Hybrid Fund
A hybrid mutual fund invests in a combination of equity and debt instruments. SEBI's October 2017 categorisation circular defines six hybrid sub-categories — each with distinct equity-to-debt allocation ranges — from conservative hybrid to multi-asset allocation.
A hybrid fund is a SEBI-categorised mutual fund scheme that invests in a combination of equity and debt instruments (and potentially other asset classes such as gold). Hybrid funds span a wide risk spectrum — from conservative hybrid schemes with 10–25% equity to aggressive hybrid schemes with 65–80% equity. The category was codified under SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2017/114 (October 2017), which defined six distinct hybrid sub-categories.
How the category is defined
SEBI's October 2017 circular defines the six hybrid sub-categories as follows:
| Sub-Category | Equity Allocation Range | Debt Allocation Range | Other Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative Hybrid | 10–25% | 75–90% | — |
| Balanced Hybrid | 40–60% | 40–60% | No arbitrage permitted |
| Aggressive Hybrid | 65–80% | 20–35% | Equity taxation eligible |
| Dynamic Asset Allocation / Balanced Advantage | 0–100% (dynamic) | 0–100% (dynamic) | Model-driven rebalancing |
| Multi-Asset Allocation | Min. 10% each in ≥3 asset classes | Min. 10% each | Includes gold, REITs, etc. |
| Arbitrage Fund | Min. 65% in arbitrage positions | Rest in debt/money market | Equity taxation, near-debt risk |
Each AMC may operate one fund in each of these sub-categories. Equity-oriented hybrids (aggressive hybrid, dynamic allocation BAF, arbitrage) benefit from equity mutual fund tax treatment when gross equity ≥65% — long-term capital gains above ₹1.25 lakh per financial year taxed at 12.5% (Finance Act 2024), with a 1-year holding period for LTCG qualification.
Debt-oriented hybrids (conservative hybrid) are taxed as debt funds: gains added to income and taxed at the applicable slab rate (post Finance Act 2023; the earlier indexation benefit for debt funds has been withdrawn for units acquired on or after 1 April 2023).
What investors should look at
- Sub-category selection: The six sub-categories have materially different risk-return profiles. An aggressive hybrid fund (65–80% equity) has substantially higher volatility than a conservative hybrid (10–25% equity). Matching the sub-category to time horizon and volatility tolerance is the primary selection criterion.
- Tax category: Whether a hybrid fund qualifies for equity or debt taxation significantly affects post-tax returns. Confirm the gross equity allocation and the specific tax treatment in the SID before subscribing.
- Debt portfolio quality in hybrid funds: The debt component's credit quality and duration determine the stability of the non-equity portion. Review the fund factsheet's credit rating distribution and modified duration for the debt segment.
- Rebalancing mechanism: Aggressive hybrid and balanced hybrid funds rebalance between equity and debt as market movements shift allocations outside the SEBI-prescribed band. Rebalancing can trigger capital gains within the fund — check the scheme's historical portfolio turnover in the annual report.
- Benchmark relevance: Different hybrid sub-categories use different composite benchmarks (e.g., 65% Nifty 50 TRI + 35% CRISIL Short-Term Bond Fund Index for aggressive hybrid). Verify that the composite benchmark matches the stated equity-debt mix.
Worked example
Two hybrid sub-category comparison as at 31 March 2025 (illustrative; verify with AMFI NAV history and AMC factsheets):
| Fund | Sub-Category | Equity % | 3Y Annualised Return | Annualised Std Dev |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICICI Pru Balanced Advantage – Direct | BAF (Dynamic) | ≈48% net | 13.8% | 9.2% |
| HDFC Aggressive Hybrid – Direct | Aggressive Hybrid | ≈72% equity | 19.4% | 13.8% |
| ICICI Pru Regular Savings – Direct | Conservative Hybrid | ≈18% equity | 8.1% | 3.4% |
The table illustrates the risk-return gradient across the hybrid spectrum. The aggressive hybrid delivered the highest return over this period but with substantially higher volatility. The conservative hybrid showed near-debt standard deviation at marginally above debt-fund returns. The BAF sat in the middle — a pattern consistent with its capital-preservation objective at elevated market valuations.
See also
- Balanced Advantage Fund
- Open-Ended Fund
- Large-Cap
- Sharpe Ratio
- Mutual Funds in India — Complete Guide
Primary source
SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2017/114 (6 October 2017) — Hybrid Fund categorisation: sebi.gov.in. Finance Act 2024 — equity LTCG rates: incometax.gov.in. Finance Act 2023 — debt fund taxation amendment: incometax.gov.in. AMFI Categorisation Data: amfiindia.com.
Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme-related documents carefully. ARN-314872. APMI APRN-01658. Content is informational and not investment advice.