Direct and indirect (or regular) plans are ways in which one can invest in a mutual fund. Choose which one suits you in this article.
8 Nov, 2019 06:30 IST 3087If you are familiar with the process of investing in mutual funds, you would have noticed a peculiar choice that you have to make when you register i.e. a mandatory selection between a direct plan and a regular plan. Post January 2013, all mutual funds are required to classify the same fund scheme under two categories viz. Direct Plans and Regular Plans. SEBI asked all mutual funds to clearly distinguish between regular plans and direct plans while announcing daily NAVs. Before this, there was no clear demarcation between the two. So, the question arises,what is the difference between the two plans and why do we have to make the choice?
Direct and indirect (or regular) plans are ways in which one can invest in a mutual fund. For e.g., if you want to invest in ABC mutual fund, you can invest in it either through a direct plan or a regular plan. Whichever plan you choose, the features, category and sub-category of the fund by itself remain the same. The main difference will be in the cost structures of the plan.
Direct plans were introduced by SEBI over 5 years ago as an alternative to regular plans, which is sold through distributors. The former allows purchase of funds at a lower cost, as it eliminates the expense on distributor commissions. The commissions on equity funds typically vary between 0.75-1.25% annually. The cost differential between the direct and regular plan should ideally be equivalent to this expense. Incrementally, over a long investment horizon, a lower expense ratio will help investors choosing a direct plan to build a significantly bigger corpus than the ones choosing a regular plan.
In the event of a direct mutual fund scheme, investors are recommended to conduct their own market research and pick top-performing schemes for mutual funds. By tapping into the various sources available online from mutual fund websites to financial blogs, investors can study and learn more about the appropriate mutual fund plans.
HDFC Balanced Advantage Fund-(G)
Particulars (5yrs)
Direct Plan
Regular Plan
DSP Bond Fund-(G)
Particulars (5yrs)
Direct Plan
Regular plan
The best way to understand the difference is by looking at the live data of both the plans on a sample of two funds. We have considered the absolute and annualized returns of 2 different funds for the 5-year period of Jan 2014-Jan 2019. The table captures the gist of the outcome. It can be seen that in case of the balanced fund, the annualized return is 100 basis points for direct plan. In the case of the bond fund, the advantage of a direct plan is 60 basis points. While 0.6%-1% of additional return each year might not seem significant, over a long term it does add up. Checkout the below table to understand the impact just 0.75% can have over a 15 year period.
Year
13% CAGR (Direct)
12.25% CAGR (Regular)
Please note that the returns here are overly simplified and one should not expect such consistency.
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