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Is Banasthali University a Good Choice for my Daughter's CS Education?

Radheshyam

Radheshyam Zanwar  |2995 Answers  |Ask -

MHT-CET, IIT-JEE, NEET-UG Expert - Answered on Sep 06, 2024

Radheshyam Zanwar is the founder of Zanwar Classes which prepares aspirants for competitive exams such as MHT-CET, IIT-JEE and NEET-UG.
Based in Aurangabad, Maharashtra, it provides coaching for Class 10 and Class 12 students as well.
Since the last 25 years, Radheshyam has been teaching mathematics to Class 11 and Class 12 students and coaching them for engineering and medical entrance examinations.
Radheshyam completed his civil engineering from the Government Engineering College in Aurangabad.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Sep 04, 2024Hindi
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Career

Sir my daughter has got admission in banasthali vidyapeeth in CS branch can we go with this plz guide

Ans: Hello.

Banasthali Vidyapeeth (Located in Banasthali, near Village Tonk, Rajasthan) is a good choice for Computer Science, especially if your daughter values a women-centric, safe campus with strong academics and placement opportunities. It is a reputed institution, but make sure it aligns with her career goals and campus preferences. Best of luck for your daughter.

If you are dissatisfied with the reply, please ask again without hesitation.
If satisfied, please like and follow me.
Thanks

Radheshyam
Career

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8889 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 10, 2025
Money
Prabhu Asked on - Jun 09, 2025 Hi sir, I'm 39 working with MNC with take home 1.4L. Kindly advice 2 thing. Shall I close the loan with PPF and does my investment are on right way. Investment 30L ESOP 30L MF 15L PPF ( matured) 25K yearly in ulip for 20 years stared in 2022. 12K SIP Liabilities 20L home loan ( 9 yr completed) 30K expenses monthly 21K health insurance yrly 40K term insurance yrly
Ans: You are 39 years old, working with a multinational company. Your take-home income is Rs. 1.4 lakh per month. You are asking two questions:

Should I close my home loan using my matured PPF?

Are my investments on the right track?

Let us evaluate both in a detailed and professional manner. We will look at your finances from a full 360-degree view to help you take better decisions.

Present Financial Snapshot
Let us understand your current assets and liabilities first:

Take-home salary: Rs. 1.4 lakh per month

Home loan outstanding: Rs. 20 lakh (9 years completed)

Monthly EMI (assumed): Not mentioned, but likely Rs. 20,000–25,000

Monthly expenses: Rs. 30,000

Health insurance premium: Rs. 21,000 per year

Term insurance premium: Rs. 40,000 per year

SIP: Rs. 12,000 per month

ULIP: Rs. 25,000 per year (started in 2022 for 20 years)

PPF: Rs. 15 lakh (matured)

Mutual funds: Rs. 30 lakh

ESOPs: Rs. 30 lakh

Let us now analyse both your questions step by step.

Should You Close Home Loan Using PPF?
You have completed 9 years of a housing loan.

Only Rs. 20 lakh is left as balance.

PPF has matured and holds Rs. 15 lakh.

Your PPF is a safe and tax-free investment.

You should not use the full amount to close your home loan.

Here is why: Home loan gives tax benefits on both interest and principal.

It also helps you build your credit history.

Your EMI seems comfortable at Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 25,000.

Your net monthly surplus is very good after expenses and SIP.

Do partial prepayment of home loan only.

Use Rs. 5 lakh from PPF to reduce your loan balance.

This reduces your interest burden.

Keep Rs. 10 lakh in PPF for safety and emergencies.

Don’t close full loan now.

If you reduce loan tenure (not EMI), it saves more interest.

This way, you reduce interest and still keep benefits.

Don't touch the rest of PPF.

It can also act as emergency fund in job break, health issue or family need.

Full closure of home loan is not necessary if EMI is manageable.

Should You Continue or Surrender the ULIP?
You are paying Rs. 25,000 per year in a ULIP since 2022.

ULIPs mix insurance and investment in one product.

In the first few years, most of your money goes in charges.

They are very costly, and the returns are unpredictable.

You already have term insurance for pure protection.

ULIP is not needed.

You can surrender this policy immediately.

Reinvest the amount in mutual funds through SIP or STP.

This way, you get better returns with lower costs.

ULIP does not offer flexibility or goal matching.

Mutual funds give transparent performance tracking.

Avoid mixing insurance with investments in future.

Is Your Investment Strategy on the Right Path?
Let’s analyse your current investment portfolio from all sides.

1. Mutual Funds – Rs. 30 lakh

This is a strong amount for your age.

You are running a SIP of Rs. 12,000 monthly.

This shows discipline and long-term thinking.

Try to increase SIP yearly with salary hike.

Aim for Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 25,000 SIP monthly in next 2 years.

Invest in actively managed funds, not index funds.

Index funds only copy the market and don’t give extra return.

Active funds have fund managers to help beat inflation.

Also, avoid direct plan funds if used.

They may look cheaper, but offer zero guidance or review.

Use regular plan via Certified Financial Planner (CFP).

This gives ongoing support, rebalancing, and handholding.

Review your MF portfolio once in 6 months.

Keep mix of large cap, flexi cap and mid cap funds.

Avoid small cap if your goals are short term.

Long-term goals should drive your MF selection.

Keep 1 goal for each MF. Example: Retirement, freedom, child, etc.

This brings clarity and emotional discipline.

2. ESOPs – Rs. 30 lakh

ESOPs can create sudden wealth but are high risk.

They are linked to one company, your employer.

This is called “double risk”.

If your job and stock both go down, you face double pain.

Keep ESOPs within 20% of your total portfolio.

You already have Rs. 30 lakh in ESOP, and Rs. 30 lakh in MFs.

That’s a 50-50 split now.

Start selling some ESOP every year.

Move the money into mutual funds or debt funds.

This reduces risk and adds diversity.

Also, check tax rules before selling ESOPs.

Avoid waiting for maximum price or market timing.

Take money out slowly over 2–3 years.

Don't link your wealth to one company stock.

3. PPF – Rs. 15 lakh (matured)

You have done very well by holding PPF till maturity.

PPF is one of the best low-risk options in India.

Use only part of it for loan prepayment.

Keep balance for emergencies or future needs.

You can also open a new PPF again.

This helps save tax under Section 80C.

Use PPF as a safety cushion, not for aggressive growth.

4. SIP – Rs. 12,000 monthly

SIP is a good habit for wealth creation.

Increase it step by step every year.

Add Rs. 2,000–3,000 more every 6 months.

Your current income allows higher SIP.

But maintain balance between investing, EMI, insurance and life needs.

Insurance Coverage Assessment
1. Health Insurance

You are paying Rs. 21,000 per year.

Check if the cover is at least Rs. 25 lakh floater.

If not, take a super top-up plan.

Health expenses are rising faster than income.

Good insurance protects your savings and wealth.

2. Term Insurance

You are paying Rs. 40,000 yearly.

Ensure cover is 15 to 20 times your annual income.

Your income is Rs. 16.8 lakh yearly (1.4 lakh x 12).

So, term cover should be at least Rs. 3 crore.

If current cover is lower, take an extra policy.

Term plans are cheap and pure protection.

Don't delay increasing your coverage.

Suggestions for Future Financial Growth
Track your net worth every 6 months.

Maintain a monthly budget sheet to manage expenses.

Avoid luxury spending from bonuses or incentives.

Don’t buy any new real estate for investment.

Real estate locks money and gives poor flexibility.

Avoid F&O, crypto, or stock tips from social media.

These look exciting but destroy wealth silently.

Stick to your own goals and asset allocation.

Write your goals on paper – with amount and time.

Example: Rs. 2 crore for retirement by age 55, Rs. 40 lakh for child.

Link each investment to one goal.

This gives emotional connection and purpose.

Stay patient during market ups and downs.

Don’t stop SIPs during market fall. That’s when you get more value.

Meet a Certified Financial Planner every year to review.

Life changes. So should your plan.

Finally
Do not close your entire home loan using PPF.

Do partial prepayment with Rs. 5 lakh only.

Keep Rs. 10 lakh from PPF as emergency buffer.

Surrender your ULIP and shift to mutual funds.

Increase SIP step by step.

Reduce ESOP exposure to avoid risk.

Review term and health insurance coverage immediately.

Maintain goal-based investing using active mutual funds.

Avoid direct and index funds.

Keep meeting Certified Financial Planner every year.

This builds financial freedom, not just wealth.

You are already on a strong path. Just refine it smartly.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8889 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 10, 2025
Money
Sir i have 14 lacs in savings account and have a emi of 65k for 80 lacs loan at the moment. How much should i invest and how much to should i prepay my loan.
Ans: You have Rs. 14 lakh in your savings account. You are paying an EMI of Rs. 65,000 for a home loan of Rs. 80 lakh.

You want to know how much to invest and how much to prepay.

Let us do a complete 360-degree analysis.

We will keep the answer simple, but give deep insights for better decisions.

Understand the Current Picture
You have Rs. 14 lakh in savings account.

You are repaying Rs. 65,000 EMI monthly.

You have a large home loan of Rs. 80 lakh.

Most likely, your home loan tenure is 15 to 20 years.

The loan interest in initial years is mostly high.

Savings account gives very low returns.

Keeping too much idle in savings hurts your money.

A good balance is needed between safety, growth, and EMI relief.

Emergency Fund Comes First
First step is to check your emergency fund.

You should always keep 6 months of total expenses aside.

Include EMI, household costs, child fees, medical, etc.

If total monthly cost is Rs. 1 lakh, emergency fund must be Rs. 6 lakh.

If it is Rs. 1.3 lakh monthly, keep Rs. 7.5 to 8 lakh minimum.

This should be in FD or liquid mutual fund.

Do not invest or prepay using this portion.

Emergency fund is your shield against sudden shocks.

Only the extra amount beyond this can be used.

How Much to Prepay from Rs. 14 Lakh?
Once emergency fund is set aside, you are left with Rs. 6 to 7 lakh.

Home loan prepayment in early years saves a lot of interest.

Especially if your interest is above 8.5%, prepaying is smart.

Use a portion of the remaining money to prepay the loan.

But do not prepay everything. You also need investments for future goals.

So, use about Rs. 3 to 4 lakh for home loan prepayment now.

This reduces your loan balance and total interest outgo.

You also keep flexibility for future EMI relief if needed.

How Much to Invest from Rs. 14 Lakh?
After emergency fund and prepayment, you may have Rs. 3 to 4 lakh left.

You can invest this in mutual funds for long-term wealth.

Do not invest in lump sum fully in equity funds.

Invest this balance using STP (Systematic Transfer Plan).

First park the money in a liquid fund.

From there, shift Rs. 25,000–30,000 monthly into equity mutual funds.

This keeps risk lower and avoids market timing mistakes.

Choose good actively managed mutual funds.

Avoid index funds. They don’t perform better in Indian markets.

Index funds just copy the market. They don’t beat it.

Active funds are managed by experts and often give better returns.

Invest through regular plan via MFD with CFP guidance.

Avoid direct funds. They look cheaper, but offer no support or correction.

MFD with CFP gives you regular portfolio review and changes when needed.

Maintain Monthly SIP Discipline
Do not stop your monthly SIPs if already running.

If you are not doing SIPs yet, start one now.

Even a small SIP of Rs. 10,000 to 15,000 is powerful.

Link your SIPs to long-term goals like retirement, child future, freedom fund.

SIPs give you cost averaging, which beats market ups and downs.

Over 10 to 15 years, SIPs create strong wealth.

As your income grows, increase SIP amount yearly.

This is how wealth is created in real life – not through lottery or quick trades.

Benefits of Balanced Approach: Prepay + Invest
Let us now understand the real benefit of splitting your Rs. 14 lakh.

Emergency fund gives peace of mind.

Prepayment reduces your interest burden.

Investment gives your money a chance to grow.

This is how financial maturity is built.

You don’t put all in one basket.

You don’t lock all money into property.

You also don’t risk all into market.

You keep liquidity, reduce debt, and grow wealth side by side.

Bonus Tip: How to Review Loan Prepayment Plan
Check with your bank if there’s a cap or condition for partial prepayment.

Ask if you can reduce EMI or reduce tenure after prepaying.

Reducing tenure is better than reducing EMI.

Lower tenure saves more in total interest.

Check your home loan schedule every year.

If you get bonus, gift, or extra income, do small prepayments.

This will cut years off your loan.

But never sacrifice your emergency fund or investments for prepayment.

Your financial freedom is more important than just closing the loan.

Other Suggestions to Strengthen Your Financial Life
Ensure you have a term insurance equal to at least 15 times your annual income.

Ensure you have a family floater health policy for Rs. 25 lakh or more.

Keep an excel sheet to track all EMIs, SIPs, insurance, expenses.

Every 6 months, check your net worth.

Use surplus funds wisely, not for lifestyle inflation.

Do not break investments to repay loans in future.

Always separate your emergency, investment, and EMI money.

Meet a Certified Financial Planner once a year to check your plan.

This keeps your wealth engine tuned and moving forward.

Stay away from quick-money ideas like F&O, crypto, penny stocks.

These destroy wealth and create stress.

Follow a steady plan. Wealth builds slowly but surely.

Finally
You have Rs. 14 lakh in savings. This is a strong position.

Use Rs. 6 to 8 lakh to build or top up your emergency fund.

Use Rs. 3 to 4 lakh for home loan partial prepayment.

Use Rs. 3 to 4 lakh for mutual fund investing with SIP or STP.

This 3-way plan gives you safety, EMI relief, and growth.

You reduce loan burden without losing future opportunities.

You stay ready for emergency and invest for long term.

This is the smartest use of lump sum money.

Build on this foundation with monthly SIPs, yearly reviews, and steady savings.

This way, you achieve freedom, not just debt closure.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8889 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 10, 2025
Money
I am 32, earning Rs 2 lakh per month with a home loan EMI of 57,000 and education loan EMI of 11,000. I send 30,000 to my parents in Indore. I've been investing 20,000 monthly in SIPs across largecap and flexicap funds. I recently received a 5 lakh annual bonus. Should I use it to prepay my home loan or invest in SIPs for better long-term growth?
Ans: You are 32 years old and already earning Rs. 2 lakh monthly. That’s a strong start. You're managing Rs. 57,000 home loan EMI and Rs. 11,000 education loan EMI. You send Rs. 30,000 to your parents monthly. You also invest Rs. 20,000 SIP in largecap and flexicap funds. You have now received a Rs. 5 lakh bonus.

You want to know whether to prepay your home loan or invest this Rs. 5 lakh in SIPs.

Let us analyse both options step by step, from a full 360-degree perspective.

We will look at all angles and give you a practical plan.

Understanding Your Current Monthly Flow
Monthly income is Rs. 2 lakh.

Home loan EMI is Rs. 57,000.

Education loan EMI is Rs. 11,000.

You send Rs. 30,000 to your parents in Indore.

You invest Rs. 20,000 monthly in SIPs.

Your fixed monthly outgo is Rs. 1.18 lakh.

So, you are left with Rs. 82,000 monthly.

You need to manage your rent, food, travel, savings and other expenses from this.

It shows that your finances are stable and under control.

You also have discipline in investing regularly.

Receiving Rs. 5 lakh bonus gives you a chance to fast-track your goals.

Thinking About the Home Loan
Home loan EMI is Rs. 57,000 per month.

Most home loans run for 20 years.

The interest outgo is very high in early years.

Prepayment in early years reduces interest greatly.

Prepayment does not attract any penalty in most home loans.

But if you claim full home loan interest benefit under Section 24, check tax impact.

Full deduction up to Rs. 2 lakh per year is allowed.

If you prepay too much, you may lose some of this tax benefit.

Also, home loan gives long repayment term. That gives cash flow flexibility.

So, we need to evaluate if locking bonus into prepayment is the best use.

Education Loan Angle
EMI of Rs. 11,000 is small compared to income.

Education loans give tax benefit under Section 80E.

You get deduction for interest paid. No cap for years if loan is in active status.

But the benefit continues only for 8 years from start of repayment.

Also, education loan interest rate is often higher than home loan.

If your education loan is old and at high interest, partial repayment makes sense.

Otherwise, it can be kept as is if affordable.

Benefits of Mutual Fund SIPs
You already invest Rs. 20,000 in mutual funds monthly.

This is a very good habit.

Largecap and flexicap funds are balanced choices for long-term wealth.

These funds can grow faster than loan savings, over long time.

But mutual funds are volatile. They carry risk in short term.

SIPs work well if invested for 7 years or more.

For long-term goals like retirement, child’s future, or financial freedom, SIP is better.

But lump sum investment must be done only after risk review.

What Is the Best Use of the Rs. 5 Lakh Bonus?
Let us look at multiple good ways to use this bonus.

We will evaluate each angle separately.

Option 1: Use Full Bonus to Prepay Home Loan
You save a large amount in total interest over time.

It reduces EMI burden or shortens loan term.

You reduce stress in monthly cash flow in future.

But the money gets locked in the house.

You cannot access it in an emergency.

It does not grow in value.

It gives guaranteed savings, but not wealth creation.

If you have no emergency fund, this option is risky.



Option 2: Invest Full Rs. 5 Lakh in Mutual Funds
You create long-term wealth from this bonus.

Over 10 years, this can double or more.

You can use this later for a big goal like early retirement.

But mutual funds have risk of loss in short term.

Also, no guaranteed returns.

You need to stay invested long term and stay calm during market ups and downs.

If you have no emergency fund, again, this is not safe.

Emergency Fund Comes First
Before you choose prepayment or SIP, ask this first:

Do you have 6 months’ expenses saved as emergency fund?

Your monthly expenses are about Rs. 1.2 to 1.3 lakh.

So, emergency fund should be at least Rs. 7.5 to 8 lakh.

If you don’t have this yet, you must build it first.

Emergency fund should be kept in liquid mutual fund, FD, or savings account.

This gives peace and security during job loss, health crisis or big expense.

This also allows SIPs and EMIs to continue in hard times.

Use Rs. 1.5 to 2 lakh from the bonus to build emergency fund.

This is your foundation.

Ideal Split of Rs. 5 Lakh Bonus
Instead of putting all in one place, do a balanced split.

This gives you safety, peace, growth and loan savings together.

Here is a good model:

Rs. 2 lakh: Build emergency fund (if not already there)

Rs. 1 lakh: Partial prepayment of education loan (especially if interest is high)

Rs. 2 lakh: Invest in mutual funds for long term

This is a 360-degree plan.

It covers immediate safety, medium-term saving, and long-term growth.

It does not lock everything in the house or in markets.

It also keeps your risk low and returns reasonable.

Extra Suggestions to Strengthen Finances
Continue SIPs at Rs. 20,000 monthly.

Once education loan closes, increase SIP by Rs. 11,000 monthly.

Do not stop SIP even after buying a house.

Review your SIP funds once a year with a Certified Financial Planner.

Choose regular funds through a trusted MFD. Avoid direct funds.

Direct funds do not give guidance. They seem cheap but lead to poor decisions.

MFD with CFP helps in fund selection, discipline and rebalancing.

Invest in growth plans only if you are sure of the holding period.

If you plan to withdraw in less than 3 years, do not invest in equity.

Create goal-based SIPs – one for retirement, one for parents, one for your own freedom.

Review all insurance. Have term insurance and health cover already in place.

Track expenses for three months. Cut non-useful spends and increase savings.

Keep bonus or any windfall money for meaningful goals only.

Never mix consumption (like holidays) with your wealth-building money.

Tax Points to Keep in Mind
You will not pay tax for home loan prepayment.

But mutual fund gains are taxed on sale.

Short-term capital gains (within 1 year) – taxed at 20%.

Long-term capital gains (after 1 year) – first Rs. 1.25 lakh gain is tax-free.

Above that, taxed at 12.5%.

So, hold mutual funds for long term to get benefit.

Do not redeem mutual funds in panic or to pay EMI.

Always sell only after 1 year to reduce tax and maximise growth.

Finally
Rs. 5 lakh bonus is a gift. Use it wisely.

Don’t rush to prepay loan just because it feels good.

Don’t invest all into mutual funds only thinking of high returns.

First, secure your base with an emergency fund.

Next, reduce high-interest loans partially.

Then, invest the rest for long-term wealth creation.

This gives you strong financial health.

You feel secure, flexible and confident.

A Certified Financial Planner can review your full plan yearly.

This gives you the right direction in all seasons of life.

Stay invested, stay protected, and keep growing step by step.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

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