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Debt Fund Ratings: Why They Differ from Equity Fund Ratings

Debt mutual funds serve a very different role from equity funds, which is why they require a different rating methodology. At Qonfido, we evaluate debt funds primarily on stability, drawdown behaviour, and consistency, not just returns. Our ratings cover all 14 SEBI debt fund categories, recognising that some categories offer meaningful differentiation between funds while others are largely equivalent. The goal is simple: help investors identify funds that do their job reliably within the role they play in a portfolio.

By Nikhil R6 min read

A great equity fund and a great debt fund are trying to achieve very different things.

An equity fund's job is to grow your wealth over the long term. A debt fund's job is to preserve capital, provide stability, and generate predictable returns. Judging both using the same rating framework would be like evaluating a family sedan and a race car using the same scorecard.

That is why Qonfido's debt fund ratings use a fundamentally different methodology from our equity fund ratings. Instead of focusing primarily on return maximisation, we place greater emphasis on stability, drawdowns, consistency, and risk-adjusted performance within each debt fund category.

In this article, we'll explain how debt funds differ from equity funds, how the various debt fund categories behave, and how our rating system identifies the funds that are doing their job best.

Types of Debt Mutual Funds

It would be a mistake to treat debt mutual funds as a single category. There are 14 SEBI-defined sub-categories, each with a different risk profile and time horizon. Here is how they group together in terms of what an investor would actually use them for.

Debt categories and suitability for use-cases
Debt Categories

The common thread is that none of these categories are trying to beat the stock market. They sit at different ends of the safety-to-yield spectrum. The right choice depends on your investment horizon and how much day-to-day NAV movement you can live with.

How Have Debt Mutual Funds Performed?

Debt fund returns in India broadly follow the prevailing interest rate cycle. The RBI's policy rate is the single largest driver of returns across categories. In a falling rate environment, longer-duration funds deliver strong capital gains. In a rising or uncertain rate environment, short-duration and floating-rate funds hold up better.

Across all categories, returns over the past three years have generally been in the 7 to 9% range. That sounds narrow, but the real differences show up in how smooth or bumpy the ride is. A Liquid fund and a Long Duration fund might deliver similar headline returns in a given year, yet one barely moves while the other swings considerably more. The differentiation in our ratings comes primarily from stability and drawdown behaviour, not just returns.

The chart below shows where each category sits on the risk spectrum, measured by how much the fund's NAV typically fluctuates day-to-day (annualised volatility). The approximate annual return for each category is shown alongside each bar.

Debt categories - risk return profile
Debt Fund Categories: Risk and Return Profile at a Glance

One category that deserves a specific mention is Credit Risk. On the surface it can look calm, but the average masks significant fund-level dispersion. Some funds were affected by past credit events involving companies like Yes Bank, Vodafone Idea, and IL&FS. Credit risk funds can deliver strong returns when the underlying bonds hold up, but when they do not, the damage tends to be sudden and sharp. This is the one debt category that genuinely requires more due diligence before investing.

Top-Rated Debt Funds: Some Examples

Categories Where Most Funds Are Equivalent: Liquid and Overnight

Liquid and Overnight funds invest in the shortest-dated, highest-quality instruments under strict SEBI guidelines. In practice, the difference in performance between the best and worst fund in these categories is often just a few basis points a year. Imposing a ranking on a category where the top and bottom funds differ by less than 3 composite score points would create distinctions that are not real.

So for these categories, rather than Premier to Watch, we classify funds as Equivalent or Watch. Equivalent means the fund is doing its job properly and is indistinguishable from most of its peers. A Watch label in these categories is a genuine outlier flag, not an average performer.

The two examples below are Equivalent-rated funds. They are good funds. So are most of the other Liquid and Overnight funds in our universe. If you are parking money for a short period, the choice between these and most other funds in the same category matters far less than making sure you are in the right category for your time horizon.

FundStatus Annual VolatilityExcess Return vs Category
Axis Liquid FundEquivalent3.0%1.63%
Trust MF Liquid FundEquivalent2.7%+1.56%

Categories With Meaningful Differentiation: Banking & PSU and Corporate Bond

Move further along the risk spectrum to Banking & PSU and Corporate Bond funds, and the story changes. These categories have enough spread in performance across funds that a Premier-rated fund is genuinely doing something better than a Watch-rated one. The differences in stability, drawdown behaviour, and return delivery are real and sustained over time.

Here are the top 3 funds in each category from our current ratings, along with what sets them apart.

These three funds sit at the top of the Banking & PSU category because they combine tight NAV stability with consistent above-median returns. Banking & PSU funds invest only in bonds issued by banks and government-owned entities, which means credit risk is low by design. The differentiation between funds here comes from how well the portfolio is managed within those constraints: how smoothly the NAV moves, how rarely it dips, and how consistently it delivers returns above the category median. ITI, UTI, and Bandhan have all done this well over the measurement period.

Banking and PSU & Corporate Bond Funds - Risk-Return Profiles
Banking and PSU & Corporate Bond Fund

Corporate Bond funds invest mostly in AA+ rated corporate bonds, which carry slightly more credit risk than Banking & PSU but also offer higher yields. The top three here are Premier-rated because they have delivered above-median returns without taking on disproportionate volatility. DSP Corporate Bond Fund has had minimal NAV dips even in volatile bond market periods, with returns consistently above the category average. The contrast with lower-rated funds in this category is meaningful: Watch-rated Corporate Bond funds have experienced larger drawdowns and more erratic month-to-month returns, making them harder to hold through difficult periods.

How We Evaluate Debt Mutual Funds

Our debt rating system starts from the premise that stability is the primary job of a debt fund, not return maximisation. Every fund is evaluated on six stability metrics: volatility, downside deviation, maximum drawdown, Ulcer Index, return consistency, and drawdown frequency. All six are calculated as percentile scores relative to category peers, then averaged into a Stability Score. A separate Excess Return Score captures how the fund's returns compare to the category median. The two are combined into a Composite Score, with stability weighted more heavily for conservative categories (70 to 80%) and less so for higher-duration or credit categories where return generation is part of the mandate (50 to 60%).

For categories where all funds perform within a genuinely narrow band (Liquid, Overnight, Ultra Short), we skip the four-tier ranking and classify funds as Equivalent or Watch instead. In all other categories, funds are ranked into four tiers: Premier (top 15%), Select (next 35%), Standard (next 35%), and Watch (bottom 15%). Ratings cover all 14 SEBI debt sub-categories and are updated monthly.

Debt fund ratings at Qonfido are updated monthly. The goal is to give you a clear, honest picture of which funds in each sub-category are doing their primary job well and which ones are not. To find the best debt mutual funds in India, visit our debt funds discovery page.

Like our equity ratings, these are a starting point for your decision, not a substitute for understanding your own investment horizon and risk tolerance.

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