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

Advait Arora  | Answer  |Ask -

Financial Planner - Answered on Aug 28, 2023

Advait Arora has over 20 years of experience in direct investing in stock markets in India and overseas.
He holds a masters in IT management from the University Of Wollongong, Australia, and an MBA in marketing from Charles Strut University, NewCastle, Australia.
Advait is a firm believer in the power of compounding to help his clients grow their wealth.... more
Sanjay Question by Sanjay on Aug 25, 2023Hindi
Listen
Money

Hello. I have 2000 shares of Ballarpur Industries Ltd. @3. what's it's future

Ans: not the best portfolio stock. pl refrain from such stories. Still to good quality stocks which are showing consistent growth and are not facing any sector head winds !!
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

Jigar

Jigar Patel  | Answer  |Ask -

Stock Market Expert - Answered on Oct 16, 2023

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Money
Hi Sir, I am 39 year old having taken home salary 1.7 lakh PM. I have 2 homeloan combined debt around 93 lakh and paying EMI 82200 for duration 135 months and 17854 for 164 months. I have auto loan for 11.5 lakh and emi 18552 with 80 months. I have approx 6 lakh in MF investment, 6 lakh as FD for emergency fund and approx 10 tola physical gold. I have 2 daughters age viz 8 and 5. I have no major short term outstanding as of now. Please guide me for retirement corpus + kids education readiness. Also is my decision to payout debt by increasing EMI yearly and prepayment advisable? Thanks.
Ans: Income and Expense Overview
– Your monthly take-home is Rs. 1.7 lakh
– Combined home loan EMI is Rs. 1,00,054
– Auto loan EMI is Rs. 18,552
– Total EMI outflow is Rs. 1,18,606 per month
– This leaves you with about Rs. 51,000 for all other expenses
– You are under high fixed obligation due to loans
– This limits your savings and investment capacity

– However, your discipline in EMI payments is strong
– You have kept Rs. 6 lakh as emergency fund in FD
– That is a good buffer
– You also have Rs. 6 lakh in mutual funds
– And around 10 tola gold (approx Rs. 6–7 lakh)

– Your debt level is high, but you are managing it without default
– That shows resilience and commitment

Assessment of Current Loans
– You have two home loans, total Rs. 93 lakh
– Combined EMIs are Rs. 1,00,054
– One loan is for 135 months (over 11 years)
– Other loan is for 164 months (about 13.5 years)
– Auto loan of Rs. 11.5 lakh adds pressure with Rs. 18,552 EMI

– Loans are eating 70% of your income
– This restricts wealth-building and puts stress on monthly budget

– If income doesn’t grow, savings may suffer
– You must plan carefully to balance debt and future goals

Should You Increase EMI and Prepay Loans?
– Yes, increasing EMI annually is a good strategy
– This brings down the interest burden and shortens loan duration
– Prepaying home loan is also beneficial if done smartly
– Focus more on prepaying auto loan first

– Auto loan has shorter life and higher interest cost
– Clear it off within 3–4 years if possible

– After that, shift focus to prepay home loans step-by-step
– Avoid using emergency fund or MF corpus to prepay
– Use only surplus from salary hikes and bonuses

– You may increase EMI by 5–10% every year
– That will bring strong interest savings
– But don’t reduce emergency fund below Rs. 6 lakh

– Prioritise long-term wealth creation along with loan reduction
– Don’t stop mutual fund SIPs to prepay loans
– Balance both smartly

Mutual Fund Investment Review
– You have Rs. 6 lakh in mutual funds
– You didn’t mention the type, but assuming it’s equity
– It is a good start for long-term goals

– Mutual funds should be your main investment tool going forward
– You must build SIP discipline even with EMI pressure
– Even Rs. 10,000 monthly SIP can create huge wealth in 15 years

– Use actively managed equity mutual funds
– They are more flexible and perform better than index funds
– Index funds do not adjust during market fall or rise
– Active funds are handled by experienced fund managers

– Avoid direct mutual funds as well
– Direct plans may look cheap but give no guidance
– Investing through Certified Financial Planner helps manage risk
– Regular plans offer service, reviews and help in tough markets

Emergency Fund and Safety Net
– You have Rs. 6 lakh in FD
– This is sufficient for now
– It covers at least 4–5 months of your expenses and EMIs

– Do not use this FD for investment or prepayment
– It is your safety cushion against job loss or medical emergencies

– Also, ensure you have term life insurance
– You are the only earning member with high debt
– Take a term plan of at least Rs. 1 crore or more
– It will protect your family from loan burden in your absence

– Health insurance is also crucial
– Take Rs. 10 lakh family floater for your family
– Don’t rely only on employer cover

Children’s Education Planning
– Your daughters are 8 and 5 years old
– Their higher education will begin in 10–13 years

– You must start SIPs now for their goals
– Begin with separate SIP for each child
– Use child-labeled mutual fund schemes or long-term equity funds
– Avoid ULIPs or child insurance plans
– These mix insurance with investment and give low returns

– Mutual fund SIPs offer higher growth and flexibility
– Start with minimum Rs. 5,000–7,000 per child per month
– Increase this every year as EMI burden reduces

– Your gold can also be used for children’s expenses later
– It will work as buffer support

– Don’t depend only on gold or loans for their education
– Planned SIPs will give you full control

Retirement Corpus Planning
– You are 39 now
– Retirement at 60 gives you 21 years
– You need to build wealth during this time

– Your current focus is debt reduction
– But you must slowly shift to wealth creation
– Start SIP for retirement, even if small now
– Rs. 5,000 per month is enough to begin

– Increase the SIP amount as EMI reduces
– Goal should be Rs. 25,000–30,000 monthly SIP after 5–6 years
– This can create sufficient retirement corpus in time

– Don’t stop SIPs when market falls
– Stay invested for full term
– Review portfolio yearly with Certified Financial Planner

– Avoid index funds and direct funds for retirement
– You need professional management and timely advice

Physical Gold Holding
– You hold 10 tola gold, approx Rs. 6–7 lakh
– Gold is good for diversification
– But don’t increase gold further

– Gold does not give regular income or compounding
– Use it only during daughter’s marriage or big expenses

– For long-term goals, equity mutual funds are better
– They offer higher returns and tax advantages

Taxation on Investments
– Equity mutual funds are taxed only when sold
– LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%
– STCG is taxed at 20%

– Debt mutual fund gains are taxed as per your slab
– FD interest is also fully taxable

– So mutual funds are tax-efficient for long-term goals
– FDs are not tax-efficient but useful for safety

Future Action Plan – Step by Step
– Keep Rs. 6 lakh FD for emergencies
– Don’t use this for prepayment or investing
– Increase EMI yearly by 5–10% if income rises
– Prepay auto loan first, then target one home loan
– Don’t stop SIPs during loan repayment
– Build minimum SIP of Rs. 15,000 total per month now
– Divide between retirement and child education
– Take term insurance of at least Rs. 1 crore
– Take health cover of Rs. 10 lakh for family
– Slowly reduce gold exposure if needed

Finally
Your debt pressure is high, but your financial behaviour is very responsible. You have created buffers. You are planning ahead.

Yes, increasing EMIs and prepaying debt is wise. But do it gradually. Do not stop mutual fund investments. Wealth creation and debt reduction must go together.

You are at a turning point in your financial journey. Right steps from now will secure your future. Stay consistent. Review yearly with a Certified Financial Planner.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 27, 2025Hindi
Money
I am 49 , I will retire on 60 i.e. 2036. Currently I am investing 35k per month in sip mostly equity funds sbi n will invest with 10% stepup each year till 2036 , nps 6k per month , current epf balance 26lks ppf 15laks with monthly contribution of 9k. What will be my tentative corpus till 2036.
Ans: Evaluation of Current Investments and Contributions
– You are 49 and planning to retire at 60 in 2036.
– Monthly SIP of Rs.?35,000 in equity funds is strong.
– You plan 10% annual step-up till retirement.
– That ensures increasing contributions over time.
– NPS investment of Rs.?6,000/month is steady.
– EPF balance of Rs.?26?lakhs is substantial.
– PPF corpus is Rs.?15?lakhs with Rs.?9,000 monthly.

– These investments cover equities and fixed-income well.
– Equity SIP provides growth, PPF/NPS offer stability.
– EPF benefits from employer contributions and tax efficiency.
– You are well on your way for retirement planning.

Expected Growth Patterns Till Retirement
– Equity SIP typically delivers average annual return of 10–12%.
– With your 10% annual increase, contributions grow significantly.
– This build-up enhances compounding power.
– NPS gives moderate returns with partial equity exposure.
– PPF gives secure but lower 7–8% returns over long term.
– EPF returns are consistent and tax-free on maturity.

– Over the next 11–12 years, these investments will grow substantially.
– Equity will remain primary growth driver.
– Fixed income will offer stability and balance.
– Together they create a balanced retirement corpus.

Tentative Retirement Corpus Estimation
– Without detailed figures, exact number is complex to calculate.
– But long-term growth patterns indicate a solid corpus.
– You should expect corpus of Rs.?3.5–4?crore by 2036.
– This depends on consistent contributions and returns.

– Equity SIP with step-up will build over Rs.?1–1.5?crore.
– EPF balance with ongoing contributions can reach Rs.?1–1.2?crore.
– PPF maturity over 11 years may grow to Rs.?25–30?lakhs or more.
– NPS corpus may be Rs.?15–20?lakhs depending on asset mix.
– Total investment value may land between Rs.?3.5 to Rs.?4?crore.

– Actual amount may vary due to market cycles and return fluctuations.
– But this projected range gives you a useful goal framework.

Income Generation from the Retirement Corpus
– To generate Rs.?2.5?lakh monthly (Rs.?30?lakh yearly), you need smart withdrawals.
– A corpus of Rs.?3.5–4?crore can support this sustainably.
– Equity and hybrid allocations post-retirement guard against inflation.
– This enables systematic withdrawal plans from mutual funds.
– Fixed income from EPF/PPF/NPS offers stable annual basis.
– Equity withdrawal top-up ensures your monthly need is met yearly.

– Keep and increase equity share even after retirement.
– This helps maintain corpus value over 25–30 post-retirement years.
– A mix of fixed and growth assets ensures both income and longevity.

Reinforce Equity SIP Upside with Step-Up Strategy
– 10% yearly increase is disciplined and powerful.
– As your income grows, follow through the planned step-ups.
– If step-up becomes difficult, maintain current SIP amount.
– Consider investing surplus income or bonuses into existing SIPs.
– Maintaining consistency ensures compounding works in your favour.

Optimize Fixed-Income Holdings Strategically
– EPF is ideal as a foundation; continue contributions till 2036.
– PPF should continue for its tax-free, safe returns.
– NPS contributions can remain as they offer annuity benefits and diversification.
– Avoid shifting from these unless liquidity becomes urgent.

– Fixed-income tools give safe cushion to your investment mix.
– They help balance out equity volatility near retirement.
– You can gradually convert some fixed income into conservative hybrid funds near age 57.

Asset Allocation Transition Over Time
– From now till 2033, keep around 70–80% equity exposure.
– This supports strong growth and future corpus.
– From age 56 onward, shift gradually to hybrid and debt funds.
– This protects the portfolio from pre-retirement market dips.
– Target 50–60% equity, 40–50% fixed income by age 58.
– This offers growth with capital protection nearing retirement.

Tax and Withdrawal Planning
– Mutual fund gains above Rs.?1.25?lakh are taxed at 12.5% LTCG.
– Short-term gains are taxed at 20%.
– Debt fund gains follow slab rates.
– Plan withdrawals in phases to manage annual tax impact.
– Use systematic withdrawal plans for mutual funds post-retirement.
– EPF and PPF withdrawals are tax-free. NPS lump sum also has benefits.

Risks and Contingency Measures
– Market volatility may impact equity returns.
– Health and inflation risk can affect your corpus and expenses.
– Insurance is essential: ensure you have term and health coverage.
– Keep emergency fund equal to at least 6 months of expenses.
– This avoids forced withdrawal of investments.
– Monitor portfolio allocation and rebalance every year.
– Stay flexible with step-up rates and asset mix adjustments.

Role of Regular Funds and CFP Guidance
– Use actively managed funds for better performance and flexibility.
– Avoid index funds – they merely track benchmarks and lack tactical rebalancing.
– Avoid direct funds – no advisory support, no periodic rebalancing.
– Invest via regular fund plans through a CFP-certified MFD.
– You gain expert help with fund selection, review, and emotional control.
– They guide in timely switching between asset classes.

Action Plan Summary for the Next 12 Years
– Increase SIP step-up yearly without fail.
– Maintain NPS and PPF till retirement.
– Continue EPF contributions.
– Gradually transfer some FDs to hybrid funds via STP.
– Review asset allocation every year to stay on track.
– Implement SWP post-retirement for monthly income.
– Monitor tax rules and adjust withdrawals accordingly.
– Maintain appropriate insurance and emergency buffer.

Final Insights
– You already have a solid foundation with diversified assets.
– Consistent investing, step-up SIPs, and smart asset mix will build your corpus.
– With Rs.?3.5–4?crore by 2036, you can achieve Rs.?2.5?lakh monthly income.
– Avoid passive index funds and direct plans that lack proactive support.
– Use CFP-led regular funds for guidance and personalised planning.
– Rebalance periodically and plan withdrawals with tax efficiency.
– Your disciplined approach today will secure a comfortable future income at retirement.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 27, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir , I am now at 35. My monthly income is 70K. I have PL of 12L and Credit Card Dues of 6 lakh. I have LIC 12k per year and an market link investment and life insurance policy of 10k per month. I have liability of school fee of my child that is 30K / Y. Please suggest.
Ans: Understanding Your Current Financial Situation
– You are 35 years old with Rs 70,000 monthly income.
– You have a personal loan of Rs 12 lakh.
– Your credit card dues are Rs 6 lakh.
– You pay Rs 12,000 yearly towards a LIC policy.
– You have a market-linked insurance plan costing Rs 10,000 monthly.
– Your child’s annual school fees are Rs 30,000.

Your financial situation shows some urgent areas to fix. You have high debt. Your savings are locked in non-useful products. Immediate steps are needed.

Assessing the Impact of Debt on Your Finances
– Personal loans and credit card dues are costly.
– Personal loans carry interest rates of 12% to 18%.
– Credit cards have interest rates of 30% to 42% yearly.
– These loans are wealth-destroying, not wealth-building.

– With Rs 70,000 salary, your EMI capacity is limited.
– High debt EMIs will strain your daily living expenses.
– This can affect your peace of mind and family life.

Reducing debt must be your first priority.

Analysing the LIC and Market Linked Insurance Plan
– LIC policy premium is Rs 12,000 yearly.
– You also pay Rs 10,000 monthly for a market-linked plan.
– This totals Rs 1.32 lakh per year for insurance.

– These policies are investment-cum-insurance.
– Such products give poor returns and inadequate protection.
– They lock your money for long periods.

A Certified Financial Planner always advises pure term insurance for protection.
Investments should be in mutual funds separately for better growth.

Suggested Immediate Actions on Insurance Policies
– Surrender your market-linked insurance plan immediately.
– Also surrender LIC if it is a money-back, endowment, or ULIP.
– Stop paying further premiums on both.

– Use the surrender values to repay your debts partly.
– Buy a pure term insurance plan separately for life cover.

– The term insurance premium will be low.
– Around Rs 8,000 to Rs 12,000 yearly for Rs 50 lakh to Rs 75 lakh cover.

Your first step is to protect your family without wasting money in poor plans.

Creating a Practical Debt Repayment Strategy
– List all your loans with outstanding amounts and interest rates.
– Start with clearing the highest interest loan first.

Step 1: Pay Off Credit Card Dues First
– Credit cards charge the highest interest.
– Take a personal loan top-up at lower interest to clear the cards.
– If top-up is not possible, convert your credit card dues into EMIs.

– Avoid making only minimum payments.
– Pay the full amount or convert to lower EMIs.

Step 2: Repay Personal Loan Next
– Once credit card dues are cleared, focus on personal loan EMIs.
– Use every bonus, incentive, or side income for loan prepayment.
– Don’t delay prepayment. Interest eats your wealth silently.

Planning a Monthly Cash Flow Budget
– Your monthly income is Rs 70,000.
– Set aside Rs 8,000 yearly for term insurance premium.
– Child’s school fee is Rs 2,500 monthly (Rs 30,000 yearly).

– Your household expenses should not exceed Rs 25,000 to Rs 30,000.
– Allocate Rs 5,000 to Rs 7,000 monthly for essential savings.
– Use the rest fully to clear debt EMIs.

Keep your lifestyle simple till your debts are cleared.

Setting Up an Emergency Fund Slowly
– After clearing your loans, start building an emergency fund.
– This should cover 3 to 6 months of expenses.
– Keep it in a liquid mutual fund or sweep-in FD.

This will protect your family during job loss or medical emergencies.

Starting Proper Investments After Debt Clearance
– Don’t invest aggressively until your debts are cleared.
– Debt interest is higher than investment returns.

After debt clearance, start SIP in actively managed mutual funds.
Don’t choose index funds.

Why Avoid Index Funds?
– Index funds only copy the market without expert guidance.
– In falling markets, they fall with the index.
– Actively managed funds aim to protect your downside.
– Expert fund managers spot opportunities and risks.

Mutual funds through a Certified Financial Planner give you personalised advice.
Don’t go for direct funds.

Why Avoid Direct Mutual Funds?
– Direct funds give no personalised advice.
– In tough markets, you will have no guidance.
– A Mutual Fund Distributor (MFD) holding CFP credentials helps you stay disciplined.

Regular funds through an MFD have monitoring and handholding. This protects your long-term goals.

Keeping Your Child’s Education in Focus
– School fees are currently manageable.
– But higher education will need a bigger corpus.

After your debts are cleared, start a dedicated SIP for your child.
Prefer an actively managed equity mutual fund for growth.

Increase the SIP yearly as your income grows.

Protecting Your Retirement in the Long-Term
– At 35 years, retirement is around 25 years away.
– Start small investments in equity mutual funds after debt clearance.

PF and PPF can be part of your retirement safety net.
But they alone are not enough.

Mutual funds give higher growth potential for long-term retirement goals.

Smart Cost-Cutting Suggestions to Improve Cash Flow
– Cut down unnecessary lifestyle expenses temporarily.
– Postpone big-ticket purchases like phones or vacations.
– Stop premium OTT subscriptions if not used.
– Limit eating out and reduce online shopping.
– Use public transport or carpool to save fuel.

Every Rs 1 saved can help clear your debt faster.

Exploring Additional Income Opportunities
– Look for freelance or weekend work in your skill area.
– Even Rs 5,000 to Rs 10,000 extra per month helps your debt reduction.
– Explore online part-time teaching, content writing, or digital freelancing.

This extra income can be used fully for loan repayment.

Reassessing Your Loans Every 6 Months
– Review your debt status every 6 months.
– If your income increases, increase EMI or make prepayments.

This reduces your interest and loan tenure quickly.

Important Money Habits to Follow
– Always pay your full credit card dues on time.
– Never take fresh personal loans unless it is an emergency.
– Don’t borrow to invest.
– Avoid EMI shopping for gadgets and appliances.

Your focus now should be on clearing your past dues first.

Your Step-by-Step Action Plan
Stop all poor insurance plans and surrender them.

Buy a pure term insurance plan for family protection.

Pay off credit card dues first using personal loan top-up or EMI conversion.

Stick to a tight household budget.

Allocate all savings towards debt clearance.

Start building an emergency fund only after debt is cleared.

Begin SIPs in mutual funds for child’s education and retirement later.

Get ongoing guidance from a Certified Financial Planner.

Final Insights
Your debt levels are high but can be cleared with discipline.
Don’t panic or lose hope. Start taking small steps today.

Clear your debts first to achieve financial peace.
Then start your wealth-building journey through proper mutual fund investments.

Avoid confusing insurance with investment.
Don’t touch real estate for investment purposes. It is illiquid and costly.

Work with a Certified Financial Planner to review your progress yearly.

In the future, your family’s financial stability will thank you for these steps.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Money
Hello Sir I am Naveen and i am 32 years old, I am planning to retire at the age of 45 with 5 Cr and monthly income 1 L My Investment is PPF 550000 ULIP 250000 EPF 500000 NPS 250000(every year 50000) Stock 1300000 MF 1000000 . Take Child plan name sbi smart champ paying 55000 every year ,Own house, taken Health insurance 20 L and Term insurance 1 Cr. Please advise me how much i need to increase my investment for my better retirement
Ans: Your goals are clear and early. That itself is good. You want to retire by 45 with Rs. 5 crores and Rs. 1 lakh monthly income. You are just 32 now. You have 13 years. Let me assess everything from a 360-degree view. I’ll guide you step by step with practical insights.

Your Retirement Goal – Good Target But Needs Fine-Tuning
– You want to retire by age 45.
– You aim for a retirement corpus of Rs. 5 crores.
– You expect Rs. 1 lakh monthly income post-retirement.

But please consider:
– You may live 40+ years after retirement.
– Inflation will erode the value of Rs. 1 lakh over time.
– So you will need much more than Rs. 5 crores actually.

Example Insight:
– Rs. 1 lakh today will be worth only Rs. 50,000 after 15 years.
– That means your target income will not be enough later.
– You need rising income during retirement, not flat.
– That requires a bigger corpus than you currently think.

Monthly Investment Requirement – Likely to Be Low Now
– At 32, you still have time to build a good base.
– But you must invest heavily and consistently for 13 years.
– You will need at least Rs. 75,000 to Rs. 90,000 monthly investment.
– This figure assumes decent returns and proper discipline.

Let’s Analyse Your Existing Investments
You’ve shared the following:

– PPF: Rs. 5.5 lakhs
– ULIP: Rs. 2.5 lakhs
– EPF: Rs. 5 lakhs
– NPS: Rs. 2.5 lakhs (Rs. 50,000 per year)
– Stocks: Rs. 13 lakhs
– Mutual Funds: Rs. 10 lakhs
– SBI Smart Champ child plan – Rs. 55,000/year
– Own house
– Term cover of Rs. 1 crore
– Health cover of Rs. 20 lakhs

Now I’ll assess each one with suggestions.

PPF – Safe but Limited Growth
– PPF is safe and tax-free.
– But returns are fixed and not high.
– It’s good for partial retirement safety.
– Don’t over-allocate here.

Suggestion:
– Continue PPF till maturity.
– But don’t invest more than Rs. 1.5 lakh yearly here.
– Don’t treat it as core retirement engine.

ULIP – High Charges and Poor Flexibility
– ULIPs have high charges in early years.
– Investment performance is generally lower than mutual funds.
– Mixes insurance and investment.

Suggestion:
– Review the policy document carefully.
– If it’s more than 5 years old, check surrender value.
– Post lock-in, consider surrendering and shifting to mutual funds.
– Keep insurance and investment separate always.

EPF – Good Base for Long-Term Safety
– EPF is safe, disciplined, and tax-efficient.
– Interest is tax-free.
– It helps for basic retirement security.

Suggestion:
– Continue your EPF contribution.
– Don’t withdraw it.
– Treat it as your retirement buffer.
– But it alone won’t be enough for early retirement.

NPS – Consistent Contribution Needed
– NPS is low cost and long-term.
– You are contributing Rs. 50,000 yearly.
– It is locked till 60. So won’t help for age 45 retirement.

Suggestion:
– Continue NPS separately for age 60 retirement.
– But don’t depend on NPS for your early retirement needs.

Stocks – Needs Proper Monitoring
– You have Rs. 13 lakhs in stocks.
– That’s a good amount.
– Direct stocks need regular monitoring and research.

Suggestion:
– Review quality of stocks.
– Exit any non-performing or risky ones.
– Keep only fundamentally strong and growth-focused stocks.
– Shift some portion to mutual funds for balance.

Mutual Funds – Strong Foundation for Growth
– You have Rs. 10 lakhs in mutual funds.
– This is a very good step.
– Mutual funds give long-term compounding with lower risk than stocks.

Suggestions:
– Increase SIP gradually every year.
– Choose 3–4 good funds.
– Mix flexi-cap, balanced advantage, and mid-cap.
– Avoid index or sector funds.

Direct Plan – Not Mentioned But Important to Clarify
– If your mutual fund is a direct plan, take care.
– Direct plans offer no professional support.
– You may make wrong fund choices or stay with poor funds.
– Regular plans via MFD with CFP offer guidance and reviews.

Suggestion:
– Prefer regular plan via CFP-backed MFD.
– You get handholding, rebalancing, and support.
– Especially important for early retirement planning.

Index Funds – Not Advised for Your Case
– Index funds have no flexibility.
– They cannot beat market or protect downside.
– Actively managed funds adjust better to cycles.

Suggestion:
– Don’t use index funds.
– Use actively managed equity mutual funds.
– Choose based on consistent performance and fund manager record.

SBI Smart Champ – Review Needed
– This is an insurance-linked child plan.
– Such plans give low return and long lock-in.
– Rs. 55,000 yearly is going there.

Suggestion:
– After 5 years, consider surrendering.
– Instead, invest in mutual funds for child education.
– Term plan is a better cover for life protection.

Own House – Not a Liquid Asset
– You mentioned having a house.
– That gives emotional comfort.
– But it won’t help in retirement income.

Suggestion:
– Don’t count your house as part of retirement corpus.
– It is not income generating unless rented.
– Focus on building financial assets.

Term Insurance – Sufficient for Now
– You have a term insurance of Rs. 1 crore.
– That’s good for now.

Suggestion:
– Review after few years as your liabilities grow.
– Increase coverage if you have more dependents later.
– Term insurance should continue till at least age 60.

Health Insurance – Strong Coverage
– You have Rs. 20 lakh health insurance.
– That is a very good step.

Suggestion:
– Confirm if it includes all family members.
– Keep increasing cover or add super top-up.
– This protects your investments from medical expenses.

Emergency Fund – Not Mentioned
– You haven’t shared about emergency fund.
– It is essential for any early retirement plan.

Suggestion:
– Maintain 6 to 9 months of expenses in liquid form.
– Use FD, savings or liquid mutual funds.
– Never use long-term funds for short-term needs.

Monthly Investment – Target for Early Retirement
– Your target corpus of Rs. 5 crores may fall short.
– Especially with Rs. 1 lakh monthly post-retirement goal.
– Inflation will reduce real value of money every year.

Suggestion:
– You must aim for Rs. 75,000 to Rs. 90,000 monthly investments.
– Start with what you can manage now.
– Increase SIP by 10–15% every year.
– Focus on equity-oriented instruments.
– Review progress yearly with a CFP.

Asset Allocation – Get the Balance Right
– Your current allocation is mixed: equity, debt, insurance.
– More focus is needed on equity for growth.
– Locked plans like ULIP and child plans reduce flexibility.

Suggestion:
– Shift gradually to more liquid and equity-based products.
– Maintain emergency and protection base.
– Avoid over-committing to long lock-in products.

Behavioural Discipline – Most Critical
– Early retirement needs strict consistency.
– Market will go up and down. Don’t stop SIPs.
– Avoid panic and greed.
– Stick to your strategy with help of professional.

Taxation Awareness – Important for Planning
– Equity mutual fund LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
– STCG taxed at 20%.
– Debt mutual fund gains taxed as per your income slab.
– Keep this in mind while rebalancing or redeeming.
– Plan exits smartly to reduce tax.

Finally
– Your financial journey has started well.
– You have good habits and clarity.
– But early retirement needs more speed and focus.
– Rs. 5 crores may not be enough.
– Your monthly goal must grow with inflation.
– Shift from ULIP and child plans to equity mutual funds.
– Use a Certified Financial Planner to guide each step.
– Increase investments every year.
– Track and rebalance regularly.
– Protect your health and family with strong insurance.
– Avoid direct plans and index funds.

Stay committed. Adjust when needed. Review annually.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
Sir, I'm 41 with a 7 year old kid. My husband is currently not working. I have a net monthly income of 2L. We own a flat so there is no rental except for monthly maintenance charges. Apart from that that I save 50k in RD (2L till now). Rest goes for house hold expenses. In savings, I have, 1.5 L in NPS which I don't want to put more anymore. 3.5 L in large cap and mid cap stocks ,1.6 L in mutual fund one time investment, Around 9L worth of investment in SGB (maturing in 2028 and maturity amount will be approx 13 to 15L), 50L in my company stocks And 10 L in bank fixed deposit. I'm thinking whether I should stop my monthly 50K RD and do a SIP in midcap instead for 5 years? With job volatility what would be a best and safe way to get more returns.
Ans: You have shown strong discipline in savings. Your steady income and structured investments are already giving you a good base. At 41, your focus must be on stability, growth, and protection. Let us evaluate your situation in depth and build a 360-degree strategy for you.

Income, Expense and Surplus Evaluation
– Your net monthly income is Rs. 2L
– Household expenses plus maintenance consume about Rs. 1.5L
– You save Rs. 50K in RD monthly, which is structured and disciplined
– Your spouse is not working, so you are the sole earner
– This increases the importance of cash flow and risk cover
– With one child aged 7, you will have education needs in next 10–12 years

– Your savings rate of 25% (Rs. 50K monthly) is good
– But returns from RD are too low for long-term goals
– RD gives safety but not growth
– We need to rebalance towards high-return avenues

Existing Investment Review
##Recurring Deposit
– You have Rs. 2L already saved in RD
– RD offers fixed but low returns, taxable as per your slab
– It is safe but not useful for wealth creation
– Not suitable for medium to long-term goals
– You may stop new RDs now
– Existing RD can be allowed to complete its term
– Use that corpus later for emergencies or as lump-sum

##Mutual Fund One-time Investment
– You have Rs. 1.6L in mutual funds
– It shows good intention to diversify
– You haven’t mentioned the fund type, but equity allocation is useful
– This fund should be reviewed periodically for performance
– You can continue to hold or switch based on planner’s review

##Stocks – Company and Others
– Rs. 3.5L in large-cap and mid-cap stocks shows active investing
– Also Rs. 50L in your company’s stock is significant
– Stocks are risky, especially when concentrated in one company
– If your salary and investment depend on same company, risk is doubled
– This creates vulnerability during market downturn or job change

– Gradually reduce your exposure in company stock
– Redeem in parts when possible and reinvest in diversified funds
– Keep company stock below 10–15% of your total assets
– That protects you from overdependence

– Don’t increase direct stock exposure further unless you track markets regularly
– Use actively managed mutual funds instead

##Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs)
– Rs. 9L in SGBs is well-placed for diversification
– Maturity in 2028 will likely fetch Rs. 13–15L
– SGBs are safe, government-backed, and tax-free on maturity
– This gives protection against inflation in gold
– No action needed here. Continue to hold till maturity

##NPS
– You have Rs. 1.5L in NPS but don’t want to invest more
– That is acceptable
– NPS gives long-term retirement income but has lock-in till 60
– Withdrawal is restricted and not fully flexible
– You can keep existing funds but stop new investment
– Direct mutual fund SIPs are better for long-term growth with liquidity

##Fixed Deposit
– Rs. 10L in FD gives you safety and liquidity
– It acts as a good emergency buffer
– You don’t need to increase FD unless job situation changes
– FD returns are also taxed, so not ideal for growth
– Use it mainly for emergencies and temporary parking

Goal Planning for Child and Retirement
– Your child is 7 now
– Higher education cost will come up in 10–12 years
– You need to build a dedicated fund for that

– You should start a SIP for minimum 5–7 years
– Use only actively managed equity mutual funds
– Mid-cap or flexi-cap categories can work best
– Avoid index funds—they only copy markets and don’t adjust in downturn
– Active funds have better flexibility and professional management
– They outperform in long run with the help of fund managers

– Direct plans may look cheaper but offer no help
– In tough markets, direct investors often stop SIPs
– That spoils long-term goals
– Go for regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner
– You get reviews, guidance, portfolio adjustments and goal tracking

– A Rs. 50K SIP for 5 years can create a strong child corpus
– You may increase SIP after 1–2 years if your income allows

– For retirement, continue existing funds in mutual funds and NPS
– Also, slowly shift out of your company stock
– Reinvest in equity and hybrid mutual funds
– This will give more stable growth

Safety and Risk Management
##Job Volatility and Income Protection
– You are the only earning member
– Your child and husband depend on you fully
– So you must protect income and stability

– First, ensure you have 6–9 months’ expenses as emergency fund
– You already have Rs. 10L in FD, which can be used for this
– Don’t touch this FD for investment

– Next, ensure term insurance is active
– You must have at least Rs. 1 crore term insurance
– If not taken yet, buy it urgently
– Avoid LIC or traditional insurance for this
– Buy pure term cover with low premium and high sum assured

##Health Insurance
– You didn’t mention personal health insurance
– Do not rely only on company insurance
– Buy separate Rs. 10L floater policy for yourself and family
– Choose a plan with maternity, child cover, and critical illness options

– Medical inflation is rising every year
– A hospitalisation can wipe out years of savings
– Health cover protects both income and savings

SIP vs RD – What Works Better
– RD is useful only for safety and short goals
– But it gives low returns and is taxable fully
– Mutual funds offer higher growth for medium to long term

– You want to shift Rs. 50K RD to SIP for 5 years
– Yes, that is a wise decision
– SIPs will create more wealth with compounding
– Start with mid-cap or flexi-cap funds via regular plan

– Stay invested for full term
– Don’t stop SIPs during market fall
– Use planner’s help to review every 6 months

– Mutual fund SIP builds discipline, just like RD
– But gives much better returns over time
– Also gives flexibility to increase or reduce

Investment Mistakes to Avoid
– Avoid investing more in company stock
– Don’t invest in index funds—they don’t offer active management
– Don’t go for direct mutual funds—they lack guidance
– Don’t buy ULIPs or traditional child plans—they mix insurance and investment
– Don’t overexpose to FDs beyond emergency needs
– Avoid chasing high-return tips or unknown stocks

– Follow structured asset allocation
– Equity for growth, debt for stability, gold for hedge
– Review and adjust based on market and goals

Finally
You are managing things well with discipline. Your savings are structured. You have diversified investments.

But now, you must shift focus from safety to growth. RD is safe, but too slow. Mutual fund SIPs will help you grow wealth.

Stop RD and start SIP of Rs. 50K for 5 years. Use only actively managed funds. Avoid direct and index options.

Make sure you have term insurance and health cover in place. Use your company stock gains smartly. Reduce holding gradually.

This combination will give you growth, safety, and flexibility. You can achieve all future goals with this balanced strategy.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9611 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 10, 2025

Money
I am 43 years old, earning 2L pm, I have a Car Loan of 11L & I m investing 15000 pm in mutual funds. I Have 71k in Mutual Funds, 8.75L in Equities+Gold SGB, Have 1 Home, whose rental income covers car loan emi fully, Have 65 L In VPF & FDR is 30L, I want to retire by 57? How to maxmise my Investment so that i can earn 2.5l pm after 57?
Ans: Income, Loans, and Current Cash Flow Assessment
– Your monthly income is Rs. 2 lakhs.
– Car loan of Rs. 11L is being repaid.
– Home rent fully covers car loan EMI.
– That is a helpful arrangement for cash flow.

– You invest Rs. 15,000 monthly in mutual funds.
– Total mutual fund holding is Rs. 71,000 currently.
– Equities and SGB investment total is Rs. 8.75 lakhs.
– Fixed deposit corpus stands at Rs. 30 lakhs.
– VPF savings have grown to Rs. 65 lakhs.

– You have a property, but it's better not to consider it for investment.
– It is serving well by supporting your EMI obligation.

– With such good assets already built, your base is strong.
– You now need to accelerate and align all investments to retirement.

Retirement Goal: Rs. 2.5 Lakhs Monthly from Age 57
– You want Rs. 2.5 lakhs every month post-retirement.
– That means Rs. 30 lakhs per year as retirement income.
– This income must last for at least 25–30 years.
– So, you will need a sizeable retirement corpus by age 57.

– You have 14 years left to accumulate this corpus.
– Early retirement requires aggressive and disciplined investing.
– Existing assets can be optimised to achieve this.

– Let’s focus on how to grow your wealth till age 57.
– Then how to draw monthly income from it sustainably.

Mutual Funds – Growth Engine for Retirement
– Currently, SIP is Rs. 15,000 per month in mutual funds.
– This needs to be increased in the next 2–3 years.
– From age 43 to 50, try increasing SIPs by 10% yearly.

– Mutual funds should be in diversified equity categories.
– Prefer actively managed multi-cap, large-midcap, and flexi-cap funds.
– These help in growth and flexibility over long term.

– Avoid index funds. They follow the index passively.
– Index funds don’t beat the market in all phases.
– In India, active fund managers can outperform in most cycles.

– Also avoid ETFs. They don’t offer real diversification.
– For wealth creation, direct index investing is not suitable.

– Do not invest in direct mutual fund plans.
– Direct funds give no advice, no tracking, no correction help.
– Invest through regular plans with a Certified Financial Planner.
– You get handholding, guidance and behaviour control.

– Separate your SIPs into two goals: retirement and contingency.
– Keep one folio for each, so goals remain clearly tracked.

VPF and FD – Stability, But Low Growth
– Your VPF corpus is Rs. 65 lakhs now.
– This is good for long-term safety and retirement base.
– VPF offers steady and tax-free interest returns.
– Continue VPF till age 57 for secure retirement core.

– Your FD holding is Rs. 30 lakhs.
– FDs are safe, but offer low post-tax return.
– They don’t beat inflation over long durations.

– Don’t lock all FD amounts in long-term.
– You can slowly shift Rs. 10–15L into hybrid funds.
– Use Systematic Transfer Plan (STP) over 12–15 months.
– This improves return while keeping risk moderate.

– Balance FDs can stay for emergencies or future use.
– Review FD rates every year and reinvest cautiously.

Equities and Gold (SGBs) – Add Power to Wealth
– Your holdings in equities and SGBs total Rs. 8.75L.
– This is a good start for alternative investment pool.
– Keep investing in equities via mutual funds only.
– Direct equity needs time and emotional control.
– Many investors lose by reacting to market news.

– SGBs are fine for long-term passive gold holding.
– But don’t increase allocation to gold beyond 5–8%.
– Gold can protect wealth, but not grow it enough.

– Don’t buy more gold in physical or digital form.
– Existing SGBs can be kept till maturity.
– They provide interest plus capital appreciation.

Optimising Car Loan and Monthly Surplus
– Your home rent fully covers car EMI.
– So, you need not focus on prepaying it fast.
– Just keep a check on total interest outgo.

– If EMI ends before retirement, that’s good enough.
– Any future rental surplus can be redirected to investments.

– Try to increase SIP amount to Rs. 25,000 in next year.
– Plan to grow it to Rs. 40,000–50,000 within 3–4 years.
– Early years matter more due to compounding.

– Review your expenses every 6 months.
– Try to save 30% of your income for investing.
– This will build momentum towards early retirement.

Insurance and Protection Strategy
– You didn’t mention insurance coverage details.
– At your age, term insurance is essential till age 60.
– You should have minimum Rs. 1–1.5 cr term cover.

– Health insurance is also important, minimum Rs. 10L individual or family cover.
– Keep a buffer of Rs. 2–3L in liquid funds for emergencies.

– Do not buy new traditional or endowment plans.
– They mix insurance and investment, and give low return.
– Your retirement goal needs pure investments, not bundled ones.

– If you already hold ULIP or endowment policies, review them.
– If surrender is allowed with low penalty, exit and reinvest in mutual funds.

Post-Retirement Income Planning – 14 Years from Now
– At 57, you will need Rs. 2.5L per month as income.
– This means planning for sustainable withdrawal.
– Total retirement corpus should be around Rs. 4.5–5 cr at least.

– It should come from mutual funds, VPF, and debt funds.
– You should hold at least 30–40% in equity post-retirement too.
– This helps in beating inflation over long time.

– Start shifting equity to hybrid from age 54 slowly.
– Keep 2 years' worth of monthly income in liquid funds.
– Don’t withdraw from equity funds in a bad market.
– Use systematic withdrawal plans (SWP) from mutual funds post-retirement.

– Withdraw from debt and hybrid funds in the first 5 years.
– Allow equity funds to grow for later years.

Taxation Awareness on Mutual Fund Withdrawals
– New mutual fund tax rules are different now.
– Equity fund LTCG above Rs. 1.25L taxed at 12.5%.
– STCG from equity funds taxed at 20%.
– Debt fund gains are taxed as per your income slab.

– Track holding periods carefully before withdrawing.
– Use SWP to manage tax outgo post-retirement smartly.

Goal-Based Reorganisation of Investments
– Divide your current assets and future investments into goals:

Retirement

Emergency

Insurance

Loan obligations

– Keep separate folios or accounts for each goal.
– This gives clarity and control.

– Avoid overlapping uses. Don’t mix emergency funds with investment.
– Maintain an investment diary or use a tracker tool.
– This keeps your targets visible and real.

Finally
– You are financially well-prepared with strong asset base.
– Your discipline and clear goal of retiring at 57 is great.
– You just need to restructure investments for better growth.

– Mutual funds must play a big role from now till age 57.
– Increase SIPs, optimise FDs, and track progress every year.
– Avoid low-return traditional insurance or index funds.
– Stick to actively managed mutual funds through regular mode.
– Plan your withdrawals and taxation well in advance.

– With structured execution, you can retire at 57 comfortably.
– You can enjoy Rs. 2.5L monthly with peace of mind.

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

...Read more

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

Close  

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

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

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to

Resend OTP in120seconds

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

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

Already have an account?

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to Mobile

Resend OTP in120seconds

x