
Hello Sir, my name is Rahul, and I am from Mumbai
I need some financial advice. I am 35 years old, married and having one son (6yr)
My financial conditions as as below :
working at MNC, having CTC of 28LPA
my in hand salary is 1,17,000 PM (I have annual variable(6L) and monthly allowance for the rest of amount)
my current investment and SIPs are :
Blackrock flexi cap - 6K monthly
BOI small cap - 2K monthly
SBI blue chip - 1K
SBI magnum midcap - 1K
axis smallcap - 2K
axis midcap and large cap - 1K
axis growth opportunity - 1k
(all SIPs holding at the moment is around 8L) and
BOI ELSS fund, one time - 60K.. now increased to 1L
I have bought house and car which has below monthly emi's
Homeloan - 48K for 20 years
car loan - 10500 for 5 years
my wife is also working in small company but her salary less and mostly covers our outings and other small expenses.
I have also two LIC policies running, yearly 40K.. will mature in 15 years
My parents are living in my home town, we have farm land 5 acre, which my father look after.. there as well we have home constructed by father
I can continue this SIPs till my retirement and will increase them as well yearly. .
I want to retire with corpus of 8-10 Cr..
is this good strategy which I am following, will this corpus achievable by retirement? can you guide me
Ans: At 35, your financial life is moving in the right direction. You are earning well, investing consistently, and already thinking about your retirement. That forward-thinking attitude will create a big difference over time. Your plan has many positive aspects, but it can be fine-tuned further to make your Rs 8–10 crore goal more achievable.
Let’s assess your situation step by step and build a clear path for your financial growth.
» Your Current Position
– You have started early, which gives you enough time to build wealth.
– Having multiple SIPs across fund categories is a strong foundation.
– Buying your own house and car at this stage shows responsible financial planning.
– Managing family needs and parents’ support adds stability to your financial life.
– The intention to increase SIPs every year shows discipline and long-term focus.
Your direction is right. Now it’s about improving structure and efficiency in your financial plan.
» Understanding Your Income and Cash Flow
– Your CTC of Rs 28 lakh is a strong base for future savings.
– With Rs 1,17,000 in-hand salary and additional variable pay and allowances, you have flexibility.
– The current loan EMIs (Rs 48,000 home + Rs 10,500 car) take about 50% of your monthly income.
– Remaining cash is used for household, child’s needs, and SIPs.
You are managing your cash flow well, but there is room to increase long-term savings once debts reduce.
» Assessing Your Investment Portfolio
Your SIPs in multiple mutual funds total around Rs 14,000 per month. That’s a good beginning.
However, diversification and fund overlap should be reviewed carefully.
– Too many small SIPs can cause duplication in fund holdings.
– Focus on fewer but well-managed diversified funds.
– Ensure your portfolio covers large cap, flexi cap, and mid cap categories.
– Limit small cap exposure to 15–20% of total SIPs to control volatility.
– Continue ELSS investment for tax-saving and equity growth.
A structured portfolio gives better long-term consistency and easier review.
» Why Regular Mutual Funds Are Better Than Direct Funds
Many investors prefer direct funds thinking they save cost. But that’s not always true in the long run.
– Direct funds put all responsibility on you — fund selection, tracking, and rebalancing.
– Most investors skip periodic reviews, which causes missed opportunities or higher risk.
– Regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner and MFD give continuous support.
– The cost difference is very small compared to the benefits of professional monitoring.
– Guidance helps in switching from poor performers and aligning goals effectively.
So, it’s better to continue investing through regular plans under a Certified Financial Planner.
» Evaluating Your Goals
You have a clear retirement target of Rs 8–10 crore. That is achievable with the right strategy.
You also have family responsibilities — home loan, car loan, child’s education, and long-term security.
– Retirement goal needs at least 25–30 years of focused investing.
– Education and family protection need short and medium-term planning.
– Your current savings rate is good but can improve with annual increments and bonus planning.
Keeping each goal separate will give clarity and better control over progress.
» Loan Management and Debt Planning
Loans are necessary but should not block your savings.
– Your home loan of Rs 48,000 EMI is long-term. Don’t rush to prepay unless interest is too high.
– Instead, continue EMIs and invest more in mutual funds for higher long-term return.
– Your car loan of Rs 10,500 is short-term. Once it’s closed, redirect that EMI to SIPs.
– Avoid taking new loans unless it’s essential.
This balance ensures liquidity and wealth growth together.
» Review of LIC Policies
You mentioned two LIC policies with annual premium of Rs 40,000.
These traditional plans usually give low returns around 5–6%.
– They mix insurance and investment, which reduces wealth growth.
– It is better to separate protection and investment.
– Consider surrendering these policies (after checking surrender value) and reinvest proceeds in mutual funds.
– Take a pure term insurance plan separately for family protection.
This shift can help you earn higher long-term returns and ensure proper coverage.
» Building a Strong Insurance Cover
Family protection is the backbone of every financial plan.
– You should have term life insurance equal to 10–12 times your annual income.
– This will ensure your wife and child are secure if anything happens to you.
– Your wife should also have a smaller term cover if she contributes to income.
– Take a family floater health insurance of at least Rs 10–15 lakh.
– Add top-up cover to reduce medical risk.
Insurance is not investment. It’s your family’s financial shield.
» Emergency Fund Preparation
Every family must have a safety net for unexpected situations.
– Keep 6–8 months of total expenses as an emergency fund.
– Use liquid or ultra-short-term debt funds for this purpose.
– Do not mix it with your investment or use fixed deposits.
– Review it once every year and top it up as expenses increase.
This ensures peace of mind and prevents breaking long-term investments.
» Increasing Your SIPs Gradually
Your current SIPs are good, but they need to grow with income.
– Increase SIP amount by at least 10–15% every year.
– Redirect any bonus or variable pay into additional SIPs.
– Once car loan ends, use that EMI for SIP top-up.
– Use goal-based SIPs — separate ones for retirement, child’s education, and wealth creation.
This small yearly increase will multiply your corpus significantly over time.
» Asset Allocation Strategy
Your portfolio should balance growth and stability.
– Keep 70% in equity mutual funds for long-term goals.
– Keep 20–25% in debt mutual funds or PF for stability.
– Keep 5–10% in liquid funds for short-term needs.
– Avoid new fixed deposits as post-tax returns are low.
– Debt funds provide better flexibility and higher tax efficiency.
A right asset mix controls risk and keeps returns consistent across market cycles.
» Disadvantages of Index Funds Compared to Active Funds
Some investors shift to index funds thinking they perform better.
But for long-term wealth building, actively managed funds still hold an edge.
– Index funds just copy the market; they can’t protect during market fall.
– They don’t have flexibility to change sector allocation when economy changes.
– Active funds can move to defensive sectors and manage risk better.
– Skilled fund managers can identify emerging opportunities faster.
– For goals like retirement and child’s education, active management gives more stability.
Hence, it’s better to stay with quality actively managed funds rather than index-based investing.
» Child’s Education and Future Planning
Your son is 6 years old now. You have around 12–14 years before higher education starts.
– Create a separate SIP for education.
– Start with balanced or diversified equity mutual funds.
– As you near the goal, move funds to safer options 2 years before usage.
– Avoid using home equity or loans for education later.
– Early planning will keep you debt-free at that stage.
This ensures your child’s education is fully funded without affecting retirement goals.
» Tax Planning
Your income level requires efficient tax management.
– Continue ELSS funds for Section 80C deduction.
– Claim home loan principal and interest benefits.
– Use health insurance premium for Section 80D.
– Contribute to Voluntary PF or NPS for long-term tax savings.
– Plan withdrawals from mutual funds strategically to reduce LTCG.
Proper tax planning keeps more money invested for your goals.
» Reviewing and Monitoring Investments
Market keeps changing, so regular review is important.
– Review portfolio performance every 6–12 months.
– Remove underperforming funds after consistent poor results.
– Keep track of changes in fund management or objective.
– Rebalance equity-debt ratio once a year.
– Don’t react to short-term market noise.
Review and discipline are more important than timing the market.
» Future Wealth Creation Possibility
With your current age and income, your Rs 8–10 crore target is realistic.
– If you keep increasing SIPs yearly and stay invested for 25 years, it is possible.
– Avoid early withdrawals unless it’s for planned goals.
– Keep your investments linked with long-term objectives.
– Continue disciplined approach even during market volatility.
Consistency and time are the biggest drivers of wealth, not timing.
» Lifestyle and Spending Control
You are managing family expenses well, but maintaining control will help savings grow faster.
– Avoid lifestyle inflation when income increases.
– Keep a monthly budget and track discretionary spends.
– Try to save at least 30–35% of total monthly inflow.
– Use your wife’s income for family leisure and small goals, as you already do.
Small saving habits compound into big wealth over years.
» Retirement Planning Strategy
You are 35 now, and retirement may be around 58–60. You have over 20 years.
– Focus on equity exposure for first 15 years to grow faster.
– Gradually increase debt portion in last 5 years for safety.
– Build 2–3 years’ worth of expenses in liquid or debt funds before retirement.
– Post-retirement, you can set up Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWP) from mutual funds for monthly income.
– Avoid keeping large idle funds in savings account after retirement.
This structured approach can maintain your lifestyle even after work stops.
» Handling Farm Property and Family Assets
Your family already owns farm land and a home in native place.
– Treat it as a legacy or optional asset, not primary investment.
– Do not depend on it for future retirement needs.
– If it gives income later, treat it as bonus support.
– Continue maintaining it for your parents’ comfort.
Financial independence should come from financial assets, not land or property.
» Finally
Rahul, your financial base is strong. You are investing with purpose, managing debt, and planning early. By increasing SIPs every year, restructuring low-yield LIC policies, and keeping asset allocation balanced, your Rs 8–10 crore retirement goal is achievable.
Continue your discipline, avoid unnecessary loans, and review investments regularly. Over time, your money will start working harder than you.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment