Earning 1.30L/PM, current value of investment is 9L, 1 cr termplan , 10lakh mediclaim ( wife, son -14old, daughter 6 old) want 25 Lakh after 5 years and 2 cr after 15 years, plz suggest me investment structure?
Ans: You have built a strong base already. A steady monthly income of Rs 1.30 lakh, Rs 1 crore term cover, Rs 10 lakh family mediclaim, and Rs 9 lakh investments show discipline. You also have clear goals – Rs 25 lakh in 5 years and Rs 2 crore in 15 years. Let me share a complete 360-degree structure for your situation.
» Protection foundation in place
– Your Rs 1 crore term plan is very good for family safety.
– Rs 10 lakh mediclaim for family is also essential.
– At your age and stage, this insurance cover is appropriate.
– Please review term cover every 3 years as income grows.
– Increase mediclaim by top-up or super-top-up to Rs 20 lakh gradually.
– Medical inflation is high, so higher protection is better.
» Emergency reserve importance
– First build an emergency fund equal to 6 months’ expenses.
– Keep it in liquid fund or sweep-in savings account.
– This prevents you from touching investments during sudden needs.
– Emergency fund gives peace during job risk or medical need.
» Short term goal – Rs 25 lakh in 5 years
– Your target is Rs 25 lakh after 5 years.
– Current corpus of Rs 9 lakh can partly support this.
– But equity investment fully is risky in short horizon.
– Use balanced allocation of debt and equity for this goal.
– Mix of debt funds, short duration funds and moderate equity funds works.
– This gives stability and some growth to reach Rs 25 lakh.
– Avoid index funds here. They follow market blindly.
– In 5 years, index may underperform.
– Actively managed funds have experts who adjust to market.
– That helps reduce risk in short goals.
– Direct funds also not advisable.
– Regular funds through Certified Financial Planner give ongoing guidance.
– This ensures you stay on track for Rs 25 lakh.
» Long term goal – Rs 2 crore in 15 years
– This goal needs high equity exposure.
– Long horizon allows you to handle volatility.
– Equity mutual funds can compound wealth strongly over 15 years.
– Avoid index funds because they lack flexibility.
– Active managers can deliver above-index returns.
– Professional fund houses actively manage risk.
– This improves chances of achieving Rs 2 crore.
– Avoid direct funds also.
– Regular plans with Certified Financial Planner ensure handholding.
– Markets are unpredictable and guidance avoids panic exits.
– 15-year compounding with disciplined SIP will create big corpus.
– Step-up SIP every year by 10% to boost growth.
– This mirrors your rising income over time.
» Suggested allocation approach
– Short term goal allocation: 60% debt, 40% equity.
– This gives stability and growth balance.
– Long term goal allocation: 70% equity, 30% debt.
– This maximises compounding but retains safety net.
– Rebalance portfolio once a year.
– Rebalancing avoids overexposure to one asset.
– It keeps you aligned with goals.
» Importance of SIP discipline
– Invest monthly via SIPs linked to goals.
– SIP builds habit and averages cost.
– SIP avoids timing market which is impossible.
– Step-up SIP matches rising salary.
– SIP in long term goals builds wealth silently.
– Avoid stopping SIPs in bad markets.
– Continuity gives power of compounding.
» Taxation awareness
– Equity fund gains after 1 year are long-term.
– Long-term gains above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
– Short-term gains taxed at 20%.
– Debt fund gains taxed at your income slab.
– So for 5-year goal, debt side may have higher tax impact.
– But stability is more important than tax savings.
– For 15-year goal, equity gains taxation is reasonable.
– Keep this taxation in mind during withdrawals.
» Avoid distractions
– Do not mix insurance and investment.
– Avoid ULIPs or endowment plans.
– They give poor returns and less transparency.
– Keep term insurance for protection only.
– Keep mutual funds for growth only.
– Separate goals clearly for better clarity.
» Monitoring progress
– Review investments once a year with Certified Financial Planner.
– Check progress towards Rs 25 lakh and Rs 2 crore.
– Adjust SIP amount if needed.
– Shift 5-year goal funds to debt in last 2 years.
– This avoids market shock near maturity.
– Stay disciplined and avoid frequent changes.
» Role of spouse and family awareness
– Share financial plan with spouse.
– Ensure they know about term cover, mediclaim, investments.
– Keep nominee updated for all investments.
– Document all details in one place.
– This makes family secure if anything happens.
» Final insights
– You have laid a solid foundation already.
– Insurance protection is strong, just increase mediclaim gradually.
– Emergency fund must be created before investments.
– For Rs 25 lakh goal, choose debt-heavy mix.
– For Rs 2 crore goal, keep high equity exposure.
– Avoid index funds, direct funds, ULIPs or endowment.
– Regular funds through Certified Financial Planner give discipline and support.
– SIP with step-up strategy will create wealth silently.
– Rebalance annually and review goals once a year.
– In last 2 years of short goal, move to debt fully.
– This prevents risk of sudden loss.
– Keep insurance and investment separate.
– Share details with family for transparency.
– With this structured approach, your goals are realistic.
– Discipline and guidance will help you achieve both targets.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - Aug 25, 2025 | Answered on Aug 25, 2025
CURRENT
Large & Midcap 8000
Flexi 11500
Balance Fund 2000
Mid Cap 3000
Small Cap 2500
Sector fund 2000
29000
This is my current investment detail, also i have home loan balance 8.40L ( @7.45% ROI) EMI is 14500/-PM , also have equity shares of rs. 75K current , monthly home exp is 30K, and also tell me how much should i save from my salary according any earning and saving ratio.?
Ans: You are investing Rs 29,000 already and EMI is Rs 14,500. With Rs 1.30 lakh income and Rs 30,000 household spend, you still have surplus. Try saving 35–40% of income (around Rs 45,000–50,000). Continue SIPs, step-up yearly, and gradually increase allocation to long-term goal. Build emergency fund first, then add surplus into equity mutual funds through SIP for the 15-year corpus.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - Aug 27, 2025 | Answered on Aug 28, 2025
my other expense is 1.50L school fee per year, 22000/- medicaim , 30000/- termplan other house hold exp. like Elec. Gas, TV . Mobile, Maintenance is around 6000/-pm
Ans: Including school fee, mediclaim and household costs, your yearly outgo is reasonable. You can still target 35%–40% savings from salary. Keep SIPs consistent, step-up yearly, and avoid lifestyle inflation. Prioritise emergency fund, children’s education, and retirement goals.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - Aug 28, 2025 | Answered on Aug 30, 2025
sir Liquid fund profit are taxable, ? and how its work and its safe for emergency fund? and what is the process of withdrawal from it?
Ans: Yes, liquid fund profits are taxable as per your income tax slab (treated like debt funds). They are safe for emergency funds since they invest in very short-term debt instruments. Withdrawal is simple – place a redemption request online or through your fund house/app, and money usually comes to your bank account within 1 working day.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - Aug 31, 2025 | Answered on Sep 03, 2025
which is best way to create emergency fund 1. liquid fund or FDR or Saving or debt fund?
Ans: Emergency fund should focus on safety + quick access. Best choice: keep 50% in liquid fund (1-day redemption, better returns than savings) and 50% in bank FD/sweep-in savings (immediate liquidity). Avoid long-term debt funds. This mix gives safety, tax efficiency, and instant access in emergencies.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment