Hello sir. I'm meghasai . I'm 28 years old.
I'm a photographer and work in couple of other professions part time. I have 75 lakh in mutual funds and stocks. 2.8 cr in Fd and bonds.
My question should i continue to invest in stocks or let the 75 lakh corpus grow .
I'm looking to renovate my house should i go for home loan or Use the funds which around 35 lakhs. Some banks say they don't provide home loan for renovation. They ask me to go for loan on property which is around 9.1 pa. One of my frnd suggested for over draft loan is that better
My monthly expenses are around 10k. How should i plan for further for retirement and family
Ans: You’ve built significant assets at a young age. That shows discipline and potential. Now let’s work through your current dilemmas—whether to continue investing in stocks, how to renovate your house, and how to plan for retirement and family goals—with a full 360-degree financial roadmap tailored to you.
Evaluating Your Existing Asset Base
You currently hold:
Rs 75 lakh in equity mutual funds and stocks
Rs 2.8 crore in fixed deposits and bonds
Monthly expenses around Rs 10,000
This gives you a total asset base of roughly Rs 3.55 crore. Your income is diversified, including part-time work and photography. That is an excellent start. With low expenses and substantial safety capital, you have strong financial freedom. Now the question is how to best allocate these assets for growth, liquidity, and future goals.
Should You Continue Investing in Stocks?
You have Rs 75 lakh in equity. A key goal is to preserve growth potential while managing risk.
Equity Exposure – Why You Should Continue With Actively Managed Funds
Equity is the best long-term engine for wealth.
Actively managed funds adjust to market cycles and protect downside.
Index funds mirror the market and don’t adjust in downturns.
Direct equity investing needs expert timing; it’s risky alone.
A CFP and MFD can guide portfolio rebalancing and prevent emotional mistakes.
Managing Risk With Equity Allocation
Keep equity exposure between 20%–30% of total assets (~Rs 70–100 crore).
This means Rs 75 lakh is fine, but do not increase much beyond that.
Invest new money via SIP into diversified equity funds, not small concentrated bets.
Rebalance annually to ensure equity stays within your comfort zone.
Diversify Within Equity
Mix large-cap, mid-cap, and diversified equity mutual funds.
Avoid too much concentration on one theme or sector.
Use regular mutual fund plans. This ensures proper guidance and higher discipline.
House Renovation Strategy – Use Cash or Borrow?
Renovation cost is estimated around Rs 35 lakh. You have 2.8 crore in liquidity. You have several financing options to consider.
Option A – Use Your Own Funds
Using Rs 35 lakh from FD or bonds avoids paying interest.
You can immediately complete renovation without dependency.
However withdrawing introduces liquidity risk and missed interest.
After renovation, you should rebuild your safety reserves gradually.
Option B – Take an Overdraft or Home Improvement Loan
Overdraft against property allows pulling funds as needed.
Interest is only charged on withdrawn amount.
Rates on OD are often lower than personal loan rates.
You retain interest-earning capacity on unused portion.
However, banks may freeze OD if property has other loans.
Option C – Home Loan for Purpose
Some banks allow project loan or second home loan.
Interest rates are lower than personal loans.
Requirement on borrower income may apply.
Not every bank offers renovation loan separately.
Which Option to Choose?
If renovating with your own funds doesn’t hurt liquidity, using your cash is simplest.
If this reduces your buffer excessively, consider OD facility on property.
Compare interest rates: OD vs home improvement loan.
Choose OD if interest cost is low and buffer remains intact.
Consult your CFP to review interest savings vs buffer risk.
Retirement and Family Planning Roadmap
You are 28 years old. You have a long horizon—32 more years till age 60. You should access this time for wealth creation with multi-goal structure.
Define Key Goals
Home renovation – immediate
Retirement corpus – 32 years away
Family planning – marriage or children, mid-term
Emergency fund – always
Goal 1: House Renovation (Near-Term)
Funded through own cash or OD, no RBI or bank EMIs
After renovation, ensure you still have 6–9 months’ expenses in liquid funds
Goal 2: Retirement Corpus (Long-Term)
You need to build a corpus that can deliver sustainable income or lump sum in 32 years.
How much should you invest now?
You have Rs 75 lakh in equity and Rs 2.8 crore in low-return assets
Convert part of your FD portfolio into growth assets with equity exposure to beat inflation
Suggested Allocation
Remain equity exposure at 25% of total assets (~Rs 1 crore in equity).
Thus, increase equity exposure gradually from current Rs 75 lakh to Rs 1 crore.
Over 32 years, equity returns compound significantly and offset inflation
Monthly Investments
Open a systematic investment plan (SIP) of Rs 50,000 in a diversified equity fund (regular plan)
Add to this from future income increments or rental earnings
Smaller SIPs are less effective over time
Asset Allocation Timeline
Maintain 65% equity, 35% debt/hybrid for long term
Rebalance annually to maintain this ratio
As retirement approaches (last 5 years), reduce equity exposure below 50%
Why Active Funds?
In 32 years, markets will face cycles
Actively managed funds adapt to downturns
Direct investing or index tracking denies you this support
Higher discipline and review via CFP and regular fund is helpful
Goal 3: Family Planning
If you plan marriage or children in 5–10 years, that is a mid-term goal.
Recommended Strategy
Build a separate corpus worth Rs 25–30 lakh
Use a mix of hybrid and short-duration debt funds
Start SIP of Rs 10,000 monthly for 8–10 years
Gradually shift to debt allocation 3 years before marriage/family plan
Keep goals separate to avoid liquidity misalignment
Your CFP can help structure separate folios for each goal and rebalance automatically.
Goal 4: Emergency Fund (Safety Foundation)
Even after spending Rs 35 lakh on renovation, maintain adequate reserves.
Ideal Emergency Fund Size
Monthly expenses are Rs 10,000 only
Target a buffer of Rs 2–3 lakh in liquid funds
Use ULTRA short or liquid mutual funds for easy access
Keep buffer only for emergencies; do not use for investing
Improving Asset Efficiency
You have large FD and bonds; they are low-yielding instruments. We must make this capital work smarter.
Phased Reallocation Plan
Let FDs mature gradually over 2–3 years
Upon maturity, reallocate funds into:
Equity (to reach 25% exposure)
Debt/hybrid funds for balance
Short-duration funds for flexibility
This keeps your portfolio growth-oriented without disrupting timeline.
Tax Considerations
Debt funds attract taxed gains; hybrid slightly less
Long-term holding reduces tax bite
Plan asset switches via a CFP to minimise tax impact
Risk and Insurance Review
As a self-employed individual, you must ensure protection against uncertainty.
Reassure Coverage
Term insurance for yourself with sufficient cover
Health insurance for you (and family if applicable)
Property insurance for your house
There's no need for ULIP, endowment, or annuity products. These are expensive and underperform. Keep insurance separate from investments.
Portfolio Review and Rebalancing Discipline
Your strategy spans 32 years, with multiple goals. Tracking is essential.
Annual Review Checklist
Rebalance asset mix (equity vs debt/hybrid)
Review progress toward renovation, retirement, and family goals
Adjust SIP amounts based on income changes
Redeploy matured FDs per plan
Check insurance coverage adequacy
Your CFP acts as a guide to keep you on track and counter emotional decisions.
Behavioral Discipline in Volatile Markets
Equity markets will fluctuate. Be prepared.
Do not panic-sell during steep corrections
Use downturns to deploy new SIPs or lumpsum expansions
Regular fund plans and CFP support protect against impulsive moves
Over time, disciplined investing outperforms short-term gains chasing
Tax Efficiency and Regulatory Updates
Your equity investments fall under new tax rules. Keep these in mind:
LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%
STCG taxed at 20%
Debt fund payouts taxed per your income slab
Timing of switches and redemptions impacts tax burden
Your CFP can plan withdrawals optimally to reduce tax incidence.
Tracking and Reporting
Set up a basic goal tracking document:
Renovation: tracked via cash or OD withdrawals
Retirement: target corpus value vs current investments
Family goals: progress toward Rs 25–30 lakh corpus
Buffer fund: maintained in liquid fund
Review this semi-annually with your CFP. Adjust strategy depending on performance, income, and changes.
Final Insights
You are at an enviable position financially. You have strong assets, low liabilities, and low expenses. The task now is to direct these assets sensibly:
Keep equity exposure at around 25% and invest via SIPs
Use Rs 35 lakh cash for renovation if buffer permits
If buffer is tight, use overdraft against property rather than personal loan
Build retirement and family funds via structured SIPs and balanced asset allocation
Phase out FDs to unlock returns and maintain solvency
Maintain emergency fund in liquid instruments
Monitor and rebalance yearly
Maintain robust insurance protection
Use CFP support regularly to guide, adapt, and manage behavioural risks
Following this structured, goal-linked roadmap ensures you can renovate your home, build a secure family future, and create lasting wealth.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment