Key Information Memorandum — What to Check
The Key Information Memorandum (KIM) is a concise, abridged version of the Scheme Information Document (SID) that provides the most essential information about ...
Key Information Memorandum — What to Check
The Key Information Memorandum (KIM) is a concise, abridged version of the Scheme Information Document (SID) that provides the most essential information about a mutual fund scheme in a quick-reference format. SEBI mandates that a KIM must accompany every application form — whether physical or digital. It serves as the investor's first point of reference, containing the investment objective, risk factors, asset allocation pattern, benchmark, minimum investment amount, fund manager details, load structure, and performance data. The KIM is not a substitute for the SID but rather a convenient summary designed to help investors make quick comparisons between schemes.
In practical terms, the KIM is the document most retail investors will actually read. While the SID can span 60-100 pages, the KIM is typically 2-4 pages — concise, clear, and designed for easy comparison. For distributors, mastering the KIM is essential professional practice. When a client asks about a scheme, a distributor should be able to walk through the KIM systematically, covering each critical section. The KIM must contain the scheme's investment objective in plain language, the asset allocation table showing where the money will go, the risk-o-meter classification, benchmark index, minimum application amounts for lump sum and SIP, current NAV, fund manager name and experience, loads (entry and exit), expense ratio details (now structured as BER + Brokerage + Levies under the 2026 Regulations), and the scheme's past performance versus benchmark. When an application form is submitted, the KIM accompanies it. SEBI made this mandatory precisely so that no investor can claim they were not informed about the basics. A distributor's responsibility is to highlight the critical parts — especially the risk level, exit load, and expense ratio — before the client signs.
A Practical Example
Consider the case of Meena, an MFD in Jaipur, meeting her client Arun, a 45-year-old government school teacher who wants to invest ₹3,00,000 lumpsum from his GPF partial withdrawal. Meena uses the KIM of a midcap equity fund to walk Arun through the key details systematically: Investment Objective — long-term capital appreciation by investing in midcap companies. Asset Allocation — 65-100% in midcap equity, 0-35% in other equities and debt. Risk-o-meter — Very High, meaning the fund can see sharp declines of 20-30% in a bad year. Benchmark — S&P BSE Midcap 150 TRI. Exit Load — 1% if redeemed within 1 year. Expense structure — disclosed under the new BER framework. Fund Manager — a professional with over two decades of experience. Past performance versus benchmark over standard periods. Arun now has a clear picture in under 5 minutes and makes an informed investment decision with a commitment to stay invested for at least 5 years. This is exactly how the KIM should be used — as a structured guided conversation tool between distributor and client.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The Offer Document consists of SID + SAI only. The KIM is a separate abridged document derived from the SID. This is a very important distinction for the NISM exam — many candidates confuse this. Think of KIM as the "cheat sheet" version of the SID, not a component of the Offer Document.
🧠 Quick Quiz
3 questions to check your understanding
