I have been investing in 3 mutual funds - HDFC flexi cap, sbi contra fund and Edelweiss us technology equity fund of funds since last 3 years. I am 39 years old now I am investing in these funds for retirement. Are these good funds for creating a good corpus. Please tell
Ans: You’ve already taken a good step by consistently investing for three years. Starting at age 39 with retirement in mind is wise. But retirement planning needs more than picking a few funds. It needs a deeper understanding of fund type, risk, asset mix, taxation, review, and most importantly—goal alignment.
Let us look at your portfolio and approach from a 360-degree retirement planning view.
Age, Timeline, and Goal Clarity
You are 39 years old now.
That gives you around 18–20 years for retirement.
Your current SIPs are meant for retirement.
Retirement is a long-term goal.
It needs disciplined investing and regular portfolio review.
So, the question is not only are the funds good, but also are they aligned with your goal?
Reviewing Each Fund Category You Hold
Let us assess your three mutual funds, category-wise. Scheme names are not needed. We will look at their fund type instead.
1. Flexi-Cap Fund
This is a good category for retirement investing.
Fund manager has flexibility to move between large, mid and small caps.
Gives long-term compounding benefits with diversification.
Helps to ride market cycles.
Keep this type of fund in your portfolio. But review performance yearly with a Certified Financial Planner.
2. Contra Fund
This type of fund follows a contrarian style.
It buys out-of-favour stocks expecting future gains.
May underperform in the short term.
But may deliver well in long term with volatility.
You must assess whether you can handle such volatility. Contra funds are not suitable for all investors. A Certified Financial Planner can check if this suits your risk profile.
3. International Technology Fund (Fund of Fund)
This is an international exposure fund.
Also sector specific – technology only.
It adds currency and geographical diversification.
But it is concentrated, volatile, and theme based.
Too much allocation here may hurt your goal. Use this only in a limited proportion—ideally under 10–15%. Also, Fund of Funds are taxed as debt funds in India.
So, gains are taxed as per income slab. For long-term, this affects returns. If you need global exposure, your Certified Financial Planner can help design it through better vehicles.
Key Observations from Your Current Fund Mix
You have three funds only.
All are equity-oriented.
No debt fund exposure is mentioned.
Two out of three funds are high-risk categories.
Portfolio lacks balance between risk and stability.
Retirement planning needs both growth and safety. That balance is missing now.
Asset Allocation Needs Correction
Right fund selection matters, but more important is asset allocation.
Retirement portfolio must have a mix of equity, debt, and some hybrid funds.
This gives growth, stability, and liquidity.
Your current portfolio has all equity funds.
Equity brings growth but also high short-term risk.
As you get closer to retirement, you must slowly reduce equity exposure.
This shift should be systematic. You can use Systematic Transfer Plans (STP) later. A Certified Financial Planner can plan this asset shift smoothly for you.
Tax Implications Must Be Understood
For your portfolio, new capital gains rules are important.
Equity Fund Tax
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.
Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) taxed at 20%.
Fund of Funds Tax
Treated as debt funds.
Gains taxed as per your income slab.
No LTCG benefit even after 3 years.
This can reduce your post-tax returns. Always keep taxation in mind while building corpus. A Certified Financial Planner will help optimise for post-tax wealth.
What You Must Do Now – Action Plan
Let’s build your retirement plan in a more focused manner. Here are the steps:
1. Review Current Portfolio With Expert
Review fund performance every 12 months.
Replace underperformers early.
Don't stay in one fund for emotional reasons.
2. Diversify Your Portfolio
Don’t invest only in equity.
Include debt and hybrid funds.
These give stability and reduce retirement risk.
3. Limit International or Sector Funds
Don’t keep more than 10–15% in theme-based or foreign funds.
Use them for diversification only.
Not as a core retirement fund.
4. Avoid Index Funds or ETFs
These follow markets blindly.
No fund manager control in falling markets.
Don’t adjust to market changes.
Better to go with actively managed funds.
An actively managed fund gives better downside protection and alpha generation. Especially important for retirement planning.
5. Don’t Use Direct Funds
Direct plans give higher return only in theory.
You don’t get expert guidance or ongoing review.
Without annual rebalancing, performance can drop.
Small mistakes in allocation can derail the plan.
Use regular plans through Certified Financial Planner. You will get goal tracking, rebalancing, and personal support.
6. Add a SIP Step-Up Plan
Increase SIP yearly by 10–15%.
It fights inflation and increases corpus.
Don’t keep SIP amount constant for 20 years.
SIPs should grow with your income.
Your Portfolio Should Follow Life Stages
Every retirement plan should adjust with age. Here’s how:
Age 39–45: More in equity, less in debt.
Age 46–50: Start increasing debt and hybrid.
Age 51–55: Increase debt allocation further.
After 55: Keep 30–40% only in equity.
Your Certified Financial Planner will handle this transition smartly. Don't do it randomly.
Retirement Plan Should Also Include These
Emergency Fund
Keep 6–9 months expenses in liquid funds.
Don’t touch SIPs during emergencies.
Term Insurance
Ensure you have adequate term cover till retirement.
Don’t mix insurance with investment.
Health Insurance
Take separate family floater health policy.
Medical cost can derail your plan.
How to Track Progress Every Year
Review SIP and portfolio once every year.
Track your corpus growth.
Make sure you are ahead of inflation.
Rebalance as per market condition.
Don’t follow one-time “buy and forget” method. Retirement is too important for that.
Finally
Your start is good. You’re consistent and goal-oriented. But portfolio needs correction and balance.
Right now:
You have too much equity exposure.
Two funds are high-risk.
International exposure is high.
No mention of debt, hybrid or regular plan support.
For a secure retirement:
Build balanced portfolio.
Use actively managed funds.
Use regular funds via Certified Financial Planner.
Increase SIPs yearly.
Review funds every year.
Control taxes and reduce unnecessary risks.
Retirement is not just reaching a number. It’s about reaching it peacefully, without stress or shortfall.
With the right asset mix and review, your goal will be possible.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment
Asked on - Jul 13, 2025 | Answered on Jul 14, 2025
Thank you sir for your valuable feedback
Can you please tell me about the HDFC balanced advantage fund. Is it a good fund?
Ans: Thank you for your kind words.
You are asking about a specific balanced advantage fund. That shows your interest in informed investing.
However, it’s not advisable to choose or analyse mutual funds in isolation.
A fund that suits one investor may not suit another.
Suitability depends on your goals, time frame, and risk capacity.
Balanced advantage funds manage equity and debt dynamically.
They aim to reduce downside risk and deliver steady returns.
But even within this category, funds vary in strategy and consistency.
Instead of picking a fund on your own, take guided advice.
A Certified Financial Planner or MFD with CFP credential can help.
They match fund selection with your specific financial goals.
They also review and rebalance your portfolio regularly.
If you are not working with one already, feel free to connect with us.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment