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Bought Ashok Leyland, DMart, BEL, Coal India, Ola, and Tata Motors on 19.8.24. Should I hold for the long term?

Samraat

Samraat Jadhav  |2552 Answers  |Ask -

Stock Market Expert - Answered on Sep 23, 2024

Samraat Jadhav is the founder of Prosperity Wealth Adviser.
He is a SEBI-registered investment and research analyst and has over 18 years of experience in managing high-end portfolios.
A management graduate from XLRI-Jamshedpur, Jadhav specialises in portfolio management, investment banking, financial planning, derivatives, equities and capital markets.... more
M Question by M on Sep 23, 2024Hindi
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Investment in ashokleyland at 259 dmart 5023, BEL 313, COAL 525, OLA 147, TATAMOT 1085 BOUGHT ON 19.8.24 FOR LONG TERM. ANY ADVICE REQUESTED

Ans: exit dmart all others good for long term
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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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11028 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jan 27, 2026

Money
Hello Sir, I would like your opinion regarding my investments. SIP monthly 40000. 1.PARAG PARIKH FLEXICAP INCREASED TO 16000/MONTH. TOTAL INVESTED Rs 2,02,000/- 2.NIPPON INDIA LARGE CAP FUND Rs 5000/MONTH. DID LUMPSUM OF Rs 11000 ON 21st JAN 2026 AS MARKET WENT DOWN. TOTAL INVESTED Rs 1,09,000/- SIP IS GOING ON. 3. MOTILAL OSWAL GOLD & SILVER PASSIVE FOF LUMPSUM 1 LAC ON 12th JAN 2026. HAVING 14000 PROFIT NOW. 4. MOTILAL OSWAL MIDCAP FUND Rs 7000/ MONTH. NOT PERFORMING WELL CURRENTLY. BUT CONTINUING THE SIP. TOTAL INVESTED Rs 1,11,000/- 5. NIPPON INDIA SMALL CAP FUND Rs 6000/MONTH. NOT PERFORMING WELL CURRENTLY BUT CONTINUING THE SIP. TOTAL INVESTED Rs 72000. 6. EDELWEISS US TECH EQUITY FOF Rs 6000/MONTH. TOTAL INVESTED Rs 24000. 7. NIPPON INDIA MULTICAP FUND TOTAL INVESTED Rs 1,20,000. NOT PERFORMING WELL CURRENTLY. STOPPED SIP. Spouse SIP 7000/month (HDFC Flexicap Fund). TOTAL INVESTED Rs 1,20,000/- TRYING TO ACHIEVE 7 CRORE IN 18-20 YEARS. I am 33 years currently. HDFC LIFE INSURANCE INVESTED 7.2 LACS EACH FOR ME AND MY WIFE. PAYMENT TERMS WAS 6 YEARS. THIS IS MY LAST YEAR AND WIFE PAYMENT TERM ALREADY COMPLETED. (I SHOULD HAVE DONE SIP FOR THE PAST 6 YEARS BUT STILL ITS OK I WILL USE THIS AMOUNT FOR EXTRA LUMPSUMS.) I HAVE 1 DAUGHTER AND LIC POLICY TAKEN FOR 19 YEARS. EACH YEAR PAYMENT 1.2 LACS. 25th YEAR I WILL GET 60 LACS. I HAVE TAKEN FAMILY HEALTH INSURANCE OF 10 LACS. ALSO TERM INSURANCE OF 1CR THIS YEAR. GOALS - WISH TO BE FINANCIALLY FREE BY 55 & TRAVEL EVERY ALTERNATE YEAR.
Ans: I appreciate your discipline, honesty, and long-term thinking. At 33, managing a Rs 40,000 monthly SIP, protecting family with insurance, and having a clear Rs 7 crore vision already puts you on a strong path. Some corrections now will make the journey smoother and less stressful.

» First, your big picture in simple words
– Age is in your favour with nearly 18–20 years available
– Monthly investment habit is strong and consistent
– Insurance protection is largely in place
– Goals are clear: financial freedom by 55 and regular travel
– Current portfolio is active but slightly overcomplicated

The base is strong, refinement is needed.

» About achieving Rs 7 crore in 18–20 years
– This goal is realistic with your current SIP discipline
– Annual increase in SIP with income growth is essential
– Equity-heavy approach is required, but with control
– Staying invested during poor performance phases is critical

Behaviour will matter more than fund selection.

» On funds “not performing well currently”
– Short-term underperformance is normal, especially in mid and small caps
– Stopping SIPs due to recent performance usually harms long-term results
– SIPs should continue during weak phases, not stop
– Performance must be reviewed over full market cycles, not months

Market corrections are when future returns are created.

» Too many similar equity funds – an important concern
– Many funds are overlapping in style and holdings
– This creates confusion, not real diversification
– Fewer funds with clear roles work better
– Monitoring and rebalancing become easier

More funds do not mean better outcomes.

» Direct plans – an honest assessment
– Direct plans save small cost, but remove guidance
– No professional support during market fear
– No portfolio-level rebalancing advice
– No behavioural control when emotions rise

Regular funds through an MFD with CFP credential provide long-term discipline, reviews, and protection from wrong decisions, which is far more valuable over 20 years.

» Gold and silver investment – reality check
– Passive gold and silver exposure adds stability
– It should remain limited and not grow further
– This is protection, not wealth creation
– Do not expect it to drive the Rs 7 crore goal

Equity will do the heavy lifting.

» Insurance policies – very important correction needed
– HDFC life policies are investment-linked and low growth
– LIC policy for daughter gives poor long-term returns
– Locking Rs 1.2 lakh yearly for 19 years reduces flexibility
– These products delay wealth creation

You should evaluate surrender of LIC and investment-linked insurance policies and redirect future savings into mutual funds. Insurance and investment must be kept separate.

» Child goal planning
– Child education fund must be separate from retirement
– Equity-oriented SIPs suit this long horizon
– Avoid mixing insurance maturity with education planning

Clear separation reduces future pressure.

» Travel goal planning
– Create a separate travel fund
– Shorter-term investments should be used for travel
– Do not touch retirement SIPs for lifestyle spending

Enjoyment is important, but structure avoids regret.

» What you should do from now
– Simplify equity portfolio and reduce overlap
– Continue SIPs even during weak performance
– Shift from direct to regular funds with professional guidance
– Exit inefficient insurance products gradually
– Increase SIP every year with income growth

Small corrections now create big comfort later.

» Final Insights
– Rs 7 crore in 18–20 years is achievable with discipline
– Your biggest risk is complexity, not markets
– Simplification and professional guidance will protect returns
– Avoid reacting to short-term fund performance
– Stay consistent, review annually, and enjoy the journey

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

..Read more

Latest Questions
Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |541 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 12, 2026

Money
Sir, How can we reduce the Commision on Regular MF ?What is Steps to avoid the Tax if wants to Switch from Regular to Direct?.
Ans: Hi Amit,

Your concern regarding commision in regular funds is quite genuine and common these days due to the misleading content shared by some people.
You should understand that a whilst regular funds have comparatively lower expense ratio than direct funds, and this has risen to the direct fund popularity. But in actual a direct fund portfolio is only good if you know all ins and out of the market, have proper knowledge and knows the correct way to invest perse your individual profile.

There are few benefits of regular fund portfolio which is highly overlooked:
- a professional builds your portfolio keeping in mind your detailed profile, funds selction are done based on your risk profile
- a professional knows the best time to invrease your investments, to hold and to shift. They constantly monitor the same and periodically review them

And a regular fund portfolio definitely beats the direct fund portfolio made with random tips and zero or less knowledge.
Hence I would not suggest you to switch from regular to direct funds if you are working with a professional.

Also switching from regular funds to direct will attract tax, there is no way to avoid the taxation.

However, you can get your portfolio reviewed from another advisor and ask them to guide you to make necessary changes.

If you do not have an advisor, connect with 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. A CFP periodically reviews your portfolio and suggest any amendments to be made, if required.

Let me know if you need more help.

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

...Read more

Naveenn

Naveenn Kummar  |249 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF, Insurance Expert - Answered on Feb 11, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 11, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi there, I am 53 years and retiring on 31/12/2025. I hvae a daughter and son, both studing and un-married. I am curently holding mutual fund (investment only) of around 15lacs. I am doing a SIP of 12000/- PM. Beside this, i have an equity investment of 15.50 lacs. I do have 65lacs in FD and the same amunt is expected upon retirement. I have a own house and there is no loan obligations currently. i have another 50lacs given to relatives and there is no timeline when I will be receiving this amount. I have around 100000 monthly expense and ofcourse the marriage expenses of my daughter and son in next 3-4 years. Kindly advise the best strategy and utilization of funds. Thank you.
Ans: Hi sir ,
You are entering a very sensitive financial phase where protection of capital becomes more important than aggressive growth. At the same time, you still have 30 plus years of life expectancy to fund, along with two large near-term goals children’s marriages and ongoing household expenses. So the strategy has to balance income, liquidity, and moderate growth.

Let me break this down in a practical way.

1. Where you stand today

Assets available / expected

Mutual Funds approx 15 lakh

Direct Equity approx 15.5 lakh

FD 65 lakh

Retirement proceeds expected approx 65 lakh

Money given to relatives 50 lakh uncertain timeline

Own house no loan

Total financial assets (excluding relatives money)
~160 lakh

If relatives repay, corpus rises to ~210 lakh but we should not depend on it for planning.

2. Monthly expense reality check

You mentioned ?1,00,000 per month = ?12 lakh per year.

Assuming 6 percent inflation, this expense will double in ~12 years.

So retirement planning must create income + growth, not just fixed income.

3. Immediate financial buckets to create

Think in 4 separate buckets instead of one pool.

A. Emergency + Liquidity bucket

Keep 18–24 months expenses.

?20–25 lakh
Park in:

Savings + sweep FD

Liquid / money market funds

Purpose: medical, family, urgent needs without breaking investments.

B. Marriage funding bucket (3–4 years)

Do not keep this in equity markets due to time risk.

Estimate requirement realistically. Suppose:

Daughter marriage 25–30 lakh

Son marriage 20–25 lakh

Total say 50 lakh

Park in:

Short duration debt funds

Bank FD ladder

RBI bonds

Capital safety is priority here.

C. Income generation bucket

This is the most critical post-retirement engine.

From your corpus, allocate ~70–80 lakh.

Options mix:

Senior Citizen Saving Scheme (SCSS)

Post Office MIS

RBI Floating Rate Bonds

High quality Corporate FD

Debt mutual funds with SWP

Target blended return: 7–8 percent.

This can generate ?45k–?55k monthly income.

D. Growth bucket (Long term)

You still need equity to beat inflation.

Allocate 25–30 lakh minimum.

Continue SIP (even post retirement if possible).

Suitable allocation:

Large Cap funds

Balanced Advantage / Dynamic Asset Allocation

Multi Asset funds

Time horizon: 10–20 years.

This bucket funds late retirement and healthcare inflation.

4. What to do with existing investments
Mutual Funds (15 lakh)

Keep invested. Review fund quality. Shift to:

Balanced Advantage

Large Cap / Flexi Cap

Avoid small cap concentration now.

Direct Equity (15.5 lakh)

Gradually reduce risk.

Move profits into hybrid funds or debt over 12–18 months. Do not exit in one shot to avoid tax and timing risk.

5. Retirement corpus deployment illustration

Here is a simple structure using your ~160 lakh corpus:

Bucket Amount Purpose
Emergency 25 L Liquidity
Marriage 50 L 3–4 yr goals
Income 60 L Monthly cashflow
Growth 25 L Inflation hedge

If relatives repay 50 lakh later:

Add 20 lakh to growth

Add 15 lakh to medical reserve

Add 15 lakh to income bucket

6. Monthly income gap

Expense: ?1,00,000

Income possible:

SCSS + MIS + Bonds: ~?50,000

SWP from debt / hybrid: ~?20,000

Equity dividends / growth withdrawal later: ~?10,000–?15,000

Gap may still exist initially.

So you may need:

Part time income / consulting (even ?25k helps)

Delay large withdrawals till age 60 when senior schemes expand

7. Important risks to manage
Healthcare

Take a family floater + super top up if not already.

Longevity risk

Plan till age 90, not 75.

Relatives money

Treat as “bonus”, not retirement funding.

Document repayment if possible.

Inflation

Do not over-allocate to FD.

That is the biggest mistake retirees make.

8. Action checklist

Finalize marriage budget realistically

Create 2-year emergency fund

Invest in SCSS immediately after retirement

Restructure equity to hybrid orientation

Continue SIP from surplus if feasible

Arrange health insurance buffer

Write a will and nominations

...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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