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Purshotam

Purshotam Lal  | Answer  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Oct 25, 2025

Purshotam Lal has over 38 years of experience in investment banking, mutual funds, insurance and wealth management.
He is an Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI)-registered mutual fund distributor, an Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI)-certified insurance advisor and founder of Finphoenix Services LLP.
He holds an MBA in finance from the Faculty of Management Studies (FMS), Delhi University and a chartered financial analyst (CFA) degree. He also holds certified associate of the Indian Institute of Bankers (CAIIB), fellow of the Insurance Institute of India (FIII) and National Institute of Securities Markets (NISM) certifications.... more
Rajeev Question by Rajeev on Oct 20, 2025Hindi
Money

I am 42 years old working as Chief Manager with a public sector bank. I have recently completed 20 yrs of service and looking to take VRS after 5 years. My present assets are as follows: 1. One independent houseworth Rs 1.5 cr with home loan of Rs 50 lacs outstanding 2. One flat worth Rs 1.10 cr with home loan of Rs 42 lacs. 3. Balance in PF Rs 50 lacs, MF value Rs 90 lacs and physical gold of approx 40 lacs. I am presently investing one lac Rs per month in different SIP. I assume that after 5 years, my total portfolio would be Rs 3.4 Cr approx including MF, PF and gratutity. I will close both home loans. I will keep aside 40 lacs Rs for my son's education who would have turned 17 yrs by then. I will create FD of Rs 30 lacs and Rs 10 lacs in debt based funds as an emergency fund. I would be left with around 1.8 cr in MF fund. My present monthly expenses are around 65k. My pension would be around 90k per month at the time of VRS which would be sufficient to take care of monthly expenses including health insurance yearly premium of Rs 25k for 25 lacs+ 25 lacs top up. I am recieving around 25k as rent from flat. I want to explore country and foreign land. For this purpose, I would start SWP of around 40k per month with 6% increase every year ( from MF corpus of 1.8 cr.). I want your advise whether considering all the factors, can I comfortably retire after 5 yrs

Ans: Congratulations on being able to have such a wonderful financial discipline and very sound position you currently are in. As far as calculations are concerned for corpus after 5 years, I agree with the same. It is the decision to be taken by you as to how much is enough for your comfortable living after taking VRS after 5 Years. But again life is very uncertain and you shall still have long years ahead after your VRS age of 47. Good Luck to you.

Purshotam, CFP®, MBA, CAIIB, FIII
Certified Financial Planner
Insurance advisor
www.finphoenixinvest.com
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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Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |233 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Sep 18, 2025

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I am 41 years old. I have 2 kids below 3 years age. My monthly income is 1.50 Lacs and rental income of 60000. I have no plans except one Housing loan of 35 Lacs. I am doing 50000 Sip and have a portfolio of 20 Lacs in Mutual funds and 20 Lacs in shares and 15 Lacs shares. My monthly expenses are now Approx 60000 excluding children education. Children education estimated expenses are 3-4 lacs per annum. I am planning to retire after 5 years. At the time of retirement I will be having the following : 1. Monthly Rental income 70000 2. Monthly NPS Pension 37000 3. Fixed deposit 40-50 Lacs ( interest income 30000) 4. Mutual fund and equity portfolio of 1 crore Is it fisible to retire after 5 years ??
Ans: Dear Sir,

You are 41 years old with the following profile:

Monthly Salary: ?1.5 lakh

Rental Income: ?60,000/month

Kids: 2, both under 3 years

Housing Loan: ?35 lakh outstanding

Mutual Funds: ?20 lakh (SIP ?50,000/month)

Equity Portfolio: ?20 lakh

Fixed Deposits: ?15 lakh

Monthly Expenses: ?60,000 (excluding children’s education)

Children’s Education: Estimated ?3–4 lakh/year

Observations

Current Savings & Investments – Your investible corpus is ~?55 lakh (MF + Equity + FD). SIP of ?50k/month adds ~?30 lakh over 5 years (excluding returns).

Projected Retirement Corpus (5 years) – Assuming 10% CAGR on MF/Equity, your corpus may grow to ~?1 crore. FD interest (~?15k/month at 6–7%) adds stability.

Income at Retirement – Post-retirement, expected inflows:

Rental Income: ?70,000/month

NPS Pension: ?37,000/month

FD Interest: ?30,000/month

MF + Equity Corpus: SWP possible (~?50,000–60,000/month depending on withdrawal plan)

Total Monthly Post-Retirement Income – Approx ?2.1–2.2 lakh/month.

Expense Coverage – Your current expenses (~?60k) plus children education (~?25–30k/month average) are well within projected income.

Action Plan

1. Debt Management

Plan to repay housing loan within next 2–3 years to reduce liability and free cash flow.

2. Portfolio Allocation

Maintain 60–65% in equity (MF + stocks) for growth.

Keep 25–30% in debt (FD/NPS) for stability.

Allocate ~5–10% to gold/SGBs as inflation hedge.

Emergency fund: Maintain 12 months’ expenses in liquid funds.

3. Retirement Withdrawal Strategy

Consider Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) from MF/Equity corpus to supplement rental and pension.

Use goal-based approach for children’s education to avoid disrupting retirement corpus.

Conclusion

Based on current corpus, SIPs, rental, and NPS pension, retiring in 5 years is feasible. Key points:

Focus on clearing housing loan before retirement.

Continue disciplined SIPs for growth.

Keep children’s education funds separate.

Please consult a QPFP / MFD for detailed cash flow planning, SWP structuring, and risk assessment.

Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme related documents carefully before investing.

Best regards,
Naveenn Kummar, BE, MBA, QPFP
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered MFD
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

..Read more

Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |417 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Nov 08, 2025

Money
I am 42 years old working as Chief Manager with a public sector bank. I have recently completed 20 yrs of service and looking to take VRS after 5 years. My present assets are as follows: 1. One independent house worth Rs 1.5 cr with home loan of Rs 50 lacs outstanding 2. One flat worth Rs 1.10 cr with home loan of Rs 42 lacs. 3. Balance in PF Rs 50 lacs, MF value Rs 90 lacs and physical gold of approx 40 lacs. I am presently investing one lac Rs per month in different SIP. I assume that after 5 years, my total portfolio would be Rs 3.4 Cr approx including MF, PF and gratutity. I will close both home loans. I will keep aside 40 lacs Rs for my son's education who would have turned 17 yrs by then. I will create FD of Rs 30 lacs and Rs 10 lacs in debt based funds as an emergency fund. I would be left with around 1.8 cr in MF fund. My present monthly expenses are around 65k. My pension would be around 90k per month at the time of VRS which would be sufficient to take care of monthly expenses including health insurance yearly premium of Rs 25k for 25 lacs+ 25 lacs top up. I am recieving around 25k as rent from flat. I want to explore country and foreign land. For this purpose, I would start SWP of around 40k per month with 6% increase every year ( from MF corpus of 1.8 cr.). I want your advise whether considering all the factors, can I comfortably retire after 5 yrs. I have wife and one son only in my family.
Ans: Hi Rajeev,

Your plan and current investments seem very on the spot. Let us have a detailed look:
1. Your 2 real estates with outstanding loan - you will close loan in next 5 years. Seems easily doable. This will lessen your burden of home loan EMI.
2. PF - 50 lakhs and some gratuity as well. Collective approx. 85 lakhs. You can bifurcate this whole amount for your son's education as well as your emergency fund in FD and liquid funds. Planned right.
3. You will have around 2 crores in MFs. Well withdrawing 40k monthly to travel with 6% increase each year can be easily done. It will never exhaust your corpus. Just make sure that the MFs are invested so as to generate return of minimum 11-12% for you. You can work with a professional to design your MF assignments so that it works wrt your requirements.
4. Your monthly expenses and health insurance is taken care of by the pension post VRS.
5. Rental income from property can be invested in your mutualfund portfolio to grow it bigger.

You have covered major goals for yourself and are fully covered in terms of insurance as well. Can easily retire after 5 years.

The only thing that you can plan for is Long Term Medical Care for yourself and spouse which will take care of you in older age. Can have a dedicated 30 to 40 lakhs in aggressive mutual funds for this which will come handy post the age of 80.

Only suggestion - 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.

Let me know if you need more help.

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10870 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
I am 42 years old working as Chief Manager with a public sector bank. I have recently completed 20 yrs of service and looking to take VRS after 5 years. My present assets are as follows: 1. One independent houseworth Rs 1.5 cr with home loan of Rs 50 lacs outstanding 2. One flat worth Rs 1.10 cr with home loan of Rs 42 lacs. 3. Balance in PF Rs 50 lacs, MF value Rs 90 lacs and physical gold of approx 40 lacs. I am presently investing one lac Rs per month in different SIP. I assume that after 5 years, my total portfolio would be Rs 3.4 Cr approx including MF, PF and gratutity. I will close both home loans. I will keep aside 40 lacs Rs for my son's education who would have turned 17 yrs by then. I will create FD of Rs 30 lacs and Rs 10 lacs in debt based funds as an emergency fund. I would be left with around 1.8 cr in MF fund. My present monthly expenses are around 65k. My pension would be around 90k per month at the time of VRS which would be sufficient to take care of monthly expenses including health insurance yearly premium of Rs 25k for 25 lacs+ 25 lacs top up. I am recieving around 25k as rent from flat. I want to explore country and foreign land. For this purpose, I would start SWP of around 40k per month with 6% increase every year ( from MF corpus of 1.8 cr.). I want your advise whether considering all the factors, can I comfortably retire after 5 yrs.
Ans: Your planning attitude deserves strong appreciation. At 42, you have created a thoughtful, organised, and responsible structure for your retirement journey. You have combined discipline, vision, and practicality in every part of your plan. Your financial base is already strong, and your thinking about retiring after five years is realistic. You are not rushing, you are preparing carefully. Let’s evaluate your full situation in detail and see how comfortably you can retire and live the lifestyle you desire.

» Evaluating your present financial position

You have completed 20 years in a stable banking career and are planning for VRS after five more years. You already own two valuable real estate assets, have good savings in PF, a healthy mutual fund portfolio, and a meaningful amount of gold.

Your net asset position shows strong balance and maturity. The PF of Rs 50 lakhs, MF value of Rs 90 lakhs, and gold of Rs 40 lakhs already place you in a secure position. In addition, your disciplined SIP investment of Rs 1 lakh per month will further boost your retirement corpus.

Both houses are useful assets. However, since they carry outstanding loans, clearing them before retirement will be very important. Your plan to close both home loans before VRS is perfectly sound and must remain a top priority.

» Estimating your financial position after 5 years

You have estimated that your total investable portfolio — PF, MF, and gratuity — will reach around Rs 3.4 crore in the next five years. That projection seems logical and achievable with your present contributions and market expectations.

After allocating Rs 40 lakhs for your son’s education, Rs 30 lakhs for fixed deposits, and Rs 10 lakhs for debt funds as emergency reserve, you expect to have around Rs 1.8 crore in mutual funds for wealth generation.

This is a well-balanced plan because it secures both short-term and long-term requirements. You are keeping enough liquidity for emergencies, while ensuring that your larger portion remains in growth assets.

» Evaluating your income sources after VRS

Your plan includes multiple reliable income streams.

– You will receive a pension of about Rs 90,000 per month.
– You will get Rs 25,000 monthly rental income from your flat.
– You plan to start a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) of Rs 40,000 per month from mutual funds, with a 6% yearly increase.

This combination creates a diversified and dependable cash flow. Even if one source slows down, the others will support your expenses.

Your expected total inflow will be roughly Rs 1.55 lakh per month in the first year of retirement. Compared to your present expense level of Rs 65,000 per month, this income structure offers a wide safety margin.

» Evaluating sustainability of your retirement cash flow

Your plan for a Rs 40,000 monthly SWP with a 6% yearly increase appears reasonable. Assuming your MF corpus of Rs 1.8 crore continues to grow moderately, this withdrawal level should remain sustainable for the long term.

The increase of 6% each year will offset inflation and maintain your purchasing power. The key condition here is to keep your SWP limited to a safe withdrawal rate, not exceeding the long-term return from your MF portfolio.

You can allocate your MF corpus in a combination of equity and hybrid funds to ensure steady growth with moderate volatility. This will keep your corpus productive even as you draw a monthly income.

» Evaluating your expense structure

Your current expenses of Rs 65,000 per month are very reasonable. Even after including medical insurance premium and inflation adjustments, your total cost structure is well below your expected income during retirement.

You also have clear coverage for health through your Rs 25 lakh base policy and Rs 25 lakh top-up. This is a very strong health protection plan for a retired life.

Because you have no major liabilities after closing your home loans, your fixed monthly outflow will remain controlled. This ensures that your retirement income sources will be more than enough to cover lifestyle needs, emergencies, and travel plans.

» Analysing your home loan strategy

Clearing both home loans before your VRS is a wise move. It removes financial stress and increases cash flow flexibility.

However, while closing loans, ensure that you don’t liquidate growth assets too early. Continue the regular EMI schedule, and if possible, make small prepayments from bonuses or incentives.

By the time of VRS, once both loans are fully paid, your houses become complete assets. The rental income from one property becomes a stable monthly support, while the other gives you lifelong residential comfort.

» Evaluating your mutual fund portfolio structure

Your mutual fund value of Rs 90 lakh and SIP of Rs 1 lakh per month are major strengths. You are already maintaining a healthy habit that will continue compounding till your retirement.

After 5 years, your corpus of Rs 1.8 crore will become the engine for wealth creation even post-retirement. This corpus should not be invested in a single type of fund. You can maintain a mix of:
– Equity mutual funds for long-term growth.
– Balanced or hybrid funds for stability.
– Short-term debt or liquid funds for SWP management and emergency use.

By doing this, you ensure both safety and growth in your retirement phase.

» Importance of actively managed funds

You have already invested in mutual funds and are likely using actively managed ones. That is good. Many investors are drawn towards index funds thinking they are cheaper. But index funds only copy the market; they cannot adapt to economic or policy changes.

Actively managed funds, led by experienced fund managers, can shift allocations across sectors and protect your investments during volatile periods. Over long durations, they offer better risk-adjusted returns in India’s dynamic markets.

Hence, continue to stay with actively managed funds under the guidance of a Certified Financial Planner.

» Investing through regular plans versus direct plans

Some investors switch to direct plans thinking they save on costs. But direct plans remove expert guidance. Without a professional review, small mistakes can erode returns over time.

Regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner give you active monitoring, proper rebalancing, and regular performance assessment. The long-term advantage from expert intervention is far greater than the small cost difference.

Your portfolio of Rs 1.8 crore will need continuous supervision, especially during withdrawal years. Regular plan investments ensure that you get this professional support.

» Emergency and contingency planning

Your plan to create Rs 30 lakh FD and Rs 10 lakh in debt-based funds as an emergency reserve is excellent. It ensures instant liquidity and safety.

The FD amount can handle large one-time emergencies like medical or family requirements. The debt fund can be used for shorter-term liquidity without disturbing your main investments.

This separate emergency cushion will prevent panic withdrawals from your mutual fund corpus during market volatility. It keeps your SWP undisturbed and your retirement plan stable.

» Funding your son’s education

Setting aside Rs 40 lakh for your son’s higher education is a good and thoughtful move. You are ensuring that his future education is protected from market fluctuations or income interruptions.

Keep this education fund in a combination of short-duration debt funds and conservative hybrid funds as the goal is only five years away. Avoid equity exposure for this particular portion. This will ensure stability and guaranteed availability of funds when he starts his higher studies.

» Assessing your travel and lifestyle goals

You wish to explore both domestic and foreign destinations after VRS. That is a beautiful aspiration. It represents emotional and lifestyle fulfilment — which is equally important as financial comfort.

Your plan to fund these experiences from your SWP is absolutely fine. With Rs 40,000 per month withdrawal and 6% annual increase, you can easily meet such lifestyle goals without straining your overall financial structure.

If some years require higher travel expense, you can adjust temporarily by reducing SWP increments or using small portions of FD interest. Flexibility in cash flow is always key for smooth retired life.

» Inflation and longevity planning

At age 47, you will be retiring quite early with VRS. You may live another 35–40 years after that. So, inflation will play a strong role in your long-term cash flow.

Your plan to raise SWP every year by 6% is an excellent step against inflation. But in addition, continue to keep a part of your corpus in equity mutual funds even after retirement. That equity exposure will ensure that your overall wealth keeps growing faster than inflation over the long term.

A well-planned 60:40 ratio between equity and debt can provide both stability and growth through your retired years.

» Tax planning on withdrawals

When you start your SWP, the withdrawals from equity mutual funds will attract capital gains tax. Under the new rule, long-term capital gains above Rs 1.25 lakh in a year are taxed at 12.5%. Short-term gains are taxed at 20%.

To manage tax efficiently, plan your redemptions in such a way that you utilise the Rs 1.25 lakh annual exemption every financial year. Your Certified Financial Planner can guide you in structuring SWPs to minimise tax outflow and improve post-tax returns.

Also, the pension and rent will add to taxable income, so tax optimisation through proper structuring becomes important.

» Portfolio review and rebalancing

During the next five years, continue investing through SIPs and review once every 12 months. As you get closer to retirement, gradually shift 15–20% of your equity allocation into balanced funds or short-duration debt funds.

This phased shift will protect your accumulated corpus from sudden market drops near your VRS year. After retirement, review the portfolio every six months to ensure that growth and withdrawals remain balanced.

Do not make frequent fund changes based on short-term performance. Focus on consistency and discipline.

» Risk management through insurance

At this stage, you already have health insurance of Rs 25 lakh base + Rs 25 lakh top-up. That is excellent. Ensure that the policy continues seamlessly into retirement without any gap.

If your family depends on your income, maintain a term insurance cover until your major financial goals, like your son’s education, are fully completed. After that, you may not need large life insurance because your assets will already generate sufficient income.

» Evaluating emotional and lifestyle readiness

Financially you are almost ready for retirement. The other part is emotional readiness. Shifting from an active banking role to retired life needs mental adjustment. Your idea of exploring travel and new experiences will keep you mentally engaged and happy.

Consider learning a new hobby or a part-time passion activity post-retirement. It keeps your energy balanced and adds purpose to your free time.

» Finally

Your plan for retirement after five years looks very strong and achievable. You have a stable job, multiple income sources, disciplined investments, and clear goal-based allocation. By closing your loans, keeping emergency reserves, and maintaining proper insurance, you will secure your financial base completely.

Your pension and rent will cover regular living. Your SWP will fund your travel and lifestyle goals comfortably. You are already protecting your child’s education. With periodic reviews and proper rebalancing through a Certified Financial Planner, you can live peacefully without any financial pressure.

You are already on track to retire gracefully and explore the world with freedom and comfort. Maintain discipline, continue your SIPs, protect your corpus, and enjoy the journey ahead.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

..Read more

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Dear Sir, I did my BTech from a normal engineering college not very famous. The teaching was not great and hence i did not study well. I tried my best to learn coding including all the technologies like html,css,javascript,react js,dba,php because i wanted to be a web developer But nothing seem to enter my head except html and css. I don't understand a language which has more complexities. Is it because of my lack of experience or not devoting enough time. I am not sure. I did many courses online and tried to do diplomas also abroad which i passed somehow. I recently joined android development course because i like apps but the teaching was so fast that i could not memorize anything. There was no time to even take notes down. During the course i did assignments and understood the code because i have to pass but after the course is over i tend to forget everything. I attempted a lot of interviews. Some of them i even got but could not perform well so they let me go. Now due to the AI booming and job markets in a bad shape i am re-thinking whether to keep studying or whether its just time waste. Since 3 years i am doing labour type of jobs which does not yield anything to me for survival and to pay my expenses. I have the quest to learn everything but as soon as i sit in front of the computer i listen to music or read something else. What should i do to stay more focused? What should i do to make myself believe confident. Is there still scope of IT in todays world? Kindly advise.
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Dating, Relationships Expert - Answered on Dec 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 02, 2025Hindi
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My married ex still texts me for comfort. Because of him, I am unable to move on. He makes me feel guilty by saying he got married out of family pressure. His dad is a cardiac patient and mom is being treated for cancer. He comforts me by saying he will get separated soon and we will get married because he only loves me. We have been in a relationship for 14 years and despite everything we tried, his parents refused to accept me, so he chose to get married to someone who understands our situation. I don't know when he will separate from his wife. She knows about us too but she comes from a traditional family. She also confirmed there is no physical intimacy between them. I trust him, but is it worth losing my youth for him? Honestly, I am worried and very confused.
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I understand how difficult it is to let go of a relationship you have built from scratch, but is it really how you want to continue? It really seems to be going nowhere. His parents are already in bad health and he married someone else for their happiness. Does it seem like he will be able to leave her? So many people’s happiness and lives depend on this one decision. I think it’s about time you and your BF have a clear conversation about the same. If he can’t give a proper timeline, please try to understand his situation. But also make sure he understands yours and maybe rethink this equation. It really isn’t healthy. You deserve a love you can have wholly, and not just in pieces, and in the shadows.

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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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