Last week we spoke about market volatility, why falling prices are not a reason to panic, and why staying invested through uncertain times is one of the most powerful things a long-term investor can do. I believe that. And I stand by it. But I also know that not everyone reading this column is in the same place in life.
The Myth of Universal Advice
Some of you are in your thirties with twenty-five years of investing ahead of you. The ups and downs of the market feel manageable because time is on your side. But some of you are in your fifties and the idea of watching your savings fall by fifteen or twenty per cent in a bad month is not just uncomfortable. It is genuinely disruptive to your peace of mind and your plans. Some of you are saving for a goal that is three years away, not twenty. Some of you are retired or approaching retirement and need your money to be steady and accessible, not adventurous. What is right for one investor is not right for another. This is one of the most important things this column will ever say. Financial advice that works beautifully for a thirty-two-year-old with a stable income and no immediate financial needs can be entirely wrong for a fifty-eight-year-old who is two years from retirement. The product is not good or bad in isolation. It depends on who is using it, and when, and for what.

An Overlooked Safety Net
So today, let us talk about an asset class that gets far less attention than it deserves. One that does not make for exciting headlines, does not promise to double your money, and will never be the subject of breathless television coverage. But for the right person at the right stage of life, it can be exactly what they need.
How Debt Funds Work
Debt mutual funds. We have spoken about equity mutual funds in this column many times. They invest in shares of companies, they have the potential for significant long-term growth, and they carry with them the volatility that comes with that growth. When the market has a bad week, equity funds have a bad week. That is the trade-off you accept in exchange for higher long-term returns. Debt mutual funds work differently. Instead of buying shares in companies, they lend money to governments and well-rated companies by purchasing their bonds and fixed-income securities. These borrowers pay interest on what they have borrowed. That interest becomes your return. No share prices are moving up and down every day. There is no Sensex headline that changes the value of your investment overnight. The movement is steadier, more predictable, and significantly less dramatic.
Owner vs Lender Mindset
Think of the difference this way. An equity fund is like being a part-owner in a business. Your returns depend on how well the business does, and some years are exceptional, and some are difficult. A debt fund is more like being the banker who lent money to that business. You earn a steady interest. You are not chasing the upside, but you are also largely insulated from the downside. Now, within debt mutual funds, there are several types, and each serves a different purpose.
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Liquid Funds: For Emergency Cash
Liquid funds are the most conservative and the most accessible. They invest in very short-term instruments that mature in ninety days or less. Returns are modest, typically slightly better than a savings account, and the money can be withdrawn in one business day. If you have been keeping your emergency fund in a savings account earning very little, a liquid fund is a smarter home for that money. Accessible when you need it, earning more than it would sitting idle, and carrying minimal risk.
Short Duration Funds: For Medium-Term Goals
Short duration funds invest in instruments with slightly longer maturities, typically one to three years. They are suitable for money you will not need immediately but plan to use within two to three years. The wedding you are saving toward. The down payment that is two years away. The school fees you know are coming. These funds offer better returns than liquid funds while remaining far more stable than equity.
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Corporate Bond Funds: An FD Alternative
Corporate bond funds invest in bonds issued by high-quality companies and offer better returns than government bonds over a three to five-year horizon. If your non-equity money has always sat in fixed deposits earning less than you hoped, corporate bond funds are worth understanding.

Dynamic Funds, Risks, and Taxation
Dynamic bond funds actively adjust their holdings based on interest rate movements and can be rewarding over a three to five-year period, though they require some willingness to accept occasional variation in returns. One thing worth knowing before you invest: debt funds are not completely risk-free. When interest rates in the economy rise, the value of existing bonds can dip temporarily. Holding for the right time horizon largely takes care of this. And since 2023, gains from debt funds are taxed according to your income tax slab regardless of how long you hold them, making them comparable to fixed deposits from a tax perspective.
Who Should Invest in Debt Funds?
So who is a debt fund really for? The investor approaching retirement who needs stability more than growth. Anyone saving toward a goal two to five years away. Someone building an emergency fund. The person who finds equity markets deeply stressful and would rather earn a steadier return and sleep well at night. There is no shame in that. There is wisdom in it.

Prioritising Peace of Mind
Not every rupee needs to be in the market. The goal is not the highest possible return. It is the return that helps you reach your goals at a level of comfort you can actually sustain. The right investment is not always the most exciting one. Sometimes it is simply the one that lets you reach your goal without losing sleep along the way.
Write to us at iamolaxmi@gmail.com. We read every letter.
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