Long Duration Fund
A SEBI-categorised debt fund that maintains a Macaulay duration of 7 years or more in its portfolio, providing maximum interest-rate sensitivity and the highest potential for capital appreciation during rate-cutting cycles.
A long duration fund is a SEBI-categorised open-ended debt scheme that maintains a Macaulay duration of 7 years or more across its portfolio (SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2017/114, October 2017). The ≥7-year Macaulay duration mandate places long duration funds at the far end of the SEBI duration spectrum — beyond medium-to-long duration (4–7 years) and comparable in rate sensitivity to gilt funds with long-dated G-Sec holdings. Long duration funds are the most direct expression of a directional view on long-end Indian interest rates within the mutual fund structure.
What sits in the portfolio
Achieving a Macaulay duration of ≥7 years requires predominantly long-dated instruments:
- Long-dated G-Secs (10–40 years): Central government bonds of 10, 14, 30, and 40-year tenors. The RBI has progressively introduced ultra-long G-Secs (30-year and 40-year) to accommodate long-end demand from pension funds, insurance companies, and mutual funds. The 40-year G-Sec provides the longest available duration in the Indian sovereign market.
- Long-dated SDLs: State government bonds of 10–20 years; offer a yield premium of 25–40 bps over comparable central G-Secs.
- Long-dated PSU bonds (10–15 years): Bonds from large PSUs (NHAI, PFC, REC) with long tenors; used for credit spread enhancement while maintaining high duration.
- Corporate bonds (10+ years): Relatively rare in Indian markets; AAA-rated only; provide marginal yield pickup.
The portfolio is typically concentrated — 10–15 instruments — because the universe of liquid long-dated bonds in India is limited. G-Sec and SDL exposure dominates, implying near-zero credit risk but very high duration risk.
Risk profile
- Duration risk: very high. A Macaulay duration of 10 years corresponds to a modified duration of approximately 9.3 years. A 100 bps yield increase reduces NAV by approximately 9.3% — a loss that may take over a year of accrual to recover at prevailing yields. Long duration funds are directly comparable to equity funds in terms of short-term NAV volatility during interest rate surprises.
- Credit risk: low. The dominance of G-Secs and AAA PSU bonds keeps credit risk minimal.
- Reinvestment risk: low in the short term. Long-dated bonds do not mature frequently; the portfolio is relatively stable in composition. However, coupon reinvestment at lower rates during cutting cycles reduces the effective compounded yield versus the stated YTM.
- Mark-to-market volatility: Long duration funds exhibit the sharpest NAV swings of any open-ended debt category. The RBI 10-year benchmark yield series (rbi.org.in) is the primary indicator of expected NAV direction for these funds.
Taxation (post-Finance Act 2023)
Finance Act 2023 Section 50AA applies. The loss of LTCG with indexation (previously compelling for long-duration funds held for 3+ years, especially during low-inflation periods) removed a key post-tax advantage. The current tax treatment of long duration fund gains at slab rate means a 30% taxpayer loses approximately one-third of any capital appreciation to tax — including rate-cycle-driven NAV gains. Investors must factor in the pre-tax return needed to justify the higher slab-rate tax versus the tax treatment of alternative instruments (e.g., tax-free bonds where available).
Worked example
HDFC Long Duration Debt Fund (AMFI scheme code: 147622 — illustrative; verify from amfiindia.com) maintained a Macaulay duration of approximately 20 years and a modified duration of approximately 14 years as at 31 March 2025, with portfolio YTM of approximately 7.60%. During the hypothetical scenario of a 150 bps cumulative RBI rate cut over 18 months, the fund's NAV could appreciate by approximately 14% × 1.5 = 21% from duration alone — in addition to accrual. Conversely, a 75 bps unexpected rate hike would reduce NAV by approximately 10.5% from duration impact alone. This asymmetric payoff structure makes long duration funds directional macro instruments rather than stable income vehicles. The conventional 91-day T-bill yield (the academic "risk-free rate" proxy) was approximately 6.55% at this date, against the fund's 7.60% YTM — a gross spread of ~105 bps earned for 14 years of modified duration exposure.
See also
Primary source
SEBI Circular SEBI/HO/IMD/DF3/CIR/P/2017/114 (6 October 2017): sebi.gov.in. Finance Act 2023, Section 50AA. RBI G-Sec yield series and 10-year benchmark: rbi.org.in. AMFI scheme 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.