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Ulhas

Ulhas Joshi  |280 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Fund Expert - Answered on May 10, 2023

With over 16 years of experience in the mutual fund industry, Ulhas Joshi has helped numerous clients choose the right funds and create wealth.
Prior to joining RankMF as CEO, he was vice president (sales) at IDBI Asset Management Ltd.
Joshi holds an MBA in marketing from Barkatullah University, Bhopal.... more
RISHU Question by RISHU on Apr 11, 2023Hindi
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Dear Sir, I have been investing 16000/- per month in Four Mutual Funds under SIP since last one year. Pls suggest whether i should continue with the below mentioned funds or to change to some other funds: 1.Kotak Emerging Equity Fund - Direct Plan - Growth - Equity- Diversified 2.Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund - Direct Plan - Growth - Equity - Diversified 3.Mirae Asset Tax Saver Fund - Direct Plan - Growth - Equity - ELSS 4.DSP Quant Fund - Direct Plan - Growth - Equity - Diversified Further I want to increase monthly SIP to total 25000/-. Pls suggest new funds which should i opt for generation of good corpus after 10 years.

Ans: Hello Rishu, thanks for writing to me. The funds you invest in are good funds. As you want to increase your investment by Rs.9,000 every month, you can consider beginning investments in:

1-Edelweiss NIFTY Quality 100 30 Index Fund: Rs.3,000 per month
2-SBI Focused Equity Fund: Rs.3,000 per month
3-Motilal Oswal Focused Fund: Rs.3,000 per month.
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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Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Sep 16, 2024

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I am currently investing in the following funds for past 5 years and would like to increase my SIP by an additional ?30,000. Could you recommend which fund I should allocate this to? My current SIP allocation is as follows: ?15k in ICICI Pru Bluechip, ?15k in Quant Smallcap, ?15k in UTI Nifty Index Fund, ?15k in HDFC Midcap, ?15k in PPFAS Flexicap, ?15k in Quant Active Cap, ?15k in Tata Digital fund, and ?5k in Motilal Oswal Microcap. in addition, I am also holding FDs and am considering interest gained on FD during maturity to be reinvesting into mutual funds . Could you recommend how I should allocate this corpus into mutual funds, and which funds would be ideal for this ? For the entire plan investment time duration is another 7-10 years
Ans: Your current SIP portfolio looks well diversified across large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, and flexi-cap funds. You’ve also included a digital fund, which adds sectoral diversification. This is a strong approach for building wealth over a period of 7-10 years. Each of your selected funds serves a unique purpose, contributing to both growth and stability in your portfolio.

Your allocation shows a healthy mix of aggressive growth (small-cap, mid-cap, micro-cap) and more stable, consistent performers (large-cap, flexi-cap). You’ve done well in balancing risk and reward over time.

Adding Rs 30,000 to your SIP is a great decision, which will significantly boost your wealth over the long term.

Let’s break down how you can allocate this additional amount to optimize your returns while maintaining balance.

Increasing Your SIP Allocation
Risk Tolerance & Time Horizon

Since you’ve already been investing for 5 years, and your investment time horizon is another 7-10 years, you have a relatively long period ahead. This means you can afford to maintain a slightly aggressive portfolio, as you can ride out market volatility. However, you should also ensure some stability as you get closer to your goal.

Consolidation vs Diversification

Your current portfolio has a lot of diversification in terms of both market capitalization (large, mid, small) and fund types (sectoral, flexi-cap). This is good, but you also don’t want to spread your investments too thin. Allocating your Rs 30,000 across your existing funds will help consolidate and strengthen your portfolio.

Equity-Focused Allocation

Given your time horizon, increasing your allocation towards equity funds makes sense. Equity funds have the potential to provide higher returns, which is what you need for wealth accumulation over the next 7-10 years.

Let’s now discuss how to allocate your additional Rs 30,000 across your existing portfolio.

Suggested Allocation for the Additional Rs 30,000
Increase in Large-Cap Allocation: Rs 8,000

Large-cap funds provide stability and steady growth. They invest in well-established companies with a proven track record. Increasing your allocation to large-cap funds will provide a solid foundation for your portfolio.

Large-cap funds have historically delivered consistent returns, especially over longer periods. Allocating Rs 8,000 here will ensure you have a strong base of reliable performers in your portfolio.

Boost Mid-Cap Allocation: Rs 7,000

Mid-cap funds can provide a good mix of growth potential and moderate risk. They offer higher growth than large-caps but are less volatile than small-caps. Given your long-term horizon, increasing your mid-cap exposure is a good idea.

Mid-cap companies tend to grow faster, and over 7-10 years, this growth could significantly boost your returns. Allocating Rs 7,000 towards mid-cap funds will give you exposure to companies that are in their growth phase.

Strengthen Small-Cap Exposure: Rs 5,000

Small-cap funds can be volatile in the short term but have great growth potential over the long term. Since you are comfortable with some level of risk, increasing your small-cap allocation could yield significant benefits over time.

Small-cap companies can offer exponential growth, and Rs 5,000 added to this allocation will enhance your portfolio’s ability to capture this growth.

Flexi-Cap Funds for Flexibility: Rs 6,000

Flexi-cap funds allow the fund manager to invest across market caps—large, mid, and small. This gives flexibility to shift between market caps based on market conditions. Increasing your allocation to flexi-cap funds ensures that your portfolio can adapt to different market conditions.

By allocating Rs 6,000 here, you ensure that your portfolio is not overly reliant on any one segment of the market, giving you the flexibility to benefit from various market conditions.

Digital or Sector-Specific Funds: Rs 4,000

Sector-specific funds, like digital funds, can offer higher returns, but they also come with higher risk due to their focus on a specific sector. Increasing your exposure to sector-specific funds can help you capture growth in sectors like technology, which have strong potential for the future.

A Rs 4,000 increase here will give you more exposure to high-growth sectors, while keeping the allocation small enough to avoid excessive risk.

FD Maturity Reinvestment into Mutual Funds
You’ve mentioned considering the reinvestment of the interest earned on your FDs into mutual funds. This is a wise decision, as mutual funds have the potential to offer much higher returns than FDs, especially over longer periods. Let’s discuss how you can deploy this corpus effectively.

Debt Mutual Funds for Stability

Given that FD interest is often a source of safe, stable income, you may want to reinvest some of this amount into debt mutual funds. Debt funds provide steady returns with lower risk compared to equity. This ensures that you maintain some level of safety in your portfolio.

You could consider investing 50% of the FD maturity corpus into debt mutual funds. These funds will help stabilize your overall portfolio and can be used for short- to medium-term goals or emergency funds.

Equity Funds for Growth

The remaining 50% can be invested in equity mutual funds. You already have a diversified equity portfolio, so this reinvestment could be distributed across your existing equity funds. This ensures that you continue to benefit from long-term capital appreciation.

Asset Allocation Review

As you reinvest the FD maturity corpus, review your overall asset allocation to ensure it aligns with your risk tolerance and financial goals. Maintaining a balance between equity and debt is key to managing risk and maximizing returns.

Avoiding Index Funds and Direct Plans
You currently have an allocation to an index fund (UTI Nifty Index Fund). While index funds have their place, actively managed funds can often outperform them, especially in a market like India, where there is room for stock-picking and alpha generation.

Disadvantages of Index Funds:

No Flexibility: Index funds passively track the market and do not have the ability to adjust based on market conditions. Active funds, on the other hand, allow fund managers to take advantage of opportunities and avoid risks.

Lower Return Potential: In emerging markets, actively managed funds can outperform the index. The Indian market, with its growth potential, offers opportunities for active fund managers to generate higher returns.

Similarly, investing through direct plans might seem attractive due to lower expense ratios. However, working with a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) and investing through regular plans offers several advantages:

Expert Guidance: A CFP helps you navigate market cycles, provides personalized advice, and ensures that your investments are aligned with your financial goals. Direct plans leave you to manage everything on your own, which can lead to suboptimal decisions.

Portfolio Review: A CFP regularly reviews and rebalances your portfolio based on market conditions and changes in your personal circumstances.

Better Risk Management: A professional helps manage risk by ensuring your portfolio is not overly exposed to any single asset class or sector.

Regular Portfolio Reviews
Now that you are increasing your SIP and reinvesting FD maturity interest into mutual funds, it’s crucial to review your portfolio regularly. This ensures that your investments continue to align with your financial goals and risk tolerance.

Regular reviews help you adjust your asset allocation based on:

Market Conditions: As market conditions change, you may need to rebalance your portfolio to maintain the desired risk-reward balance.

Financial Goals: Your goals may evolve over time, and regular reviews will help ensure your portfolio stays aligned with these goals.

Time Horizon: As you get closer to your financial goals (like retirement), you may want to shift towards more conservative investments.

Final Insights
Your current SIP portfolio is well-diversified, and increasing your SIP by Rs 30,000 is a great step toward building more wealth. By focusing on a balanced allocation across large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, flexi-cap, and sector-specific funds, you can optimize your returns while managing risk.

Additionally, reinvesting the interest earned from your FDs into mutual funds is a smart move. By allocating part of it to debt funds for stability and part to equity funds for growth, you can maintain a balanced approach.

Finally, it’s important to review your portfolio regularly with a Certified Financial Planner (CFP). This will ensure that your investments remain aligned with your evolving financial goals and risk profile.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |423 Answers  |Ask -

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

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Kapil: Kindly give your expert opinion regarding my monthly mutual fund investments at the moment of Rs. 40000 (total SIP gradually increased over past years) I have been doing for the last 7 and half years. I am 42 yr old. My total portfolio value till now is around Rs. 42,50,000. I want to create a corpus of around 2.5 Crore in the next 10 years. 1. HDFC Children's Gift Fund - (Lock-in) - Regular Plan - Rs. 10000. 2. ICICI Prudential Midcap Fund - Direct Growth - Rs. 5000 3. ICICI Prudential Multicap Fund - Growth - Rs. 2000 4. Axis Large Cap Fund - Regular Growth - Rs. 4500 5. Axis Focussed 25 Fund - Regular Growth - Rs. 2000 6. SBI Focussed Equity Fund - Regular Growth - Rs. 4500 7. Invesco India Small Cap Fund - Regular Growth - Rs. 5000 8. Edelweiss Multi Cap Fund - Regular Growth - Rs. 7000 I want to increase the SIP of around Rs. 10000 in my mutual funds now to make total SIP value of Rs. 50000. I am thinking about increasing Rs. 7000 in Axis Large Cap Fund (which will take its total Sip value to Rs. 11500) and Rs. 3000 in Axis Focussed Fund (which will take its total Sip value to Rs. 5000). Kindly suggest me following three things: 1) Possibility of creating a corpus of around 2.5 Crore in the next 10 years with these funds and what should be the right yearly increase in my SIP value. 2) Increasing of SIP of Rs. 7000 in Axis Large Cap Fund and Rs. 3000 in Axis Focussed Fund is right choice or should I increase in my other mutual funds. Your expert opinion will be appreciated.
Ans: Hi Kapil,

Really appreciate your dedication in investing for past 7.5 years and creating an amazing corpus for yourself.
Currently you are investing 40k monthly and want to increase it to 50k per month which is a very good decision as step-up SIP can make a huge positive impact in your wealth creation.

- If you continue investing at this pace, with a monthly investment of 50k for next 10 years, you can easily achieve 2.5 crores with a CAGR of 13%. And if you step-up with 10% yearly investment, you can get more than 3 crores after 10 years.
- However the funds you mentioned are lil overlapping. It needs some minor re-allocation. You have 2 multi cap funds and 2 focused funds. You can keep one of both the funds.
- Increasing 10k SIP - Add 3500 to Axis Largecap (total 8000), 6500 in good Momentum fund.

As your portfolio size is quite big, it would be really better for you to work with a professional who reviews your portfolio periodically and changes it as per the requirement.
Hence 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.

Let me know if you need more help.

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

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Nayagam P

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Asked by Anonymous - Dec 12, 2025Hindi
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Hello, I am currently in Class 12 and preparing for JEE. I have not yet completed even 50% of the syllabus properly, but I aim to score around '110' marks. Could you suggest an effective strategy to achieve this? I know the target is relatively low, but I have category reservation, so it should be sufficient.
Ans: With category reservation (SC/ST/OBC), a score of 110 marks is absolutely achievable and realistic. Based on 2025 data, SC candidates qualified with approximately 60-65 percentile, and ST candidates with 45-55 percentile. Your target requires scoring just 37-40% marks, which is significantly lower than general category standards. This gives you a genuine advantage. Immediate Action Plan (December 2025 - January 2026): 4-5 Weeks. Week 1-2: High-Weightage Chapter Focus. Stop trying to complete the entire syllabus. Instead, focus exclusively on high-scoring chapters that carry maximum weightage: Physics (Modern Physics, Current Electricity, Work-Power-Energy, Rotation, Magnetism), Chemistry (Chemical Bonding, Thermodynamics, Coordination Compounds, Electrochemistry), and Maths (Integration, Differentiation, Vectors, 3D Geometry, Probability). These chapters alone can yield 80-100+ marks if practiced properly. Ignore topics you haven't studied yet. Week 2-3: Previous Year Questions (PYQs). Solve JEE Main PYQs from the last 10 years (2015-2025) for chapters you're studying. PYQs reveal question patterns and difficulty levels. Focus on understanding why answers are correct, not memorizing solutions. Week 3-4: Mock Tests & Error Analysis. Take 2-3 full-length mock tests weekly under timed conditions. This is crucial because mock tests build exam confidence, reveal time management weaknesses, and error analysis prevents repeated mistakes. Maintain an error notebook documenting every mistake—this becomes your revision guide. Week 4-5: Revision & Formula Consolidation. Create concise formula sheets for each subject. Spend 30 minutes daily reviewing formulas and key concepts. Avoid learning new topics entirely at this stage. Study Schedule (Daily): 7-8 Hours. Morning (5:00-7:30 AM): Physics concepts + 30 PYQs. Break (7:30-8:30 AM): Breakfast & rest. Mid-morning (8:30-11:00): Chemistry concepts + 20 PYQs. Lunch (11:00-1:00 PM): Full break. Afternoon (1:00-3:30 PM): Maths concepts + 30 PYQs. Evening (3:30-5:00 PM): Mock test or error review. Night (7:00-9:00 PM): Formula revision & weak area focus. Strategic Approach for 110 Marks: Attempt only confident questions and avoid negative marking by skipping difficult questions. Do easy questions first—in the exam, attempt all basic-level questions before attempting medium or hard ones. Focus on quality over quantity as 30 well-practiced questions beat 100 random questions. Master NCERT concepts as most JEE questions test NCERT concepts applied smartly. April 2026 Session Advantage. If January doesn't deliver desired results, April gives you a second chance with 3+ months to prepare. Use January as a practice attempt to identify weak areas, then focus intensively on those in February-March. Realistic Timeline: January 2026 target is 95-110 marks (achievable with focused 50% syllabus), while April 2026 target is 120-130 marks (with complete syllabus + experience). Your reservation benefit means you need only approximately 90-105 marks to qualify and secure admission to quality engineering colleges. Stop comparing yourself to general category cutoffs. Most Importantly: Consistency beats perfection. Study 6 focused hours daily rather than 12 distracted hours. Your 110-mark target is realistic—execute this plan with discipline. All the BEST for Your JEE 2026!

Follow RediffGURUS to Know More on 'Careers | Money | Health | Relationships'.

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Dr Dipankar

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Asked by Anonymous - Dec 12, 2025
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Dear Sir/Madam, I am currently a 1st year UG student studying engineering in Sairam Engineering College, But there the lack of exposure and strict academics feels so rigid and I don't like it that. It's like they don't gaf about skills but just wants us to memorize things and score a good CGPA, the only skill they want is you to memorize things and pass, there's even special class for students who don't perform well in academics and it is compulsory for them to attend or else the student and his/her parents needs to face authorities who lashes out. My question is when did engineering became something that requires good academics instead of actual learning and skill set. In sairam they provides us a coding platform in which we need to gain the required points for each semester which is ridiculous cuz most of the students here just look at the solution to code instead of actual debugging. I am passionate about engineering so I want to learn and experiment things instead of just memorizing, so I actually consider dropping out and I want to give jee a try and maybe viteee , srmjeee But i heard some people say SRM may provide exposure but not that good in placements. I may not be excellent at studies but my marks are decent. So gimme some insights about SRM and recommend me other colleges/universities which are good at exposure
Ans: First — your frustration is valid

What you are experiencing at Sairam is not engineering, it is rote-based credential production.

“When did engineering become memorizing instead of learning?”

Sadly, this shift happened decades ago in most Tier-3 private colleges in India.

About “coding platforms & points” – your observation is sharp

You are absolutely right:

Mandatory coding points → students copy solutions

Copying ≠ learning

Debugging & thinking are missing

This is pseudo-skill education — it looks modern but produces shallow engineers.

The fact that you noticed this in 1st year already puts you ahead of 80% students.

Should you DROP OUT and prepare for JEE / VITEEE / SRMJEEE?

Although VIT/SRM is better than Sairam Engineering College, but you may face the same problem. You will not face this type of problem only in some top IITs, but getting seat in those IITs will be difficult.
Instead of dropping immediately, consider:

???? Strategy:

Stay enrolled (degree security)

Reduce emotional investment in college rules

Use:

GitHub

Open-source projects

Hackathons

Internships (remote)

Hardware / software self-projects

This way:

College = formality

Learning = self-driven

Risk = minimal

...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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