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Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |233 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Sep 04, 2025

Naveenn Kummar has over 16 years of experience in banking and financial services.
He is an Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI)-registered mutual fund distributor, an Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI)-licensed insurance advisor and a qualified personal finance professional (QPFP) certified by Network FP.
An engineering graduate with an MBA in management, he leads Alenova Financial Services under Vadula Consultancy Services, offering solutions in mutual funds, insurance, retirement planning and wealth management.... more
Thejasree Question by Thejasree on Aug 25, 2025Hindi
Money

I am 40old with Financial condition: Savings side: NPS 10lakhs, EPF 25lakhs, Gold 10lakhs, SSY 3lakhs, PPF 1lakhs, Mutual fund 15Lakhs, Equity shares 10lakhs, Fixed Deposits 5lakhs for emergency fund. Loans side: Home loan 26 lakhs (9Lakhs cleared from Dec2022 to Aug2025), Gold loan 2.6 lakhs(2.4Lakhs cleared from Mar2025 to Aug2025) Took 1Crore Term insurance for myself, 50lakhs for my wife. Took 25lakhs health insurance for myself, wife and my daughter (4 yr old). I have a challenge on monthly salary spend planning where i seek advise on the way i am allotting the funds: Take home salary is 2.5 lakhs and no other income source and below are the spending pattern every month, 1. 50k home loan EMI 2. 46k mf sip (Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund 12K, Bhandhan Small cap fund 8k, Motilal Oswal Midcap Fund 8k, ICICI Prud technology fund 3k, Motilal Oswal Large & Mid Cap Fund 15k) with stepup option of 1k each fund yearly. - partially for kid marriage and my retirement purpose 3. 40k gold loan prepayment 4. 40k home maintenance expenses (sometimes goes to 50k to 60k based on medical or shopping or adhoc requirements for my wife or kid) - I started budgeting this 40k as well to minimize the spends but failed to minimize. 5. 15k SSY and PPF for my Kid education 6. 5k apartment maintenance 7. RD of 20K for annual requirements of 2.3lakhs consist of : a. 45k LIC premium annual requirement b. 60k term and health insurance premium annual requirement c. 30k annually for bike insurance, services and other maintenance d. 1.3lakhs for baby girl school fees ... Few Asks: 1. Want to buy Car (as baby growing and planning for car).. When to buy with my financial condition and I have no down payment, with no free cash now. 2. In the month of Nov 2025, i will get around 600000 (post tax), as retention bonus so what to do with that fund eg 1. buy car with down payment 2. invest in equity market or mutual funds, 3. add to emergency fund, 4. park under Liquid fund.. 3. Should I change my financial saving/investment strategies, please suggest as I have left with no free cashflow post the monthly commitment. 4. Suggest any changes to current plan of allocation of monthly salary and MFs selected. 5. If any one of the Mutual fund not performing, is it good to take out full capital and invest in other fund along with SIP or start fresh SIP in other funds and don't touch capital in previous fund

Ans: Dear Sir,

Thank you for providing detailed information about your financial situation and goals. Based on the details shared, here’s a comprehensive analysis and suggestions:

1. Current Financial Snapshot

Assets:

NPS: ?10 L

EPF: ?25 L

Gold: ?10 L

SSY: ?3 L

PPF: ?1 L

Mutual Funds: ?15 L

Equity Shares: ?10 L

Fixed Deposit (Emergency): ?5 L

Liabilities:

Home Loan: ?26 L (EMI ?50k)

Gold Loan: ?2.6 L (prepayment in progress)

Insurance:

Term Insurance: ?1 Cr (self), ?50 L (spouse)

Health Insurance: ?25 L (family)

Income & Expenses:

Take-home salary: ?2.5 L

Monthly commitments: ~?2.4–2.5 L (EMI, SIP, RDs, maintenance, education, insurance)

Net free cash: ~?0

2. Challenges Identified

No free cash flow left after monthly commitments.

Budgeting for variable expenses (home maintenance, medical, shopping) is difficult.

Planning for big-ticket purchase (car) without down payment or free cash.

3. Buying a Car

Given your current obligations:

Do not take a new car loan immediately, as your cash flow is tight.

Better timing: After clearing the gold loan and part of home loan (from Aug 2025 onwards), your EMIs will reduce, freeing cash for a car purchase.

Down Payment: Ideally, use part of the retention bonus or accumulated surplus for at least 30–40% down payment to reduce EMIs.

4. Retention Bonus (?6 L post-tax, Nov 2025)

Suggested allocation:

Purpose Recommendation
Emergency Fund Top-up FD/Liquid fund to maintain 6–12 months of expenses (?5–6 L)
Car Down Payment Allocate part (30–40%) if planning to buy after EMI relief
Investments Remaining amount can be invested in balanced/flexi-cap mutual funds or liquid funds until decision for car purchase

Avoid investing full bonus in equity for immediate needs; liquid or short-term balanced funds are safer.

5. Monthly Saving/Investment Strategy Adjustments

Step-up SIPs: Keep moderate (?1k/year) as planned. Avoid over-committing when free cash is zero.

Reduce variable spends: Track and categorize home maintenance, shopping, and medical expenses to realistically control them (~?40k).

RDS & Education Funds: Maintain discipline for kid’s education.

6. Mutual Fund Selection & Management

Current allocation: Flexi-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, sectoral tech fund.

Suggestions:

Review fund performance annually.

If a fund underperforms for >3 years, consider:

Stop further SIP into that fund

Continue existing capital or

Rebalance gradually into better-performing funds

Avoid full redemption unless necessary; capital gains may attract taxes and timing the market is risky.

Portfolio Balance: Ensure mix of large-cap, flexi-cap, and mid/small-cap funds to balance growth and risk.

7. Suggested Monthly Salary Allocation Review
Category Current Recommendation
Home Loan EMI ?50k Maintain
Mutual Funds SIP ?46k Maintain, monitor step-up
Gold Loan Prepayment ?40k Once completed, redirect to EMIs or SIP
Home Maintenance ?40k Track & control, target 35k
SSY + PPF (Kid) ?15k Maintain
RD & Insurance ?20k Maintain
Apartment Maintenance ?5k Maintain

After gold loan prepayment, free cash flow increases, which can be redirected to car down payment, additional SIP, or emergency buffer.

8. Key Recommendations

Delay car purchase until post-gold loan & partial home loan repayment.

Allocate retention bonus wisely: emergency fund → partial car down payment → liquid or balanced fund investments.

Continue MF investments, but monitor performance annually. Avoid panic withdrawals.

Control variable expenses to maintain discipline.

Engage a QPFP professional for a detailed cash flow review and optimization.

Summary:

Immediate priorities: Emergency fund, control variable spends, complete gold loan prepayment.

Near-term priorities (2025–26): Plan car purchase, retain bonus allocation.

Long-term priorities: Maintain SIPs, step-up moderately, and rebalance MF portfolio annually.

Best regards,
Naveenn Kummar, BE, MBA, QPFP
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered MFD
www.alenova.in
https://www.instagram.com/alenova_wealth
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  |10876 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
I am 41yrs old with below Financial condition: Assets side: Apartment in Bangalore costed 50lakhs in 2022, Plot in Bangalore costed 25 lakhs in 2021, Agri-land in my hometown costed 15lakhs in 2014, Plot in hometown costed 8lakhs in 2013, NPS 10lakhs, EPF 25lakhs, Gold 10lakhs, SSY 3lakhs, PPF 1lakhs, Mutual fund 16lakhs, Equity shares 10lakhs, Fixed Deposits 11lakhs (5lakhs for emergency fund, 6 lakhs for SBI Life smart wealth builder plan as 1lakh yearly premium payout for next 6 years). Liabilities side: Home loan 35 lakhs, Gold loan 3 lakhs Took 1Crore Term insurance for myself, 50lakhs for my wife (housewife) apart from 1crore group insurance cover from my employer, Took 25lakhs health insurance for myself, wife and my daughter (4 yr old) apart from 20lakhs health cover through my employer (using for my father who is 74 yr old have diabetics so employer insurance kept for my father) so for us took external insurance coverage. Took 10lakhs LIC policy with premium of 40K annually with maturity in 2038. I have a challenge on monthly salary spend planning where i seek advise from you expert on the way i am allotting the funds: Take home salary is 2 lakhs and no other income source and below are the spending pattern every month, 1. 45k home loan EMI and 5k transferring to other account to accumulate for one extra EMI (annually pay one extra EMI of 45k). 2. 30k mf sip (3k each for 10 funds - quant infra, quant smallcap, quant elss, 360 one focused, canara robeco smallcap, canara robeco emerging, mirae largecap, pgim flexicap, parag elss, ICICI prudential technology fund) with stepup option of 1k each fund yearly. - partially for kid marriage and my retirement purpose (apart from EPF) 3. 40k gold loan prepayment 4. 40k home maintenance expenses (sometimes goes to 50k to 60k based on medical or shopping or adhoc requirements for my wife or kid) - I started budgeting this 40k as well to minimize the spends but failed to minimize. 5. 15k SSY and PPF for my Kid education 6. 5k apartment maintenance 7. RD of 20K for annual requirements of 2.3lakhs consist of : a. 45k LIC premium annual requirement b. 60k term and health insurance premium annual requirement c. 30k annually for bike insurance, services and other maintenance d. 1.3lakhs for baby girl school fees ... Few Asks: 1. Want to buy Car (as baby growing and planning for car as Activa is not able to manage for travel with 3 people).. When to buy with my financial condition and I have no down payment, with no free cash now. 2. Should I change my financial saving/investment strategies, please suggest as I have left with no free cashflow post the monthly commitment. 3. Want to become financial freedom by next 15 years (5years early than normal retirement) so what I need to do for it and plan better... 4. Suggest any changes to current plan of MFs selected for retirement plan. 5. If any one of the Mutual fund not performing, is it good to take out full capital and invest in other fund along with SIP or start fresh SIP in other funds and don't touch capital in previous fund. 6. Any suggestion about 2nd source of income (As I hold real estate investments but not generating any regular income from those what to do there) and 7. Recently I heard about Managed Farmland where they will take care of farm land with cash crops and long term plantation plan like sandal wood, teak and for cash crops they commit to give us around ~2-3 lakhs per annum based on crop yield and long term plantation yield 50lakhs to 1crore with land appreciation. is this good investment to look for second source plan?
Ans: You are already doing many things right. At the same time, a few adjustments can help you better align your goals, manage cash flow, and work towards financial independence.

Below is a complete 360-degree review in simple, structured format as per your expectations.

? Overall Financial Snapshot

– You are 41 years old with Rs. 2 lakh monthly take-home pay.
– You have a good mix of assets: house, plots, mutual funds, NPS, EPF, FD, gold.
– No rent or home EMI strain as EMI is manageable.
– You are financially responsible with term and health covers.
– You are trying to invest for retirement and your daughter’s future.
– You are facing cash flow strain due to multiple commitments.

This shows strong intent. You are willing to take corrective steps. That’s very good.

? Key Strengths in Current Setup

– Rs. 1 crore term insurance + 1 crore group cover.
– 25 lakh family floater + 20 lakh employer health cover.
– Investing in SIPs with step-up feature.
– Saving regularly for daughter’s education and marriage.
– Using recurring deposit to handle annual expenses.
– Keeping track of EMI, prepayments, and maintenance spends.
– Holding mix of EPF, NPS, MF, gold, land.

You are disciplined and structured, which is a strong base to build on.

? Main Cash Flow Challenges

– Total monthly outgo is approx. Rs. 2 lakh.
– There’s no free cash available at month-end.
– Any unexpected spend strains the flow.
– You wish to buy a car but have no surplus.
– Your RD is blocking Rs. 20,000 per month.
– Gold loan repayment takes away Rs. 40,000 every month.
– SIPs take Rs. 30,000.

You are investing well, but with zero buffer, liquidity is weak.

? About the Car Purchase Plan

– Car is a need, especially with a small child.
– But you should not buy without down payment.
– EMI without surplus will hurt other goals.
– You can target buying a car after gold loan closure.
– This will free Rs. 40,000 per month.
– Accumulate Rs. 3–4 lakh over 8–10 months post gold loan closure.
– Then go for car with 25% down payment.
– Take shortest possible tenure and lowest interest rate.

Avoid immediate car loan. It can disrupt your long-term planning.

? Gold Loan Prepayment – Review Needed

– You are paying Rs. 40,000 monthly to prepay Rs. 3 lakh gold loan.
– Your intent is correct, as gold loan has higher interest.
– But, instead of Rs. 40,000 EMI-like prepayment, check actual interest cost.
– If tenure is short, try to close in 6 months.
– After gold loan is done, reallocate Rs. 40,000 to:

Rs. 15,000 to emergency/liquidity fund

Rs. 10,000 to buffer for any surprise expense

Rs. 15,000 to car down payment or step-up SIPs

Liquidity is more important than just fast loan repayment.

? Review of Your Mutual Funds and Strategy

– You are investing in 10 different mutual funds.
– Equal Rs. 3,000 SIP each. All with step-up feature.
– SIP split across ELSS, infra, smallcap, largecap, flexicap, tech, focused.
– Funds selected are mostly high-risk or thematic.
– No clear core portfolio.

Suggested changes:

– Reduce from 10 funds to 5–6 maximum.
– Focus on diversified equity funds.
– Avoid sectoral funds like technology or infra as core SIPs.
– Keep only 1 ELSS. Remove the other.
– Add one balanced advantage fund.
– Prefer large & flexi-cap over too many small-cap.

Too many funds cause portfolio overlap. Makes monitoring tough.

? Should You Stop SIP If Fund Underperforms?

– Don’t stop SIP based on short-term returns.
– Equity funds work over long term.
– If a fund underperforms for over 2 years, then review.
– If fund manager or strategy has changed, you can switch.
– Don't immediately withdraw capital.
– Either:

Stop SIP and redirect to a better fund

Or reduce SIP amount gradually

Let capital compound if fund shows recovery

Avoid panic exits. Take help of MFD with CFP for regular fund review.

? About Your Insurance-Linked Investments

– LIC: Rs. 10 lakh policy with Rs. 40,000 annual premium.
– SBI Smart Wealth: Rs. 1 lakh per year for 6 years.

Both are insurance-cum-investment products.

Suggested action:

– These are low return and not flexible.
– Since you already have term insurance, investment-linked policies are avoidable.
– Ask insurer for surrender value of LIC and SBI Wealth.
– If loss is low, better to surrender early.
– Redirect the future premiums to equity mutual funds.
– Your long-term returns will improve significantly.

Insurance should only protect, not invest.

? Real Estate Investments – Current and Future Scope

– You own house, 2 plots, agri land.
– None of them provide regular income.
– Plots and land are illiquid.
– No rent or farming income from them now.

Suggestions:

– Don’t buy more property.
– Don’t use these as investment anymore.
– For extra income:

Explore renting one plot temporarily

Lease agri land for cultivation with revenue share

Avoid schemes that promise fixed income from farmland

Instead, let real estate grow silently. Focus on liquid assets for income.

? Thoughts on Managed Farmland Investment

– These are risky and unregulated.
– Promoters promise high returns based on crops or plantation.
– But market prices, climate, and land issues affect income.
– Future yield of Rs. 50 lakh–1 crore is just assumption.
– You also lose liquidity and control over land.

Instead of such plans:

– Use flexi-cap or hybrid mutual funds.
– They offer better transparency and liquidity.
– If you wish passive income, opt for SWP from debt-oriented MF.
– Don’t depend on farmland schemes for regular income.

Don’t fall for promises without track record.

? Second Source of Income – Practical Ideas

– You need steady income beyond salary.
– Suggestions:

Rent a room or space if available

Freelancing or part-time skills (teaching, content writing, tech)

Weekend classes or consulting (if in IT, teaching, marketing)

Online platforms: voice-over, data work, content editing

Spouse can explore light home-based work

Don’t chase quick rich schemes. Build slow, solid income streams.

? Your Financial Freedom in 15 Years – Is It Possible?

– You have strong intent to retire early at 56.
– EPF + NPS + MFs can become main pillars.
– Real estate is illiquid, not retirement-ready asset.
– You must target Rs. 4–5 crore retirement corpus.
– Keep SIP step-up of Rs. 10,000 per year at least.
– Avoid unnecessary spending.
– Avoid buying car now on EMI.
– Reinvest all insurance-linked savings into mutual funds.
– Maintain emergency fund of Rs. 6 lakh minimum.
– Take help of Certified Financial Planner to track progress every year.

With discipline and right asset mix, 15-year goal is possible.

? Suggestions to Improve Current Monthly Planning

– Gold loan closure should be top priority in next 6 months.
– Pause car plan till this is over.
– Keep Rs. 10,000 monthly buffer in savings account.
– Recheck home expenses and make a weekly tracker.
– Avoid over-dependence on RD.
– Instead, build 3-month rolling balance for annual spends.
– Optimise SIPs by reducing to 6 funds max.
– Avoid direct funds. Go via MFD with CFP for handholding.

Cash flow clarity is more important than maximum returns.

? Finally

– You are already doing very well in many areas.
– You need few smart changes in structure.
– Avoid high-risk funds and sector bets.
– Replace poor insurance-linked products with mutual funds.
– Plan car purchase after improving cash flow.
– Don’t invest in farmland schemes with income promises.
– Aim for 15-year retirement with steady growth of SIPs.
– Build second income slowly with skill or rent.
– Keep yearly review with Certified Financial Planner to stay on track.

Right planning today will make your future secure and peaceful.

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10876 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Sep 08, 2025

Money
I am 40yrs old with below Financial condition: Savings side: NPS 10lakhs, EPF 25lakhs, Gold 10lakhs, SSY 3lakhs, PPF 1lakhs, Mutual fund 15Lakhs, Equity shares 10lakhs, Fixed Deposits 5lakhs for emergency fund. Loans side: Home loan 26 lakhs (9Lakhs cleared from Dec2022 to Aug2025), Gold loan 2.6 lakhs(2.4Lakhs cleared from Mar2025 to Aug2025) Took 1Crore Term insurance for myself, 50lakhs for my wife. Took 25lakhs health insurance for myself, wife and my daughter (4 yr old). I have a challenge on monthly salary spend planning where i seek advise on the way i am allotting the funds: Take home salary is 2.5 lakhs and no other income source and below are the spending pattern every month, 1. 50k home loan EMI 2. 46k mf sip (Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund 12K, Bhandhan Small cap fund 8k, Motilal Oswal Midcap Fund 8k, ICICI Prud technology fund 3k, Motilal Oswal Large & Mid Cap Fund 15k) with stepup option of 1k each fund yearly. - partially for kid marriage and my retirement purpose 3. 40k gold loan prepayment 4. 40k home maintenance expenses (sometimes goes to 50k to 60k based on medical or shopping or adhoc requirements for my wife or kid) - I started budgeting this 40k as well to minimize the spends but failed to minimize. 5. 15k SSY and PPF for my Kid education 6. 5k apartment maintenance 7. RD of 20K for annual requirements of 2.3lakhs consist of : a. 45k LIC premium annual requirement b. 60k term and health insurance premium annual requirement c. 30k annually for bike insurance, services and other maintenance d. 1.3lakhs for baby girl school fees ... Few Asks: 1. Want to buy Car (as baby growing and planning for car).. When to buy with my financial condition and I have no down payment, with no free cash now. 2. In the month of Nov 2025, i will get around 600000 (post tax), as retention bonus so what to do with that fund eg 1. buy car with down payment 2. invest in equity market or mutual funds, 3. add to emergency fund, 4. park under Liquid fund.. 3. Should I change my financial saving/investment strategies, please suggest as I have left with no free cashflow post the monthly commitment. 4. Suggest any changes to current plan of allocation of monthly salary and MFs selected. 5. If any one of the Mutual fund not performing, is it good to take out full capital and invest in other fund along with SIP or start fresh SIP in other funds and don't touch capital in previous fund
Ans: You are doing very well by balancing investments, insurance, and loan repayments at this stage. Clearing Rs. 9 lakhs home loan and Rs. 2.4 lakhs gold loan in just two years shows strong discipline. Your insurance cover and health cover are also very appropriate. Now, the main focus should be on optimising cash flow, preparing for near goals like car purchase, and securing future goals like retirement and child education.

» Current Cash Flow Position
– Your monthly take home is Rs. 2.5 lakhs.
– Home loan EMI is Rs. 50,000, which is within safe limit.
– MF SIP of Rs. 46,000 shows great discipline for wealth creation.
– Gold loan prepayment of Rs. 40,000 will stop soon, giving you relief.
– Household and lifestyle spends at Rs. 40,000–60,000 need better control.
– SSY and PPF for child at Rs. 15,000 is good for secured corpus.
– Recurring deposit of Rs. 20,000 for annual needs is practical.
– Apartment maintenance Rs. 5,000 is standard and unavoidable.
– After all commitments, no surplus cash is left, creating stress.

» Car Purchase Decision
– A car is a need with growing family, not a luxury now.
– Avoid buying car before clearing gold loan completely.
– Gold loan EMI of Rs. 40,000 ends by Aug 2025.
– From Sep 2025, this amount becomes free cash flow.
– With this, you can manage a car EMI comfortably.
– Do not stretch current budget for car before Aug 2025.
– In Nov 2025, you expect Rs. 6 lakhs bonus.
– Use part of bonus as down payment to reduce car loan EMI.
– Keep EMI within 15% of monthly salary for safety.

» Best Use of Nov 2025 Retention Bonus Rs. 6 Lakhs
– First priority is car down payment, around Rs. 2.5–3 lakhs.
– This will reduce EMI stress on future budget.
– Allocate Rs. 1–1.5 lakhs to emergency fund, increasing stability.
– Balance Rs. 1.5–2 lakhs can be invested in mutual funds.
– Use staggered approach if putting into equity, not lump sum.
– Parking temporarily in liquid fund is also good till allocation decided.

» Improving Monthly Budgeting
– Household expenses are currently 40k–60k, sometimes uncontrolled.
– Fix a strict limit of Rs. 40,000 for family expenses.
– Use separate account for lifestyle spends to monitor better.
– Cash or UPI tracking tools will give visibility.
– Involve your wife in budgeting, making it family teamwork.
– Small saving in lifestyle will free money for investments.

» Investment Strategy Review
– Current MF SIP is diversified but needs better allocation.
– Too many mid and small cap funds increase portfolio risk.
– Small cap and mid cap should not exceed 30% of equity allocation.
– Flexi cap and large & mid cap give more stability.
– Sectoral fund like technology should be capped at small percentage.
– Balanced allocation will give smoother returns in long term.
– Keep SIP step-up, but not beyond what cash flow allows.

» Managing LIC and Insurance Premiums
– You have Rs. 45,000 annual LIC premium.
– If this is an endowment or money-back type, returns are low.
– Such policies mix insurance with investment, which is inefficient.
– Better approach is pure term insurance for protection.
– Investments should go to mutual funds for better growth.
– Consider surrendering LIC if suitable, and reinvest in mutual funds.

» Child Education and Marriage Planning
– SSY and PPF ensure safe corpus, but limited growth.
– Education costs grow faster than inflation.
– SIP in equity mutual funds must continue to match rising cost.
– Marriage goal can also be partly supported through equity mutual funds.
– Do not depend only on gold for marriage, as prices are uncertain.

» Retirement Planning
– EPF and NPS corpus together are already Rs. 35 lakhs.
– Adding SIP in mutual funds will grow this strongly over 15 years.
– PPF also adds a safe portion.
– Do not withdraw EPF or PPF for short term needs.
– Continue contributions and let compounding work.

» Emergency Fund Readiness
– You have Rs. 5 lakhs in FDs as emergency fund.
– With monthly salary Rs. 2.5 lakhs, ideal emergency fund is 6–8 lakhs.
– Add some from bonus next year to strengthen this.
– Emergency fund must remain untouched except for real emergencies.

» Handling Non-Performing Mutual Funds
– Do not exit from mutual funds due to short term underperformance.
– Equity funds need at least 5–7 years to show real results.
– Instead of taking out capital, start fresh SIP in better performing funds.
– Shift only future SIPs, keep old investments untouched.
– This avoids exit load and tax liability also.
– Review portfolio yearly with a Certified Financial Planner.

» Why Not Index Funds or Direct Funds
– Index funds are passive and cannot adapt to market changes.
– They miss opportunities where active fund managers can outperform.
– For medium and long term, active funds give better value.
– Direct funds look cheaper but lack professional review support.
– Regular funds through CFP ensure better handholding and corrections.
– This guidance avoids wrong decisions during volatile markets.

» Strengthening Financial Stability
– Avoid new loans till gold loan is cleared.
– Use retention bonus smartly across car, emergency fund, and investments.
– Keep lifestyle inflation under check, avoid overspending.
– Continue SIP with balanced allocation, reduce small cap exposure.
– Revisit LIC decision and shift to efficient investment options.
– Maintain emergency fund at safe levels.
– Review goals yearly and make adjustments.

» Finally
Your financial foundation is strong with good insurance, EPF, NPS, and mutual funds. Cash flow is tight now, but relief is coming soon after gold loan closure. Bonus in Nov 2025 will give you flexibility to buy car without stress and also strengthen emergency fund. Streamlining expenses and rebalancing mutual funds will ensure smoother journey. By keeping discipline, reviewing yearly, and avoiding emotional decisions, you will achieve child education, marriage, and retirement goals comfortably.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10876 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
Im aged 40 years and my husband is aged 48 years. We have one son aged 8 years and daughter aged 12 years. We both are in business. What should be the ideal corpus to meet their education at the age of 18 years for both children? Present business income we can save Rs.50000 pm
Ans: You are thinking early. That itself is a smart step. Many parents postpone planning and later struggle with loans. You are not in that situation. So appreciate your approach.

You asked about ideal corpus for higher education. Education cost is rising fast. So planning early avoids financial pressure later.

You have two kids. Your daughter is 12. Your son is 8. You have around six years for your daughter and around ten years for your son. With this time frame, you need a proper structured plan.

» Understanding Future Education Cost

Education inflation in India is high. It is increasing year after year. Even professional courses are becoming costly. College fees, hostel fees, books, digital tools and transportation also add cost.

You need to consider this inflation. Higher education cost will not remain at today’s value. It will grow.

So if today a standard undergraduate program costs around a few lakhs, in six to ten years the cost may go much higher. That is why estimating corpus should consider this future cost.

You don’t need exact numbers today. You need a target range to plan. A comfortable range gives clarity.

» Typical Cost Structure for Higher Education

Higher education cost depends on:

– Private or government institution
– Course type
– City or abroad option
– Duration

For engineering, medical, management or technology courses, cost goes higher. For government colleges the cost is lower but seats are limited. Private colleges are more accessible but expensive.

So planning based only on government college assumption may create funding gaps. Planning based on private college range gives safer margin.

» Suggested Corpus for Both Children

For your daughter, considering next six years gap and inflation, a target range should be higher. For your son, you have more time. So his corpus can grow better because compounding works more with time.

For a comfortable education corpus that covers most course possibilities, many families plan for a higher number. It gives flexibility to choose better college without stress.

So you can aim for a larger goal for both children like this:

– Daughter: Target a strong education fund for next six years
– Son: Target a similar or slightly higher fund for the next ten years because future costs may be higher

You may not need the whole amount if your child chooses a less expensive route. But having extra cushion gives peace.

» Your Savings Ability

You mentioned you can save Rs.50000 monthly. That is a strong saving capacity. But this saving should not go entirely to a single goal. You will also need future retirement planning, emergency fund and other life goals.

Still, a reasonable portion of this amount can be allocated towards education planning. Some families divide savings based on urgency and time horizon. Since daughter’s goal is near, she may need a more stable allocation.

Your son’s goal is long term. So his part can stay in growth asset for longer.

» Choosing the Right Investment Style

A long term goal like your son’s education needs equity exposure. Equity gives better potential for long term growth. It beats inflation better than fixed deposits.

But for your daughter, pure equity can create risk because goal is nearer. Market fluctuations may affect final corpus. So she needs a balanced asset mix.

So investment approach must be different for both.

» Asset Allocation Strategy

For your daughter with six year horizon:

– Higher allocation to a balanced type category
– Some allocation to equity through diversified categories
– Step down equity allocation in final three years

This structure protects capital in later years.

For your son with ten year horizon:

– Higher equity allocation at start
– Continue systematic investing
– Reduce risk allocation gradually closer to goal period

This helps growth and protection.

» Avoiding Wrong Investment Products

Parents often buy traditional insurance plans or children policies for education. These policies give low returns. They lock money and reduce wealth creation potential.

So avoid purely insurance based products for education goals. Insurance is separate. Investment is separate. This separation creates clarity and better growth.

If you already hold any ULIP or investment insurance product, it may not be efficient. Only if you have such policies then you may review and consider if surrender is needed and reinvest in mutual funds. If you don’t have such policies, no need to worry.

» Role of Actively Managed Mutual Funds

For long term goals, actively managed mutual funds offer better flexibility and expert management. They are designed to outperform inflation. A regular plan through a mutual fund distributor with CFP support helps with guidance. They also track your goal and give advice in volatile phases.

Direct funds look cheaper on expense ratio. But they lack advisory support. Long term investors often make emotional mistakes in direct investing. They stop SIPs or switch wrong schemes. So advisory backed investing avoids costly behaviour mistakes.

Index funds look simple and low cost. But they only follow the market. They don’t protect during corrections. There is no strategy or research. Actively managed funds adjust holdings based on market research and valuation. For life goals like education, smoother growth and strategy are needed.

So regular plan with advisory support helps you avoid unnecessary emotional decisions.

» Importance of Systematic Investing

A fixed monthly SIP gives discipline. It also benefits from market volatility. When markets fall, SIP buys more units. In rise phase, the value grows.

A structured SIP helps both goals. For daughter, SIP should shift towards low volatility funds slowly. For son, SIP can run longer in growth-oriented funds before reducing risk.

Your contribution amount may change based on future business income. But start now with whatever comfortable.

» Protecting the Goal With Insurance

Since you both are running business, income stability may fluctuate. So ensuring life security is important. Term insurance is the right option. It is low cost and high coverage.

This ensures child’s education is protected even if income stops.

Medical insurance also matters. A medical emergency should not break education savings.

» Reviewing the Plan Periodically

A fixed plan is good. But markets and life conditions change. So review once every twelve months.

Points to review:

– Are SIPs running on time?
– Is allocation suitable for goal year?
– Any need to shift from equity to safer category?
– Any tax planning advantage needed?

But avoid checking portfolio every week. Frequent checking creates stress.

» Education Goal Withdrawal Plan

As the daughter’s goal comes close:

– Stop SIP in high risk category
– Start shifting profit to debt type fund over systematic transfers
– Keep final year money in safe option like liquid category

Same formula should be applied for your son when his goal approaches.

This protects against last minute market crash.

» Emotional Side of Planning

Education is an emotional goal. Parents feel pressure to provide the best. But planning removes fear.

Saving consistently gives confidence. Having a plan helps avoid panic decisions. It also brings clarity of future expense.

This planning sets financial discipline for your children as well.

» Taxation Factors

When redeeming funds for education, tax rules will apply. For equity fund withdrawals, long term capital gains above exemption are taxed at 12.5% as per current rules. For short term within one year, tax is higher.

For debt investments, gains are taxed as per your tax slab.

So plan the withdrawal timing to reduce tax.

Tax planning near goal year is very important.

» What You Can Do Next

– Start separate investments for each child
– Use SIP for disciplined investing
– Choose growth-oriented asset for son
– Choose balanced and phased investment approach for daughter
– Review allocation yearly
– Protect the goal with insurance cover

Following these steps helps achieve the target corpus smoothly.

» Finally

You are already thinking in the right direction. You have time for both goals. You also have a good saving frequency. So you can build a strong education fund without stress.

Your children’s future will be secure if you continue with a structured and disciplined plan.

Stay consistent with your savings. Make investment choices carefully. Review and adjust calmly over time.

This journey will help you reach your ideal corpus for both children.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10876 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 09, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, Regarding recent turmoils in global economic situation and trends, Trump's tariffs, relentless FII selling, should I be worried about midcap, large&midcap funds that I have in my mutual fund portfolio? I have been investing from last 4 years and want to invest for next 10 years only. And then plan to retire and move to SWP. I'm targeting a 10%-11% return eventually. And I don't want to make lower returns than FD's. Is now the time to switch from midcap, laege&midcap to conservative, large, flexi funds? Please suggest.
Ans: You have asked the right question at the right time. Many investors panic only after damage happens. You are thinking ahead. That is a strong habit.

You also have clarity about your goal, time horizon and expected returns. This mindset will help you handle market noise better.

» Current Market Sentiment and Global Events
The global economy is seeing stress. There are trade decisions, tariff announcements, and geopolitical issues. Foreign institutional investors are selling. News flow looks negative.
These events can cause short term volatility. Midcaps and small caps usually react faster during these phases. Even large caps show some stress.
But markets have seen many crises in the past. Elections, governments, conflicts, pandemics, financial crashes and tariff wars are not new events. Markets always recover over time.
Short term movements are unpredictable. Long term wealth creation depends more on patience and asset allocation.

» Your Time Horizon Matters More Than Market Noise
You have been investing for 4 years. You plan to invest for the next 10 years. That means your remaining maturity is long term.
For a 10 year goal, equity is suitable. Midcap and large and midcap funds are designed for long term investors. They are not meant for short periods.
If your time horizon is short, it is valid to worry about downside risk. But with 10 more years ahead, temporary volatility is normal and expected.
Short term fear should not drive long term decisions.

» Should You Switch to Conservative or Large Cap Now?
Switching based on panic or temporary news is not ideal. When you switch now, you lock the current lower value permanently. You also miss the recovery phase.
Large cap and flexi cap funds offer stability. But they also deliver lower growth potential during bull runs compared to midcaps.
Midcaps usually fall deeper when markets drop. But they also recover faster and often outperform in the next cycle.
Switching now may protect emotions but may reduce long term wealth creation.

» Target Return of 10% to 11% is Reasonable
Aiming for 10%-11% return with a 10 year investment horizon is realistic.
Fixed deposits now offer around 6.5% to 7.5%. After tax, the return becomes lower.
Equity funds have potential to generate better returns compared to FD over a long tenure. Midcap allocation contributes to this return potential.
So moving fully to conservative funds may reduce your ability to beat inflation comfortably.

» Impact of FII Selling
FII selling creates pressure on the market. But domestic investors including SIP flows are strong today. India is seeing strong structural growth.
Retail investors, mutual funds and systematic flows act as stabilizers.
FII selling is temporary and cyclical. It is not a permanent trend.

» Economic Slowdowns Create Opportunities
Corrections make valuations reasonable. This can benefit long term SIP investors.
During downturns, your SIP buys more units. During recovery, these units grow.
This mechanism works best in volatile categories like midcaps.
Stopping SIP or switching during dips blocks this benefit.

» Midcap Cycles Are Natural
Midcap funds move in cycles. They have phases of strong growth followed by correction. The correction phase is painful but temporary.
Every cycle contributes to future upside. Staying invested during all phases is important.
Many investors exit during downturns and enter again after markets rise. This behaviour produces lower returns than the mutual fund performance.

» Role of Portfolio Balance
Instead of exiting fully, review your asset allocation. You can hold a mix of:
– Large cap
– Flexi cap
– Midcap
– Large and midcap
This gives stability and growth potential.
Midcap should not be more than a suitable percentage for your age and risk tolerance. Since you are 36, some meaningful midcap exposure is fine.
If midcap exposure is very high, you can reduce slightly and move that portion to flexi cap or large cap funds slowly through a systematic transfer. Do not do a lump sum shift during panic.

» Behavioural Discipline Matters More Than Fund Selection
Market cycles test investor patience. Consistency in SIP and holding through declines builds wealth.
Most investors do not fail due to bad funds. They fail due to fear-based decisions.
Your approach should be systematic, not emotional.

» Do Not Compare with FD Frequently
FD gives predictable return. Equity gives volatile but higher potential return.
Comparing FD returns every time the market falls leads to wrong decisions.
FD is for safety. Equity is for growth. They serve different purposes.
Your retirement plan and SWP plan depends on growth. Only equity can provide that growth.

» Should You Change Strategy Because Retirement is 10 Years Away?
Now is not the time to exit growth segments. You are still in accumulation phase.
When you reach the last 3 years before retirement, then reducing equity exposure step by step is required.
At that stage, a glide path helps preserve gains. That time has not yet come.
So continue building wealth now.

» Market Timings and Shifts Rarely Work
Many investors try to predict markets. Most of them fail.
Switching based on news looks logical. But news and market timing rarely align.
Staying consistent with your asset allocation gives better results than frequent changes.

» Portfolio Review Approach
You can follow these steps:
– Continue SIPs in all categories
– Avoid stopping based on short term fears
– If midcap allocation is above comfort level, shift only small portion gradually
– Review allocation once in a year, not every month
This structured approach prevents emotional decisions.

» Tax Rules Matter When Switching
Switching between equity funds involves tax impact.
Short term capital gains tax is higher.
Long term capital gains above the exemption limit are taxed at 12.5%.
Switching without purpose can create avoidable tax leakage.
This reduces your compounding.

» When to Worry?
You need to reconsider only if:
– Your goal horizon becomes short
– Your risk appetite changes
– Your allocation becomes unbalanced
Not because of headlines or temporary corrections.

» Your Retirement SWP Plan
Once your accumulation phase is completed, you can shift to:
– Conservative hybrid
– Flexi cap
– Balanced allocation
This will support a smoother SWP.
But this transition should happen only closer to the retirement start date. Not now.

» SIP is Designed for Turbulent Years
SIP works best when markets are volatile. The hardest years for emotions are the most powerful for compounding.
Your long term discipline is your strategy.
Do not interrupt it.

» What You Should Do Now
– Stay invested
– Continue SIP
– Avoid panic selling
– Review allocation once a year
– Use a steady plan, not reactions
This will help you reach your target return range.

» Finally
You are on the right path. The current volatility is temporary. Your 10 year horizon gives enough time for recovery and growth.
Switching right now based on fear may reduce your future returns. Staying invested and continuing SIPs is the sensible approach.
Your goal of better return than FD is realistic. Equity can deliver that with patience.
Stay calm and systematic.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Radheshyam

Radheshyam Zanwar  |6739 Answers  |Ask -

MHT-CET, IIT-JEE, NEET-UG Expert - Answered on Dec 09, 2025

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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