
Dear Nitin Sir,
I am 63 years old retired person investing MF since 2010. and my MF investments are as follows:
Total Investments: 21.16L, Corpus- 43.31, XIRR-14.63%.
Shares- 3.3L
Details of Investment:
1. SBI Contra Regular: Investments from 2010 to 2024, presently suspended.
Invest. amount- 4.83L, Corpus-19.32L, XIRR-17.4%.
Present SIP- 55K since 3-4 years
1. Parag Parikh Flexi cap, direct - 10K
2. HDFC Balanced Advantage, direct- 20K
3. HDFC Retirement Saving, direct - 5K
4. Navi Nifty 50 Index, direct - 5K
5. Kotak Nifty Next 50 Index- 5K
6. Motilal Oswal Nifty 500 Momentum 50, direct -5K,
Motilal Oswal Mid Cap , Direct -5K
Time horizon- 15+ years
Also I am planning to withdraw about 10% of corpus (to get benefit of LTCG) from SBI Contra Regular and invest in Flexi Cap/ Balance advantage Funds.
I have following other investments.
Bank FD - 40L
PO SCCS- 30L
PO MIS - 4.5L
NPS Investment- 10L
PPF- 15L
Health Insurance- 8L
EPF/SBI Life / LIC Superannuation Pension- 28K/Month
My children are married and working.
My investment objective is to gift these (MF + Share) investments to my son and daughter after say 15 years.
Please suggest your views on portfolios.
With Thanks & Regards,
S. Salvankar
Ans: You have done a wonderful job by staying disciplined with mutual fund investments for over a decade. A long-term equity investment, especially post-retirement, shows patience, understanding, and commitment. Your detailed summary shows thoughtful planning and systematic execution. Let me now assess your portfolio and investment approach from a 360-degree perspective, keeping in mind your future gifting goal.
Overall Portfolio Structure
Your investments are diversified across:
Equity mutual funds
Direct shares
Fixed income avenues like Bank FD, Post Office schemes, PPF, NPS
Pension income
Health insurance
You have a clear goal — to pass on your equity investments to your children after 15 years. This is a beautiful long-term wealth gifting intention. Your time horizon also aligns well with equity investing. However, there are a few areas where your strategy can be refined.
Mutual Fund Portfolio – Positives
You started investing early and have stayed invested for over 14 years.
Your corpus of Rs. 43.31L on Rs. 21.16L investment shows consistent and high-quality compounding.
An XIRR of 14.63% is an excellent achievement over this long horizon.
SIP of Rs. 55K/month at this age is bold and forward-looking.
You have spread your SIP across different fund categories.
This portfolio reflects long-term wealth-building behaviour and commitment.
Review of Your Current Equity Mutual Fund Portfolio
Let’s look at the structure of your mutual fund investments:
SBI Contra Regular
Strong long-term performer.
Investment since 2010, paused now.
XIRR of 17.4% is remarkable.
You have rightly held it for long, giving the fund time to deliver.
Parag Parikh Flexi Cap (Direct)
HDFC Balanced Advantage (Direct)
HDFC Retirement Saving (Direct)
Navi Nifty 50 Index (Direct)
Kotak Nifty Next 50 Index (Direct)
Motilal Oswal Nifty 500 Momentum 50 (Direct)
Motilal Oswal Mid Cap (Direct)
These SIPs show diversification across flexi-cap, hybrid, thematic, index, and mid-cap segments.
However, let me highlight a few critical areas for improvement.
Disadvantages of Direct Funds
You are investing in direct funds. But this may not be ideal, especially for retired investors.
Direct funds need regular performance tracking.
You miss personalised guidance from a Certified Financial Planner (CFP).
If the fund underperforms, you may not exit at the right time.
Asset allocation or rebalancing will not happen without expert help.
Retirement stage needs proactive reviews, not reactive responses.
Regular plans through an MFD-CFP come with professional oversight, tailored advice, and peace of mind. Over a 15-year period, right allocation matters more than a slightly lower expense ratio.
Index Funds in Your Portfolio – A Critical View
You have allocated part of your SIP to:
Navi Nifty 50 Index
Kotak Nifty Next 50 Index
Motilal Oswal Nifty 500 Momentum
While these funds seem low-cost, they lack active human intelligence.
Why Index Funds May Not Suit You:
Index funds blindly copy the index.
No flexibility to manage downside risk.
They cannot avoid overvalued stocks.
Momentum themes work only in certain phases.
Recovery in falling markets may take longer.
They are not suitable for legacy or wealth transfer goals.
You need funds that can manage volatility and aim for consistent returns. Actively managed funds with a good track record serve this better.
Portfolio Restructuring Recommendations
Based on your current scenario and gifting goal, here are my suggestions:
Switch From Index Funds
Gradually exit all index fund SIPs.
Redeploy this into actively managed flexi-cap and balanced advantage funds through a regular plan.
Select AMC schemes that have a consistent 10-year+ track record.
Pause Retirement-Specific Funds
HDFC Retirement Saving is tax-locked.
Once lock-in ends, consider shifting to a more suitable long-term fund.
Reduce the Number of Funds
Too many small SIPs lead to portfolio clutter.
Concentrate into 3 to 4 well-managed funds.
Ensure each fund has a distinct mandate — not overlapping in strategy.
SBI Contra Withdrawal Plan
You are planning to withdraw 10% of your SBI Contra corpus to realise long-term capital gains.
This is a wise move, considering tax implications.
MF Tax Rule You Should Note:
LTCG above Rs. 1.25L is taxed at 12.5% now.
You can withdraw up to Rs. 1.25L of gains every year, tax-free.
Systematically redeem in phases to avoid bulk taxation.
Redeploy these proceeds into flexi-cap or balanced advantage regular plans. This will keep the compounding cycle intact.
Direct Shares Holding
You have Rs. 3.3L in shares. Please consider:
Are these high-quality companies with stable track records?
Do you monitor and rebalance them?
If not, better to switch to diversified mutual funds.
A CFP can help review the stock portfolio.
Fixed Income Portfolio Assessment
You hold:
Rs. 40L in Bank FDs
Rs. 30L in Post Office Senior Citizen Savings Scheme
Rs. 4.5L in PO MIS
Rs. 15L in PPF
Rs. 10L in NPS
This is a conservative, capital-protected allocation, which is perfect at your age.
You are earning:
Rs. 28,000 monthly pension
Likely interest income of Rs. 4 to 5L annually
There is enough buffer to manage regular expenses, with no pressure on equity withdrawals.
Please ensure the following:
Stagger maturity of FDs to avoid reinvestment risk.
Reinvest matured PO schemes into safer debt funds or hybrid funds with moderate risk.
Do not add more money to NPS now. It will become illiquid and taxable on withdrawal.
Health Insurance Review
You have a health cover of Rs. 8L. Please ensure:
It includes critical illness cover.
It has cashless facility in your nearest hospital.
Policy continues till age 80+.
Premiums are paid on time.
If needed, explore super top-up policies to enhance coverage at a low cost.
Estate Planning and Gifting to Children
You plan to gift the entire mutual fund and stock corpus to your children after 15 years.
This is thoughtful and visionary. To do it smoothly, please:
Write a Will now, clearly assigning MF and stock assets.
Nominate your son and daughter correctly in each folio.
Keep them informed about your investments.
Review the Will every 3-4 years.
Maintain a simple tracker sheet with folio details, nominee names, and login info.
Also consider creating a trust, if you want to manage transfer gradually. A CFP can help you plan this smoothly.
Risk and Volatility Review
Even though you have 15+ years, equity markets remain volatile in short periods.
Please review your risk:
Avoid high exposure to mid-cap or momentum-based funds.
Stick to large-cap biased flexi-cap and balanced advantage funds.
Ensure debt-equity balance is maintained (ideally 30-35% in equity for now).
Review asset allocation annually with a CFP.
This approach will protect the wealth you are building for your children.
Action Plan Summary
Here is what you can do step-by-step:
Exit index funds gradually.
Stop direct fund SIPs and move to regular funds via CFP-guided MFDs.
Reduce mutual fund count and consolidate.
Withdraw small gains from SBI Contra yearly.
Pause fresh NPS investment.
Monitor health insurance coverage closely.
Nominate children and write a proper Will.
Maintain asset allocation of 65-70% debt, 30-35% equity.
Review portfolio every year.
Finally
Your portfolio reflects clarity and long-term vision.
But direct funds and index funds may hinder that vision.
Let a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) work with you, just like a family doctor. They’ll help protect and grow your wealth till the time you gift it.
Investing with expert review ensures peace of mind, emotional security, and legacy fulfilment.
You have built a solid base — now protect it with structure, consolidation, and clarity.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP
Chief Financial Planner
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment