
Hi Sir, My Name is Ravi Kumar and by professional IT Solution Consultant. My goal is buy a Home value is around 50L, Please suggest to me which funds I should continue, stop or reduce? Any better fund categories or asset allocation you would suggest? I would like a brief review of my mutual fund portfolio and guidance on whether I should continue, rebalance or make any changes Current Mutual Fund Portfolio:-| ABSL Multi Cap Fund – SIP ₹3,000 (Dec 2021), Partial withdrawal and reinvestment done, Current value: ₹1.71 lakh Invested: ₹1.35 lakh, | Quant Active Fund – SIP ₹10,000 (Dec 2023), Current value: ₹2.25 lakh Invested: ₹2.40 lakh, | Nippon India Small Cap Fund – SIP ₹2,500 (Jan 2024), Current value: ₹58,016 Invested: ₹57,500,| Franklin India ELSS Tax Saver Fund – SIP ₹5,000 (Jan 2025), Current value: ₹56,260 Invested: ₹55,000, | ABSL Digital India Fund – SIP ₹2,500 (Jan 2025), Current value: ₹23,218 Invested: ₹22,500, | ABSL Nifty India Defence Index Fund – SIP ₹1,000 (Jan 2025), Current value: ₹10,044 Invested: ₹8,914, | HDFC Flexi Cap Fund – SIP ₹6,000 (Apr 2025) + ₹18,000 lump sum, Current value: ₹68,663 Invested: ₹66,000, | Franklin India ELSS Tax Saver Fund – Lump sum 5000 Current value: ₹5,109 (Some SIPs were paused for a few months in 2025 due to personal reasons.)
Ans: I appreciate your discipline and transparency.
You have started investing early.
You are thinking about a clear life goal.
Buying a home shows responsibility and vision.
Your effort deserves structured guidance.
Your portfolio needs refinement, not rejection.
Clarity will reduce stress and improve outcomes.
» Understanding Your Primary Goal
– Your main goal is home purchase.
– Target value is around Rs.50 lakh.
– This is a medium-term goal.
– The goal is non-negotiable.
Home buying needs certainty.
Volatility must be controlled here.
» Time Horizon Assessment
– You did not mention exact purchase year.
– Likely within five to seven years.
– This period is sensitive to market swings.
Risk must be moderated.
Capital safety matters more than returns.
» Your Current Mutual Fund Structure
– Portfolio is equity heavy.
– Exposure is scattered across many themes.
– Overlap risk is visible.
– Goal alignment is weak currently.
Returns look acceptable.
Structure needs correction.
» Review of Multi Cap Exposure
– Multi cap gives flexibility.
– Fund manager shifts allocation across market caps.
– This suits uncertain market phases.
– Continue this category.
– SIP amount is reasonable.
No immediate action needed here.
» Review of Active Diversified Equity Exposure
– Active diversified funds suit long-term wealth creation.
– They adjust sector and stock exposure.
– However, volatility can be high short term.
– Your home goal needs stability.
– SIP amount should be moderated.
Reduce dependency for home goal.
» Review of Small Cap Exposure
– Small caps are high risk.
– Returns come with sharp volatility.
– Drawdowns can be deep and long.
– This category is unsuitable for home purchase goals.
– Emotional stress can be high.
– Stop further SIPs here.
Allow existing units to grow.
» Review of ELSS Exposure
– ELSS funds serve tax saving purpose.
– Lock-in reduces liquidity risk.
– Your exposure is reasonable.
– Avoid adding more beyond tax needs.
– ELSS should not fund home purchase.
Use it only for tax planning.
» Review of Sectoral Technology Exposure
– Sector funds are cyclical.
– Performance depends on global trends.
– Timing matters significantly.
– High concentration risk exists.
– Sectoral funds are not goal-friendly.
– Stop fresh SIPs here.
Do not add more money.
» Review of Defence Index Exposure
– This is a thematic index product.
– Index funds follow momentum blindly.
– No downside control exists.
– Valuations are ignored completely.
– Volatility can surprise investors.
This category is unsuitable for your goal.
» Why Index Funds Are Risky Here
– Index funds fall fully during corrections.
– No active risk management happens.
– No profit booking discipline exists.
– They suit long horizons only.
– Home goal needs predictability.
Actively managed funds are better.
» Review of Flexi Cap Exposure
– Flexi cap funds are versatile.
– Managers move between segments.
– This suits changing market cycles.
– SIP amount is reasonable.
– Continue this category.
This fund supports long-term growth.
» Overall Portfolio Diagnosis
– Too many equity categories.
– Too many themes.
– Too much volatility for home goal.
– Goal clarity is missing.
This needs correction now.
» Goal-Based Asset Segregation
– Separate home goal money.
– Separate long-term wealth money.
Mixing goals creates confusion.
» Home Purchase Money Strategy
– Capital safety is priority.
– Growth is secondary.
– Liquidity is important.
Avoid aggressive equity here.
» Suitable Categories for Home Goal
– Conservative hybrid strategies.
– Short to medium duration debt strategies.
– Balanced allocation approaches.
These reduce volatility.
» Why Not Pure Equity for Home Goal
– Market timing risk exists.
– A crash near purchase date hurts badly.
– Loan dependency may increase.
Safety beats returns here.
» Long-Term Wealth Portion Strategy
– Equity can be used here.
– Time absorbs volatility.
– Active management helps discipline.
This part can grow steadily.
» SIP Realignment Suggestion
– Reduce total equity SIP exposure.
– Redirect some SIPs to stable categories.
– Stop thematic and small cap SIPs.
This aligns with home goal.
» Handling Existing Investments
– Do not exit everything suddenly.
– Gradual rebalancing is better.
– Emotional decisions cause regret.
Take phased action.
» Why Regular Mutual Fund Route Helps
– Guidance ensures discipline.
– Behavioural mistakes reduce.
– Portfolio reviews stay objective.
– Long-term success improves.
» Disadvantages of Direct Investing Without Guidance
– Investors chase performance.
– Panic during volatility increases.
– Wrong exits destroy returns.
Guidance protects behaviour.
» Tax Awareness for Your Planning
– Equity mutual fund gains have clear rules.
– Long-term gains above threshold are taxed.
– Short-term gains attract higher tax.
Avoid frequent churn.
» Emergency Fund Check
– Ensure six months expenses aside.
– Do not invest emergency money.
This avoids forced redemptions.
» Insurance Check Brief
– Ensure adequate term cover.
– Health cover should be sufficient.
Do not mix insurance with investment.
» Psychological Comfort Matters
– Portfolio should allow peaceful sleep.
– Stress reduces decision quality.
Stability improves consistency.
» Timeline Discipline
– Review portfolio yearly.
– Adjust as home purchase nears.
Reduce equity exposure gradually.
» Avoid These Mistakes Now
– Avoid chasing last year’s returns.
– Avoid adding new themes.
– Avoid frequent switching.
Simplicity works best.
» Role of a Certified Financial Planner
– Helps align investments with goals.
– Helps manage risk objectively.
– Helps control emotions.
This adds long-term value.
» Final Insights
– Your intent to buy a home is strong.
– Your investment journey has started well.
– Portfolio needs goal alignment.
– Small caps and themes add unnecessary risk.
– Index based themes lack downside protection.
– Actively managed diversified funds suit you better.
– Separate home goal from wealth goal.
– Reduce volatility as purchase nears.
– Discipline will decide success, not returns.
– With correction now, your goal is achievable.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment