
Hi Ramalingam Sir, Good Evening. I recently bought a land in Bangalore outskirts by redeeming 75 lakhs from my MF portfolio. I've started house construction through a Builder which will cost me 1 crore which will be funded by PMS worth 60 lakhs (which will be redeemed shortly) and remaining 40 lakhs funded by MF portfolio of 85 lakhs. This will leave me with 45 lakhs of MF balance. I will be retiring in March 2026 and has a monthly salary savings of Rs 2 lakhs for the next 9 months and will be getting a bonus of Rs.7 lakhs in Mar'26. Total savings from now till March 2026 would be 25 lakhs. Also I will be receiving retirals (PF and Gratuity) of Rs.60 lakhs. I've invested Rs 20 lakhs in my friend's startup business and getting 15% returns (monthly payout of Rs.25000). I've not taken any loans in the past 25-30 years so no debts.
I've to fund my only Son's Engineering from 2025 to 2029 approx 20 lakhs and need Rs.25 to 30 lakhs for his marriage sometime in 2032-33. My post retiral expenses would be approx 45 to 50K per month. I've a small 500 sft flat worth 10 lakhs in Bangalore outskirts and 50% share in ancestral house property worth approx 1 crore which cannot be sold anytime sooner. Been working very hard all through my career and hardly taken my family for trips and hence would like to relax and have yearly domestic trips and international trips every 2-3 years and manage household expenses without depending on my Son. I am getting jittery as not sure if I had over committed in constructing own house and if I would be able to sustain for the next 20 years at least. I am now 58 yrs young. Appreciate your comments and advice. Thanks
Ans: You have shown deep commitment to your family, career, and financial goals. At age 58, with no debts, a solid savings base, and clear life priorities, you are in a commendable position.
Let’s walk through your situation and build clarity, confidence, and comfort around your choices. We'll approach it from a 360-degree perspective, one step at a time.
1. Summary of Your Current Financial Position
Assets and Investments Post House Construction:
Land and under-construction house: Rs. 1.75 crore (land + construction)
MF after partial redemption: Rs. 45 lakhs
PMS (to be redeemed): Rs. 60 lakhs (will be used for construction)
Retirals (EPF + Gratuity): Rs. 60 lakhs in March 2026
Monthly savings till retirement: Rs. 2 lakhs/month × 9 = Rs. 18 lakhs
Bonus in March 2026: Rs. 7 lakhs
Investment in friend’s business: Rs. 20 lakhs (monthly income Rs. 25,000)
500 sqft flat: Rs. 10 lakhs (can be used later if needed)
50% in ancestral property: Worth Rs. 50 lakhs (not liquid currently)
Estimated Corpus by March 2026:
MF: Rs. 45 lakhs
New savings + bonus: Rs. 25 lakhs
Retirals: Rs. 60 lakhs
Friend’s business investment: Rs. 20 lakhs
Total liquid corpus post-retirement: ~Rs. 1.5 crore
This is excluding the house, flat, and ancestral share.
You’ve been very structured and responsible. That deserves full appreciation.
2. House Construction: A Good Decision or Over-Commitment?
Many people feel jittery after making large financial moves close to retirement. That’s natural. Let’s evaluate practically.
Merits of the House Decision:
You’re building a real, usable asset
You avoided debt
You’ve used PMS and MF corpus strategically
You’ll own a valuable asset without EMIs
Cautions:
Rs. 1.75 crore is locked into a non-income generating asset
That impacts liquidity
Any delay or overrun in construction can stress finances
Maintenance costs will come in future
Assessment:
You are not over-committed, but you are fully committed
You will have around Rs. 1.5 crore in liquid assets post-retirement
That is sufficient for 25+ years of moderate expenses
But cash flow planning is now crucial
3. Monthly Expenses and Income Post-Retirement
Expenses:
Household: Rs. 50,000/month
Yearly domestic trip: Rs. 1 lakh
International trip every 3 years: Rs. 5–6 lakhs/3 years
Kid’s education and marriage (long term goals)
Inflation-adjusted needs:
Monthly: Rs. 60,000–65,000 average
Yearly requirement: Rs. 7.5–8 lakhs minimum
Adjusting for travel: Rs. 9–10 lakhs/year
Income Sources:
Rs. 1.5 crore corpus can generate income
Rs. 25,000/month from friend’s startup (Rs. 3 lakhs/year)
You may do light consulting post-retirement (if desired)
Flat and ancestral house – backup options
Gap:
Income from business + returns from corpus should comfortably fund your lifestyle
Withdrawal of 6% per year from corpus is sustainable for 25+ years
So yes, you will be able to sustain your lifestyle comfortably.
4. Child’s Education and Marriage Planning
Education (Rs. 20 lakhs from 2025 to 2029):
Start an STP from mutual funds into a short-term debt fund
Use part of your new monthly savings to add to this fund
You don’t need to use corpus fully now; plan withdrawals in stages
Marriage (Rs. 25–30 lakhs in 2032–33):
This is still 7–8 years away
Allocate Rs. 10–12 lakhs from retiral corpus into balanced funds
Let it grow with moderate risk
Rebalance after 4–5 years
There is no urgency to keep this money liquid now.
Systematic planning will ensure you’re ready when the time comes.
5. Ideal Asset Allocation Strategy
Post-retirement, protecting capital is more important than high returns.
Recommended allocation:
30–35% in balanced mutual funds (for moderate growth)
30–40% in debt mutual funds (for stability and income)
10% in liquid or ultra-short debt (emergency and short-term needs)
10% can remain in the friend’s business if stable
5–10% in gold SGBs (if you wish to add for diversification)
Avoid:
Large allocation to direct equity or high-risk PMS
Illiquid assets which you may need in future
Important: Work with a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) to set up regular plans.
Avoid direct mutual fund investing. You won’t get strategic rebalancing.
Also, index funds don’t adjust to changing market cycles. Stay with active funds.
6. Cash Flow Planning: Systematic Withdrawals
SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan):
Set up a monthly SWP from debt mutual funds after retirement
This gives stable income and reduces tax impact
Keep 12–18 months of expenses in liquid funds at all times
Review portfolio performance every year with a CFP
Don’t let market volatility force you to redeem more.
That breaks the long-term plan.
7. Emergency Fund and Risk Protection
Even at 58, some basic protections are useful.
Emergency fund:
Rs. 5–7 lakhs in liquid fund or sweep-in FD
Covers medical or urgent repair costs
Health insurance:
Ensure you and spouse have Rs. 10–15 lakh family floater
Even after retirement, continue it
Don’t depend only on savings for medical expenses
No loans:
You’ve kept yourself debt-free. That is a big strength.
Continue to stay that way
8. Legacy Planning and Estate Structuring
It’s wise to think long term.
Key actions:
Create a WILL and assign nominees to all assets
Inform family about investments and passwords
Keep a folder with documents, mutual fund statements, property papers
Mention your 50% right in ancestral house in the WILL
You may also include a clause for your friend’s business investment
This brings peace of mind and prevents future confusion.
9. Mental and Emotional Well-Being
After a long career, it’s okay to relax.
You should:
Travel with family guilt-free
Maintain hobbies and social activities
Do short-term consultancy if it feels fulfilling
Spend time in your new home with no EMI pressure
Accept that you’ve done your best. That is enough.
No investment is more valuable than memories with loved ones.
Please prioritise those now.
10. Finally
You are not over-committed. You are well-planned and deeply committed to your family.
You’ve stayed debt-free, built wealth, and now created a home.
Even after spending on the house, you’ll have over Rs. 1.5 crore of investable assets.
This can support you for the next 25 years and more.
Key actions ahead:
Finalise retirement asset allocation with a CFP
Setup SIPs and STPs for child’s goals
Create WILL and update nominations
Keep emotions out of investments
Track only once in 6 months
Your worry shows how much you care. That’s your strength.
But rest assured, you are financially independent and emotionally strong.
Take that yearly vacation. You’ve earned it.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment