Mutual Funds vs Other Investments
This section provides a comprehensive comparison of mutual funds with other popular investment options available in India — Fixed Deposits (FDs), Public Provide...
Mutual Funds vs Other Investments
This section provides a comprehensive comparison of mutual funds with other popular investment options available in India — Fixed Deposits (FDs), Public Provident Fund (PPF), Real Estate, Gold, Direct Equity, and Insurance Endowment Plans — across eight critical parameters: returns, risk, liquidity, tax efficiency, minimum investment, professional management, transparency, and regulation. This is a critical section for distributors as it provides the data and framework to handle every "why not FD/PPF/real estate/gold?" objection from clients.
Here is a breakdown of each comparison with the honesty clients deserve. No investment is perfect for every situation, and a good distributor acknowledges trade-offs: Mutual Funds vs Fixed Deposits: FDs offer guaranteed returns (6-7%) and capital protection (DICGC insured up to ₹5 lakh). But after 30% tax, a 7% FD yields 4.9% — below 5-6% inflation. Equity MFs have historically delivered 12-15% CAGR over 10+ years (not guaranteed) with better tax treatment (LTCG at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh, STCG at 20%). For conservative clients, debt MFs serve as the middle ground. Mutual Funds vs PPF: PPF offers approximately 7.1% tax-free returns with sovereign guarantee — an excellent product. But it has a 15-year lock-in and ₹1.5 lakh annual limit. MFs offer unlimited investment, better liquidity, and potentially higher returns — but without guarantees. The smart approach: use both. Mutual Funds vs Real Estate: Real estate is illiquid, requires large capital (₹20-50 lakh minimum), has high transaction costs (stamp duty, registration, brokerage), lacks transparency, and rental yields are often 2-3%. MFs need ₹500/month, offer daily liquidity, full transparency, and historically better returns. However, real estate offers leverage (home loan) and emotional satisfaction. Mutual Funds vs Gold: Gold is a hedge against inflation and currency depreciation, returning about 8-10% CAGR over long periods. But physical gold has making charges, storage concerns, and purity risks. Gold MFs/ETFs solve these issues while offering MF advantages. Gold should be 5-10% of a portfolio, not the core. Mutual Funds vs Direct Equity: Direct stocks can give higher returns but require knowledge, time, and emotional discipline. 90% of retail traders lose money. MFs offer professional management, diversification, and discipline — making them suitable for the vast majority of investors. Mutual Funds vs Insurance Endowment Plans: This is where distributors can truly help clients. Endowment plans give 4-6% returns — often worse than FDs — while combining insurance and investment poorly. The recommended approach: keep insurance and investment separate — term plan for insurance, MF for investment.
A Practical Example
Here is the math that clients need to see. For example, Sunita invests ₹10,000 per month for 15 years in three different options:
Option 2 — PPF (approximately 7.1% tax-free):
Total invested: ₹18,00,000 (₹1.5 lakh/year cap — so only ₹12,500/month qualifies)
Maturity value after 15 years: ₹32,60,000 approximately
Tax-free, sovereign guarantee — excellent but locked in and capped
Option 3 — Equity Mutual Fund SIP (12% CAGR assumed):
Total invested: ₹18,00,000
Maturity value: ₹50,45,760 approximately
LTCG tax on gains (12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh): Applicable but still significantly ahead
Not guaranteed — but 15-year equity SIPs have historically delivered 10-15% CAGR
The numbers speak for themselves. Option 3 nearly doubles Option 1 and significantly beats Option 2. But here is the key: a wise distributor does not say "choose only one." The recommendation is: use PPF for the guaranteed, tax-free portion (up to ₹1.5 lakh/year), some FDs for emergency fund (6 months of expenses), and equity MF SIPs for the growth portion. This balanced approach addresses every client objection while building real wealth.
What Makes This Important
Mathematical Formula
SIP Future Value = P x [(1+r)^n - 1] / r x (1+r) FD Maturity = P x (1 + r/n)^(n*t) Real Return = ((1 + Nominal Return) / (1 + Inflation Rate)) - 1 Where: P = Monthly investment / Principal r = Rate of return (monthly for SIP, annual for FD) n = Number of periods t = Time in years
Step-by-Step Calculation
₹10,000/month for 15 years — The Three-Way Race: 1. Bank RD at 7% (post-tax at 30%: 4.9%): FV = 10,000 x [(1+0.00408)^180 - 1] / 0.00408 x (1.00408) FV = approximately ₹25,64,000 2. PPF at 7.1% (tax-free, compounded annually): ₹1,20,000/year for 15 years at 7.1% FV = 1,20,000 x [(1.071)^15 - 1] / 0.071 FV = approximately ₹32,60,000 3. Equity MF SIP at 12% CAGR: Monthly rate = 1% = 0.01 FV = 10,000 x [(1.01)^180 - 1] / 0.01 x (1.01) FV = 10,000 x [5.996 - 1] / 0.01 x 1.01 FV = 10,000 x 499.6 x 1.01 FV = approximately ₹50,46,000 Total invested in each: ₹18,00,000 Wealth created: FD: ₹7.64L | PPF: ₹14.60L | MF SIP: ₹32.46L The equity MF SIP created 4.2x more wealth than the FD and 2.2x more than PPF — but came with market risk. Key message to clients: "The risk of NOT investing in equity over 15 years is far greater than the risk of investing."
Frequently Asked Questions
Acknowledge that real estate has created wealth for many Indians. Then present the full picture: (1) Capital required: ₹20-50 lakh minimum vs ₹500/month for MFs, (2) Liquidity: selling property takes 3-6 months; MF redemption takes 1-3 days, (3) Transaction costs: stamp duty, registration, brokerage total 7-10% vs zero for MFs, (4) Rental yield: typically 2-3% in Indian metros, (5) Maintenance and property tax are ongoing costs, (6) No diversification: the entire investment is in one asset in one location. MFs are not better than real estate in every case — but for most investors, they are more practical, accessible, and liquid.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
