Hello Sir, I am 37 years old. Invested in NPS 35 lakhs, PF 24 Lakh, Fd 15 L with monthly int payout, mutual fund (Lumpsum plus sip) rs.8.60L. net salary mine plus husband's 2.30 L. monthly investment 23k sip, new ppf 12.5k, 10k gold, 30k RD. Housing loan 28L, emi 42k, Car loan 11L, emi 15k. Need advice as where should we invest monthly rent of 32k pm plus 8k pm from FD payout.
Ans: You are already making consistent efforts in building wealth. At age 37, with a good income, sound asset base, and disciplined monthly savings, your current financial position shows good intent and responsibility.
Let’s assess your portfolio and suggest the best use of your surplus Rs. 40,000 per month (from rent and FD interest) while considering your goals, risk, and cash flow.
Assessment of Current Portfolio
1. NPS – Rs. 35 Lakhs
This shows disciplined retirement planning.
It has limited liquidity before retirement age.
Tax benefits are helpful now, but withdrawals have restrictions later.
It is a helpful part of retirement but cannot be your only solution.
2. Provident Fund – Rs. 24 Lakhs
It gives stable, tax-free interest (under current rules).
Best kept untouched till retirement.
Continue contributions via salary deduction.
3. Fixed Deposit – Rs. 15 Lakhs (Monthly Interest)
Monthly interest adds Rs. 8,000 to income. Useful for liquidity.
Interest is taxed as per your income slab.
Not suitable for wealth creation due to low post-tax return.
Only keep for short-term or emergency needs.
4. Mutual Funds – Rs. 8.6 Lakhs (SIP + Lumpsum)
Excellent move for long-term growth.
SIP of Rs. 23,000 monthly is good discipline.
Continue this without break.
Regular mutual funds, invested through a CFP-guided Mutual Fund Distributor (MFD), give expert help and behaviour management.
Why Regular Mutual Funds over Direct Funds:
Direct funds lack advisor support.
You may miss scheme changes, portfolio rebalancing, and risk warnings.
An MFD with CFP guidance helps you take informed steps and correct mistakes early.
Behavioural support is more valuable than 0.5% extra return from direct mode.
Why Actively Managed Funds over Index Funds:
Index funds just follow the market.
No risk management in volatile times.
Actively managed funds aim to beat the index.
With expert fund managers, they change allocation based on market conditions.
Helps avoid bad sectors, capture trends, and manage downside better.
5. PPF – New Contribution of Rs. 12,500 Monthly
Safe, tax-saving, and long lock-in.
Good for part of debt portfolio.
Keep it for long-term security.
6. Gold – Rs. 10,000 Monthly Investment
Small portion of gold is fine.
Don’t exceed 10% of total portfolio in gold.
Use for diversification, not growth.
7. Recurring Deposit – Rs. 30,000 Monthly
RD is best only for short-term goals under 2 years.
Beyond 2 years, returns fall behind inflation.
Consider shifting RD amounts gradually into mutual funds after checking short-term needs.
8. Loans: Home Loan (Rs. 28 Lakhs) and Car Loan (Rs. 11 Lakhs)
Home loan EMI of Rs. 42,000 is manageable.
Continue for tax benefits.
Car loan EMI of Rs. 15,000 eats cash flow.
Try to close it early with bonus or surplus.
Your Cash Flow Overview
Net household income: Rs. 2.30 Lakhs monthly
EMI total: Rs. 57,000
Investments: Rs. 75,500 monthly (SIP + PPF + Gold + RD)
Surplus from Rent and FD: Rs. 40,000 monthly
Your total monthly commitments: Rs. 1.72 Lakhs
Remaining for living and buffer: Rs. 58,000 monthly
This is healthy. Well done on maintaining savings discipline.
Where to Invest Rs. 40,000 Monthly Surplus
You can use this surplus for long-term wealth building, short-term planning, and debt management.
Let’s divide this into 3 parts.
A. Add to Mutual Fund SIPs – Rs. 20,000 Monthly
Invest into diversified equity mutual funds.
Prefer actively managed funds via MFD with CFP guidance.
Equity funds help you beat inflation and create wealth.
Suitable for goals 5+ years away.
Avoid sector-specific or thematic funds.
B. Emergency Corpus – Rs. 5,000 Monthly
Build 6–8 months’ expenses as liquid emergency fund.
Use liquid or ultra-short debt mutual funds (not FDs).
This fund should be easy to access, not linked to market risk.
C. Reduce Car Loan Burden – Rs. 15,000 Monthly
Use surplus to partly prepay car loan.
Car loan gives no tax benefit, and interest is high.
One-time or regular partial prepayment helps save interest.
Freeing this EMI improves monthly cash flow.
Future Goal Planning Suggestions
Start listing your major goals with timelines. For example:
Children’s education – 10–12 years ahead
Retirement corpus – 20–25 years ahead
Children’s marriage – 15 years ahead
Travel, lifestyle upgrades – mid-term goals
Now align investments to each goal.
For long-term goals, use equity mutual funds.
For mid-term goals (3–5 years), use hybrid or balanced advantage funds.
For short-term goals (under 3 years), use debt funds or liquid options.
Avoid RDs or FDs for long-term goals.
360-Degree Financial Wellness Suggestions
Here are a few action points you may review beyond investments:
1. Insurance Protection
Check if you have pure term insurance.
Coverage must be 10–15 times of annual income.
Avoid ULIPs or money-back plans. If you already hold them, consider surrender and reinvest in mutual funds.
Health insurance should be separate from employer policy.
2. Joint Will or Nomination
Review all nominations across assets: PF, NPS, mutual funds, FDs, etc.
Ensure both spouses have updated nominees.
Consider making a will to avoid future disputes.
3. Retirement Readiness
NPS and PF are building blocks.
Add more equity mutual funds for retirement.
Assess future retirement expenses.
Use inflation-adjusted goals for better clarity.
4. Tax Efficiency
Use tax-efficient funds with longer holding periods.
New LTCG rule for equity mutual funds: Gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
STCG taxed at 20% on equity.
For debt mutual funds, both LTCG and STCG taxed as per income slab.
Plan redemptions with this in mind.
Review Your Portfolio Yearly
Rebalance once a year.
Shift profit from equity to debt when goals near.
Avoid chasing best-performing funds.
Stick to your plan through market ups and downs.
Finally
You are already doing very well.
Your income, savings habits, and investments show good balance.
Now focus on simplifying and aligning each investment to your goals.
Reduce inefficient products like RDs and car loan interest.
Grow long-term wealth with equity mutual funds.
Don’t chase hot tips or switch funds often.
Stay on course with expert help from a Mutual Fund Distributor who is also a Certified Financial Planner.
This gives you clarity, control, and confidence.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment