Fixed-income funds, commonly known as debt mutual funds, invest in securities such as government bonds, corporate bonds, treasury bills, and money market instruments. Many investors associate volatility only with equity markets, yet fixed-income funds also show daily price movements. These changes appear in the Net Asset Value (NAV) of the fund.
The NAV represents the current market value of one unit of a mutual fund scheme. It is calculated by subtracting liabilities from total assets and dividing the result by the number of outstanding units. The value reflects the market price of the securities in the portfolio at the end of each trading day. Let’s take a look at how different factors influence NAV fluctuations in fixed income funds.
Interest rates affect bond prices directly
The most important factor affecting NAV movement in fixed-income mutual funds is the change in interest rates. Bond prices and interest rates share an inverse relationship. When interest rates rise, the price of existing bonds declines. When interest rates fall, the value of those bonds increases.
For example, consider a bond issued earlier with a 6% coupon. If new bonds enter the market with an 8% yield, investors prefer the newer bonds. The older bond, therefore, trades at a lower price in the market. If a mutual fund holds such bonds, the decline in bond prices reduces the total value of the portfolio and pushes the NAV downward.
Duration decides how sharp the movement will be
Two debt funds can hold good-quality bonds and still show very different NAV behaviour. The main reason is duration. Duration measures how sensitive a bond fund is to interest rate shifts. It indicates the approximate percentage change in the NAV for every 1% change in interest rates. For instance, if a gilt fund has a duration of 7 years, a 1% rise in market interest rates could lead to a 7% drop in its NAV. The longer the time, the greater the “opportunity cost” of missing out on higher rates
Short-term instruments like liquid funds or overnight funds maintain a very low duration. These categories experience minimal NAV volatility because their underlying assets mature quickly, allowing the fund manager to reinvest at newer rates rapidly.
Credit quality can move NAV even without default
NAV can also fluctuate because of credit risk. If the market starts doubting an issuer’s ability to repay, the price of that bond may fall. A default causes a stronger hit, but even a downgrade or a fear of a downgrade can reduce valuation. This is why funds that hold lower-rated corporate debt often carry more risk than funds that hold government securities or high-rated papers.
Government securities do not carry default risk in the same way, though they still face interest rate risk. Credit quality, therefore, plays a direct role in daily NAV movement.
Liquidity also shapes daily valuation
Liquidity risk receives less attention, but it matters. If a bond does not trade easily in the market, the fund may find it harder to value or sell that security at a favourable price during stressed conditions. In such periods, valuation pressure may pull the NAV down.
that hold shorter-maturity money market instruments usually face lower liquidity stress than portfolios that hold less-traded, longer-tenure securities. This is one reason short-duration categories often look steadier on the surface.
Expenses and dividends
Operating a fund costs money. The Asset Management Company (AMC) deducts an annual expense ratio from the fund. While this deduction is small, it creates a slight drag on NAV growth.
Also, if you choose the Income Distribution cum Capital Withdrawal (IDCW) option, the AMC pays out a portion of the gains. The NAV decreases by the dividend amount at the time of payout since the funds are transferred from the scheme to your bank account.
Conclusion
NAV fluctuations are a normal part of how fixed-income funds work. Daily NAV changes reflect shifts in bond prices, interest rate expectations, accrued income, portfolio duration, credit quality, and fund costs. A temporary fall in NAV does not automatically mean the fund is performing poorly. In many cases, it simply shows that the market has revalued the securities in the portfolio.
What matters more is how the fund fits your investment horizon and risk appetite. If you check the fund’s duration profile, credit quality, and return pattern carefully, you can judge it more accurately and choose a debt fund that supports your financial goals.









