SBI Mutual Fund Launches 2 New Debt Funds

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If you are looking for a safe and short-term investment option, this new offer from SBI Mutual Fund could be worth your attention.

The fund house has launched two new constant maturity index funds focused on short-term debt in the financial services sector. These are:

SBI CRISIL-IBX Financial Services 3–6 Months Debt Index Fund

SBI CRISIL-IBX Financial Services 9–12 Months Debt Index Fund

Both funds are open for investment under a New Fund Offer (NFO) from April 15 to April 20.

These funds aim to give returns similar to their respective CRISIL-IBX Financial Services Debt Index, though slight differences may occur due to tracking error.

Easy Entry with Low Investment

You can start investing in these funds with just ₹5,000 during the NFO period. After that, additional investments can be made starting from ₹1,000.

For those who prefer disciplined investing, SIP options are also available. You can choose from daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, half-yearly, or yearly plans.

The funds will be managed by Rajiv Radhakrishnan, an experienced fixed income expert associated with SBI Mutual Fund since 2008.

Designed for Short-Term Investors

According to SBI Mutual Fund’s CEO Nand Kishore, these funds are built to offer simple, transparent, and low-cost investment options.

They follow an index-based strategy, which means the investment is aligned with a specific market index instead of active stock picking.

This makes them easier to understand and suitable for investors looking for short-term opportunities in debt markets.

Where Will Your Money Be Invested?

Both funds will invest 95% to 100% of their total assets in securities that are part of their respective indices.

The 3–6 months fund will invest in short-duration debt instruments

The 9–12 months fund will focus on slightly longer short-term securities

The remaining up to 5% can be invested in safe and liquid options such as:

Government securities (G-Secs, Treasury Bills, SDLs)

Commercial papers and bills

Certificates of deposit

Call/notice money and other RBI-approved instruments

They may also hold cash, liquid mutual fund units, and tri-party repos to maintain liquidity.

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