HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceStatus quo on rates: Stay put with shorter-tenure debt funds

Status quo on rates: Stay put with shorter-tenure debt funds

As interest rates are likely to decline later, it’s best to retain your debt funds

August 06, 2020 / 16:31 IST
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has kept policy rates unchanged in its monetary policy announced earlier today. In keeping with this status quo, debt fund investors too may retain their holdings in these schemes.

Interest rates can still decrease

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Although the RBI kept the repo rate (4 percent) and the reverse repo rate (3.35 percent) unchanged, governor Shaktikanta Das said that the monetary policy committee’s stance is ‘accommodative.’ Thus, the RBI is open to making reductions in interest rates later, if found necessary for reviving growth and overcoming the impact of COVID-19 on the Indian economy. When interest rates fall, prices of bonds – and therefore the net asset values of debt funds invested in them – rise. So far, the RBI has reduced policy rates by 250 basis points since February 2019 and Das added in his statement that rate cuts have been working, in the sense that transmission of lower interest rates have happened thanks largely to liquidity conditions it induced, despite banks remaining averse to lending. When interest rates are kept unchanged with the possibility a decline later, it’s best to stick to your debt funds.

“The RBI has to worry about the depositor, the silent saver, and hence needs to be careful and calibrated in rate cuts,” says Pankaj Pathak, Fund Manager-Fixed Income, Quantum Mutual Fund.