Hi Jinal, I am 26 and currently starting SIP 9 months ago . Nippon small cap -2k Quant small cap -3.3k Bandhan small cap - 2k Motilal Midcap - 2.5k Sbi long term equity - 2k Sbi psu - 50k lumpsum Could you please suggest portfolio allocation and if I want to increase my from 13300 to 40000
Ans: At 26, you are off to a good start. You have taken initiative early. That itself is a big advantage. You have built a solid base with Rs. 13,300 SIP and Rs. 50,000 lump sum. Now you are planning to scale it to Rs. 40,000 SIP monthly. Let us build a complete 360-degree strategy to match that.
Analysing Your Current Portfolio
You are currently investing in:
3 Small Cap funds – Rs. 7,300
1 Mid Cap fund – Rs. 2,500
1 ELSS (Tax Saver) – Rs. 2,000
1 PSU thematic fund – Rs. 50,000 lump sum
Small Cap Overexposure
Small caps are high risk and high return.
55% of your SIP is into small caps now.
At 26, risk-taking is fine, but too much can backfire.
Small caps are also more volatile than other equity categories.
Mid Cap Underrepresented
Only Rs. 2,500 is allocated.
Mid caps balance risk and return.
They suit your age better than overloading on small caps.
PSU Fund Caution
Thematic PSU funds are not for long-term SIPs.
They work better for short bursts or tactical allocations.
Do not increase this further.
ELSS for Tax Saving
A good move for 80C benefit.
Continue with one ELSS.
No need for more tax-savers.
Ideal Asset Allocation for Rs. 40,000 SIP
We now restructure your Rs. 40,000 SIP goal.
Recommended Category-Wise Split
Large & Flexi Cap: Rs. 13,000 (33%)
Mid Cap: Rs. 9,000 (22%)
Small Cap: Rs. 7,000 (18%)
Multi Asset / Balanced Advantage: Rs. 6,000 (15%)
ELSS (Tax saving): Rs. 2,000 (5%)
Thematic (Optional): Rs. 3,000 (7%)
You are building long-term wealth. So diversification is important.
Why Include Large/Flexi Cap Funds
They are less volatile than small/mid caps.
They include India’s top companies.
Help maintain portfolio stability in tough times.
Why Mid Cap Allocation Should Rise
Mid caps offer strong long-term compounding.
They provide better balance than small caps.
You are young, so 20–25% is suitable.
Why Balanced Advantage/Multi Asset
These funds bring stability during corrections.
They auto-shift between equity and debt.
Ideal for mental peace and smoother growth.
ELSS – Already Covered
You are investing Rs. 2,000 here.
That is fine for tax planning now.
No need to increase unless Section 80C not fully used.
Avoid More in PSU Fund
Thematic funds are risky and cyclical.
Limit to Rs. 50,000 already invested.
Do not SIP further in this theme.
Suggested Fund Types to Add
Please do not go for direct plans.
Direct funds may seem to save cost.
But they offer no guidance or review.
Regular funds through a CFP-backed MFD ensure discipline.
You also get behavioural support during market volatility.
Always value long-term performance, not short-term low cost.
Avoid index funds.
Index funds cannot beat the market.
They follow the market blindly.
They do not react to bad sectors or poor quality companies.
Actively managed funds adapt better.
Skilled fund managers give better downside protection.
So always prefer good regular active funds. Let a Certified Financial Planner guide fund selection.
Additional Wealth Creation Tips
Now let us think beyond SIP.
Build Emergency Fund
Keep at least 6 months expenses aside.
Use bank RD or short-term mutual fund for this.
This avoids stopping SIP during crisis.
Review Insurance Policies
You are 26 now.
Take a Rs. 1 crore term insurance if not already done.
No need for money-back or endowment plans.
If you have LIC, ULIP, or mixed plans, exit them smartly.
Reinvest in mutual funds instead.
Boost PPF Annually
PPF gives fixed tax-free returns.
Good for conservative allocation.
You can keep Rs. 5,000 monthly if goal is far.
Avoid Real Estate for Now
Property locks your money.
No liquidity.
High costs and low rental yield.
Mutual funds give better return with more flexibility.
Portfolio Review Strategy
Review SIP performance every year.
Use Certified Financial Planner for regular monitoring.
Rebalance if small cap rises too much.
Track goal progress – not just fund return.
Do not keep switching funds too often.
How to Scale from Rs. 13,300 to Rs. 40,000
Increase in steps. Not in one jump.
Step-Up Plan:
Month 1: Increase to Rs. 20,000
Month 4: Increase to Rs. 30,000
Month 7: Raise to Rs. 40,000
This keeps it comfortable for you.
If salary increases or expenses reduce, accelerate faster.
Retirement and Long-Term Goal Preparation
You are 26 now. Retirement is 34 years away.
Use this time wisely.
A Rs. 40,000 SIP with step-ups every 2–3 years can create huge wealth.
But stay invested for 15+ years.
Avoid stopping during market corrections.
Power of compounding works best when uninterrupted.
Final Insights
You are already thinking 10 years ahead. That itself is a strength.
Continue SIP discipline every month.
Add large and balanced funds to reduce portfolio risk.
Avoid increasing in small or thematic funds.
Choose active regular plans via trusted CFP-led MFD only.
Stay away from direct funds and index funds.
Slowly scale SIPs to Rs. 40,000 in a planned way.
Review performance annually. Don’t check returns monthly.
Keep your insurance and emergency fund updated.
Let every rupee you earn have a clear job to do.
This 360-degree approach will help you grow faster and safer.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment