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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 07, 2025

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
Aritra Question by Aritra on Jun 27, 2025Hindi
Money

Hi sir I am 28 years old and my monthly take home is 1.22k , have a ongoing car loan with balance amount of around 4.8L and invested around 2.10 in PPF , 2.15L in EPF and investing 40k per month in 6 SIPs and over the years I have accummulated around 15.5 lakh and my stock portfolio is 9.2 Lakh where I invest 7.5k per month . Can you tell me what are the other investments I can make to achieve 1 cr portfolio ?

Ans: You are just 28. That is a very good start. You are already saving and investing with focus. You also maintain discipline in SIPs and stocks. Let us assess and guide you in a 360-degree view.

Income and Existing Commitments
Your monthly income is Rs 1.22 lakh

Car loan outstanding is Rs 4.8 lakh

EMI not mentioned, assume around Rs 10,000 monthly

So, approx monthly savings capacity is Rs 50,000–60,000

You are already using most of it in SIPs and stocks
That shows your good commitment to wealth creation

Your Existing Investments
PPF: Rs 2.10 lakh (long-term safe debt)

EPF: Rs 2.15 lakh (stable retirement support)

Mutual Funds: Rs 15.5 lakh through 6 SIPs (Rs 40,000/month)

Stocks: Rs 9.2 lakh and Rs 7,500 monthly SIP

This is a well-diversified portfolio already
You are using equity in both mutual funds and stocks
And using debt tools like EPF and PPF

Investment Approach Review
Your current path is working well
But you need to check two things regularly:

Is asset allocation balanced?

Are SIPs aligned to your long-term goals?

We now plan with a Rs 1 crore target

Understanding Your Rs 1 Crore Goal
You didn’t mention target year for Rs 1 crore
We assume you want it in next 8–10 years
This is a moderate-aggressive goal, very achievable for you

You are currently saving approx Rs 47,500 monthly
Rs 40K in mutual funds + Rs 7.5K in stocks

With this pace, reaching Rs 1 crore is realistic before 40

Suggestions to Reach Rs 1 Crore Faster
Here is a detailed and practical approach.

1. Finish Car Loan First

Car loan has no tax benefit

Interest is high, usually 9–11%

Prepay aggressively in next 12–18 months

Use bonus, incentives, or stock profits if needed

Freeing EMI boosts future SIPs

2. Increase SIPs Gradually

You already invest Rs 40,000 monthly

Add step-up of Rs 5,000 every year

Helps fight inflation and boosts compounding

Even a 10% yearly hike will shorten your Rs 1 crore journey

3. Maintain Smart Asset Allocation

At your age, equity allocation can be around 75–80%
Debt should be 20–25% to manage volatility

Ideal mix:

Equity MFs: 60%

Direct Stocks: 15%

PPF + EPF: 20%

Liquid/Safe fund: 5%

Review this every 6 months with a Certified Financial Planner

Don’t Use Direct Mutual Funds
Investing in direct plans may seem cost-saving
But they don’t give you any guidance or service

Disadvantages:

You don’t get personalised asset review

No emotional support during market dips

No tax-saving planning at year-end

No proper rebalancing and goal monitoring

You miss exit strategy planning

Use regular mutual funds via MFD with CFP
You get handholding, rebalancing, updates, and holistic help

Paying small commission is worth for long-term safety

Avoid Index Funds and ETFs
These funds simply copy the index
They do not use active human thinking
They perform like the market – nothing extra

Disadvantages:

They fall badly when markets fall

No chance of extra return or alpha

No protection in crash

Not suitable for emotional investors

Active funds managed by professionals perform better
They do strategy, research, exit and entry management

At your age, actively managed mutual funds are more powerful

Improve Your Stock Portfolio Handling
You have Rs 9.2 L in stocks and adding Rs 7.5K monthly
That’s good but you must handle it with discipline

Do’s:

Invest only in fundamentally strong companies

Hold for minimum 5–7 years

Don’t react to daily noise

Avoid penny stocks and tips

Don’ts:

Don’t average down bad stocks

Don’t invest without studying balance sheet

Don’t make it 50% of your portfolio

Keep stocks at 15–20% max of your total portfolio
The rest should be in mutual funds with SIP/STP

Debt Component – Safe But Slow Growth
EPF and PPF are long-term safety nets
Continue with them as is
Don’t withdraw unless for emergency

You can use the PPF limit of Rs 1.5 L per year
Invest Rs 12,500 per month consistently in it

This will balance your equity risk in volatile markets

Build a Liquid Fund Emergency Buffer
You didn’t mention emergency funds
This is very important for financial safety

Do the following:

Keep Rs 1.5–2 lakh in liquid fund or savings

Use this only for medical or job loss need

Don’t invest this in equity

This helps avoid credit card or loan use during emergency

Step-Up Investment Strategy
After your car loan closes, increase SIPs
Don’t let money sit idle in savings

If salary increases, add 10–15% more SIP every year
This is called SIP step-up method

This alone can bring Rs 1 crore in 8–9 years
You can use STP to move idle funds from FD to mutual funds

Use Hybrid Funds for Stability
You can add some monthly amount in aggressive hybrid fund
This balances equity and debt automatically
It gives stability in down markets
You can even use it for STP to equity

This is a safer way to keep your money growing

Tax Awareness for Mutual Funds
Keep in mind mutual fund taxation rules
For equity funds:

If you sell before 1 year – STCG at 20%

After 1 year – LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

For debt funds:

All gains taxed as per your income slab

So always invest with goal horizon
Avoid selling in panic or for short-term goals

Additional Suggestions
Use one Certified Financial Planner to track all

Don’t mix too many mutual funds

Keep 5–6 funds max – good enough

Link every SIP to a goal

Don’t stop SIPs during market fall

Finally
You are saving well and regularly

Finish car loan to improve cash flow

Add step-up SIP to speed up Rs 1 crore goal

Avoid direct and index funds

Use regular mutual funds with CFP support

Review allocation and rebalance twice a year

Don’t take emotional or impulse decisions

Stick to the long-term plan and keep learning

Your Rs 1 crore target is 100% achievable
Stay disciplined, review regularly, and stay consistent

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
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  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 07, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - Apr 30, 2024Hindi
Listen
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Hi i am 27 and from last 2 years i am investing 9k per month in following funds 2k in quant Small cap 2k in Nippon large cap 1.5k in ICICI technology, 1.5k in HDFC midcap opportunity & 1.5k in franklin flexicap. My aim is to get 1 cr by the time i reach 40 Kindly Review my portfolio and suggest me.
Ans: It's excellent to see your commitment to investing at such a young age! Let's review your portfolio and make some suggestions to help you achieve your goal of reaching 1 crore by the time you turn 40:

Portfolio Review:
Quant Small Cap, Nippon Large Cap, ICICI Technology, HDFC Midcap Opportunity, and Franklin Flexicap are diversified funds covering various market segments.
Your portfolio reflects a good mix of small-cap, large-cap, mid-cap, and flexi-cap funds, which can help spread risk across different sectors and market capitalizations.
Investment Strategy:
Continue with your systematic investment plan (SIP) approach, as it allows you to invest regularly and take advantage of rupee cost averaging.
Consider increasing your SIP amount gradually as your income grows to accelerate wealth accumulation.
Risk Management:
Keep an eye on the performance of individual funds and review them periodically to ensure they align with your investment goals and risk tolerance.
Monitor the sectoral exposure of your portfolio and ensure it remains well-diversified to mitigate concentration risk.
Goal Setting:
Revisit your financial goals periodically and adjust your investment strategy as needed to stay on track.
Consider incorporating other investment avenues, such as debt funds or index funds, to further diversify your portfolio and manage risk.
Professional Advice:
Consider consulting with a financial advisor or Certified Financial Planner to assess your risk profile, review your investment strategy, and tailor a plan that aligns with your goals.
A professional can provide personalized guidance and help you make informed investment decisions as you work towards achieving your financial objectives.
Overall, your investment portfolio appears well-structured and diversified, which is essential for long-term wealth creation. Stay disciplined in your approach, continue to invest regularly, and seek professional advice when needed to maximize your chances of reaching your goal of 1 crore by the age of 40. Keep up the good work!

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 24, 2025

Money
Hello sir Im 34 years old and my monthly take home is 96k and 8500 rental income. have a ongoing home loan with balance amount of around 10.50L and invested around 4L in ppf, 3L in LIC, 1L in NPS, 1L in PF and started investing 40k per month in different SIPs . Can you tell me how can I achive 1cr portfolio
Ans: You are already showing great clarity. At 34 years old, with a monthly income of Rs. 96,000 and Rs. 8,500 rental income, you are taking the right steps. A Rs. 1 crore portfolio is not far from your reach. You are already investing Rs. 40,000 per month in SIPs, which is very powerful. Let us look at how to make your journey to Rs. 1 crore even stronger, more efficient, and stable.

Income and Financial Structure
Monthly salary: Rs. 96,000

Monthly rental income: Rs. 8,500

Total monthly income: Rs. 1,04,500

Home loan balance: Around Rs. 10.50 lakhs

Monthly SIP investment: Rs. 40,000

Existing investments: Rs. 4 lakhs in PPF, Rs. 3 lakhs in LIC, Rs. 1 lakh in NPS, Rs. 1 lakh in PF

You have a strong monthly income and are investing a large share. That is very encouraging.

Investment in LIC
You mentioned Rs. 3 lakhs in LIC.

LIC plans are mainly traditional insurance plans. These are not ideal for wealth creation.

Returns are often 4% to 5% per annum.

There is low flexibility and long lock-in periods.

Insurance coverage is usually very low.

What You Can Do:

If your LIC policies are endowment or money-back types, consider surrendering them.

Only surrender if they are more than 3 years old.

Use the surrendered value to invest in mutual funds.

Purchase a term insurance policy instead for protection.

Separate your insurance and investments. It gives better growth and safety both.

Home Loan Management
You have an outstanding home loan of Rs. 10.50 lakhs.

Loan repayment is a long-term commitment. It needs balance with your investing goals.

What You Should Do:

Keep paying EMIs regularly.

Don’t rush to close the loan early.

Interest on home loans gives tax benefit under Section 24.

Continue building your investment portfolio alongside.

If you get any large bonus or maturity money, partly reduce the principal. This reduces tenure and interest. But do not disturb your SIPs for this.

PPF, NPS, and PF Investments
These are all long-term and low-risk instruments. They offer safety but lower growth.

PPF: Rs. 4 lakhs invested

NPS: Rs. 1 lakh invested

PF: Rs. 1 lakh (probably EPF)

Suggestions:

Continue small amounts in PPF for debt allocation.

Don’t increase PPF limit aggressively.

Keep NPS contribution small. It has strict withdrawal rules.

Consider NPS only for tax-saving if you are using Section 80CCD(1B).

PPF and PF offer stability. But they are not enough for big wealth creation like Rs. 1 crore. For that, equity mutual funds are the core.

Mutual Fund SIP Strategy
You are investing Rs. 40,000 monthly in SIPs. This is your biggest strength.

Review the Fund Choices:

Include large cap and mid cap funds.

Add some allocation to small cap for growth.

Choose only actively managed funds.

Avoid index funds. They follow market returns only.

Actively managed funds can outperform with skilled fund managers.

Avoid direct plans if you are not professionally trained.

Direct plans save commission, but lack guidance.

You may miss underperformance or wrong fund selections.

With regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner, you get tracking and advice.

For wealth creation, direction is more important than cost saving.

How to Reach Rs. 1 Crore Portfolio
Let us now talk about building your Rs. 1 crore goal. You are already investing Rs. 40,000 per month.

This alone can help you reach Rs. 1 crore in 10–12 years. But to ensure it happens faster and more smoothly, follow the below:

What You Should Do:

Review and rebalance funds every 12 months.

Don’t stop SIPs during market fall.

Increase SIPs by 10% each year as income grows.

Keep at least 3 SIPs: one large cap, one flexi-cap, one mid/small cap.

Allocate higher amount to large and mid cap funds.

If you stick to this process, you will reach Rs. 1 crore easily in less than 12 years.

If you increase SIPs yearly, the journey becomes even shorter.

Emergency Fund Planning
You did not mention an emergency fund.

This is very important before aggressive investing.

What You Should Do:

Keep at least 4–6 months of expenses in a liquid mutual fund.

Don’t use fixed deposits or savings account for this.

This gives fast access in times of illness or job loss.

Without this fund, you may be forced to stop SIPs or redeem investments in emergency.

Life Insurance and Term Plan
You mentioned LIC, but no term plan.

A pure term plan is must for financial protection of your family.

Steps to Take:

Take a term plan of at least 15–20 times your annual income.

Keep a single term plan with good claim record.

Pay premium yearly. Choose online or offline with help of CFP.

Avoid any plan that gives maturity or money-back.

Buy term plan separately and invest separately. This gives you full benefits.

Health Insurance for Family
You did not mention health insurance.

Depending only on employer health cover is risky.

What You Should Do:

Buy a family floater health policy of Rs. 10–15 lakhs.

Add top-up cover if needed.

Check features like day-care, no-claim bonus, and room rent limit.

Medical expenses can wipe out savings. Protect your investment journey with good cover.

Tax Saving Suggestions
Let us also look at your tax-saving investments.

You are investing in PPF, LIC, NPS, PF.

These together cover Section 80C and 80CCD.

Suggestions:

Use ELSS mutual funds instead of LIC or NPS.

ELSS gives tax saving and better return.

Lock-in is only 3 years.

LIC and NPS have low returns and long lock-in. ELSS gives better flexibility and growth.

Behaviour and Discipline
Wealth building is not just about picking funds. It is about habits.

Good Practices to Follow:

Never stop SIPs due to market fall.

Don’t chase past performance only.

Review every 12 months.

Stick to the process, not emotions.

Invest with clear goals.

Behavioural discipline is the true power behind achieving Rs. 1 crore.

Asset Allocation Strategy
Keep your portfolio balanced.

Don’t put everything in equity. Don’t put everything in fixed income.

Suggested Allocation:

70% equity mutual funds

20% in PPF + PF

10% in liquid funds as emergency

Rebalance once every year with help of a Certified Financial Planner.

This keeps your risk low and return stable.

Future Increase in Income
Your income will grow every few years.

How to Use That:

Increase SIPs by Rs. 2,000–3,000 every year.

Avoid increasing lifestyle spending unnecessarily.

Invest bonuses or increments wisely.

This small step reduces time to reach Rs. 1 crore.

Common Mistakes to Avoid
Don’t stop SIPs mid-way

Don’t rely on index funds or direct plans

Don’t mix insurance and investment

Don’t keep money idle in savings account

Don’t skip financial reviews

Avoiding mistakes is as important as choosing the right investments.

Finally
You are on the right path with Rs. 40,000 SIP.

Surrender LIC if possible and reinvest that money.

Don’t touch SIPs during home loan repayment.

Create emergency fund and buy term plan.

Use ELSS for tax saving, not traditional policies.

Review with a Certified Financial Planner every year.

Your Rs. 1 crore goal is possible. You already have the base. Now you need a structure.

Stay consistent, review regularly, and keep investing with purpose.

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

..Read more

Janak

Janak Patel  |71 Answers  |Ask -

MF, PF Expert - Answered on Jun 25, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 25, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, I'm 43 years old, have 2 houses and a villa plot. And a home loan of 80lakhs, 25 lakh gold loan. Saving of 10 lakhs. Take home salary of 1.4lakh and EMI is 75k. How can I build 1 cr portfolio from scratch.
Ans: Hi,

With a take home salary of 1.4 lakh and EMI of 75k, you have 65k to manage expenses and saving if any.

Your current assets are - 2 houses and a Villa plot. Do you receive rent on at least 1 of the house, that can help supplement your savings. I doubt Villa plot can generate any income. So do consider any rental income possible.

You have a Gold Loan of 25 lakhs, do reduce it using some part (50%) of the 10 lakhs in savings. Consider rest as Emergency fund.

Once you have optimized your income and reduced your outstanding loans, see how much you can really save for a long term.

Some math for the 1 Cr target you have in mind.
Assuming your investment will get return of 12%, you will need 43k per month to achieve 1Cr in 10 years. If you extend the time period to achieve it, to 15 years, then you will need 20k per month.

So be realistic and plan for a long period to contribute to your goal of 1 Cr. As I don't know the loan duration, I cannot include the EMI amount toward savings post loan completion.

As I see it, many advisors can recommend a portfolio to achieve 1Cr, but most importantly, you need to be smart with accumulating assets and loans, manage income and expenses and plan your savings. You have at least 10 years to be aggressive investor before your move closer towards retirement, so think Equity.

Thanks & Regards
Janak Patel
Certified Financial Planner.

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
I'm 27 years old. My in-hand monthly salary is around 2.15 lakh. I've around 29lakh of housing loan pending for next 15 years. My housing emi is around 31000 per month. I've around 7 lakh of debt in personal loan and credit card. I've around 2 lakhs in SIPs , around 2 lakhs in stocks . I've been doing around 20K per month in SIPs. I've also 2 LIC policies around 60000 per year. In my PF account I've around 6lakhs. My first goal is to build a portfolio of around 1 cr by 35. Is it a realistic goal. If yes how can I achieve this.
Ans: At 27, your focus on wealth creation is very good.
You have a stable salary and have started early.
Let us study your finances from every angle and give a complete plan.

Your Current Financial Picture
Let us first understand what you own and what you owe.

Age: 27 years

Monthly Income (Net): Rs. 2.15 lakh

Home Loan Outstanding: Rs. 29 lakh

Home Loan EMI: Rs. 31,000

Other Loans: Rs. 7 lakh (personal and credit card)

SIP Corpus: Rs. 2 lakh

Stock Investment: Rs. 2 lakh

Monthly SIP: Rs. 20,000

PF Corpus: Rs. 6 lakh

LIC Premium: Rs. 60,000 per year

Goal: Rs. 1 crore corpus by age 35

You have 8 years to reach the goal.

Key Positives in Your Profile
High income at a young age
This gives a strong base to build wealth.

Already investing via SIP
This shows financial maturity.

No delay in retirement saving
PF contributions have started early.

Housing EMI is manageable
You pay only about 15% of your income as EMI.

Areas That Need Attention
Your financial picture shows a few leakages:

High-interest personal loans
This will slow wealth creation.

Credit card dues are risky
These attract very high interest. Avoid them always.

LIC policies are costly
Premium is high with poor returns.

SIP investment is low compared to income
With Rs. 2.15 lakh salary, only Rs. 20K SIP is low.

Let us now give you a 360-degree strategy.

Debt Clean-Up Comes First
Before building wealth, clear high-interest debt.

Target credit card and personal loan
These usually have interest above 13% to 36%.

Don’t make fresh investments
Instead, use excess savings to repay these loans faster.

Create a debt closure plan
Use bonuses or incentives towards this first.

Do not take fresh loans
This slows down your compounding journey.

Home loan is okay
Since the EMI is affordable, keep that going.

Once bad debt is cleared, cash flow improves quickly.

LIC Policy Assessment
You pay Rs. 60,000 yearly towards LIC.

This is likely an investment cum insurance plan.

These offer poor returns
Usually between 4% and 5% only.

They are not suitable for wealth creation
They neither offer enough life cover nor good returns.

If these policies are less than 5 years old:

Consider surrendering the policy

Reinvest the proceeds in mutual funds

Use term insurance instead

This one step can save years of delay in wealth building.

Term Insurance – A Must-Have
You haven’t mentioned term insurance.

This is important, especially if you have dependents or loans.

Take a term cover of at least Rs. 1 crore

Prefer term-only, not return plans

Buy separately, not bundled with investment

Review coverage every 5 years

Premiums are very low at your age.

Emergency Fund – Build It Soon
You didn’t mention an emergency fund.

This is needed to avoid taking loans again.

Set aside at least Rs. 3 lakhs as emergency money

Keep it in liquid funds or sweep-in FDs

This is not for investing

This protects your SIPs from getting stopped

Without emergency buffer, every expense becomes a crisis.

Review of Existing SIPs and Equity
You have:

Rs. 2 lakh in SIP portfolio

Rs. 2 lakh in stocks

Rs. 20,000 monthly SIP going on

Let’s now analyse this based on your goal.

Is Rs. 1 Crore Corpus by Age 35 Possible?
You have 8 years to reach Rs. 1 crore.

It is not easy, but it is achievable if:

You increase your SIP amount every year

You clear all high-interest loans in 1 year

You invest with discipline for 8 full years

You do not withdraw midway

You invest in the right fund categories

But at current SIP of Rs. 20,000, it is not enough.

You must step up your SIPs to Rs. 40,000+ monthly after clearing debt.

And increase SIPs by 10% yearly.

SIP Category Suggestions
Let us optimise your SIP categories once debts are cleared.

Use this allocation:

Large Cap Funds – Rs. 12,000

Flexi/Multi Cap Funds – Rs. 14,000

Mid Cap Funds – Rs. 10,000

Small Cap Funds – Rs. 4,000

Avoid sector and thematic funds

You can add hybrid funds later as you reach 35.

Do Not Invest in Index Funds
Index funds only copy the index.

They don’t adjust to market cycles.

They invest in poor sectors if those are in index.

They don’t generate extra returns over market.

Actively managed funds:

Beat inflation better

Take advantage of market timing

Avoid risk-heavy stocks

Are adjusted by professional fund managers

Use regular plans through a CFP-backed MFD.
They help choose better funds.
They guide when to switch.
Direct plans don’t provide guidance or support.
You may lose more in mistakes than saved in expense ratio.

PF Corpus – Long Term Support
You already have Rs. 6 lakh in PF.

This is a good long-term foundation.

Do not withdraw this before retirement.

It acts as your safety for old age.

Equity Stocks – Handle With Caution
You have Rs. 2 lakh in stocks.

This is fine if you can track them regularly.

But for most people, mutual funds give better results.

Diversified exposure

Lower emotional bias

Professionally managed

Don’t increase equity stocks unless you have strong knowledge.

Step-by-Step Action Plan
Step 1:
Pay off all personal loans and credit cards in 12 months.

Step 2:
Surrender LIC policies if less than 5 years old.

Step 3:
Create emergency fund of Rs. 3 lakh.

Step 4:
Start Rs. 40,000 monthly SIP after loans are cleared.

Step 5:
Increase SIP every year by Rs. 5,000 to Rs. 7,000.

Step 6:
Don’t stop SIPs during market falls.
Keep investing.

Step 7:
Take term insurance of Rs. 1 crore.
Add health insurance if not covered by employer.

Step 8:
Do yearly review with Certified Financial Planner.

Taxation Angle You Must Know
Equity mutual fund taxation has changed.

LTCG (Long Term Capital Gain) above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

STCG (Short Term Capital Gain) is taxed at 20%.

For debt mutual funds, all gains are taxed as per your slab.

Plan redemptions accordingly.
Avoid unnecessary switches.
Track holding period to reduce tax outgo.

Finally
You can reach Rs. 1 crore corpus in 8 years.
But only if you increase savings after clearing loans.
At your age, even a delay of 2 years can cost big.
Focus first on becoming debt-free.
Then automate your investments.
Avoid poor products like LIC combos.
Invest in mutual funds via regular plans.
Choose quality funds managed by professionals.
Review progress every year with a trusted CFP.

Discipline is more important than returns.

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 29, 2025

Money
Hi sir I am 28 years old and my monthly take home is 1.22k , have a ongoing car loan with balance amount of around 4.8L and invested around 2.10 in PPF , 2.15L in EPF and investing 40k per month in 6 SIPs and over the years I have accummulated around 15.5 lakh and my stock portfolio is 9.2 Lakh where I invest 7.5k per month . Can you tell me what are the other investments I can make to achieve 1 cr portfolio ?
Ans: You are 28 years old with strong monthly savings habits. You have already built a solid foundation. With some structure and clarity, you can surely reach your Rs. 1 crore goal. Let us now build a full 360-degree investment plan for you.

Your Financial Snapshot
Let us first understand your present numbers.

Monthly take-home salary: Rs. 1.22 lakh

Ongoing car loan balance: Rs. 4.8 lakh

Monthly SIP in mutual funds: Rs. 40,000

Monthly stock investments: Rs. 7,500

Mutual fund corpus: Rs. 15.5 lakh

Stock portfolio: Rs. 9.2 lakh

EPF balance: Rs. 2.15 lakh

PPF balance: Rs. 2.10 lakh

This is a very healthy position for someone aged 28.

Your investment attitude is disciplined. That is your biggest strength today.

Now, let us move towards the Rs. 1 crore portfolio.

Define the Goal Clearly
Wanting Rs. 1 crore is good. But we must define more.

Do you need Rs. 1 crore in 5 years?

Or in 10 or 15 years?

Is this for retirement? Or a house? Or travel?

Let us assume your goal is to build wealth in the next 8–10 years.

That gives enough time to use equity for strong growth.

Loan Management Comes First
You have Rs. 4.8 lakh car loan.

That will create EMI burden for the short term.

Do not prepay unless interest is very high.

Keep EMI under 20–25% of income.

Make sure emergency fund is ready before investing more.

Do not divert SIP money for loan prepayment unless urgent.

Emergency Fund Planning
Before increasing investments, secure yourself.

Build 6 months of expenses and EMIs.

That is around Rs. 2.5 to Rs. 3 lakh minimum.

Keep in savings, liquid fund, or short-term FD.

Do not invest this money in risky options.

This gives safety and peace of mind during job loss or medical need.

Current Investments Evaluation
You are investing Rs. 40,000 monthly in 6 SIPs.

Review if they cover all categories.

Include flexi-cap, mid-cap, and large-cap.

Add hybrid fund for stability.

If all 6 are similar, returns may overlap.

More funds do not mean more returns. Fewer but right funds are better.

Ideal SIP basket:

One flexi-cap fund

One mid-cap fund

One large and mid-cap fund

One aggressive hybrid fund

One ELSS for tax-saving if needed

Avoid repeating fund categories. Each fund should serve a clear purpose.

Disadvantages of Direct Mutual Funds
If your SIPs are in direct plans, please note this:

Why direct funds can hurt you:

No fund selection help

No support during market fall

No one to rebalance your portfolio

No emotional handholding

It looks cheaper, but can cost more in wrong choices.

Regular funds via CFP and MFD are better:

Expert help in fund selection

Annual reviews and asset rebalancing

Help in goal tracking

Peace of mind during market volatility

Choose experience and expertise over saving small commission.

Why Index Funds Are Not Suggested
You may hear about index funds. But they are not right for your goal.

Problems with index funds:

They blindly copy top 50 or 100 stocks

No active management during crash

Include overvalued companies too

No scope of beating the market

Actively managed funds are better:

Fund managers take smarter decisions

Remove poor-performing sectors

Focus on growth sectors

Protect during market fall

You need active guidance for your Rs. 1 crore goal.

Index funds offer no protection or personalised growth.

Stocks vs Mutual Funds
You are investing Rs. 7,500 monthly in stocks.

This is good for active investors.

But stocks need deep research and time.

High risk and emotional stress involved.

Continue with stocks if you enjoy research.

But mutual funds should remain your core vehicle.

Let mutual funds handle your major goals.

Use stocks for learning or extra returns.

SIP Strategy to Reach Rs. 1 Crore
You already have Rs. 15.5 lakh in mutual funds.

You also invest Rs. 40,000 monthly in SIPs.

This is the right habit.

To reach Rs. 1 crore:

Continue investing Rs. 40,000 monthly

Increase SIP by 10% every year

Avoid withdrawing early

Add lump sum when bonus or incentives come

Review portfolio every year with Certified Financial Planner

With time and discipline, this goal is easily possible.

EPF and PPF – Safe Long-Term Tools
You have Rs. 2.15 lakh in EPF and Rs. 2.10 lakh in PPF.

These are safe and steady tools.

EPF helps in retirement.

PPF is tax-free and good for long-term goals.

Continue investing Rs. 1,000 to Rs. 2,000 in PPF yearly.

But use mutual funds as your main engine for growth.

Asset Allocation Check
You need to keep proper balance in asset types.

At 28 years, you can take higher equity exposure.

Ideal asset mix:

75% in equity mutual funds

10–15% in hybrid funds

10–15% in PPF, EPF, FD

Too much cash in savings slows down returns.

Do not put too much into debt at this stage.

Time is your biggest asset now.

Tax Efficiency of Mutual Funds
Mutual funds give tax benefits with proper planning.

Equity mutual funds:

Long-term gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

Short-term gains taxed at 20%

Debt mutual funds:

Taxed as per your income slab

Avoid frequent redemptions. Stay long term for tax efficiency.

Increase SIP With Income Growth
Your income will grow every year.

Do not keep SIP fixed.

Increase SIPs by 10% every year

Use bonus and hikes for top-ups

Avoid lifestyle inflation

More you invest early, faster you reach Rs. 1 crore.

Avoid These Mistakes
Don’t invest in traditional insurance policies

Avoid ULIPs and endowment plans

Don’t stop SIPs during market fall

Don’t keep cash idle in savings account

Don’t follow stock tips blindly

Don’t pick direct funds without CFP help

These mistakes delay your wealth creation journey.

Add These Good Habits
Track net worth every 6 months

Keep all investments goal-linked

Create health and term insurance

Stay invested for at least 10 years

Use Certified Financial Planner for guidance

These habits will make your journey stress-free and efficient.

Step-by-Step Action Plan
Review your current 6 SIPs with a CFP

Exit overlapping or poorly performing ones

Maintain 5–6 funds across categories

Keep investing Rs. 40,000 monthly

Increase SIP every year as salary increases

Keep Rs. 2.5 lakh emergency fund in FD or liquid fund

Continue PPF and EPF contributions

Maintain stock portfolio with caution

Do not chase index or direct funds

Review portfolio once every year

This is your roadmap to reach Rs. 1 crore and beyond.

Finally
At 28, you are far ahead of your age group. Your SIP amount is strong. Your stock and mutual fund corpus is already impressive.

But to reach Rs. 1 crore smoothly, you need:

Focus

Discipline

Annual review

Expert guidance

Right fund selection

You are not far. Stick to your plan. Improve it gradually. Keep investing with purpose and patience.

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 15, 2025Hindi
Money
Good Morning Sir, I am having a Mutual Fund portfolio of 3.7 Crores, Savings account balance in India of 10 lacs, and PPF/Sukanya Samriddhi/NPS of around 30 lacs. My savings account in UAE has about 30 lacs. I have lost my job and am currently trying to get one. We will be in the UAE till July so that my daughter can complete her school year. If I get a job by then, it will be great; but if not, will I be able to retire with these funds? Please assume that the UAE savings account will be depleted by July during relocation. Kindly suggest.
Ans: Your financial discipline over many years deserves appreciation.
You stayed invested with patience.
You built wealth across countries.
This foundation gives you real confidence now.

» Current Life Stage and Context
– You are facing temporary job loss.
– You are still financially independent.
– UAE stay continues till July.
– Relocation costs are already planned.
– This phase needs calm decisions.
– Fear is natural, but clarity matters.

» Family Responsibilities Snapshot
– You have a school-going daughter.
– Education continuity is a priority.
– Stability for the child matters emotionally.
– Your planning already reflects responsibility.
– This strengthens your overall position.

» Asset Position Review
– Mutual fund portfolio is Rs.3.7 Crores.
– Indian savings account holds Rs.10 lacs.
– Long-term savings total about Rs.30 lacs.
– UAE savings will reduce to zero.
– Home ownership lowers future expenses.
– Net worth remains strong even after relocation.

» Liquidity and Cash Comfort
– Indian savings give immediate support.
– Mutual funds provide large liquidity.
– Withdrawals can be staggered wisely.
– Forced selling is avoidable.
– This protects capital during volatility.

» Job Loss Impact Assessment
– Income disruption affects confidence.
– It does not erase financial strength.
– You have time to decide.
– Rushed retirement decisions harm outcomes.
– Temporary gaps need flexible planning.

» Can You Retire If Job Does Not Come
– Retirement is possible with discipline.
– It requires expense control.
– It needs structured withdrawals.
– Lifestyle choices become important.
– Emotional readiness is equally critical.

» Early Retirement Reality Check
– Retirement at mid-forties is early.
– Corpus must last many decades.
– Inflation will work continuously.
– Growth assets cannot be abandoned.
– Balance is more important than returns.

» Role of Mutual Funds Going Forward
– Mutual funds remain core growth assets.
– Equity exposure should stay meaningful.
– Allocation should become more balanced.
– Risk control becomes more important now.
– Portfolio reviews must be regular.

» Why Actively Managed Funds Suit You
– Active funds respond to market stress.
– Fund managers adjust sector exposure.
– Valuation discipline is applied.
– Index funds fall fully with markets.
– Passive exposure increases drawdown risk.
– Active management supports smoother retirement.

» Managing Equity Volatility During Retirement
– Sudden market falls can hurt withdrawals.
– Selling equity during crashes damages corpus.
– Withdrawal planning must protect equity.
– Buffer assets reduce stress.
– This approach improves sustainability.

» Importance of Stable Assets
– Stable assets support monthly expenses.
– They reduce emotional reactions.
– They protect during market corrections.
– They fund short-term needs.
– This gives peace of mind.

» Role of Government-Backed Savings
– PPF and similar provide safety.
– Returns are predictable.
– Liquidity rules must be respected.
– These should not fund early expenses.
– They act as long-term protection.

» Expense Planning After Returning to India
– Living in owned home lowers costs.
– India expenses are lower than UAE.
– Lifestyle inflation must be avoided.
– Spending discipline extends corpus life.
– Regular tracking becomes essential.

» Education Planning for Your Daughter
– Education costs will rise steadily.
– This goal cannot face market risk alone.
– Dedicated allocation is required.
– Avoid mixing education money with retirement.
– Separate mental buckets improve clarity.

» Tax Considerations During Withdrawals
– Equity mutual fund withdrawals attract capital gains tax.
– Long-term gains above Rs.1.25 lakh are taxed.
– Short-term gains attract higher tax.
– Withdrawal sequencing reduces tax burden.
– Proper planning avoids unnecessary taxes.

» Health and Protection Planning
– Health insurance must be adequate.
– Employer cover may stop.
– Medical inflation is severe.
– Health costs can derail plans.
– Protection safeguards your corpus.

» Psychological Readiness for Retirement
– Retirement is not only financial.
– Loss of routine can disturb balance.
– Purpose keeps mind active.
– Part-time work can help.
– Engagement supports mental health.

» Semi-Retirement as a Practical Option
– Consulting reduces withdrawal pressure.
– Flexible work gives confidence.
– Income extends corpus life.
– Market volatility becomes easier to handle.
– This option offers balance.

» Time Advantage You Still Have
– You still have working years.
– One job changes everything positively.
– Corpus continues to compound.
– Do not rush permanent decisions.
– Allow time for clarity.

» Mistakes to Avoid Now
– Avoid panic selling.
– Avoid drastic asset changes.
– Avoid chasing guaranteed returns.
– Avoid emotional decisions.
– Stability protects wealth.

» Role of a Certified Financial Planner
– Helps structure withdrawals.
– Aligns assets with goals.
– Manages risk during uncertainty.
– Protects child education goals.
– Provides clarity and confidence.

» Final Insights
– Your financial base is strong.
– Retirement is possible with discipline.
– Job income adds comfort, not necessity.
– Balanced asset allocation is essential.
– Active fund management suits this stage.
– Emotional calm will protect decisions.
– Structured planning ensures long-term peace.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 15, 2025Hindi
Money
Good Morning Sir, I am having a Mutual Fund portfolio of 3.7 Crores, Savings account balance in India of 10 lacs, and PPF/Sukanya Samriddhi/NPS of around 30 lacs. My savings account in UAE has about 30 lacs. I have lost my job and am currently trying to get one. We will be in the UAE till July so that my daughter can complete her school year. If I get a job by then, it will be great; but if not, will I be able to retire with these funds? Please assume that the UAE savings account will be depleted by July during relocation. I have my own apartment in Delhi and present age is 46 with daughter age is 13 Kindly suggest.
Ans: Your discipline over years deserves appreciation.
You built wealth across phases.
You avoided lifestyle inflation.
You planned even while abroad.
This gives you strength now.
Job loss does not erase past discipline.

» Current Life Situation Assessment
– You are 46 years old.
– Your daughter is 13 years old.
– You are temporarily without income.
– UAE stay continues till July.
– Relocation costs are already considered.
– Emotional stress is natural now.

» Asset Snapshot and Financial Base
– Mutual fund portfolio is Rs.3.7 Crores.
– Indian savings account holds Rs.10 lacs.
– Long-term government-backed savings are Rs.30 lacs.
– UAE savings of Rs.30 lacs will deplete.
– You own a Delhi apartment.
– No mention of liabilities exists.

» Net Worth Strength Perspective
– Financial assets remain very strong.
– Market-linked assets dominate wealth.
– Liquidity exists even after relocation.
– Home ownership reduces living pressure.
– This is a solid base.
– Many retirees have far less.

» Employment Gap Impact Review
– Job loss impacts cash flow.
– It does not destroy wealth.
– Time gap creates anxiety.
– Planning reduces fear.
– Your corpus buys time.
– Decisions must remain calm.

» Key Question You Are Asking
– Can I retire if job fails.
– Can corpus last lifelong.
– Can child education be protected.
– Can lifestyle be sustained.
– Can risk be managed.
– These are valid concerns.

» Retirement Age and Horizon View
– Retirement at 46 is early.
– Life expectancy is long.
– Corpus must last decades.
– Inflation will work continuously.
– Growth assets remain essential.
– Protection planning becomes critical.

» Expense Reality After India Return
– Living in owned home helps.
– Rent expense becomes zero.
– India costs are lower than UAE.
– School expenses will continue.
– Lifestyle moderation may be required.
– Flexibility improves sustainability.

» Child Education Responsibility
– Daughter is 13 now.
– Higher education remains ahead.
– Education costs will rise.
– This cannot be compromised.
– Planning must ring-fence this goal.
– Separate allocation is necessary.

» Current Liquidity Comfort
– Indian savings give short-term support.
– Mutual funds give long-term strength.
– PPF and similar give safety.
– Liquidity is adequate now.
– Emergency comfort exists.
– Panic actions are avoidable.

» Can You Retire Immediately
– Technically possible with discipline.
– Practically requires lifestyle alignment.
– Emotionally may feel uncomfortable.
– Job income adds safety.
– Partial work may help.
– Full stop is not mandatory.

» Semi-Retirement as a Middle Path
– Consulting work can reduce pressure.
– Part-time roles give confidence.
– Income reduces withdrawal stress.
– Corpus continues compounding.
– Psychological comfort improves.
– This is often ideal.

» Withdrawal Risk Awareness
– Early retirement faces sequence risk.
– Market downturns can hurt withdrawals.
– Timing matters greatly.
– Structured withdrawal planning is critical.
– Random redemptions harm corpus.
– Discipline protects longevity.

» Mutual Fund Portfolio Role
– Mutual funds remain growth engine.
– They must be managed actively.
– Asset allocation matters more now.
– Aggression should slowly reduce.
– Quality focus becomes key.
– Overlapping exposure must be reviewed.

» Why Active Management Matters Now
– Active funds adjust during downturns.
– Valuations are monitored.
– Risk is controlled dynamically.
– Index exposure falls fully.
– Drawdowns can be harsh.
– Active oversight suits retirees better.

» Debt Allocation Importance
– Debt provides stability.
– Debt funds withdrawals calmly.
– Debt avoids forced equity selling.
– It smoothens cash flow.
– Peace of mind improves.
– Balance is essential now.

» Role of Government-Backed Savings
– PPF and similar give safety.
– They provide predictability.
– Liquidity rules must be respected.
– They support capital protection.
– Keep them untouched longer.
– They act as anchor.

» Managing Market Volatility Emotionally
– Job loss increases fear.
– Markets amplify emotions.
– Avoid reacting to headlines.
– Follow pre-set plan.
– Review annually only.
– Emotional discipline is wealth.

» Tax Awareness During Withdrawals
– Equity withdrawals attract capital gains tax.
– Long-term gains above Rs.1.25 lakh are taxed.
– Short-term gains attract higher tax.
– Withdrawal sequencing matters.
– Tax efficiency improves longevity.
– Planning avoids surprises.

» What You Should Avoid Now
– Avoid panic selling.
– Avoid liquidating entire equity.
– Avoid chasing guaranteed returns.
– Avoid lending informally.
– Avoid untested products.
– Simplicity protects capital.

» Health and Insurance Angle
– Health cover must be strong.
– Job-linked cover may end.
– Family protection is critical.
– Medical inflation is high.
– Review coverage immediately.
– This safeguards corpus.

» Lifestyle Adjustment Reality
– Retirement needs conscious spending.
– Wants must be filtered.
– Needs must be secured.
– Child education stays priority.
– Travel plans may adjust.
– Control gives confidence.

» Psychological Side of Early Retirement
– Identity loss may occur.
– Work gives structure.
– Social engagement matters.
– Purpose prevents anxiety.
– Financial independence is not idleness.
– Mental planning is vital.

» Time as Your Biggest Asset
– You still have years.
– Corpus can still grow.
– One good job changes picture.
– Do not rush decisions.
– Allow six to twelve months.
– Calm thinking improves outcomes.

» Role of a Certified Financial Planner
– Helps structure withdrawals.
– Aligns assets with life stages.
– Prevents emotional mistakes.
– Reviews asset allocation.
– Protects child goals.
– Adds clarity in uncertainty.

» Final Insights
– Your financial base is strong.
– Immediate retirement is possible with discipline.
– Job income adds safety and comfort.
– Semi-retirement is a balanced option.
– Child education must be ring-fenced.
– Active fund management suits your stage.
– Liquidity and debt bring stability.
– Patience and structure will protect your future.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Money
45 years of age, self employed. I am selling my flat and after paying all taxes/capital gains should have roughly about 70 lakhs to invest. I already have 65 lakhs in MF, 95 lakhs portfolio in equity and also have couple more real estate properties where i fetch about 1 lakh.per month rental income. My monthly earning currently is irratic and annually around 10-12lakhs. No EMI , LOANS ETC. outgoing are SIP OF 60000, anything surplus I invest in equity. Child is 8 years and his education, future education, current fees all are made up for as mentioned and my wife together do SIP OF 110000 towards the same. My question is my wife and my investments are all exposed to MF AND equity. NO FD, NO OTHER diversified investments. So this income from sale of flat, do we invest in markets again or any other options are available. We have no liabilities , hence can take medium to agressive risks .
Ans: Your discipline and clarity deserve appreciation.
You have built assets patiently.
You avoided unnecessary debt wisely.
Your questions show maturity and foresight.
This is a strong financial position already.
Now refinement matters more than expansion.

» Your Current Financial Strength
– You are 45 years old.
– You are self-employed with flexibility.
– Annual income is irregular but healthy.
– No loans or EMIs exist.
– Rental income provides stability.
– This is a strong base.

» Asset Overview and Balance
– Mutual fund exposure is significant.
– Direct equity exposure is also large.
– Real estate exposure already exists.
– Child education planning is well handled.
– SIP discipline is excellent.
– Overall net worth is strong.

» Liquidity and Cash Flow Position
– Rental income gives steady monthly cash.
– Business income is uneven.
– SIP commitments are comfortably met.
– Surplus is invested regularly.
– Liquidity buffer needs assessment.
– Emergency comfort matters for self-employed.

» Risk Capacity Versus Risk Comfort
– Risk capacity is clearly high.
– Risk comfort also seems high.
– However concentration risk exists.
– Markets dominate portfolio exposure.
– Volatility impact must be evaluated.
– Diversification is the real concern.

» Understanding Concentration Risk
– Equity and mutual funds move together.
– Market downturns affect both sharply.
– Psychological stress can increase.
– Liquidity may dry temporarily.
– Long-term returns remain good.
– But timing risk exists.

» Your Core Question Clarified
– You are not asking about returns.
– You are asking about balance.
– You want intelligent diversification.
– You want risk-managed growth.
– You want capital protection layers.
– This is correct thinking.

» Should the Rs.70 Lakhs Enter Markets Fully
– Putting all again into markets increases concentration.
– It magnifies timing risk.
– Even strong investors need balance.
– Markets may not always cooperate.
– Partial allocation is sensible.
– Phased deployment is wiser.

» Importance of Staggered Investment
– Lump sum market entry carries timing risk.
– Volatility can impact short-term value.
– Phased investing smoothens entry.
– Emotion management improves.
– Decision quality stays high.
– Discipline matters even for experienced investors.

» Role of Debt-Oriented Instruments
– Debt provides stability to portfolio.
– Debt reduces overall volatility.
– Debt supports rebalancing later.
– Debt gives liquidity comfort.
– Returns are predictable.
– Peace of mind improves decision making.

» Why Some Debt Exposure Is Necessary
– You are self-employed.
– Income is irregular.
– Markets can fall anytime.
– Debt cushions lifestyle needs.
– Avoid forced equity selling.
– This protects long-term wealth.

» Debt Mutual Funds Perspective
– Debt funds offer flexibility.
– They are more tax-efficient than fixed deposits.
– Liquidity is better.
– Suitable for medium-term goals.
– Risk varies by fund quality.
– Selection must be conservative.

» Avoiding Fixed Deposits Blindly
– Fixed deposits lock money.
– Tax efficiency is poor.
– Returns barely beat inflation.
– Liquidity may have penalties.
– Better alternatives exist.
– Structure matters more than familiarity.

» Hybrid and Balanced Allocation Thought
– Hybrid funds mix growth and stability.
– Volatility remains controlled.
– Suitable for capital protection.
– Good parking for part capital.
– Helps rebalancing automatically.
– Useful during uncertain markets.

» Why Actively Managed Funds Suit You
– Active managers adjust with cycles.
– Valuations matter to them.
– Sector rotation is managed.
– Downside protection improves.
– Concentration risk reduces.
– Passive exposure lacks this flexibility.

» Disadvantages of Index Exposure
– Index follows markets blindly.
– No valuation control exists.
– Drawdowns are full impact.
– Recovery takes patience.
– Emotional stress increases.
– Active management adds value here.

» Existing Equity Portfolio Review Thought
– Equity exposure is already high.
– Additional equity should be selective.
– Avoid duplication across holdings.
– Style diversification matters.
– Avoid over-aggression now.
– Capital preservation gains importance.

» Asset Allocation Direction Suggested
– Equity should still remain majority.
– Debt should act as stabiliser.
– Allocation must be intentional.
– Not reactive to market moods.
– Review annually.
– Adjust gradually with age.

» Emergency and Opportunity Fund
– Self-employed professionals need buffers.
– At least one year expenses covered.
– This avoids panic during downturns.
– Opportunity buying also becomes possible.
– Confidence improves decision making.
– Liquidity brings power.

» Role of Alternative Strategies
– Avoid unregulated products.
– Avoid opaque structures.
– Simplicity works best.
– Transparency builds trust.
– Liquidity should not be compromised.
– Focus on controllable risks.

» Tax Efficiency Awareness
– Capital gains planning matters.
– Phased investing helps tax management.
– Debt funds taxed per slab.
– Equity taxed on withdrawal.
– Withdrawal planning matters later.
– Structure supports efficiency.

» Retirement Planning Angle
– Retirement is still distant.
– But preparation must start.
– Equity will power long-term growth.
– Debt will stabilise income later.
– Balanced build-up helps future SWP.
– This foresight is valuable.

» Child Goal Already Secured
– Education planning is strong.
– SIP discipline is excellent.
– No need to disturb this.
– Avoid overlapping investments.
– Keep child goal separate.
– This reduces confusion later.

» Behavioural Discipline Strength
– You already invest consistently.
– You avoid panic actions.
– You reinvest surplus logically.
– This is rare.
– Maintain this strength.
– Do not complicate unnecessarily.

» What Not to Do With Rs.70 Lakhs
– Do not rush entire amount.
– Do not chase trending assets.
– Do not over-diversify blindly.
– Do not keep idle long-term.
– Do not ignore risk layering.
– Avoid emotional decisions.

» Suggested Deployment Philosophy
– Divide money by purpose.
– Some for stability.
– Some for growth.
– Some for liquidity.
– Invest gradually.
– Review annually.

» Role of a Certified Financial Planner
– Helps structure allocation.
– Prevents overexposure mistakes.
– Aligns with life goals.
– Manages behavioural risks.
– Reviews objectively.
– Adds long-term value.

» Final Insights
– Your financial base is strong.
– Concentration risk is the key concern.
– Full market reinvestment needs caution.
– Partial debt allocation improves balance.
– Phased investing reduces timing risk.
– Active management suits your profile.
– Liquidity buffer is essential.
– Structured diversification will protect and grow wealth.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Money
I am 54 years old, my monthly salary is 40 K, my liability 6 lakhs loan liability and personal from 2 lakhs in ICICI bank, and 5000 two wheeler loan from hdfc and another loan of Rs, 35000 from LIC Policy pledged. I invested Rs. 58000 in stocks and Rs. 15000 in mutual funds and I have owned a residential house in kochi, Kerala No Other Savings. Pls. advise to how can I some savings at the age of 60
Ans: You have shown courage by asking this question honestly.
Many people avoid facing numbers at this age.
You are taking responsibility now.
That itself is a strong positive step.
There is still time to improve outcomes.
With discipline, progress is possible.

» Current Age and Time Availability
– You are 54 years old now.
– Retirement planning window is around six years.
– Time is limited but not over.
– Focus must shift to stability and control.
– Aggressive risks should reduce gradually.
– Consistency matters more than return chasing.

» Income Position Assessment
– Monthly salary is Rs.40,000.
– Income appears fixed and predictable.
– Salary growth may be limited now.
– Planning should assume stable income only.
– Avoid depending on uncertain future hikes.
– Savings must come from discipline.

» Expense Awareness and Reality
– Expenses were not detailed fully.
– Loans indicate cash flow pressure.
– Lifestyle spending must be reviewed honestly.
– Small savings matter at this stage.
– Leakages need strict control.
– Tracking expenses becomes critical now.

» Loan and Liability Overview
– Total loan burden is significant.
– Personal loan of Rs.6 lakh exists.
– Additional Rs.2 lakh personal loan exists.
– Two-wheeler loan EMI of Rs.5,000 runs.
– LIC policy loan of Rs.35,000 exists.
– Multiple loans increase stress.

» Interest Cost Impact
– Personal loans carry high interest.
– Two-wheeler loan also costs more.
– LIC policy loan reduces policy benefits.
– High interest erodes future savings.
– Loan control must be first priority.
– Returns cannot beat high interest easily.

» Asset Position Overview
– Residential house in Kochi is owned.
– House gives living security.
– No rental income assumed currently.
– House should not be sold for retirement.
– Emotional and practical value is high.
– Treat it as safety asset.

» Investment Snapshot
– Equity stock investment is Rs.58,000.
– Mutual fund investment is Rs.15,000.
– Total financial investments are very low.
– This limits compounding benefits.
– However, starting now still helps.
– Even small steps matter.

» Liquidity and Emergency Status
– No clear emergency fund exists.
– Loans indicate past emergencies.
– Lack of emergency fund causes borrowing.
– This cycle must stop.
– Emergency fund is foundation.
– Without it, savings break repeatedly.

» Priority Reset Required
– Retirement savings come after stability.
– First priority is cash flow control.
– Second priority is loan reduction.
– Third priority is emergency fund.
– Fourth priority is retirement investing.
– Order matters greatly now.

» Debt Reduction Strategy Importance
– Reducing loans gives guaranteed returns.
– Emotional relief also improves discipline.
– Fewer EMIs free monthly cash.
– Cash can redirect to savings.
– Retirement planning needs free cash flow.
– Debt blocks future progress.

» Which Loan to Target First
– Focus on highest interest loan first.
– Personal loans usually cost the most.
– Two-wheeler loan can follow.
– LIC policy loan should close early.
– Policy value should recover.
– Avoid new borrowing strictly.

» LIC Policy Review
– LIC policy is pledged currently.
– This reduces maturity value.
– Many LIC policies give low returns.
– Insurance and investment are mixed here.
– Such policies hurt retirement efficiency.
– Review purpose of this policy carefully.

» Action on LIC Policy
– If LIC is investment-oriented, reconsider.
– Surrender may free funds.
– Loan can be cleared using surrender value.
– Remaining amount can rebuild savings.
– Policy continuation must justify benefits.
– Emotional attachment should be avoided.

» Emergency Fund Creation
– Emergency fund should cover basic expenses.
– Target at least six months needs.
– Start with small monthly amount.
– Keep it separate from investments.
– This prevents future borrowing.
– Stability improves mental peace.

» Retirement Goal Reality Check
– Retirement age is close.
– Corpus building time is short.
– Expectations must stay realistic.
– Focus on supplementary income creation.
– Avoid risky return promises.
– Capital protection becomes important.

» Role of Equity at This Stage
– Equity still has a role.
– But exposure must be limited.
– Volatility can hurt near retirement.
– Balanced approach is needed.
– Equity for growth.
– Debt for stability.

» Mutual Fund Strategy Thought Process
– Mutual funds offer flexibility.
– SIP helps discipline monthly savings.
– Actively managed funds suit this phase.
– Fund managers adjust risk dynamically.
– This protects downside better.
– Index funds lack such control.

» Why Index Funds Are Risky Now
– Index funds fall fully with markets.
– No protection during market crashes.
– Near retirement, recovery time is less.
– Emotional panic risk increases.
– Active funds manage risk better.
– Stability matters more than matching index.

» Direct Funds Versus Regular Funds
– Direct funds need strong self-discipline.
– Wrong fund choice can hurt badly.
– No guidance during market stress.
– Regular funds offer support.
– Certified Financial Planner guidance helps.
– Behaviour management is crucial now.

» Monthly Savings Possibility
– Even Rs.3,000 matters now.
– Start small but stay consistent.
– Increase amount after loan closure.
– Automate savings immediately after salary.
– Avoid waiting for surplus.
– Surplus never comes automatically.

» Expense Rationalisation Steps
– Review subscriptions and discretionary spends.
– Reduce non-essential expenses.
– Delay lifestyle upgrades.
– Focus on needs over wants.
– Every saved rupee counts.
– Discipline builds confidence.

» Asset Allocation Approach
– Majority should be stable assets.
– Smaller portion in growth assets.
– Avoid concentration risk.
– Do not chase trending stocks.
– Consistency beats speculation.
– Preservation becomes key now.

» Stock Investment Review
– Existing stocks need careful review.
– Avoid frequent trading.
– High risk stocks should reduce gradually.
– Capital protection matters now.
– Reinvest proceeds wisely.
– Emotional decisions must stop.

» Retirement Income Planning Thought
– Retirement income must be predictable.
– Monthly cash flow is required.
– Capital should last longer.
– Avoid lump sum withdrawals.
– Planning must support longevity.
– Health costs may rise later.

» Health Insurance Importance
– Medical expenses rise with age.
– Adequate health insurance is essential.
– This protects retirement savings.
– Avoid policy gaps.
– Review coverage annually.
– Health shocks destroy savings fast.

» Tax Efficiency Consideration
– Tax should be considered carefully.
– Mutual funds offer tax efficiency.
– Gains taxed only on withdrawal.
– Equity gains have specific rules.
– Debt gains taxed as per slab.
– Planning reduces unnecessary tax.

» Behavioural Discipline Required
– Market volatility will test patience.
– Avoid panic selling.
– Avoid greed-driven buying.
– Stick to chosen path.
– Annual review is sufficient.
– Emotional control is critical.

» Role of Side Income
– Explore small side income options.
– Skill-based work can help.
– Even small extra income helps.
– Direct it fully into savings.
– Do not increase lifestyle.
– Purpose is retirement security.

» Family Communication
– Family should know limitations.
– Set realistic expectations together.
– Avoid financial surprises later.
– Transparency reduces stress.
– Shared responsibility helps discipline.
– Support improves success chances.

» Common Mistakes to Avoid
– Chasing high return promises.
– Ignoring debt problem.
– Using retirement money for emergencies.
– Frequent portfolio changes.
– Delaying action further.
– Comparing with others.

» Psychological Aspect
– Guilt about late start is normal.
– Do not dwell on past.
– Focus on controllable actions now.
– Small wins build confidence.
– Progress matters more than perfection.
– Hope must stay alive.

» What Success Looks Like Now
– Reduced debt burden.
– Emergency fund in place.
– Regular monthly savings habit.
– Controlled risk exposure.
– Predictable retirement income support.
– Peace of mind.

» Final Insights
– You are late but not helpless.
– Debt reduction is first priority.
– Emergency fund is essential.
– LIC policy needs careful review.
– Mutual funds can support retirement.
– Active management suits your stage.
– Discipline matters more than amount.
– With steady effort, improvement is possible.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Money
can anyone suggest some good mutual funds to invest ?
Ans: It is good you are asking this question.
Many people invest blindly without understanding.
Your intent shows responsibility and awareness.
This is the right starting point.
Mutual funds work best with clarity.
I appreciate your willingness to learn.

» Understanding the Real Question
– You are not asking for returns alone.
– You are asking for safety and growth.
– You want confidence in decisions.
– You want fewer mistakes.
– This mindset is very important.
– Mutual funds need goal-based thinking.

» Why “Good Mutual Funds” Is a Relative Term
– There is no single best fund.
– Suitability matters more than popularity.
– Age changes risk tolerance.
– Income stability matters.
– Time horizon matters greatly.
– Emotional comfort also matters.

» Role of a Certified Financial Planner
– A Certified Financial Planner matches funds to goals.
– Random suggestions often fail.
– Personal context decides suitability.
– Fund selection is not guessing.
– It is a structured process.
– Guidance prevents costly mistakes.

» First Step Before Choosing Any Fund
– Identify your goal clearly.
– Short term goals differ from long term.
– Retirement goals need stability.
– Wealth creation needs patience.
– Emergency money should stay separate.
– Mixing goals creates confusion.

» Importance of Time Horizon
– Less than three years needs safety.
– Three to seven years needs balance.
– More than seven years allows growth focus.
– Time absorbs market volatility.
– Longer time reduces risk.
– Short time increases uncertainty.

» Understanding Risk Properly
– Risk is not loss alone.
– Risk is emotional panic also.
– Wrong fund causes sleepless nights.
– Panic selling destroys wealth.
– Right fund keeps you calm.
– Calm investors earn better returns.

» Why Actively Managed Funds Matter
– Markets change constantly.
– Companies rise and fall.
– Active managers track these changes.
– They reduce exposure during stress.
– They increase quality holdings.
– This flexibility protects capital.

» Disadvantages of Index Funds
– Index funds blindly follow markets.
– No downside protection exists.
– Full fall happens during crashes.
– Recovery takes time.
– Near goals, this hurts badly.
– Active funds manage risk better.

» Importance of Asset Allocation
– Do not put everything in equity.
– Debt provides stability.
– Equity provides growth.
– Balance reduces volatility.
– Allocation should change with age.
– This improves long-term success.

» Equity Mutual Fund Categories Explained
– Large-focused funds invest in stable companies.
– Mid-focused funds aim higher growth.
– Smaller companies bring higher volatility.
– Flexi-style funds adjust across sizes.
– Balanced style funds mix debt and equity.
– Each serves a different purpose.

» When to Use Large-Focused Equity Funds
– Suitable for conservative investors.
– Suitable for beginners.
– Suitable near retirement.
– Volatility remains lower.
– Growth is steady.
– Confidence remains higher.

» When to Use Mid-Focused Equity Funds
– Suitable for longer horizons.
– Suitable for moderate risk takers.
– Returns can be higher.
– Falls can be sharp sometimes.
– Requires patience.
– SIP helps manage volatility.

» When to Use Smaller Company Focused Funds
– Only for long horizons.
– Only for high risk tolerance.
– Not suitable near goals.
– Volatility is very high.
– Returns fluctuate widely.
– Allocation should be limited.

» Role of Flexi-Style Equity Funds
– Managers move across market sizes.
– They respond to valuations.
– They reduce concentration risk.
– Suitable for uncertain markets.
– Good core holding.
– Useful across life stages.

» Balanced Style Funds Explained
– Mix of equity and debt exists.
– Volatility is lower.
– Returns are smoother.
– Suitable for conservative investors.
– Suitable near retirement.
– Provides income stability.

» Debt Mutual Fund Understanding
– Debt funds invest in fixed income instruments.
– Returns are more stable.
– Risk depends on credit quality.
– Short duration suits safety needs.
– Long duration suits interest rate cycles.
– Selection must be careful.

» Why Debt Funds Matter
– They reduce overall portfolio risk.
– They provide predictable returns.
– They help during market crashes.
– They support regular withdrawals.
– They improve sleep quality.
– They bring balance.

» Tax Aspect Awareness
– Equity gains have holding period rules.
– Long term equity gains have lower tax.
– Short term gains attract higher tax.
– Debt gains taxed as per slab.
– Holding period planning reduces tax.
– Withdrawal planning matters.

» SIP Versus Lump Sum
– SIP builds discipline.
– SIP reduces timing risk.
– Lump sum suits surplus money.
– Market timing is difficult.
– SIP suits salaried investors.
– Consistency matters more than timing.

» Why Regular Funds Are Better for Most
– Regular funds provide guidance.
– Behaviour management is included.
– Review support is available.
– Panic decisions are reduced.
– CFP guidance adds value.
– Cost difference is justified often.

» Disadvantages of Direct Funds
– No handholding during volatility.
– Wrong allocation mistakes occur.
– Investors panic during falls.
– Discipline breaks easily.
– Mistakes cost more than savings.
– Support matters more than cost.

» Portfolio Construction Principles
– Limit number of funds.
– Avoid duplication.
– Diversify across styles.
– Align funds with goals.
– Review annually only.
– Avoid frequent changes.

» How Many Funds Are Enough
– Too many funds confuse tracking.
– Four to six funds are enough.
– Each fund must have a role.
– Overlapping funds reduce efficiency.
– Simplicity improves discipline.
– Control improves results.

» Common Mistakes Investors Make
– Chasing recent performance.
– Following social media tips.
– Switching frequently.
– Investing without goals.
– Ignoring asset allocation.
– Stopping SIP during downturns.

» Behaviour Is More Important Than Funds
– Good behaviour beats good products.
– Staying invested matters most.
– Panic destroys compounding.
– Patience builds wealth.
– Discipline creates results.
– Confidence grows over time.

» Role of Review and Rebalancing
– Portfolio needs periodic review.
– Life changes need adjustments.
– Risk increases with market rise.
– Rebalancing restores balance.
– Annual review is enough.
– Over-monitoring creates stress.

» Age-Based Allocation Thought
– Younger investors can take higher equity.
– Middle age needs balanced approach.
– Near retirement needs stability.
– Allocation must reduce risk gradually.
– This protects capital.
– Longevity risk increases later.

» Emotional Side of Investing
– Fear and greed influence decisions.
– Market news creates panic.
– Discipline reduces emotional damage.
– Guidance provides reassurance.
– Staying calm is crucial.
– Long-term view wins.

» Importance of Emergency Fund
– Emergency fund protects investments.
– It avoids forced selling.
– Keep it separate from mutual funds.
– Liquidity matters here.
– Peace of mind improves discipline.
– This is foundation step.

» Goal-Based Investing Is Key
– Each goal needs its own strategy.
– Education goals differ from retirement.
– Short goals need safety.
– Long goals allow growth.
– Mixing goals causes confusion.
– Structure brings clarity.

» Final Insights
– Good mutual funds depend on your goals.
– Actively managed funds suit most investors.
– Asset allocation matters more than fund names.
– Discipline beats market timing.
– Guidance reduces costly mistakes.
– Start with clarity and patience.
– Stay consistent and review annually.
– This approach builds long-term wealth.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10893 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 15, 2025Hindi
Money
My friend age is 39 salary is 70000 loan 100000 with 1200 EMI had 5.5 lakh pf and yearly lic policies of 45000 had own house worth 40 lakhs and one land worth 15 lakhs nearly son age is 4 how to invest for education
Ans: Your friend has taken a responsible step by thinking early.
Planning for a child’s education shows care and foresight.
Starting now gives strong advantage.
Time is the biggest strength here.
This deserves appreciation and encouragement.

» Family and Life Stage Assessment
– Your friend is 39 years old.
– Child is only 4 years old.
– Education goal is 14 to 18 years away.
– This gives long investment runway.
– Long horizon allows growth focus.
– Early planning reduces pressure later.

» Income and Stability Review
– Monthly salary is Rs.70,000.
– Income seems stable currently.
– EMI burden is very low.
– Loan amount is manageable.
– Cash flow pressure appears limited.
– This supports long-term investing.

» Existing Asset Overview
– Provident fund value is Rs.5.5 lakh.
– Own house provides residential security.
– Land holding adds balance sheet strength.
– Physical assets already exist.
– Education funding should stay financial.
– Avoid mixing goals with properties.

» Current Liability Position
– Loan amount is only Rs.1 lakh.
– EMI is Rs.1,200 monthly.
– Debt stress is minimal.
– No urgent prepayment pressure exists.
– Liquidity remains comfortable.
– This supports regular investments.

» Child Education Cost Reality
– Education costs rise faster than inflation.
– Higher education costs are unpredictable.
– Foreign education increases costs sharply.
– Professional courses cost much more.
– Planning should assume higher expenses.
– Conservative assumptions protect future.

» Time Horizon Advantage
– Child has 14 plus years.
– Long horizon favours equity exposure.
– Short-term volatility becomes irrelevant.
– Compounding works best over time.
– Discipline matters more than timing.
– Starting early reduces monthly burden.

» Goal Segregation Importance
– Education goal must stay separate.
– Retirement goals should not mix.
– House and land should remain untouched.
– Education money needs liquidity later.
– Clear buckets avoid confusion.
– This brings clarity and focus.

» Provident Fund Role Clarification
– PF is meant for retirement.
– Avoid using PF for education.
– PF offers safety, not flexibility.
– Withdrawal later affects retirement comfort.
– Let PF compound peacefully.
– Education should have its own plan.

» LIC Policy Assessment
– LIC policies are long-term commitments.
– Many LIC policies give low returns.
– Education goal needs higher growth.
– Insurance and investment should not mix.
– Review policy purpose carefully.
– Education planning needs efficiency.

» Action on LIC Policies
– If LIC is investment oriented, review seriously.
– Such policies often underperform inflation.
– Education goal needs stronger growth engine.
– Consider surrender after policy review.
– Redirect money into mutual funds.
– This improves goal probability.

» Risk Capacity Versus Risk Appetite
– Income stability supports equity exposure.
– Child’s age supports growth focus.
– Emotional comfort still matters.
– Portfolio should avoid extreme swings.
– Balance reduces regret during downturns.
– Discipline ensures long-term success.

» Asset Allocation Thought Process
– Education goal allows higher equity allocation.
– Small debt portion adds stability.
– Allocation should change near goal.
– Gradual de-risking protects corpus.
– No sudden changes later.
– Planning must be dynamic.

» Why Mutual Funds Fit Education Goals
– Mutual funds offer growth potential.
– They allow disciplined monthly investing.
– SIP suits salary earners well.
– Flexibility exists for top-ups.
– Liquidity is available when needed.
– Transparency improves understanding.

» Importance of Active Management
– Active funds manage downside risks.
– Fund managers respond to market changes.
– Education corpus cannot afford blind tracking.
– Index investing lacks downside control.
– Active approach suits long-term goals.
– Flexibility is critical here.

» Why Index Funds Are Not Ideal
– Index funds follow markets mechanically.
– They fall fully during market crashes.
– No protection during extreme volatility.
– Education timeline cannot wait always.
– Active funds adjust allocations actively.
– This reduces emotional stress.

» Monthly Investment Discipline
– SIP builds habit and discipline.
– Small amounts grow meaningfully over time.
– Step-up SIP improves future corpus.
– Salary growth supports step-up.
– Consistency matters more than amount.
– Missed months reduce compounding.

» Emergency Fund Before Education Investing
– Emergency fund should exist first.
– At least six months expenses recommended.
– This avoids breaking education investments.
– Emergencies are unpredictable.
– Financial shocks derail long-term plans.
– Stability supports discipline.

» Insurance Protection Check
– Adequate term insurance is critical.
– Child’s education depends on income.
– Insurance protects goal continuity.
– Medical insurance protects savings.
– Without protection, plans collapse.
– Risk management comes first.

» Tax Efficiency Perspective
– Education investing should consider tax.
– Mutual funds offer tax-efficient growth.
– Tax applies only on realised gains.
– Equity gains have specific rules.
– Planning improves post-tax outcomes.
– Tax should not drive decisions alone.

» Behavioural Aspects of Education Planning
– Market corrections will happen.
– Panic reactions harm long-term goals.
– Education planning needs patience.
– Annual review is enough.
– Avoid daily portfolio tracking.
– Trust the process.

» Role of Land and House
– House provides living security.
– Land is illiquid for education needs.
– Avoid selling assets for education.
– Forced sales reduce value.
– Education funds must be liquid.
– Separate assets reduce stress.

» Periodic Review and Rebalancing
– Review education plan yearly.
– Increase investments with income growth.
– Reduce risk near goal.
– Shift gradually to safer assets.
– Avoid last-minute surprises.
– Discipline ensures success.

» Child Education Milestones Planning
– School education costs come first.
– Graduation costs come later.
– Post-graduation may need larger funds.
– Plan for multiple stages.
– Avoid lump-sum burden later.
– Stagger planning reduces stress.

» Emotional Satisfaction Aspect
– Education planning gives confidence.
– Parents sleep better with clarity.
– Child benefits from better choices.
– Financial clarity improves family harmony.
– Less stress improves health.
– Planning improves overall life quality.

» Role of Certified Financial Planner
– Personalised planning improves outcomes.
– Risk comfort differs per family.
– Cash flow analysis matters.
– Goal prioritisation avoids conflicts.
– Periodic guidance improves discipline.
– Holistic approach protects all goals.

» Common Mistakes to Avoid
– Starting too late.
– Relying only on LIC policies.
– Using PF for education.
– Chasing high returns blindly.
– Ignoring inflation impact.
– Avoiding reviews.

» Long-Term Discipline Reminder
– Education planning is a marathon.
– Short-term noise should be ignored.
– Time corrects many mistakes.
– Discipline beats intelligence here.
– Patience builds strong corpus.
– Calmness protects decisions.

» Final Insights
– Your friend has strong starting position.
– Early planning gives big advantage.
– Child’s age supports growth focus.
– Mutual funds suit education goals well.
– LIC policies need careful review.
– Insurance protection is essential.
– Discipline and reviews ensure success.
– With proper structure, education goals are achievable.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |425 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Dec 15, 2025

Money
i am a 65 year old person at present working in a company as advisor with Rs.2,00,000/-month remuneration.My son is studying 1st year B.Tech.My wife is a home maker.I am having 2 apartments on my name worth approx.2 crores.MY wife is a single child to my in laws and i stay in my mother in law's house as my wife has to take care of her. I am having a plot which costs about 75 lakhs rupees.I am having PPF amount Rs,25 lakhs in my account and still account is not closed.I may be having a cash of Rs.20 lakhs approx.in various forms.I am havinga stocks porfolio worth Rs30 lakhs.I am giving you my MF sips in various forms.The MFs amount is to the tune of Rs.80 lakhs. Fund Name Category SIP Amount % of Portfolio Motilal Oswal Large Cap Fund Large Cap ₹15,000 10.3% Nippon India Large Cap Fund Large Cap ₹13,000 8.9% Total Large Cap ₹28,000 19.2% HDFC Midcap Fund Mid Cap ₹7,500 5.1% Edelweiss Mid Cap Fund Mid Cap ₹31,000 21.2% Total Mid Cap ₹38,500 26.3% SBI Small Cap Fund Small Cap ₹3,500 2.4% Nippon India Small Cap Fund Small Cap ₹2,000 1.4% Total Small Cap ₹5,500 3.8% Parag Parikh Flexicap Fund Flexi Cap ₹38,500 26.3% HDFC Focused Fund Focused ₹7,000 4.8% Mirae Asset Large & Midcap Fund Large & Mid Cap ₹2,500 1.7% Total Diversified Equity ₹48,000 32.8% Canara Robeco Multi Asset Multi Asset ₹1,500 1.0% HDFC Balanced Advantage Fund BAF ₹10,000 6.8% Total Hybrid / Debt-Oriented ₹11,500 7.9% Tata Nifty Capital Markets Index Sectoral (Financial Services) ₹2,000 1.4% Nippon India Banking & Financial Services Sectoral (Financial Services) ₹1,500 1.0% Total Sectoral ₹3,500 2.4% Total SIP amount is approx.Rs.1.5 lakhs / month . I am having monthly sips for SBI small cap,nippon india small cap, dsp small cap rs.5000/-each in addition to above SIPs.My total MFs amount is approx.rs.75 lakhs. Though i am not sure how many months my assignment continue, immediately there is no threat.at present my health only is the criteria to continue and i may continue for maximum of one year.MY wife also may be having cash in various forms to the tune of Rs.50 lakhs. This is my financial status. Kindly guide me for a better and remunerative planning.Best Regards.
Ans: Hi Nadakuduru,

Your overall assets are good but need some proper realignment wrt you what all you mentioned. Let us have a detailed look:

- Considering that you will work for a year or so, you need to have proper alignment of your current assets in liquid form.
- Close your PPF account upon maturity and park it in debt MFs.
- Direct stock investment is way too risky. Shift that amount in equity mutual funds to fund you when you stop working.
- Make a FD of 20 lakhs cash that you have for your emergency requirement.
- Your current SIPs are highly overdiversified and overlapped. A portfolio like this never gives a good return. Hence work with a professional to get a good portfolio.
A DIY portfolio like yours can break your overall investments. Do not do any large investments like these without proper guidance.
- Hence stop current SIPS and take professional's help.

Do consult a professional Certified Financial Planner - a CFP who can guide you with exact funds to invest in keeping in mind your age, requirements, financial goals and risk profile. A CFP periodically reviews your portfolio and suggest any amendments to be made, if required.

Let me know if you need more help.

Best Regards,
Reetika Sharma, Certified Financial Planner
https://www.instagram.com/cfpreetika/

...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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