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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10836 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Sep 23, 2025

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Sep 18, 2025Hindi
Money

Im 35 years old with 2 baby boys of 4 and 1 year old. Monthly salary of 2.74lakh. Monthly home loan emi of 86k and 79 emis pending. Monthly SIP of 20k with 20% step up and started 1 year back. PPF of 1.5lakh yearly and completed 10years. LIC Jeevan Labh with 2.28lakh yearly premium with maturity on 2047 with 1.3cr and 50lkh sum assured. Monthly 20k to gold scheme for ornamental gold. PF of 15k monthly. Health insurance topup of 30lakh. Term insurance from office and sum assured from lic jeevan labh. Please suggest on financial planning for kids education and early retirement.

Ans: You are doing very well with your planning. Managing salary, expenses, investments, and family needs together is a big achievement. Providing quality education to two young boys is your dream, and early retirement is a powerful goal. Your efforts so far set a strong foundation.

» Salary, EMI, and Expenses

Your salary is Rs.2.74 lakh monthly. This gives financial strength. Outgoings are significant. The home loan EMI is Rs.86,000 per month and 79 EMIs are left. This is a long commitment. After EMI, balance income must manage family, lifestyle, and invest for future.

» SIP Strategy and Growth

Monthly SIP of Rs.20,000 begun one year ago is a solid step. You plan a yearly step-up of 20%. Increasing SIP each year is crucial for building greater wealth. This habit helps beat inflation. SIPs work best with discipline and growth rate.

» Children’s Education Planning

Both boys are very young. Education costs rise at 10% to 12% each year. The final amounts for higher studies will be much higher than today's costs. Regular SIPs in mutual funds, combined with annual step-ups, provide growth. Mutual funds give inflation-beating returns, unlike fixed deposits. Do not use index funds for this goal. Index funds often lag market and cannot deliver higher-than-average returns. Actively managed funds have experts making smart choices for growth. Stay focused on long duration, careful increase every year.

Long-term savings like PPF also help here. PPF is safe, and you have completed 10 years already. Continue to use PPF as a backup corpus. For short-term school expenses, keep a safe reserve in bank or liquid funds for timely withdrawal.

» Gold Scheme and Family Wealth

Rs.20,000 monthly for ornamental gold is a big saving. Gold helps in traditions, gifting, and weddings. But gold is not wealth-creating for education or retirement. It does not earn income or beat inflation regularly. Continue gold savings as part of family tradition. Do not depend on this for education goals.

» PF and PPF

Employee PF of Rs.15,000 each month adds future corpus. It supports retirement, health emergencies, and job uncertainty. Public Provident Fund (PPF) yearly contribution of Rs.1.5 lakh builds steady, moderate growth. PPF is tax-free at maturity, so it helps reduce risk. However, PPF return is capped, and below inflation most times. SIP in mutual funds gives long-term wealth, and PPF gives safe, backup corpus for emergencies.

» Life Insurance Policies

You have LIC Jeevan Labh, with yearly premium of Rs.2.28 lakh. Maturity is Rs.1.3 crore in 2047, with Rs.50 lakh sum assured. This is a mix of investment and insurance. Such policies often give lower returns than mutual funds. If you can secure pure term plan separately, it may be better to surrender the investment-cum-insurance policy and reinvest that yearly premium in mutual funds. Mutual funds over 20 years give higher compounding growth. Insurance-cum-investment plans are costly and returns are moderate. By switching premium to a mutual fund SIP, you build bigger corpus for children’s education and retirement.

» Insurance Protection

You have office term insurance and LIC sum assured. Top-up health insurance of Rs.30 lakh is strong. Health care costs rise fast, so keeping this protection is wise. For life coverage, pure term insurance is best. It provides full protection at low cost. Check if your sum assured is at least 10-12 times your annual salary for safe family security. If not, increase pure term coverage.

» Debt Management

Home loan is the largest outgoing now. 79 EMIs means over 6 years left. Try to close it earlier by prepaying principal if possible. Any yearly bonus or increments can be partially used for early repayment. Reducing loan tenure gives freedom quicker, and lets you push more money towards investments for retirement and education. But only prepay if no penalty and if cashflow permits.

» Inflation and Future Expense

Children’s education will be expensive. Rs.10 lakh studies today can cost Rs.30-40 lakh in 15 years. Overseas studies can be Rs.50 lakh to Rs.1 crore. Always plan for inflation, do not use current statistics for future needs. For education, start targeted SIPs with goal-based planning. Increase SIP every year using step-up formula. For retirement, budget for Rs.1 lakh per month in today’s value for expenses, adjusted upward yearly.

» Early Retirement Plan

Early retirement requires a solid corpus. It means stopping work before usual 60 years. You need to generate income for more years without job. Keep increasing investments regularly. Use mutual funds (not index funds) for higher growth and active management. PPF and PF give smaller, slow increase, so do not depend on them for retirement. Do yearly review and asset allocation shift as you approach retirement age.

» Asset Allocation for Security

For future security, balance between growth, stability and liquidity is needed. For now, stay tilted towards equity, actively managed funds for growth. As you get closer to retirement, shift step-by-step to debt for safety. Active management gives better returns, dynamic allocation, risk protection against market falls. Index funds have no expert intervention. In turbulent markets, they fall as much as the market does. Actively managed funds protect your wealth from big dips and poor performing sectors.

» Emergency Fund

Keep a liquid emergency fund for sudden expenses. Three to six months’ living cost in liquid funds or bank is good. Use this only if needed, do not touch main investments. This keeps family safe during health or job crisis.

» SIP Continued and Stepped-Up

Every year raise your SIP by at least 20%. With increments, push more into investment, using disciplined step-up approach. Compounding on increased base over each year multiplies future wealth. Missed years cannot be matched later, so make every year count.

» Kids’ Key Education Milestones

Build education funds for each child’s higher studies. Plan for undergraduate by 15 years, postgraduate by 20 years. Start separate SIP bucket or goal for each milestone. Review progress yearly, increase contributions if needed. Protect goal from short-term market risk as milestone date approaches by shifting gradually to safer funds.

» LIC Jeevan Labh Surrender – Should You?

Investment-cum-insurance policies often give limited returns vs mutual funds. Surrendering after 2 years of premiums paid is allowed. Switch premium amount to mutual funds for targeted growth. With mutual funds, you can monitor, adjust, and increase contributions to meet children’s education and retirement needs better. Regular plans via MFD and Certified Financial Planner provide advice, discipline, and after-sales support, unlike direct plans which miss this support.

» Avoid Direct Funds Pitfall

Direct funds miss guidance and regular portfolio checkup. Mistakes can be costly, especially in complex markets or volatile years. Regular plans with MFD and Certified Financial Planner provide advice, systematic review, and tailored support. Guidance keeps all goals on track, protects you from bypassing key milestones or making emotional choices. In direct funds, investor is alone with research and paperwork, which causes missed opportunities or costly errors.

» Taxation – New Rules

Equity mutual funds – long-term capital gain above Rs.1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%. Short-term capital gain is taxed at 20%. Debt mutual funds are taxed as per your tax slab, whether short or long term. PPF is tax-free. Factor tax when planning withdrawals and final corpus.

» Step-by-Step Yearly Action

– Do annual review of all goals
– Increase SIP by 20% each year
– Push surplus into kids’ education SIPs
– Prepay home loan if cashflow allows
– Check insurance adequacy and increase coverage if required
– Keep an emergency fund aside and never touch main investments
– Close LIC Jeevan Labh and reinvest premium in mutual funds via Certified Financial Planner
– Separate gold for family traditions, not for retirement or education goals

» Finally

Your structured efforts are very powerful. Continue SIPs and keep increasing each year. Plan targeted goals for each child and retirement. Surrender LIC investment-insurance policy and focus on wealth creation through mutual funds. Ensure Insurance protection stays strong. Review each milestone regularly. This approach gives your family future security and achieves early retirement dream with confidence and peace.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information to be as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision.
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You may like to see similar questions and answers below

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10836 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Aug 04, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Aug 04, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, I am 38 years old working as IT professional, post tax I am getting 3.33 lakhs per month, company providing NPS option, I am investing 17000 towards NPS for tax benefit and retirement plan. I have 2 personal loans one is 25 lakhs with 10.5 ROE with emi 66000 for next 4 years, second is 15 lakhs with 10.75 ROE with emi 39000 for next 4 years. I have mutual funds holding 5 lakhs and direct stocks 3.6 lakhs, 3.7 lakhs in PPF and 12 lakhs EPF, 3 lic policy, one is money back policy yearly premium 6.2k( 2014 started -2031), jeevan anand 27k yearly (2016-2035), jeevan labh 5.5 lakh yearly it is 10 years premium payment, already paid 5 years, 5 payment left, by 2035 will get 1.2cr. I have agricultural land 2.72 acres which gives 65k per year. I am holding 2 plots for long term. I have already purchased villa (1.10 cr) and paid 20% down payment remaining will go for home loan. I doing chitti in my native place for 10 lakhs for 20 months, paid already 4 chitti. My monthly house hold amount comes under 90k including Rent 25.5k . I need your suggestion to plan my financial for my retirement and my kids education (9 years old and 3 years old) . I have health insurance coverage of 15 lakhs and my company provides with additional of 8 lakhs and my parents depends on me , they have 6 lakhs health insurance and I send them 17k every month.
Ans: You’ve shown amazing commitment and effort in your financial journey so far.
Balancing family needs, loans, investments, and responsibilities is never easy.
You’ve done it well and deserve appreciation.

Now let's assess your complete financial life in detail.
We will review each element and provide a 360-degree view.
Focus will be on strengthening your retirement and children's education goals.

» Income, Savings and Current Commitments

– Your monthly post-tax income is Rs.3.33 lakhs.
– Household expenses including rent are Rs.90,000.
– You support parents with Rs.17,000 monthly.
– Two personal loan EMIs total Rs.1.05 lakhs.
– Chit fund also takes outflows monthly.
– Remaining income is under pressure due to these fixed costs.

Even though income is strong, actual investible surplus is low.
This can impact long-term wealth building.
We need to create breathing room in monthly cash flow.

» Loan Strategy Needs Immediate Action

– You are paying EMIs of Rs.1.05 lakhs per month.
– Interest rates are above 10%.
– These are personal loans, not secured by assets.
– These are very expensive loans.
– They eat a big portion of your income every month.

Suggestions:

– Use surplus or bonuses to part-prepay these loans.
– Repay the costlier one first, or the one with smaller balance.
– Do not increase investments till at least one loan is cleared.
– Avoid parallel new loans for any purpose till these close.

Freeing up this EMI burden is the first big win for your future goals.

» NPS – Retirement Benefit, But With Limits

– You contribute Rs.17,000 monthly in NPS.
– This gives you tax benefit under Sec 80CCD(1B).
– It helps build long-term retirement fund.

However:

– NPS has lock-in till age 60.
– Partial withdrawal is restricted.
– 60% corpus is tax-free, rest must be used for pension.
– Pension from annuity is fully taxable.

NPS is helpful but should not be your only retirement plan.
You need more flexible and high-growth options like mutual funds.

» Mutual Funds – Increase Investment Over Time

– You currently hold Rs.5 lakhs in mutual funds.
– This is a good start but not enough for your goals.
– Especially with two children and long-term plans.

Recommendations:

– Avoid investing in direct plans.
– Direct plans do not offer professional guidance.
– Without a Certified Financial Planner, mistakes can reduce gains.
– Regular plans give expert advice, rebalancing, and support.
– Investing through CFP helps you align funds with goals.

Increase investments step-by-step as you clear your loans.
Start with child education goals, then retirement.

» Avoid Index Funds – You Need Better Risk Management

– Index funds invest blindly in the whole market.
– They do not filter bad companies or falling sectors.
– There is no fund manager to protect downside.
– In a market crash, index funds fall fully.
– They also don’t outperform – they just match the index.

Your goals need outperformance, not matching returns.
Actively managed funds offer:

– Smarter stock selection
– Risk control
– Fund manager experience
– Dynamic adjustment

Always go with actively managed funds via regular plan with Certified Financial Planner support.

» Direct Stocks – Keep It Limited

– You hold Rs.3.6 lakhs in direct equity.
– Equity investing needs deep research and regular tracking.
– You also need risk control and diversification.

If you don’t have time to track stocks:

– Reduce exposure over time.
– Shift to mutual funds with active management.
– Let professionals handle your equity allocation.

Don’t add more capital to direct stocks unless you are an experienced investor.

» PPF and EPF – Stable Support for Long-Term

– You have Rs.3.7 lakhs in PPF and Rs.12 lakhs in EPF.
– Both are safe, long-term, and tax-free options.
– EPF will grow through your salary contribution.
– PPF maturity can be aligned to your retirement or kid’s education.

These are low-risk parts of your portfolio.
But returns will be slower than mutual funds.
Don’t rely fully on them to meet large future goals.

» LIC Policies – Need to be Reviewed and Rationalised

You have three LIC policies:

– Money back policy – Rs.6.2k yearly
– Jeevan Anand – Rs.27k yearly
– Jeevan Labh – Rs.5.5 lakhs yearly premium, 10-year payment

LIC plans give:

– Very low returns, usually 4% to 5%
– Poor liquidity
– Poor goal alignment
– High premiums reduce investment capacity

Action Plan:

– You can continue money back and Jeevan Anand till maturity due to low premium.
– But Jeevan Labh is absorbing huge premium.
– Even though it says Rs.1.2 crore by 2035, the return is low.
– Surrender the Jeevan Labh policy now.
– Reinvest surrender amount into mutual funds via regular plan.
– Your Certified Financial Planner can guide you.

This change will boost your returns and improve liquidity.

» Agricultural Land and Plots – Treat Them as Passive Holdings

– Your land gives Rs.65,000 income yearly.
– Two plots are held for long term.

Please remember:

– Land and plots do not give regular cash flow.
– They need maintenance, records, and legal tracking.
– Selling them is not easy in emergencies.
– They don’t fit well into financial planning goals.

Don’t count land/plots for education or retirement goals.
Treat them as passive holdings.
Build your core financial strength around mutual funds.

» Villa Purchase and Home Loan – Balance It Carefully

– You have booked a villa worth Rs.1.10 crore.
– Paid 20% down payment.
– Remaining will be on home loan.

Suggestions:

– Keep EMI below 40% of your income.
– Include this EMI only after clearing personal loans.
– Home is a lifestyle decision, not an investment.
– Avoid overcommitting if other goals are pending.

Plan this with your Certified Financial Planner to ensure cash flow is balanced.

» Chit Fund – Limited Use Only

– You have joined a 10 lakh chit.
– Already paid 4 rounds.

Keep in mind:

– Chits are not regulated like mutual funds.
– Default risk is high if organiser is not trusted.
– Do not increase chit exposure in future.

Complete the current chit but don’t depend on it for long-term goals.

» Children’s Education Planning – Act Now

– Your children are 9 and 3 years old.
– You have around 9-15 years before they need college funds.

Steps to take:

– Start SIP in child-focused mutual fund via regular plan.
– Invest in actively managed equity-oriented funds.
– Use SIPs to build corpus over years.
– Avoid ULIPs and child plans from insurance companies.
– They give poor returns and lack flexibility.

A Certified Financial Planner can create a goal map for both kids.
This helps avoid future education loans.

» Retirement Planning – Build Your Corpus Slowly and Steadily

– You are 38 now.
– You have around 22 years to retire.
– EPF and NPS are good supports.
– But they are not enough.

You must create a parallel retirement fund using:

– Diversified mutual funds
– Regular contribution via SIP
– Proper asset allocation
– Tax-efficient withdrawal planning

Start small now and increase every year.
Don’t delay this till your 40s.
Your retirement must be independent of children or property.

» Insurance – Good Start, But Needs Layering

– You have Rs.15 lakh personal health insurance.
– Your company offers Rs.8 lakh coverage.
– Parents have Rs.6 lakh insurance.

Recommendations:

– Buy term life insurance if not already done.
– Ensure cover is 10-15 times your annual income.
– Don’t mix insurance with investment.
– Avoid ULIPs or endowment for new policies.
– Check if parent’s health cover is sufficient based on age.

A Certified Financial Planner can assess insurance adequacy for the whole family.

» Cash Flow and Emergency Fund – Strengthen Liquidity

– Monthly fixed outflows are very high.
– Limited buffer is visible.
– You must have at least 6 months of expenses saved.

Build emergency fund using:

– Liquid mutual funds
– Bank sweep-in account
– Recurring deposits (for short-term)

This will protect you in job loss or sudden expense.

» Tax Planning – Use All Allowed Sections But Avoid Over-Focus

– NPS gives benefit under 80CCD(1B).
– EPF and PPF cover 80C.
– Home loan will give deduction under 80C and 24(b).
– Health insurance premiums also reduce tax.

But don’t over-focus on tax-saving only.
Focus on wealth creation and goal fulfilment.
Don’t buy poor-return products for tax saving alone.

» Finally

– You have built a strong base.
– Income is good, and responsibilities are well managed.
– But you must shift focus from debt to wealth.
– Clear personal loans first.
– Surrender unproductive insurance plans.
– Increase mutual fund investments via regular plan and CFP.
– Protect family with right insurance.
– Avoid index funds, direct funds, and real estate overexposure.
– Track children’s education needs step by step.
– Balance villa loan carefully with other goals.
– Stay disciplined with long-term investing.

A Certified Financial Planner will guide you with goal tracking, fund selection, and review.
This approach will give peace of mind and wealth creation both.

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

..Read more

Latest Questions
Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |228 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Nov 10, 2025

Money
Hi, I'm 49 married with 2 kids aged 16 and 11. I work in mid mgmt in a Finance co. Wife is 45 works at a Bank. Combined annual salary is 80 lakhs. Live in a home which just got loan free. Have a rental income of 40k monthly that my wife gets. Mom also lives with us and she gets a rental income of 45k per month. I have invested in a small office space which will be ready by mid 2027 and has a construction linked plan, have to pay 40L more. I Have stocks of 45L and EPF of 60L PPF of 12 L. Have ancestral property in land at native place not much but say 25L. Mom has pledged 50% of her assets to my sister. Liability of office and company car is 6L. School fees and tution fees are paid from rental income and wife chips in. There's maintenance, club membership fees, insurance, repairs and maintenance, kids pocket money, groceries, internet, mobile, maids etc. which I pay. I'm thinking of quitting my job and starting something on my own. I am a guest lecturer at a college which is pro bono and also helping 2 Startups of friends over weekend with a tiny equity stake in one. Is it a right decision? Pressure at work is high, growth chances are minimum. Many colleagues asked to go. The environment isn't very encouraging. Pls advise if I'm ok financially with about 45 lakhs liability. Never got a chance to save as EMIs were 75% of income. I'm unable to get a direction.
Ans: You are 49, with a stable dual-income family, home loan cleared, and some investments in place. You feel stagnated in your job and want to start something of your own. It’s a natural and valid thought at this life stage — but the decision needs to be planned, not impulsive.

At present, your financial base is decent but not fully liquid. You still have about ?45 lakh in liabilities, upcoming education costs for your children, and limited cash reserves. Your wife’s job and rental income can sustain household expenses, but not much beyond that.

The wise move is to continue your job while you explore your business or investment idea part-time. Use the next 18–24 months to:

Clear pending loans, especially the office property.

Build a minimum ?20–25 lakh emergency corpus.

Fund your children’s education separately.

Test and refine your business idea alongside your job.

Before quitting, also discuss openly with your spouse whether she is comfortable with you stepping away from a steady income. Her emotional and financial comfort will determine how smooth your transition is.

In short:
Keep your job, continue your startup or investing interest part-time, strengthen your finances, and plan a structured exit once liabilities are cleared. Freedom feels best when it’s backed by security, not uncertainty.

Contingency buffer and health insurance details:
For detailed financial planning and portfolio reconstruction, please connect with a Qualified Personal Finance Professional (QPFP).

Disclaimer / Guidance:
The above analysis is generic in nature and based on limited data shared. For accurate projections — including inflation, tax implications, pension structure, and education cost escalation — it is strongly advised to consult a qualified QPFP/CFP or Mutual Fund Distributor (MFD). They can help prepare a comprehensive retirement and goal-based cash flow plan tailored to your unique situation.
Financial planning is not only about returns; it’s about ensuring peace of mind and aligning your money with life goals. A professional planner can help you design a safe, efficient, and realistic roadmap toward your ideal retirement.

Best regards,
Naveenn Kummar, BE, MBA, QPFP
Chief Financial Planner | AMFI Registered MFD
https://members.networkfp.com/member/naveenkumarreddy-vadula-chennai

...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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