark | Market index used for scheme performance comparison |
| Beta | Fund’s historical sensitivity to benchmark movements |
| CAGR | Compounded Annual Growth Rate – used for lump sum returns |
| Credit Rating | Assessment of bond issuer’s ability to repay debt |
| Credit Spread | Yield difference between corporate bond and G-Sec of same maturity |
| Cut-off Time | Deadline for a transaction to receive that business day’s NAV |
| Duration (Macaulay) | Weighted average time until a bond’s cash flows are received |
| ELSS | Equity Linked Savings Scheme – equity fund with 3-year statutory lock-in |
| Entry Load | Charge at time of investment – abolished by SEBI in 2009. No longer applicable. |
| ETF | Exchange Traded Fund – index fund listed on a stock exchange |
| Exit Load | Fee on redemption before a specified holding period |
| Expense Ratio / TER | Annual fee charged by the scheme as % of AUM |
| Fact Sheet | Monthly fund publication with portfolio and performance data |
| Flexi Cap Fund | Equity fund with flexible allocation across market caps |
| FOF – Fund of Funds | Scheme that invests in units of other mutual fund schemes |
| Folio | Investor’s unique account number with a fund house |
| Growth Option | Profits reinvested; NAV grows; taxed only at redemption |
| Hybrid Fund | Invests in a combination of equity and debt instruments |
| IDCW Option | Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal (formerly Dividend Option) |
| Index Fund | Passively managed fund replicating a market index |
| KIM | Key Information Memorandum – concise SID summary |
| KYC | Know Your Customer – mandatory one-time identity verification |
| Lock-in Period | Mandatory holding period (e.g., ELSS: 3 years per instalment) |
| Lump Sum | One-time single investment into a scheme |
| Maximum Drawdown | Largest peak-to-trough NAV decline in a given historical period |
| Modified Duration | Direct % NAV change per 1% interest rate movement |
| NACH | National Automated Clearing House – auto-debit system for SIPs |
| NAV | Net Asset Value – per-unit price of a mutual fund scheme |
| NFO | New Fund Offer – first subscription period for a new scheme |
| Overnight Fund | Debt fund investing in securities with maturity of 1 day |
| R-Squared | Correlation between fund performance and benchmark (0–100) |
| Rebalancing | Realigning portfolio to target asset allocation |
| Redemption | Selling mutual fund units back to the fund house |
| Risk-o-Meter | SEBI-mandated monthly risk classification: Low to Very High |
| Rolling Return | Returns over multiple overlapping periods – consistency measure |
| RTA | Registrar and Transfer Agent – handles investor services |
| Rupee Cost Averaging | Mathematical feature of fixed-amount periodic investing |
| SEBI | Securities and Exchange Board of India – apex market regulator |
| Sharpe Ratio | Risk-adjusted return per unit of total volatility |
| SID | Scheme Information Document – primary legal scheme document |
| SIP | Systematic Investment Plan – fixed-amount regular investment |
| Small Cap Fund | Fund investing in companies ranked 251+ by market capitalization |
| Sortino Ratio | Risk-adjusted return using downside volatility only |
| Standard Deviation | Statistical measure of historical return volatility |
| STP | Systematic Transfer Plan – regular transfers between schemes |
| Subscription | Purchasing mutual fund units by investing money into a scheme |
| SWP | Systematic Withdrawal Plan – fixed-amount regular redemption |
| Tracking Error | Deviation of index fund returns from its benchmark |
| Units | Fractional portions of a mutual fund held by an investor |
| Yield Curve | Graph of bond yields across different maturities |
| YTM | Yield to Maturity – estimated return if debt portfolio held to maturity |
| XIRR | Extended IRR – annualized return measure for SIPs and irregular cash flows |
A Note From Your Mutual Fund Distributor
Familiarity with mutual fund terminology may help investors – and their families – become more comfortable with basic concepts when reviewing scheme documents or discussing investments.
As an AMFI Registered Mutual Fund Distributor (ARN-349400), mfd.co.in facilitates mutual fund investments through registered schemes and provides general educational guidance in the course of distribution-related activities. Distributor services are optional.
Working with an AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor may provide investors with access to general portfolio information, transaction support, and educational guidance. Many investors find it useful to have a point of contact during periods of market uncertainty. The value of such support will vary by individual circumstance.
Comprehensive Disclaimer
Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully.
This article is purely educational and does not constitute investment advice, recommendation, solicitation, or suitability assessment of any kind. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Actual returns may be higher, lower, or negative.
SIP does not assure a profit or guarantee protection against loss in a declining market. Rupee Cost Averaging is a mathematical feature, not a performance guarantee.
All definitions, numerical examples, NAV figures, tables, and illustrations are for educational purposes only. They do not represent any real scheme, real performance data, or real portfolio.
Always read the Scheme Information Document (SID) and Key Information Memorandum (KIM) carefully before investing. Investors are encouraged to consult an AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor or a SEBI-registered Investment Advisor for guidance tailored to their specific financial situation, risk appetite, and investment horizon.
Tax information in this article is for general educational reference only, based on publicly available information as of May 2026. Tax laws are subject to change. Consult a qualified Chartered Accountant for personalised tax guidance.
Regulatory information is based on SEBI/AMFI circulars and notifications publicly available as of May 2026.
This material is issued by an AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor. Distributor services are optional. MFD.co.in operates solely as an AMFI Registered Mutual Fund Distributor (ARN-349400). It does not hold SEBI registration as an Investment Adviser or Portfolio Manager.
Contact Information
Amit Verma – AMFI Registered Mutual Fund Distributor (ARN-349400) | Verifiable at amfiindia.com (use ‘Locate a Distributor’ and enter ARN-349400)
📱 WhatsApp: +91-76510-32666
🌐 Website: mfd.co.in
✉️ Email: planwithmfd@gmail.com
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