Home > Money > Question
Need Expert Advice?Our Gurus Can Help
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11025 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 23, 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 - Jun 22, 2025Hindi
Money

Hello Sir, I'm 36 years old, My current investment it 2.5 Lakh in PPF, EPFO 5.5 Lakh, SIP 5 lakh, ULIP 7Lakh, Invest in gold 8k monthly. Having loan of 4.5 lakhs. Monthly house hold expenses are 35k. Monthly salary 1.05 lakh. How I can build capital of 1 cr in 5-6 years.

Ans: Reviewing Your Current Financial Scenario
You are 36 years old with family-like responsibilities.

Your investable assets:
• PPF: ?2.5?lakh
• EPFO: ?5.5?lakh
• SIPs: ?5?lakh total value
• ULIP: ?7?lakh
• Gold: ?8,000 monthly

You carry a loan of ?4.5?lakh.

Monthly household expenses run ?35,000.

Your take-home salary is ?1.05?lakh.

You already have started savings in multiple areas. That is commendable.

Clarifying Your Goal and Timeline
Target: ?1?crore corpus in 5–6 years.

Time horizon is medium-short and volatile markets may impact returns.

At current savings and age, you need an aggressive but disciplined approach.

Returns of 12–15% are needed—requires strong equity allocation with risk management.

Reassessing ULIP Investment
ULIPs blend insurance and investment but come with high charges.

They lack transparency and flexibility compared to mutual funds.

Consider surrendering ULIP if no early lock-ins remain.

Redirect proceeds into actively managed mutual funds for better growth and control.

Consolidating Debt Obligations
Outstanding loan (?4.5?lakh) must be prioritised.

Check if interest rate is above 10%.

Focus on repaying loan early—within a year.

Fast repayment saves interest and frees up cash flow.

After clearing, redirect savings to SIPs.

Reducing Overall Expenses
Current expenses ?35,000 per month.

Scrutinise cost items—subscriptions, utilities etc.

Aim to reduce expenses by ?5,000 monthly.

This frees funds for either faster loan repayment or additional investments.

Enhancing Emergency Fund
You do not mention an existing emergency fund.

Aim to build at least ?2?lakh (6 months of post-expense income).

Use liquid or ultra-short debt funds for parking this reserve.

Do this in parallel with loan repayment and investment.

Restructuring Your Investment Portfolio
New asset allocation plan:

Equity mutual funds: 70%

Aggressive hybrid funds: 10%

Debt and liquid funds: 10%

Gold ETF/fund: 5%

PPF/EPFO: 5% (fixed long-term debt)

This blend supports high growth and manages volatility effectively.

Suggested Monthly SIP Structure (Post-Loan)
With your salary of ?1.05 lakh and after meeting expenses and creating an emergency buffer:

Loan EMI repayment (approx): ?15,000

Household expenses: ?35,000

Emergency fund savings: ?10,000 monthly for 20 months to accumulate ?2?lakh buffer

Remaining: ?45,000 monthly for investment

Investment SIPs:

Large/Flexi?cap equity: ?20,000

Mid?cap/small?cap equity: ?10,000

Aggressive hybrid: ?5,000

Gold ETF/fund: ?5,000

Liquid fund: ?5,000

This yields ?45,000 investment – aligned with your goals.

Managing Existing SIPs During Transition
Continue current equity SIPs until realigned allocation is achievable.

As you add new SIPs, gradually reduce high-risk small-cap SIPs to balance allocation.

Maintain a core flexi-cap and mid-cap exposure; trim others accordingly.

Deploying ULIP and Other Lump-Sum Funds
Surrender ULIP to generate a lump sum (~?7 lakh).

Redeploy into your new portfolio structure as follows:

• Equity allocation (~70% of lump): ?4.9 lakh
• Aggressive hybrid: ?70,000
• Debt/liquid: ?70,000

Use phased deployment over 3–4 months to average entry prices.

Debt Goals and Repayment Strategy
Focus on paying off the ?4.5 lakh loan quickly.

Use freed-up funds post-ULIP and expense reductions.

Once loan is cleared, reallocate EMI amount (?15,000) into SIPs.

Why Active Managed Funds Over Index Funds
Index funds mimic market with no strategic shifts.

They cannot protect capital during market downturns.

Actively managed funds adjust exposure and reduce loss.

For short horizon, safety controls are crucial.

Role of Regular Plans with CFP Guidance
Direct plans save on cost but come without analysis and monitoring.

Regular plans via CFP-backed MFD offer disciplined support.

You get help in fund selection, tax planning, rebalancing.

Mistakes are reduced; outcomes tend to improve.

Monitoring, Rebalancing & Exit Strategy
Set quarterly reviews to monitor returns and asset allocation vs. targets.

If equity run ahead of target range, switch new inflows to debt/hybrid to rebalance.

Avoid panic selling during corrections; i.e. volatility is normal.

As investment horizon shortens, gradually shift portfolio towards debt.

Tax Efficiency in This Approach
Equity LTCG (>1 year) taxed at 12.5% above ?1.25 lakh gains.

Short-term gains taxed at 20%.

Debt fund gains taxed by income slab.

Hybrid taxation depends on equity share within funds.

Use annual LTCG exemption effectively by planning redemptions.

CFP assistance helps time switch/redemption smartly.

Mid-Term Outlook and Portfolio Goals
Target 12–15% average returns from this allocation.

With ?45,000 monthly SIP and lump-sum deployment, composite returns may approach desired target.

This consistent strategy pushes you close to ?1?crore within 6 years.

Risk & Contingency Management
Absence of emergency fund makes you vulnerable—good you’re building one.

Debt repayment protects credit score and frees future cash flow.

Equity volatility will rise in short-term; hybrid & debt helps absorb shock.

Insurance status missing—verify adequacy of life and health cover quickly.

Insurance, Health and Protection Planning
You haven’t mentioned insurance.

Secure term life insurance, ideally 10–12 times your salary.

Health insurance is equally important—get a cover of ?5–10 lakh.

Premiums for these are small relative to income and essential for peace.

Financial Discipline & Behavioural Recommendations
Maintain clarity—track income, spending, and saving goals monthly.

Use separate accounts for expenses, loan EMIs, and investments.

Automate your savings and SIP flows.

Avoid impulse credit card use—carry a buffer instead.

Celebrate milestones: loan repayment, corpus growth.

Final Insights
Your ?1 crore goal in 5–6 years is ambitious but achievable given your discipline. By:

Eliminating your ULIP and redeploying proceeds into equity and hybrid funds,

Clearing your loan quickly,

Structuring SIPs in a balanced growth-focused strategy,

Building an emergency fund,

Securing insurance, and

Engaging CFP guidance for fund selection and tax planning —

You create a resilient, growth-oriented plan. With consistent effort and correct asset allocation, your target is within reach. You have built this with discipline—now structure it smartly to win.

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.
Money

You may like to see similar questions and answers below

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11025 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 09, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - Feb 28, 2024Hindi
Listen
Money
Hi ..I am 34 year old married..my monthly income is 80k now as I am in government service. I have invested already 2lakh in equity fund and sip of 2k in canara robocop bluechip MF..how to have a capital of atleast 5 CR when I will b 50
Ans: It's great that you're thinking about your financial future at such a young age. Building a corpus of 5 Crores by the time you turn 50 is an ambitious but achievable goal with careful planning and disciplined investing. Here's a plan to help you reach your target:

Increase Investment Amount: Since you're already investing in equity funds and SIPs, consider increasing your investment amount gradually as your income grows. Aim to maximize your contributions towards long-term wealth creation.
Diversify Your Portfolio: While equity funds offer the potential for high returns, diversifying your portfolio across different asset classes can help manage risk. Consider allocating a portion of your investments to debt funds, real estate, and other avenues based on your risk tolerance and financial goals.
Review and Rebalance: Regularly review your investment portfolio and rebalance it as needed to ensure it remains aligned with your financial objectives. Monitor the performance of your funds and make adjustments based on market conditions and changes in your personal circumstances.
Explore Other Investment Opportunities: Look for additional avenues to grow your wealth, such as investing in tax-saving instruments like ELSS funds, PPF, or NPS. These options offer tax benefits along with the potential for long-term capital appreciation.
Seek Professional Guidance: Consider consulting with a Certified Financial Planner who can provide personalized advice tailored to your specific financial situation and goals. They can help you create a comprehensive financial plan and guide you towards achieving your target of 5 Crores by the age of 50.
Remember, achieving your financial goals requires discipline, patience, and a long-term perspective. Stay focused on your objectives, and with the right investment strategy, you can work towards building a substantial corpus for your future.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11025 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 26, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
Hello Sir, I am 31 years old. My takehome salary is 1.4 lakh per month. I have 2 outstanding loan - 7.5 lakh (car loan) will end in next 3 years and 1.2 lakh personal loan will end in next 1 year. My investment are 3.5 lakh in MF SIP, 1.5 lakh in PPF, 5 lakh in EPF, 60K in NPS, 1.4 lakh in stocks and a RD of 7000 per month. Have family and personal health cover with topup plan covering around 40 lakh for parents and spouse. Monthly expenses stands at 50000. How can I build a capital wealth of 2 Cr or more in next 10 years.
Ans: You are 31 years old, take home salary is Rs.1.4 lakh per month.

Loans outstanding:

Car loan Rs.7.5 lakh ending in 3 years

Personal loan Rs.1.2 lakh ending in 1 year

Investments:

Rs.3.5 lakh in mutual fund SIPs

Rs.1.5 lakh in PPF

Rs.5 lakh in EPF

Rs.60,000 in NPS

Rs.1.4 lakh in stocks

RD of Rs.7,000 per month

Health cover: family and personal with top?up of Rs.40 lakh

Monthly expenses are Rs.50,000

This is a strong foundation. Portfolio shows variety. Insurance cover is good. You have clear loan timeline.

Wealth Goal
Aim: build capital of Rs.2 crore or more in next 10 years

Monthly savings and disciplined investing will be key

Target required corpus is realistic given your income and time

Gap and Resource Analysis
Current liquid investments total:

MFs: Rs.3.5 lakh

PPF: Rs.1.5 lakh

EPF: Rs.5 lakh

NPS: Rs.60,000

Stocks: Rs.1.4 lakh

RD: grows monthly

Total ~Rs.12 lakh plus monthly additions

Loan EMIs reduce investible surplus

Monthly surplus after expenses and EMIs is your growth engine

Need to calculate required monthly investment to reach goal

Loan Strategy
Personal loan ends in 1 year.

Once it ends, free up that EMI amount.

Car loan ends in 3 years.

After 3 years, that EMI also frees up

Use freed-up cash flow to invest actively

Cashflow Management
Salary: Rs.1.4 lakh

Expenses: Rs.50,000

Loans EMI need detail but assume moderate

Surplus should be channelled into investments

Manage flow to ensure savings before expenses. Automate investments early in month.

Investment Strategy Overview
Use actively managed mutual funds for growth

Avoid index funds; they lack active risk control

Index funds offer only market returns

Active funds can adapt to changing conditions

For direct vs regular plans:

Direct plans lack personalised guidance

No balance tracking, potential timing mistakes

Regular funds via MFD with CFP enable advice and reviews

No annuities recommended due to lack of flexibility

Suggested Portfolio Mix
Equity mutual funds (actively managed): ~65% initially

Debt instruments (PPF, EPF, RDs, debt funds): ~25%

Stocks and NPS: ~10%

Gradually shift equity to debt as retirement nears

Rebalance yearly to maintain desired split

Step?by?Step Plan
1. Prepay Personal Loan
Clears in 1 year

Use any bonus or extra to accelerate

Freeing up funds boosts investments

2. Increase SIPs After Loan Ends
Once loan ends, add EMI amount to SIP

Continue for car loan similarly

3. Automate Investments
Setup SIPs and RD early

Ensure all surplus is invested monthly

4. Choose Active Funds with CFP Insight
Pick diversified large?cap, mid?cap, flexi?cap active funds

Regularly re-evaluate performance

Avoid index plans due to limited management flexibility

5. Continue RD and PPF, EPF, NPS
These provide stability and tax benefit

Keep contributing to PPF and EPF annually

NPS gives retirement aligned returns

6. Stock Investments
Keep small exposure (Rs.1.4 lakh)

Avoid high concentration or speculative picks

Invest only what you are comfortable losing

Insurance and Risk Planning
You already have good health cover including parents

Ensure your term insurance covers liabilities & family needs

Use separate term insurance, not ULIPs or insurance?cum?investment

Emergency fund equal to 6 months’ expenses is essential

Progress Tracking and Review
Review portfolio annually with your CFP

Rebalance asset split yearly

Adjust SIP amounts with salary growth

Monitor performance against equities, debt benchmarks

Discipline & Behavioural Insights
Do not shift investments due to market swings

Stick to long?term vision

Use CFP advice when markets turn volatile

Regular investments reward through compounding

Tax Efficiency
Use tax benefits on PPF, EPF, NPS and ELSS-like active funds

Redeem RD partially to avoid tax burden

Avoid frequent trading in stocks for tax reasons

Risk Assessment and Mitigation
Equity returns vary year?to?year

Debt instruments protect principal

Inflation erodes value, hence need equity growth

Insurance and emergency fund shield against shocks

Approximate Savings Timeline
First year: personal loan payoff, increase SIP

Year 3: car loan payoff, double SIP amounts

Years 4–10: SIP total higher, compounding works

By year 10, portfolio likely crosses Rs.2 crore

360?Degree Wealth Solution Summary
Area Action Plan
Income Save disciplined surplus monthly
Loans Prepay personal then car loan
Investments Active funds + debt + NPS + stocks
Plan Type Regular plans via MFD with CFP
Asset Allocation 65% equity / 35% debt, rebalance
Insurance Term + health cover adequate
Emergency 6-month expenses cash reserve
Review Annual CFP reviews and adjustments
Mindset Long-term focus, avoid impulsive changes
Tax Use tax-advantaged instruments

Final Insights
Your goal of Rs.2 crore in 10 years is feasible.

You have good income, investments, insurance.

Loan-free status will free funds for growth.

Active mutual funds guided by CFP will add value.

Discipline, review, rebalance and risk cover are key.

Avoid index funds, direct plans, annuities, real estate.

With focus, consistency, and CFP insight you can retire financially strong.

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |247 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Money
Hi sir, I would like to invest in the market or bank or saving it on FD. Whatever way is possible. I want to save 1cr in next 5 years. As of now I don't have any saving yet. I will get 2l saving on my nemae in july. My month expenses is around 54k and my salary also 54 onlym currently I am filled with emis and some commitments till July 2026. I am thinking of buying a car and planning buy a home or build a home at native. This is possible only I will vwich the another company so that I will get a salary growth nearly 1lakh per month. So please give me some suggestions to investments ideas and marketing and savings and finance planning to afford the needed things.
Ans: Good aspiration, Ganesh.

However, at present your salary and expenses are almost equal, and you are still carrying financial commitments. So this is not the right time to explore investments or market exposure aggressively.

The ?2 Lakhs you expect in July should first be used to clear pending obligations. Any balance amount can be parked in a Fixed Deposit and treated as your emergency fund.

Once your commitments reduce and you are able to generate monthly surplus, you may start SIPs even with a small amount. Discipline matters more than size initially.

After you switch to a new company and income improves, do ensure you take:

A personal Term Insurance plan

A Family Floater Health Insurance policy

These protections should precede wealth creation.

Step-by-step progression will keep your finances stable and stress-free.

...Read more

Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |247 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Money
Sir, I have invested totally 4.83 L in SBI Contra regular fund through SIP since 2010 and the present corpus is 19.76L @ 16.49% XIRR. Now I want to redeem say 4L (1.25 L Capital gain + corresponding Principle investment) to take advantage of LTCG. If I re-invest the same amount immediately predicting the same NAV, is it affect on profit of the fund in future? Please suggest. With Thanks & Regards, S.Salvankar
Ans: Hello Mr. Salvankar,

You have built an excellent corpus over time. A 16%+ XIRR since 2010 reflects disciplined investing and strong fund performance.

Redeeming around ?4 Lakhs to realise ~?1.25L LTCG and utilise the annual tax exemption is a valid tax-harvesting strategy. If you reinvest the same amount immediately, even at a similar NAV, it will not affect your future wealth creation. Your market exposure remains the same, while your purchase cost resets higher, helping reduce future taxable gains.

Do ensure reinvestment is done promptly to avoid market movement gaps, though the long-term impact is minimal.

LTCG exemption applies only on gain, not withdrawal amount

Redemption must be calculated proportionately

Redeeming ?4L will overshoot tax-free limit

However, you may please consult your Chartered Accountant for specific tax implications and personalized advice before executing the transaction.

Naveenn Kummar
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered Mutal fund distributor , Certified Retirement Advisor
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

...Read more

Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |247 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Feb 07, 2026Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, I am 55 years old women and want to start investing ₹45,000 per month through SIPs for the next 5 years. My aim is only capital growth and I am a moderate risk investor. I have not invested in any mutual funds yet. Please suggest: 1). How much should I invest in equity vs debt/hybrid funds 2). What type of mutual funds are suitable for my age and 5-year period 3). Whether investing in midcap/Flexicaps and Multicap funds is advisable for me I want a safe but growth-oriented investment approach. Thank you in advance for your valuable advise :)
Ans: Hello Madam,

Thank you for your query. Starting SIPs at 55 with clarity of purpose is a very sensible step.

Since your horizon is 5 years and risk profile is moderate, the focus should be growth with capital stability, not aggressive equity exposure.

Allocation guidance

Keep equity around 40–45% and the balance 55–60% in hybrid and debt funds. This helps participate in market upside while reducing volatility risk.

Out of ?45,000 SIP, you may broadly structure:

?18–20K in equity oriented funds

?25–27K in hybrid / debt funds

Suitable fund categories

Flexicap funds are appropriate as a core growth component.
Balanced Advantage or Dynamic Asset Allocation funds are ideal for automatic risk management.
Aggressive Hybrid funds add measured equity exposure.
Short duration or corporate bond funds provide stability.

Midcap / Multicap exposure

Flexicap is suitable.
Multicap selectively.
Pure midcap exposure should be minimal or avoided given the short tenure.

Return expectation

With this balanced approach, a realistic outcome over 5 years may be in the 8–10% range, offering growth without undue stress on capital.

In simple terms, your strategy should be balanced, diversified and stability-led rather than return-chasing.

Wishing you disciplined and confident investing ahead.please consult qualified mutual fund advisor on scheme and fund selection
Naveenn Kummar
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered Mutal fund distributor , Certified Retirement Advisor
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

...Read more

Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |247 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Money
Dear Sir, I'm 54-year-old and my sons are 23 and 21 years old. I would like to know, in SBI Life Policies / any other brand of Life Policies, Term Insurance and Health Insurance. At present, specifically what are the best beneficial wealth policies, Term Insurance and Health Insurance Vs PPF, Vs MF, vs. NPS v FD vs Trading in the Share Market including ETFs, as well as with Sudden Death Protection, which suits for me and my both son's age and all of three income sources, such as a salary of 6-8L /Annum. Pl. Elaborate on all these requests with PROS and CONS on each segment for three of us, including the retirement plan and policies/investments. Thanks, from Chennai (1st Feb 2026)
Ans: Dear Sir,

For your sons, the first priority should be a Term Insurance Plan. It provides immediate financial protection in case of any unforeseen event. Please avoid ULIPs, traditional or endowment policies at this stage. Their eligibility and cost structures are linked to income and long lock-ins, and returns are usually not efficient.

Since their age is very young, term insurance premiums will be much cheaper. You may opt for a policy term up to age 65 or 70. Avoid “Return of Premium” and limited-pay variants, as they increase cost without meaningful benefit.

Secondly, take Health Insurance early. A high base cover, even 1 crore or an unlimited restoration plan, will come at a very economical premium due to their age. This protects future savings from medical inflation.

Regarding investments, traditional avenues like PPF and Fixed Deposits provide safety but may not beat inflation over long periods. For retirement discipline, you may consider enrolling them in NPS and, if suitable, Atal Pension Yojana for additional pension layering.

Avoid active trading for now. Without experience, it can erode capital rather than build wealth.

Maintain at least six months of income as an emergency fund, parked in FDs or liquid mutual funds for quick access.

Parallelly, start SIPs in mutual funds to build long-term wealth systematically.

For a more customized allocation and goal planning approach, you may consult a qualified Mutual Fund Advisor who can structure investments based on income, risk profile and timelines.

Naveenn Kummar
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered Mutal fund distributor , Certified Retirement Advisor
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

...Read more

Ravi

Ravi Mittal  |697 Answers  |Ask -

Dating, Relationships Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Anu

Anu Krishna  |1766 Answers  |Ask -

Relationships Expert, Mind Coach - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Feb 02, 2026Hindi
Relationship
I'm male on the verge of completing 32 years ... Doing currently md from prestigious medical college and completed my mbbs from topmost medical institute in india... I'm into relationship for almost about 5 years when se was 20 and I was 27 ... I know there is a age gap of 7 years but we never felt that there is a age gap between us.. currently her age is 25 years ... We both loved each other ... Her parents is very conservative and from orthodox family .. i know that majority have those mindset and I can't blame it by saying derogatory words like narrow mindset and very cheap thinking even in my family some members have conservative mindset ... So when I don't call my family members by using derogatory then why I am to use cuss words about them also... Khair ... Baat yeh tha ma'am aapse ki mere andar hichkhichat bilkul nhi h lekin bs thoda sa nervousness feel ho rha ki apni baat ko kaise samne rkhe ... Hm toh khud yeh chahenge ji woh bhi samay le apna kyuki apni ghar ki Lakshmi apni jaan se bhi pyari ladki ko kisi ko saupne ki baat h .. lekin hm dono different caste se h ... We both belong to obc but having different communities or caste whatever you say ma'am .. ma'am aapse bs yahi puchna chahte h ki aap hme kya suggestion de skti h agar dena ho toh... Apni kabiliyat pe bharosa h unko hm smjha skte h apni financial stability bta ke apne chizo ko honestly aur transparently rkhte hue lekin phir bhi halka sa dar lgta h ki kai woh na maane toh... Dhanyawad aapka meri baato ko padhne aur smjhne ke liye..
Ans: Dear Anonymous,
Financial stability ho toh bahut kuch aasaani se suljhaaya jaa sakta hai.
Apni mann ki baat apne parents aur ladki ke parents ke saamne rakhna; ab ya toh maan jaayenge ya toh bawaal mach sakta hai...
Par agar aapko lagta hai ki koi bhi samasya saame aaye toh aap aur ladki dono milke suljhaa paaoge, toh befikr hoke unhe sab bataa dena. Kuch dino tak shaayad naarza bhi rahein, kabhi na kabhi maan jaayenge yeh mere maanna hai...par kuch aisi communities hoti hain jahaan doosre caste mein koi baat nahin uthaate shaadi ka. Mere sujhaav phir yeh hoga ki aap jisse bahut kareeb ho ghar mein unse pehle baat karein taaki koi toh hohga aapke saath...uske baad poori family ko is baat ka khulaasa karein...ladke wale ladki aur uske pariwaar ke baare mein janna chahenge toh yeh baat acche se jaan lijiye...
Dekhiye aage hota hai kya!

All the best!
Anu Krishna
Mind Coach|NLP Trainer|Author
Drop in: www.unfear.io
Reach me: Facebook: anukrish07/ AND LinkedIn: anukrishna-joyofserving/

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11025 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Feb 10, 2026

Money
Dear Ramalingam Sir.......I had invested in the NFO (in February 2021) of SBI Retirement Fund. After completion of five year locking period in February, 2026, the Units will now be available/free, for redemption. The investment was aimed for long term to built up a retirement portfolio for my two children who works in private without any pension provision in their employment. This fund has so far given moderate returns during last five years. Please suggest whether I should continue the investment in the same above SBI Retirement fund OR to have better investment returns I may redeem existing single portfolio in above SBI MF and re-invest the redemption value in different category of Mutual funds with obvious goal of a long term investment of over 20-25 years, for a Gift to my two childrens. Diversification in different MFs will also facilitate to avail yearly benefit of long term capital gain on redemption and then re-investment. Please also suggest names of MFs in different categories. With Regards.
Ans: » Understanding your current retirement fund holding
– You invested in a retirement-oriented mutual fund in February 2021 with a 5-year lock-in
– The fund follows a hybrid structure, combining equity and debt for balanced growth
– Returns over the first five years have been moderate, which is not unusual for this category
– With the lock-in now completed in February 2026, you have full flexibility to continue or restructure

» Rechecking the goal and time horizon
– The objective is long-term wealth creation of 20–25 years for your two children
– Since your children work in the private sector without pension benefits, growth becomes more important than short-term stability
– Over such a long period, portfolios with higher equity orientation generally have better wealth-building potential

» Continue with the same fund or switch – how to think about it
– Continuing in the same fund offers familiarity and avoids any transition effort
– However, retirement and hybrid funds are designed more for stability and discipline than for maximum long-term growth
– With a long horizon ahead, relying on a single hybrid fund may limit return potential
– This is a good stage to reassess structure rather than judge only past returns

» Why diversification now makes sense
– Holding the entire corpus in one fund increases fund-specific and strategy risk
– Diversifying across multiple mutual fund categories improves consistency over market cycles
– It also allows flexibility in partial redemptions and tax planning in future years

» Suggested mutual fund categories for 20–25 year horizon
– Instead of remaining in a single retirement fund, consider spreading across:

Flexi-cap oriented equity funds for long-term core growth

Large and mid-cap oriented funds for stability with growth

Select mid-cap oriented funds for higher long-term potential

One balanced or aggressive hybrid fund for risk control
– This combination helps balance growth, volatility, and discipline over decades

» About naming specific mutual funds
– Fund selection should be based on consistency of investment process, fund management stability, and portfolio quality
– Chasing recent top performers or NFO themes is not advisable for such long goals
– A Certified Financial Planner usually shortlists schemes based on suitability rather than popularity

» Tax planning perspective
– Equity-oriented mutual funds allow long-term capital gains benefit beyond the holding period
– Using diversification, you may plan staggered redemptions over different years to utilise the annual exemption limit effectively
– This improves post-tax outcomes over time without disturbing the long-term goal

» How to execute the transition smoothly
– Avoid redeeming and reinvesting in a hurry based on short-term market movements
– If you decide to exit the existing fund, a phased approach can reduce timing risk
– Continue long-term SIP discipline in the restructured portfolio

» Final Insights
– Your original investment decision was sensible for discipline and lock-in
– With the lock-in completed and a very long horizon ahead, restructuring into a diversified, growth-oriented mutual fund portfolio is worth considering
– The focus should now shift from product label to portfolio design
– A well-diversified mutual fund structure held with patience can meaningfully support your children’s retirement needs

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Dr Nagarajan J S K

Dr Nagarajan J S K   |2606 Answers  |Ask -

NEET, Medical, Pharmacy Careers - Answered on Feb 09, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Feb 09, 2026Hindi
Career
Hello I am a 26 year old female I have scored 83 in 10th 77 in 12th and then during the same time I gave neet with boards so i couldnt score well at that point. I allways wanted to be a doctor and loved biology so that was the reason behind me taking science. Then I took bsc in microbiology never loved the subject....kinda only liked medical part of it and food microbiology a bit...scored 9.41 cgpa but things took a turn Post COVID my family shifted to a new place i was confused about what next since I didn't wanted to continue with micro...new city and all....family issues and stuff were there. I gave in 4 years to govt exam prep did few courses in digital marketing side by side and also some pg certificate courses to stay in touch with the field....just in case i decide to go for msc in food tech or pg diploma in data management or msc in clinical research. But I allways felt or had this regret of not getting into medical field and I feel like I belong there.....i want to heal and help people or animals (bams or vet was my choice if now mbbs ) So at this point would u suggest me to give neet a shot with 2 months left ? Or if not neet what would u suggest ? My parents are supportive but I have this age this in mind like will a guy marry a women who is like 28 or 29 and is in her 4th year of med school and would start earning by 30 or so....and then maybe at some point get into pg . And will I be questioned on my gap years when I would like apply at hospitals ? 3 years were because of bsc but rest were due to govt exam thing so.
Ans: Hi,
Thank you for your intriguing inquiry.
Your situation is similar to that of others who feel uncertain about their next steps.
It seems you have become confused about whether to continue in the field of education. That’s why, while preparing for government exams, you started pursuing digital marketing simultaneously. This may have hindered your ability to achieve your goals, and the course you completed might not have yielded the expected results.

Before pursuing any course, consider the following points:

1. Will the course provide valuable knowledge for your life and career?
2. Does the course align with your core subjects?

The answers to these questions are crucial:
- The course should offer practical skills, not just theoretical concepts.
- It should complement your core subjects to enhance your employability.
Be cautious of jobs that merely act as placeholders. Institutions often use impressive language to attract students, but it can be challenging to find suitable positions after completing these programs.

Regarding your inquiry about choosing between marriage and education, you do have options. You could take the NEET exam for MBBS. Is it feasible for you to attempt the upcoming exam? If so, consider preparing for a year to improve your chances. If you choose this route, you could complete your medical degree by 2031.

Alternatively, you might consider pursuing a BSc in Nursing, which aligns with your desire to heal and help others. This degree can be completed in three years, and there is a high demand for nurses, meaning job opportunities will be available soon after graduation. By 2029, you could finish the course, and if you wish, you can pursue a postgraduate degree afterward or start working in a hospital with your undergraduate qualification.

However, if you prefer medicine, you'll need to pursue a postgraduate qualification to advance your career. Since you've felt a bit lost, consider exploring other courses like Nursing, Naturopathy, or Ayurvedic studies.

If you are interested in fields related to medicine or health, an academic gap will not raise questions. The trend has shifted in recent years; many students aiming for medicine or technology at national institutions often take a year or two off to prepare for competitive exams. This should not pose a problem for you in the near future either.

So accordingly.
Best Wishes.

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

Close  

You haven't logged in yet. To ask a question, Please Log in below
Login

A verification OTP will be sent to this
Mobile Number / Email

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to

Resend OTP in120seconds

Dear User, You have not registered yet. Please register by filling the fields below to get expert answers from our Gurus
Sign up

By signing up, you agree to our
Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy

Already have an account?

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to Mobile

Resend OTP in120seconds

x