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Confused about Vit-V ECE vs RBU CSE, should I wait for the next round?

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Nayagam P P  |6586 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 28, 2024

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Asked by Anonymous - Jul 12, 2024Hindi
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Vit-V ECE vs RBU CSE(plain) Mht cet 93%.....should we wait for cap round?

Ans: Lock RBU-CSE as a back-up and wait for Cap Round. All the BEST for Your Bright Future.

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
I am currently investing a total of Rs.10,000 per month. The breakup of my investments is as follows: Rs.1,000 each in Mirae Asset Large & Midcap Fund and Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund through direct SIPs via Coin by Zerodha. Rs.3,000 in ICICI Prudential Balanced Advantage Fund through direct SIP via Coin by Zerodha. Rs.2,500 each in Bandhan Mutual Fund and Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund through regular SIPs via a distributor. Please let me know if any changes or suggestions are required for better portfolio diversification or performance.
Ans: You are saving regularly and diversifying—this effort is deeply appreciated.

Now, let us assess your portfolio with a 360-degree view for long-term suitability.

This reply will be long, thorough, and focused on Indian context and simple language.

Overall Portfolio Review
You are investing Rs 10,000 monthly

Half of it is through direct plans via Coin by Zerodha

The rest is through regular plans via distributor

Exposure is across large-midcap, flexi-cap, balanced, and hybrid categories

This mix shows a good intent to diversify

But it has gaps in guidance, tax planning, and style alignment

Split Between Direct and Regular Plans
Direct Plans (Rs 6,000 via Zerodha Coin):

Rs 1,000 in Large & Mid Cap Fund

Rs 1,000 in Flexi Cap Fund

Rs 3,000 in Balanced Advantage Fund

Regular Plans (Rs 4,000 via distributor):

Rs 2,500 in Bandhan Mutual Fund

Rs 1,500 in Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund

Problems with Direct Plans for Long-Term Investors
Many investors choose direct plans thinking cost-saving is everything.

But in reality, there are many hidden disadvantages:

No help to review or restructure based on life changes

No one guides when market crashes or corrections happen

Asset allocation becomes confusing and unmanaged

Investors are left alone without a Certified Financial Planner’s support

Portfolio becomes a mixed bag with no focus or goals

No tracking of tax optimisation or exit planning strategy

Why Regular Plans Through CFP are Better
A regular plan via MFD and Certified Financial Planner gives full-time support

They guide you during ups and downs in market

They realign portfolio yearly based on goals

Help avoid emotional selling during bad market phases

You get a system-driven exit when goal is near

Better management of short-term and long-term capital gains

True wealth is built through advice, not just cost saving

Index Fund Not Recommended
Though not directly mentioned, many direct investors consider index funds next.

You must avoid index funds for the following reasons:

Index funds follow market blindly—no downside protection

Overexposure to top 5 stocks creates risk concentration

They can’t change allocation when market turns volatile

Index funds lack human expertise and sector judgement

You miss out on fund manager-driven alpha returns

Category-Wise Fund Assessment
Let’s go deeper into each fund category and see if it's serving your goal.

1. Large & Midcap Fund (Direct SIP)

Good blend of large and mid-cap stocks

But Rs 1,000 monthly is too small to make any impact

Fund overlaps with other equity funds in your portfolio

Suggestion: Consolidate or increase allocation if it is core holding

2. Flexi Cap Fund (Direct SIP)

Flexi cap gives diversification across market caps

Suitable for medium to long-term investors

But with only Rs 1,000 SIP, returns will not compound meaningfully

Suggestion: Increase allocation and shift to regular plan with CFP

3. Balanced Advantage Fund (Direct SIP)

This fund dynamically moves between equity and debt

Good for reducing risk during market corrections

You have invested Rs 3,000 monthly—decent allocation

Suggestion: Shift this to regular plan for guided withdrawal later

4. Bandhan Mutual Fund (Regular SIP)

Rs 2,500 is invested, but fund category is not mentioned

Earlier some funds from this house underperformed

Recent improvements are seen but not uniform across all schemes

Suggestion: Evaluate performance with CFP and switch if needed

5. Franklin Mutual Fund (Regular SIP)

Franklin has had liquidity and regulatory challenges in past

Current performance in some funds has recovered

But trust and liquidity risk remain a concern

Suggestion: Keep only if performance is strong and transparent

Key Issues Noticed in Your Portfolio
Direct plans are unmanaged with no retirement or wealth strategy

SIP amounts are too low in most funds for compounding

Fund house selection is not based on investment style consistency

There is no tax harvesting or capital gain planning

Multiple funds with small SIPs can dilute overall return

Ideal Portfolio Re-Structure
You must now restructure your Rs 10,000 monthly SIP as follows:

Rs 4,000 in a Flexi Cap Fund (via regular plan with CFP)

Rs 3,000 in a Balanced Advantage Fund (via regular plan)

Rs 3,000 in a Multi Cap or Mid Cap Fund (with regular support)

This gives diversification, expert support, and good market exposure.

Avoid investing Rs 1,000 in 3–4 funds. Instead, concentrate in 2–3 funds with higher SIP.

Future Step-Up Strategy
Increase SIP every year by at least Rs 2,000–Rs 3,000

Set goals like retirement, child education, or corpus by 50s

Tag every SIP to a goal and time horizon

Don’t invest blindly just to save money

SIP with advice brings financial clarity and peace

If You Have LIC, ULIP, or Insurance Policies
If you hold LIC, ULIP or any investment-linked insurance policies:

Check surrender value of these policies

Don’t continue for maturity if return is below 6%

Reinvest that in long-term mutual funds with SIP/STP

Insurance should be only term plan with no investment attached

Emergency and Health Preparedness
Ensure Rs 2–3 lakhs in liquid fund or savings for emergency

Take a health insurance cover of minimum Rs 10 lakh for family

Include super top-up if needed later

Emergency fund must not be mixed with SIP investments

Tax Awareness and Mutual Fund Exit Strategy
Equity mutual funds attract LTCG if held over 1 year

LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%

Short-term gains are taxed at 20%

Debt funds follow income tax slab rates for both gains

Regular plan via CFP helps plan redemptions with tax impact in mind

Mistakes to Avoid
Avoid too many SIPs of small value in different funds

Don’t stick to direct plans just for lower cost

Don’t chase best past performance—look for long-term consistency

Don’t depend on Coin platform or mobile apps for financial advice

Don’t pick index or passive funds for core portfolio

Finally
Your discipline in saving is truly appreciated.

But now is the time to align your SIPs with long-term goals.

Avoid direct plans. Shift to regular plans with MFD backed by CFP.

Consolidate funds. Choose 2–3 schemes based on life stage and risk.

Invest with purpose—not just through platforms.

Take help. Review portfolio yearly. Focus on peace, not just return.

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
Hello Sir, I am a retired 60 yr old man. My current corpus is as follows MF - Rs 1.30 Cr FD - Rs 20 Lacs Stocks - Rs 10 Lacs SCSS- Rs 15 Lacs My requirement is Rs 1 Lac a month for my living. Can my corpus sustain for 25 yrs based on my monthly requirement Kindly let me know what i need to do Regards
Ans: Your planning at this stage is commendable.
You have a good corpus and clear monthly requirement.
Let us create a strategy to make it last for 25 years.

1. Current Corpus Overview
Mutual Funds (equity/hybrid): Rs.?1.30 crore

Fixed Deposits: Rs.?20 lakh

Stocks: Rs.?10 lakh

SCSS (Senior Citizen Saving Scheme): Rs.?15 lakh

Total: Rs.?1.75 crore
You need Rs.?1 lakh per month for living.
Annual requirement: Rs.?12 lakh per year.

2. Assess Sustainability Of Corpus
To withdraw Rs.?12 lakh annually from Rs.?1.75 crore means ~6.9% withdrawal rate.

This is broadly sustainable if net returns can match this after tax and inflation.

Returns scenario:

Debt/hybrid returns ~6–8%

Equity returns ~8–10%

SCSS offers ~8% tax-free

FD yields ~6–7% taxable

A blended withdrawal of ~7% annually may be viable for 25 years, if returns hold up.

3. Restructure Asset Allocation
You should rebalance to de-risk and build income sustainability:

Suggested Allocation

Hybrid Balanced Funds: 40% (Rs.?70 lakh)

Provides equity exposure and stable income

Debt Funds / Liquid Funds: 20% (Rs.?35 lakh)

For emergency cushion and short-term needs

Equity Mutual Funds: 20% (Rs.?35 lakh)

For long-term growth and inflation hedge

SCSS: 15% (Rs.?15 lakh)

Already tax-free yield; good for income stability

Fixed Deposits: 5% (Rs.?10 lakh)

Use for immediate liquidity; ladder for short-term needs

Stocks: Can shift Rs.?10 lakh to hybrid or equity to match this allocation.

4. Weekly & Monthly Income via SWP
Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWPs) can generate monthly income:

Use hybrid balanced fund SWP of Rs.?50,000/month

Use equity mutual fund SWP of Rs.?25,000/month

Use SCSS payout (quarterly or monthly) ~Rs. 10,000

Use FD interest monthly via laddered withdrawal ~Rs.?3,000

Adjust to reach Rs.?1 lakh total

This provides regular income with tax efficiency.

5. Emergency & Buffer Planning
Keep at least 6 months expenses (Rs.?6 lakh) in liquid/debt funds.

This ensures no equity selling during downturn.

Use remaining debt funds for short-term buffer.

6. Tax Considerations on Withdrawals
Equity fund LTCG beyond Rs.?1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

Debt/hybrid gains taxed as per slab

SCSS interest is taxable unless kept under tax-saving deposit

Use SWP to smooth income and manage tax liability year-round

7. Health Cover & Longevity Safety Net
At age 60, medical expenses likely rise significantly

Carry a health policy of at least Rs.?10–15 lakh renewal coverage

Add senior citizen riders if possible

Consider top-ups after 65

This protects corpus from medical shocks

8. Minimising Investment Charges and Risks
Use actively managed hybrid and equity funds; avoid index funds

Actively managed funds handle market fluctuations

They offer downside protection during volatility

Avoid direct plans; as post-retirement, you need ongoing financial advice

Avoid ULIPs, annuities, and speculative products

9. Withdrawal Strategy Review and Adjustments
Review withdrawals semi-annually

Adjust SWP rates if expenditure changes or markets fluctuate

Rebalance allocation as hybrid or equity grows or shrinks

Maintain shaped glide path to defensiveness over time

10. Estate Planning and Nominations
Ensure all investment accounts have current nominations

Create a simple will covering assets and bank accounts

Arrange power of attorney if needed

This helps family in managing affairs smoothly

11. Risk of Longevity and Inflation
You may need income beyond standard life expectancy

Ensure equity portion sustains corpus over time

Reevaluate strategy every 3–5 years to reflect inflation, healthcare, etc.

12. Summary Roadmap
Immediate: Rebalance portfolio; set SWP to generate income; buy health cover

Within 6 months: Build debt/liquid buffer; update nominations and will

Ongoing: Monitor withdrawals, rebalance annually, adjust SWP based on expenditures

Long-Term: Post 85 years, reduce equity gradually and rely more on debt/SCSS/FD income

Final Insights
Your corpus of Rs.?1.75 crore can support Rs.?1 lakh/month for 25 years.
A structured SWP strategy across hybrid, equity, SCSS, and FD is key.
Health insurance and buffer protection are essential.
Actively managed funds via regularly advised plans are preferable.
Review and rebalance periodically for sustainable growth and comfort.

You are well placed to live independently and securely with this plan.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 15, 2025Hindi
Money
Good afternoon sir. I have a flat which I bought for 62 lakhs and the property is 14 years old now. I wish to sell this for around 95 lakhs. Where can I reinvest my money to save long term capital gain. Shall I buy a new flat or invest in fd or plot ? Also I am bit confused to not to sell and put the flat on rent approx 35k I will be getting but since the property is 14 years old I feel the selling value might decrease with time? Looking forward for your guidance sir.
Ans: You are thinking in the right direction. You are asking the right questions at the right time. Selling or holding this property is a big decision. Let us evaluate it from all angles.

Property Holding – Key Numbers and Facts
You bought this flat for Rs. 62 lakhs.

The property is now 14 years old.

You expect to sell it for Rs. 95 lakhs.

You are unsure whether to sell or give it on rent.

Expected rent is Rs. 35,000 per month.

This is a common situation many face after holding a property for a long period.

Evaluate the Rental Income Option
Let’s assess the rent-first approach.

Pros of Renting:
Monthly rent of Rs. 35,000 is regular income.

Total yearly rent is Rs. 4.2 lakh.

You still own the flat and can sell later.

But consider these limitations:
Property is already 14 years old.

Rental income will not grow very fast.

Maintenance costs and repairs will rise every year.

Vacancy or tenant damage may reduce income.

Finding good tenants regularly is not easy.

Emotional stress in property management is real.

Rental returns rarely cross 2%–3% of property value. This is very low.

Rs. 4.2 lakh rent per year on a Rs. 95 lakh property gives poor return.

That too before tax, maintenance and vacancies.

Expected Depreciation In Value
Property value does not increase forever.

Older flats often see price stagnation or fall.

New buyers prefer newer buildings with better amenities.

Older buildings face legal or structural repair issues.

Government redevelopment or road projects may also affect value.

It is wise to exit before the property becomes harder to sell.

Capital Gains on Sale of Flat
You are selling a flat held for more than 2 years.

So, long-term capital gains (LTCG) will apply.

Sale price: Rs. 95 lakh
Indexed cost: Higher than Rs. 62 lakh
Gain: Sale price minus indexed cost

Capital gains above Rs. 1 lakh are taxable at 20%.

But you are eligible to save this tax if you reinvest under the correct rule.

How to Save LTCG Tax Smartly
Let’s understand the available options and their implications.

Option 1 – Reinvest in a New Residential House
Under specific section rules, you can save LTCG by buying a residential house.

You must reinvest only the capital gain, not full sale amount.

Property must be in India and completed within specific time.

You can only invest in one house.

This locks a large sum into another immovable asset.

But you already feel real estate may not grow well.

If you buy again, you repeat same cycle of low rental return and poor liquidity.

Option 2 – Invest in Specific Capital Gains Scheme Bonds
You can invest LTCG amount (not full sale amount) in notified bonds.

These bonds have 5 years lock-in.

Interest is very low (around 5.25%).

Interest is taxable every year.

After 5 years, capital is returned.

But these bonds don’t beat inflation or give real wealth growth.

It only helps to defer tax, not build financial strength.

Option 3 – Invest in FDs
Fixed deposits are not tax-saving instruments for capital gains.

You will still pay 20% LTCG on capital gain.

Also, FD interest is fully taxable.

Returns are not inflation-beating.

Not good for wealth creation or retirement planning.

FDs serve short-term needs or emergency use only.

Option 4 – Invest in Plot
Buying a plot does not help in saving LTCG tax.

You must build a house on plot within 3 years.

Plot gives no rental income.

Again, no liquidity and low flexibility.

Plot is not a wise option. Capital gets locked without returns.

Recommended Strategy – A Balanced and Growth-Focused Path
You are at a critical decision point. Here is a holistic approach.

Step 1 – Decide to Sell Now
Property is 14 years old. Maintenance cost will rise soon.

Price appreciation will likely stagnate or decline.

Rs. 35,000 rent is not attractive on Rs. 95 lakh value.

Selling now locks in gain and gives liquidity.

Exit now and don’t wait till market or property condition worsens.

Step 2 – Use LTCG Exemption Smartly
You have two options to save LTCG.

Either:

Reinvest only the capital gain (not full sale value) into a new flat.

Or:

Invest only the capital gain into notified 5-year capital gains bonds.

If you don’t want another flat, go with bonds.

Accept that bonds will give low return, but save tax legally.

You can use remaining amount (after reinvesting capital gain) in growth investments.

Step 3 – Deploy Remaining Money Into Mutual Funds
This is the key move.

Don’t invest in direct mutual funds. They have no personal support.

Invest in regular mutual funds through MFD guided by a Certified Financial Planner.

Use active funds, not index funds.

Index funds copy market and can’t avoid losses in fall.

Active funds protect downside better and seek higher returns.

Start SIPs and also use lumpsum investing smartly over phases.

This gives both safety and growth.

Step 4 – Split the Reinvested Amount Into Buckets
Don’t put all money in one place.

Split your funds into three parts:

Short term – Liquid funds or short-term debt mutual funds

Medium term – Hybrid or balanced advantage funds

Long term – Diversified equity mutual funds with SIPs

Each bucket serves a specific need and timeline.

This method gives liquidity, growth and protection.

Step 5 – Review Your Insurance and Emergency Plan
If you don’t have health insurance, take now.

Don’t depend only on cash for health issues.

Also, keep Rs. 5–10 lakh in FD or liquid fund as emergency buffer.

Emergency plan must be separate and untouchable.

Step 6 – Don’t Lock Into Real Estate Again
Flat resale market is slow and uncertain.

Rental yields are poor and taxable.

No liquidity, and selling is slow.

Property transfer has costs and legal work.

Mutual funds are faster, flexible and manageable.

Step 7 – Plan For Goals With Purpose
If you are planning for retirement or child education, link funds accordingly.

Don’t invest randomly. Purpose-driven investment brings clarity and focus.

Mutual funds offer customised plans for each goal.

Align investment with specific goals, not just returns.

Step 8 – Get Guidance From Certified Financial Planner
You are dealing with Rs. 95 lakh.

Tax law, mutual fund selection and risk balancing must be handled properly.

Take professional help from a Certified Financial Planner.

Use an MFD with CFP credential who understands your life needs.

Avoid decisions based on hearsay or internet shortcuts.

Finally
Selling your flat now is a smart decision. The age of the property, low rent, and poor growth make holding it less sensible. You can reinvest capital gain part in bonds to save tax. Don’t buy another flat or plot. Use mutual funds with guidance from Certified Financial Planner. Avoid direct plans and index funds. They don’t offer support or customisation. Divide your investment into short, medium and long term. Keep emergency buffer and buy proper health insurance. You can grow your money and protect it too. With proper planning, you will gain both peace and financial strength.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 15, 2025Hindi
Money
I'm banker by profession. I have monthly salary of 70k. I hv 12.55 lakhs in FDs with monthly interest payout of 9kpm. Bonds of 2 lakhs at11%. 1.5k per month interest payout. I have 1.8 lacs in PPF and i deposit 12-13k PPF every month. 2.25cr Pure Term plan with monthly premium of 2100rs. 30lakh health insurance cover at 9k pa. I have given 7lakhs to brother which will not give me back any interest but pricipal is secured and money will return in 1 year. I have a Car whose loan I have paid but monthly expense including maintenance, repair, insurance and running cost is 12k p.m. Other expenses on lifestyle is 15-20k pm avg. I'll be 27 year old in October. Not married. Live with parents. Parents own 2 house of cr each. 2 plot investment of 4cr. Parents earns 1lac pm and home expenses are done by them. Health insurance is adequate for parents. I have not planned any SIP till now, I was covering Emergency fund first which I have done. I have bifurcated savings as 7lacs as emergency funds and 7laxs marriage fund. Both I have saved now. PPF I'm doing for future Child education. I have monthly expense at 30kpm which I have mentioned above mainly through credit card and 30-35k permonth is saved by me permonth. How should I plan investments now. Please suggest. I want to build bunglow in future in parents plot which will cost 1.7 cr. We could sell one house.
Ans: You are managing your money well at a young age. Now is the right time to focus on long-term wealth creation with a disciplined investment plan.

Let us build a 360-degree financial plan tailored to your situation.

Step-by-Step Assessment of Your Current Financial Position
You are 26 with a salary of Rs 70,000/month.

Rs 12.55 lakhs in FDs gives Rs 9,000/month interest.

Rs 2 lakhs in bonds gives Rs 1,500/month interest.

You invest Rs 12–13k/month in PPF. Total in PPF is Rs 1.8 lakhs.

You have a large Rs 2.25 crore term cover. This is good.

Health insurance of Rs 30 lakhs is sufficient at your stage.

Monthly expenses are Rs 30,000. You save Rs 30–35k/month.

Rs 7 lakhs for emergency fund and Rs 7 lakhs for marriage fund are ready.

Rs 7 lakhs given to your brother is secure, will return in a year.

You wish to build a Rs 1.7 crore bungalow on family land.

You have no major liabilities. No loans. No risky investments. Very good base.

Your Key Financial Goals
Let’s define and structure your key goals properly:

Marriage in 2–4 years: Rs 7 lakhs already set aside.

Child education (after marriage): Already doing PPF. Need equity exposure.

Buy car or gadget in future: Use short-term mutual funds, not FDs.

Build bungalow of Rs 1.7 crore: In 5–10 years. Need a long-term corpus.

Retirement planning: Start now with SIPs in equity MFs.

Gaps in Current Approach
Here are the issues:

No SIPs yet. Equity exposure missing for long-term growth.

Very heavy in fixed-income instruments like FD, bonds, PPF.

No inflation protection. FD and bonds don’t beat long-term inflation.

Credit card usage is high. You pay lifestyle expenses with it.

No tracking of goal-wise investments. All investments are scattered.

Action Plan: Start Systematic Investments Now
From your Rs 30–35k savings, allocate in a structured way:

1. Monthly SIP Plan (Rs 20,000–25,000)
50% in Large and Flexi Cap Funds
Lower risk. Ideal for long-term stable growth.

30% in Mid Cap Funds
Higher return potential over 7–10 years.

20% in Small Cap Funds
Only if your risk appetite is high. Otherwise, avoid.

Avoid direct plans. Invest via regular plan through a certified MFD and CFP.
Direct plans have no support. No rebalancing. Risk of wrong fund selection.

2. Short-Term Bucket (Rs 5,000–7,000/month)
Use ultra-short debt funds or liquid funds.

For short goals like vacation, gadgets, insurance, repairs.

These are better than recurring deposit or savings account.

3. Avoid These Mistakes
Don’t increase FD allocation. You already have enough.

Don’t use credit card for regular expenses. Use cash or debit card.

Don’t invest in index funds. They mirror market, no downside control.

Actively managed funds perform better in India in the long term.

Goal-Specific Planning
A. Building Bungalow (Rs 1.7 crore in 8–10 years)
Start SIP of Rs 20,000/month now.

Use flexi-cap and multi-cap funds for this goal.

Rebalance every year with help of CFP.

Don’t break PPF for this. Use mutual fund corpus only.

If parents agree, you may sell one house later to top-up.

B. Marriage Goal – Already Achieved
Keep Rs 7 lakhs in a debt fund or ultra short-term fund.

Avoid FD for this. Better post-tax returns in debt funds.

C. Child Future Planning (Assuming marriage in 3 years)
PPF alone is not enough.

Open a SIP in child name (minor folio).

Use multi-cap or flexi-cap funds.

Add Rs 5,000/month to start.

Increase after marriage, based on affordability.

Insurance Review
Life cover of Rs 2.25 crore is very good.

Health cover of Rs 30 lakhs is excellent for now.

Once married, extend family floater to spouse and future kids.

Emergency Fund Strategy
Rs 7 lakhs already set aside. This is sufficient.

Park in liquid or arbitrage fund.

Don't keep full amount in savings account or FD.

Bond Holdings
Bonds of Rs 2 lakhs giving Rs 1.5k/month interest is good.

But don’t add more to bonds.

Keep it under 10% of your total investments.

PPF and Long-Term Goals
Continue Rs 12–13k/month.

Use this for future child education.

Don’t touch it for home or marriage.

Suggested Monthly Allocation Strategy
You can divide your monthly investible surplus like this:

Rs 20,000 – Equity Mutual Funds via SIP

Rs 5,000 – Debt Fund for short-term

Rs 5,000 – Cash buffer or small savings

Review yearly and increase SIP as your income grows.

What You Should Avoid
Don’t invest in ULIPs or endowment policies.

Don’t fall for real estate investment traps.

Don’t lend to relatives unless it’s fully secure.

Don’t increase credit card spending.

Don’t stay inactive. Time is most important for compounding.

What You Can Do Extra
Start reading financial books or videos.

Track net worth monthly. Use a simple Excel.

Learn basics of compounding and goal-based investing.

Take help from MFD and Certified Financial Planner regularly.

Finally
You are in a very strong financial position.
But you must shift from saving to investing.
Don’t delay starting SIPs anymore.
Focus on equity funds for long-term goals.
Avoid FDs and index funds for wealth creation.
Balance your expenses and keep monitoring.

Use regular mutual fund plans through Certified Financial Planner.
They guide on fund selection, rebalancing, and reviews.
Stay consistent. Time will do the magic.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
My age is 46. My salary is 1.7k. Currently I have 10 Lakh im MF, 8 lakh in Nps, 6.5 lakh in PPF, 4.5 Lakh in Sukanya. I have term insurance of 1.5cr and health insurance of 10 lakh family floater. Paying 12000 emi of car loan with 24 month pending emi. 8.5 k loan on credit card with 4 month emi pending. Investing 38 k in MF, 15000 per month ULIP AND 12 K RD. Can invest another 20k per month. Monthly expenditure is 48k. I need 15 lakh after 5 years. 70 lakh after ten year. Another 50 lakh after 15 years and 1.5 cr after 20 years. Kindly review my portfolio and goal.
Ans: Snapshot of Your Current Finances
Age 46, salary in hand Rs?1.7?lakh monthly.

Monthly expenses Rs?48,000.

Car loan EMI Rs?12,000. 24 instalments remain.

Credit?card loan Rs?8,500 EMI. Four instalments remain.

Mutual funds current value Rs?10?lakh. SIP investing Rs?38,000 monthly.

NPS corpus Rs?8?lakh.

PPF balance Rs?6.5?lakh.

Sukanya Samriddhi balance Rs?4.5?lakh.

ULIP premium Rs?15,000 monthly.

Recurring deposit Rs?12,000 monthly.

Extra saving power Rs?20,000 monthly.

Term cover Rs?1.5?crore till 70.

Health cover Rs?10?lakh family floater.

Short?Term Repairs: Clear Costly Loans Fast
Credit?card debt costs high interest.

Pay the four dues within two months.

Use Rs?24,000 from savings for quick closure.

Car loan has fair rate. Two years left.

Keep paying EMI on schedule.

Avoid early closure now. Interest left is small.

Free cash should feed investment goals instead.

Strengthen Emergency Cushion
Target six months of expenses plus EMIs.

Needed buffer equals Rs?48k + 12k = Rs?60k monthly.

Six months buffer equals Rs?3.6?lakh.

Place buffer in liquid mutual fund.

Continue topping until full buffer reached.

Never park emergency cash in ULIP or PPF.

Review and Act on ULIP
ULIP mixes insurance and investing.

Returns often below pure equity funds.

Premium eats into cash flow heavily.

Check lock?in period end date.

If five years complete, surrender immediately.

If lock?in ongoing, stop further premiums.

Convert policy to paid?up mode.

Redirect freed Rs?15,000 monthly to mutual funds.

Use SIP via regular plan through CFP?backed MFD.

Recurring Deposit Assessment
RD suits goals within five years.

You need Rs?15?lakh in five years.

Current RD gives certain corpus.

Continue RD but cap at Rs?12,000 monthly.

Do not extend RD term beyond goal date.

Goal?Wise Buckets
Five?year goal: Rs?15?lakh

RD monthly Rs?12,000 continues.

Add Rs?5,000 monthly to conservative hybrid fund.

Shift hybrid part to low?duration debt in year four.

Ten?year goal: Rs?70?lakh

Channel Rs?25,000 monthly to flexi?cap equity funds.

Use three diversified active funds.

Invest through regular plans only.

Review performance every six months.

Gradually move 30?% to hybrid during year eight.

Fifteen?year goal: Rs?50?lakh

Allocate Rs?15,000 monthly to mid?cap fund.

Keep sip discipline for twelve years.

Shift gains to balanced advantage fund afterward.

Twenty?year goal: Rs?1.5?crore

Increase NPS contribution by Rs?5,000 monthly.

Add Rs?10,000 monthly SIP in multicap fund.

Let PPF contributions continue yearly at Rs?1.5?lakh.

PPF plus NPS plus equity give inflation?beating corpus.

Monthly Cash?Flow Layout After Shifts
Salary in hand Rs?170,000.

Household spend Rs?48,000.

Car EMI Rs?12,000.

Mutual fund SIPs old Rs?38,000.

New equity SIPs from ULIP stop Rs?15,000.

New hybrid SIP Rs?5,000.

NPS top?up Rs?5,000.

Emergency build Rs?10,000 (until buffer ready).

RD Rs?12,000.

Available surplus each month now fully used.

If hikes come, raise equity SIPs first.

Portfolio Mix After Adjustment
Large?cap 40?%

Flexi?cap 25?%

Mid?cap 15?%

Conservative hybrid 10?%

Balanced advantage 10?%

This mix suits age 46 risk profile.

Protection Enhancements
Term cover adequate at Rs?1.5?crore.

Keep nominee details updated.

Health cover Rs?10?lakh might be low later.

Buy super top?up of Rs?15?lakh.

Premium low if done this year.

Check critical illness rider as well.

Tax Efficiency Steps
PPF full limit cuts taxable income.

NPS extra Rs?50,000 gives 80CCD(1B) benefit.

Equity fund gains above Rs?1.25?lakh taxed 12.5?%.

Debt fund gains taxed at slab.

Plan redemptions in slices to stay below threshold.

Review Schedule
Semi?annual meeting with CFP?backed MFD.

Compare each fund to category average.

Switch out if trailing badly for four quarters.

Check goal progress percentages.

Rebalance if equity weight drifts 10?% off.

Behaviour Rules
Never pause SIPs during market falls.

Avoid new credit card EMI schemes.

Resist fresh car purchase until this loan ends.

Keep lifestyle inflation under salary growth.

Children’s Future Security
Sukanya for daughter continues yearly.

After RD goal hits, direct that Rs?12k to Sukanya or child fund.

Shift Sukanya gains to hybrid when she turns 13.

For son, start a separate equity SIP Rs?5,000 from next increment.

Estate and Documentation
Draft a simple Will within six months.

List mutual fund folio numbers clearly.

Mention PPF, NPS, term plan nominees.

Store documents digitally and in hard copy.

Action List for Coming Week
Pay remaining four credit card EMIs early.

Contact insurer to stop ULIP premiums.

Open three new mutual fund folios via CFP?guided MFD.

Set up fresh SIP mandates as per bucket plan.

Increase NPS contribution online by Rs?5,000.

Open super top?up health policy.

Set auto transfer Rs?10,000 to liquid fund for emergency.

Final Insights
Small steady moves create big future gains.
Clear the costliest loans first.
Redirect every freed rupee into goal?aligned SIPs.
Keep portfolio under expert watch.
Stay invested for twenty years with discipline.
Your targets of Rs?15?lakh, Rs?70?lakh, Rs?50?lakh, and Rs?1.5?crore then become realistic milestones rather than distant wishes.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9019 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 14, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi sir. Currently my package is 7.4 lakhs. Have one SIP of 2k per month. I also regularly invest in NSC-20k per month. APY of 1.2k per month. My parents earn pension. My wife is housewife. My son is 3 years old now and is currently going to play school now. Please suggest investment plans to cover my family.
Ans: Your commitment to saving through SIP, NSC, and APY is a good foundation. You also have a young son, a salaried income, and dependents in your family. Let us craft a 360-degree investment plan to support your family’s needs—covering short-term safety, children’s future, retirement, and tax efficiency.

1. Build a Strong Emergency Fund
You currently contribute Rs 2,000 per month via SIP and Rs 20,000 monthly to NSC.

Evaluate your monthly household expenses carefully.

Build an emergency fund covering 6 months of living expenses.

Keep this fund in a liquid or ultra-short debt mutual fund.

Avoid keeping it in NSC or locked instruments.

This gives easy access and better interest above fixed deposits.

Your parents’ pension income also supports the household, but an independent emergency buffer gives peace of mind.

2. Insurance Protection for Family Security
You are the sole income earner; protecting that income is vital.

Buy a term life insurance policy of at least 15–20 times your annual income (approximately Rs 1.2–1.5 crore).

Premium is low due to your current age and health. Buy now.

Secure your son too with a small life cover to pay for future education if needed.

Ensure the insurance policy is a pure term plan.

Avoid life insurance with investment features—they offer poor returns and lock in money.

Also take a family health insurance plan for your son and spouse with coverage of Rs 10–15 lakh.

Add a critical illness rider for added protection.

These measures ensure your family’s security if something unexpected happens.

3. Evaluate Your Current Investments
You invest through:

A SIP of Rs 2,000 per month (unclear equity or debt)

Rs 20,000 per month to NSC (5-year lock-in)

Rs 1,200 per month to APY (15-year pension lock-in)

Appreciation: You have a disciplined approach. NSC gives fixed returns. APY prepares for retirement.
Observations:

APY is a good tax-saving tool but offers fixed 8–8.5% interest—less than what equity or hybrid funds can deliver over long term.

NSC is locked away—you can keep this but not rely on it for future cash flow flexibility.

A Rs 2,000 SIP is helpful, but not enough to meet long-term goals like child education or retirement.

Let us optimize your investments with short-, medium-, and long-term goals.

4. Short-Term Planning: Emergency Fund
First, calculate your monthly expenses. Suppose they total Rs 50,000.

Build an emergency fund of Rs 3 lakh (6-month coverage) as top priority.

Stop APY and NSC contributions temporarily until the fund is built.

You can channel your emergency fund into a liquid mutual fund with weekly auto-sweep features.

Only once this buffer is set should we move to longer-term investments.

5. Medium-Term Planning: Child Education Fund
Your son is 3 years old. Education, especially at higher levels, can now cost Rs 1–2 crore in 15 years.

Plan approach:

Start a separate equity-linked SIP of Rs 5,000–8,000 per month.

Invest through actively managed mutual funds (flexi-cap or hybrid equity).

These grow faster than NSC or APY over the next 10–15 years.

As your son approaches age 15–16, gradually shift to conservative funds to preserve wealth.

This offers growth now and safety later.

Keep this investment separate from your retirement planning for clarity and discipline.

6. Long-term Planning: Retirement Corpus
Your current instruments (NSC, APY) help, but may not yield enough for retirement.

What to do:

After emergency fund is built, channel savings into a retirement-focused SIP of Rs 5,000–10,000 per month.

Use actively managed equity mutual funds through regular plans.

Equity grows at 12–15% CAGR over long term, beating inflation.

Add to your NPS if available through your employer.

Consider PPF for tax-free returns and safety.

Continue your current SIP alongside the new ones.

Over 25–30 years, this becomes a strong corpus for retirement.

Your parents' pension helps now, but you cannot rely on it indefinitely. Build your own corpus now.

7. Reallocating NSC and APY Savings
NSC: Continue investing if tax-saving is your priority. Keep in fixed income while child or retirement funds grow separately.

APY: Good for a fixed-income pension, but withdrawals are not available before 15 years.

You can stop new investment and redirect that to higher-yield equity if needed.

APY forms only part of your retirement plan. Equity and PPF are equally important for growth.

8. Strategic Investment Structure
Goal-wise monthly investing could look like this once your emergency fund is built:

Child education SIP: Rs 5,000–8,000

Retirement SIP: Rs 5,000–10,000

PPF contribution: Rs 12,500 (to make up Rs 1.5 lakh annually)

NSC continuation: If you wish to max tax benefit

APY contributions: Optional, up to you

Health/Term Insurance premiums: Ensure you use tax benefits from 80C and 80D

Once your SIPs begin, set them as auto-debit and treat them like mandatory EMIs.

9. Portfolio Management and Rebalancing
Invest through regular plans via CFP-backed MFD, not direct.

Active funds help in assessing goals and market dynamics.

Keep 2–3 funds for each goal—child, retirement.

Classify your funds appropriately: flexi-cap, hybrid, multi-cap.

Rebalance yearly—if equity has grown beyond target, shift some gains to debt.

As you approach child college age, move that corpus into safer loans.

Discipline and timely review are the heart of compound growth.

10. Insurance Monitoring and Top-Ups
You should have both term life and health insurance in place.

Ensure that term life aligns with your retirement and child goals.

Plan for increasing cover as your income and responsibilities grow.

Health insurance should be annual, to cover emergencies or serious illness.

Review these policies annually to stay in step with life changes.

11. Tax Planning Across Portfolios
PPF and NSC helps reduce taxable income under Section 80C.

APY also qualifies under 80CCD.

Keep track of gains from mutual fund SIPs:

Equity funds: Gains above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%, short-term taxed at 20%

Debt/hybrid funds: Fully taxable per income slab

Plan SIP exits or partial redemptions after 12–15 years to minimize tax impact

Use professional help to plan these withdrawals efficiently

12. Long-Term Investment Strategy Post Emergency & Insurance Setup
After emergency and insurance are in place:

Allocate Rs 45,000–60,000 per month across goals

Automate SIPs and ensure contributions happen without fail

Keep risk aligned—child fund equity mix reduces over time

Periodic reviews prevent drift and maintain goal clarity

A well-structured roadmap helps avoid anxiety and keeps focus.

13. Monitor and Adjust for Life Events
Financial planning is dynamic:

Job changes or salary hikes

Child’s admission to school or relocation

Medical emergencies or health changes

Market ups and downs

Your investments should flex accordingly:

Top?up SIPs during salary increase

Rebalance during market corrections

Adjust insurance cover as family grows

Stay in touch with your CFP every 6 months

Consistent review prevents surprises and keeps you in control.

14. What You Should Avoid
Do not chase trendy investment schemes or get-rich-quick platforms

Avoid new real estate purchases as an investment

Register SIPs in regular plans only; no direct or index-only funds

Don’t withdraw from NSC or APY—only encash when absolutely needed

Avoid credit card debt—use only if you can pay off the bill monthly

Staying away from pitfalls ensures your progress remains uninterrupted.

Final Insights
Sir, your savings habit is admirable—but starts are gradual. To bring your plan into full alignment:

Create a formal emergency fund first

Buy term and health insurance immediately

Build systematic SIPs for your son's education and your retirement

Reallocate or maintain NSC & APY as per need

Use actively managed mutual funds via a CFP-led MFD rotation

Contribute to PPF annually for tax-free safety

Rebalance the portfolio yearly to keep risk aligned

Review your plan 6-monthly to track goals and performance

This approach ensures your family’s security, your son’s future, and financial independence are built, step-by-step, with smart choices and professional guidance.

Wishing you success in this meaningful journey.

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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