Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) are one of the most preferred ways for Indians to invest in mutual funds. They allow you to contribute a fixed amount at regular intervals, making investing a disciplined and convenient process. However, situations may arise when you need to stop an ongoing SIP. Knowing the right process can save you from confusion and errors. This guide explains, step by step, how to stop a SIP in mutual funds through both online and offline methods.
Here are the offline and online methods to address your query: “Can I stop SIP anytime?”
SIP cancellation typically takes up to 10 calendar days from the date of request, as mandated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (SEBI) January 2024 circular. AMCs must process cancellations within this timeframe, provided the request is valid and complete.
If the SIP mandate is linked to an auto-debit instruction (such as Electronic Clearing Service or National Automated Clearing House), the bank may take an additional few days to stop debits. Investors are advised to monitor their accounts for any residual deductions during this period.
It is important to note that SIP cancellation does not redeem existing units. It only stops future instalments. To withdraw invested funds, you must place a separate redemption request.
With regard to Net Asset Value (NAV), if you redeem units after cancellation, the applicable NAV will depend on the cut-off time and the type of scheme.
NAV is always based on the day the request is received and time-stamped, not the cancellation date. Investors should ensure that redemption requests are submitted within the cut-off window to optimise NAV realisation.
Here are some situations where stopping a SIP may make sense:
If you face urgent, unavoidable expenses such as medical bills, job loss, or essential household repairs, prioritising liquid cash over continuing your SIP may be the right choice.
You set a SIP to meet specific goals with defined timelines. If your goal moves closer, for example, you now plan to buy a house in two years instead of five, the risk profile of equities no longer aligns with your shorter horizon. Equities tend to be volatile in the short term, and you risk needing the funds during a market downturn. In such cases, shifting your money to lower-risk instruments is advisable.
You may consider stopping your SIP if a scheme consistently underperforms its benchmark index and peer group year after year. Continuing such a SIP means buying into weak management and strategy. Look beyond temporary dips and review performance over multiple market cycles, ideally three to five years. Compare rolling returns, risk-adjusted metrics, and how the fund performed in different market conditions.
A change in fund manager or a shift in the scheme’s stated objective can alter the risk-return balance you originally signed up for. Active fund managers play a key role through stock selection, portfolio construction, and risk management. If the firm replaces a long-tenured manager with someone whose track record does not match the fund’s promise, or if the fund shifts from value to growth style or widens sector bets, your original reason for investing may no longer apply.
As you add SIPs over time, you can unintentionally end up with heavy exposure to the same large-cap stocks, sectors, or themes across different schemes. This duplication increases idiosyncratic risk and reduces the diversification benefit you expected. For example, two actively managed large-cap funds may both hold the same top ten stocks; adding a third fund merely increases your single-stock risk without widening exposure.
The total expense ratio (TER), along with any entry or exit loads, eats into your returns. Over the long run, even a small difference in expense ratio compounds into a large gap in final wealth. If you discover that a regular SIP feeds a high-cost active plan while lower-cost direct plans or index funds deliver similar or better net returns, it may be wise to stop the higher-cost SIP and switch to a cheaper alternative.
Stopping a SIP is a simple process, but it requires attention to detail. If you are wondering how to stop SIP, you can cancel it through your AMC, RTA, investment platform, or bank, depending on how the SIP was originally set up. Always check your SIP details carefully, decide whether you only want to stop future instalments or also redeem your units, and track the status until you receive confirmation.
References
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. It is not produced by the desk of the Kotak Securities Research Team, nor is it a report published by the Kotak Securities Research Team. The information presented is compiled from several secondary sources available on the internet and may change over time. Investors should conduct their own research and consult with financial professionals before making any investment decisions. Read the full disclaimer here.
Investments in securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing. Brokerage will not exceed SEBI prescribed limit. The securities are quoted as an example and not as a recommendation. SEBI Registration No-INZ000200137 Member Id NSE-08081; BSE-673; MSE-1024, MCX-56285, NCDEX-1262.
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