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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11200 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Apr 26, 2026

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Apr 26, 2026Hindi
Money

I am 41, earning 1.6L/month, dependent family with a kid of 9 years. Home loan of 43L, emi 50k + 10 k part payment every month. SIP : 33k/month accumulated to 12 L Shares : 25 L ESOP : 10 L MF : 15 L Expense : 50 k EPF 12k/month Corporate health insurance. No term insurance, as company sponsoring 50L term insurance. Kindly guide me any improvements in the current strategy and an approach for passive income which would turn into active after the corporate career .

Ans: You have built a strong base already. Your income, savings habit, and discipline in loan repayment are very good. With some fine-tuning, you can move from “stable” to “financially independent with choice”.

» Current Financial Position – Healthy but Slightly Unbalanced

Income vs expense gap is strong. You save well.
Good mix of assets: MF + shares + ESOP + EPF
Home loan is under control with part prepayment – this is a big positive
However, risk protection and asset allocation need correction

» Risk Protection – Immediate Gap

You are depending only on company term insurance (Rs 50L)
This is risky because it stops if you change job or lose job

You should:

Take a personal term insurance of at least Rs 1.5 to 2 Cr
Keep corporate cover as backup, not primary

Health insurance:

Corporate cover is good, but add a personal family floater policy
Reason: continuity after retirement or job change

» Emergency Fund – Must Improve

You have not mentioned a clear emergency fund
Your EMI + expense is ~Rs 1 lakh/month

You should:

Maintain at least 6 months = Rs 6 lakh in liquid form
Keep in savings + liquid mutual fund

» Asset Allocation – Needs Rebalancing
Your current structure:

Shares (Rs 25L) + ESOP (Rs 10L) = high company/market risk
MF (Rs 15L) + SIP (Rs 33k/month) = good
EPF = stable

Concern:

Too much concentration in equity and ESOP
ESOP risk is double – job + investment in same company

You should:

Gradually reduce ESOP exposure over time
Move that into diversified mutual funds
Keep equity but reduce concentration risk

» Loan Strategy – Good but Balance Needed

EMI Rs 50k + Rs 10k prepayment is disciplined

But:

Do not over-prioritise loan closure at the cost of investments

Balanced approach:

Continue EMI
Reduce part payment slightly if it affects investments
Equity over long term can give better growth than loan interest saved

» Investment Strategy – Strengthen for Goals
You are investing well, but need structure:

Separate investments by goals:
Child education (9 years left)
Retirement (15–20 years)
Continue SIP but:
Increase SIP by 5–10% every year
Focus on diversified, actively managed funds
Avoid over-exposure to direct stocks unless you track regularly

» Passive Income to Active Income Transition
This is where you need clarity now (very important stage)

Phase 1 – Build Passive Income

Grow MF corpus steadily
Add some debt allocation closer to retirement
Aim for income-generating corpus

Phase 2 – Convert to Semi-Active
Choose one path based on your interest:

Financial knowledge → advisory / consulting
Skill-based → teaching / coaching / freelance
Business → small scalable service

Key idea:

Start part-time before leaving job
Build income slowly for 3–5 years

» Retirement Direction – Early Planning Advantage

You are 41, so you have time
Your discipline is your biggest strength

You should:

Define retirement age clearly (say 55 or 60)
Build a corpus that can replace at least 70–80% of income
Gradually reduce risk 5–7 years before retirement

» Tax Efficiency Awareness

Continue using EPF as safe component
For mutual funds:
Hold long term to benefit from lower tax (above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%)
Avoid frequent churning

» Finally

Protect first (term + health insurance)
Build emergency fund
Reduce ESOP concentration risk
Keep investing consistently and increase yearly
Start building second income stream now, not later

If you follow this path, your shift from salary income to independent income will be smooth and stress-free.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11200 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Money
Hi I am 35 yrs old. My net salary is 2.4 lakh monthly. I want passive income after 58 age 1.5 lakh monthly. Can you advise changes in current plans if any. Sip 40k mtly 10lkh balance, nps 1 lakh yrly, fd 12 lakh, apy 12k yrly, EPF 20k mtly 10 lakh balance, ppf 3 lakh yrly 12 lakh balance, lic premium 1.5 lakh yrly 2013 onwards. Home loan outstanding 22 lakh with emi 28k.
Ans: . You are saving regularly and have built a strong base. Let’s now analyse your current structure and give a full 360-degree plan to reach your goal of Rs 1.5 lakh monthly passive income after age 58.

? Income, EMI and Surplus Calculation

– Net salary is Rs 2.4 lakh monthly.
– EMI for home loan is Rs 28,000 per month.
– After EMI, you are left with Rs 2.12 lakh.
– You invest around Rs 75,000 to Rs 80,000 monthly.
– You still have good surplus every month.

– This can be used to strengthen long-term goals.

? Review of Existing Investments

SIP: Rs 40,000 per month. Balance is Rs 10 lakh.

EPF: Rs 20,000 monthly. Corpus is Rs 10 lakh.

PPF: Rs 3 lakh per year. Corpus is Rs 12 lakh.

NPS: Rs 1 lakh yearly. Current balance not stated.

APY: Rs 12,000 per year.

FD: Rs 12 lakh.

LIC Policy: Rs 1.5 lakh per year since 2013.

– You have a well-diversified mix, which is good.
– But few investments need correction and adjustment.

? Review of LIC Policy

– You are paying Rs 1.5 lakh yearly since 2013.
– This is 12 years now. Total premium paid is around Rs 18 lakh.

– Such policies offer low returns. Typically 4% to 5% only.
– They mix insurance and investment. That is inefficient.

– Suggest you stop future premiums immediately.
– Surrender if surrender value is available now.
– Reinvest that amount in mutual funds through a Certified Financial Planner.

– A regular plan through MFD with CFP support offers guidance and review.
– Direct plan lacks monitoring and goal-based support.

? SIP Portfolio Assessment

– Rs 40,000 monthly SIP is a great habit.
– You are already building a strong retirement corpus.
– Continue these SIPs for the next 23 years without fail.

– Increase SIPs by 10% every year as income grows.
– Equity mutual funds give compounding benefit over time.

– Avoid index funds. They mirror the market, offer no flexibility.
– Actively managed funds perform better over the long term.

? EPF and PPF Role in Retirement

– EPF and PPF give safety and tax-free maturity.
– EPF also offers retirement stability and monthly interest.
– PPF gives long-term safety with lock-in.

– Continue both regularly. Don’t stop them.
– Combined, they will support the debt portion of retirement corpus.

? NPS and APY Analysis

– NPS is tax efficient and useful for retirement.
– However, its withdrawal rules are strict.
– You can withdraw only 60% at retirement.
– Remaining 40% must go to annuity.

– Annuity gives very poor returns post-retirement.
– Still, continue with minimum contributions to NPS.

– Avoid increasing allocation to NPS.
– Invest more in mutual funds instead.

– APY is a small pension scheme.
– It will give very limited benefit.
– Don’t depend on it for your retirement.

? FD Positioning in Portfolio

– You have Rs 12 lakh in FD.
– Keep Rs 4 lakh to Rs 5 lakh as emergency fund.
– Remaining can be moved to better performing options.

– FDs give low returns and are fully taxable.
– Shift the rest to short-term or hybrid mutual funds.

? Home Loan Strategy

– Outstanding loan is Rs 22 lakh. EMI is Rs 28,000.
– It is affordable within your income.
– No urgent need to prepay fully now.

– You can part-pay small amounts yearly.
– Avoid using retirement funds to close this.

– After 5 to 6 years, when the balance is below Rs 10 lakh, consider closing it.

? Target Corpus Needed for Retirement

– You want Rs 1.5 lakh monthly passive income.
– That’s Rs 18 lakh annually.
– You’ll retire at age 58. So, 23 years left.

– Considering inflation and post-retirement life of 30+ years,
– You will need a corpus of around Rs 4 crore to Rs 4.5 crore.
– This must be built by age 58.

– Your current investments are good, but more is needed.

? Suggested Changes in Monthly Allocation

– Continue Rs 40,000 monthly SIP.
– Increase by Rs 5,000 yearly for 5 years.
– Shift LIC premium amount of Rs 1.5 lakh yearly to mutual funds.
– That gives you Rs 12,500 more per month to invest.

– Review the FD and shift surplus above emergency need into hybrid funds.
– Keep EPF and PPF contributions steady.
– Avoid increasing NPS or APY contribution.

? Insurance Planning

– Ensure you have term insurance of at least Rs 1 crore now.
– Increase to Rs 2 crore once you have kids.

– Don’t buy ULIPs or endowment plans again.
– Keep insurance and investment separate always.

– Health insurance should be at least Rs 10 lakh family floater.
– Increase it as medical costs rise.

? How to Reach Rs 1.5 Lakh Passive Income Post-Retirement

– Build a corpus of Rs 4.5 crore over 23 years.
– Equity mutual funds will create the growth portion.
– EPF and PPF will create the safety portion.
– After retirement, split the corpus into growth and withdrawal buckets.

– Use SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) from debt mutual funds.
– Withdraw smartly each year to save tax.

– LTCG on equity mutual funds above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
– STCG taxed at 20%.
– Debt mutual funds taxed as per your slab.
– Plan redemptions carefully with tax in mind.

? Asset Allocation Suggestion

60% equity mutual funds.

30% debt (PPF, EPF, hybrid mutual funds).

10% liquid/emergency corpus.

– Review every year. Rebalance as required.
– Reduce equity portion slowly 5 years before retirement.
– Move to hybrid and debt for withdrawal safety.

? Role of Certified Financial Planner

– A Certified Financial Planner helps track your goal.
– They adjust your SIPs based on inflation and corpus growth.
– They help review underperforming funds.

– Regular plans through MFD + CFP will give you peace of mind.
– Direct plans don’t offer goal-based support or timely reviews.

? Final Insights

– You are saving well and are highly disciplined.
– But continue SIPs with rising amounts.
– Don’t hold LIC policy any further. Surrender and reinvest.

– Don’t increase NPS contribution. Use mutual funds for flexibility.
– Don’t add more to APY or FDs.
– Do not invest in index funds. They underperform and lack personalisation.

– Build a corpus of Rs 4.5 crore by age 58.
– Review your plan every year with a Certified Financial Planner.
– You are on the right track. Stay consistent and focused.

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

..Read more

Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |628 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Sep 19, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Sep 15, 2025Hindi
Money
Hello, i am 33 years old, i have in hand salary of about 85K per month and i dont pay any rent from pocket as it has been taken care of. I have NPS savings and monthly contribution going on since beging of my job and it has been 11L so far and 10+10/ month going into it on auto mode. 1 LIC taken right from my first salary which i pay 44k per year. And will mature after 25 years giving back 27L and also has 20L coverage till then. 3.60L in MF, i has bigger portfolio but had to liquidate it, due to some life and death situation of my child. Since then i have increased my group policy to 20L per year i have increased my monthly SIP to 20K This month onwards 1) flexi cap fund- 8000k 2) small cap fund- 3000K 3) index fund- 9000K . I have gold worth 15L which is kind of dead investment but keeps my lady happy so.. I have purchased a house worth 65L which is now worth 72L but i have moratorium period of 24 months to go till i havent paid anything and ROI on that is only 6% (Staff) I will be getting a passive income of about 30K in next 2 months onwards for next 30 years which i will he investigating in FD and MF through and through. I also have term cover of 1Cr for which i pay 37K per year, more 14 yrs to be paid for. What are the changes i should be making or is this path sustainable enough for my family till i retire at 60 or may be by 50?
Ans: Hi,

It is good for you to start but things do seem out of place for you. LEts take a closer look:
- NPS - on-track. Continue till retirement
- LIC - no use. It usually give only 4-5% - way less than FD. If possible surrender now and redirect the whole amount into good large cap MFs. Surrendering now will give you less loss than a bigger one after so many years.
- MF portfolio - doesn't seem too good. 9k in index fund is out of place. Connect with a professional to choose better regular funds. Direct funds might have lower expense ratio but also comes with lower returns than the guided regular funds.
- Gold - good to go
- House - good
- Passive Income - distribute equally into FD and MF
- Term Insurance - good
- Health Insurance - Minimum 20 lakhs for family
- Emergency fund - 5 lakhs in FD or liquid funds should be there

If you start investing 25000 per month into good equity MFs for 25 years with annual 10% step-up; you will get more than 10 crores at age 58 which will easily fund you forever.

Kindly 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.

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11200 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 12, 2026

Money
am 38 years old and planning to buy a high-rise apartment in Ghaziabad costing around ₹40 lakh. My current take-home salary is ₹88,000 per month. I can pay around 20% as a down payment and finance the remaining 80% through a home loan. However, after making the down payment, I will not have any emergency fund left for situations such as job loss, medical emergencies, or any other unexpected difficulties. My salary is the only source of income for paying the EMI. Therefore, I would like to know whether it would be better for me to buy the flat or invest in a 75–100 square yard plot costing around ₹15–25 lakh for future investment. Note- For the todays situation in india where inflation is increasing day by day should i buy or not?
Ans: Your concern is very practical. The biggest issue is not whether the apartment or plot gives better returns. The bigger issue is that buying the apartment will leave you with no emergency fund, while your salary is the only source for EMI payments.

» Looking at Your Financial Position

Age 38 gives you enough time to build wealth.
Monthly take-home salary of Rs.88,000 is decent.
The apartment cost of Rs.40 lakhs means you may need a home loan of around Rs.32 lakhs after the down payment.
The EMI would become a long-term commitment.
Most importantly, after the down payment, your emergency reserve becomes almost zero.

This is the point that deserves maximum attention.

» Why Emergency Fund Comes First

Job loss can happen unexpectedly.
Medical emergencies can arise without warning.
Family responsibilities may increase over time.
Home ownership also brings maintenance costs, registration expenses, interiors, and society charges.

If you exhaust all your savings for the down payment, even a small financial shock can create stress.

As a Certified Financial Planner, I generally prefer seeing at least 6 to 12 months of expenses and EMIs kept aside before taking a major loan.

» Should You Buy the Apartment Now?

If the flat is for self-occupation and you genuinely need a house for your family, buying can be considered.
However, I would not recommend proceeding if it leaves you with no emergency reserve.
A few years' delay is often better than entering home ownership with financial vulnerability.

Inflation is rising, but that alone should not force a purchase decision.

A financially strong buyer usually gets better peace of mind than a financially stretched buyer.

» What About Buying a Plot?

Since you specifically asked for a comparison, a plot generally requires lower capital commitment than the apartment you are considering.
It avoids a large EMI burden.
It allows you to preserve some liquidity.
However, plots do not generate regular income and can remain idle for long periods.

The decision should not be based purely on expected appreciation.

» Inflation and Today's Situation

Inflation is certainly increasing the cost of living.
But inflation also increases future salaries and earning potential for many professionals.
Taking a large loan without emergency reserves is a bigger risk than inflation itself.
Financial flexibility is valuable during uncertain economic periods.

» A More Balanced Approach

First build a strong emergency fund.
Ensure adequate health insurance coverage.
Keep some reserves for unforeseen expenses.
Then proceed with property purchase when the down payment does not wipe out your savings.
Avoid stretching yourself to the maximum loan eligibility offered by the bank.

» Final Insights

Based on the information provided, I would be cautious about purchasing the Rs.40 lakh apartment immediately because it leaves you without an emergency fund.
The lack of financial cushion is a bigger concern than inflation.
Strengthening your emergency reserve first can make the home purchase much safer.
Do not rush into a property decision simply because prices may rise in future.
A strong financial foundation should come before a large EMI commitment.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

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