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Mayank

Mayank Chandel  |2510 Answers  |Ask -

IIT-JEE, NEET-UG, SAT, CLAT, CA, CS Exam Expert - Answered on May 30, 2025

Mayank Chandel has over 18 years of experience coaching and training students for various exams like IIT-JEE, NEET-UG, SAT, CLAT, CA and CS.
Besides coaching students for entrance exams, he also guides Class 10 and 12 students about career options in engineering, medicine and the vocational sciences.
His interest in coaching students led him to launch the firm, CareerStreets.
Chandel holds an engineering degree in electronics from Nagpur University.... more
Harit Question by Harit on May 29, 2025
Career

Sir I am getting civil at nit Trichy or mechanical at nit Warangal , electrical at mnit Jaipur or mnnit allahabad which one should I choose please help me ??

Ans: Hello Harit
You can go with Mech or Electrical.
Career

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 10, 2025Hindi
Money
My monthly income is 75k. I don't have any emergency fund or investments. I had taken multiple personal loans and the dedt is around 13lakhs remaining. I have around 40 months of emi pending.I am paying 38k for all the loan emis. House rent is 11k and remaining expenses will be around 15k. Is there any way that is can repay my loans in 24 months.
Ans: You have shown great honesty in facing your situation. That’s the first big step. Clearing Rs 13 lakhs debt is tough, but not impossible. You are committed. That’s your strength. Now, let us look at a complete, step-by-step strategy.

» Understand Your Current Cash Flow

– Monthly income is Rs 75,000.
– EMI outflow is Rs 38,000.
– House rent is Rs 11,000.
– Other expenses are Rs 15,000.
– You are left with Rs 11,000 monthly.
– This balance is your starting point.
– No emergency fund currently, which is risky.

» Set the First Priority

– First goal is loan closure in 24 months.
– Avoid thinking beyond this goal for now.
– Don’t plan for investment until loans are cleared.
– Emergency fund comes after partial loan repayment.

» Avoid Borrowing or Credit Card Use

– No more credit should be taken now.
– Don’t use credit cards to manage cash flow.
– That leads to a debt trap.
– Pay bills only through available bank balance.

» Review All Existing Loans

– List all personal loans separately.
– Note down principal, EMI, and tenure.
– Identify which has highest interest rate.
– Identify the one with lowest balance.
– Choose the one with smallest closure amount.

» Use Snowball Method to Repay Faster

– First close the smallest loan.
– This gives psychological relief and EMI reduction.
– Add closed EMI amount to next smallest loan.
– Repeat this until all loans are cleared.
– Avoid closing high-interest first unless it’s also small.

» Target One EMI for Prepayment

– Save and allocate Rs 10,000 to Rs 12,000 monthly.
– Use it only for prepayments.
– Even Rs 5,000 extra helps in loan closure.
– Don’t keep surplus idle in savings account.

» Create Monthly Surplus by Cutting Expenses

– Reduce monthly expense from Rs 15,000 to Rs 10,000.
– Cut subscriptions, dining, shopping, and mobile bills.
– Focus only on groceries, medicines, travel, and utilities.
– Cook at home and avoid online orders.
– Cancel OTT or online course memberships temporarily.

» Shift to a Lower Rent House Temporarily

– Shift to a Rs 8,000 rent house for 2 years.
– This gives Rs 3,000 extra monthly.
– Extra rent savings go into loan prepayment.
– Shift back after loans are cleared.

» Increase Income Actively

– Side income is essential for your goal.
– Try freelancing in weekends or weekday evenings.
– Use skills like writing, editing, teaching, or tech support.
– Aim for Rs 5,000–Rs 10,000 extra monthly.
– Even part-time delivery or evening tutoring helps.

» Use Yearly Bonus for Loan Repayment

– If you get performance bonus or incentives, use fully.
– Don’t spend bonus on lifestyle expenses.
– Prepay the highest EMI with it.

» Liquidate Non-Essential Assets

– Sell unused gadgets, furniture, or electronics.
– Sell old vehicle if not needed.
– Use funds for part-payment of loans.
– Every Rs 10,000 helps reduce interest burden.

» Speak to Lenders and Restructure Wisely

– Approach banks to request lower interest.
– You can ask for part-prepayment or EMI rescheduling.
– Don’t go for loan top-up or refinancing.
– Ask for a break on EMI if under stress.
– Use moratorium only in emergencies, not for comfort.

» Avoid Real Estate and Gold Investments

– Do not invest in gold or property now.
– These are not liquid or useful for short-term debt goal.
– These investments can wait.
– Your priority is financial freedom from loans.

» Don’t Fall for Get-Rich-Quick Schemes

– Avoid any chit fund or crypto advice now.
– Never invest in schemes promising high monthly returns.
– Stay away from unregulated peer-to-peer lenders.
– Every rupee is crucial right now.

» Avoid Buying Insurance-Based Investment Plans

– No ULIPs, LIC plans, or endowment policies now.
– If already purchased, check surrender value.
– Surrender non-term plans and reinvest in loan clearance.
– Buy term insurance only if family depends on your income.

» Keep Emergency Buffer of One Month Expense

– Save Rs 15,000 separately as first step.
– Don’t touch this except during job loss or medical need.
– This prevents fresh borrowing under stress.

» Delay All Non-Urgent Goals

– Child education, home buying, vacation can wait.
– Don’t allocate any money for those now.
– Once loans are cleared, shift focus to those goals.

» Don’t Invest in Direct Funds Now

– Direct mutual funds offer no help or guidance.
– You may pick wrong ones or exit too early.
– In future, use regular funds with CFP guidance.
– That ensures tracking and disciplined investing.

» Avoid Index Funds in Future

– Index funds lack downside protection.
– They don’t adjust when markets fall.
– Active funds can protect better during volatility.
– Child and retirement goals need such active control.

» Celebrate Every Loan Closure Milestone

– Track how much EMI you reduced.
– Feel motivated with each step forward.
– Update your plan monthly and stay focused.

» Ideal Prepayment Strategy Based on Extra Savings

– Rs 10,000 prepayment monthly clears around Rs 2.4 lakhs in 2 years.
– Rs 15,000 clears Rs 3.6 lakhs in 2 years.
– Combined with bonuses and cost-cutting, Rs 13 lakhs can be cleared.
– Requires 100% dedication and no new expenses.

» Future Roadmap After Loans Are Closed

– Start SIPs in mutual funds slowly.
– Begin with Rs 2,000 and increase yearly.
– Build emergency fund of 3–6 months expenses.
– Take Rs 10–25 lakh health insurance for family.
– Build term insurance of Rs 50 lakh or more.

» Final Insights

– Your situation is difficult but not permanent.
– With strong discipline, it can change in 24 months.
– Avoid lifestyle temptations and unnecessary spending.
– Focus only on loan reduction and income increase.
– A debt-free life gives freedom to invest, grow, and plan peacefully.
– Start small, stay consistent, and track every move.

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 10, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi, I am 39 with monthly income of 80k. I have 20 lakh home loan with monthly emi of 33k. My monthly household expenses are 20k, daughter school studying in 2nd class 10k. I have corporate insurance plan for my family for 10 lakh and for parents 3 lakh. I am investing in SSY 5k for 5 years. Also have term plan of INR 50 lakh and LIC 2k per month. I have started SIP for 7k per month for 1 year. Please suggest me how can I accumulate 5cr upto age of 60 and Rs 50 lakh in 10 years?
Ans: . At age 39, with focused planning, your Rs 5 crore goal by age 60 and Rs 50 lakh in 10 years is possible. You are already taking meaningful steps. Let’s now shape a 360-degree action plan for you.

» Current Financial Snapshot

– Age: 39 years.
– Monthly income: Rs80,000.
– Home loan EMI: Rs33,000/month.
– Household expenses: Rs20,000/month.
– Daughter's school fees: Rs10,000/month.
– Total monthly outgo: Rs63,000.
– Current surplus: Rs17,000/month approx.
– SIP investments: Rs7,000/month.
– SSY investment: Rs5,000/month.
– Term insurance: Rs50 lakh.
– LIC: Rs2,000/month.
– Corporate health cover: Rs10 lakh (family), Rs3 lakh (parents).

» Income and Expense Assessment

– Your income covers all expenses including EMI.
– You are saving around Rs17,000 monthly.
– This saving rate needs to improve steadily.
– Try to increase income or reduce non-essential spending.
– Explore skill upgrades or side income.

» Loan Liability Management

– You have Rs20 lakh home loan.
– EMI of Rs33,000 is nearly 41% of income.
– This is on the higher side.
– Try to make part payments when possible.
– Use bonuses or excess funds to reduce principal.
– Lowering the loan tenure will improve long-term cash flow.
– Avoid taking additional loans till this loan is reduced.

» Insurance Review

– Term cover of Rs50 lakh is not sufficient.
– It should be 10 to 15 times your annual income.
– You need minimum Rs80 lakh to Rs1 crore term cover.
– Increase coverage immediately.
– Health insurance from company is helpful.
– But also buy personal health cover for Rs10 lakh.
– Include a Rs10 lakh top-up later.
– Parent cover of Rs3 lakh may be low for senior citizens.
– Explore options outside corporate cover for them.

» LIC Policy Evaluation

– You pay Rs2,000/month for LIC.
– That is Rs24,000/year.
– LIC plans offer low returns and long lock-ins.
– If it is endowment or money-back plan, surrender it.
– Reinvest the proceeds in SIPs through regular plans.
– Do not mix insurance and investment.

» Review of Existing Investments

– You invest Rs7,000/month in SIPs.
– You have started only a year back.
– Increase SIP by 10% every year.
– Equity mutual funds are ideal for long-term goals.
– Avoid direct mutual funds.
– Direct plans lack personal advice and monitoring.
– Work with a trusted MFD with CFP qualification.
– Regular plans give you discipline, guidance and review.

– Do not go for index funds.
– Index funds follow the market blindly.
– They don’t protect during market falls.
– Actively managed funds adapt to market and give better returns.
– Skilled fund managers help to reduce downside risk.

» Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) Insights

– SSY is a good savings tool for girl child.
– You are contributing Rs5,000/month.
– It gives fixed interest but has lock-in.
– Can be used for higher education or marriage.
– Continue this for next 10-12 years.
– Avoid increasing allocation here.
– Instead, use mutual funds for better growth.

» Goal Planning: Rs50 Lakh in 10 Years

– This is your medium-term goal.
– Need disciplined SIP towards this.
– Start with Rs15,000/month if possible.
– Increase by 10% every year.
– Choose balanced or flexi-cap equity mutual funds.
– Keep this goal separate from retirement or child goals.
– Review this every year with your MFD.
– Stay invested for full 10 years.
– Avoid panic withdrawals in market corrections.

» Goal Planning: Rs5 Crore by Age 60

– You have 21 years to reach this goal.
– It is your long-term retirement goal.
– SIPs in equity funds are best suited.
– Start with Rs10,000/month today.
– Gradually increase SIPs every year.
– Add lumpsum whenever you receive bonuses.
– Avoid using this fund for other needs.
– Review portfolio once every year.

» Child’s Future Planning

– Your daughter is in 2nd class now.
– Higher education costs will start in 10+ years.
– Create separate SIP of Rs5,000/month for her future.
– Keep SSY for traditional needs.
– Use equity mutual funds for education goal.
– Continue till she turns 18 to 20 years.

» Emergency Fund and Liquidity

– You have not mentioned emergency fund.
– Create a fund with Rs2 lakh minimum.
– Cover 3 to 6 months of EMI and expenses.
– Park in FD or liquid mutual fund.
– Don’t use this fund for planned expenses.

» Tax Planning Opportunities

– Use 80C fully: SSY, LIC, home loan principal, ELSS.
– Term insurance premium also counts under 80C.
– Claim 80D for health insurance if bought personally.
– Home loan interest gives benefit under Section 24(b).
– Avoid tax-saving products with low return and lock-in.
– Use regular ELSS through MFD only with CFP advice.

» Investment Buckets for Goal-Based Planning

– Short term (1–3 years): Keep in FD or liquid funds.
– Medium term (3–10 years): Use balanced or hybrid funds.
– Long term (10+ years): Use equity mutual funds.
– Keep each goal with a separate SIP.
– Don’t mix long-term and short-term funds.

» SIP Scaling Plan (Based on Goals and Cash Flow)

– Rs7,000/month SIP now: continue this for long term.
– Rs5,000/month SSY: continue till 15 years.
– Add new SIP of Rs10,000/month for 10-year Rs50 lakh goal.
– Add Rs5,000/month for child education.
– Add Rs5,000/month SIP for retirement.
– Target to raise SIPs every year by 10%.
– This SIP ladder helps you reach all goals.
– Avoid using SIPs for short-term needs.

» Debt and Credit Management

– Avoid personal loans or credit card dues.
– Focus on clearing home loan gradually.
– Try to prepay loan partially every year.
– Aim to close it in 10–12 years.
– This will free up Rs33,000/month later.
– Use that saving to boost retirement SIPs.

» Retirement Readiness and Vision

– Your goal is Rs5 crore corpus by age 60.
– With 21 years left, it is very achievable.
– SIP discipline, yearly review and advisor support is key.
– Start small but stay consistent.
– Don’t delay. Time matters more than money here.

» Role of a Certified Financial Planner

– You need a clear roadmap for multiple goals.
– A Certified Financial Planner with MFD license can guide.
– They help in product selection, rebalancing and goal review.
– Regular plans offer access to their advice.
– Direct plans offer no personalised support.
– Avoid direct investments unless you are expert and active.

» Final Insights

– You are already doing well in managing expenses and loans.
– Start increasing SIPs aggressively every year.
– Keep insurance and investments separate.
– Surrender low-return LIC and invest in mutual funds.
– Build a goal-based SIP portfolio.
– Maintain an emergency fund always.
– Avoid new loans or risky assets.
– Track goals every year with professional help.
– You can reach Rs50 lakh in 10 years and Rs5 crore by 60.
– Stay consistent, focused and disciplined.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Money
Though I took a loan of rs 2200000 for purchase of a plot, on the advise of financial advisor, I am.not purchasing the plot and repaying the entire loan. I will build an emergency fund in next two months. Thereafter, how to invest rs.40000/- per month. Investing in GPF is good option or not
Ans: You made a wise decision by cancelling the plot purchase. Avoiding such commitments keeps liquidity intact. Also, your plan to build an emergency fund first is excellent. It shows maturity in financial thinking. After creating that cushion, your next goal—investing Rs 40,000 monthly—needs smart planning.

Let us assess the options, step by step, in a simplified and strategic manner.

» Importance of Emergency Fund First

– Emergency fund must cover 6–9 months of expenses.

– You can build it using liquid or ultra-short-term debt funds.

– Avoid parking it in regular savings or FDs with long lock-ins.

– Keep this fund accessible but separate from daily-use account.

– It will give peace and avoid forced loans in emergencies.

– Once this is done, move to your Rs 40,000/month investment plan.

» Understanding GPF: Stability But Limited Growth

– GPF gives fixed, government-set interest rate.

– It is safe and suitable only for long-term savings.

– You must be a government employee to invest in GPF.

– If you already contribute to GPF compulsorily, avoid over-investing.

– Returns are predictable but often lower than inflation-adjusted growth assets.

– Interest is tax-free, but withdrawal is subject to service tenure rules.

– GPF cannot replace long-term equity-based wealth-building strategies.

– Ideal only as part of your debt portfolio, not full investment.

– Do not rely on GPF alone to achieve long-term goals like retirement or child education.

» Risk Capacity and Time Horizon Assessment

– Your current age and job stability affect your risk profile.

– If you are under 40 and have job security, take higher equity exposure.

– Longer investment horizon gives power to ride market cycles.

– If goal is 7+ years away, equity mutual funds are ideal.

– For 3–7 year goals, use hybrid mutual funds.

– For under 3 years, use low-risk debt funds only.

– GPF suits only those seeking stability without growth expectations.

» Suggested Investment Allocation for Rs 40,000 per Month

Rs 5,000: Continue investing in your GPF (if part of your job).

Rs 20,000: Start SIPs in equity mutual funds. Choose flexi-cap and large & mid-cap.

Rs 10,000: Invest in hybrid mutual funds. It offers moderate risk with equity participation.

Rs 5,000: Invest in short-term debt mutual funds for near-term flexibility.

– This mix gives balance—growth, stability, and some liquidity.

– All SIPs should be in regular mutual funds.

– Invest through a CFP-qualified MFD for advice and review.

– Avoid direct funds. They may look cheaper but come with hidden risks.

» Why Not Direct Mutual Funds

– Direct plans give no personalised review or rebalancing.

– You miss goal alignment and emotional handholding in volatile markets.

– Investors in direct funds often choose wrong schemes or exit early.

– Small savings in expense ratio won’t matter if return suffers.

– A qualified MFD with CFP credential manages your asset allocation better.

– That ensures peace of mind and disciplined long-term investing.

» Why Not Index Funds or ETFs

– Index funds just mirror a market index. No flexibility or stock selection.

– They can’t avoid bad-performing sectors or companies.

– In bear markets, they fall as much as the index.

– Actively managed funds adapt better and have expert fund managers.

– In India, markets are not fully efficient. Active funds have more potential.

– ELSS, flexi-cap, or multi-cap funds with active strategy suit long-term investors better.

– Hence, index funds and ETFs don’t offer real value for serious investors.

» How to Choose the Right Mutual Funds

– Don’t select based on past return only.

– Understand the fund category and your goal timeline.

– Review risk level and investment strategy of the fund.

– Use diversified equity funds for goals 7–15 years away.

– For mid-term goals, hybrid or balanced advantage funds are better.

– For short goals, consider ultra-short or short-duration debt funds.

– Always go with regular plans through a CFP-backed MFD.

– They guide portfolio strategy and help switch when needed.

» Tax Impact on Mutual Fund Investments

– Equity mutual funds held more than one year attract LTCG tax.

– LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

– If sold before one year, 20% STCG applies.

– For debt funds, tax depends on your income slab.

– No indexation benefit now. So plan withdrawal carefully.

– GPF is tax-exempt, but has less liquidity and flexibility.

– Mutual funds offer better control over taxation timing and optimisation.

» Other Aspects You Should Consider

– Keep life insurance separate from investments.

– Avoid ULIPs or traditional plans for investing purpose.

– If you already hold such products, consider surrendering and shifting to mutual funds.

– Avoid multiple small investments. Keep portfolio focused and manageable.

– Do not over-invest in GPF or FDs beyond your asset allocation need.

– Avoid gold or property as main investment tools. Liquidity is poor, and returns are uncertain.

– Do a review every year. Shift allocation based on life changes and goal proximity.

» How to Monitor Your Investments

– Use a goal-based approach, not return-based chasing.

– Keep a tracker for each goal—retirement, education, marriage, etc.

– Link each SIP to a goal and assign a timeline.

– Stay invested despite market ups and downs. Don’t panic-sell.

– Work with your CFP-qualified MFD to review quarterly or half-yearly.

– Avoid DIY changes unless you are trained in financial planning.

» Role of Emotional Discipline in Investing

– Markets can test your patience. Long-term success needs mental strength.

– GPF may feel safe, but it leads to poor wealth growth.

– Mutual funds may feel risky, but long-term they create solid wealth.

– Use SIP mode to avoid timing mistakes.

– Avoid checking NAVs or markets daily.

– Trust your plan and your MFD’s guidance.

– Discipline beats luck or market tips always.

» Avoid Real Estate and Insurance-based Investments

– You already avoided a plot purchase. That was smart.

– Real estate locks capital and gives poor liquidity.

– It also brings legal and maintenance risks.

– Insurance-cum-investment products give poor return.

– Always keep investments and insurance separate.

– For protection, take term life cover only.

– For investments, use mutual funds based on goal fit.

» Finally

– You are in a strong position after cancelling the land deal.

– Focus on building an emergency fund first.

– Then, invest Rs 40,000 monthly with a smart asset mix.

– Avoid overloading GPF. Use it only as one part of your debt portion.

– Majority of your Rs 40,000 should go to mutual funds via SIP.

– Use regular plans through CFP-qualified MFDs.

– Stay away from direct plans, index funds, and real estate.

– With the right strategy, your Rs 40,000/month can build solid future wealth.

– You are already on the right track. Just add consistent execution and regular reviews.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Money
I am 37. I have recently started SIP and year back or so. I have invested 2 lkhs in equity stocks, around 3.75 lkhs as of now in mutual funds and 10lkhs in bank. I am earning 1.26 lkhs per month post tax. I am savings monthly around 45-50k per month as savings and around 38k in mutual funds through SIP( nifty 50, nifty next50, midcap 150, gold sip, hdfc small cap and motilal oswal midcap). I have just one loan of emi 14k. I want to build retirement corpus of around 1-2 cr in next 10-12 yrs..is this sip amount sufficient or should I increase this. Any inputs would be much much appreciated
Ans: It’s truly inspiring that at 37, you have taken charge of your finances so seriously. Starting SIPs, building savings, investing in mutual funds and stocks, and keeping debt minimal shows excellent financial discipline. You are doing many things right already. Now, let’s assess your current plan and build towards your retirement corpus with clarity.

» Assessing Your Existing Financial Commitments

– You earn Rs.1.26 lakhs monthly after tax.

– Your loan EMI is Rs.14,000, which is less than 15% of income.

– That means your debt level is very healthy.

– You are saving Rs.45,000 to Rs.50,000 monthly. That is strong.

– Rs.38,000 of this is going to SIPs. This is a focused effort.

– The balance is staying in bank or stocks.

– Your total mutual fund corpus is around Rs.3.75 lakhs.

– You also have Rs.10 lakhs in bank, which shows good liquidity buffer.

– Rs.2 lakhs in stocks adds an equity angle.

– All combined, this is a solid financial base.

» Retirement Goal – A Realistic View

– You want Rs.1 crore to Rs.2 crore in 10 to 12 years.

– This is possible with right strategy and consistency.

– Your current SIPs of Rs.38,000 monthly is a very good start.

– But Rs.38,000 per month alone may not be enough for Rs.2 crore in 12 years.

– You’ll need to either increase SIP amount or add lump sum regularly.

– Or both. The more disciplined you stay, the faster you reach the goal.

» Good That You Are Saving in Bank, But It Needs Tweaking

– Rs.10 lakhs in bank is too high for idle cash.

– It earns low interest, less than 4%.

– Inflation eats away the value over time.

– Keep 6 months of expenses in savings or liquid fund.

– That is roughly Rs.75,000 x 6 = Rs.4.5 lakhs.

– Rest of the Rs.5.5 lakhs can be invested in mutual funds.

– Or staggered into funds through Systematic Transfer Plan (STP).

– That way your retirement goal gets more power.

» Your Stock Investment – Keep It Limited

– Rs.2 lakh in equity stocks is fine now.

– But individual stock investing needs time and expertise.

– Mutual funds are better for goal-based long-term investment.

– Stocks can be volatile. You must track them regularly.

– Keep stocks to under 10% of your total portfolio.

– Let majority stay in mutual funds, managed by experts.

» Too Much Index Investing – Not Ideal for Your Case

– You are investing in Nifty 50, Nifty Next 50, and Midcap 150.

– These are index funds. They just copy market index.

– Index funds don’t protect against downside.

– If the index falls, your fund also falls equally.

– They don’t exit weak sectors or bad companies.

– In India, markets are still inefficient.

– Good fund managers can outperform the index.

– Actively managed funds offer better stock selection.

– They handle volatility with judgement, not blind rules.

– Shift from index-heavy portfolio to quality active mutual funds.

– It’s safer and better for long-term compounding.

» Having Small Cap and Mid Cap is Good – But Needs Balance

– You have HDFC Small Cap and Motilal Oswal Midcap.

– These are high-growth, high-volatility categories.

– Small caps can fall sharply in bear markets.

– Don’t keep more than 30% in small and mid cap combined.

– Keep rest in large-cap and flexi-cap funds.

– That brings stability with decent growth.

» You Can Skip Gold SIP for Now

– Gold is good for diversification, not wealth creation.

– Returns are not as high as equity.

– Gold protects during uncertainty, but not for long-term goals.

– Keep only 5% to 10% in gold at best.

– You can skip gold SIP now and divert to equity SIP.

» Direct Plans May Appear Cheaper – But Not Better

– You may be using direct plans for SIPs.

– Direct plans save on commission but offer no advice.

– If you continue in direct plans, you miss rebalancing support.

– You may also make changes emotionally.

– Regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner offer monitoring.

– You get reports, reviews, goal tracking, and fund reshuffling help.

– Cost is slightly higher, but benefits are far greater.

» Suggest Increasing SIP Gradually Every Year

– You already invest Rs.38,000 monthly in SIPs.

– Increase SIP by 10% every year as income grows.

– This gradual step up makes a big difference in 10 years.

– You can easily reach Rs.50,000 to Rs.60,000 SIP in 3 years.

– You don’t feel the burden, but returns grow fast.

» Use Annual Bonus or Hike for Retirement Fund

– Any bonus or surplus income can be partially invested.

– Don’t spend it all. Allocate 50% to mutual funds.

– Even small lump sum investments boost your corpus.

– You can park bonus in liquid fund and do STP into equity.

» Keep Your Emergency Fund Separate

– Keep Rs.4.5 lakhs in liquid fund or savings for emergencies.

– Don’t touch this for SIP or long-term investing.

– This buffer gives peace of mind.

– It avoids breaking mutual funds during crisis.

» Your Loan is Well Within Limits

– Your EMI of Rs.14,000 is less than 15% of income.

– That is a healthy ratio.

– If this is a home loan, you get tax benefit.

– Don’t prepay it unless you have surplus after investing.

– Focus more on increasing SIP than loan prepayment.

» Nominate Family for All Investments

– Ensure all mutual fund folios have nominee added.

– Same for your stocks and bank accounts.

– This makes transmission easy for your family.

– Keep one family member informed of all investments.

» Review Portfolio Once Every Year

– Don’t change SIPs frequently.

– Review once a year with Certified Financial Planner.

– Rebalance asset allocation if it has shifted.

– Replace poor performing funds if needed.

– Add new SIPs if income has increased.

– Use review as a progress check.

» Avoid NFOs, PMS, or Fancy Investments

– Don’t invest in New Fund Offers (NFOs) blindly.

– Most NFOs do not outperform existing funds.

– Stick to tried and tested funds with long history.

– Also avoid PMS and other complex options.

– Keep investing simple, clean, and purposeful.

» Retirement Is Achievable – But Needs Strict Action

– You are 37 now, with 10 to 12 years to retire.

– You must stay fully focused on this goal.

– Track your progress yearly, not monthly.

– SIP increase, lump sum additions, and discipline are key.

– Avoid distractions and short-term greed.

– Don’t withdraw funds for lifestyle or non-goal spending.

» Taxation on Mutual Funds – Plan Redemptions

– Equity funds held for more than 1 year are long-term.

– LTCG above Rs.1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

– Short-term capital gains taxed at 20%.

– For debt funds, both gains taxed as per your slab.

– Plan redemption close to goal year for lower tax impact.

» Stay Invested for Full Period

– Don’t stop SIPs during market falls.

– That’s when you buy at lower prices.

– Compounding works well when you stay invested.

– Don’t touch mutual funds unless it is for your goal.

» Finally

– You have built a good start already.

– Just a few corrections and more structure is needed.

– Reduce index fund exposure gradually.

– Increase active fund SIPs under CFP guidance.

– Start using part of your bank savings towards goal-based mutual funds.

– Increase SIPs by 10% yearly, and use bonuses smartly.

– Track once a year, and stay on course.

– Retirement corpus of Rs.2 crore is surely achievable.

– Discipline, consistency, and expert advice will help you reach it faster.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 09, 2025Hindi
Money
Hello, Im 62 yr old, working in a contruction firm. I'll be continue to work for 4 more years. Currently take away salary is rs. 78000. Health cover is provided by employer amounting to rs. 7lakh/ yr.Planning to invest rs. 30000/ month till my last working month. Want to create maximum out of this. Thereby period of investment would be around 4/5 years, risk appetite-moderate. Please suggest the best way of investment.
Ans: At age 62, continuing work for 4 more years gives you a strong savings window. Rs. 30000 per month is a powerful amount when used properly. With a moderate risk appetite, we can create a solid investment plan while managing safety and growth.

» Your income, expenses, and protection are well placed

– Monthly income of Rs. 78000 offers enough surplus to invest Rs. 30000.
– Employer medical cover of Rs. 7 lakh adds important health security.
– Since you’re still earning, you can take calculated risk for higher return.
– Retirement is only 4 years away, so timing matters now.

» Your investment goal: high growth in 4–5 years

– The target is to maximise return over a medium-term horizon.
– You are not looking for long-term retirement planning right now.
– You want focused wealth building till last working year.
– This money can support you later during non-working years.

» Investment duration shapes our strategy

– Four years is not long, but not too short either.
– It allows moderate exposure to growth instruments.
– But you cannot go fully aggressive like in 10-year plans.
– Capital protection should balance with return expectation.

» Monthly investing is a strong habit

– Investing Rs. 30000 monthly builds discipline and long-term value.
– Rupee cost averaging helps reduce market entry risk.
– Regular investing gives smoother experience than lump-sum method.
– Your habit already aligns with best investment practices.

» Why not use fixed deposits or savings plans?

– Fixed deposits offer low return, around 6–7% only.
– They often fail to beat inflation after tax.
– Savings schemes with guarantees lock money for longer.
– Returns are also fixed and less flexible.
– They do not match your return expectation.

» Avoid real estate completely

– Real estate is illiquid and complex.
– It needs big investment and high time commitment.
– Resale is slow and not suitable for 4-year goals.
– You should focus only on financial instruments now.

» Disadvantages of index funds for your goal

– Index funds copy market movements without active support.
– They don’t adjust to ups and downs smartly.
– In falling market, index funds also fall equally.
– No human decision-making is involved.
– You may not get best returns in 4 years.
– You need focused, adaptable strategy—not passive returns.
– So, avoid index funds fully for this plan.

» Actively managed mutual funds are ideal for your need

– Actively managed funds are controlled by expert managers.
– They research and choose better stocks or bonds.
– Fund manager makes adjustments based on economy and trends.
– You get potential to outperform market.
– Risk is moderated through diversification and fund decisions.
– Perfect match for moderate risk takers like you.

» Why you should choose regular funds via a Certified Financial Planner

– Direct plans offer no support, no reviews, no help.
– You will be alone in choosing and adjusting schemes.
– Mistakes can go unnoticed and cost you returns.
– With regular funds, a Certified Financial Planner guides you.
– You receive goal-matching advice, rebalancing, and emotional support.
– Investment strategy stays on track even during market dips.
– Extra cost is small, but peace and performance are high.

» Build a portfolio using multiple categories

– You should not invest entire amount in one type of fund.
– Mix different categories to balance risk and growth.
– Choose three parts: equity funds, hybrid funds, debt funds.
– Each part plays a different role in your portfolio.

» Equity mutual funds for long-term growth

– Invest around 50% of monthly Rs. 30000 here.
– These funds invest in stocks of Indian companies.
– They offer highest return potential over 4–5 years.
– But they also have market risk in short term.
– You must stay invested during ups and downs.

» Hybrid funds to reduce overall risk

– Invest around 30% in hybrid (equity + debt) funds.
– These funds balance between stocks and bonds.
– They give stable return with some growth potential.
– Ideal for moderate risk investors.
– Help in cushioning equity market volatility.

» Debt mutual funds for safety and liquidity

– Invest around 20% in short-term debt funds.
– These are low risk and offer stable returns.
– Useful if you need part of money before retirement.
– They also act as emergency buffer within investments.

» Start SIPs in all three types from this month

– Begin monthly SIP of Rs. 15000 in equity fund.
– SIP Rs. 9000 in hybrid fund.
– SIP Rs. 6000 in debt fund.
– Use regular plan route with Certified Financial Planner or MFD.
– Review yearly and adjust if life or income changes.

» Invest in your name only—not in joint name

– To avoid confusion in tax and maturity.
– If you're planning nominee, add separately—not as joint holder.
– Single ownership ensures clarity and faster redemption.

» Plan for SWP after 4 years

– After 4 years, shift from SIP to SWP mode.
– SWP = Systematic Withdrawal Plan.
– You redeem monthly fixed amount from fund.
– Helps create retirement-like income from your investment.
– More flexible than pension or annuity plans.
– You can adjust amount or stop anytime.

» Avoid annuities for post-retirement income

– Annuities give fixed return for lifetime.
– But return is very low, often below inflation.
– Your capital is locked for life.
– You cannot withdraw or change amount.
– It gives no control, no liquidity.
– SWP in mutual funds is far better alternative.

» Tax awareness for mutual fund withdrawal

– New rules apply from 2024–25 onwards.
– For equity mutual funds:

LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

STCG taxed at 20%
– For debt mutual funds:

Both LTCG and STCG taxed as per your tax slab
– Plan redemptions carefully post-retirement to reduce tax.
– Use long-term holding for tax efficiency.

» Reinvest if you don’t need money immediately after 4 years

– If your monthly expenses are covered, don’t withdraw all.
– Keep investment going for another 3–5 years.
– It will grow more and serve later retirement years.
– Use staggered withdrawal instead of lump-sum.

» Keep alternate emergency fund outside of investments

– Keep 6 months' expenses in savings or FD.
– This is separate from Rs. 30000 investment.
– Helps in case of job loss or medical issue.
– Emergency fund protects your mutual funds from early withdrawal.

» Maintain your health cover even after retirement

– Employer health cover may stop after you retire.
– Buy your own senior citizen mediclaim by age 65.
– Buy early to avoid rejection or loading due to age.
– Choose policy with lifelong renewability and good claim record.
– Don’t rely only on employer group plan.

» Nomination and will planning is essential

– Add nominee in every mutual fund investment.
– Keep written record of your investment details.
– Also create a simple will mentioning your dependents.
– Avoid confusion and legal delay after your lifetime.
– Estate planning is part of full financial strategy.

» Finally

– You are saving at a strong pace at the right time.
– 4 years of investing Rs. 30000 monthly can create solid base.
– Avoid index funds, direct plans, and annuities.
– Choose regular mutual funds with Certified Financial Planner support.
– Diversify across equity, hybrid, and debt funds.
– Stay invested even during market correction.
– Use SWP for regular post-retirement income.
– Reinvest if cash flow is not urgently needed.
– Secure your medical and emergency needs separately.
– Your plan is clear, timely, and can yield strong results.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10135 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 07, 2025Hindi
Money
Sir, please tell me the best investment plans for child having age below one year
Ans: You have made a smart move by planning early for your child’s future. Starting before age one is ideal. It helps in building a solid corpus for education, marriage, or any future need.

Let’s now look at how to plan a strong investment structure from all angles.

» Understand the Time Horizon

– Your child has 17+ years before college.
– This is a long-term investment window.
– It allows you to choose equity-focused investments.
– Compounding works best over such long horizons.
– Avoid locking money in rigid traditional instruments.

» Avoid Traditional Child Plans and Endowments

– Most endowment or child insurance plans give low returns.
– They usually yield 4% to 5% annually.
– These are not suitable for education goal planning.
– Mixing insurance with investment is not efficient.
– It is better to keep insurance and investment separate.

» Stay Away from ULIPs and LIC Investment Policies

– ULIPs have high charges in the initial years.
– Returns are not consistent or transparent.
– LIC’s endowment plans give low maturity value.
– Most plans lack flexibility and liquidity.
– If you already have such plans, consider surrendering.
– Reinvest that amount in mutual funds systematically.

» Focus on Equity for Long-Term Growth

– Equity mutual funds help beat inflation in long run.
– They have potential to deliver higher returns.
– You can start SIPs of even Rs 500 monthly.
– Gradually increase SIPs as income grows.
– Diversify across multiple equity fund categories.

» Choose Actively Managed Mutual Funds

– Do not invest in index funds for child goals.
– Index funds copy the market and offer no active management.
– They underperform in falling markets.
– No downside protection is available in index funds.
– Instead, opt for actively managed equity funds.
– Experienced fund managers guide the portfolio strategy.
– They shift allocations based on market cycles.

» Avoid Direct Mutual Funds

– Direct plans do not give advisory or support.
– You may miss rebalancing at the right time.
– Many investors pick wrong funds or continue poor performers.
– A MFD (Mutual Fund Distributor) with CFP credentials adds great value.
– You get goal mapping, performance tracking, and expert guidance.
– Regular plans provide this support for a small fee.
– That support is crucial for child education goals.

» Mix Categories for Balanced Growth

– Use a combination of large-cap and flexi-cap funds.
– Add a small-cap fund in small proportion for high growth.
– Consider an equity & debt hybrid fund for stability.
– Do not go overboard with sectoral or thematic funds.
– Avoid funds with high volatility or low consistency.

» Start SIP Immediately and Increase Yearly

– Start monthly SIPs right away.
– Even small amounts matter when started early.
– Increase SIPs every year by 10-20% as salary grows.
– This step boosts the future value significantly.
– Use step-up SIP facility where available.

» Open a Minor Account and Track Separately

– Create a mutual fund folio in your child’s name.
– Use your name as guardian till age 18.
– This builds an emotional connect and financial discipline.
– It also keeps funds segregated from general investments.
– Avoid premature withdrawals from this corpus.

» Add PPF for Debt Component

– Public Provident Fund is ideal for child’s debt allocation.
– It gives tax-free returns and is government-backed.
– Lock-in period is 15 years, which suits child goals.
– Invest Rs 12,000 per month or Rs 1.5 lakh annually.
– Do not withdraw from PPF till maturity.

» Do Not Use Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY)

– SSY is only for girl children.
– Even for them, liquidity is limited.
– Withdrawals allowed only after 18 or for marriage.
– Returns are not market-linked and may underperform equity.
– Use better flexible instruments like mutual funds and PPF.

» Avoid Real Estate and Gold for Child Planning

– Property needs large capital and has liquidity issues.
– Maintenance cost and legal hassles are extra burden.
– Gold has been underperforming against equity in the long term.
– Physical gold carries risk of theft and impurity.
– Instead, invest in productive and flexible options.

» Set Goal Amounts and Track Progress

– Estimate future cost of education at current prices.
– Use a 10-12% inflation factor over 18 years.
– Break the target into short-term, medium, and long-term milestones.
– Track the corpus annually and rebalance if needed.
– Stay disciplined even if markets fall temporarily.

» Add NPS as an Optional Long-Term Tool

– Not mandatory, but can be used in child’s name post-18.
– NPS has lock-in but charges are low.
– Useful only if you want to gift child a retirement fund.
– Not suitable for education corpus.

» Avoid Annuities for Children

– Annuities are rigid and give low returns.
– They are meant for retirement income.
– They don’t suit children’s education or growth planning.
– No flexibility to withdraw for child’s future needs.

» Taxation Awareness for Future Withdrawals

– Equity MF gains are tax-free up to Rs 1.25 lakh LTCG.
– Above that, taxed at 12.5%.
– Short-term gains taxed at 20%.
– Debt MF taxed as per income tax slab.
– Plan redemptions smartly across years to reduce tax.

» Have a Separate Emergency Fund

– Do not dip into child fund for emergencies.
– Keep 6 months of expenses in liquid fund or bank FD.
– It protects long-term goals from short-term pressures.

» Buy Term Insurance for Parents

– If earning parent is no more, child goals suffer.
– Take a term plan of 15-20 times of annual income.
– Premium is low when taken young.
– No need to take child insurance.
– Child is not the breadwinner and doesn’t need insurance.

» Health Cover Is Equally Important

– A medical emergency can derail investments.
– Take Rs 10–25 lakh family floater plan.
– Add Rs 5–10 lakh super top-up as well.
– Keep child added in the policy from start.

» Include Your Spouse in Financial Planning

– Both parents should be aware of child plan.
– Keep folio details, goals, SIPs transparent to each other.
– In case of death, other parent can continue investments.

» Keep Investing Even During Market Falls

– Don’t stop SIPs during crashes.
– Falling NAV means more units bought.
– That boosts returns over the long term.
– Emotional investing leads to poor decisions.
– Stay systematic, not reactive.

» Use Gift Funds and Bonuses to Add Lumpsum

– Yearly bonus or gifts can be used for one-time investments.
– This supplements SIPs and accelerates growth.
– Invest lumpsum in staggered tranches, not at one go.

» Review Portfolio Every Year

– Check fund performance annually.
– Replace underperformers after 2–3 years of poor show.
– Do not change funds frequently based on noise.
– Stick to your goal plan and rebalance yearly.

» Start With Rs 5,000–Rs 10,000 Monthly SIP

– Increase it based on affordability.
– Higher SIP ensures early achievement of goals.
– For age 0–1, even Rs 3,000 monthly can create value.

» Open a Will or Nomination for All Investments

– Nominate your spouse for mutual funds and PPF.
– Keep documents in order and share access with spouse.
– This avoids legal delays in future.

» Final Insights

– Starting early is your biggest strength.
– Stay focused and consistent over 18–20 years.
– Avoid complex, low-return, or rigid options.
– Keep goals, returns, tax, and liquidity in balance.
– Child’s future depends on your planning discipline today.

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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