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Radheshyam

Radheshyam Zanwar  |3656 Answers  |Ask -

MHT-CET, IIT-JEE, NEET-UG Expert - Answered on Jun 12, 2025

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 - Jun 12, 2025
Career

Is Manipal Jaipur good for cse

Ans: Hello dear.
Yes. CSE @ Manipal is good.
Best of luck to you.
Follow me if you like the reply. Thanks
Radheshyam
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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 02, 2025Hindi
Money
Sir I've recently sold a plot of land and received 35 lakhs. I want to use this amount to fund my 10-year-old daughter's higher education in India or maybe abroad 10 years from now. I already have a PPF account with 6 lakhs. Should I invest this corpus in mutual funds via STP from a liquid fund, or go for FMPs and hybrid funds? What is the best investment strategy to beat inflation yet ensure safety?
Ans: You have taken a wise step by planning for your daughter’s future.
Rs.?35 lakhs is a good corpus already.
You also have Rs.?6 lakhs in PPF.
You want to cover her education in 10 years.
You seek safety and inflation beating growth.
Let us now build a structured, 360?degree plan.

Understanding Your Goal Clearly
This is a goal-based investment scenario.
The aim is a 10?year horizon.
Education costs can rise faster than inflation.
Especially if she studies abroad.
You need a strategy that balances growth and safety.
Debt-only investments will not beat inflation.
Equity-only will involve volatility.
Hence, a mix is required.
We will align allocation to risk and timeline.
Your daughter’s education is a priority goal.

Appreciating Your Existing Setup
You already have:

Rs.?6 lakhs in PPF

Lock?in is 15 years

Currently earning around fixed rates

You also now have Rs.?35 lakhs more.
That’s a total of Rs.?41 lakhs.
This is a strong starting capital.
You show good financial intention.
PPF adds tax, safety, and discipline.
We can now diversify further from this base.

Risk Profile and Time Horizon
You have a 10?year horizon ahead.
A balanced mix of equity and debt suits well.
Risk should be moderate.
You seek stability and some growth.
You cannot take unreasonable risk at this point.
Portfolio must be resilient to market corrections.

Investment Options at a Glance
Let us assess key instruments:

Systematic Transfer Plan (STP) from liquid to equity

Fixed Maturity Plans (FMP) or closed?ended debt funds

Hybrid mutual funds (balanced funds)

PPF alone (already partly used)

We must evaluate each for safety, growth, tax, and alignment.

Why Not FMPs Only
FMPs are debt?based, with fixed maturity.
They offer moderate returns.
But those returns may not beat inflation over 10 years.
They also lack liquidity before maturity.
Plus taxation on gains is as per your tax slab.
This reduces realised benefit.
So FMPs alone won’t serve education goal well.
They can only be used as a small portion.

Why Not Hybrid Funds Only
Hybrid funds invest in both equity and debt.
They reduce volatility somewhat.
But their equity exposure is limited.
Typically 20–35% equity only.
This may not generate sufficient long?term growth.
To outperform inflation, higher equity part is needed.
Half-in?hybrid and half-in?balanced equity are better mix.
Hence we need separate allocations.

Why Not Liquid Funds Alone
Liquid funds offer stability and liquidity.
But returns are low.
They barely beat inflation.
They are good short?term homes but not enough for 10-year goals.
Hence only part of corpus should go to liquid funds.

The Case Against Index Funds and Direct Funds
You did not mention index or direct funds.
But it is important to highlight:

Index funds follow the market passively

They lack downside protection in corrections

No active management means no tactical risk management

They suit long?term, risk?tolerant goals

But here we need intelligent management for balance

Therefore, actively managed funds work better

Direct funds save commission but:

Miss expert monitoring

Lack discipline in asset allocation

No professional rebalancing

Hence regular plans via Certified Financial Planner are better.
They provide advice, review, and support.

Proposed Investment Allocation Strategy
Here is a broad allocation based on your needs:

Equity Mutual Funds via STP – For growth over 10 years

Hybrid Funds – To balance volatility and debt exposure

FMP or Short?Duration Debt – For stable returns on short?term portion

Liquid Funds – For initial parking and systematic deployment

Let us now detail each component and staged implementation.

Equity Mutual Funds via STP from Liquid
Why STP?

STP helps spread market risk.
You invest lumpsum in liquid fund first.
Then monthly move small amounts to equity fund.
This avoids market timing risk.
It also gives tax efficiency.
You get equity exposure without shock.

How to implement:

Park Rs.?15–20 lakhs in liquid fund initially

Set STP of Rs.?1 lakh per month to equity fund

Continue for 15–20 months

Use actively managed mid?cap / multi?cap funds

This gives both growth and risk management

Let this grow for full 10 years.
You will get market beating potential.

Hybrid Mutual Funds
Why include them?

Hybrid funds give both equity and debt exposure.
They suit investors seeking balance.
They reduce volatility versus pure equity.
They also provide regular portfolio stability.

How to invest:

Allocate Rs.?8–10 lakhs

Use monthly SIP of Rs.?50,000 for 20 months

Choose balanced or conservative hybrid funds

These hold approx. 50–60% equity

This will diversify your corpus wisely.

Fixed Maturity Plan Allocation
Why small portion?

You may want part of the corpus in debt-only instruments.
We are nearing 10-year goal, so add stability.

How to allocate:

Allocate Rs.?5–7 lakhs

Invest in FMPs maturing 3–5 years

These will provide moderate, predictable returns

Lock?in is acceptable as you have liquid assets elsewhere

This secures part of your corpus away from equity volatility.

Liquid Fund Holding – Deployment Base
Purpose and timing:

You may not want to invest entire Rs.?35 lakhs at once

Liquid fund is initial parking and fallback

It also funds STP and hybrid top?ups

Plan:

Invest Rs.?5–7 lakhs in liquid fund

This covers STP monthly transfer needs

And acts as buffer

You may hold for 6–12 months only

Move rest promptly to equity and hybrid.

PPF Role and Continuation
You already have Rs.?6 lakhs in PPF.
Continue PPF contributions if you can.
It gives safety and tax benefits.
But PPF is locked for 15 years.
This works well beyond a 10-year target.
So keep it, but do not over?allocate more now.
PPF remains a core debt component in your portfolio.

Asset Allocation Summary (Approximate)
Your corpus of Rs.?35 lakhs can be structured like this:

Liquid Fund: Rs.?7 lakhs (initial deployment)

Equity Funds via STP: Rs.?18–20 lakhs

Hybrid Funds: Rs.?8–10 lakhs

FMP / Short?Duration Debt Funds: Rs.?5–7 lakhs

Continue PPF contributions in parallel.

Tax and Withdrawal Planning
The 10?year horizon allows holding equity long term.
On redemption:

LTCG on equity above Rs.?1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

STCG taxed at 20%

Debt fund gains taxed as per slab

Plan redemption smartly:

Use withdrawal in parts

Use STP or SWP to reduce tax

Exclude index or direct fund exposure

Only actively managed funds will be used

Certified Financial Planner will help time payout.

Regular Monitoring and Review
Your portfolio must be reviewed regularly:

At least every six months

Check if equity is above target allocation after run?up

Rebalance by moving excess equity to hybrid or debt

Adjust STP rate if needed

Tune hybrid SIPs based on performance

Professional supervision is important.
Regular plans help you in rebalancing.

Inflation and Growth Expectations
Education inflation in India is around 8–10% annually.
Equity funds can deliver 12–15% long?term post-tax.
Hybrid can deliver 9–12%.
Debt instruments around 6–8%.

A combination ensures you beat inflation consistently.
Also gives portfolio safety in down markets.

Contingency Planning
If any shortfall or delay in goal arises:

Use liquid funds to bridge cash gaps

Adjust STP or SWP rates

Re-schedule hybrid fund SIPs

Delay overseas portion till later

Senior?faculty support or scholarship can help

PLanning ahead keeps you flexible.

Risks and Their Mitigation
Even with this plan, risk remains:

Equity market fall

High debt market interest rate risk

Tax changes

Sudden expenses

We mitigate them via:

Diversification across asset classes

STP spreading and discipline

Hybrid stability cushion

Liquid fund buffer

Regular monitoring

Tax planning and redemption structure

This creates cushion and flexibility.

Advantages Over Other Instruments
Let us compare for clarity:

Equity STP: potential high growth, manageable risk

Hybrid Funds: stability and inflation buffer

FMP: predictable returns on partial corpus

Liquid Fund: ensures cash availability and flexibility

PPF: tax-saver, long-term debt part

Each component supports another.
Together they form a balanced, goal-based plan.

Simple Action Plan to Begin
Keep Rs.?7 lakhs in liquid fund

Start STP of Rs.?1 lakh monthly to equity funds

SIP Rs.?50,000 monthly into hybrid fund for next 20 months

Invest Rs.?5 lakh lumpsum in FMP

Continue PPF contribution

Setup regular review schedule

Adjust withdrawals at goal?time (after 10 years)

You may start gradually over 6?8 months.
But do not delay equity deployment unnecessarily.

Financial Discipline Tips
Invest through Certified Financial Planner

Select regular fund plans, not direct

Avoid index funds and direct products

Track goal progress yearly

Rebalance as per market

Adjust for tax implications

Keep documents and nominations ready

Review asset allocation posture as goal arrives

Do not mix new insurance policies now

Final Insights
Your plan has a good base now.
You have capital, intention, and timeline.

To summarize:

Equity STP gives long-term growth potential

Hybrid funds act as buffer and steady returns

FMP gives fixed-income part

Liquid funds give flexibility

PPF gives tax shield and stability

Together they can beat inflation and provide safety.
Strategically combining these gives financial security and growth.
Use expert help from Certified Financial Planner.
Monitor portfolio annually.
Stay disciplined.
Your daughter’s education goal is fully achievable.

Best Regards,

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Money
Hy i am 35 year old and I have two loans , business loan and personal loan but my monthly salary is only Rs11000, So how I free from these loans please help.
Ans: You are 35 years old. You have two loans—business and personal. Your monthly income is Rs. 11,000. You are struggling to clear these loans. This is a tough stage, but not impossible to solve. With discipline and a step-by-step plan, you can come out of this burden.

Let’s go deeper into your situation. We’ll look at every angle—income, expenses, debt, and opportunity. A clear 360-degree financial plan is important now.

Understanding Your Current Financial Pressure
Let’s begin with clarity about where you stand.

You earn Rs. 11,000 monthly

You are repaying business and personal loans

Your fixed income is very low

No other income sources are mentioned

Expenses are likely eating most of your income

It is not possible to repay high EMI amounts with this income. The first goal is not to panic. The second goal is to fix the leak.

Your position is tough. But not hopeless. With strong steps, change is possible.

Review and Reduce Your Monthly Expenses
When income is limited, expenses must be checked strictly.
Take a notebook. Write down your monthly spending.
Be honest. Check for waste. Remove non-essential items.

Here is how to start:

List all food, travel, and personal costs

Stop online shopping and unnecessary subscriptions

Reduce electricity and mobile bills

Delay purchases that are not urgent

Eat home-cooked food

Use public transport if possible

Even saving Rs. 1,000–Rs. 2,000 monthly can help.
That amount can go towards extra loan payment.

List Down Both Loans Clearly
Next, you need to know your loans properly. Write on paper:

Loan type (business or personal)

Name of lender (bank, NBFC, private lender)

Total loan outstanding

Interest rate for each loan

Monthly EMI

Number of EMIs left

You must have a clear idea. Without this, no action can be taken.

Identify Which Loan Is Hurting More
Usually, personal loans charge higher interest.
Business loans may have longer tenure.

You must choose which loan to finish first.

This is how to decide:

If one loan has very high interest, target that first

If one loan is small in size, finish it to reduce pressure

Check if any loan has late payment charges

By focusing on one loan at a time, progress will be faster.

This method is called "loan snowball" strategy. It builds confidence.

Talk to Your Lender and Ask for Restructuring
Please don’t hide from your lenders. It makes things worse.

Instead, go and speak to them honestly.

Say that income is low and you want to repay fully, but need help.

Ask them:

Can EMIs be reduced by increasing tenure?

Can interest rate be lowered in any way?

Can you get a pause of few months (moratorium)?

Many banks support honest customers. They may give a relief option.

If you default silently, they may take legal action. So communication is very important.

Explore Small Extra Income Sources
Your salary is Rs. 11,000. That is too low for your age.

Can you try adding Rs. 3,000–Rs. 5,000 more?

Here are possible ideas:

Part-time tuition classes

Food delivery or driving

Data entry work from home

Helping a shop or local business

Selling any handmade item online

Extra income may seem small, but helps in debt closure.

Every rupee matters at this stage.

Consider Consolidating Loans
Sometimes, combining two loans into one can help.

If you have two lenders, and one charges less interest, ask for balance transfer.

This is what you can explore:

Combine loans into one personal loan with lower EMI

Choose longer tenure but lesser monthly EMI

Repay that single EMI with discipline

But this should be done only with guidance. Wrong lender may increase your pain. Take help from a Certified Financial Planner before doing this.

Avoid Taking More Loans Now
This is very important. Please do not take a new loan to pay old loan.

That is like falling into a trap.

Even if someone offers you quick money, avoid it.

It only increases your burden. Especially from private lenders or app-based loan companies.

Stay away from such offers.

Sell Unused Items to Raise Cash
This step may feel hard, but is very useful.

Check your home for:

Old gold ornaments

Spare mobile phones or electronic items

Furniture or cycles not in use

Any vehicle you can sell for cash

Use that money only to reduce loans. Not for any other use.

Even Rs. 10,000–Rs. 20,000 can reduce pressure.

You must get lean and focus only on becoming debt-free.

Ask Support from Trusted Family or Friends
Do not borrow from friends or relatives unless it is last option.

But if someone trustworthy can give you a small interest-free loan, it can help close one loan.

Take only what you can repay. Set written terms.

Do not spoil relationships for money. Keep everything transparent.

Set a 2-Year Debt Freedom Goal
Debt freedom will not happen in one month. But you can plan for 24 months.

Make a clear plan like this:

Step 1: Lower expenses

Step 2: Earn more from side work

Step 3: Target one loan first

Step 4: Avoid new loans

Step 5: Talk to lenders

Step 6: Track progress monthly

Keep a small diary. Update loan balance every 30 days.

When you see the balance reducing, your confidence grows.

If You Have Any Insurance Plans, Review Them
Check if you have old LIC, ULIP, or money-back policies.

If they are not giving good returns, and you’ve crossed 5–6 years, you may consider surrendering.

Surrender value can be used to clear a loan.

But this must be done with expert review. Do not stop any policy blindly.

If these are insurance + investment plans, and giving only 4–5% returns, it is better to exit.

Pure term insurance is cheaper and better for future protection.

Reinvest savings through mutual funds via a Certified Financial Planner.

What Not to Do in This Situation
Please avoid the following mistakes:

Don’t take gold loan or private loan to repay other loans

Don’t stop paying EMIs suddenly

Don’t ignore lender calls or notices

Don’t use credit cards or payday loans now

Don’t borrow from unverified online apps

These steps increase your problem. Focus only on recovery.

Once Loans Are Cleared – Plan for Future
You are now 35. Once loans are over, don’t stay without a plan.

Here’s how to rebuild:

Start saving at least Rs. 500 monthly

Open SIP in mutual funds through Certified Financial Planner

Build emergency fund of 3 months’ income

Get term life cover and health insurance

Slowly increase SIP as income grows

Avoid all unnecessary debt going forward

Debt freedom is not just about today. It’s about future discipline.

Finally
You are facing a hard time today. But this can change.

Take small steps. Reduce costs. Increase income. Target one loan at a time.

Talk to lenders. Sell unused items. Seek support where safe.

Avoid shortcuts. Don’t borrow again. Make debt freedom your only goal.

Track monthly progress. Write it down. Motivate yourself daily.

Once loans are cleared, don’t fall in trap again. Learn from today.

You will rebuild. You will recover. Stay focused. You can become debt free.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 16, 2025Hindi
Money
Iam 43yrs & husband 49yrs having a small business monthly 10k income.We have our own house,no loans and we are childfree.Presently we have Fd of 6lacs,saving account 2lacs & ppf 70,000(monthly Rs 1000).we have 5 lacs of health insurance. Can you guide how to plan retirement and where to invest.We don't want to invest in sip,mutual funds & stock market.
Ans: You and your husband are in your 40s, with a modest business income.
You live in your own house, have no loans, and have chosen a childfree life.
You have some savings but prefer not to invest in SIPs, mutual funds, or stocks.
That is perfectly alright. It is still possible to build a peaceful retirement plan.

Let us build a 360-degree financial strategy that suits your preference for safe and simple investments.

Where You Stand Today – Let’s Understand First
Your Age: 43 years

Husband’s Age: 49 years

Monthly Income: Rs 10,000 (from small business)

Dependents: None (childfree)

Home: Owned, no rent, no EMI

FD Balance: Rs 6 lakhs

Savings Account: Rs 2 lakhs

PPF Balance: Rs 70,000 (Rs 1,000/month going)

Health Insurance: Rs 5 lakhs coverage

This is a good base to begin with.
You have low expenses, no debt, and minimal responsibilities.
Now we must focus on preserving your capital and generating steady income for retirement.

Retirement Timeline and Monthly Need
Let us assume retirement target at age 60.
That gives you 17 years to prepare.

But husband is 49. So he has only 11 years to build the corpus.
His energy or ability to run business may reduce after 60.

So we must:

Plan for regular income after 60

Ensure corpus lasts for at least 25–30 years

Keep it tax-efficient and safe

Stick to your comfort zone (no SIP, no mutual fund, no stock)

Step 1: Organise and Reallocate Your Current Money
You have total Rs 8.7 lakhs across savings and FD.
This money is sitting idle or earning low returns.

What to do:

Savings Account – Rs 2 lakhs

Keep only Rs 1 lakh here

This is your emergency fund

Keep it liquid for medical or urgent needs

FD – Rs 6 lakhs

Break into 3 parts

Rs 2 lakhs in 1-year FD (laddered maturity)

Rs 2 lakhs in 2-year FD

Rs 2 lakhs in 3-year FD

Renew each with new interest rate on maturity

Why laddering?

You avoid locking all money in one FD

You get higher interest step by step

You maintain some liquidity every year

Step 2: Continue and Increase PPF Contribution
You are already investing Rs 1,000/month in PPF.
This is a wise decision.

PPF gives:

Tax-free interest

Government-backed safety

Long lock-in for disciplined saving

Safe and simple for your profile

What to do now:

Increase your monthly contribution to Rs 2,500 or Rs 3,000

If not monthly, put Rs 30,000 to Rs 40,000 once a year

Target full Rs 1.5 lakh contribution every year gradually

PPF will give you a decent lump sum after 15 years.
This will be a major retirement source.

Step 3: Invest in Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) – When Husband Turns 60
This is a safe and regular income option post-retirement.
Once your husband turns 60, he becomes eligible.

SCSS Benefits:

Interest rate is better than bank FD

Interest paid quarterly

Backed by government

Good for regular monthly income

You can deposit up to Rs 30 lakhs as a couple when both are 60+.
For now, plan to keep a part of your savings ready for this.

Step 4: Consider Post Office Monthly Income Scheme (POMIS)
If you want regular monthly income with safety, POMIS is a good fit.
Interest is paid monthly, principal is safe.

You can invest up to:

Rs 9 lakhs in single name

Rs 15 lakhs in joint account

After 5 years, you can renew or withdraw.

POMIS is good for post-retirement use.
You can keep part of your FD proceeds here after age 60.

Step 5: Consider RBI Floating Rate Bonds
These are government-backed bonds with floating interest rate.
They pay interest every 6 months.

Minimum investment is Rs 1,000
No maximum limit. Lock-in of 7 years.

This is suitable if you don’t need the full money urgently.
Returns are better than most bank FDs.
You can use this after age 55 for part of your corpus.

Step 6: Build a Passive Income System Post-60
After age 60, you will need:

Fixed monthly income

Capital safety

Freedom from tension

You can use a combination of:

SCSS

POMIS

3 to 5-year FDs

PPF withdrawal in parts

RBI Bonds for long-term parking

This basket gives stability and income.
Review this once in 2 years with help of a Certified Financial Planner.

Step 7: Increase Income Slowly Before Retirement
Right now, your business income is Rs 10,000/month.
Try to increase it slowly in next 3–5 years.

Some ideas:

Offer services online (home tiffin, stitching, accounting)

Partner with local stores for small commissions

Take training and start online classes

Even Rs 5,000–8,000 extra monthly helps build long-term savings.
Use that for increasing PPF and FDs.

Step 8: Health Insurance – Strengthen Coverage Gradually
You already have Rs 5 lakhs health insurance.
That is good. But may not be enough later.

What to do:

Check if it is individual or floater policy

Take super top-up of Rs 10 lakhs

Premium will be affordable if taken early

Ensure it covers both husband and wife

Renew without gaps

Healthcare costs will rise after age 60.
This protection avoids using your savings during treatment.

Step 9: Will and Nominee Planning – Don’t Ignore
As you have no children, please plan your assets smartly.

Steps to take:

Add nominee in all FDs and accounts

Write a simple Will with your wishes

Clearly mention who should get what

Keep a copy with someone you trust

This avoids legal trouble later.
It keeps your hard-earned money protected.

Step 10: Build a Discipline of Annual Review
Even if you don’t invest in mutual funds, review is a must.

Once every year:

Check maturity of FDs

Renew PPF contribution

Review health insurance coverage

Plan SCSS and POMIS investment timeline

Track business income for extra savings

Even simple savings need smart management.
Take help of a CFP-backed MFD to assist.
They will guide you even if you prefer non-MF instruments.

Final Insights
You have peace of mind with your own home, no loans, and no dependents.
You are very clear about avoiding SIP, mutual funds, and stocks.
Even then, a secure and peaceful retirement is possible.

You just need to:

Reallocate existing money better

Increase PPF contribution steadily

Prepare for SCSS, POMIS, and RBI Bonds at 60

Strengthen health insurance with top-up

Increase business income slightly

Review savings regularly

Write a Will and update nominations

This approach will build a stable and low-risk retirement over the next 10–15 years.
You don’t have to take big risks to live well later.
Just follow this system step-by-step.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 16, 2025Hindi
Money
I have total of 50,000 rupee tell me in What I should put these money to gain more money ..btw I'm starting my graduation this year
Ans: You are starting your graduation this year.
You have Rs. 50,000 saved.
You want to grow this money wisely.

That is a good mindset at a young age.
Let’s look at a full 360-degree plan.
This will help you now and for future.

First Secure Your Emergency Need
You are still a student now.
There is no regular income.
You need to be ready for any surprise.

Keep at least Rs. 10,000 in savings account.
This will help in small health or family emergencies.
Keep it in a bank with UPI and ATM access.
Do not use this amount for investment.

Keep Some Liquid Money Handy
Sometimes you may need quick cash.
For college travel or exam expenses.
Keep Rs. 5,000 in a wallet or Paytm/PhonePe balance.
This avoids last-minute borrowing.
You can also keep this in a savings account.

This builds confidence.
It keeps your investment plan safe from interruption.

Invest Small, But Begin Now
From remaining Rs. 35,000, you should start investing.
Your goal is long term growth.
You are still very young.
So, equity investing is ideal.
You can hold for many years.
This creates big wealth with compounding.

Invest only in actively managed mutual funds.
Don’t go for index funds.
Index funds do not protect you in market fall.
They follow market blindly.
There is no expert fund manager involved.
You need expert guidance at this age.
Use actively managed regular funds through an MFD with CFP credential.

Do not choose direct funds.
Direct plans give no support.
No guidance or review help is provided.
That is risky for beginners.
You must go through regular funds via a Certified Financial Planner.

Suggested Investment Approach
Use a SIP of Rs. 1,500 to Rs. 2,000 monthly.
You can start a Systematic Investment Plan.
Choose an actively managed diversified equity fund.
Use a good AMC with a long history.

This gives habit of disciplined investing.
Keep investing for next 5 to 7 years.
It will grow to a good amount.

If SIP is not possible, do a lump sum.
Invest Rs. 25,000 at once in an actively managed fund.
Then continue with Rs. 500 monthly.
Even a small SIP is useful over time.

Don’t withdraw for short-term needs.
Keep a separate cash reserve for that.

What You Must Avoid Now
Avoid doing these things with your Rs. 50,000:

Don’t put it all in FDs.
Returns are low.
They are also taxed fully.

Don’t buy ULIPs or LIC plans.
They mix insurance and investment badly.
Not suited for young students.

Don’t invest in crypto or stocks directly.
They are risky and unstable.
You are too early for that.

Don’t buy gold with all money.
It gives poor long-term returns.

Don’t lend this money to friends.
You may not get it back.

Don’t go for annuity plans or pension schemes.
They are for older age.

Use Time as Your Power
You are just starting graduation.
You are 18 to 20 years old.
Even a small amount invested today grows big.

The earlier you invest, the less you need later.
Even Rs. 1,000 invested monthly can become lakhs.

Start early and stay invested.
Do not panic if markets fall.
Keep investing during ups and downs.

Investing for 7 to 10 years builds wealth silently.
And safely.
Without any stress.

Monitor Once Every 6 Months
Track your mutual fund once in six months.
Check your total value and performance.
Don’t check every day.
You are not a trader.

Long-term view gives good results.
Review it with a Certified Financial Planner.
You will get guidance on future steps.

Keep Learning About Money
You are in college now.
This is best time to learn about saving and investing.

Start reading about:

Budgeting

Saving goals

Tax basics

Mutual funds

Financial planning

These will help you later in job or business.
Financial wisdom is more important than income.

Keep building financial knowledge slowly.
Start now, you will thank yourself later.

After Graduation – Next Steps
When you start working, income will start.
Then you can increase your SIPs.
You can plan for your own flat, car, or marriage.
That will be easier because you started early.

You can also plan for retirement from Day 1.
Even small early investments give big support in old age.

Final Insights
You are starting with Rs. 50,000.
You have time and discipline.
That’s enough to grow big.

Split the money like this:

Rs. 10,000 in emergency fund

Rs. 5,000 in quick access cash

Rs. 25,000 in lump sum equity mutual fund

Rs. 500 to Rs. 2,000 monthly SIP from savings

Avoid index funds.
Avoid direct funds.
Avoid risky products.

Use actively managed mutual funds only.
Through a regular plan and a Certified Financial Planner.

Focus on long-term gains.
Don’t fall for short-term excitement.
Grow your money slowly, safely, and smartly.

Start small, but stay steady.
One day, this small seed will become a tree.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 14, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi, My in-hand salary is 120000, I am investing 40000 per month in SIP. 12000 rent, 20000 household expenses, 10000 kids school expenses, 20000 other expenses. I have a 40000 of premium in LIC per year. I am looking for buying a house, it cost around 70 lakh, what I can do please suggest me, I don't have down payment with me other than 10 lakh in mutual funds. Please suggest me what I can do. Go for new house with using investments or better stay in rented house.
Ans: You are earning Rs. 1,20,000 monthly. Your SIP investments are Rs. 40,000. Your rent is Rs. 12,000. Household and personal costs add up to Rs. 50,000. You also pay Rs. 40,000 yearly LIC premium. You are planning to buy a house worth Rs. 70 lakh. You only have Rs. 10 lakh in mutual funds as savings. You are unsure if buying is the right step now.

This is a very practical question. It’s good that you are evaluating before acting. You are already saving a solid 33% of income monthly. That is rare and very responsible. You also manage to balance kids' school fees, rent, and regular expenses. Let’s take a 360-degree view of your finances before deciding.

Cash Flow Snapshot: Where You Stand Today
Let us break down your monthly cash flow to get a complete view.

In-hand Salary: Rs. 1,20,000

SIPs: Rs. 40,000

Rent: Rs. 12,000

Household Expenses: Rs. 20,000

Children's School Fees: Rs. 10,000

Other Expenses: Rs. 20,000

Total Outgo: Rs. 1,02,000

Balance Left: Rs. 18,000 monthly

So, after expenses and SIPs, your savings buffer is only Rs. 18,000.

This remaining amount is too low to afford any EMI at this stage. A loan EMI for Rs. 60 lakh house loan will easily be Rs. 50,000+ monthly. This will create heavy strain.

Reviewing the House Buying Plan
You are planning to buy a house for Rs. 70 lakh. You have Rs. 10 lakh in mutual funds. This is your only source for down payment.

Let’s look at possible scenarios if you proceed with buying.

Minimum Down Payment
For Rs. 70 lakh house, lenders need 15-20% down

This means you need Rs. 10.5 to 14 lakh upfront

You only have Rs. 10 lakh. It is not enough.

Using your mutual fund savings will fully exhaust your reserves.
This is risky. It leaves no emergency fund. It leaves no flexibility.

Home Loan EMI Burden
Rs. 60 lakh loan means EMI of Rs. 50,000–55,000 per month

Your monthly surplus after current SIPs and expenses is only Rs. 18,000

You will need to stop SIPs and even reduce household spending

That will hurt long-term wealth building. You may also default during job loss or salary cuts.

Emergency Fund Risk
Using your entire Rs. 10 lakh mutual fund for down payment is very risky.
You will have zero backup for medical or job issues.
That is not advisable at this stage of life with kids' needs.

LIC Premium: Should You Keep or Exit?
You pay Rs. 40,000 per year to LIC. Please check if it is a traditional endowment or money-back plan. If yes, you may be earning low returns (around 4-5%).

These policies are not suitable for wealth creation

If you have held them for more than 5–6 years, check surrender value

You can consider surrendering and reinvesting the proceeds in mutual funds

Term insurance is better and cheaper for protection

But only make this switch after guidance from a Certified Financial Planner.

Staying in Rented House: Benefits at Present
Let’s compare if you continue in rent instead of buying now.

Your current rent is only Rs. 12,000. It is low and manageable.

You are able to invest Rs. 40,000 in mutual funds every month

You are building long-term wealth steadily

You are avoiding big EMI pressure and mental stress

Right now, this is more financially stable. Renting is not bad when it lets you invest and grow wealth. Owning a house is a good dream. But timing must be right.

Mutual Funds: Why You Must Continue Them
You are already investing Rs. 40,000 monthly. This shows discipline.
Please do not break these mutual funds for house buying.

Why?

These funds are working toward your long-term wealth

You get compounding benefits with time

Redeeming them early will lose growth

Using them for down payment will reduce your investment power

Your mutual funds are like a personal wealth engine. Do not break the engine for a one-time need.

Also, avoid direct funds without expert guidance. Direct funds have no help from MFDs. If market falls, you may not know what to do. Regular plans through Certified Financial Planners offer guidance. This helps protect your capital.

Actively managed funds are better than index funds. Index funds only copy the market. They can’t protect during big crashes. Active fund managers adjust portfolios. That protects your goals better.

If You Still Want to Own a House
You may still have a strong desire to own. That is understandable. But instead of rushing, follow this phased approach.

Step 1: Build Your Down Payment First
Target saving Rs. 15–20 lakh for down payment

Start a separate SIP for this purpose

Invest Rs. 20,000 per month toward this goal

Choose debt and balanced mutual funds for this

It will take 4–5 years to build this fund. This is safer than loaning now.
During this time, you continue renting and investing.

Step 2: Increase Emergency Fund
Keep 6 months' expenses as buffer

For your case, build Rs. 3–4 lakh in liquid fund or bank RD

This helps handle job loss or medical emergency

Don't proceed with big EMIs before this buffer is ready.

Step 3: Review Home Plan After 4–5 Years
By then:

Your income will likely rise

Your SIPs will grow wealth

You may have Rs. 20 lakh ready for down

You can afford smaller loan

EMI will fit within your budget

This gives more peace of mind. You don’t compromise kids’ future or your own retirement.

Retirement and Children’s Future Goals
Please remember:

Kids’ education costs grow very fast

Your retirement needs are also big and long-term

If you buy a house now, you will cut your SIPs

This weakens retirement and children’s goals

You are still young. You have time to grow wealth through SIPs. Don’t rush to buy a house by sacrificing your financial future.

Stay invested. Grow your SIP. After 5 years, evaluate again with your Certified Financial Planner.

Tax View on Mutual Fund Redemptions
If you sell mutual funds now:

Equity fund gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5% (LTCG)

Gains below 1 year are taxed at 20% (STCG)

Debt fund gains taxed as per income slab

Selling mutual funds means paying these taxes. You also lose future growth.
It is not the right time to exit.

What You Should Do Now – 360° Plan
Here is a full plan based on your goals and current stage.

Stay in rented house for next 4–5 years

Don’t use current mutual funds for house buying

Start new SIP for house goal: Rs. 20,000 monthly

Keep current SIPs for wealth creation

Build emergency fund up to Rs. 4 lakh

Review LIC plans with a Certified Financial Planner

Surrender low-return plans, if suitable, and invest better

Upgrade term and health insurance for full coverage

Review your cash flow yearly with your Certified Financial Planner

This plan balances your dreams with your responsibilities. You protect your future. You keep kids’ goals safe. You buy a house when truly ready.

Finally
Right now, avoid buying house with loan

Continue your current rent and SIPs

Start a fresh SIP for house fund

Build a buffer before big EMI decisions

Keep investing for children’s and your future

Don’t redeem mutual funds now

Revisit house goal after 4–5 years

Take support from a Certified Financial Planner regularly

You are already doing many things right. Keep this discipline. Stay patient. Your house dream will become real at the right time—without risk to your goals.

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Money
Hi.I want to retire in 2032-33. Till now I don't have any savings.i can start with 15000 sip.what should be my investment plan for next 7 -8years for a good retirement.please guide me
Ans: You want to retire in 2032–33.
That means you have 7 to 8 years left for active working.
You are starting now, with no savings, and ready to invest Rs 15,000 SIP per month.
This is a good move. You are taking control. That’s important.

Let’s build a solid investment plan that gives you a strong and stress-free retirement.
We will use a simple, practical and easy to follow strategy.
Our goal is to build a balanced portfolio that grows well with manageable risk.

Understand Your Timeframe and Retirement Need
You have 7–8 years to build your corpus.
That is short to medium term, not long term.
So we cannot take very high risk. But we need growth.

Also, we must assume:

You will live 25 to 30 years after retirement

Your monthly expenses will continue post-retirement

You will need income from your corpus

Inflation will increase your cost every year

So we have to grow your SIP corpus smartly till 2032
Then, we must withdraw smartly without breaking your fund

Why Rs 15,000 SIP is a Good Starting Point
Even though you have no past savings, you are starting well.

If you continue Rs 15,000 SIP for 8 years:

You can build a reasonable retirement corpus

You get the power of compounding

You build a habit of investing

You can also increase SIP by 10% every year.
This step alone can make a big difference.
Your total invested amount will grow faster.
Your final corpus will be much better.

Design Your Investment Strategy in Three Simple Steps
To reach your retirement goal smartly, follow this approach:

1. Start With Balanced Allocation
Since you have only 8 years, pure equity is risky.
At the same time, debt alone cannot give growth.
So we will combine both.

Suggested split of Rs 15,000 SIP:

Rs 9,000 into equity mutual funds

Rs 6,000 into hybrid or balanced funds

This way, your portfolio gets both:

Growth from equity

Stability from hybrid funds

Choose actively managed mutual funds.
Avoid index funds. They follow the market blindly.
They cannot protect you during crashes.
They don’t beat inflation when markets stay flat.

Instead, use active funds managed by expert fund managers.

2. Use SIPs in 2 to 3 Fund Categories
We will choose funds based on your time and risk comfort.

Option 1 – Flexicap Funds

Flexible mix of large, mid, and small companies

Helps to manage market volatility

Suitable for 8 years period

Option 2 – Balanced Advantage Funds

They shift between equity and debt automatically

Safer when markets are falling

Gives peace of mind

Option 3 – Aggressive Hybrid Funds (Optional)

Around 65–80% in equity

Remaining in debt

Good mix of growth and safety

Start with these. Avoid smallcap and sector funds for now.
They carry high short-term risk. You don’t have enough years to recover losses.

3. Invest Through Regular Plans – Not Direct Plans
Direct mutual funds may look attractive because of slightly lower expense ratio.
But you must avoid them.

Disadvantages of direct plans:

You don’t get any guidance

You may select wrong fund

You may panic and exit in bad times

You don’t get help with reviews or switches

You miss out on corrections and better opportunities

Invest through regular plans via a trusted MFD with CFP qualification.
They will:

Guide you based on your life stage

Help you stay disciplined during ups and downs

Review and rebalance your portfolio regularly

Manage your withdrawals smartly during retirement

Save taxes using right withdrawal strategy

This support is very important in your case.

Asset Allocation – Key to Safer Growth
Even in SIPs, you need asset allocation.

Equity gives growth. Debt gives stability.
But equity is volatile. You don’t want a fall during your last 2 years.
So slowly reduce equity exposure after year 5.

Suggested transition:

Year 1 to 5: 60–70% equity, 30–40% balanced funds

Year 6 to 8: 40–50% equity, 50–60% hybrid and low-risk funds

This will protect your corpus when you near retirement.
Your MFD can help you switch smoothly through STP.

After Retirement – Start SWP Smartly
After 2032, you can start a monthly income using SWP
(SWP = Systematic Withdrawal Plan)

Steps:

Transfer full corpus to Balanced Advantage Funds and Debt Funds

Start withdrawing 5% yearly (Rs 4000 per month on Rs 10 lakh)

Increase withdrawal by 5% every 2–3 years to match inflation

Don’t withdraw too much in one go

Benefits of this method:

Your capital is safe

It keeps growing slowly

You get steady income

You pay lower tax on capital gains

Emergency Fund Planning – Build Separately
Do not use your SIP corpus for emergencies.
Keep separate money for this.

Create Rs 1 lakh emergency fund:

Park in liquid mutual fund

Use only for health or urgent needs

Keep it ready always

This protects your retirement corpus from unexpected shocks.

Insurance Planning – Must for You
You are starting late. So you must be careful.

Take these covers now:

Term Insurance – Rs 50 lakh to Rs 1 crore

Health Insurance – Rs 10 lakhs floater (for self and spouse)

Do not mix insurance with investment.
No ULIP. No endowment. No money-back.

Only pure term plan and standalone mediclaim.
This protects your family and savings.

Taxation Awareness – Be Smart While Withdrawing
Mutual fund taxation matters more after retirement.

Current rule:

Equity funds: Gains above Rs 1.25 lakh/year taxed at 12.5%

STCG from equity: Taxed at 20%

Debt funds: Taxed as per your income slab

So:

Keep equity funds invested for more than 1 year

Withdraw only needed amount

Plan SWP smartly with help from a Certified Financial Planner

This keeps your post-retirement income tax-efficient.

Increase SIP When Income Grows
Your first SIP is Rs 15,000. That’s a strong start.
But don’t stop there.

Every year increase by 10%–15%
Even Rs 1,500 extra monthly will grow big.
This one habit will multiply your final retirement corpus.

Don’t Try These Wrong Steps
Don’t invest in direct plans without professional help

Don’t go for index funds now – they cannot handle corrections

Don’t keep all money in FDs – they don’t beat inflation

Don’t listen to random YouTube or WhatsApp suggestions

Don’t panic during market falls – stay invested

Don’t wait to invest – you’ve already waited too long

Track Your Progress Every Year
Once you start investing:

Review SIP performance every 6 to 12 months

Track your total corpus against goal

Adjust fund choices if performance is bad

Rebalance asset allocation gradually

Use MFD’s support for all these steps.
Do not try to manage alone. You may miss key corrections.

Finally
Your situation is difficult, but not impossible.
You have time, clarity and discipline. That’s more than enough.

Start your Rs 15,000 SIP immediately.
Use right fund mix, via a trusted Mutual Fund Distributor with CFP support.
Keep increasing your SIP yearly.
Shift from equity to hybrid slowly after 5 years.
Build emergency and insurance cover separately.
Use SWP smartly for retirement income.

If you stay disciplined and follow this plan,
you can still build a decent retirement life without stress.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 13, 2025Hindi
Money
I m 63 years old and not saved anything till date.i have cleared all loans.presently I m getting salary of Rs 1.05 lakhs pm take home.Defence pension of Rs 44 k and rental income of Rs 15 k is being used by my Mrs for daily house hold expenses.Next month onwards I wants to invest upto 90 k for next 3 years.kindly advise.
Ans: You are 63 years old now.
You have no loans or debts left.
Your current salary is Rs. 1.05 lakhs per month.
You are also receiving Rs. 44,000 per month as defence pension.
Additionally, your spouse gets Rs. 15,000 rent.
That rental and pension are used for regular household expenses.

You want to start investing Rs. 90,000 per month.
You want to invest this for the next 3 years.
This is a good and wise decision.
Though you started late, your savings power is strong now.
We can still build a meaningful retirement corpus.

At your age, capital protection is more important than high returns.
We must aim for moderate growth and regular income later.
You may not have very high risk capacity.
But your income power gives you a good base.

Let’s divide this investment goal into multiple parts.
Each part will serve a specific purpose.
This ensures balance and safety.

Start With Emergency Reserve
This is the first step.
You must create a proper emergency fund.
Life can throw surprises.
Hospitalisation, medical bills, or family needs may arise.

Right now, you have no savings.
You should not begin investing before this reserve is in place.

Set aside the first 2 or 3 months of surplus.
This will give you Rs. 1.80 to 2.70 lakhs.
You should keep this in a combination of liquid assets.

You can keep around Rs. 1.5 lakhs in your savings account.
You can place the rest in a sweep-in fixed deposit.
You can also use liquid mutual funds for this.
Do not use this for investing or expenses.
Use it only in case of real emergencies.

Get a Health Insurance Plan Now
You have a defence pension.
That may give you some health benefits.
Still, it is not always enough.
As you grow older, health costs rise.

You must buy a personal health insurance plan now.
Do not wait any longer.
It may become expensive or denied later.

Choose a plan that covers at least Rs. 5 to 7 lakhs.
Check if it includes annual check-ups.
Also confirm pre-existing disease coverage.
Buy it from a good insurer with solid reputation.

You can pay the yearly premium from your salary.
Don’t break future investments to pay premiums.

If possible, buy a second plan with family floater coverage.
This will help cover your spouse as well.

Create Monthly Income for Your Retirement
You will stop working after three years.
At that time, you will need regular income.
Your pension and rental income may not be enough.
So you must create a separate income stream.

Start investing now in monthly income mutual funds.
These are low-risk and give regular income.
They can start paying monthly income after three years.

From next month, invest Rs. 20,000 every month in this plan.
Continue doing this for the next 36 months.
This will build a stable monthly payout system.
You can use this income for living costs after your job ends.

Avoid index mutual funds here.
Index funds blindly follow markets.
They do not give regular income.
They don’t protect capital either.
Instead, use actively managed hybrid or conservative funds.

Also, never use direct funds.
Direct funds do not give guidance.
There is no help during market drops.
Use regular funds through a Certified Financial Planner.
You will get proper support and monitoring.

Plan for Liquidity for the Next Three Years
You need money to remain accessible also.
You should not block everything long term.
Some portion must remain semi-liquid.

You should start a second monthly investment.
Put around Rs. 25,000 every month here.
Use conservative hybrid funds or short-duration debt funds.
These have lower risk and decent returns.
Better than fixed deposits.

This money is not for monthly income.
But it will grow slowly and steadily.
You can withdraw part of this after 3 years.

This gives you flexibility.
You can use this pool for gifts, travel, or medical needs.
Even a part of this can be transferred to income funds later.

FDs are not ideal for all this.
They give lower post-tax returns.
Also, they have penalty on premature withdrawals.
Debt mutual funds give better flexibility and tax management.

Create a Small Equity Corpus for Long-Term Legacy
You are 63.
Still, you can have some equity exposure.
But only for long-term wealth creation.
Not for income or short-term goals.

You can invest Rs. 15,000 every month into equity mutual funds.
Use only actively managed funds.
Do not choose index funds.
Index funds give no downside protection.
They mirror the market blindly.
They don’t suit senior citizens.

Instead, use quality mutual funds with active managers.
They make portfolio changes when markets change.
They reduce losses in falling markets.

Keep this investment going for next 3 years.
Let this money remain untouched for another 7 years.
It will become a good gift to your spouse or children.
It also builds legacy wealth quietly.

Add a Small Gold or Cash Component
You can also invest Rs. 2,000 monthly in digital gold.
Or you can keep it as cash buffer.
This is optional, but gives comfort.
Gold helps as hedge during crisis.

You can use Sovereign Gold Bonds also.
But they have longer lock-ins.
So better to keep this small portion flexible.

Use Some Amount for Cash Reserves
Keep Rs. 5,000 each month aside.
This can be used for special spends.
Like birthdays, gifting, temple trips, or insurance premiums.
This creates balance.
You won’t need to withdraw investments for such spends.

Total Monthly Plan Summary
In simple words, here’s how you can split Rs. 90,000:

Use first 3 months for emergency fund

Keep Rs. 20,000 monthly for income fund

Invest Rs. 25,000 monthly in short-term debt fund

Put Rs. 15,000 monthly in equity mutual fund

Keep Rs. 2,000 for gold or cash

Use Rs. 5,000 for flexible buffer

This way, you are covering all needs.
No goal is left out.
You have income security, liquidity, growth, and safety.

Tax Planning and Withdrawals
After 3 years, you will begin using these funds.
Plan your withdrawals properly.

If you withdraw equity mutual funds after 3 years:

Long-term capital gains above Rs. 1.25 lakhs are taxed at 12.5%

Short-term gains taxed at 20%

Debt fund gains will be added to your salary.
They will be taxed as per slab.
So hold them for at least 3 years.
This reduces tax outgo.

Also, don’t withdraw everything at once.
Withdraw small amounts.
Use Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP).
This reduces tax and keeps investment growing.

Things You Must Avoid
Don’t put full Rs. 90,000 in FDs

Don’t go for real estate or land buying

Don’t invest in index funds or ETFs

Don’t invest in direct mutual funds

Don’t choose annuity plans

Don’t buy endowment or ULIP insurance

Don’t invest in aggressive stocks now

Don’t lend money to relatives without planning

Don’t depend on corporate health plans alone

Focus fully on your own safety and retirement.

Documents and Legal Planning
Make sure to prepare these also:

Joint bank account with spouse

Nomination in all mutual funds and accounts

Create a simple Will

Update Aadhar and PAN linkage

Keep insurance documents accessible

These small steps reduce confusion later.

Finally
You are starting at 63.
But you have steady income.
You have no loans.
Your household expenses are handled.

You can build strong financial support in just 3 years.
Split your Rs. 90,000 monthly across different goals.
Don’t take high risk.
Don’t follow trends or hot tips.
Use only actively managed regular mutual funds.
Invest through a Certified Financial Planner.

Your actions today will secure next 20 years.
It’s never too late when discipline is strong.
Wishing you a happy, healthy and stress-free retirement.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 13, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, I am 32 years old. I am having three year old twin girls. My take home salary is 2lakhs per month. I am working in Bangalore. My house rent is 28k include maintenance. I have ppf account worth of 5lakhs (But not investing regularly from last year). I have to take care my parents also. My monthly expenses are around 30k (including for parents). For the last 6 months I am investing in mutual funds through sip. ICICI prudential blue chip-5k, Bandhan small cap-5k, parag parikh flexi cap-5k, Tata digital india -2.5k, ICICI prudential value discovery -2.5k. Total sip 20k. My future goals are daughters higher education and marriage, constructing home in hometown, retirement. Can you please give suggestion how to achieve goals
Ans: You are 32, have twin daughters aged three, and earn Rs. 2?lakh take-home per month. Your essential expenses are about Rs. 58?k (rent of Rs. 28?k plus Rs. 30?k for other costs, including support for parents). You are investing Rs. 20?k monthly via SIPs across multiple funds. You also have Rs. 5?lakh in PPF, though contributions have paused since last year. Your long-term goals include funding daughters’ higher education and marriage, building a house in your hometown, and planning for your retirement.

Your goals are clear, and your savings habit is commendable. With disciplined steps and a holistic plan, you can achieve these goals over time. Let’s delve into a structured, 360-degree solution that addresses emergency planning, protection, debt strategy, investments, goal mapping, and reviews.

Financial Snapshot and What It Means
Age: 32 years with about 33–36 earning years ahead

Income: Rs. 2?lakh per month (take-home)

Expenses: Rs.?58?k essential outflows

Monthly surplus: Roughly Rs.?1.42?lakh available for savings, investments, and discretionary spends

SIPs: Rs.?20?k in eight mutual fund schemes

PPF: Rs.?5?lakh (no current contributions)

Dependents: Twin daughters and parents

Your cash flow is strong. You have surplus income. This gives you room to build buffers, invest for goals, and add protection.

Emergency Fund: Your First Cornerstone
Despite good income, unexpected costs can cause setbacks. You must build an emergency fund that matches at least 6 months of essential expenses.

Aim for Rs.?3.5?lakh to Rs.?4?lakh initially

Use a liquid debt mutual fund or stable bank recurring deposit

Allocate roughly Rs.?50?k per month until target is met

Do not touch this fund unless it's a real emergency like a health crisis or sudden job loss

Once established, this fund will provide mental peace and prevent you from taking impulsive financial decisions in tense situations.

Insurance: Safeguarding Your Responsibilities
With dependents and obligations, proper insurance is vital.

Life Cover
Get a term insurance policy covering at least Rs.?1.5?crore

This will protect your daughters and parents if anything happens to you

Term insurance is the most cost-effective way to get high coverage

Health Insurance
Ensure you have adequate health cover—preferably a family floater of Rs.?10 lakh

This should include both you and your dependents

Existing PPF and ULIP Checks
Your PPF balance of Rs. 5?lakh is fine

If you are paying high-cost LIC plans or ULIPs, review them carefully

Consider surrendering these if returns are poor, and redirect cash toward mutual funds via a Certified Financial Planner

Debt or Leverage Strategy
You currently do not have any loans.
This is a healthy position.
Continue avoiding debt unless necessary (e.g., home purchase backed by rental income or credit usage).
If you plan a home in hometown, avoid capital-intensive loans unless expenses are inflation-linked.

Review of Your Mutual Funds Portfolio
You have Rs.?20?k in monthly SIPs across five different schemes:

ICICI Prudential Bluechip – Rs.?5?k

Bandhan Small Cap – Rs.?5?k

Parag Parikh Flexi?Cap – Rs.?5?k

Tata Digital India – Rs.?2.5?k

ICICI Prudential Value Discovery – Rs.?2.5?k

This shows diversification across categories—large cap, mid/small cap, flexi cap, digital, and value. This is a good start for a 32-year-old. Let’s analyse each part and see how to optimise.

Actively Managed vs Index Funds
You are invested in actively managed funds. That is ideal.
Actively managed funds adjust portfolios based on market conditions.
They can protect from sudden crashes by exiting risky stocks in time.
Index funds merely replicate market composition and cannot adjust swiftly.
This lack of flexibility can expose you to more downside during downturns.
Actively managed funds are better suited for your goals and risk dynamics.

Diversity vs Over-Diversification
You are spread across five funds. That is fine for now.
But keep your total number of schemes between five and seven. Too many will dilute returns and make tracking harder.
Let’s group them by objective:

Core Core Funds (stability + growth): Bluechip + Flexi?Cap

Risk Growth Slice: Small Cap + Digital + Value stocks

This gives a 60:40 mix between stable and growth areas.

Suggested Portfolio Mix
Balancing for long-term goals:

Core Stability (Large + Flexi?Cap): 50–60% of equity

Moderate Growth (Mid Cap / Value / Digital): 30–40%

High-Growth Small-Cap slice: 5–10%

You can keep current funds but adjust SIP amounts:

Bluechip: Rs.?7?k

Flexi?Cap: Rs.?7?k

Growth (Small Cap, Digital, Value): Rs.?6?k divided among three

This blend will balance stability and growth, while controlling downside risk.

If you plan to invest new funds, avoid index funds. Stick to actively managed ones under guidance from your CFP.

Restarting PPF and Long-Term Savings
Your PPF is currently stagnant. PPF is great for tax-saving and fixed-income. It offers safe returns.

Consider restarting PPF with at least Rs. 5,000 monthly

This gives you security and a tax deduction under section 80C

Your PPF can form part of the conservative portion of your daughter’s future fund

Goal Mapping and Investment Timeline
You have three major goals:

Sisters’ higher education

Marriage

Home in hometown

Retirement

We can align your savings timeline accordingly.

1. Education & Marriage
Your daughters are 3 now. Their education milestones begin in 15 to 18 years.
You have adequate time to build a substantial corpus through equity investments.

Recommended timeline:

Build equity SIP for 12–15 years

Invest Rs.?20?k monthly with gradual hike over time

Target corpus to cover inflation-adjusted education and marriage costs

2. House Construction in Hometown
This cost may come in the next 7–10 years.
Until then, keep a portion of your funds in conservative-safe assets, growing with time.

Suggested route:

Start with dedicated SIPs into debt-oriented schemes (e.g., short-term debt mutual funds)

Build a separate corpus through disciplined monthly patterns

Rebalance mix from equity to debt as you near the expected time

3. Retirement Planning
Your retirement need is likely 20–25 years away.
This is an excellent span to utilise equity investments to their fullest.
Dirty approach:

Start with equity SIPs that form your daughter’s plans

Increase investment amount as you pay down expenses, possibly reaching Rs.?50?k monthly by age 40

Merge child and retirement corpus as lifetime wealth when children’s needs are met

Monthly Cash Flow: How to Allocate Surplus
You earn Rs. 2?lakh and spend Rs. 58?k. This leaves Rs. 1.42?lakh per month.

Here is a proposed allocation framework:

Emergency fund: Rs. 50?k until 6?lakh is built (~12 months)

PPF restart: Rs. 5?k monthly

Mutual fund SIP restructured: Rs. 20?k

Debt-oriented goal SIP: Rs. 20?k for hometown house goal

Additional equity SIP: Rs. 30?k

Buffer for insurance premium, contingencies, lifestyle: Rs. 17?k

This framework uses your current surplus efficiently and balances short, medium, and long-term priorities. Increase SIPs whenever income rises or expenses reduce.

Phased Approach: Month-by-Month
Phase 1 (Next 12 Months)

Emergency fund: Rs. 50?k monthly till Rs. 6?lakh is built

Restart PPF with Rs. 5?k monthly

Rebalance equity SIP as per ideal portfolio

Increase SIPs only after funding buffer

Phase 2 (Year 2–5)

Stop emergency fund accumulation (once corpus is ready)

Redirect Rs. 50?k monthly to:

Equity SIP: increase to Rs. 40?k–50?k

Debt SIP for house goal: Rs. 20?k

Keep PPF contributions alive

Annual SIP review and possible increments if salary increases

Phase 3 (Year 5–12)

Emergency fund remains intact

Equity SIP grows to Rs. 60–70?k monthly

Debt goal SIP continues

PPF continues for tax and safe returns

By year 7–8, your house corpus might be ready

Phase 4 (Year 12–18)

Once house is built, shift debt corpus into conservative investments

Continue equity SIP for children’s higher education corpus

Gradually reduce allocation to debt goal SIP post house completion

Phase 5 (Year 18+)

Children reach college/marriage age; start utilising fund

Retirement planning becomes your primary goal

Boost equity SIP post-goal fulfilment

Protection, Insurance & Estate Planning
Ensure your financial goals are safe.

Increase term insurance as your dependents’ future becomes costlier

Keep health insurance updated to cover changing family needs

Nominate your daughters and parents in all investments and policies

Consider preparing a will, especially to protect your daughters’ future and estate

Tax-Efficient Planning
Equity mutual fund gains taxed: LTCG above Rs. 1.25?lakh annually at 12.5%, STCG at 20%

Debt mutual fund gains taxed as per your income slab

PPF contributions get Section 80C deduction, and maturity is tax-free

Term insurance premiums may qualify for 80D deductions

Risk Management and Rebalancing
Review asset allocation annually: adjust equity vs debt ratio as life goals shift

Use actively managed funds to protect downside

Avoid impulsive behaviour during market volatility

Rebalance back to ideal weights, but only after at least 30% change

For funds underperforming over 3 years, discuss with your CFP for possible switch

Avoiding Common Mistakes
Do not invest in direct plans early—they lack guidance

Do not chase short-term returns or high-merit small caps impulsively

Do not pause SIPs during market downturns—stay disciplined

Do not withdraw from PPF unless absolutely necessary

Do not neglect insurance when building wealth

Continuous Review with Your CFP
Meet your Certified Financial Planner every 6–12 months to:

Review fund performance and SIP progress

Check asset allocation and risk alignment

Manage insurance coverage as family grows

Plan for tax saving and withdrawals

Adjust SIP amounts with income growth

Long-Term Vision for Your Twin Girls
Your daughters have 15–18 years ahead. With disciplined SIPs and growing contributions, you can fulfil their education and marriage needs without debt.

By focusing initially on building a stable base, restarting PPF, rebalancing equity priorities, and reinvesting freed-up buckets over time, you create a strong foundation for their future and your own.

Finally
Build emergency fund first for stability

Restart PPF and put system in place

Move equity SIP to balanced portfolio

Start debt-goal SIP for house

Increase investment amounts gradually

Protect loved ones with insurance

Review with your CFP regularly

Avoid impulsive financial decisions

Stay disciplined and goal-focused

With your current income and responsible approach, you can build a secure and prosperous future for your daughters and yourself. This disciplined 360-degree plan makes it achievable.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |8973 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 20, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 11, 2025Hindi
Money
Hello. I am 22 years old. I have 11 lakhs in my saving account. How can I invest it to potentially grow my money significantly over the years without much risk?
Ans: It is very rare to see someone at 22 years with Rs 11 lakhs in savings.
You’ve made a solid start. This will make a big difference in your future.
At this stage, time is your biggest strength. Let's use it wisely.

You want to grow your money without taking high risk.
We will balance growth and safety properly.
Here’s a full 360-degree strategy explained in simple steps.

Understand Your Risk, Time, and Goal
You are young, only 22 years old

You have long time to invest, maybe 25–30 years

You want high returns but not too much risk

So, your ideal investment mix should:

Grow steadily over long term

Avoid too much ups and downs

Be easy to understand and manage

Give you flexibility in future

Why Saving Account is Not Enough
Saving account gives very low return, around 2.5% to 3.5%

Inflation is more than 6%

So, your money is losing value slowly

Instead, you must shift money to better options.
Your money must earn more than inflation, safely.

Step-by-Step Investment Strategy for You
Let’s divide Rs 11 lakhs into three buckets:

1. Emergency Bucket – Rs 1.5 lakhs
This is for sudden expenses like:

Medical needs

Family emergencies

Job loss or delay in salary

Where to invest this:

Liquid mutual fund or ultra-short-term fund

Do not put in equity

Always keep it ready for use

Withdraw anytime without penalty

2. Safe Growth Bucket – Rs 3 lakhs
This money will grow with low risk.
Keep it for short-term goals in 3–5 years.
Use it for:

Higher studies

Laptop, course, or certification

Travel or home furniture

Where to invest this:

Hybrid mutual funds (low equity exposure)

Conservative hybrid or short duration debt funds

Returns are better than FDs, and tax efficient

Choose through MFD with CFP support

Avoid direct plans. You may make wrong fund choice.

3. Long-Term Wealth Bucket – Rs 6.5 lakhs
This is your long-term goldmine.
Use it for:

Retirement

Starting business

Buying your dream car or funding marriage

Financial freedom before 40

Where to invest this:

Invest in actively managed equity mutual funds

Flexicap, midcap, and multicap funds

Avoid sector funds or thematic funds now

SIP and lump sum combo works well

Invest in Regular Plans through an MFD with CFP support.
They guide you properly. They help you control emotions.
Direct plans don’t give this support.

Avoid These Mistakes at Your Age
Don’t keep too much in savings account.
You lose value slowly every year.

Don’t run behind high-risk stocks.
One wrong move can hurt your capital.

Don’t pick direct mutual funds.
You won’t get guidance, and may exit early in fear.

Don’t invest based on YouTube tips or social media.
They don’t know your real need.

Don’t ignore inflation.
Everything costs more every year. Plan for it now.

Why Not Index Funds?
Many people talk about index funds. But they are not ideal for you.
Here’s why:

Index funds follow the market blindly

They don’t try to beat the market

No protection in falling markets

No flexibility in fund manager’s hand

Not suitable for early stage investors

Instead, go for actively managed funds.
They can beat the market in long run.
They are managed by expert fund managers.

You already have time on your side.
Use it with good fund manager’s skill to get better growth.

SIP Strategy – Start Monthly, Stay Consistent
You can also start SIP from your salary or income.
Even Rs 5,000 or Rs 10,000 monthly is enough.
You will see magic after 10–15 years.

Benefits of SIP:

Invest small every month

No need to time the market

Reduces risk by rupee-cost averaging

Builds strong habit of investing

You can do SIP in:

Flexicap funds

Midcap funds

Balanced Advantage Funds

Start slow and increase SIP every year by 10%.
This simple step builds massive wealth later.

Tax Planning – Know the Basics
You must learn about mutual fund taxes.
Here is the latest rule:

Equity mutual funds:

If profit is more than Rs 1.25 lakhs in a year, 12.5% tax applies

Short-term gains (less than 1 year) taxed at 20%

Debt mutual funds:

Taxed as per your income slab

No indexation now

So hold funds for long term.
Avoid selling too early.

A good Certified Financial Planner will plan redemptions tax-wise.
That will save money in future.

Life and Health Cover – Start Now
Even if you are young, you must have these:

Rs 50 lakhs term life insurance

Rs 10 lakhs health insurance (individual plan)

Don’t depend only on company insurance.
Start early to get low premium.
Premiums are very low when you are healthy and young.

Learn Basic Finance – Just 10 Minutes a Week
Start learning about:

How mutual funds work

Why SIP is better

What is compound growth

How to handle market ups and downs

Don’t try to become expert quickly.
Learn slowly. Grow with time.

Final Insights
You have a big advantage – time and early capital.
You don’t need to take big risk to grow your money.

Just stay disciplined.
Follow the step-by-step plan.
Start SIPs, divide your money smartly, and avoid mistakes.

Please take help from a trusted Mutual Fund Distributor who is also a Certified Financial Planner.
They will design your plan, help in review, and support you for long term.

Investing smart now can help you retire early or live without money pressure later.

Keep your plan simple. Follow it without fear.

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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