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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9758 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 03, 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
Megha Question by Megha on Jul 02, 2025Hindi
Money

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
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.
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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9758 Answers  |Ask -

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

Asked by Anonymous - Aug 09, 2024Hindi
Money
Hi Sir , Firstly thanks for your detailed explanation on the questions asked. I'm 43 year old female, ashamed to say that I have not done any investment so far. I have 30 lacs in FD from past 3 years which is not fetching me much. Since I kept FD for 6 months it kept on auto renewal that's it. My take home is 1.3 lacs and I have no Emi 's. My monthly expense is max 15k. 1.My plans is to construct a house duplex in another 3 to 4 years in Bangalore. 2.I have a kids of 10 year old and 5 year how can I secure for there future financially for education etc. 3. I am planning for a SWP of 5 lacs for 5 years and expecting returns after 5 years. Since I may quit the job after 5 years.please suggest on this as well. 4.Please please suggest me to grow my money. Please suggest the MF'S I can opt for since I'm newbie on that as well.. 5.My husband has a home loan of 17 lacs for 11% interest rate is it good to close with 10 lac repayment or shld I invest that in some SWP and pay home loan emi from swp payout.
Ans: Evaluating Your Financial Situation
You are 43 years old with Rs. 30 lakhs in an FD, earning Rs. 1.3 lakhs monthly, with minimal expenses. Here’s an analysis of your financial goals:

Constructing a Duplex in 3-4 Years:

This is a significant goal, and you should prioritize saving and investing accordingly.
Securing Your Children's Future:

Planning for their education and future needs is essential.
Planning for SWP:

Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWP) are a good option if you plan to quit your job in 5 years.
Growing Your Wealth:

Investments in mutual funds can help grow your money over time.
Evaluating the Home Loan:

Your husband's home loan interest rate is high, so it's worth considering repayment options.
Constructing a Duplex
Saving for the Construction:

Target Amount:

Determine the estimated cost of constructing your duplex in Bangalore. Let’s assume you’ll need around Rs. 50-60 lakhs.
Investment Options:

Consider investing a portion of your Rs. 30 lakhs FD into high-growth mutual funds. You can choose a mix of equity and balanced funds to help achieve this goal.
Short-Term Investments:

Since your goal is in 3-4 years, focus on funds that offer moderate returns with low to medium risk.
Securing Your Children’s Future
Education Planning:

Start a SIP:

Start a monthly SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) in child education-focused mutual funds. This will create a dedicated corpus for your children’s education.
Diversification:

Invest in a mix of large-cap, mid-cap, and balanced funds for better growth.
PPF for Long-Term Safety:

You can also invest in PPF (Public Provident Fund) as it offers tax benefits and assured returns for your children’s future.
Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP)
SWP Strategy:

Purpose:

SWP is suitable for generating a regular income stream after you quit your job.
Investment Allocation:

You can allocate Rs. 5 lakhs into a balanced mutual fund or a hybrid equity fund for stable returns. The withdrawals will act as a steady income.
Expected Returns:

Over 5 years, a well-chosen fund can generate reasonable returns while allowing periodic withdrawals.
Growing Your Money
Mutual Fund Suggestions:

Large-Cap Funds:

Invest in large-cap funds for stable and consistent returns. These funds are less volatile and offer growth.
Balanced/Hybrid Funds:

Hybrid funds offer a mix of equity and debt, providing balanced growth with lower risk.
Diversify Investments:

Don't put all your money into one fund. Diversify across various funds to manage risk.
Consult a Certified Financial Planner:

Since you're new to mutual funds, consider consulting a Certified Financial Planner to help you choose the right funds based on your risk tolerance and financial goals.
Managing the Home Loan
Evaluating the Loan Repayment:

High Interest Rate:

The 11% interest rate on your husband’s home loan is high.
Option 1: Repay Rs. 10 Lakhs:

Repaying Rs. 10 lakhs will reduce the outstanding principal and save on interest payments.
Option 2: Invest and Pay EMI from SWP:

You could also invest Rs. 10 lakhs in a high-growth fund and use the returns from an SWP to pay the EMI. However, this comes with market risk.
Recommendation:

Considering the high-interest rate, it might be better to repay a portion of the loan now, reducing the debt burden.
Final Insights
Set Clear Goals:

Clearly define your financial goals, such as the cost of the house, your children’s education, and retirement needs.
Diversify Investments:

Don’t rely solely on FDs. Diversify into mutual funds, PPF, and other growth-oriented investments.
Reduce Debt:

Focus on reducing high-interest debt as it eats into your savings.
Consult a CFP:

A Certified Financial Planner can help you tailor your investments to meet your specific needs and risk tolerance.
By following these strategies, you can secure your children’s future, grow your wealth, and achieve your dream of constructing a duplex.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9758 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 03, 2024

Money
Hi , I am 24 yrs old. My monthly income 28k in hand(total PF deductions 3600 (1800 + 1800) from both me and employer PM) and total PF amount till date 26000 and I had been doing SIP contributions (5000 thousand Per month) started last November 23. In Nov 24 I have increased it to 5500 PM. I have FD (50,000) as emergency fund . From next month my income will be increased to 32k. I have some questions related. 1. Should I increase my PF contribution ? or should I open a PPF/NPS account if yes then which one should I go for PPF or NPS ? 2.Planning to get married in next 3 years and need 15 lakhs for that . So how to plan for that? 3. This is a bit early but I need to ask that I would be planning to buy a house in next 20 yrs or 25 years . So should I start investing for it seperately or leave it as of now? 4. As my father is retired and mother house wife , we have a combined health insurance but no life insurance. My employer has provided me with both of them (life/health) . So should I buy a life insurance for me now or I can wait for another 2 to 3 years ? given that( I am fit as of now with no bad eating habbits) 5. Should I think of investing in gold like SGBs somewhere down the line? 6. For short- term investments which investment option is best like for 2 years or less ? 7. As my father is a senior citizen so I opt to have FDs in his account but the problem is he has account in two banks where in one account interest rates are more but it's not breakable online (Gramin Bank) and SBI(where Roi is a bit less but accessible and brekable online). Which one to prefer? 8. My father is having a PPF account is which is maturing next year Mar 25. Corpus almost 30lacs . Where should he invest it as he has a fear that if he invest it in SWP (all 30 ) then due to war's between europen countries the market can crash and he has this saving only. So how to invest this 30lacs ?? 9. In every six months I get some bonus cash from company so how to invest that? 10. How to increase the emergency fund like should I do FD every month or like every quarter or every six months? Plz guide me and suggest me a roadmap on how to move ahead with my investment journey.
Ans: Below is a step-by-step guide to address your queries and create a comprehensive financial roadmap.

1. Should You Increase Your PF Contribution or Open a PPF/NPS Account?
EPF Contribution: There is no harm in increasing your voluntary PF contribution. It provides tax savings and builds a solid retirement corpus with safe returns.

PPF or NPS:

PPF: Suitable if you prefer tax-free returns with safety and a fixed interest rate.
NPS: Good if you are comfortable with partial market exposure and disciplined for retirement planning.
Recommendation: If you are not yet focused on retirement, continue with the EPF for now. Consider PPF for additional tax-saving benefits.

2. Planning Rs 15 Lakhs for Marriage in 3 Years
Set Clear Goals: Start by estimating how much you can save monthly toward this goal.

Investment Options:

Invest Rs 20,000 per month in debt-oriented mutual funds or recurring deposits for stability.
Avoid equities as the horizon is short, and markets can fluctuate.
Utilize Fixed Deposits for lump-sum allocations if you receive bonuses.
Pro Tip: Monitor your goal regularly and adjust SIPs to meet the Rs 15 lakh target.

3. Should You Start Planning for a House Purchase Now?
House Goal Timeline: Since this is a 20-25 year goal, it’s better to wait. Your immediate focus should be marriage and emergency funds.

Long-Term Investment: Once other goals are on track, consider investing in diversified equity mutual funds. These have the potential to generate inflation-beating returns over decades.

4. Should You Buy Life Insurance Now?
Life Insurance Requirement: As you are unmarried and have no dependents, life insurance is not urgent.

Health Insurance: Stick with the employer-provided health insurance for now.

Action Plan: Purchase term life insurance only when you have financial dependents, such as a spouse or children. Ensure coverage of at least 10-15 times your annual income.

5. Should You Consider Investing in Gold?
Gold as an Investment: Gold should not exceed 5-10% of your portfolio. Use it as a diversification tool, not a primary investment.

SGBs (Sovereign Gold Bonds):

Ideal if you plan to hold for the long term.
They provide interest income and capital appreciation without physical storage hassles.
6. Best Short-Term Investment Options (2 Years or Less)
Fixed Deposits: Offer guaranteed returns and are suitable for short-term needs.

Liquid Mutual Funds: These are better than savings accounts and provide slightly higher returns with liquidity.

Recurring Deposits: Good for disciplined savings over the short term.

7. FD in Father’s Account: Gramin Bank or SBI?
Choose SBI FD: Although Gramin Bank offers higher interest, SBI provides online accessibility and convenience.

Reasoning: Accessibility is crucial, especially during emergencies or market volatility.

8. Where Should Your Father Invest Rs 30 Lakhs PPF Maturity?
Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP): A good option for monthly income with partial market exposure. However, diversify the amount to reduce risks.

Suggested Allocation:

Rs 10 lakhs: Invest in Senior Citizens Savings Scheme (SCSS) for safety and regular income.
Rs 10 lakhs: Opt for balanced advantage mutual funds for moderate growth.
Rs 10 lakhs: Keep in FDs for emergencies or short-term needs.
Pro Tip: Reassure your father that diversification minimizes risks. Avoid investing all in one instrument.

9. How to Invest Your Bonus?
Allocate Wisely:

50% toward goals like marriage or emergency fund.
30% toward long-term investments such as mutual funds.
20% for personal needs or contingencies.
Flexibility: Use the bonus to increase SIP contributions for long-term benefits.

10. Increasing Emergency Fund
Systematic Savings: Add Rs 5,000 monthly to a Fixed Deposit or Liquid Fund.

Flexible Frequency: Alternatively, allocate every quarter or six months based on bonuses or surpluses.

Target: Aim for at least six months’ worth of expenses as your emergency fund.

Additional Suggestions
Regular Mutual Fund Investments: Continue increasing SIPs as income grows. Opt for actively managed funds with proven track records.

Avoid Direct Funds: Direct funds require active monitoring and expertise. Invest through a Certified Financial Planner for better guidance.

Tax Planning: Use Section 80C to save tax through EPF, PPF, or ELSS funds.

Final Insights
You have taken the right steps by starting SIPs and creating an emergency fund. Focus on balancing short-term and long-term goals effectively. Diversify your investments and ensure risk management. Seek professional advice for complex decisions involving larger amounts.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9758 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  |9758 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 16, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 16, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi, I am 36 years my total income, expenses & investments are as below. Family income (wife 35000 & 105000) = 140000. Mortgage EMI: 67000 for another 3 years. House rent & expenses 30000. Fisical Gold invest: 10000 per month Term Insurance: 1cr Gold loan 200gm : 6 lakhs Epf: 10 lakhs Property plot: 1cr (1500sqrft) Emergency fund: 50k Future plan: 1. 1 year old daughter future plan. 2. Construction building for 3floors to get rental income. When should start and what are the options for 1.5crs loan. 3. Retirement plan.
Ans: Monthly Cash Flow Assessment
– Your family income is Rs. 1,40,000.
– Mortgage EMI is Rs. 67,000 for 3 more years.
– Rent and expenses are Rs. 30,000.
– Gold investment is Rs. 10,000.
– That leaves around Rs. 33,000 surplus monthly.
– This surplus needs smart allocation for all future goals.
– Your expenses are well-managed. That is a strong starting point.

? Existing Assets and Liabilities
– You have Rs. 10 lakh in EPF. Good long-term asset.
– Property plot worth Rs. 1 crore is a valuable asset.
– Emergency fund is only Rs. 50,000. That is low for a family.
– Gold loan of Rs. 6 lakh on 200g gold is active.
– You have Rs. 1 crore term insurance. That’s essential and well-done.

? Emergency Fund – Strengthen It
– Ideal fund should cover 6 months of expenses.
– Your family needs Rs. 1.2 to 1.5 lakh in emergency fund.
– Boost this first before increasing other investments.
– Use a mix of bank FD and liquid mutual funds.
– Don’t ignore this step. It offers peace of mind.

? Your Daughter’s Future Planning
– You have 17+ years for her higher education.
– Cost of education is rising faster than inflation.
– You must begin a monthly SIP in diversified equity funds.
– Actively managed funds are better than index funds.
– Index funds do not protect in falling markets.
– Index funds lack professional fund manager’s timely decisions.
– Active funds can adapt to changing market cycles.
– A CFP-guided SIP approach ensures consistent returns.
– Start with Rs. 10,000 monthly SIP if possible.
– Increase SIP as EMI ends in 3 years.
– Review and rebalance annually with guidance.
– Avoid ULIPs, LIC plans, or traditional child policies.
– They underperform and offer poor flexibility.

? Construction Plan and Rs. 1.5 Crore Loan
– Construction loan of Rs. 1.5 crore needs proper planning.
– You plan to build 3 floors and earn rental income.
– This is an ambitious and practical idea.
– But timing and loan handling are key.

When to Start:
– Wait until EMI on home loan ends.
– That gives you extra Rs. 67,000 monthly.
– Use that cash to repay gold loan first.
– Clearing gold loan frees up your pledged gold.
– After that, you’re better positioned for new loan.

Loan Options & Suggestions:
– Choose a term of 15–20 years for construction loan.
– That keeps EMIs affordable and less stressful.
– Don’t overcommit. Ensure 40–45% of income to EMIs only.
– Use the plot as collateral.
– Explore joint home loan for better eligibility.
– Maintain high CIBIL score and consistent income flow.
– Keep margin money of 10–15% ready in hand.
– Start planning now but execute after gold loan is cleared.

Construction Steps to Prepare:
– Get property valuation and construction estimates.
– Prepare building approval and design papers.
– Avoid over-building. Focus on rental usability and demand.
– Reserve budget for interior and furnishing.
– Post-construction, rent should cover at least 60–70% of EMI.
– Get rental agreements and tenant screening system in place.

? Gold Loan Strategy
– 200 grams gold against Rs. 6 lakh loan is costly.
– Interest outflow eats your savings slowly.
– Prioritise repaying gold loan before construction loan.
– Use part of surplus plus any bonus to repay gold loan faster.
– Once mortgage EMI ends, use Rs. 67,000 monthly to clear it.
– Don’t keep gold loan for too long.

? EPF as Long-term Asset
– You have Rs. 10 lakh in EPF. That’s good.
– Continue contributing. Don’t withdraw for short-term goals.
– It compounds silently and supports retirement corpus.
– Review EPF statement annually for balance growth.

? Physical Gold Investments
– Rs. 10,000 monthly in gold is a sentimental plan.
– But don’t over-allocate here.
– Gold has low yield over long term.
– Treat gold as hedge, not growth asset.
– Reduce gold investment slowly after 3 years.
– Redirect funds to equity mutual funds for better growth.

? Retirement Plan – Start Early, Stay Consistent
– You are 36 now. Retirement is 20–25 years away.
– Ideal time to start building a strong retirement corpus.
– Your EPF will form one part of it.
– You need additional investments to match inflation.
– Start SIPs in actively managed hybrid and diversified equity funds.
– Begin even with Rs. 5,000–10,000 monthly if cash is tight.
– Gradually raise this SIP amount every year.
– Choose regular plans through MFD with CFP qualification.
– Avoid direct funds. They lack personalised advice and reviews.
– Regular plans offer ongoing handholding, periodic reviews, and course correction.
– Investing without review leads to bad outcomes.
– Don’t depend on annuity or pension policies.
– They are rigid and yield poor inflation-adjusted returns.
– A diversified MF portfolio offers better tax-efficient growth.
– After retirement, shift corpus slowly to hybrid funds for income.
– Avoid selling everything at once. Use SWP to withdraw.

? Tax Strategy – Reduce, Save and Optimise
– Use Rs. 1.5 lakh 80C limit smartly.
– EPF and term insurance already cover part of it.
– Invest the balance in ELSS for dual benefit.
– ELSS offers tax saving and equity growth.
– Avoid traditional insurance policies.
– For daughter’s plan, use non-tax saving diversified equity funds.
– Keep gold loan interest as deduction under 24(b) if eligible.
– Maintain file of all home loan and construction bills for tax purposes.

? Insurance – Adequacy and Coverage
– You already have Rs. 1 crore term cover.
– Check if it is 15–20 times your income.
– Increase sum assured after your new home loan.
– Buy health insurance for self, wife and daughter.
– Choose a family floater of Rs. 10 lakh minimum.
– Health expenses are rising fast in India.
– Employer cover may not be enough post-retirement.
– Buy separate personal health policy without delay.

? After EMI Ends – Rebalance Entire Plan
– In 3 years, EMI of Rs. 67,000 ends.
– That changes your cash flow dramatically.
– Use this to repay gold loan, increase SIPs and boost retirement savings.
– Avoid lifestyle inflation once EMI ends.
– Sit with a Certified Financial Planner and re-strategise.

? Rental Income Plan – What to Expect
– 3 floors can fetch good rent if location supports.
– Don’t overestimate. Always take conservative rent projections.
– Maintain the building to attract quality tenants.
– Rental income is taxable. Keep that in mind.
– Use a portion of rent to create sinking fund for repairs.

? Asset Diversification and Future Planning
– Your main assets are property, EPF, and gold.
– Add mutual funds now to balance asset allocation.
– Mutual funds are liquid, diversified and inflation-beating.
– Stay invested for long-term and avoid panic exits.
– Review goals once every year with a professional.
– Plan for daughter’s college abroad if needed.
– Consider travel, emergency, healthcare and lifestyle needs at retirement.
– Build financial independence. Don’t rely on children for support.

? Final Insights
– Your current structure is stable and promising.
– You’ve handled loans and expenses responsibly.
– Strengthen your emergency fund immediately.
– Clear gold loan before taking construction loan.
– Delay construction until EMI ends to avoid pressure.
– Start SIPs for daughter’s education and your retirement.
– Avoid index funds, direct funds and annuity plans.
– Stick with MFD-guided actively managed mutual funds.
– Keep insurance updated and separate from investments.
– Do regular reviews and plan every step wisely.

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

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Latest Questions
Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Career
Sir I got 68676 in comedk Can you suggest good colleges forCSE or CSE specialization
Ans: Ramya, With a COMEDK rank of 68,676 in 2025, you have viable options for admission to reputable engineering colleges in Karnataka for CSE and its specializations. You can confidently secure seats at numerous recognized institutions where the latest cutoffs range between 63,000 and 1,20,000 for core CSE and closely related specializations. Here are 15 colleges where admission is fully feasible: CMR Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Acharya Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Nitte Meenakshi Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Atria Institute of Technology (Bangalore), New Horizon College of Engineering (Bangalore), Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering (Bangalore), BNM Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Sapthagiri College of Engineering (Bangalore), Don Bosco Institute of Technology (Bangalore), AMC Engineering College (Bangalore), Cambridge Institute of Technology (Bangalore), East Point College of Engineering (Bangalore), Gopalan College of Engineering and Management (Bangalore), Rajarajeswari College of Engineering (Bangalore), and Sai Vidya Institute of Technology (Bangalore). These colleges routinely offer CSE and specializations such as Artificial Intelligence, Data Science, and Information Science, all supported by established infrastructure, diverse peer groups, faculty with advanced degrees, recognized accreditations, and campus-level placement cells. Their cut-off history ensures fair seat allocation for your current rank bracket.

Recommendation: Prioritize CMR Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Nitte Meenakshi Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Acharya Institute of Technology (Bangalore), Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering (Bangalore), and BNM Institute of Technology (Bangalore). This order is justified by established NIRF rankings, steady placement percentages (60–90% in CSE streams), modern campus amenities, regular project-based learning, and a proven track record of producing employable graduates across the IT sector in Karnataka and beyond. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 17, 2025Hindi
Career
My son is getting civil at bits pilani + rmit 2+2 program and cse at vit-ap cat-2 What should we choose
Ans: The BITS Pilani + RMIT 2+2 Civil Engineering program offers an international dual-degree pathway, granting a B.E. from BITS Pilani and a Bachelor’s from RMIT Australia. Students complete two years at BITS Pilani—renowned for nearly 100% placement rates in core engineering and a prestigious reputation—then transfer to RMIT for global research exposure, advanced industry collaborations, and a second recognized degree. RMIT is a top-ranked university known for its employability outcomes and practical learning, and the dual-degree substantially enhances career prospects worldwide. VIT-AP’s Computer Science Engineering (CSE) program under Category 2 ensures placement rates above 90%, excellent infrastructure, and industry-aligned curriculum, with 1000+ recruiters participating and strong records in IT sector roles for CSE graduates. VIT-AP is lauded for hands-on learning, active placement cell, and opportunities in the fast-growing tech industry, making it a robust choice for software-focused careers. While VIT-AP CSE opens doors to IT and allied opportunities, BITS Pilani + RMIT provides unmatched exposure, global credentials, and broader professional mobility in engineering domains.

Recommendation: If your priority is global exposure, academic flexibility, and broad international opportunities in engineering and related fields, prioritize BITS Pilani + RMIT 2+2 Civil. Should your focus be on a strong software foundation and rapid industry integration in India’s tech sector, VIT-AP CSE is preferred. The BITS-RMIT program stands out for long-term value and international scope. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Career
SIR I should go for HBTU (IT) or IIIT VADODARA DIU CAMPUS (ELECTRONICS)?
Ans: Kritika, HBTU’s Information Technology program consistently records placement percentages between 85–90%, supported by a highly qualified faculty (many with PhDs from IITs and NITs) and a long-standing reputation for producing industry-ready graduates. The campus is equipped with advanced labs, updated digital resources, and maintains strong ties with top recruiters in IT and consulting sectors. Batch sizes are moderate, ensuring quality academic mentoring, and the supportive alumni network promotes career growth. In contrast, IIIT Vadodara Diu Campus (Electronics) is a newer institute, operating from a well-facilitated educational hub, but still developing its industry partnerships and placement support specifically for electronics; recent campus data showcase improving placements but with less consistency, and infrastructure is modern but evolving. The electronics branch here faces greater competition for high-tech positions compared to computer-related domains.

Recommendation: HBTU IT stands out for established placements, recognized industry connections, strong academic culture, and proven output in software-oriented careers. Unless you have a distinct passion for electronics or a compelling reason for preferring a satellite IIIT campus, HBTU IT offers the most reliable outcomes for both learning and employability. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Career
My son got IIT Dharwad B.S/M.S Interdisciplinary sciences and BITS Hyderabad Mechanical through BITSAT currently. He may have potential chances of getting NIT Warangal MnC/ECE or IIIT Delhi CSE through DASA. Which one is better in the order of preference
Ans: Venkata Sir, IIIT Delhi’s Computer Science Engineering (CSE) program is nationally recognized for its rigorous curriculum, 90–100% placement rate, leading industry connections, and high-impact research output, making it one of the best platforms for a technology-driven career. The program consistently attracts top recruiters and maintains strong alumni engagement in global tech sectors. NIT Warangal’s Mathematics and Computing (MnC) and Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE) branches also offer strong academic grounding, modern labs, and recorded placement rates above 88% in core tech domains, with the ECE branch now routinely achieving average placement rates above 80% and MnC offering excellent flexibility for careers in data science, software, and analytics. BITS Hyderabad’s Mechanical Engineering program combines a tradition of academic excellence with research-oriented faculty, excellent infrastructure, and a placement percentage above 85% in recent years, while producing graduates who succeed in both core and tech industries and pursue higher studies internationally. IIT Dharwad’s BS/MS Interdisciplinary Sciences is a new, innovative program focused on multidisciplinary skill development with exposure to advanced labs and faculty, but as a new course and newer IIT, it does not yet match the placement rates or alumni reach of the other institutes; its placement rate hovers near 70% and career paths are diverse, with greater emphasis on research and interdisciplinary skills rather than direct tech sector placement.

Recommendation: The optimal order is IIIT Delhi CSE (for career, placements, tech flexibility), NIT Warangal MnC/ECE (for academic reputation and solid placements in both analytics and electronics), BITS Hyderabad Mechanical (for reputable core engineering, good placements, and global exposure), and finally IIT Dharwad BS/MS Interdisciplinary Sciences (for those pursuing interdisciplinary research but less certainty in direct placements). All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8978 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Career
Sir I have scored 83 percentile in MHT cet 2025 what are the best college option for me in Mumbai region
Ans: Aryan, With an 83 percentile in MHT-CET 2025 as a Maharashtra domicile General Category student, you are eligible for BTech admission to several well-regarded engineering colleges in the Mumbai region, excluding the most competitive ones like COEP, VJTI, and ICT, which have significantly higher cutoffs. The following colleges in Mumbai provide feasible admission opportunities based on previous years' cutoffs and are recognized for their reliable placement support, modern infrastructure, NBA/NAAC accreditation, and industry-aligned programs: Sardar Patel Institute of Technology (Andheri), K J Somaiya Institute of Technology (Sion), Vidyalankar Institute of Technology (Wadala), Fr. Conceicao Rodrigues Institute of Technology (Vashi), Xavier Institute of Engineering (Mahim), Bharati Vidyapeeth College of Engineering (Navi Mumbai), SIES Graduate School of Technology (Nerul), Ramrao Adik Institute of Technology (Navi Mumbai), St. Francis Institute of Technology (Borivali), Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Technology (Versova), Don Bosco Institute of Technology (Kurla), Shah & Anchor Kutchhi Engineering College (Chembur), MGM’s College of Engineering (Kamothe, Navi Mumbai), Atharva College of Engineering (Malad), and Pillai College of Engineering (New Panvel). Across these institutions, your score is within the realistic admission range for most branches, including Mechanical, Civil, Electronics/EXTC, and sometimes Information Technology or Computer Science, depending on current year trends and final branch cutoffs; official college portals and admission records substantiate this eligibility for the 2025 cycle.

Recommendation: For optimal academic and professional growth, consider Sardar Patel Institute of Technology (Andheri), K J Somaiya Institute of Technology (Sion), Vidyalankar Institute of Technology (Wadala), Fr. Conceicao Rodrigues Institute of Technology (Vashi), and Ramrao Adik Institute of Technology (Navi Mumbai) as the highest-priority choices. These colleges offer robust campus infrastructure, industry recognition, strong placement networks, and a history of producing successful engineering graduates. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

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Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 17, 2025

Career
Sir, Which would batter choice between my doughter got EE in vlsi Design at Banasthali vidyapeeth and recently also got CSE in Goverment Mahila Engineering College, Ajmer. Which would better ? Suggest
Ans: Amit Sir, Banasthali Vidyapith’s Electrical Engineering program with a focus on VLSI Design is anchored in a reputed women’s university with A++ NAAC accreditation, robust faculty credentials, industry tie-ups, and consistent placement rates of 90–95% for core branches, often in electronics and automation sectors. Campus infrastructure is comprehensive, research exposure is strong, and students benefit from a national network and notable institutional rankings. Government Mahila Engineering College Ajmer’s CSE branch is part of a government-run, well-recognized institution with modern teaching resources, 80–95% placement rates for computer science in recent years, accessible industry partnerships, and a track record of sending students to reputed recruiters such as Amazon and Microsoft. The Ajmer campus is lauded for its faculty, student activities, digital facilities, and supportive environment, though its national brand is less established than Banasthali’s.

Recommendation: If your daughter is passionate about electronics, VLSI, or hardware-oriented careers, Banasthali Vidyapith offers a stronger national reputation, longstanding placement consistency, and higher institutional ranking. For a broad, flexible technology career in software, Government Mahila Engineering College Ajmer CSE stands out for contemporary opportunities and direct industry links. Both paths assure solid outcomes, but branch preference should drive the final choice. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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