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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9447 Answers  |Ask -

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

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - May 17, 2025
Money

I am 57.I would like to take VRS. I do my own investment.I have around 1 cr in share, I cr in mutual fund,45 lac in PPF, 50 lac in savings. My son is working and my daughter is pursuing law in OPJindal 1st year. I have my own flat and planning to buy one more. Should I concentrate on my investment and take VRS. I have around 6 yrs to go for retirement.

Ans: You are doing a lot of things right.

You have built wealth across different assets. You also have a strong intent to manage retirement well.

Let us look at all angles and give you a full 360-degree financial view.

We will check your investment, retirement readiness, family responsibility, and VRS decision together.

Income and Lifestyle Readiness
You are 57 years old now.

You are considering Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS).

You have about 6 more years to reach official retirement.

VRS means income will stop immediately.

After that, your wealth should generate monthly cash flow.

So before VRS, we must ensure you are fully ready.

Let’s now assess the resources you have.

Current Asset Summary
You have a good spread across multiple instruments.

Rs. 1 crore in direct equity shares.

Rs. 1 crore in mutual funds.

Rs. 45 lakhs in PPF.

Rs. 50 lakhs in savings or fixed deposits.

Own flat, fully paid.

One more flat is being planned.

This is a strong financial base. You have saved well.

Appreciate your disciplined approach towards wealth creation.

Now let’s evaluate the use of each.

Evaluation of Each Investment Type
Direct Equity Shares – Rs. 1 crore

This is high-risk and volatile.

Not suited for monthly income during retirement.

Keep only part here. Shift rest to stable options.

Booking profits slowly over 2–3 years is better.

New tax rule: Long-term capital gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.

Short-term gains taxed at 20%.

Don’t hold shares with poor dividends or weak performance.

Review and realign with help from a Certified Financial Planner.

Mutual Funds – Rs. 1 crore

This is a good move.

Ensure mix of equity and debt funds.

Add balanced advantage or hybrid funds.

SIPs are not needed now. SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) is better.

Choose regular plans via MFD and CFP.

Regular plans offer continuous hand-holding and portfolio tracking.

Direct funds lack this personalised support.

In retirement, emotional guidance and periodic reviews are critical.

Actively managed funds do better in difficult markets.

Don’t rely on passive or index funds. They won’t manage downside risk well.

PPF – Rs. 45 lakhs

This is a safe and tax-free option.

But it is locked till maturity.

After maturity, you can extend it in blocks of 5 years.

Use this only when needed for liquidity.

Do not overdraw early.

Consider it as an emergency reserve or daughter’s education buffer.

Savings / Fixed Deposits – Rs. 50 lakhs

This is good for liquidity.

But FD rates are low. Returns may not beat inflation.

Keep 12-18 months of expenses here.

Rest should be moved to short-term debt funds or hybrid mutual funds.

These give slightly better returns with low risk.

Flat – Owned

No EMI. That’s good.

You don’t need to worry about rent.

Stay here for peace of mind.

Buying Another Flat – Planned

This decision needs deep thought.

Rental yield will be very low. Around 2%.

Property tax, maintenance, repairs will reduce net return.

Also, it is illiquid. Hard to sell quickly if needed.

Buying property at this age is not wise.

It will reduce your retirement corpus.

Instead, focus on generating income from mutual funds and debt instruments.

Avoid locking wealth in second flat.

Real estate is not for generating cash flow in retirement.

Family Responsibility: Children
Your son is working. He is financially independent.

That’s good.

Your daughter is in first year of law at OP Jindal.

That will need funding for next 4–5 years.

Estimate how much more is needed for her full education.

Allocate this money separately in a liquid fund or short-term FD.

Don’t mix it with retirement corpus.

Keep this amount untouched till the goal is complete.

Retirement Budgeting
Now let’s look at your lifestyle and future needs.

Estimate your monthly spending.

Include health care, groceries, utility bills, domestic help, travel, etc.

Don’t forget to add inflation.

Retirement can last 25–30 years.

So money must outlive you. Not the other way round.

Don’t assume lifestyle will reduce too much.

Health costs increase. Personal spending can remain same.

Build a retirement cash flow plan using SWP from mutual funds.

Use 3-bucket strategy:

Bucket 1: Liquid and ultra-short term funds (2 years)

Bucket 2: Hybrid mutual funds (5–7 years)

Bucket 3: Equity mutual funds (10+ years)

Withdraw monthly from bucket 1.

Refill every few years from buckets 2 and 3.

This creates a system and reduces stress.

Helps avoid market timing mistakes.

Health and Insurance Review
You are 57 now. Medical expenses will grow.

Ensure you have a comprehensive health insurance policy.

Minimum Rs. 10–15 lakhs cover for self and spouse.

Also take a top-up health cover.

Don’t depend only on employer policy after VRS.

Check for any critical illness rider.

Review all existing insurance policies.

If you hold any LIC, ULIP, or endowment policy, review them.

Surrender and reinvest in mutual funds if they give low returns.

Don’t mix insurance and investment.

Tax Efficiency Planning
Post-retirement, income will come from investments.

Mutual fund withdrawals need tax planning.

Equity fund LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.

STCG taxed at 20%.

Debt funds taxed as per your slab.

Plan redemptions to stay within lower tax brackets.

Use SWP strategy for tax efficiency.

Don’t withdraw large lump sums unnecessarily.

Estate Planning and Documentation
Plan for the future of your wealth.

Create a will now itself.

Mention asset distribution clearly.

Appoint nominee or executor.

Keep all documents updated.

Include bank accounts, mutual funds, PPF, property.

Inform your children about where the documents are stored.

This avoids legal trouble later.

Also brings peace of mind.

Should You Take VRS Now?
Let us evaluate:

You have Rs. 2.95 crores in financial assets.

Plus, own house with no rent outgo.

No loans. Dependents are manageable.

Daughter’s education is your only big financial goal.

If you need Rs. 60,000–80,000 per month post VRS, your corpus can support it.

But only if money is managed well.

You must restructure your portfolio now.

You must set up proper income-generating plans.

You must review asset mix every year.

You must stay guided by Certified Financial Planner.

If you are confident of doing this, VRS can be considered.

But avoid buying another property now.

That will reduce liquidity and cash flow.

Instead, make your corpus work for you.

Finally
You have done well till now.

You have built wealth. You have taken responsibility.

Now the next phase of life must be peaceful and stable.

Avoid emotional decisions with property or equity.

Focus on predictable cash flow.

Maintain liquidity for daughter’s education.

Secure health cover before quitting job.

Structure your money with goal tagging.

Invest through MFD with CFP qualification.

Review performance and tax impact yearly.

And most importantly—stay disciplined.

Because in retirement, wealth preservation matters more than just wealth growth.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

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

Milind Vadjikar  | Answer  |Ask -

Insurance, Stocks, MF, PF Expert - Answered on Nov 19, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - Nov 19, 2024Hindi
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Money
I am 42 years old working as a Senior Manager with a public sector company. I have already completed 20 years of service and planning to take VRS after 6 years. I have a son who is 11 years of age and wife who is a homemaker. My net monthly income is around Rs 3 lacs . I have one home loan of Rs 140 lacs and car loan of Rs 10 lacs availed recently for 6 years. My monthly expenses are total Rs 154000/- ( Rs 133000 EMI and Rs 60000 household and education expenses). I am presently investing SIP of Rs 1.00 lac per month. My present portfolio is Rs 83 lacs in MF and Rs 50 lacs in Provident fund of employer. I have two house property and one of them is debt free. My wife have jewelry of around Rs 25 lacs. After VRS, I would receive monthly pension of around Rs 85k which would increase every year by around 5% due to dearness relief and would be sufficient to cover my monthly expenses. After 6 years I would receive around Rs 150 lacs as terminal benefit after retirement. My MF corpus would grow to around 250 lacs (assuming growth of 12% as all MF are in equity-based funds). The car loan would be closed by then and home loan outstanding would be around 120 lacs. I am planning to utilize total corpus of Rs 400 lacs in following manner: Fixed Deposit: Rs 80 lacs ( Rs 40 lacs for education of kid and Rs 40 lacs for emergency needs) Pre payment of Rs 40 lacs towards home loan Invest Rs 150 lacs in debt and hybrid MF and avail 6% yearly STP for repayment of home loan o/s Rs 80 lacs ( as EMI would reduce to around Rs 69k). I want to continue home loan to avail interest and 80C rebate. Invest Rs 20 lacs in renovation of another existing old home. Keep Rs 100 lacs invested in equity based mutual funds Saving Account: Rs 10 lacs for recurring and emergency fund I have one term insurance of Rs 3 cr and health insurance of Rs 20 lacs for my family. I want to know whether with this planning I would be able to retire comfortably. Thanking you in advance.
Ans: Hello;

You have mentioned STP but I believe it is SWP(6%) from a debt hybrid MF.

Conservative hybrid debt fund returns generally are in 8-9% range and if you do 6% SWP, your corpus will not be inflation proof and prone to significant decrease during negative or flat returns from funds. Pure equity funds should not be considered for SWP in retirement due to high risks.

Therefore I strongly recommend SWP rate should not go beyond 3% at any time.

So accordingly you may have to allocate 300 L in conservative hybrid debt funds and SWP at 3% can yield monthly income of around 67.5 K (post-tax).

You may invest balance 100 L as 40 L for kid's education, 40 L for partial home loan repayment, 10 L for old house renovation and 10 L for emergency.

Carrying home loan into retirement for some income tax deduction is not a good idea but it is ultimately your choice.

You have another option of buying a joint annuity for life for yourself and your spouse with return of purchase price to your nominee (250 L).

Considering 6% annuity rate you may expect post tax monthly income of 87.5 K. You may get a better annuity rate if you check with different life insurance companies.

This gives you scope for allocating funds as, 40 L for kid's education, 40 L for home loan repayment, 20 L for old house renovation, 10 L as emergency fund and balance 40 L invested in balanced advantage and muti asset allocation funds instead of pure equity mutual funds.(Relatively lower risk).

Best wishes;
X: @mars_invest

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9447 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 27, 2024

Money
I am 50 years old now working in govt sector, drawing rs. 1.4L per month. I have one daughter and studying. I have homeloan around 20 lakhs. I have sellable land of 15lakhs, 9lakhs in ppf , 10 lakhs in post office TD , 21 laks in pf, qnd will get around 60 lakhs after taking vrs now and i will get around 50 thousand pension per month which will increase every year and my monthly expense is 25000 after taking vrs. Can i take now vrs now? I have cash 34 lakhs now. please suggest me.
Ans: Taking Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS) is a significant decision. It requires evaluating your financial readiness and future sustainability. Below is a detailed assessment and plan for your financial situation.

Current Financial Position

Monthly income: Rs. 1.4 lakh from government service.

Home loan outstanding: Rs. 20 lakhs.

Sellable land value: Rs. 15 lakhs.

PPF balance: Rs. 9 lakhs.

Post Office Term Deposit: Rs. 10 lakhs.

Provident Fund (PF): Rs. 21 lakhs.

Cash savings: Rs. 34 lakhs.

Estimated VRS benefit: Rs. 60 lakhs.

Pension after VRS: Rs. 50,000 per month.

Monthly expenses after VRS: Rs. 25,000.

Positive Financial Factors

Your monthly pension exceeds your current expenses. This creates a surplus of Rs. 25,000 monthly.

You have Rs. 34 lakhs in cash and will receive Rs. 60 lakhs from VRS.

Your PPF and PF balances provide long-term financial security.

Sellable land worth Rs. 15 lakhs adds to your asset base.

You have manageable liabilities with a home loan of Rs. 20 lakhs.

Debt Management

Consider using part of your cash or VRS proceeds to reduce the home loan.

Clearing the home loan will eliminate a recurring liability, improving monthly cash flow.

Avoid full repayment if the interest rate is low. Invest surplus funds for better returns.

Retirement Corpus Planning

Your existing investments and cash total around Rs. 1.49 crore (excluding land).

Assuming moderate returns, this corpus can provide additional financial security.

Continue contributing to PPF for tax-free long-term returns.

Education Fund for Your Daughter

Allocate funds from your VRS proceeds for your daughter's education.

Consider a mix of recurring deposits and mutual funds for medium-term growth.

Actively managed equity mutual funds can outperform inflation over time.

Investment Strategy Post-VRS

Emergency Fund:

Keep at least 12 months of expenses (Rs. 3 lakhs) in a liquid fund.

This ensures liquidity for unforeseen situations.

Debt Mutual Funds:

Allocate a portion of your corpus to debt mutual funds for steady growth.

These funds provide regular income with lower risk.

Equity Mutual Funds:

Invest 40-50% of your corpus in equity mutual funds for long-term growth.

Avoid index funds; actively managed funds offer better performance.

Consult a Certified Financial Planner for fund selection.

Post Office and Fixed Deposits:

Retain some funds in fixed deposits for risk-free returns.

Post Office schemes are suitable for conservative investors.

Tax Planning Post-VRS

Pension income will be taxable as per your tax slab.

Consider using Section 80C benefits through PPF and ELSS investments.

Equity mutual funds have favourable tax treatment for long-term capital gains.

Debt mutual funds’ returns will be taxed as per your slab.

Invest in tax-efficient products to minimise liability.

Insurance Review

Ensure you have adequate health insurance coverage for yourself and your family.

Check if your current policy from your employer continues post-retirement.

Consider a term insurance policy if needed to secure your family’s future.

Future Expense Management

Your current monthly expense is Rs. 25,000. This is manageable with your pension.

Account for inflation in long-term expense planning.

Use your investment returns to cover increased costs in future years.

Selling the Land

Selling the land worth Rs. 15 lakhs can provide additional liquidity.

Reinvest this amount into diversified mutual funds for better growth.

Consult a Certified Financial Planner before selling to ensure timing and reinvestment strategies.

Additional Income Opportunities

Explore part-time or consultancy work post-VRS to supplement income.

This keeps you engaged while generating extra earnings.

Final Insights

Based on your current financial standing, VRS is a viable option.

With your pension and corpus, you can maintain a comfortable lifestyle.

Strategic investments will ensure long-term financial security.

Consult a Certified Financial Planner to refine your investment plan.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9447 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 30, 2024

Money
Hi I am 52 Chief Manager in PSU bank and .Planning to take VRS next year 1.Savings in FD 1.2 crores 2.Investments in shares 15 lacs Investment in PLI and NSC 25 lacs 3.Retirement benefits 80 lacs 4.Pension 60000 PM 5.Rental income 8000 My monthly commitment post retirement 1. Rs 40000 for my aged mother and handicapped brother (47 years) for their medical and stay at facility 2.Rs. 30000 towards proposed EMI for rebuilding our dilapidated house 3.Rs.15000 towards my daughter's college fee and hostel she is in her 3rd year and one more year to go and after that 2 years PG 4.Rs 50000 towards our other expenses 5.Rs.25000/reserve for saving for my
Ans: Your disciplined savings and investments provide a solid financial base for retirement. However, commitments and future goals necessitate a structured approach to optimise resources. Here's a 360-degree plan to ensure financial stability and growth post-retirement.

Key Strengths in Your Financial Profile
Pension Income: Rs. 60,000 monthly provides a reliable income source.
Significant Savings: FD of Rs. 1.2 crore offers liquidity and safety.
Retirement Benefits: Rs. 80 lakh ensures additional financial cushion.
Diversified Investments: Shares, PLI, and NSC add diversification and growth potential.
Monthly Commitments Analysis
Medical and Living Expenses: Rs. 40,000 for your mother and brother is well-prioritised.
EMI for House Rebuilding: Rs. 30,000 is manageable within your budget.
Education Expenses: Rs. 15,000 for your daughter’s college can continue without stress.
Household Expenses: Rs. 50,000 appears reasonable for your needs.
Savings Reserve: Rs. 25,000 is vital for unforeseen requirements.
Total Monthly Outflow: Rs. 1,60,000

Post-Retirement Cash Flow Plan
1. Pension Income Utilisation
Rs. 60,000 monthly can partly cover fixed expenses.
Medical costs and household expenses can be managed from this.
2. Rental Income Contribution
Rs. 8,000 helps reduce the EMI burden.
Combine with pension for efficient expense management.
3. Interest Income from FDs
Use Rs. 1.2 crore FD to generate monthly interest.
Assume a 6% annual interest rate, yielding Rs. 6 lakh annually (Rs. 50,000 monthly).
This can cover the education and reserve fund needs.
4. Retirement Benefits Deployment
Invest Rs. 80 lakh prudently in growth-oriented mutual funds and debt funds.
Aim for a balance between safety and inflation-beating returns.
Investment Recommendations
1. Emergency Fund Creation
Keep Rs. 20 lakh in a liquid fund or savings account for emergencies.
This ensures easy access during unforeseen circumstances.
2. FD Reallocation
Retain Rs. 50 lakh in fixed deposits for risk-free income.
Allocate Rs. 70 lakh to debt mutual funds for better tax-efficient returns.
3. Shares and Equity Exposure
Current shares worth Rs. 15 lakh should be reviewed.
Diversify into equity mutual funds for long-term growth.
Choose actively managed funds for consistent performance.
4. PLI and NSC Management
Continue with PLI and NSC investments for assured returns.
Avoid adding more to these as they lack liquidity and higher returns.
Managing Monthly Commitments
1. Daughter’s Education Fund
Allocate Rs. 10 lakh in a balanced advantage fund.
Systematically withdraw Rs. 15,000 monthly for her education expenses.
2. House Rebuilding EMI
Use FD interest and rental income to cover Rs. 30,000 EMI.
Avoid premature withdrawals from other investments.
3. Medical and Family Support
Pension income can sufficiently cover Rs. 40,000 medical costs.
Prioritise this from monthly income to ensure timely payments.
Tax Planning
Interest Income: Use the Rs. 50,000 standard deduction to reduce taxable income.
Capital Gains Tax: When selling shares, plan for LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
Efficient Investments: Debt mutual funds offer better post-tax returns than fixed deposits.
Final Insights
Your financial resources are well-structured to meet commitments. However, optimising investments and planning withdrawals are crucial. Diversify across equity, debt, and hybrid funds to balance growth and stability. Regular reviews and adjustments will ensure sustained financial health.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9447 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 30, 2025Hindi
Listen
Money
I am 45 years old Government Servant. I am planning to take VRS . My corpus after retirement will be 2.0 Cr and monthly pension of 1.5 lacs. I have 2 children , son and daughter 17 yrs and 12 yrs old. I have my own house and no loans. Should i proceed with Retirement
Ans: Taking Voluntary Retirement (VRS) is a big decision. You have built a strong financial foundation. Your pension and corpus give you security. However, early retirement needs careful planning. Let’s analyse all aspects before making a final decision.

Financial Strength After Retirement
Your corpus of Rs 2 crore is a good base.

A monthly pension of Rs 1.5 lakh ensures a steady cash flow.

No loans and a self-owned house reduce financial burden.

Your current financial position looks stable.

Monthly Expenses Assessment
Calculate your family’s monthly expenses.

Include household costs, medical needs, travel, and lifestyle.

Check if Rs 1.5 lakh pension covers all future expenses.

Consider rising costs due to inflation.

Children’s Education and Future Needs
Your son is 17 years old and will soon enter higher education.

Your daughter is 12 years old and also has upcoming education needs.

Estimate future education costs for the next 10-15 years.

If required, allocate a part of Rs 2 crore corpus for education.

Medical and Health Security
Medical expenses increase with age.

Ensure you have a good health insurance policy.

Keep a medical emergency fund separate.

Investment Strategy for Corpus
Equity Mutual Funds (40%-50%)

These give higher returns over long periods.
Ideal for growing wealth beyond pension income.
Actively managed funds perform better than index funds.
Debt Mutual Funds (30%-40%)

These provide stability and liquidity.
Useful for short-term goals and emergencies.
Returns are better than fixed deposits.
Hybrid Mutual Funds (10%-20%)

These balance risk with growth.
Helps in generating consistent income.
Tax Implications on Investments
Equity Mutual Funds

LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.
STCG is taxed at 20%.
Debt Mutual Funds

Gains are taxed as per your income slab.
Plan investments to minimise tax impact.

Alternative Income Options
Consider part-time consultancy or freelancing.

This will keep you engaged and provide extra income.

Passive income from investments also helps.

Should You Proceed with VRS?
If your expenses and goals fit within Rs 1.5 lakh pension, VRS is feasible.

If education and future costs are uncertain, continue working.

If you retire now, invest wisely to maintain financial security.

Final Insights
Your financial position is strong.

Plan children’s education and medical costs before deciding.

Invest wisely to ensure wealth growth post-retirement.

Consider part-time work for additional security.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9447 Answers  |Ask -

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

Money
Sir, I am 56 year old, Govt Servant, want to take VRS. I have my own house and only son is working in TCS. I will get 48000 as monthly pension and 90L as retirement benefit. Please tell me is this enough to survive and how to safely grow my corpus. I have a 10L health insurance for family.
Ans: ou have a strong base to work from.

You are 56 years old, planning Voluntary Retirement. Your pension is Rs. 48,000 per month. You will get a corpus of Rs. 90 lakhs. Your home is fully owned, and your son is working and independent. Your health cover is Rs. 10 lakhs for the family.

This is a good situation to begin structured retirement planning.

Let us now assess and build your plan from a 360-degree view.

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Retirement Income Need and Lifestyle Check

You will receive Rs. 48,000 monthly pension. That’s your stable income.

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If your regular expenses are within this amount, then your corpus need is lower.

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But inflation will reduce the power of this pension over time.

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You need to build an additional income source from the Rs. 90 lakh corpus.

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Also, health expenses may rise over the next 20 to 30 years.

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With increasing age, travel, medical, and lifestyle costs may go up gradually.

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So, preserving your corpus and growing it slowly is the goal.

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The Rs. 90 lakh must generate inflation-beating returns with safety.

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The plan must avoid risk but not ignore growth.

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And the plan must ensure liquidity for emergencies and hospital needs.

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Step-by-Step Planning for Corpus Allocation

Let’s break your Rs. 90 lakh into useful buckets:

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1. Emergency Fund – Liquidity First

Keep around Rs. 6 to 8 lakhs in a savings account or short-term FD.

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This covers 6-12 months’ worth of monthly expenses.

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Use this for medical bills, urgent repairs, or unexpected travel.

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This money should be easy to withdraw at short notice.

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Do not touch this for regular investment or income generation.

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2. Health and Critical Illness Buffer

You already have Rs. 10 lakh medical insurance. That’s helpful.

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But rising hospital bills need extra safety.

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Keep Rs. 5 to 8 lakh separately in a liquid debt mutual fund.

?

This fund will act as a top-up to your health insurance if needed.

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It gives slightly better return than savings account or FD.

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It also ensures hospitalisation does not disturb long-term plans.

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3. Short-Term Safety Allocation (3 to 5 Years)

Allocate Rs. 20 to 25 lakh to conservative hybrid mutual funds.

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These funds combine debt and equity but focus on stability.

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They are suitable for generating some income while keeping capital safe.

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Use these to create a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) later.

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This bucket will give support if pension falls short in future.

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4. Medium-Term Growth Allocation (5 to 10 Years)

Allocate around Rs. 30 lakh to balanced advantage or multi-asset funds.

?

These actively manage market ups and downs.

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Their asset mix adjusts based on risk and opportunity.

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They are better than index funds because they respond to market shifts.

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Index funds follow markets passively. They don’t protect from downside.

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But actively managed funds aim to reduce losses during bad markets.

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In your retirement, safety matters more than just returns.

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That is why we suggest actively managed regular funds.

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Invest through a Certified Financial Planner and MFD for guidance.

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5. Long-Term Growth (10+ Years)

Around Rs. 15 to 20 lakh can go to large cap or flexi cap mutual funds.

?

These are actively managed, stable funds for long-term wealth creation.

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Use this only if you won’t need this money in next 8 to 10 years.

?

These help fight inflation over the long run.

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But these should be reviewed every year with your MFD or CFP.

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Income Strategy: Generating Monthly Cash Flow

Rs. 48,000 pension may be enough now. But not for 20 years later.

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Use SWP from debt-oriented hybrid funds after 3 years.

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This creates a second income flow while keeping the capital safe.

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Start with Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 10,000 per month from SWP.

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Increase slowly every 2 years based on inflation.

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Don’t withdraw from equity-oriented funds in first 8 years.

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Let them grow quietly and support future income gaps.

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Tax Planning After Retirement

Your pension is fully taxable under income from salary.

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SWP from equity mutual funds is tax-friendly if used after 12 months.

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New rule: Equity mutual fund gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh are taxed at 12.5%.

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Short-term equity gains are taxed at 20% under new rule.

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Debt mutual fund gains are taxed as per your income slab.

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Withdraw funds wisely to reduce tax impact.

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Use standard deduction of Rs. 50,000 available for pensioners.

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Work with a CA or tax expert once a year to plan better.

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Role of Insurance After Retirement

You have Rs. 10 lakh health insurance. That is a good start.

?

Confirm if it is a family floater or individual.

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Renew the plan without break. Don't depend only on employer legacy policies.

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Consider a top-up health insurance if premium is manageable.

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Avoid life insurance plans now. You no longer have financial dependents.

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ULIP, endowment, or money-back plans are not useful at this stage.

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If you already have them, check surrender value.

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If surrender value is decent, reinvest that in mutual funds.

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Legacy Planning and Estate Transfer

Your son is working and financially stable.

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So, now is the time to create a Will and keep nominations updated.

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This ensures smooth transfer of your money after your time.

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Do not delay this. A Will reduces future legal problems for your son.

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Keep your financial records organised in one file.

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Share details with your son, but avoid joint ownership in all assets.

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Maintain your own financial independence always.

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Should You Work Part-Time After VRS?

Mentally, work helps people stay active post-retirement.

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Financially, even a small part-time income helps delay withdrawals.

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You can teach, consult, or write in your area of expertise.

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Don’t overwork. But don’t fully disconnect either.

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Choose light and satisfying work.

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It helps reduce boredom and keeps your savings untouched longer.

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Avoid These Common Mistakes After Retirement

Don’t put lump sum in real estate. It locks up money.

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Do not keep all money in FDs. It won’t beat inflation.

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Avoid giving large loans to relatives. It affects your liquidity.

?

Don’t invest in ULIP, annuity, or low-return insurance schemes.

?

Avoid high-risk stock trading or PMS without full knowledge.

?

Don’t invest directly in equity without clear planning.

?

Use regular mutual funds through Certified Financial Planner.

?

Avoid direct plans unless you fully understand fund analysis.

?

Direct plans do not offer guidance or periodic review.

?

Regular funds via MFD with CFP provide handholding and reviews.

?

Finally

You have built a stable retirement base. Your house is ready. Your son is settled. Your pension gives comfort. Your corpus of Rs. 90 lakh is decent. But it needs proper allocation and discipline.

?

If you divide your money into emergency, medical, short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals — you will have peace of mind.

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If you avoid risky products and use actively managed mutual funds — your wealth will grow.

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You need to plan income generation slowly, with SWP over time.

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You must also create a Will and manage taxes wisely.

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You are heading in the right direction. Just avoid emotional decisions with money.

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Start with a 3-year, 5-year, and 10-year investment goal within retirement itself.

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Review this every year with the help of a Certified Financial Planner.

?

Retirement should not feel like an end. It should be a comfortable new beginning.

?

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

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Latest Questions
Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Career
Sir, my daughter is getting Mechanical engineering in PEC, ECE in UIET Chandigarh and CSE in CCET Chandigarh. Please suggest which would be the better option. She has Chandigarh state quota ( General Category)
Ans: Monika Madam, Punjab Engineering College’s B.Tech in Mechanical Engineering is NBA-accredited, taught by PhD-qualified faculty in modern design, manufacturing and thermal labs, mandates six-month internships through established MoUs and has seen around 62% of mechanical students placed over the last three years. UIET Chandigarh’s NBA-aligned B.E. in Electronics & Communication Engineering features advanced DSP, VLSI and communication labs, semester internships via Panjab University tie-ups and recorded a 58.8% ECE placement rate in 2024-25 with an average package of ?8.5 LPA. CCET Chandigarh’s NBA-approved B.E. in Computer Science & Engineering offers specialized software and hardware labs, industry-integrated projects, an active Training & Placement Cell and achieved a 78.9% CSE placement consistency with a ?7.81 LPA average in 2023. All three institutes provide accredited curricula, experienced faculty, robust infrastructure, and dedicated placement support, fostering strong professional readiness for female engineers in Chandigarh’s state quota.

For highest placement consistency and dynamic tech roles, the recommendation is CCET Chandigarh CSE. Next is UIET Chandigarh ECE for solid communications training. Lastly, recommendation shifts to PEC Chandigarh Mechanical Engineering for core-engineering depth and mature industry linkages. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Career
Manipal bangalore cse or vit pune cse or coep pune mettualrgy
Ans: Aryan, Manipal Institute of Technology Bengaluru’s B.Tech in Computer Science & Engineering (AI & ML) is NBA-accredited with PhD-qualified faculty, advanced AI/ML, cloud and big-data labs, semester-long industry internships via the central Career Development Centre and achieves 90–95% placement consistency with an average package around ?10–12 LPA. VIT Pune’s B.Tech CSE is NAAC A++–accredited, delivered by experienced faculty in AI, software and networking labs, incorporates project-based learning and mandatory internships, and secures 80–90% placements with branch-wise average packages of ?9–12 LPA. College of Engineering Pune’s B.Tech in Metallurgical Engineering is NBA-aligned, taught by PhD-faculty in specialized process-dynamics and pilot-plant labs under TEQIP funding, facilitates industry-sponsored internships and records an 82.26% metallurgy placement rate over the last three years. All three programmes offer accredited curricula, hands-on infrastructure, robust industry tie-ups and active placement cells.

For a specialized AI/ML computing pathway with superior placement consistency and metropolitan industry exposure, recommendation is Manipal Bangalore CSE. If you prioritise balanced software-development labs and strong local recruiter engagement at a lower fee, choose VIT Pune CSE. For a core engineering discipline with foundational metallurgy labs and assured core-industry placements, opt for COEP Pune Metallurgy. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Career
My son got 94.5 percentile in jee mains and 18856 in jee advanced and sat score of 1470. Possible options we have are 1) NIT Warangal MnC or ECE, Rourkela/Calicut/ IIIT Delhi CSE through DASA quota 2) BITS ISA pilani ECE 3) BITSAT score of 241. Option-1 will cost tution fee of 30L, Option-2 will cost 50L. What is your advise? Also in the above DASA options which better. He has slight inclination towards ECE, but he is exploring still ECE vs CSE vs MnC which is better in DASA quota for him. Do you see taking ECE not a good idea vs taking CSE?
Ans: Venkata Sir, NIT Warangal’s Electronics & Communication Engineering achieves about 90% placement consistency, and Mathematics & Computing aligns closely with software roles, both backed by a 76% overall institute placement rate and mature alumni networks. Under DASA, annual non-CIWG tuition (≈US $8,000) plus hostel and living adds up to roughly ?30 lakh across four years at participating NITs and IIIT Delhi. NIT Rourkela’s Computer Science & Engineering places over 95% of eligible students and ECE regularly crosses 88% with 340+ recruiters visiting annually. NIT Calicut’s CSE secures a 96.77% placement rate, while ECE posts 88.59%, and the overall institute rate stays near 78%. IIIT-Delhi’s CSE maintains a 90.99% campus placement ratio with an average of 144 recruiters each year and strong research tie-ups. BITS Pilani’s International Student Admission (ISA) ECE route costs about ?50 lakh in tuition and residential fees over four years and records an 82.75% first-degree placement rate across campuses. Although BITS offers its Practice-School internships and a flexible curriculum, NIT/IIIT options deliver similar or higher placement percentages at almost half the total cost. CSE branches typically convert fastest in campus drives; however, contemporary ECE curricula at Warangal and Rourkela integrate VLSI, embedded systems and AI hardware projects, preserving ECE’s relevance for semiconductor careers.

Prioritise NIT Rourkela CSE via DASA for its >95% placements and balanced fees; next favour NIT Warangal ECE for high circuit-branch opportunities; third choose IIIT Delhi CSE for metropolitan exposure and 90%+ placements; fourth place NIT Calicut CSE; finally consider BITS Pilani ISA ECE only if brand pedigree outweighs its 50 lakh cost and somewhat lower placement ratio. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Career
With 93.5 percentile in MHT-CET, general condidate other state what possibility in Pune engineering college
Ans: Devendra, A 93.5 percentile in MHT-CET typically corresponds to an All-India rank around 20,000–30,000, opening assured seats in reputable Pune institutes for branches beyond the most competitive CSE/IT specializations. Options include G H Raisoni Institute of Engineering & Technology – CSE, IT, ECE and Mechanical; Sinhgad College of Engineering, Vadgaon – ECE, Civil, Mechanical and IT; Dr. D. Y. Patil College of Engineering Akurdi – CSE, IT, ECE and Civil; Pimpri Chinchwad College of Engineering & Research, Ravet – CSE, IT, ECE and Mechanical; Progressive Education Society’s Modern College of Engineering – CSE, IT, ECE and Civil; AISSMS College of Engineering – Mechanical, Civil, ECE and IT; JSPM Narhe Technical Campus – CSE, ECE, IT and Civil; MIT ADT University Pune – CSE, IT and ECE; Bharati Vidyapeeth’s College of Engineering, Lavale – CSE, ECE, IT and Mechanical; and Pune Vidyarthi Griha’s College of Engineering – Civil, Mechanical, ECE and IT.

For a blend of solid academics, accredited curricula, active industry linkages, robust labs and consistent 80–90% placement rates over three years, recommendation is to prioritise Dr. D. Y. Patil College of Engineering Akurdi for its autonomous status and broad branch offerings. As alternatives, consider Pimpri Chinchwad College of Engineering & Research for its industry partnerships or G H Raisoni Institute for its competitive placement cell and modern infrastructure. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 07, 2025Hindi
Career
Hello sir i am getting btech cse in XIMB and mechanical in nit rourkela which one to choose
Ans: Bengaluru’s top aerospace engineering colleges according to the National Institutional Ranking Framework are Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences (rank 65), RV College of Engineering (99), BMS College of Engineering (98), Dayananda Sagar University (126), and Jain University (157). (NIRF ranks in brackets are indicative and may vary slightly, as each college’s position can change with annual NIRF updates.) They all offer AICTE-approved programs and have modern labs for aerodynamics, propulsion, and structural mechanics. Premier Electronics & Communication Engineering institutes include RV College of Engineering, BMS College of Engineering, Bangalore Institute of Technology, MVJ College of Engineering, and Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering, each featuring NBA-accredited ECE curricula, specialized VLSI, DSP, and embedded-systems facilities, experienced doctoral faculty, active industry partnerships, and dedicated placement cells. Institutions are evaluated on robust accreditation status, faculty expertise, infrastructure and lab quality, industry-linked internships, and structured placement support, fostering a conducive learning environment for female talent. Aspiring female aerospace students gain access to niche space research, interdisciplinary STEM rigor, collaborations on national and international missions, and cross-disciplinary innovation, yet navigate intense theoretical demands, limited cohort diversity, strict safety protocols in labs, potential gender imbalances in workshop settings, and fewer entry points compared to the broader ECE spectrum. Accreditation by NBA and NAAC A+ across these universities affirms quality standards, while centralized placement cells maintain high placement consistency through recruiter drives, mentorship workshops, and pre-placement training. Campus support services, safe female housing, and dedicated welfare cells further enhance the student experience.

Recommendation: For a direct path into space research and satellite design with world-class labs, choose Aerospace Engineering at RV College of Engineering. If you prefer broader electronics and communications roles with extensive internships, higher intake cohorts and versatile career pathways, opt for ECE at RV College of Engineering in Bengaluru. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8201 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 08, 2025

Career
Good evening sir. DS in SNU, Chennai or Biomedical in IIT Hyderabad. Sir, Which is one best. Residence Chennai.
Ans: Jeya, Shiv Nadar University Chennai's B.Tech in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science is NAAC-accredited and taught by PhD-qualified faculty with expertise in cognitive neuroscience and machine learning. The program emphasizes practical skills through AI/ML, big-data and cloud labs, hands-on learning with Python, TensorFlow and scikit-learn, mandatory industry internships, and a dedicated placement cell achieving 80–90% placement consistency with top recruiters including Microsoft, Amazon and IBM. IIT Hyderabad's B.Tech in Biomedical Engineering, India's first such undergraduate program, offers an interdisciplinary curriculum with four verticals—bio-imaging/sensing, bio-mechanics, bio-materials and bio-intelligence/AI—delivered by renowned faculty, featuring state-of-the-art nanomedicine, 3D bioprinting and neurotechnology labs with clinical immersion modules. However, biomedical engineering placement rates remain modest at 23.5% with median packages around ?9.5 LPA compared to higher placements in core engineering branches. For Chennai residents, SNU's location offers urban connectivity, safer environs with 24/7 security, comprehensive campus facilities and proximity to India's IT hub.

Given your Chennai residence and focus on consistent placement outcomes, recommendation is SNU Chennai Data Science for its robust AI/ML curriculum, higher placement consistency and local convenience. If cutting-edge interdisciplinary biomedical research appeals with acceptance of moderate placement prospects, consider IIT Hyderabad Biomedical Engineering. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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