Hi there, I am 25 year old and I am planning to invest 25-30k in something not sure where so needed your help and I have existing monthly investment close to 8-9k Existing MF 1)Nippon india small cap direct growth 2)Bajaj Finserv balanced advantage fund direct growth 3) ICICI prudential commodities fund direct 4) digital gold 5) nifty bees Please tell me if this is the right approach
Ans: At 25, starting early is your biggest advantage. You’ve already begun investing. That itself is a good step. Now, you are thinking deeper. That is wise. You want to grow wealth steadily. You also want to avoid risky mistakes. That is the best mindset to have now.
Let’s now take a full look at your situation.
We will cover:
What is going right in your current plan
What can be improved
What to do with your new Rs. 25,000–30,000
Disadvantages of index funds and direct plans
Safer and smarter asset mix
Future goal planning from now
Role of Certified Financial Planner in wealth growth
Final insights for your age and journey
Your Current Portfolio Assessment:
You invest Rs. 8,000–9,000 monthly
You hold a small cap fund, balanced advantage, commodities, and digital gold
You also invest in Nifty Bees – an ETF tracking index
This is a diverse portfolio, but some gaps are there
Overall structure lacks stability and purpose right now
Let’s evaluate each choice separately.
Small Cap Fund:
High growth but high risk also
Small caps are volatile in short term
Better to hold small cap only if you have long-term view
Limit small cap exposure to 15–20% of total portfolio
SIP is the right way to invest here
Balanced Advantage Fund:
This gives equity and debt mix
It adjusts automatically based on market
Good for first-time investors
But do not depend only on this for long-term wealth
Commodities Fund:
Commodity funds are highly volatile
Mostly linked to oil, metals, or international prices
Not ideal for monthly SIP unless for a specific reason
Better limit to a small part of portfolio only
Does not create steady long-term wealth like equity mutual funds
Digital Gold:
Gold is a good hedge for risk
But should not be main part of investments
Keep 5–10% of portfolio in gold, not more
Avoid digital gold for large, long-term investments
It does not beat inflation in the long run
Nifty Bees (Index ETF):
You are investing in an index fund indirectly
Index funds do not have active fund managers
They follow market blindly, without adjustments
They perform poorly in falling markets
No downside protection at all
Actively managed mutual funds are better for this reason
Experts in active funds manage based on economy, not blindly copy index
So better to shift this part to an actively managed fund
Issues With Direct Mutual Funds:
You are choosing direct mutual fund plans
Direct plans do not have expert advisory built-in
No one is there to guide or do annual reviews
You may miss changing market signals or fund underperformance
Regular plans through MFDs with CFP support give guided decisions
You get proper allocation, rebalancing, and financial planning support
Performance difference may be higher in long run due to poor choices
Certified Financial Planner gives peace of mind and accountability
What Can Be Improved:
You need core stability in the portfolio
Right now, your mix is tilted towards high risk
You do not have large cap or flexi cap funds
No defined plan for future goals like house, marriage, etc.
No emergency fund or insurance mentioned in question
You are choosing funds in isolation without goal-based structure
What You Should Do With Rs. 25,000–30,000 Extra:
Use this monthly surplus wisely
Start SIP in actively managed flexi cap mutual fund
Add a large-cap fund for stability and size
Add a good hybrid equity-debt mutual fund for balance
Avoid more commodity, small cap, or sector-specific themes
Divide your Rs. 30,000 monthly like this:
– Rs. 10,000 into flexi cap mutual fund
– Rs. 10,000 into large cap mutual fund
– Rs. 5,000 into hybrid mutual fund
– Rs. 5,000 into liquid or ultra-short debt fund for short term goals
Keep digital gold limit to Rs. 500–1000 per month only
Stop index fund like Nifty Bees and shift to active mutual fund
Track fund performance every 6 months and rebalance once a year
Stick to regular mutual funds with Certified Financial Planner support
Goal-Based Investing Is Important:
Right now, you are investing without a defined goal
Define 3–5 goals now and assign money to each
Example: Emergency fund, buying vehicle, house down payment, marriage, travel
Assign each goal a time period and expected cost
Allocate funds accordingly – short, medium, and long-term buckets
Emergency fund should be Rs. 1.5 to 2 lakh at least
Use liquid funds to build this
Future goals like buying home or car in 3–5 years – use hybrid funds
Retirement goal can have more equity and flexi cap funds
Assign each SIP to one goal
Review goals once a year
Update your SIP amount as income grows
Asset Mix You Should Aim For:
Equity (large, flexi, hybrid) – 65%
Debt mutual funds or liquid funds – 20%
Gold – 5–7%
Emergency fund (cash or ultra-short debt fund) – 8–10%
Avoid commodities, index funds, and high-risk themes above 5–8%
Always link each investment to a purpose
Certified Financial Planner Can Help You:
You are young and still learning money skills
CFP will help you build a full financial roadmap
CFP guides on asset allocation based on your life stage
Also checks if funds are working well or need change
CFP helps you avoid poor choices and emotional investing
You also get help in taxes, documentation, and long-term planning
With a CFP, your plan becomes goal-based and stress-free
Finally:
You have started early, and that is your biggest asset
Your current funds need realignment and stability
Digital gold and commodities should be limited
Avoid index funds like Nifty Bees. They do not offer smart handling
Avoid direct funds. They lack guidance and make you invest blindly
Use regular mutual funds with support from Certified Financial Planner
Keep asset mix balanced between equity, debt, and gold
Always link each SIP to a goal. Do not invest without purpose
Rebalance portfolio every 12 months. Exit poor funds, add better ones
Focus more on time in the market, not timing the market
Review your income, goals, and risk every year. Update investments accordingly
Keep investing for 10–15 years with patience and plan
Wealth will grow automatically if you stay disciplined and guided
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment