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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11150 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Apr 13, 2026

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
SM Question by SM on Apr 10, 2026Hindi
Money

Hi , 2 question 1) My mutual fund rm suggested me to switch the funds AXIS ELSS FUND & ABSL ELSS FUND which has free units and around 1.50 lacs to Axis small cap & ABSL flexi cap , can you guide if this is a smart move considering the current market situation , 2) my few other funds are Axis Large Cap Fund - Growth , ICICI Prudential Large Cap Fund - Growth , ICICI Prudential Multi Asset Fund - Growth, LIC MF Multi Cap Fund - Growth, SBI Large Cap Fund - Growth, SBI Midcap Fund - Growth eventhough the XIRR has come down to 5 % am still holding it and will hold it. Kindly suggest if any changes to be done in the fund which i hold or should i continue as it is. Will appreciate any valuable guidance

Ans: You are taking a thoughtful approach by reviewing your portfolio before making switches. Many investors change funds without checking suitability. Your habit of evaluating before acting is a strong advantage for long-term wealth creation.

Let us address both your questions clearly.

» Switching ELSS funds into small cap and flexi cap categories

Your mutual fund relationship manager has suggested switching:

– tax-saving category funds (with completed lock-in period)
into
– one small cap category fund
– one flexi cap category fund

This suggestion is partly good, but it should be applied carefully.

Positive aspects of this switch:

– tax-saving category funds are mainly large cap oriented
– flexi cap category gives better flexibility across market caps
– small cap category improves long-term return potential
– lock-in already completed, so liquidity flexibility exists

However one important caution:

Switching entirely into small cap category is not always suitable in the current market phase if your portfolio already has midcap or small cap exposure.

Small caps:

– move very fast during rallies
– fall sharply during corrections
– need strong patience holding ability

So the smarter approach is:

– switching one ELSS fund into flexi cap category is a very good move
– switching the second ELSS fund fully into small cap category should depend on your existing small cap allocation

If you already hold midcap or small cap funds, then allocate only partly into small cap category.

Balanced allocation improves stability and long-term XIRR consistency.

» Whether continuing your existing funds with 5% XIRR is correct

Your current holdings include exposure across:

– multiple large cap category funds
– one multi asset category fund
– one multi cap category fund
– one midcap category fund

The fall in XIRR to around 5% is mainly because:

– last 12–18 months markets moved unevenly
– large caps remained relatively slow
– midcaps corrected after strong rally

So low recent XIRR does not mean fund quality is weak.

Your decision to continue holding is correct.

But there is one improvement opportunity.

Currently you hold multiple funds from the same category (large cap category). This creates duplication instead of diversification.

Better structure normally:

– keep one strong large cap category fund
– keep one flexi cap category fund
– keep one midcap category fund
– keep one multi cap category fund
– keep one hybrid or multi asset category fund

Holding many large cap category funds together does not improve returns meaningfully.

It only spreads investment across similar portfolios.

So instead of exiting immediately, a gradual consolidation strategy is better.

» Role of your multi asset category fund

This category is useful because it invests in:

– equity
– debt
– gold

It reduces volatility and improves stability during market corrections.

So continuing this fund is a good decision.

» Role of your midcap category fund

Midcap exposure supports long-term growth strongly.

Since your horizon appears long-term, continuing this allocation is appropriate.

No change required here.

» Suggested improvement strategy going forward

You are already doing the most important thing correctly — staying invested.

Now only refinement is needed.

Recommended actions:

– switch one matured ELSS fund into flexi cap category
– review whether small cap allocation is already sufficient before shifting second ELSS fund
– gradually reduce duplication across large cap category funds
– continue midcap allocation
– continue multi asset allocation
– avoid frequent switching based on short-term performance

These steps improve return potential without increasing risk sharply.

» Finally

Your discipline in continuing investments despite temporary fall in XIRR is the right behaviour of a successful long-term investor.

Switching part of matured ELSS allocation into flexi cap category is a smart move.

Small cap allocation should be added carefully, not aggressively.

Gradual consolidation of multiple large cap category funds will improve portfolio efficiency over time.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/
DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information to be as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision.
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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11150 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 21, 2024

Listen
Money
Good morning sir. I am investing in SBI midcap, small cap and health care opportunities fund at the rate of Rs 10000 per month respectively and Rs 5000/- each in ICICI equity funds. Kindly suggest whether to contiue or to switch to other
Ans: It's great to see your proactive approach towards investing. Let's assess your current mutual fund investments and explore whether any adjustments are needed.

Reviewing Current Investments
Diversification Strategy
Your investment strategy reflects a diversified approach by investing in midcap, small cap, healthcare, and equity funds.

Performance Analysis
Evaluate the performance of your current funds against relevant benchmarks to gauge their effectiveness in meeting your financial goals.

Considerations for Continuation or Switching
Fund Performance
Assess the historical performance of each fund to determine if they consistently outperform their benchmarks.

Risk Appetite
Consider your risk tolerance and ensure your investment choices align with your risk appetite and financial goals.

Potential Action Steps
Consultation with a Certified Financial Planner
Seek guidance from a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) to review your investment portfolio comprehensively and ensure it aligns with your financial objectives.

Periodic Portfolio Review
Regularly review your investment portfolio to stay informed about market trends and make necessary adjustments based on changing economic conditions.

Final Recommendation
Stay Informed
Stay updated on market developments and seek professional advice when considering changes to your investment strategy.

By regularly reviewing your mutual fund portfolio and consulting with a Certified Financial Planner, you can make informed decisions to optimize your investments and work towards your financial goals.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11150 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Oct 22, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Oct 22, 2025Hindi
Money
Dear sir, I m doing Following MF in last 4 months, ICICI prudential large cap - 54k HDFC balance advantage fund - 39k Parag Parikh Flexi cap - 41k Motilal Midcap -36k Invesco midcap - 36k Bandhan small cap - 36k Nippon india small cap - 35k ICICI prudential gold ETF - 33k Axis liq fund - 1.5L(emergency fund) One of the website advisor asking to change all funds to their index fund except flexi cap, Is this decision correct or wrong? Kindly suggest for my funds portfolio My assets & goals Short term : Buy a car within 2yrs Long term: built a house in 10yrs Wants to financial freedom early(at age of 50), right now my age is 38. Planning to invest 35k/M, my expense 30k/M, Total net sal income 86k/M, I have no loan & liabilities, I have traditional FD corpus - 7L in FD & 4L in NSC & 6L in Kissan Vikas Patra 10yr lockin ( right now 3yrs completed) Real estate networth - 30L(2 plots) PF - 8L balance Right now I have corpus of 6L in hand Whenever I have extra money will invest in MF only Team insurance - 1cr Health insurance - plan to buy Kindly suggest advise for me
Ans: You have done an excellent job in managing your finances so far. At age 38, being debt-free and already investing regularly shows great awareness and discipline. You are balancing your expenses and savings well, and your focus on financial freedom is truly inspiring. Most importantly, you are thinking ahead and seeking clarity before making major changes — that’s the sign of a mature investor.

Now, let’s evaluate your current portfolio and the suggestion given by that website advisor in a complete and balanced way.

» Assessing your present investment mix

You already hold a thoughtful mix of mutual funds — large-cap, flexi-cap, balanced advantage, midcap, small-cap, gold, and liquid. This mix covers most risk and return categories. You have exposure to growth, balance, and stability, plus an emergency fund.

Your mutual fund portfolio is diversified, and the mix is suitable for your age and goals. You also hold some traditional savings like FD, NSC, and KVP. Those offer safety and liquidity. Altogether, your structure is healthy and provides a good balance between growth and security.

Your systematic approach of investing 35k per month further strengthens your long-term compounding potential. So, your overall direction is already correct.

» Evaluating the suggestion to move into index funds

Moving everything to index funds except flexi-cap, as suggested by that website, is not suitable for your goals or stage.

Index funds simply mirror the market index. They hold all companies in the index, good or bad. There is no active research or decision-making. So, if the market falls, they fall equally. They cannot avoid poor-quality stocks or sectors.

Active funds, on the other hand, are managed by experienced fund managers who study company fundamentals, economic trends, and valuations. They can protect downside in falling markets by adjusting holdings. Over long-term, good active funds have delivered better risk-adjusted returns than index funds.

Also, index funds offer no flexibility during volatile phases. For long-term wealth creation and early financial freedom, you need actively managed funds that can adapt, not passive ones that just follow.

Hence, changing all your existing funds to index funds would be a poor decision. It may reduce your return potential and increase your risk during corrections.

» Why your present mix is better suited

Your current portfolio already includes diversified categories:
– Large-cap for stability and steady compounding.
– Balanced advantage fund for dynamic asset allocation.
– Flexi-cap for tactical equity exposure.
– Mid-cap and small-cap for high-growth potential over long term.
– Gold for protection against inflation and volatility.
– Liquid fund for emergency needs.

This type of structure gives you balance between growth, safety, and liquidity. It already follows the core principles of asset allocation. The need is not to change everything, but to hold, review, and rebalance once a year under guidance of a Certified Financial Planner.

So, your portfolio direction is correct. What you need is monitoring, not a complete shift.

» Why active management is more meaningful in India

The Indian equity market is still evolving. It is not as mature or efficient as developed markets. Many stocks are under-researched, and market prices often move emotionally. In such markets, skilled fund managers can identify undervalued stocks early and avoid poor-quality ones.

This means active funds in India have higher potential to outperform the market. Index funds, in contrast, simply follow market weight, ignoring valuations or fundamentals. That limits your wealth-building potential.

For long-term goals like your home and early retirement, this difference compounds into a big gap. That’s why, for Indian investors, actively managed funds remain more rewarding.

» Matching investments to your goals

You have three clear goals:

– Short term: Buy a car in 2 years.
– Long term: Build a house in 10 years.
– Life goal: Financial freedom by 50.

For your car goal, avoid equity exposure. You already have Axis Liquid Fund and other safe instruments like FD and NSC. Keep your car money in those. Don’t mix short-term goals with equity.

For your house goal and financial freedom, continue investing in your mutual funds through SIPs. You can review and rebalance the ratio of large-cap, flexi-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap once every year. A Certified Financial Planner can help you decide allocation based on performance and your evolving comfort.

This separation of short and long-term goals prevents panic selling and gives clarity in planning.

» Evaluating your risk profile and investment behaviour

At 38, you are young enough to handle moderate risk. You have stable income, no liabilities, and emergency reserves. This allows you to take reasonable exposure to equity for long-term goals.

Your current mix already reflects that. Large-cap, balanced advantage, and flexi-cap form your stable base. Mid and small caps bring extra growth over long horizons. Gold adds safety during market dips. This is a well-balanced structure.

So, rather than change the category, focus on continuing disciplined investing and annual reviews.

» On managing FDs, NSC, and KVP

You have Rs 7 lakh in FDs, Rs 4 lakh in NSC, and Rs 6 lakh in KVP. These are safe instruments, but not efficient for long-term wealth creation. Their post-tax returns are usually lower than inflation.

Continue them till maturity, but don’t renew them again. When they mature, reinvest the proceeds into suitable mutual funds through a Certified Financial Planner. This will help your money grow faster without increasing risk too much.

This approach ensures that your traditional assets are gradually moved into more productive instruments.

» On your PF and insurance

Your PF balance of Rs 8 lakh is a solid foundation for retirement. Keep contributing to it till you reach financial freedom. It’s a stable long-term corpus.

You already have term insurance of Rs 1 crore, which is excellent. It gives financial protection to your dependents. Once your investments grow and your family becomes financially independent, you can review if you still need the same cover later.

Regarding health insurance, please buy a comprehensive plan soon. A single hospitalisation can disturb even a strong portfolio. Health insurance protects both your money and your peace of mind.

» On investing additional corpus and surplus

You have Rs 6 lakh in hand now. You can invest it as lumpsum in your existing mutual fund categories after checking current market conditions and your allocation ratio. Don’t open too many new funds. Instead, top up existing ones that fit your goal duration and risk level.

Continue your SIP of Rs 35k per month. If your income rises, increase your SIP by 10% yearly. This step will accelerate your journey toward financial freedom.

Whenever you get bonus or extra income, use part of it to prepay any future liability or invest in growth assets. Avoid putting too much in FDs again.

» Taxation awareness for your mutual fund investments

Since you are investing in equity mutual funds, understand the taxation clearly:
– Long-term capital gains above Rs 1.25 lakh per year are taxed at 12.5%.
– Short-term gains are taxed at 20%.

For debt-oriented or hybrid funds, gains are taxed as per your income slab.

When you hold funds for long term, you benefit from compounding and tax efficiency. Avoid frequent switching or profit booking. It creates unnecessary short-term gains and tax burden. Stay focused on goals instead of market timing.

» Why continuing through a Certified Financial Planner is better than going direct

Many investors think direct plans save cost. But direct plans mean no monitoring, no advice, and no emotional support during volatility. You alone will have to decide when to review, switch, or rebalance.

A Certified Financial Planner-backed Mutual Fund Distributor tracks your portfolio regularly. They analyse performance, suggest corrections, and help with rebalancing. The difference in expense ratio is small, but the value of professional guidance is large.

Long-term wealth is built by right actions taken at right times. That’s why investing through a CFP ensures your plan remains disciplined, reviewed, and aligned with your goals.

» Building your emergency and contingency reserves

Your Axis Liquid Fund already serves as emergency reserve. Keep at least six months of your expenses here. Don’t withdraw from this unless a real emergency arises.

Review the fund every year to ensure it stays liquid and stable. Refill it whenever you use it. This small discipline keeps your entire plan safe from sudden shocks.

» Monitoring and reviewing performance

Your portfolio will go through ups and downs. That’s normal. Review once every year, not every month. Check each fund’s performance versus its category and your goals.

If any fund consistently underperforms for more than two years, your Certified Financial Planner can suggest switching to a better one. Otherwise, avoid unnecessary changes. Frequent changes reduce returns and increase confusion.

Patience and review discipline are the keys for wealth building.

» Behavioural control during market volatility

Markets will not move in straight lines. During correction phases, stay calm and continue SIPs. Those are the times when your future wealth gets built at cheaper prices.

Don’t panic or stop SIPs during temporary falls. Remember, long-term investors earn because they stay invested when others quit. Your goals are long term, and your funds are chosen accordingly. Trust the process.

» Creating a 360-degree financial system

To make your financial life strong, integrate all parts:
– Investment planning through mutual funds.
– Protection through term and health insurance.
– Safety through emergency fund.
– Retirement through PF and equity allocation.
– Tax planning and estate management through Will and nominations.

When all these work together, your finances become complete and worry-free. A Certified Financial Planner can help you keep these connected and reviewed regularly.

» Finally

Your portfolio is already on the right track. You don’t need to shift everything to index funds. Index funds are simple but lack flexibility, judgment, and downside protection. For your goals of house construction, financial freedom, and long-term wealth, your current actively managed mix is far better.

Continue your SIPs, hold your funds for long term, and review them once a year with a Certified Financial Planner. Avoid frequent changes and trust your discipline.

Your current habits, clarity, and consistency will lead you toward early financial freedom with confidence. Stay focused, stay patient, and let compounding work silently for you.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11150 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Apr 21, 2026

Money
I am a 43 year old, have a dependend wife & 12 yr old daughter (7 STD). Earing 2.25 L per month. Monthly expenses 80k. No debts and staying in my own flat.& 1 more flat (earn rent Rs. 28 k monthly), 2 lac as emergency fund in savings. I invested 3 lakhs in equity stocks, 23 lakhs in MF lumpsum(Current Value 32 lacs), 18 lac in FD and 10 lac in NSC. Till date my PF is 36 lacs. I pay 80 k SIP monthly (investment value 19.50 lacs and market value 25 lac), PPF 1.50 lac p.a -Current value 9 lacs, NPS 1 lac p.a -Current value 6.5 lacs, SSY 1.5 lacs p.a.( Current value 9.5 lacs) and PPF for wife 1 lacs p.a (Current value 5.50 lacs) and PPF for daughter 50k p.a.from 2023( Current value 1.73 lac) Also Family medical insurance of 10 lacs.. and myself term insurance of 50 lakhs and LIC of 10 lakhs. Also I purchased LIC Child Money back of 10 lacs and SBI smart chap 5 lacs for my daughter education. I want to retire by 50's with the total corpus of 5 cr. Is it possible with above or increase investments??
Ans: You have built a very strong financial structure already at age 43. Your disciplined SIP of Rs 80,000 monthly, multiple long-term investments, rental income and debt-free lifestyle are powerful advantages for early retirement planning before 50s.

» Present Financial Strength Overview

– Monthly income Rs 2.25 lakh
– Monthly expense Rs 80,000
– Rental income Rs 28,000 monthly
– No liabilities
– Strong PF corpus Rs 36 lakh
– Mutual fund investments growing well
– Regular SIP Rs 80,000 monthly
– PPF contributions for self, wife and daughter
– SSY contribution for daughter
– NSC and FD holdings available

This is a very balanced portfolio structure.

» Retirement Target Rs 5 Crore by Age 50

Your goal is ambitious but achievable with disciplined continuation.

Positive factors supporting success:

– high monthly SIP already running
– strong PF accumulation ongoing
– additional rental income support
– low household expense ratio
– no debt burden

These are excellent strengths.

However, timeline is short (about 7 years).

So investment efficiency becomes very important.

» Emergency Fund Needs Improvement

Currently emergency fund is Rs 2 lakh.

Recommended level:

– minimum 6 to 12 months expenses
– should be around Rs 5 to 10 lakh range

Increase this gradually for safety.

» Role of Fixed Income Investments in Your Plan

Your portfolio includes:

– FD Rs 18 lakh
– NSC Rs 10 lakh
– multiple PPF accounts

These provide stability but lower growth compared to equity mutual funds.

For early retirement goal before 50:

– some portion of future investments should move towards growth assets
– continue existing safe investments but avoid increasing them further heavily

This improves corpus growth speed.

» Mutual Fund SIP Strength is the Key Driver

Your SIP of Rs 80,000 monthly is your biggest retirement engine.

To reach Rs 5 crore comfortably:

– increase SIP yearly when income increases
– even Rs 10,000 yearly increase helps strongly
– continue long-term discipline without interruption

This creates strong compounding impact.

» Review of Insurance Planning

Current protection:

– health insurance Rs 10 lakh
– term insurance Rs 50 lakh

Suggestions:

– increase health cover if possible
– term insurance ideally should be higher considering dependent wife and child

Protection planning strengthens retirement safety.

» Child Education Policies Review

You mentioned:

– child education insurance policies already taken

Generally these plans give lower returns compared to mutual funds.

Better approach after checking surrender values:

– consider partial surrender or paid-up option
– redirect future premium savings towards mutual fund SIP for education goal

This improves long-term growth.

» Rental Income Advantage in Retirement Planning

Rental income Rs 28,000 monthly is a strong support.

This helps:

– reduce retirement dependency on corpus
– provide inflation-adjusted support over time
– improve early retirement feasibility

Very useful strength in your case.

» Action Steps to Improve Probability of Rs 5 Crore Target

Simple improvements can help:

– increase emergency fund to safer level
– increase SIP gradually every year
– avoid increasing new fixed-return investments
– review child education insurance policies
– strengthen health insurance cover
– maintain investment discipline for next 7 years strictly

These steps improve goal achievement chances strongly.

» Finally

Based on your current savings rate, strong SIP discipline, rental income support and low expenses, reaching Rs 5 crore by your early 50s looks achievable. Increasing SIP gradually and improving protection planning will make this target more comfortable and realistic.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11150 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Apr 21, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Apr 11, 2026Hindi
Money
Hi gurus...I am 33yr married female. I am making the following investments monthly 1. Sip of 17000pm 2. I invest in RD to be able to deposit in my ppf account ( trying to utilise full 1.5Lakh limit) 3. Every month my contribution ( including employer contribution ) to NPS is 9670pm Since my spouse is working in pvt sector, I would like to accumulate retirement money required to lead post retirement withdrawing 1.5 lakh monthly. Also, I will need to withdraw 10-15 lakh for home buying (planning in 5-7 years), and kids education after 15-18 years requiring 20 lakhs Pls suggest if this investment plan is good for my goal or I need to make any tweaks to achieve my goals
Ans: You have already started retirement planning at age 33 and that is a very strong step. Also, you are investing regularly through SIP, PPF and NPS. This shows discipline and long-term thinking. With some adjustments, your goals can become more comfortable and achievable.
» Understanding Your Present Investment Structure
Your current monthly investments are:
– SIP investment Rs 17,000
– RD for PPF contribution up to Rs 1.5 lakh yearly
– NPS contribution (employee + employer) Rs 9,670 monthly
These three together create a solid base for retirement planning. But since you have multiple goals, allocation planning becomes important.
» Retirement Goal Requirement Reality
You want retirement income of about Rs 1.5 lakh per month.
Important points:
– retirement may be after 25 to 27 years
– inflation will increase expenses strongly
– future monthly need may be much higher than today’s value
– so retirement corpus requirement will be large
This means present SIP amount alone may not be enough over long term.
Increasing equity mutual fund exposure gradually is important.
» Home Purchase Goal in 5 to 7 Years
You plan to withdraw Rs 10 to 15 lakh for house purchase.
Current approach:
– RD supporting PPF contribution is safe
– but PPF has long lock-in period
– withdrawal flexibility is limited
Better approach:
– create a separate mutual fund investment bucket for house goal
– choose balanced allocation between safety and growth
– avoid depending only on PPF for this goal
This improves liquidity and timing comfort.
» Children Education Goal After 15 to 18 Years
Education goal of Rs 20 lakh today will increase in future.
So planning should include:
– growth-oriented mutual fund investments
– long-term SIP increase gradually
– separate goal-based investment tracking
This will help you reach education target without disturbing retirement savings.
» Role of NPS in Your Retirement Planning
NPS contribution of Rs 9,670 monthly including employer share is a strong advantage.
Benefits:
– long-term disciplined retirement saving
– tax efficiency support
– employer contribution adds extra strength
Continue this without interruption.
» Importance of Increasing SIP Every Year
Your retirement success depends mainly on equity exposure.
Recommended action:
– increase SIP amount every year with salary increase
– even small yearly increase creates big future impact
– goal-based SIP planning gives better clarity
This improves retirement confidence.
» Need for Emergency Fund Planning
Before increasing investments further, check:
– minimum 6 months household expense reserve
– kept in safe liquid investment
– separate from long-term goals
This protects your financial plan during unexpected situations.
» Simple Allocation Improvement Strategy
For stronger goal achievement:
– continue NPS contribution
– continue PPF contribution for safety portion
– increase SIP gradually for retirement goal
– create separate SIP for house purchase goal
– create separate SIP for children education goal
Goal separation improves clarity and success rate.
» Finally
Your current investment plan is a strong starting structure. But to achieve retirement income of Rs 1.5 lakh monthly along with house purchase and children education goals, increasing SIP gradually and creating separate investments for each goal will make your plan much stronger and safer.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/

...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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