The investment objective of the Scheme is to provide reasonable returns and high level of liquidity by investing in debt instruments such as bonds, debentures and Government Securities; and money market instruments such as treasury bills, commercial paper, certificate of deposit, including repos in permitted securities of different maturities, so as to spread the risk across different kinds of issuers in the debt markets. The Scheme may invest in call money/term money market in terms of RBI guidelines in this respect. Subject to the maximum amount permitted from time to time, the Scheme may invest in offshore securities in the manner allowed by SEBI / RBI, provided such investments are in conformity with the investment objective of the Scheme and the prevailing guidelines and Regulations. To reduce the risk of the portfolio, the Scheme may also use various derivative and hedging products from time to time, in the manner permitted by SEBI. There is no assurance that the investment objective of the Schemes will be realised.
This fund has lowest risk compared to any other debt funds. It invests in debt and money market securities having maturity of upto 91 days only and is suitable for investors with lowest risk profile having investment horizon of few days to few weeks.
Minimum Purchase Application Amount
Rs. 1000.0 (plus in multiples of Rs. 500.0)
Entry Load
Not applicable
Exit Load
NIL
Indicative Investment Horizon
5 Years and above
Asset Allocation
Fund's historical return comparison with other asset classes
Fund Performance
Fund's historical return comparison with other asset classes
Rolling returns are the annualized returns of the scheme taken for a specified period
(rolling returns period) on every day/week/month and taken till the last day of the
duration. In this chart we are showing the annualized returns over the rolling returns
period on every day from the start date and comparing it with the benchmark. Rolling
returns is the best measure of a fund's performance. Trailing returns have a recency
bias and point to point returns are specific to the period in consideration. Rolling
returns, on the other hand, measures the fund's absolute and relative performance across
all timescales, without bias.