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

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9195 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 22, 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 21, 2025
Money

Hello Sir. I'm 36. I earn net 1.25L per month. I have Plot Loan Outstanding 17L roi is 9%, 12 years pending, EMI 23k per month. I also have Personal Loan, outstanding 17 Lakhs,3 years pending, EMI 28k per month. I invest 12k per month for SSY for my daughter and 10K SIP in MF. I save about 10K monthly after all expenses. Please guide can I use that savings for prepayment of loan or to increase the SIP. MF + Stocks - 6L SSY - 3L Emergency Fund - 3L Term insurance - 1.5CR - Premium - 30K annualy. Health Insurance - 15L - Premium - 30K annualy. LIC - 8L insured - 36K annually Plot - worth 40L - Loan outstanding Please advise sir.

Ans: You have made a disciplined start towards financial planning. Your family responsibilities are being handled well, especially your daughter’s SSY and the insurance covers.

Let us now assess your current financial picture, and explore suitable action points.

Income, Expenses and Loan Burden
Your monthly income is Rs. 1.25 lakh.

Plot loan EMI is Rs. 23,000. Personal loan EMI is Rs. 28,000.

Total EMI is Rs. 51,000 per month. That is 40% of your income.

This is a high EMI-to-income ratio. It limits your flexibility.

Your monthly SIP is Rs. 10,000. SSY is Rs. 12,000 per month.

You save Rs. 10,000 monthly after all these.

Your committed outflow is around Rs. 83,000 monthly. This needs careful planning.

Assessment of Your Loans
Personal loan is expensive. Tenure is short. EMI is high.

Plot loan is long-term. EMI is moderate. But interest rate is also high.

Personal loan is not asset-backed. Interest is high without tax benefit.

Plot loan is secured. Interest is also high but offers tax benefit.

Total outstanding loan is Rs. 34 lakh. That is 27 times your monthly income.

This is a financial stress point. Needs correction step-by-step.

Investments and Insurance Review
Mutual fund + stocks total is Rs. 6 lakh.

Emergency fund is Rs. 3 lakh. You are well-covered for 3 months' expenses.

SSY corpus is Rs. 3 lakh. A good start for your daughter.

Term insurance of Rs. 1.5 crore is ideal. You are rightly covered.

Health insurance of Rs. 15 lakh is sufficient for now. Good family protection.

LIC policy of Rs. 8 lakh sum assured, with Rs. 36,000 premium yearly.

LIC plans are low-yield. You may evaluate this further.

Your Financial Strengths
You are consistently saving. That is a great habit.

You have SSY for your daughter. A strong step as a father.

You have term and health covers. Risk management is in place.

You have SIP in mutual funds. You are investing for the future.

Emergency fund of Rs. 3 lakh gives you safety.

Your Financial Pressure Points
Two large loans are a burden. EMI eats away 40% income.

Personal loan interest is costly. It slows down wealth growth.

LIC policy is eating Rs. 3,000 monthly. Returns are not linked to inflation.

Limited surplus for investments due to EMI load.

Equity investments are just Rs. 6 lakh. Needs increase over time.

Ideal Action Plan — Step-by-Step
1. Personal Loan Repayment First

This loan is costlier than plot loan.

It has short tenure. Paying extra saves more.

Use monthly savings of Rs. 10,000 to prepay personal loan.

Do not increase SIP now. Prioritise debt clearance.

Even a partial prepayment every 6 months will help.

2. Stop LIC Policy After Evaluation

LIC gives low returns. Around 4–5% annually.

You are already insured through term policy.

If this LIC is not a pension or ULIP, consider surrender.

Use surrender value to prepay personal loan or invest in mutual funds.

Reinvesting this Rs. 36,000 annual premium in mutual funds is better.

3. Hold SIP Steady, Don’t Increase Yet

You are investing Rs. 10,000 per month in SIP. Keep it unchanged.

Do not stop or reduce SIP unless emergency arises.

Use only savings and LIC money for loan prepayment, not SIP money.

Your SIP should continue to compound long-term.

4. SSY Contribution is Mandatory

Rs. 12,000 monthly SSY for daughter is locked-in. That’s fine.

This is a social commitment. Let it continue.

It will create a corpus at her age 21. Don’t disturb this.

5. Keep Emergency Fund Intact

You have Rs. 3 lakh emergency fund.

That covers 3 months' expenses. Good decision.

Do not use this for loan prepayment or investment.

Keep it in a liquid fund or sweep-in FD for access.

6. Avoid Direct Stocks or High-Risk Assets Now

You already hold Rs. 6 lakh in MF and stocks.

Stocks are volatile. You are in a debt-heavy phase.

Avoid buying more stocks till loans are reduced.

Focus on debt reduction, not aggressive returns.

7. No New Loans or Commitments

No gold loan, credit card EMI, or gadgets on EMI.

No car loan or new real estate plan.

Avoid real estate as investment. It's illiquid and costly.

Your plot is for long term. Keep it that way.

8. Regular Fund Investments Preferred

You may have SIPs in direct plans. These look cheaper.

But direct funds do not offer advice or personal review.

Wrong fund choice in direct plan can lower returns.

Regular plans via CFP-backed MFD ensure guidance and tracking.

Long-term returns improve with portfolio review and timely changes.

9. Stay with Actively Managed Mutual Funds

Index funds may look simple and low-cost.

But index funds lack flexibility. They mimic the market.

In falling markets, index funds fall fully. No downside protection.

Actively managed funds give better defence and opportunity.

Let fund managers make dynamic decisions for better outcomes.

10. Monitor and Review Every 6 Months

Keep track of loan balances and interest saved.

Review SIPs and funds with CFP every 6 months.

Check if additional surplus can be used to prepay loans.

Once personal loan is cleared, divert that EMI into SIP.

Over time, increase SIP to Rs. 20,000 monthly.

11. Children’s Education Plan Later

Your daughter’s SSY is a good start.

After clearing personal loan, build an education fund.

Begin with Rs. 5,000 monthly SIP when surplus increases.

Use child-specific mutual funds with 10–12 year horizon.

12. Retirement Planning from Age 40

You are 36 now. Clear loans in 3–4 years.

From age 40, begin long-term retirement SIPs.

SIP of Rs. 20,000 monthly for 20 years builds good retirement wealth.

Delay in retirement planning can lead to pressure later.

13. Avoid Frequent Changes or Panic

Stick to your strategy. Be consistent.

Don’t stop SIP during market fall.

Don’t switch funds without reason or advice.

Avoid short-term goals with equity mutual funds.

14. Use Surplus Cash or Bonus Wisely

Use any annual bonus to prepay loans.

Avoid spending bonus on lifestyle upgrades.

Any maturity from LIC or FD should go to loan or SIP.

15. Tax Planning Must be Optimised

You are investing in SSY, ELSS may be part of SIP.

Avoid traditional plans for tax benefit alone.

Use term plan and ELSS for tax and growth.

Finally
You are already making smart money choices. That’s encouraging.

Clear personal loan first. It frees up cash and mind.

LIC surrender and reinvestment improves returns.

Keep SIPs running. Keep SSY untouched.

Increase SIP later with surplus from EMI reduction.

Build a child education fund post-loan closure.

Retirement savings can start at age 40 with higher SIP.

Don’t invest in real estate now. Avoid gold loans and credit EMIs.

Review your financial plan with a Certified Financial Planner every 6 months.

Your journey is strong. With right steps, you will create lasting wealth.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - May 25, 2025 | Answered on May 26, 2025
Thank you so much for your valuable advise sir. Thanks for taking some time and responding. Thank you sir.
Ans: You're welcome! If you have any more questions or need further assistance, feel free to ask. Best wishes on your financial journey!

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  |9195 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 21, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - May 21, 2024Hindi
Money
Hi myself 36 yrs old Started mf plan very late Luckily due to organisation switch got company stocks vested to me around 85 lacs and still around 60 lacs not yet vested . With that confidence I have taken home loan of 1.2cr for 25 yrs Emi amt 1 lac per month rate of interest 8.5 Not much invested earlier in mf started late around 1.5 yrs back Was able to accumulate 5 lacs total Invested in stocks around 2 lacs Now am trying to do sip every month of 42k I earn around 2.2lacs I have 2 more loans apart from home loan Personal loan of 26k emi 4 yrs pending Gold loan yearly emi payment of 6 lacs amount. Deduction of 1 lac + 26k+ 42k = 1.68 lacs goes to emis Yearly gold I have to pay around 60k without principal I consider 1.75 lacs to fixed amt goes as cuttings. I have remaining around 40k I think Home necessities cost around 15k monthly I still have around 20 to 25k remaining As I have started very late in mf I want to increase my sip for my kids education and future retirement plans I have something in mind which am bit afraid I want to sell stocks and invest in real estate and do the rotation of money for 10 years. But i have limited knowledge after doing some research . Should I go ahead with that ? Or Should I close my home loan using my stocks and reduce to 40 lacs home loan something Invest same amount in sips ? My stocks are in US market ..should I sell or not ? Company stocks are till now going well.. How high it would jump and how much it will take for that to happen I don't know Please suggest me to some investment ideas Q1. Should I close home loan Q2. Should I invest in real estate Q3. Should I invest stocks amt in mutual funds Any better ideas and suggestions please advise ..
Ans: Evaluating Your Financial Position
Your current financial situation reflects both opportunities and challenges. You have accumulated a significant amount of company stocks and started investing in mutual funds. Your home loan and other liabilities add to your monthly financial commitments. It's essential to strategically manage your investments to ensure long-term financial stability.

Assessing the Home Loan
Paying off your home loan can provide a sense of financial relief. However, consider the opportunity cost of using your stocks for this purpose. With an interest rate of 8.5%, the cost of maintaining the home loan is relatively high. Reducing your home loan can decrease your monthly EMI, providing more cash flow for investments and other expenses. However, before deciding, consider the potential growth of your stocks. If the stocks have significant growth potential, retaining them might be more beneficial in the long run.

Evaluating Real Estate as an Investment
Investing in real estate can be tempting, but it comes with several challenges. Real estate investments require substantial capital and involve high transaction costs. They also lack liquidity compared to stocks and mutual funds. The real estate market can be unpredictable, and managing properties requires time and effort. Given these factors, real estate might not be the best option for someone seeking to simplify and strengthen their financial portfolio.

Investing in Mutual Funds
Mutual funds offer a diversified investment option that can align with your financial goals. Given your late start in mutual funds, it’s wise to increase your SIPs to build a substantial corpus over time. Actively managed funds can offer better returns due to professional management. These funds allow you to benefit from the expertise of fund managers, providing a balanced risk-return ratio.

Disadvantages of Index Funds and Direct Funds
Index funds, while low-cost, do not always outperform actively managed funds. They mirror market performance, lacking the flexibility to adapt to market changes. On the other hand, direct mutual funds require active monitoring and decision-making. Investing through a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) can provide valuable insights and professional management, helping you navigate complex market conditions effectively.

Strategic Use of Stocks
Your company stocks are a significant asset. Diversifying this investment can reduce risk and enhance returns. Selling a portion of your stocks and investing in mutual funds can provide a balanced approach. This strategy diversifies your portfolio and reduces the risk associated with holding a single type of asset.

Recommendations
Reduce Home Loan: Consider partially reducing your home loan with your stocks. This will lower your EMI and interest burden, providing more cash flow for investments.

Avoid Real Estate: Given the high costs and management efforts involved, real estate might not be the best option. Focus on more liquid and manageable investments.

Increase SIPs in Mutual Funds: Boost your SIPs to build a robust financial corpus for your children’s education and retirement. Actively managed funds through a CFP can optimize your returns.

Diversify Stock Investments: Gradually sell a portion of your company stocks and diversify into mutual funds. This reduces risk and provides a balanced growth potential.

Conclusion
Your proactive approach to managing your finances is commendable. Balancing debt reduction with strategic investments can provide financial stability and growth. A diversified portfolio, professional management, and a focus on long-term goals will help secure your financial future.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9195 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - May 14, 2025
Money
Hi, I'm 34 years. I've a home loan of 48L emi is 50k (home loan pending tenure is 13years)... my net salary in hand is 1.3L. currently I don't have much monthly exp as I live in joint family n I have good control on my exp.. - My monthly investments are MF sip 30k, NPS 3K, ICICI child gift ulip plan 4K monthly for 5years, Bajaj retirement goal III ulip plan monthly 5k for 10years, LIC premium monthly 5K. And I pay extra Home loan pricipal monthly 12k.. -I've other investments 10fd, MF around 21L, equity stock around 17L, PPF 10L, NPS 2L, SGB 1L, suknya account 1.3L, .. 1) What you suggest shall I continue the my MF sips and other investments? 2) shall I increase monthly home loan prepayment from 12k by reducing monthly MF sips ? 3) guide am I in right direction in order to have retirement fund at the age of 50-55 ? 4) In future I'll have the exp of my two kids marriage and educational exp (they're now 2years) 5) Is child plan good? Shall I continue? 7) Also I'm planning to have another house (in year 2029-2034) which will cost nearly 1.7cr. currently the house for which loan is taken sale value is approx 70-75L..
Ans: At 34, you are doing many good things.

You live within your means and invest well.

Still, you asked the right questions.

Let us go step by step.

This answer will be simple but deep.

We will assess from a 360-degree angle.

Let us now begin.

Income, Loan and Lifestyle Assessment

Your net monthly salary is Rs. 1.3 lakh.

Your current EMI is Rs. 50,000. This is almost 38% of your income.

You pay Rs. 12,000 extra as home loan prepayment.

Your total home loan outflow is Rs. 62,000 per month.

You have strong cost control because you live in a joint family.

That is a big plus at this age. Keep it up.

Your current lifestyle gives you surplus money. That is a strength.

Do not let lifestyle inflation spoil this later.

Review of Your Ongoing Monthly Investments

SIP in mutual funds: Rs. 30,000 monthly. This is a good habit.

NPS contribution: Rs. 3,000 per month. But NPS has lock-in and limited flexibility.

LIC: Rs. 5,000 monthly. LIC policies mostly offer low returns.

ICICI child ULIP: Rs. 4,000 monthly. ULIPs are not cost-effective.

Bajaj Retirement ULIP: Rs. 5,000 monthly. Also not efficient.

You are paying Rs. 17,000 per month towards ULIP and LIC combined.

This money can earn more if invested in mutual funds.

ULIP and LIC Policies: Need Review

ULIP plans have high costs and complex structures.

They mix insurance and investment. That is never a smart idea.

LIC plans also give low returns (around 5-6% only).

Instead of continuing for full term, check surrender value now.

You may stop future payments after checking terms.

A Certified Financial Planner can assist in evaluating surrender wisely.

That money should be moved to mutual funds via SIP.

Assessment of Mutual Fund Investments

SIP of Rs. 30,000 monthly is excellent. Continue it.

You already have Rs. 21 lakh in mutual funds. That is solid.

Don't reduce SIP to increase home loan prepayment.

Mutual funds help build wealth faster than home loan savings.

Prepayment gives 8.5% benefit (loan rate).

But mutual funds (active ones) can give 12-14% over long term.

So reducing SIPs to prepay loan is not wise.

Continue SIPs. Increase them if income increases.

PPF, NPS and SGB – Conservative, Yet Useful

PPF: Rs. 10 lakh. Tax-free and safe. Keep investing the max every year.

NPS: Rs. 2 lakh. Good for tax saving. But retirement corpus gets locked.

SGB: Rs. 1 lakh. Gold bonds are fine for partial diversification.

Use PPF more than NPS because of better flexibility.

FDs and Stocks – Balancing Safety with Growth

You have Rs. 10 lakh in fixed deposits. Good for emergency or short-term needs.

Equity stocks: Rs. 17 lakh. Shows you are growth-oriented.

Review stock portfolio once every 6 months.

Don’t hold stocks if you're unsure of their quality.

If needed, shift to mutual funds where experts manage the money.

Child ULIP Plans – Better to Avoid

These child ULIPs are sold emotionally, not financially.

High costs and limited transparency are common issues.

Returns are low due to charges.

For your kids’ education and marriage, mutual funds are better.

Start two SIPs – one for education and one for marriage.

Invest in multi-cap and flexi-cap mutual funds.

Keep increasing these SIPs as income grows.

Future Second Home Purchase – Evaluation Needed

You are planning to buy another house worth Rs. 1.7 crore.

Your current home value is Rs. 70–75 lakh.

Don’t look at second house as an investment.

Real estate brings risk, low liquidity and high maintenance.

If it's for self-use, then fine.

But for wealth creation, mutual funds are better.

Don’t take another big loan just for second house.

That can disturb cash flow and limit investments.

If needed, sell existing house and use that as down payment.

Debt vs Equity Thinking – Long-Term Wealth Needs Equity

You are still young. Just 34.

Retirement goal is 50–55. You still have 16–21 years.

Equity mutual funds help in wealth creation.

Debt products like FDs, PPF, NPS are safe but grow slowly.

So, most savings should go to equity mutual funds now.

Only emergency and near-term goals should use FDs or PPF.

Tax Efficiency – Optimise Your Structure

Income tax savings from home loan are fine.

NPS gives extra deduction under 80CCD(1B).

But ULIPs and LIC do not give long-term tax benefits.

Mutual funds are now taxed at 12.5% for long term.

Still, mutual funds offer better post-tax growth than LIC/ULIP.

Emergency Fund and Insurance Coverage

Keep 6 months’ expense in FD or savings as emergency fund.

Check if you have term life cover. Minimum Rs. 1 crore is needed.

Also check family medical insurance. Rs. 10–15 lakh cover is good.

Don’t mix insurance with investment. Keep both separate.

Action Plan: Clear, Simple and Step-by-Step

Continue your Rs. 30,000 SIP. Increase yearly if possible.

Review and surrender ULIPs and LIC if suitable.

Stop all future ULIP premiums. Redirect to mutual funds.

Don’t reduce SIPs to prepay loan. Let SIPs continue.

Make home loan prepayment only if surplus money is idle.

Start SIPs for child education and marriage.

Don’t go for second house as investment.

Review stocks and replace with mutual funds if not confident.

Maintain FDs for emergency, not as long-term investment.

Ensure term life and health cover are in place.

Update nominations and keep all documents organised.

Finally

Your financial journey has a strong start.

You have right habits and long-term thinking.

But your portfolio needs cleaning.

ULIPs and LIC are eating your returns quietly.

Your SIPs are your strongest weapon. Don’t pause them.

Buy house only if it’s for personal use, not wealth building.

Your retirement goal at 50–55 is achievable.

But only if equity investment continues and grows.

Children’s goals will come faster than you think.

Start SIPs now for them. Don’t depend on ULIPs.

You are on the right track. Just remove the low-return blocks.

Review regularly with a Certified Financial Planner.

That will help you move confidently, year after year.

Best Regards,

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9195 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - May 14, 2025
Money
Dear Sir, My monthly income is 2.5 lac, savings include three land parcels (1.37 cr), mutual funds (43 lac), LIC (12 lac), and stocks worth 64 lac. I am not including PF in my saving. My liabilities include home loan emi 60k per month (58 lac outstanding) and emi of personal loan 40k per month (16 lac outstanding). Please note that i have not included my ancestral property (aaprox 4cr) back in my home town and my current house (1.2cr) in delhi as my investment and am not intended to sell them. I am doin SIP of 50k month in mutual fund as well. Please suggest if i should prepay my loans (14 years remaining in both) my disposing off my real estate assets, or by selling my mutual funds and stocks, or should continue to pay the emi.. I am a 39 year old workin in private sector.
Ans: You have done a fine job building your finances.
A monthly income of Rs. 2.5 lakh offers good scope to plan further.
Your net worth is strong. Your clarity about assets is useful.

Let’s now evaluate your loans and investments fully.

We will see if loan prepayment is better or continuing EMI suits you more.

We will give you a simple, practical, and 360-degree answer.

Loan Details – A Quick Understanding
Your home loan has Rs. 58 lakh balance. EMI is Rs. 60,000 monthly.

Your personal loan has Rs. 16 lakh balance. EMI is Rs. 40,000 monthly.

Both loans have 14 years left.

Your total EMI is Rs. 1 lakh monthly, which is 40% of income.

This EMI load is still manageable, but can limit your savings.

Asset Overview – You Hold Valuable Assets
Three land parcels – total value is around Rs. 1.37 crore.

Mutual funds – Rs. 43 lakh. SIP of Rs. 50,000 is ongoing.

Stocks – Rs. 64 lakh. Good value and can grow further.

LIC – Rs. 12 lakh. This can be evaluated separately.

House in Delhi – Rs. 1.2 crore (not meant for selling).

Ancestral property – Rs. 4 crore (not meant for selling).

EPF not included in current asset count.

Income Stability – Key Strength
You are working in the private sector at age 39.

You likely have 20+ years of earning life ahead.

Income of Rs. 2.5 lakh monthly shows strong earning power.

This gives you room to act on a long-term plan.

Approach to Loan Prepayment – Thoughtful Steps
Let’s now assess your prepayment options clearly.

Should you prepay home and personal loans?
And if yes, what is the best way to do it?

We’ll check each option with clarity and purpose.

Option 1: Use Mutual Funds and Stocks to Prepay
You hold Rs. 1.07 crore across mutual funds and stocks.

Selling this can close your loans fully.

But this step ends future compounding.

Equity and mutual funds grow better over time.

Selling now reduces future wealth potential.

Also, mutual funds sold now can attract capital gain tax.

LTCG on equity funds above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

STCG is taxed at 20%.

Selling in a hurry may create tax burden.

Stocks too, if held long term, may grow better than loan savings.

Do not liquidate full equity portfolio unless under financial pressure.

Option 2: Use Real Estate (Land Parcels) to Prepay
Land parcels are worth Rs. 1.37 crore.

Land does not give monthly returns.

It has holding cost and liquidity issues.

Selling land and closing personal loan is a good move.

Personal loan has higher interest than home loan.

Prepaying personal loan gives instant relief in cash flow.

This saves you Rs. 40,000 per month.

After that, you can partly reduce home loan as well.

This will reduce total interest over 14 years.

Real estate is not ideal for wealth building.

Land sale can be better used to reduce high-cost loans.

Option 3: Continue Paying EMI and Keep Assets Untouched
Current EMI is Rs. 1 lakh monthly.

You save Rs. 50,000 in SIP and likely save more outside that.

If you continue EMIs, equity portfolio will grow faster.

In the long run, equity can give higher return than loan rate.

But, you carry high EMI stress for next 14 years.

You stay exposed to job risk in private sector.

Reducing loan now gives more future comfort.

Balanced and Smart Approach – Best for Your Case
Now let us give a 360-degree mix of the above.

This balanced path protects growth and reduces loan burden.

First, sell one land parcel.

Use this to close the full personal loan.

Personal loan has high interest. Closing it gives immediate benefit.

EMI burden drops from Rs. 1 lakh to Rs. 60,000 monthly.

You save Rs. 40,000 monthly, which can now go to investments.

Second, part-prepay the home loan using remaining land money.

Don’t close full loan, just reduce tenure or EMI.

This cuts interest and lowers future outgo.

You also stay eligible for home loan tax benefits.

Third, continue equity investments without selling.

Let mutual funds and stocks stay invested.

They can grow well over next 10–15 years.

Fourth, review your LIC policies.

If they are traditional or ULIPs, returns are low.

Surrender them if lock-in is over.

Reinvest proceeds in mutual funds.

Equity funds give better compounding over time.

Fifth, don’t touch the house or ancestral property.

You are wise to keep them outside this plan.

They are emotional and security assets. Not financial investments.

Use Regular Funds via CFP – Not Direct
Direct mutual funds look cheaper but give no support.

Wrong fund choice or timing can harm you.

You already have a large equity portfolio.

Without guidance, portfolio can become risky or unbalanced.

Regular funds, through Certified Financial Planner, give expert guidance.

You get help with rebalancing, tax planning, and goal alignment.

You save more in long term with right direction.

Other Important Steps You Can Take
Build or review your emergency fund.

Keep 6–9 months of expenses in liquid mutual fund.

Maintain good health and life insurance.

Term plan should be 10–15 times your annual income.

Health plan should cover you and family.

If any insurance is bundled with investment, review it critically.

Review your SIP portfolio every year.

Use asset allocation based on age and risk comfort.

Consider increasing SIPs by 5–10% yearly.

Finally
You are in a strong financial position.

You are earning well and saving consistently.

Your asset base is rich and diverse.

But your EMI load is affecting your monthly surplus.

You also carry high-cost personal loan.

Avoid touching equity investments for prepayment.

Instead, sell land parcels and close personal loan.

Then reduce some home loan principal also.

This improves monthly cash flow and reduces future interest.

Keep investing through mutual funds regularly.

Don’t shift to direct funds. Stay with regular funds via CFP.

Review your LIC policies and shift to equity if possible.

Build a clear financial roadmap for 15–20 years.

Take help from a Certified Financial Planner to stay on course.

This balanced strategy gives you growth, liquidity, and peace.

You are not late. You are well-placed to grow further.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

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

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9195 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 14, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 13, 2025
Money
Hi, I am 39 years. My monthly salary is 94000 and I am investing in MF since 2016. I started my SIP with Rs. 8000 per month and presently my monthly SIP contribution is 36000. My present MF Corpus is 35 lacs (XIRR: 18.20). I am monthly invested in following funds at present: SBI Contra Fund: 5000 SBI Small Cap Fund: 6000 SBI Large and Mid Cap: 6000 Parag Parekh Flexi Cap: 5000 ICICI Blue Chip: 4000 Quant Small Cap: 3000 Nippon India Growth: 3000 Nippon India Multi Cap: 4000 My investment in small cap is high as I will be invested for next 15 years. I have my wife and two child aged 7 and 1. I have term plan of 1.5 crs. I also have emergency fund in FD for 6 lacs. Are the savings sufficient to cover my child expenses when they grow up and for my retirement? I am a PSU employee and I have statutory deductions like PF and NPS and my PF balance is 14 lacs and NPS balance is 29 lacs as on date. Presently I have no loans but planning a House purchase for 80 lacs (Margin: 10 lacs). Is it advisable to take loan for House and continue my SIP although my monthly SIP will decrease if I avail loan or shall I reduce loan amount and pay upfront higher amount/margin from my MF/ other savings to purchase house. And any suggestions from your side for funds in which I am investing to add or remove as I have XIRR of above 15% in all the funds I have invested till now. Till 60 years I will be getting leased accomodation from my employer but at the place of posting and we are mostly posted in Tier 2/3 cities or rural places. but I want to purchase a flat in State capital for better future prospect of my children. Our medical needs are taken care by my organization and I don't need to incur any expenses on that front.
Ans: Your dedication toward financial planning is impressive. Let us now take a complete 360-degree look at your current situation and future planning.

Comprehensive Financial Assessment
You are 39 years old with monthly salary of Rs.?94,000.

You have been investing consistently in mutual funds since 2016.

Your SIP began at Rs.?8,000 per month, now reaching Rs.?36,000.

Your mutual fund corpus is Rs.?35?lakhs, delivering XIRR of 18.20%.

You hold seven equity mutual fund schemes across large cap, small cap, flexi cap, and multi cap categories.

You maintain an emergency fund of Rs.?6?lakhs in fixed deposits.

You have term insurance coverage of Rs.?1.5?crore.

You are a PSU employee with PF of Rs.?14?lakhs and NPS of Rs.?29?lakhs.

You plan to buy a house worth Rs.?80?lakhs, keeping Rs.?10?lakhs as margin.

Employer provides housing until age 60, and you live in Tier?2 or rural postings.

Medical expenses are already covered by your employer’s scheme.

Your financial foundation is strong. You started early, and your SIP discipline shows excellent planning traits.

Goal Setting and Time Horizon
To build any effective financial strategy, linking money to goals is essential. You have multiple significant life goals:

Home purchase – Buying a flat in the State capital.

Child expenses – Education and possibly marriage funding.

Retirement – Corpus to support your expenses post retirement.

Let’s break these down.

Home Purchase Goal
You want to buy a flat worth Rs.?80?lakhs, using Rs.?10?lakhs margin and a home loan for the rest.

The loan repayment (EMI) must fit your income without disturbing SIPs and lifestyle.

Child-Oriented Goals
Your children are aged 7 and 1.

School, college, marriage expenses will come over 10 to 20 years.

Return on investment must beat education inflation in metros.

Retirement Goal
You plan to retire around age 60.

That leaves 21 more years of working life.

You will have PF, NPS, mutual funds.

Goal is to build sufficient corpus to sustain post-retirement life.

Linking each fund allocation and financial action to these specific goals ensures clarity and purpose.

Cash Flow and EMI Planning
You earn Rs.?94,000 per month. Let’s examine your outflow structure:

Current investment outflow is SIP of Rs.?36,000 monthly.

PF and NPS contributions are statutory and deducted from salary.

Emergency fund is already in place.

No current EMIs or loans.

But EMI will start post house purchase.

To keep financial plan intact, EMI must stay within comfortable limits—preferably under 40–45% of net income. Let us explore two funding strategies for housing:

Option A: Higher Down Payment
Use margin of Rs.?10?lakhs and an additional Rs.?5–10?lakhs from your savings or mutual funds.

Loan amount reduces accordingly.

EMI becomes more manageable.

But you will partly pause or reduce SIP to fund margin.

Option B: Moderate Margin, Higher Loan
Use only Rs.?10?lakhs margin.

Loan amount increases, raising EMI.

You continue SIP at near current levels.

EMI may cover 40–45% of net income.

Balanced Approach (Preferred)
Use margin of Rs.?10?lakhs plus Rs.?5?lakhs if comfortable.

Loan size becomes manageable.

Keep SIP on track by slightly reducing only during loan repayment stress periods.

Once EMI settles, resume or increase SIP.

With careful planning, EMI and SIP can coexist, preserving your mutual fund growth trajectory.

Emergency Fund and Insurance
You have built a strong emergency fund of Rs.?6?lakhs. This covers around six to seven months of expenses. It gives you financial cushion if your salary faces interruptions or loan EMI starts unexpectedly.

Your term insurance coverage of Rs.?1.5?crore is adequate given your dependents and responsibilities. Employer health insurance ensures no major medical spending needed.

Ensure that after taking home loan, the emergency fund stays intact. Do not use this corpus for house margin or EMI. Keeping this buffer is foundational to financial health.

Equity Portfolio Structure and Risk
You currently have seven mutual fund schemes across small, large, flexi, and multi cap categories. Small cap exposure looks particularly high (~30% of equity allocation). This heavy tilt may be appropriate for long-term goals, but bears higher volatility.

Given your time horizon of 15 years for the property and even longer for children’s future and retirement, equity is suitable. But too much small cap exposure may hurt during downturns.

A long-term investor like you can handle volatility, but also needs prudence.

Suggested Equity to Hybrid Mix
Here is a deeper elaboration on fund mix and rationale:

1. Small Cap Funds
These funds invest in smaller, high-growth firms.

They can give strong returns over time.

But they are vulnerable to market drops and liquidity issues.

We suggest keeping small cap allocation around 15–20% of total equity.

2. Large and Mid Cap Funds
Focused on more stable, growing companies.

Less volatile than small cap.

Good for steady compounding.

Weigh this allocation around 25–30%.

3. Flexi Cap and Multi Cap Funds
Provide diversification across all market caps.

Active fund managers adjust allocations.

They help blunt volatility and provide consistency.

A 30–40% allocation here helps control risk.

4. Balanced or Hybrid Funds
Combine equity and debt in single scheme.

Equity portion provides growth, debt cushions against falls.

Highly useful during market corrections.

A 20–30% allocation here adds resilience to your portfolio.

Such a structure keeps your portfolio growth-oriented yet not over-exposed to high-risk segments.

Fund Consolidation
Holding seven equity schemes plus PF and NPS across different categories adds portfolio complexity. Tracking, rebalancing, and performance evaluation become labour-intensive.

Consider reducing fund count by:

Merging two small cap funds if both are of similar mandate.

Evaluating flexi cap and multi cap funds – keep the ones with better consistency.

Ensuring every fund in portfolio serves a distinct purpose.

Keeping 4–5 equity/hybrid funds makes monitoring simpler and more effective.

Review of Direct Funds
You currently invest in direct mutual funds. These have lower expense ratios, which improves returns. Yet, direct funds come with limited guidance, which can be risky without professional oversight.

Limitations:
No regular review aligned with goals

Risk of emotional decision-making in volatility

Rebalancing burdens fall entirely on investor

Harder to get support during investments or exit planning

Benefits of Regular Funds via MFD + CFP:
Access to expert advice and goal-based allocation

Portfolio reviews aligned with life changes

Support during market dips or financial stress

Better discipline in top-ups, rebalance, and redemptions

Transitioning to regular funds managed through a Certified Financial Planner can provide more holistic guidance and oversight. The small extra cost is often justified by better discipline and risk management.

Index Funds and Active Funds
You have not shown interest in index funds or ETFs, which is wise for your strategy. Index funds simply replicate market performance. They lack flexibility and cannot avoid poor performers. They perform poorly during downturns by tracking every stock.

Actively managed funds like those in your portfolio allow skilled managers to adjust allocations, exit weak companies, and take advantage of upside. This makes them superior during volatile market phases and in generating alpha for long-term investors like you.

Children’s Education and Marriage Corpus
Your children are young now, giving you 16–20 years horizon for their education and marriage planning. Your current SIP and corpus are good building blocks. However:

Education inflation in metro cities may reach 10–12% annually.

Early planning through separate goal-based portfolios is wise.

You can start designated SIPs for each child’s education and marriage objective.

Consider increasing SIP amounts when you get salary increments.

Monitor these SIPs periodically with CFP for mid-course corrections.

Goal-based investing helps track progress and stay motivated. It ensures funds are aligned with need timelines.

Retirement Planning
Your PF and NPS corpus already stand at Rs.?14?lakhs and Rs.?29?lakhs. These are sound foundations. Combined with mutual fund corpus and continued SIPs, you appear well on track to build sufficient retirement wealth.

However, periodic review is essential:

PF and NPS have defined contribution limits and investment rules.

Mutual fund SIPs should continue with strategic allocation mix.

Hybrid funds may be increased as retirement nears to reduce volatility.

Annual fund performance and asset drift must be monitored.

With disciplined saving and periodic review, your retirement corpus can meet inflation-adjusted living requirements.

Loan Strategy vs SIP Commitment
Taking a home loan requires balancing EMI burden with SIP commitments. A loan for Rs.?70 lakhs at typical interest rate over 20 years may have EMI of Rs.?55,000.

You should:

Ensure EMI stays within 45% of net salary.

Continue SIPs without full interruption—either maintain current amount or slightly reduce (not pause).

Once home loan EMI reduces over time, resume SIP top-up.

Avoid using mutual fund corpus or emergency funds for down payment.

Balancing EMI and SIP ensures homeownership does not derail your wealth-building process.

Tax Benefits and Implications
You should factor taxation into investment and withdrawal decisions:

Equity Mutual Funds

LTCG above Rs.?1.25?lakhs is taxed at 12.5%.

STCG within one year is taxed at 20%.

Debt Funds

LTCG and STCG taxed as per income tax slab.

Home Loan

Though loan EMI interest is not deductible, the rent saved can be treated as benefit in kind.

Tax planning strategies around home loan prepayment and eligible deductions apply.

Consult your CFP before making exit or redemption decisions. Timing redemptions post 3-year holding period can help reduce tax liabilities on equity gains.

Regular Reviews & Monitoring
Your financial plan needs regular check-ins:

Review portfolio allocation and performance annually.

Rebalance if equity drift exceeds your desired limits (e.g., small cap exposure grows due to market rally).

Adjust SIP amounts aligned with new salary, promotions, or changing goals.

Keep focus on goal completion timelines and required corpus.

During market volatility, maintain disciplined SIP approach.

Such discipline builds long-term wealth and supports your overall goal framework.

Emotional Discipline & Investor Mindset
Your XIRR of 18.20% reflects strong execution. However:

Past performance is not guaranteed for future.

You must stay committed during market leaps and troughs.

Avoid panicking and selling your equity funds during corrections.

Keep focus on long?term plan rather than daily NAV movements.

Patience and discipline are as critical as returns themselves.

Growing wealth in equity is as much about emotional strength as financial strategy.

Step-Wise Action Plan
Let us summarise the steps for clarity:

Finalize home loan and EMI capacity

Evaluate your comfort with EMI covering

..Read more

Latest Questions
Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |6947 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jun 24, 2025

Career
Sir what should I choose Nit srinagar ee/mechanical vs iiit nagpur,ranchi, bhagalpur ece vs nit Hamirpur civil/nit patna civil
Ans: Aditya, NIT Srinagar’s Electrical and Mechanical branches have exceptional placement rates (114% and 141% respectively in 2023), with average packages around ?9–9.4 LPA and strong recruiter participation, making them stand out among core engineering options. IIIT Nagpur, Ranchi, and Bhagalpur offer ECE with 85–89% placement rates and average packages between ?10–17 LPA, with IIIT Ranchi’s ECE reaching a ?17 LPA average and IIIT Bhagalpur’s ECE at 95% placement in 2023. NIT Hamirpur and NIT Patna Civil Engineering have lower placement rates (60–65%), with average packages of ?6–7 LPA and 55% placement at NIT Patna, though NIT Hamirpur boasts excellent infrastructure and campus life. While IIITs offer strong tech placements, especially in ECE, NIT Srinagar’s core branches provide stability, high placement rates, and a robust alumni network, making them preferable for traditional engineering careers.

The recommendation is to prioritize Electrical or Mechanical Engineering at NIT Srinagar for their outstanding placement percentages and core engineering value, followed by ECE at IIIT Nagpur or Ranchi for high-tech roles, and consider Civil at NIT Hamirpur or Patna only if core civil engineering is a strong preference. All the BEST for the Admission & a Prosperous Future!

Follow RediffGURUS to Know More on 'Careers | Money | Health | Relationships'.

...Read more

Prof Suvasish

Prof Suvasish Mukhopadhyay  |1617 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jun 24, 2025

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