I have a sip in Axis Tax Saver Fund having XIRR of 14%.Should I continue or exit ?
Ans: You have done very well in life till now. At age 50, you have built multiple assets across equity, debt, and fixed deposits. You also have steady rental income. Your SIP habit is a good sign of discipline. You are thinking about retirement at 55, which shows foresight. Many postpone planning, but you are being practical and proactive. That is a very strong move.
Let us now look in detail at your situation. I will cover retirement corpus need, investment strategy, children’s education, tax impact, and risk factors. This will give you a 360-degree clarity.
» Current family situation
– You are 50 years old and work in IT.
– Your wife is a homemaker.
– You earn Rs.2 lakh take-home salary monthly.
– Rental income adds Rs.60,000 monthly.
– You have two children, a daughter and a son.
– Elder daughter will finish graduation in 2026.
– Younger son is 13 years old.
» Present assets you hold
– Rs.15 lakh in fixed deposits.
– Rs.20 lakh equity portfolio.
– Rs.15,000 monthly SIP contribution.
– Rs.1 crore in PF, PPF, and NPS (balanced).
– Rs.60,000 rental income every month.
– These show a good mix of debt and equity.
– You already have a strong foundation for retirement.
» Retirement timeline and expenses
– You plan to retire at 55.
– That leaves only 5 years of active salary.
– You expect retirement expenses of Rs.1 lakh monthly today.
– This will increase due to inflation.
– Retirement may last 30 years or longer.
– Corpus must be designed to last till 85 or 90.
» Estimating retirement corpus
– Rs.1 lakh today will rise with inflation each year.
– In 10 to 12 years, monthly cost may reach Rs.2 lakh.
– After 20 years, cost may reach Rs.4 lakh.
– Corpus must cover these rising expenses comfortably.
– Rental income of Rs.60,000 will reduce some burden.
– But it cannot fully meet rising costs alone.
– So corpus must be around Rs.3 to 4 crore for safety.
» Current gap to target corpus
– You hold Rs.1.35 crore across debt, equity, and FD.
– Rental income is already helping current cash flow.
– You have 5 years to add more savings.
– With growth and fresh investments, corpus can move closer to target.
– Stronger equity focus is needed in these 5 years.
– This will balance inflation risk during retirement.
» Role of equity in your plan
– Equity is critical for beating inflation.
– Without equity, your corpus may finish early.
– Your Rs.20 lakh portfolio can grow in the next 5 years.
– Current SIP of Rs.15,000 is too small for your income level.
– You can increase SIP to Rs.50,000 or more monthly.
– Higher allocation to equity now creates stronger retirement base.
– Keep at least 30% of final corpus in equity even after retirement.
» Role of debt in your plan
– You already hold Rs.1 crore in PF, PPF, and NPS.
– Debt ensures stability and reduces volatility.
– Debt will provide steady returns, though lower than equity.
– Keep part of corpus in short-term debt for liquidity.
– Use debt portion for 3 to 5 years of expenses at retirement.
– This protects you from selling equity in market downturns.
– Balance between equity and debt is critical.
» Importance of liquidity
– Fixed deposits provide liquidity but low returns.
– Rs.15 lakh FD can be part of emergency fund.
– You should not depend fully on FDs for retirement.
– Maintain 12 months of expenses in liquid instruments.
– This avoids panic during emergencies or medical needs.
» Rental income role
– Rs.60,000 monthly rent is a strong pillar.
– It offsets a portion of retirement expenses.
– But rental income is not guaranteed forever.
– Vacancies, repairs, or legal issues may reduce income.
– Do not base entire retirement only on rental.
– Treat it as additional support, not main source.
» Children’s education planning
– Elder daughter completes graduation in 2026.
– Younger son will require college funding in 5 years.
– Education expenses should not disturb retirement corpus.
– Allocate specific funds for children separately.
– Use part of salary savings and equity growth for this.
– Avoid dipping into PF, PPF, or NPS for education.
» Health protection
– Medical costs are rising faster than normal inflation.
– Health insurance is a must before retirement.
– Review your current cover amount.
– Ensure family floater plan is strong enough.
– Medical emergencies can destroy retirement corpus otherwise.
– Health protection is as important as investment planning.
» Why not index funds
– Many think index funds are safe for retirement.
– But index funds cannot manage risks actively.
– They only copy the index blindly.
– They do not adjust during market downturns.
– Retirement planning needs active management.
– A fund manager can control downside and select better opportunities.
– Actively managed funds suit you better than passive index funds.
» Why avoid direct funds
– Some investors prefer direct funds for lower cost.
– But cost saving is very small compared to guidance.
– Wrong scheme choice can damage wealth permanently.
– With direct funds, you are left alone in decisions.
– A Certified Financial Planner gives personalised strategy.
– Regular funds through expert guidance deliver better results.
– Long-term success matters more than small cost saving.
» Tax aspects in retirement
– Equity fund gains above Rs.1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
– Short-term gains taxed at 20%.
– Debt mutual fund gains taxed as per slab.
– SWP withdrawals will also attract tax on gains.
– Rental income is fully taxable.
– FD interest is also fully taxable.
– Tax planning is as important as investment planning.
» Withdrawal strategy after retirement
– Do not withdraw money randomly from corpus.
– Use Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) for steady income.
– Keep 2 to 3 years of expenses in debt funds.
– Use debt funds for monthly income flow.
– Equity should remain invested for growth.
– Rebalance yearly to maintain equity-debt ratio.
– This ensures smooth cash flow without hurting growth.
» Behavioural discipline
– Retirement planning needs emotional control.
– Do not stop SIPs during market falls.
– Do not panic and withdraw early.
– Stick to planned allocation with patience.
– Review once a year and adjust gradually.
– Long-term consistency matters more than chasing returns.
» Final insights
– You have built a strong base with Rs.1.35 crore assets.
– With 5 years of higher equity focus, you can reach Rs.3 to 4 crore.
– Rental income will support but should not be sole reliance.
– Health insurance, children’s education, and liquidity must be secured.
– Retirement plan must combine equity, debt, and rental.
– Withdrawals must be structured through SWP.
– Regular review with a Certified Financial Planner is key.
– With discipline and focus, your retirement at 55 can be peaceful and sustainable.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment