
Hi Sir, I'm a 37 yrs aged salaried employee working in Ahmedabad with monthly in hand salary of 150 k after tax and with 2 kids my son(his age is around 5 yrs) and my daughter (her age is around 2 yrs).
My financial details are as below:-
1) Term Life Insurance (2 crore)
2) Health insurance from 2 companies (15 lakhs)
3) Emergency fund (8 lakhs)
4) MF 12 year old (31.50 lakhs as on date)
5) My House (Approx. 60 lakhs)
My Monthly expenses
1) 30 k Mutual Funds SIP (Which I use to increase 10% per year)
2) Home Loan EMI 14.75 k(Loan o/s 20.00 lakhs)
3) The cost of running House 50.00 k
4) Monthly savings approx. 50 to 55 k
Stock Market Portfolio
1) I am not professional trader but from last 8 years I am doing trading with my own methods & with proper hedging. My Trading capital is approx. 35 lakhs and I use to get 50-55 k monthly from this but I never withdraw amount it's get accumulated due to that my capital is now 35.00 lakhs.
My question
I want to make sure that my both Childs will not get any hurdle in their Higher Education. I am having monthly 50 k extra amount from my salary but I am totally confused that whether I should put it in My Trading portfolio or in Mutual fund. Because mutual funds are giving approx. 9.40% after all deductions including tax and all I calculated on my own. I am getting 17-18% yearly from my trading but it's Risky. I want to ask that whether should I put this extra 50k to secure my Childs Higher studies.
Ans: You’ve done a lot of good things already.
Strong insurance, growing MF corpus, steady income, and careful trading discipline.
You’re asking the right question at the right time — How do I secure my children’s education without any risk?
This is a perfect moment to design a 360-degree financial strategy focused on certainty, not just returns.
Let’s assess this together.
Priority: Ensure Certainty for Your Children’s Future
Higher education is a non-negotiable financial goal
You must ensure it happens with 100% confidence, even in worst-case scenarios
For this, you should not take unnecessary risk on this goal
Your Rs. 50K/month surplus must work safely towards this target
Your trading income can continue — but should not be used for this goal
That money can be used later for early retirement or wealth building
Let us now break this down in practical terms.
Education Goals Should Be Firewalled from Market Risk
Your son is 5. He will need funds at 18. That’s 13 years ahead.
Your daughter is 2. Her goal is about 16 years away.
You have a clear time horizon, which is a huge advantage
This allows disciplined planning using equity mutual funds
But not every kind of equity exposure is suitable for this purpose
Volatility is good for long-term wealth — but not for goal-specific milestones
Hence, use mutual funds wisely, not randomly
Why Trading Is NOT Right for Education Goals
Let’s accept — you are skilled in trading.
Still, it has no place in goal-based investing.
Trading is always risky, no matter how skilled you are
A single bad year can wipe out returns or even capital
For children’s education, you need stability, not thrills
Trading may be used to create wealth, not to meet fixed goals
It’s like doing stunts when taking your kids to school — not required
So, don’t mix trading portfolio with education funding
Keep both completely separate
Mutual Funds: The Better Path for Goal Certainty
You already have Rs. 31.5 lakhs in mutual funds.
This is a great start.
Add your Rs. 50K/month to these investments for next 10 to 15 years
Stick to diversified equity mutual funds managed by experienced professionals
Prefer regular funds through Certified Financial Planner
Avoid direct funds — they give no support or guidance when markets fall
Regular funds help you stay on track through proper advice and handholding
Most investors in direct plans panic or make mistakes during corrections
Also avoid index funds — let me explain why.
Why Index Funds Are Wrong for Education Goals
Index funds are popular because of low cost.
But cost is not the full story.
Index funds blindly follow the index, good or bad
They cannot switch sectors or stocks during market crisis
In 2008 and 2020, index funds fell hard and took long to recover
No strategy, no protection, no risk filter — only blind following
For children’s education, this is not acceptable
You need actively managed funds with clear strategy and consistent performance
Fund manager must take calls during bull and bear phases
That’s why actively managed funds in regular plans are ideal.
Suggested Mutual Fund Strategy (Without Scheme Names)
You should have a structured portfolio with these layers:
Flexi Cap Fund: Core growth, across market caps
Large & Mid Cap Fund: Balanced growth with limited volatility
Aggressive Hybrid Fund: Mix of equity and debt, smoother ride
Mid Cap Fund (Optional): Only if risk appetite is high
You don’t need small cap, sectoral, or international funds for this goal.
Keep portfolio simple, diversified and review annually
Avoid new fund offers or thematic stories — no relevance to education goals
SIPs with Annual Step-Up = Perfect Tool
You are already stepping up SIP by 10% yearly
This is an excellent habit.
It helps fight education inflation (around 8% yearly in India)
It uses compounding effectively with growing contribution
Continue Rs. 50K SIP in 3-4 carefully selected schemes
Review performance yearly with your Certified Financial Planner
If any fund underperforms for 3 years, switch it safely to better option
Don’t decide based on one-year returns or market noise
Use Goal-Specific Buckets for Children
It helps to break your SIPs into 2 buckets:
Bucket A: Son’s Higher Education
SIP for next 13 years
Use Flexi Cap + Large & Mid Cap + Hybrid mix
Bucket B: Daughter’s Higher Education
SIP for next 16 years
Slightly more aggressive portfolio acceptable
This way, goals remain separate, tracked, and managed individually
Don’t combine all goals into one single MF portfolio
Use STP for Final 3 Years Before Goal
When each child is 15, shift SIP value to low-risk funds
Use Systematic Transfer Plan (STP) to move from equity to debt gradually
This protects the amount from sudden market crashes
This should be planned in advance
CFP will help manage these switches without emotional panic
Many investors ignore this and lose money just before goal date
You must protect capital when goal is near
Tax Awareness Is Also Important
New tax rules are simple:
Equity mutual funds:
LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%
STCG taxed at 20%
Debt mutual funds:
Taxed as per your income slab
Keep records of all redemptions for capital gain tracking
During withdrawal, your Certified Financial Planner will help with efficient tax management
Emergency Fund and Insurance Are Strong Already
You already have Rs. 8 lakh emergency fund.
Also Rs. 2 crore term life cover and Rs. 15 lakh health cover.
This makes your foundation very strong.
So your Rs. 50K/month can be safely invested for future goals.
You don’t need more insurance, ULIPs, or endowment plans.
If you had LIC or any investment-cum-insurance — I would ask you to surrender.
Thankfully, your structure is clean and efficient.
Your Trading Portfolio Can Be Used Differently
Right now you have Rs. 35 lakh trading capital.
You are not withdrawing anything, which is fine.
Continue this — but use it for building long-term corpus.
Maybe for early retirement, luxury purchases or legacy.
But don’t consider this as children’s education backup
Because it’s not protected from market risk or psychological pressure
Use this power responsibly, not emotionally
Discipline is key — don’t mix trading and long-term investing
Simple Action Plan for You
Continue current SIPs with 10% step-up
Add new Rs. 50K SIP in carefully selected mutual funds
Keep children’s education funds separate from other goals
Avoid index funds, direct plans, ULIPs, and NFOs
Stick to regular plans through Certified Financial Planner
Review all funds every 12 months
From age 15 of child, shift money to debt slowly through STP
Let trading profits accumulate separately — don’t rely on it for family goals
Maintain emergency fund as it is — don’t use for investing
Keep tracking your goals, not the market
Finally
You are a responsible father and thoughtful investor.
Your current lifestyle, savings, and planning show high maturity.
Your children’s future can be secured easily — if you separate goal-based investing from trading returns.
Use mutual funds as your education engine.
Stay disciplined and guided by Certified Financial Planner.
That’s how you will not just grow wealth, but achieve goals without stress.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment