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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10842 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 29, 2024

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Mar 16, 2023Hindi
Money

Hello Sir, My age is 36 and I am investing in below fund for long term. Please suggest if these fund will provide better return. What are other better options to invest as I am planning to increase my investing by INR 5000-7000 Aditya Birla SL Tax Relief 96 Fund ELSS - 4000 Canara Robecco Equity Taxsaver Fund - 4500 Franklin India Taxshield - 2000 Noppin India small cap fund - 2500 Union Long term equity fund - 4000

Ans: Investing for Long-Term Growth

You are on the right track by planning for long-term investments. The funds you have chosen indicate a diversified approach. Let's delve deeper into each type of fund and explore other investment options to help you increase your investments by Rs 5000-7000.

Understanding Your Current Investments

You have selected a mix of tax-saving funds and a small-cap fund. These funds cater to different investment needs and goals. Tax-saving funds provide tax benefits under Section 80C. Small-cap funds offer potential for high returns but come with higher risks.

Tax-Saving Funds (ELSS)

ELSS funds provide dual benefits: tax savings and wealth creation. These funds have a lock-in period of three years. The lock-in period helps mitigate short-term market volatility. They are equity-oriented and can deliver substantial returns over the long term. Your selection of tax-saving funds reflects a strategic approach to combine tax efficiency with growth potential.

Small-Cap Funds

Small-cap funds invest in smaller companies with high growth potential. These companies can deliver significant returns as they expand and capture market share. However, small-cap funds are volatile and risky. They require a longer investment horizon to ride out market fluctuations. Your inclusion of a small-cap fund indicates a willingness to take calculated risks for higher rewards.

Diversification and Risk Management

Diversification is essential in mitigating risks. By investing in different types of funds, you spread the risk and enhance the potential for returns. Your portfolio shows diversification across tax-saving funds and small-cap funds. This strategy helps in balancing risk and reward.

Exploring Additional Investment Options

To increase your investment by Rs 5000-7000, consider these options:

Large-Cap Funds

Large-cap funds invest in well-established companies with a strong market presence. These funds are less volatile and provide stable returns. They are suitable for conservative investors looking for steady growth. Adding a large-cap fund to your portfolio can balance the high risk of small-cap funds.

Mid-Cap Funds

Mid-cap funds invest in companies that are in the growth phase. These companies have the potential to become large-cap over time. Mid-cap funds offer a balance between the stability of large-cap and the growth potential of small-cap. They can provide good returns with moderate risk.

Multi-Cap Funds

Multi-cap funds invest across large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap companies. They offer diversification within a single fund. Multi-cap funds can adapt to market conditions by shifting allocations. They provide a mix of stability and growth potential. Consider adding a multi-cap fund for better diversification.

Sectoral/Thematic Funds

Sectoral or thematic funds invest in specific sectors like technology, healthcare, or infrastructure. These funds can deliver high returns if the sector performs well. However, they come with higher risks due to sector concentration. Invest in sectoral funds only if you have a strong conviction about the sector's growth prospects.

Balanced or Hybrid Funds

Balanced or hybrid funds invest in both equity and debt instruments. They provide a balanced approach to growth and income. These funds are less volatile and suitable for moderate risk-takers. Including a balanced fund can add stability to your portfolio.

Regularly Review and Rebalance Your Portfolio

Regularly reviewing your portfolio ensures alignment with your financial goals. Rebalancing involves adjusting your investments based on performance and market conditions. It helps in maintaining the desired risk-reward ratio. Consider reviewing your portfolio at least once a year.

Benefits of Actively Managed Funds

Actively managed funds have a fund manager who makes investment decisions. These managers use their expertise to identify opportunities and manage risks. Actively managed funds can outperform the market, especially in volatile conditions. They provide flexibility in adapting to market changes.

Advantages of Investing Through a Certified Financial Planner

Investing through a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) offers several advantages. A CFP provides personalized advice based on your financial goals and risk tolerance. They help in selecting suitable funds and strategies. CFPs also assist in regular portfolio reviews and rebalancing. Their expertise ensures that your investments are aligned with your long-term objectives.

Conclusion

Your current investments indicate a strategic approach towards tax efficiency and growth. To further enhance your portfolio, consider adding large-cap, mid-cap, multi-cap, or balanced funds. Diversification and regular portfolio reviews are key to successful long-term investing. Investing through a Certified Financial Planner can provide personalized guidance and help in achieving your financial goals.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
Asked on - May 29, 2024 | Answered on May 29, 2024
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Thank you sir
Ans: You're welcome! If you have any more questions or need further assistance, feel free to ask. Best wishes on your financial journey!

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
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 Kalirajan  |10842 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 11, 2025

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Good evening sir/madam, I am investing in the following mutual funds since 2018. Initially I started with two funds and gradually added other funds each fund from one category. I am a doctor by profession earning 1.5L/ month as state government employee. Tata digital India fund SIP 5000/month Axis Bluechip fund 5000/month Mirae Assest Large & midcap fund 15000/month. Mirae Assest ELSS tax saver fund 5000/month. SBI small cap fund 5000/month Parag Parikh flexi cap fund 10000/month Quant value fund 10000/month Tata small cap fund 5000/month. Kindly opine about my fund. Whether to continue ELSS TAX saver fund since I switched over to new tax regime. Also the performance of Axis bluechip fund is lot to be desired.
Ans: You have built a strong, diversified mutual fund portfolio across different categories. Here’s a short analysis:

? Continue Your ELSS Fund?
– Since you have switched to new tax regime, ELSS tax benefit is less relevant.
– However, if you value disciplined investing, you may continue.
– Or you can pause it and redirect that amount to equity funds.

? Axis Bluechip Fund Concern
– You notice underperformance recently.
– Actively managed large?cap funds can lag in phases.
– Review fund’s consistency over 3–5 years, not just recent months.
– If it still underperforms similar peers, consider switching to another equity fund.

? Overall Portfolio View
– You hold large?cap, flexicap, mid?cap, small?cap, ELSS and thematic funds.
– That gives you good diversity across market segments.
– Monitor overlapping stock exposure across these funds.
– Too much overlap can reduce true diversity.

For tailored, scheme?specific advice on fund switches or allocations, please reach out to a Certified Financial Planner or Mutual Fund Distributor.
You’re welcome to consult with me directly via the website below for detailed guidance.

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

..Read more

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Asked by Anonymous - Nov 07, 2025Hindi
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Sir, I am 39 years PSU employee with monthly net salary of 1.10 lacs. I have a son of 9 years and daughter of 1 year. I am investing in MF through SIPs and lumpsump for last 7 years and my present MF portfolio is 50 lacs with XIRR of almost 18%. Presently I do SIP of 30000 per month. I also have housing loan and my EMI is 42000. I am provided accomodation and medical facilities from my employer. I also have accumulated 18 lacs in PF and Rs. 28 lacs in NPS. I have Term plan of 1.5 crs. I also have liquid funds of 10 lacs in FD for emergency purpose and approx 7 lacs in PPF. Since my child's major education expenses is still 7 to 8 years far for my son and 15 years for my daughter, I will continue my SIP of atleast for next 8 to 10 years without breaking my existing portfolio. Can I generate a corpus of more than 7 crs till my retirement with above funds and will it be sufficient to meet the inflation after 20 years.
Ans: Hi,

You have done and accumulated quite good at your age in different instruments with varied returns. Let us have a detailed look.

1. Emergency Fund - 10 lakhs in FD - good to go.
2. Term Plan - 1.5 crores - good to go.
3. Health Insurance - provided by employer. However, can take a separate personal insurance for yourself and family.
4. PF - 18 lakhs (continue)
5. NPS - 28 lakhs (continue)
6. PPF - 7 lakhs (can stop continuing, invest only bare minimum to keep account active. Close account upon maturity and reallocate these funds in mutual funds)
7. MF Portfolio - 50 lakhs with 30k monthly SIP
8. Home Loan EMI - 42000

Goals:
- Son's education - after 8 years
- Daughter's education - after 15 years
- Retirement - need 7 crores

You are very much on the right track. Your current financials look strong in terms of fulfiling your financial goals.

> Your current MF portfolio can be bifurcated into 2 parts
i. 40 lakhs for your retirement. This amount along with other amount from PF and NPS will finance your retirement forever (inflation adjusted). Additionally you wil lleave behind a great fortune for your kids.
ii. 10 lakhs for your kid's education. Continue your existing SIP of 30k per month and also contribute 7 lakhs from PPF account on its maturity towards this goal. For son, you will have 75 lakhs only from this investment and your daughter's education will have 1.5 crores when she requires.

This way your existing investments can take care of all your goals. Also, do increase your contibution in SIP yearly. It will help in generating a higher corpus for your family.

As your overall investments are more thann 10 lakhs in MFs, it is wise for you to connect with a professional who will assist you and make a dedicated investment plan as per your goals.
Hence, do consult a professional Certified Financial Planner - a CFP who will guide you with exact funds to invest in keeping in mind your age, requirements, financial goals and risk profile. A CFP periodically reviews your portfolio and suggest any amendments to be made, if required.

Let me know if you need more help.

Best Regards,
Reetika Sharma, Certified Financial Planner
https://www.instagram.com/cfpreetika/

...Read more

Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |360 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Nov 13, 2025

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My current age is 41 Years old and private employe in I.T sector. I have five kids of 11,8,7,5 &2 years. My elder daughter is in 7th class now. I have monthly Net salary of 1 lakhs after taxes. I am saving 20/30 thousand monthly. My assets are as follows:- I have one house worth Rs.15 lakhs, Two commercial shops worth Rs, 50 L. Having no loan in the market. Insurance Rs. 50 L term plan for me. Yearly I pay 40k. Health insurance 11 lakh for my entire family from my organisation.Yearly I pay 20k. I maintain an emergency fund 1.5 lac liquid on hand. Would like to make a total fund og 5 Cr by 2035. I have a requirement during higher education for childerns/marriage/Business for my son's and retirement at my age of 51 yrs after 10 years. How to grow my income. I would like to focus on high-growth investment to achieve my goal. But I am planning to invest monthly from my salary. More ever I may get 4lack in next month. Now the thing is how to go about 4lack. Where to invest Am confused what to do. Kindly advise further for more wealth creation. Steady plan. Wealth builds slowly but surely. Can someone help design a withdrawal/Saving strategy to meet your income needs and achieve goal. I would like comfortable retirement with a steady income. Thanks....
Ans: Hi Syed,

Let us have a detailed look below:
- Your monthly income - 1 lakhs, expenses - around 75k , and money for saving - approx. 25k per month.
- Emergency fund - 1.5 lakhs . Would suggest you to make a FD of this fund as emergency fund.
- Term and Health insurance - covered. But sum assured is less for your family. It should be increased.
- One house - 15 lakhs; 2 commercial shops - 50 lakhs.

Requirements:
- Need 5 crores by 2035 i.e. in 10 years
- Need fund for higher education and marriage of 5 children
- Retirement corpus required after 10 years

To achieve all these goals, you need to invest starting right now in aggressive mutual funds with 25-30k left with you. And you can increase your investment with the increase in your income.
Realistically, retirement after 10 years is not possible, but you can try and upgrade your skills to earn more and invest more.

You are also getting 4 lakhs next month. Invest entire amount in aggressive mutual funds. Mutual funds will give you an annual return of 14-15% very easily. This is the best way to build wealth for the goals that you mentioned.
>> Make sure to stay away from LIC policies and ULIPs and other plans which lock your money.

As you are not much aware about mutual funds and investment, you should work with a professional who will draft a plan for you.

Hence, please consult a professional Certified Financial Planner - a CFP who can guide you with exact funds to invest in keeping in mind your age, requirements, financial goals and risk profile. A CFP periodically reviews your portfolio and suggest any amendments to be made, if required.

Let me know if you need more help.

Best Regards,
Reetika Sharma, Certified Financial Planner
https://www.instagram.com/cfpreetika/

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10842 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Nov 13, 2025

Money
Dear Sir I have invested in a 2 BHK apartment in Mumbai Malad East area near Dindoshi court. The builder is GSA Grandeur. The builder promised to handover the flat possession ready to stay in December 2004. Later due to some issues he informed that the Flat shall be ready by December 2005. Now still he is saying that Falt shall be ready by August 2006. In this regard sir please advise what action I should take against the builder. The Flat cost is 1.11 CR plus registration charges from which I have paid him 1 CR. Kindly guide whom to approach for further action. Regards
Ans: You have taken a major financial step by booking an apartment. I appreciate your initiative in seeking advice. As a Certified Financial Planner, here is a structured menu of action you can take — from validating your rights to escalating with the proper authorities. Make sure to review all your documents and decisions with a qualified property lawyer before proceeding further.

» Confirm the agreement details

Check your Agreement for Sale (or Contract) and note the promised possession date: you mention December 2004, then December 2005, and now August 2006.

Verify whether the builder (GSA Grandeur) / promoter has a registered project under MahaRERA (Real Estate Regulatory Authority, Maharashtra).

See whether the project is listed on the MahaRERA website with a registration number.

Check if the builder has issued written communications about delay and extensions (emails/letters) and whether they have acknowledged the original date and the subsequent revised date.

Retain all payment receipts (you paid Rs 1 Cr out of total Rs 1.11 Cr + registration) and keep a record of when each payment was made and as per which schedule of installments.

» Understand your legal rights under the law

Under the Real Estate (Regulation & Development) Act, 2016 (RERA) and corresponding Maharashtra rules, if a promoter delays handing over possession beyond the agreed time, you have a right to compensation or withdrawal (refund) as per Section 18 of the Act.

You may ask the builder to pay interest on the amount you have paid so far for the period of delay. The model agreement under Maharashtra RERA states that if the promoter is unable to deliver within the time-schedule, the promoter should pay interest for every month of delay.

If the builder fails to deliver within a “reasonable” extended time (or fails entirely), you can choose to withdraw and seek refund of your money, along with compensation.

If the project is not registered with RERA (even though it should have been), then you may have additional grounds for legal action under consumer law or contract law.

Please note: recent judgments highlight that the builder’s delay gives you rights; but home-loan interest you paid may not be fully refundable via consumer forum as per recent rulings.

» Immediate practical steps you should take

Write & send a formal letter (by registered post) to the builder (GSA Grandeur) stating:

You booked the 2 BHK apartment in Malad East near Dindoshi Court.

The agreed (original) possession date was December 2004 (as per the agreement) and subsequent revised dates.

You have paid Rs 1 Cr out of total Rs 1.11 Cr + registration charges.

You demand the builder to clearly state the revised firm date of handing over possession, or alternatively offer you the option to withdraw and refund the money if they cannot meet a firm date.

You seek interest on the amounts paid for the period of delay, as per model agreement and RERA provisions.

Keep all your communication in writing and copy all relevant documents: payment receipts, agreement, letters from builder, any announcements, etc.

Check whether the builder has applied for or received Occupancy Certificate (OC) or Completion Certificate for the project/phase. Without OC the handover is legally incomplete.

» Approach the regulatory and legal forums

Check on the MahaRERA website whether the project is registered and find the project registration number.

If registered, you can file a complaint with MahaRERA (Maharashtra Real Estate Regulatory Authority) under the Act. As per FAQs, you may approach them for a refund, compensation and interest for delay.

If the project is not registered or the builder is non-compliant, you may also consider filing a suit in the consumer forum or appropriate civil court/contract tribunal for breach of contract.

Before filing, consult a lawyer specialising in real estate/consumer law so that all your evidence and claims are framed properly.

» Evaluate your options: continue vs withdraw

If the builder now gives you a firm handover date (with OC, all works completed) then you may choose to continue, given that you have already invested a large sum.

However, if the builder is still giving vague dates (August 2006 or beyond) and there are no signs of progress (OC pending, works incomplete), then you should seriously consider withdrawal and refund.

In that event, you must ask for: full refund of amount paid, interest for delay period (and compensation if justified), plus possible damages for alternative accommodation/rent you may have taken.

Monitor whether the builder is proceeding with construction, obtaining approvals, and has conveyed clear timelines.

» Assessing risk & safeguarding yourself

Since you made the payment long ago and the possession is delayed significantly, there is time-value and risk involved.

Make sure your title rights are secure: the agreement must clearly state your unit, floor, parking (if any), and your payments.

Avoid making any further significant payments unless you receive a possession letter and builder gives you the keys and OC/occupancy certificate.

Check for any lien, mortgage or charge on the builder’s property which may delay transfer further.

Note that property/real estate is subject to large delays and builder insolvency risk; hence your proactive action is wise.

» Document checklist for your case

Agreement for Sale (signed by you and builder) with possession date clause.

Payment receipts/Cheque copies of your payments (1 Cr paid) and records of registration charges.

Written communications from builder about revised dates (December 2005, August 2006).

Project registration certificate on MahaRERA (if available).

Status of Occupancy Certificate / Completion Certificate for the building.

Construction status photographs, society formation records, if any.

Correspondence showing builder’s acknowledgment of delay or your demand for possession/refund.

Any rent/alternative accommodation expense you incurred due to delay (if applicable).

» Timeline of action

Immediately send the registered letter to builder demanding firm date or refund.

Within 1-2 months if builder does not respond with firm date, file complaint with MahaRERA or initiate legal action.

Keep monitoring builder’s progress; if there is substantial delay (many years beyond promised date) your case will become stronger.

Maintain all documents and remain proactive; deadlines and records matter in these matters.

» Final Insights
You have a strong basis to assert your rights. The fact that possession was promised years ago and is still delayed means you are well within your rights to demand either speedy handover or refund/compensation. Initiate formal written demand, verify builder registration under MahaRERA, maintain all records, and seek regulatory/legal redress if builder remains non-responsive. With the right approach and evidence, you can compel the builder to perform or compensate you. Your prompt action now will protect your investment and avoid further loss.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
Holistic Investment Planners
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.

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