Hi Sir, I am 32 years old, married and have a 4 month old daughter. I am working in a defense based private company. I earn 53K in hand. My monthly expenses come to around 20K. I have just started investing in mutual funds and doing a SIP of Rs.8000 per month. I have invested around 1.5 lakhs across multiple funds by now. I also have around 1.2lakhs in my EPFO account. I have saved 20K per month for my daughter for the past year which totals around 2 lakhs right now which I want to invest in her name for the long term. Besides these, I do not own any assets or have any liabilities as of now. Please suggest where to invest the amount I have saved for my daughter for best returns. And also please suggest how to plan for my retirement considering similar monthly expenditure with addition of daughters education and marriage.
Ans: You are in a very important phase of life. At 32, with a young child and a steady income, you have made a solid beginning. Your habit of saving and investing early will give you a big edge. Your family is depending on you, and your discipline will secure their future.
Let’s look at everything in a structured and simple way.
? Understanding Your Current Financial Situation
– Your income is Rs.53000 in hand.
– You spend Rs.20000 monthly.
– You save and invest the rest, which is very good.
– You already do SIP of Rs.8000 per month.
– You have Rs.1.5 lakhs in mutual funds.
– You have Rs.1.2 lakhs in EPFO.
– You have Rs.2 lakhs saved for your daughter.
– You have no loans.
– You have no assets like house or gold.
This is a healthy start. You are already spending only 40% of your income. That gives room to build wealth. Now, let us look at what to do next.
? Investing Your Daughter’s Rs.2 Lakhs: Long-Term View
This is for your daughter’s future. Likely uses could be higher education or marriage. Both are long-term goals.
– She is only 4 months now.
– You have 15 to 20 years time.
– This gives scope for growth-based investing.
Here’s what you can do:
– Invest this Rs.2 lakhs in 2 or 3 equity mutual funds.
– Choose actively managed funds for better long-term returns.
– Avoid index funds. They only copy the market and don’t beat inflation.
– Actively managed funds have expert fund managers.
– They adjust based on market opportunities.
– Over 15 years, they usually outperform index funds.
Also,
– Use Regular Plans through a CFP-backed Mutual Fund Distributor.
– Avoid Direct Plans unless you can manage and review investments on your own.
– Direct plans don’t provide support, review, or portfolio balancing.
– Regular Plans through a Certified Financial Planner help you stay disciplined.
– A qualified planner monitors the market and guides rebalancing.
– You avoid costly emotional mistakes.
Strategy for daughter’s funds:
– Divide Rs.2 lakhs across 2 or 3 good equity mutual funds.
– Stay invested for 15 years minimum.
– Do not withdraw in between.
– Review yearly with help of Certified Financial Planner.
– This can grow into a good education or marriage corpus.
Also, since you are already saving Rs.20000 every month for her, keep it up.
Even Rs.5000 or Rs.10000 monthly in SIP for her will make a big difference over time.
? Planning Your Retirement: Long-Term but Needs Focus
Retirement planning should start now. You have time, but the earlier, the better.
– You are 32 now.
– You can aim to retire at 60.
– That gives you 28 years to save.
– But inflation reduces the value of money.
– So Rs.20000 expenses today will grow a lot by retirement.
You need to plan for:
– Your own expenses after retirement
– Your wife’s needs
– Medical costs in old age
– Travel and emergencies
– No income after retirement
What you should do:
– Increase your SIP gradually as income rises.
– Right now, you invest Rs.8000 in mutual funds.
– Increase it by Rs.1000 every year.
– Also start a new SIP only for retirement.
– Separate from daughter’s goal.
Why equity mutual funds help:
– Equity mutual funds beat inflation over long term.
– They build wealth over 20+ years.
– Don’t choose debt mutual funds for retirement goals.
– Debt funds give stable returns but low growth.
– They are good for short-term goals.
Continue EPFO contribution:
– EPFO is a good long-term tool.
– It gives safe and tax-free corpus at retirement.
– Don’t withdraw EPF for other uses.
– Let it grow till retirement.
? Tracking Your Monthly Budget and Investing Discipline
Your expenses are only Rs.20000.
You save nearly Rs.30000 each month.
This gives you enough to grow wealth for all goals.
– Continue SIP of Rs.8000 or increase it.
– Start SIP of Rs.5000 for daughter.
– Start SIP of Rs.5000 for retirement.
– Keep Rs.5000 to Rs.7000 for emergency savings.
– Maintain Rs.1 lakh as emergency fund.
– Park it in liquid fund or FD for easy access.
This way:
– You cover child’s needs.
– You build retirement wealth.
– You stay ready for emergencies.
? Life Insurance and Health Insurance: Non-Investment but Vital
These are not investments. But they are must-haves.
They protect your family and finances from sudden shocks.
– Buy a term insurance of Rs.50 lakhs to Rs.1 crore.
– Choose only pure term insurance.
– Do not take ULIPs or endowment policies.
– They give low returns and high costs.
– If you already have such products, you may consider surrendering.
– Reinvest that amount in mutual funds.
– Also buy family floater health insurance.
– You, your wife and daughter should be covered.
– Minimum Rs.5 lakhs coverage.
– Health costs rise every year.
? Education and Marriage Planning for Daughter
These are big goals. But they are long-term, so time is your friend.
Education Planning:
– Higher education needs large funds.
– Start a separate SIP of Rs.5000 per month.
– Use equity mutual funds.
– Review every year and increase SIP.
– Don’t touch this investment for any other need.
Marriage Planning:
– This is 20+ years away.
– You can use lumpsum investments here.
– The Rs.2 lakhs you saved can be for this.
– Also, build this goal slowly after education fund is stable.
Do not mix marriage and education planning.
Treat them as two different goals.
? Building Assets for Financial Stability
You currently do not have any physical assets. That’s not a problem.
Focus on building financial assets.
– Mutual funds are liquid and can grow well.
– EPFO adds stability and long-term safety.
– Emergency fund ensures peace of mind.
– Term insurance covers family needs.
– Health insurance protects savings.
Stick to these. Do not get distracted by gold or real estate.
Real estate has low liquidity and high maintenance.
Also, resale or rental is not easy and returns are uncertain.
? Why You Should Avoid Index Funds
Index funds may look cheap. But they have limitations.
– They only copy the market index like Nifty.
– They don’t outperform the market.
– In falling markets, they fall fully.
– No active fund manager to manage risk.
– Inflation can beat index fund returns.
On the other hand:
– Actively managed funds have experienced managers.
– They reduce exposure to weak sectors.
– They increase exposure to strong sectors.
– Over long term, they create better value.
Always go with active mutual funds through a CFP-led advisor.
They help you rebalance and stay on track.
? Why Direct Mutual Funds Are Not Ideal
Direct funds have low expense ratio. But they lack guidance.
– No help with fund selection.
– No review or rebalancing support.
– No risk profiling.
– No hand-holding during market falls.
Investors often panic or stay emotional.
This hurts long-term returns.
On the other hand:
– Regular plans give guidance.
– Through Certified Financial Planner, you get yearly reviews.
– You get portfolio alignment based on goals.
– Mistakes are avoided.
The slightly higher cost is worth the value it brings.
Long-term discipline beats small cost difference.
? What To Review Every Year
Every year, review these points:
– SIP amount and growth
– Fund performance
– Daughter’s goal progress
– Retirement corpus projection
– Changes in income or expenses
– New responsibilities or medical needs
– Emergency fund adequacy
Your planner can guide this review well.
This ensures all your goals stay on track.
? Finally
You are doing very well for your stage in life.
– You have no loans.
– You are disciplined in savings.
– You are planning for your daughter.
– You are thinking of retirement.
This mindset will help you build wealth peacefully.
Follow these steps:
– Stay invested for long term.
– Don’t chase returns.
– Review yearly.
– Invest goal-wise.
– Increase SIPs as income grows.
– Avoid distractions like gold and real estate.
– Avoid mixing insurance and investment.
– Take professional help where needed.
With this, you can confidently build your financial future.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment