
I am 41yrs old with below Financial condition:
Assets side: Apartment in Bangalore costed 50lakhs in 2022,
Plot in Bangalore costed 25 lakhs in 2021,
Agri-land in my hometown costed 15lakhs in 2014,
Plot in hometown costed 8lakhs in 2013,
NPS 10lakhs, EPF 25lakhs, Gold 10lakhs, SSY 3lakhs, PPF 1lakhs, Mutual fund 16lakhs, Equity shares 10lakhs, Fixed Deposits 11lakhs (5lakhs for emergency fund, 6 lakhs for SBI Life smart wealth builder plan as 1lakh yearly premium payout for next 6 years).
Liabilities side: Home loan 35 lakhs, Gold loan 3 lakhs
Took 1Crore Term insurance for myself, 50lakhs for my wife (housewife) apart from 1crore group insurance cover from my employer,
Took 25lakhs health insurance for myself, wife and my daughter (4 yr old) apart from 20lakhs health cover through my employer (using for my father who is 74 yr old have diabetics so employer insurance kept for my father) so for us took external insurance coverage.
Took 10lakhs LIC policy with premium of 40K annually with maturity in 2038.
I have a challenge on monthly salary spend planning where i seek advise from you expert on the way i am allotting the funds:
Take home salary is 2 lakhs and no other income source and below are the spending pattern every month,
1. 45k home loan EMI and 5k transferring to other account to accumulate for one extra EMI (annually pay one extra EMI of 45k).
2. 30k mf sip (3k each for 10 funds - quant infra, quant smallcap, quant elss, 360 one focused, canara robeco smallcap, canara robeco emerging, mirae largecap, pgim flexicap, parag elss, ICICI prudential technology fund) with stepup option of 1k each fund yearly. - partially for kid marriage and my retirement purpose (apart from EPF)
3. 40k gold loan prepayment
4. 40k home maintenance expenses (sometimes goes to 50k to 60k based on medical or shopping or adhoc requirements for my wife or kid) - I started budgeting this 40k as well to minimize the spends but failed to minimize.
5. 15k SSY and PPF for my Kid education
6. 5k apartment maintenance
7. RD of 20K for annual requirements of 2.3lakhs consist of :
a. 45k LIC premium annual requirement
b. 60k term and health insurance premium annual requirement
c. 30k annually for bike insurance, services and other maintenance
d. 1.3lakhs for baby girl school fees ...
Few Asks:
1. Want to buy Car (as baby growing and planning for car as Activa is not able to manage for travel with 3 people).. When to buy with my financial condition and I have no down payment, with no free cash now.
2. Should I change my financial saving/investment strategies, please suggest as I have left with no free cashflow post the monthly commitment.
3. Want to become financial freedom by next 15 years (5years early than normal retirement) so what I need to do for it and plan better...
4. Suggest any changes to current plan of MFs selected for retirement plan.
5. If any one of the Mutual fund not performing, is it good to take out full capital and invest in other fund along with SIP or start fresh SIP in other funds and don't touch capital in previous fund.
6. Any suggestion about 2nd source of income (As I hold real estate investments but not generating any regular income from those what to do there) and
7. Recently I heard about Managed Farmland where they will take care of farm land with cash crops and long term plantation plan like sandal wood, teak and for cash crops they commit to give us around ~2-3 lakhs per annum based on crop yield and long term plantation yield 50lakhs to 1crore with land appreciation. is this good investment to look for second source plan?
Ans: You are already doing many things right. At the same time, a few adjustments can help you better align your goals, manage cash flow, and work towards financial independence.
Below is a complete 360-degree review in simple, structured format as per your expectations.
? Overall Financial Snapshot
– You are 41 years old with Rs. 2 lakh monthly take-home pay.
– You have a good mix of assets: house, plots, mutual funds, NPS, EPF, FD, gold.
– No rent or home EMI strain as EMI is manageable.
– You are financially responsible with term and health covers.
– You are trying to invest for retirement and your daughter’s future.
– You are facing cash flow strain due to multiple commitments.
This shows strong intent. You are willing to take corrective steps. That’s very good.
? Key Strengths in Current Setup
– Rs. 1 crore term insurance + 1 crore group cover.
– 25 lakh family floater + 20 lakh employer health cover.
– Investing in SIPs with step-up feature.
– Saving regularly for daughter’s education and marriage.
– Using recurring deposit to handle annual expenses.
– Keeping track of EMI, prepayments, and maintenance spends.
– Holding mix of EPF, NPS, MF, gold, land.
You are disciplined and structured, which is a strong base to build on.
? Main Cash Flow Challenges
– Total monthly outgo is approx. Rs. 2 lakh.
– There’s no free cash available at month-end.
– Any unexpected spend strains the flow.
– You wish to buy a car but have no surplus.
– Your RD is blocking Rs. 20,000 per month.
– Gold loan repayment takes away Rs. 40,000 every month.
– SIPs take Rs. 30,000.
You are investing well, but with zero buffer, liquidity is weak.
? About the Car Purchase Plan
– Car is a need, especially with a small child.
– But you should not buy without down payment.
– EMI without surplus will hurt other goals.
– You can target buying a car after gold loan closure.
– This will free Rs. 40,000 per month.
– Accumulate Rs. 3–4 lakh over 8–10 months post gold loan closure.
– Then go for car with 25% down payment.
– Take shortest possible tenure and lowest interest rate.
Avoid immediate car loan. It can disrupt your long-term planning.
? Gold Loan Prepayment – Review Needed
– You are paying Rs. 40,000 monthly to prepay Rs. 3 lakh gold loan.
– Your intent is correct, as gold loan has higher interest.
– But, instead of Rs. 40,000 EMI-like prepayment, check actual interest cost.
– If tenure is short, try to close in 6 months.
– After gold loan is done, reallocate Rs. 40,000 to:
Rs. 15,000 to emergency/liquidity fund
Rs. 10,000 to buffer for any surprise expense
Rs. 15,000 to car down payment or step-up SIPs
Liquidity is more important than just fast loan repayment.
? Review of Your Mutual Funds and Strategy
– You are investing in 10 different mutual funds.
– Equal Rs. 3,000 SIP each. All with step-up feature.
– SIP split across ELSS, infra, smallcap, largecap, flexicap, tech, focused.
– Funds selected are mostly high-risk or thematic.
– No clear core portfolio.
Suggested changes:
– Reduce from 10 funds to 5–6 maximum.
– Focus on diversified equity funds.
– Avoid sectoral funds like technology or infra as core SIPs.
– Keep only 1 ELSS. Remove the other.
– Add one balanced advantage fund.
– Prefer large & flexi-cap over too many small-cap.
Too many funds cause portfolio overlap. Makes monitoring tough.
? Should You Stop SIP If Fund Underperforms?
– Don’t stop SIP based on short-term returns.
– Equity funds work over long term.
– If a fund underperforms for over 2 years, then review.
– If fund manager or strategy has changed, you can switch.
– Don't immediately withdraw capital.
– Either:
Stop SIP and redirect to a better fund
Or reduce SIP amount gradually
Let capital compound if fund shows recovery
Avoid panic exits. Take help of MFD with CFP for regular fund review.
? About Your Insurance-Linked Investments
– LIC: Rs. 10 lakh policy with Rs. 40,000 annual premium.
– SBI Smart Wealth: Rs. 1 lakh per year for 6 years.
Both are insurance-cum-investment products.
Suggested action:
– These are low return and not flexible.
– Since you already have term insurance, investment-linked policies are avoidable.
– Ask insurer for surrender value of LIC and SBI Wealth.
– If loss is low, better to surrender early.
– Redirect the future premiums to equity mutual funds.
– Your long-term returns will improve significantly.
Insurance should only protect, not invest.
? Real Estate Investments – Current and Future Scope
– You own house, 2 plots, agri land.
– None of them provide regular income.
– Plots and land are illiquid.
– No rent or farming income from them now.
Suggestions:
– Don’t buy more property.
– Don’t use these as investment anymore.
– For extra income:
Explore renting one plot temporarily
Lease agri land for cultivation with revenue share
Avoid schemes that promise fixed income from farmland
Instead, let real estate grow silently. Focus on liquid assets for income.
? Thoughts on Managed Farmland Investment
– These are risky and unregulated.
– Promoters promise high returns based on crops or plantation.
– But market prices, climate, and land issues affect income.
– Future yield of Rs. 50 lakh–1 crore is just assumption.
– You also lose liquidity and control over land.
Instead of such plans:
– Use flexi-cap or hybrid mutual funds.
– They offer better transparency and liquidity.
– If you wish passive income, opt for SWP from debt-oriented MF.
– Don’t depend on farmland schemes for regular income.
Don’t fall for promises without track record.
? Second Source of Income – Practical Ideas
– You need steady income beyond salary.
– Suggestions:
Rent a room or space if available
Freelancing or part-time skills (teaching, content writing, tech)
Weekend classes or consulting (if in IT, teaching, marketing)
Online platforms: voice-over, data work, content editing
Spouse can explore light home-based work
Don’t chase quick rich schemes. Build slow, solid income streams.
? Your Financial Freedom in 15 Years – Is It Possible?
– You have strong intent to retire early at 56.
– EPF + NPS + MFs can become main pillars.
– Real estate is illiquid, not retirement-ready asset.
– You must target Rs. 4–5 crore retirement corpus.
– Keep SIP step-up of Rs. 10,000 per year at least.
– Avoid unnecessary spending.
– Avoid buying car now on EMI.
– Reinvest all insurance-linked savings into mutual funds.
– Maintain emergency fund of Rs. 6 lakh minimum.
– Take help of Certified Financial Planner to track progress every year.
With discipline and right asset mix, 15-year goal is possible.
? Suggestions to Improve Current Monthly Planning
– Gold loan closure should be top priority in next 6 months.
– Pause car plan till this is over.
– Keep Rs. 10,000 monthly buffer in savings account.
– Recheck home expenses and make a weekly tracker.
– Avoid over-dependence on RD.
– Instead, build 3-month rolling balance for annual spends.
– Optimise SIPs by reducing to 6 funds max.
– Avoid direct funds. Go via MFD with CFP for handholding.
Cash flow clarity is more important than maximum returns.
? Finally
– You are already doing very well in many areas.
– You need few smart changes in structure.
– Avoid high-risk funds and sector bets.
– Replace poor insurance-linked products with mutual funds.
– Plan car purchase after improving cash flow.
– Don’t invest in farmland schemes with income promises.
– Aim for 15-year retirement with steady growth of SIPs.
– Build second income slowly with skill or rent.
– Keep yearly review with Certified Financial Planner to stay on track.
Right planning today will make your future secure and peaceful.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment