Dear Sir, I am getting Rs. 39 L from sale of one of house property. I am confused where should I utilize this money: 1. I have another house loan of Rs. 50 L for which I will get possession shortly. I can reduce my bank home loan. 2. My father is having debt of more than 1 Cr for which i have already paid 40% of amount and balance is being charged @ approximately 14% interest. Should I repay this? 3. Should I invest in FD/Mutual Fund/direct equity? My age is 38 and I also want to save something for my kids who are 5 and 3 years old.
Ans: You are already on a thoughtful journey by planning ahead. Using Rs 39 lakh wisely is important. You are considering home loan, your father's debt, and also future investments. Your question deserves a deep, balanced analysis.
Let’s understand all angles. We’ll examine how to manage debt, build wealth, and secure your kids’ future. You’ll also get tax-efficient and low-risk suggestions.
A step-by-step 360-degree plan is shared below.
Your Present Financial Opportunities and Challenges
You are 38 years old with two young kids.
You just sold a house and received Rs 39 lakh.
You already hold a second house with a Rs 50 lakh home loan.
Your father has a loan of over Rs 1 crore at 14% interest.
You’ve already repaid 40% of that loan.
You want to invest this Rs 39 lakh wisely for long-term goals.
Step 1: Evaluate and Prioritise the Outstanding Liabilities
Let’s begin with debt because it affects your peace of mind.
Your Father’s Debt at 14%
This is a very high interest rate.
It eats into your family income each month.
You have already paid a good portion, which is responsible.
Reducing this loan now is the smartest first step.
Interest saving is higher than returns from any mutual fund or FD.
It gives emotional relief and stronger family bonding.
It avoids legal or health-related pressure on your father.
Paying off part of this loan with Rs 20–25 lakh makes great sense.
Your Own Home Loan at 8%–9% Interest
Home loan has lower interest than personal or business loan.
It also gives tax benefits under Section 80C and Section 24.
If EMI is affordable, there is no rush to prepay.
But if EMI feels heavy or if interest is fixed and high, consider partial repayment.
You can use Rs 10–12 lakh to reduce the EMI or loan tenure.
Remaining Amount After Debt Handling
After paying Rs 25 lakh to father’s loan and Rs 10–12 lakh to home loan, around Rs 2–4 lakh may remain.
This can be invested for your children or parked for short-term needs.
Step 2: Avoid Fixed Deposit Unless Meant for Emergency Fund
FD gives fixed returns but is fully taxable as per slab.
FD returns are usually less than inflation rate.
For 5–10 years wealth creation, FD is not suitable.
Use FD only for emergency fund or temporary parking.
Keep 6–9 months of expenses in FD or liquid fund.
Step 3: Stay Away from Direct Equity If Not Skilled
Direct equity means buying individual stocks.
It needs deep study, constant monitoring, and emotional control.
Market volatility can affect your decisions badly.
You already have big responsibilities; don’t add risk.
Mutual funds are safer, managed by professionals.
Step 4: Avoid Direct Funds, Prefer Regular Funds With CFP-Guided MFD
Direct mutual funds may look cheaper but need self-research.
You may select wrong funds or exit at wrong time.
Regular plans give access to expert support from a Certified Financial Planner.
CFP + MFD ensures you take the right path.
They help with asset allocation, rebalancing, and goal mapping.
Step 5: Stay Away from Index Funds and ETFs
Index funds copy market indices like Nifty or Sensex.
They don’t offer downside protection in market fall.
Index funds don’t adjust portfolio as per economic conditions.
They also lack sector rotation benefit.
ETFs have liquidity issues and don’t beat inflation effectively.
Actively managed funds give higher risk-adjusted returns.
You get dynamic allocation, human expertise, and focused sector picks.
Step 6: Invest in Actively Managed Mutual Funds
Invest Based on Time Horizon and Purpose
For Short-Term (1–3 Years)
Use ultra short duration debt funds.
Also park in low-risk hybrid conservative funds.
For Medium-Term (3–5 Years)
Use balanced advantage funds or multi-asset funds.
For Long-Term (5+ Years)
Invest in actively managed large & mid-cap and multi-cap funds.
Use SIP for monthly investment and part lump sum as STP (Systematic Transfer Plan).
Children’s Education (Future Goal)
Your kids are 3 and 5 years old.
Their higher education is at least 12–15 years away.
Long-term compounding through mutual funds is ideal.
Start one folio for each child, in your name with them as nominee.
You can also add a minor’s folio with you as guardian.
Use actively managed funds with 70–80% equity exposure.
Review every year and reduce risk as the goal comes near.
Step 7: Protect Your Family with Financial Safety Nets
Ensure Rs 1.5–2 crore term insurance for you.
This protects family if you are not around.
Also ensure health insurance for all members.
Avoid ULIPs, traditional insurance, or investment-cum-insurance policies.
If you already hold them, check surrender value and reinvest in mutual funds.
Step 8: Tax Planning and Legal Documentation
Sale of house creates capital gains tax.
If you owned for more than 2 years, it’s LTCG.
LTCG is taxed at 20% with indexation benefit.
If you reinvest in another house, you may get exemption under Section 54.
But since you already have a house, this may not be practical.
Calculate LTCG with help of CA and file returns carefully.
Keep all records of reinvestment or debt repayment.
For Mutual Fund Investment
Equity fund LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
STCG is taxed at 20%.
Debt fund returns taxed as per your income slab.
Plan withdrawals accordingly.
Step 9: Add a Will and Keep Documents in Place
Create a simple Will naming your spouse and children.
Add nominations in all mutual fund accounts.
Add joint holding with either or survivor option.
Keep mutual fund records updated and stored safely.
Step 10: Build a Monthly Investment Discipline
After repaying debts, invest balance in SIPs monthly.
As your income grows, increase SIP every year.
This is called “Step-up SIP” and builds strong corpus.
Use SIPs for long-term goals like child’s education or your retirement.
Finally
You are thinking ahead for your kids and family. That is admirable.
Begin with reducing 14% debt first.
Next, reduce own home loan partially.
Use balance for long-term mutual fund investments.
Avoid index funds, direct equity, and direct plans.
Invest only through CFP-backed regular mutual fund route.
Build a safety net with insurance and emergency fund.
Save smartly for your children’s future and your own retirement.
Review your portfolio every year with a Certified Financial Planner.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment