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Sunil

Sunil Lala  | Answer  |Ask -

Financial Planner - Answered on Jul 18, 2025

Sunil Lala founded SL Wealth, a company that offers life and non-life insurance, mutual fund and asset allocation advice, in 2005. A certified financial planner, he has three decades of domain experience. His expertise includes designing goal-specific financial plans and creating investment awareness. He has been a registered member of the Financial Planning Standards Board since 2009.... more
Anurag Question by Anurag on Jul 17, 2025Hindi
Money

Sir, I have mother & wife as dependents as of now, father is no more, monthly expenses is around 60000, my sister is a doctor, I have an own house inherited planning to get the house by 2030, presently paying EMI for house of 30000 per month, please suggest for my asset allocation

Ans: Anurag, your asset allocation depends a lot on your financial goals, your preferences which I think will be a long conversation and cannot be answered here in 2-3 lines. I would urge you to visit my website (mentioned in the trail answer) and we can have a detailed conversation about your scenario and come up with plan of action that best suits your requirements.
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  |10874 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 22, 2024

Money
Hello Anil Ji i am 58yr of age retiring in Dec 24. My family is myself wife 55yr , unmarried daughter 29yr working since last four yr in reputed MNC with good salary and career prospects. My investment are 1.09 cr of equity, 2.37cr MF equity, 0.56cr MF Debt funds. 65lacs Ulip all premium paid maturing in sept 24. FD in bank 20lacs. Total of 4.82cr. Own 3 Bhk apartment in Metro city where i live approx value 1.45cr. No loans no debts. My question is what should be my asset allocation after retirement my monthly requirement is 1.25lacs and one time expense of daughter marriage in next 1-2 yrs of 30lacs. Thanks
Ans: I appreciate the clarity and the thoroughness with which you've provided your details. It sounds like you have done a fantastic job building your assets. Let's explore how to best allocate your resources after retirement to meet your needs.

Understanding Your Financial Position
Firstly, congratulations on reaching a well-diversified asset base. Here's a summary of your assets:

Equity Investments: Rs 1.09 crore
Mutual Funds (Equity): Rs 2.37 crore
Mutual Funds (Debt): Rs 0.56 crore
ULIP: Rs 65 lakhs (maturing soon)
Fixed Deposit: Rs 20 lakhs
Real Estate: 3 BHK apartment (Rs 1.45 crore)
Your total financial assets come to around Rs 4.82 crore. You have no loans, which is excellent. Your monthly requirement is Rs 1.25 lakhs, and you have a one-time expense of Rs 30 lakhs for your daughter's marriage.

Setting the Foundation: Emergency Fund
An emergency fund is crucial for financial security. Ensure you have at least 6 to 12 months of expenses in a liquid, low-risk account. This fund should cover unexpected expenses without disturbing your investments.

Recommended Emergency Fund: Rs 15 lakhs (12 months of expenses)
Asset Allocation Strategy Post-Retirement
Let's break down a suitable asset allocation strategy:

1. Debt Instruments for Stability
Debt instruments provide stability and regular income. They are less volatile and suitable for your monthly needs. Considering your requirement of Rs 1.25 lakhs per month, prioritize these investments:

Mutual Funds (Debt): Rs 56 lakhs already allocated. Consider adding more to this to ensure stable returns.
Fixed Deposit: Rs 20 lakhs is a good buffer. Keep this as part of your emergency fund and for short-term liquidity.
2. Equity Investments for Growth
Equity investments are essential for growth and to combat inflation. However, post-retirement, the exposure should be balanced:

Equity Investments: Rs 1.09 crore
Mutual Funds (Equity): Rs 2.37 crore
While these investments have higher returns, they come with higher risks. Consider reallocating some equity to balanced or conservative funds to reduce volatility.

3. ULIP as a Diversification Tool
Your ULIP maturing soon will provide a lump sum. ULIPs combine insurance and investment but may not always offer the best returns. Since all premiums are paid and it’s maturing, use the maturity amount wisely.

ULIP Maturity: Rs 65 lakhs. Reinvest this in safer debt funds or balanced funds for moderate growth with lower risk.
Creating a Monthly Income Stream
To generate Rs 1.25 lakhs per month, a mix of Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWPs) from mutual funds and interest from fixed deposits can be considered.

Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP)
SWP allows you to withdraw a fixed amount from mutual funds periodically. This can provide regular income without selling your investments entirely.

SWP from Debt Mutual Funds: Utilize debt funds to withdraw a steady amount monthly.
SWP from Balanced Funds: For a balanced risk approach, include some withdrawals from balanced funds.
Interest from Fixed Deposits
Interest from fixed deposits can supplement your monthly income. Ensure the interest aligns with your monthly needs and reinvest any excess for future use.

Planning for One-Time Expenses
For your daughter’s marriage, earmark Rs 30 lakhs from your existing assets. Consider using the maturity proceeds of your ULIP or liquidating some of your fixed deposits for this purpose.

Adjusting Your Portfolio
Rebalancing Equity and Debt
After ensuring your monthly needs and one-time expenses are covered, rebalance your portfolio to maintain a suitable risk level. Post-retirement, a common approach is to have a 40-60% allocation in equities and 60-40% in debt:

Equity Allocation: Aim for around 40% of your portfolio.
Debt Allocation: Aim for around 60% of your portfolio.
This balance provides growth potential while ensuring stability and regular income.

Diversifying within Debt and Equity
Within debt and equity, diversify to manage risk better:

Debt Funds: Include short-term, medium-term, and income funds.
Equity Funds: Include large-cap, mid-cap, and balanced funds.
Tax Planning
Efficient tax planning ensures you retain more of your income. Post-retirement, tax planning involves:

Tax-Exempt Instruments: Use the tax benefits of PPF and other exempt instruments.
Long-Term Capital Gains: Equity investments held for over a year have favorable tax treatment.
Tax-Efficient Withdrawals: Plan withdrawals from funds in a tax-efficient manner.
Monitoring and Review
Regular monitoring and review of your investments are crucial. Assess your portfolio at least once a year and adjust as needed to align with your goals and market conditions.

Genuine Compliments and Empathy
You've done a remarkable job in securing a diversified asset base. Managing your finances prudently has given you a solid foundation. Your focus on family and ensuring their well-being is commendable. It’s understandable to want to ensure your assets are well-managed post-retirement. I'm here to help guide you through this transition.

Final Insights
Retirement planning is about securing your future while enjoying the present. You've built a strong portfolio, and with the right adjustments, you can ensure a stable, comfortable retirement.

Emergency Fund: Keep Rs 15 lakhs for unexpected needs.
Debt Instruments: Use debt funds and FDs for stability and regular income.
Equity Investments: Maintain equity for growth but balance with lower-risk options.
ULIP Maturity: Reinvest in safe or balanced funds.
SWP: Generate monthly income through systematic withdrawals.
Tax Planning: Optimize withdrawals to minimize tax impact.
By following these steps, you can maintain your lifestyle and meet your financial goals post-retirement. Regular review and adjustments will keep you on track. Wishing you a fulfilling and stress-free retirement.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP

Chief Financial Planner

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10874 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 02, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - May 18, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi, I am a software architect with 34 years age. I earn 8 lakh, my wife 1.5 lakh and my mother get pension 50k (all are after tax). Our monthly expense is 2 lakh. Our family current saving is 7 Cr. Here is the breakup Equity mutual fund - 3 Cr US stocks - 2 Cr Gold, Silver ETF - 50 lacs Physical Gold and Silver - 50 lacs PF, NPS, Debt MF, FD, Crypto- 1 Cr I have one big house in tier3 city and Got another with 1.5 Cr loan (1.3 lakh emi per month) Please suggest as per my portfolio, where should I invest next monthly? Apart from our regular income, I get 30 lakh approx yearly with different side work, bonus etc.
Ans: You have built a strong foundation. Your income, savings and asset allocation show financial maturity. With Rs. 7 Cr savings and Rs. 30 lakh extra income yearly, you are in a good place. Let’s now look at your portfolio deeply and guide you further.

This suggestion focuses on enhancing wealth, managing risks and achieving long-term peace of mind. Let us now assess and advise under each major aspect.

Cash Flow and Expense Structure
Your total household monthly income is approx Rs. 10 lakh.

Your monthly expense is Rs. 2 lakh only. That is just 20% of income.

You save 80% of your monthly income. This is very healthy.

Your EMI is Rs. 1.3 lakh. That is well within safe limits.

You also receive Rs. 30 lakh extra per year. This adds to your liquidity.

Net yearly surplus is around Rs. 90 lakh. That is significant.

You are in a wealth-building phase. But must now protect and grow wisely.

Current Portfolio Assessment
Rs. 3 Cr in equity mutual funds. This is good for long-term growth.

Rs. 2 Cr in US stocks. This adds global diversification. Currency hedge too.

Rs. 50 lakh in Gold and Silver ETF. This is a decent hedge against inflation.

Rs. 50 lakh in physical gold/silver. This adds emotional and traditional value.

Rs. 1 Cr in PF, NPS, Debt MF, FD and Crypto. This offers stability and mix.

Two properties. One loan-backed. Property is not liquid. Avoid more in future.

Debt and EMI Assessment
Rs. 1.5 Cr loan is manageable now. EMI is affordable.

However, EMI is Rs. 1.3 lakh. This creates fixed outgo.

Repayment plan must be gradual. No hurry to prepay aggressively.

Don’t use lump sum savings for repayment. Let income manage EMIs.

Loan helps in taxation also. Maintain liquidity with savings.

Asset Allocation Recommendation
Your current asset mix is approximately like this:

Equity (India + US): 71%

Precious Metals: 14%

Debt + Hybrid + Cash: 15%

Equity is slightly aggressive. But it suits your age and income.

Keep equity exposure near 65% max.

Increase debt and hybrid category by 5%.

Keep physical gold steady. Don’t increase further.

Avoid adding more to US stocks now. Currency risks are rising.

Monthly Investment Strategy (Going Forward)
You have enough surplus every month. You should allocate this wisely now.

Let’s break the monthly allocation strategy:

Allocate Rs. 4 lakh per month to actively managed equity mutual funds.

Prefer regular plans. Invest via trusted Certified Financial Planner.

Direct plans miss personal guidance. Not ideal for complex needs.

Regular plan via qualified CFP offers advice, rebalancing and goal-mapping.

Avoid index funds. These follow market passively. No downside protection.

Actively managed funds offer expert oversight. Better in volatile markets.

Allocate Rs. 2 lakh per month to hybrid funds and dynamic asset allocation funds.

These offer safety with moderate growth. Ideal to balance high equity exposure.

Allocate Rs. 1 lakh per month to short-term debt funds or liquid funds.

These help in emergency corpus building. You can access quickly if needed.

Allocate Rs. 1 lakh per month to Sovereign Gold Bonds or Digital Gold.

Better than physical gold. Safer and interest-bearing too.

Annual Surplus Investment Plan (Rs. 30 lakh Yearly)
This is your bonus and side income. Use it for building specific goals.

Divide your annual Rs. 30 lakh like this:

Rs. 10 lakh into equity mutual funds. Choose different categories from SIP.

Rs. 6 lakh into hybrid and balanced advantage funds.

Rs. 6 lakh into debt-oriented mutual funds. Use accrual or short-duration funds.

Rs. 3 lakh into physical asset maintenance and lifestyle upgrades.

Rs. 2 lakh into personal term insurance and health top-up, if not yet covered.

Rs. 3 lakh into family emergency and parents’ medical reserve.

Risk Management & Insurance Planning
If you don’t have a term plan, take one for Rs. 2-3 Cr.

Ensure health insurance of at least Rs. 15 lakh per family member.

Don’t mix investment with insurance. Avoid ULIP and endowment plans.

If already holding them, consider surrendering and reinvest in mutual funds.

Review nominations and WILL. Secure family financially with clarity.

Children's Education and Retirement Planning
If you have kids, start education corpus fund. Target 10-15 years horizon.

Use child-focused mutual funds. Choose via Certified Financial Planner.

For retirement, you already have PF, NPS and mutual fund equity.

Continue SIP in diversified mutual funds for retirement.

Avoid annuities. They offer poor returns and zero flexibility.

Set a retirement target corpus with inflation-adjusted needs.

Review yearly and rebalance with professional help.

Avoid These Common Pitfalls
Avoid overexposure to US stocks now. Currency cycles are unpredictable.

Avoid buying more real estate. It is illiquid and difficult to exit.

Avoid direct mutual fund plans. You lose guidance and monitoring.

Avoid index funds. They mirror market and lack downside protection.

Don’t invest based on friends or social media tips.

Don’t keep large idle cash in savings account. Returns are too low.

Don’t chase crypto returns blindly. Use caution and cap allocation.

Portfolio Rebalancing Plan
Review asset allocation every 6 months.

If equity becomes more than 65%, shift excess to hybrid or debt.

Rebalancing helps protect profits and reduce future risk.

Rebalance with help of Certified Financial Planner only.

Keep long-term goals unchanged. Don’t panic in market falls.

Estate Planning and Family Wealth Safety
Prepare a WILL. Include all assets clearly.

Add nomination in mutual funds, demat, bank accounts and insurance.

Educate spouse about account locations and emergency access.

Keep one document with all investments and login details.

This helps family in uncertain times. Gives peace of mind.

Tax Planning and Documentation
Use debt funds for tax-efficient returns in low-risk category.

Keep all income documents ready. Declare side income carefully.

Equity MF LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

Short-term gains taxed at 20%. Plan redemptions accordingly.

Debt MF gains taxed as per slab. Choose wisely with help.

Avoid too many FDs. Tax inefficient and low yielding.

File ITR early every year. Maintain good financial hygiene.

Finally
You have already built a strong financial base.

Now, the focus should be on smart allocation and risk control.

Diversify but don’t over-diversify.

Invest only in what you understand or have guided support in.

Use qualified Certified Financial Planner for advice and course correction.

Avoid noise and stay disciplined. Wealth builds over decades.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

..Read more

Nitin

Nitin Narkhede  | Answer  |Ask -

MF, PF Expert - Answered on Aug 10, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Aug 10, 2025Hindi
Money
Sir, I am a 33 year old IT professional with monthly income of Rs 1.9 lakh. I have a homemaker spouse, a 2 year old daughter, and parents aged 60. Since 2014, I have been investing about 60 percent of my income. My portfolio is EPF and VPF of Rs 14.6 lakh, PPF for self and spouse of Rs 18 lakh, NPS of Rs 7.7 lakh with Rs 10000 monthly SIP, direct shares of Rs 17 lakh with Rs 15000 SIP, ETF and SGB of Rs 10 lakh, mutual funds of Rs 24 lakh with Rs 15000 SIP in 3 schemes, gold chit with Rs 10000 per month in GRT. for parents income Annuity insurance in Aditya Birla for Rs 3 lakh per year giving Rs 25000 per quarter , and corporate bonds of Rs 14.3 lakh yielding 11 percent monthly. We live in a rented house in Chennai for Rs 14000 per month, same lifestyle for the past six years. My parents are in a village. There is a suggestion to buy a flat by selling some investments. Should I buy a house now or continue with these investments. Please guide on the best asset allocation for child future and retirement considering possible risks in IT sector.
Ans: Dear Friend,
You have a strong savings habit (60% of income) and a well-diversified portfolio across EPF/VPF, PPF, NPS, equities, MFs, ETFs, gold, annuity, and bonds, plus low living costs (?14k rent). Your emergency and retirement foundation is strong. Buying a house now in Chennai would reduce liquidity and potentially disrupt your compounding, especially since real estate returns in metro flats often lag equities over the long term. Unless you foresee rent rising sharply or plan to settle permanently, continuing to rent while investing can grow wealth faster. For asset allocation: keep ~50–55% in equity (MF + shares + ETFs), 25–30% in fixed income (EPF, PPF, bonds), 10% in gold/SGB, and the rest in NPS. For your child’s future, start a dedicated equity index fund SIP; for retirement, maintain high equity allocation until 50, then gradually shift to debt. Continue reviewing allocation yearly and diversify against IT sector job risks. Regards, Nitin Narkhede -Founder, Prosperity Lifestyle Hub,
Free webinar https://bit.ly/PLH-Webinar

..Read more

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Anu Krishna  |1746 Answers  |Ask -

Relationships Expert, Mind Coach - Answered on Dec 08, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10874 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 08, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Dec 08, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi i am 40M. would request your help to understand what should be the corpus required for retirement as i want to get retired in next 3-5yrs. currently my take home is 2.3L monthly & my wife also works but leaving the job in next 2-3 months. we have a daughter 10yrs, currently i stay on rent and total monthly expense is 1.1L month. once i will retire we will shift in our own parental flat, where hopefully there will be no rent. current Investments 1. 50L in REC bonds getting matured in 2029 2. 42L in stocks 3. 17L in MF 4. 16L FD 5. 15L in PPF 6. 1.3L SIP monthly i do My Wife Investments 1. 30L corpus 2. flat with current value 40L and we get rental of 10K monthly. Please guide what should be the retirement corpus required combined to retire, assuming i need 75L for my daughter post grad and marriage and we would be requiring 75K monthly for our expenses after retiring
Ans: You have explained your income, goals, current assets, and future plans with great clarity. Your early planning spirit is strong. This gives a very good base. You can reach a peaceful retirement with smart steps in the next few years.

» Your Current Position

You are 40 years old. You plan to retire in 3 to 5 years. You earn Rs 2.3 lakh per month. Your wife also works but will stop working soon. You have one daughter aged 10. Your current monthly cost is around Rs 1.1 lakh. This cost will reduce after retirement because you will shift to your parental flat.

Your investment base is already good. You have saved in bonds, stocks, mutual funds, PPF, FD, and SIP. Your wife also has her own savings and rental income from a flat. All these create a good starting point.

This early base helps you plan stronger. It also gives room for more shaping. You are on the right road.

» Your Family Goals

You need Rs 75 lakh for your daughter’s higher education and marriage.

You want Rs 75,000 per month for family living after retirement.

You want to retire in 3 to 5 years.

You will shift to your parental flat after retirement.

You will have rental income of Rs 10,000 from your wife’s flat.

These goals are clear. They give direction. They allow a strong plan.

» Your Present Investments

Your investments include:

Rs 50 lakh in REC bonds maturing in 2029.

Rs 42 lakh in stocks.

Rs 17 lakh in mutual funds.

Rs 16 lakh in fixed deposits.

Rs 15 lakh in PPF.

Rs 1.3 lakh as monthly SIP.

Your wife holds:

Rs 30 lakh corpus.

A flat worth Rs 40 lakh with rent of Rs 10,000 each month.

Your combined net worth is healthy. This gives good power to build your retirement fund in the coming years.

» Understanding Your Expense Need After Retirement

You expect Rs 75,000 per month after retirement. This includes all basic needs. You will not have rent. That reduces cost. This assumption looks fair today.

Your cost will rise with inflation. So you must plan for rising needs. A strong retirement corpus must support rising cost for 40 to 45 years because you are retiring early.

An early retirement needs a large buffer. So you need safety along with growth. Your plan must include growth assets and safety assets.

» How Much Monthly Income You Will Need Later

Rs 75,000 per month is Rs 9 lakh per year. In future years, this cost can rise. If we assume steady rise, your future cost will be much higher.

So the retirement corpus must be designed to:

Give monthly income.

Beat inflation.

Support you for 40 to 45 years.

Protect your family even in market down cycles.

Allow flexibility if your needs change.

A strong retirement fund must support both safety and long-term growth.

» How Much Corpus You Should Target

A safe target is a large and flexible corpus that can support long years without running out of money. For early retirement, the usual thumb rule suggests a very high number. This is because you need income for many decades.

You need a corpus big enough to produce rising income. You also need a cushion for unexpected health costs, lifestyle shocks, and inflation changes.

Your target retirement corpus should be in a strong range. For your needs of Rs 75,000 per month and for goals like daughter’s education and marriage, you should aim for a combined retirement readiness corpus in the higher bracket.

A safe range for your family would be a very large number crossing multiple crores. This large range gives you:

Income safety.

Inflation protection.

Peace during market cycles.

Comfort in long life.

Room for daughter’s future.

Strong backup for health.

You are already on the way due to your existing assets. You will reach close to this range with systematic building over the next 3 to 5 years.

» Why You Need This Larger Corpus

You will retire early. That means more years of living from your corpus. Your corpus must not fall early. It must grow even after retirement. It must give monthly income and long-term family protection.

This is only possible when the corpus is strong and well-structured. A weak corpus creates stress. A strong corpus creates freedom.

Also, your daughter’s future cost must be kept aside. This must be parked in a separate fund. This must not touch your retirement money.

A strong corpus makes these two worlds separate and safe.

» Your Existing Assets and Their Strength

You already have good diversification:

Bonds give safety.

Stocks give growth.

Mutual funds give managed growth.

FD gives stability.

PPF gives tax-free long-term savings.

This blend is already a good start. But you need to make the blend more structured for early retirement.

Your Rs 1.3 lakh monthly SIP is also strong. It builds your future fast. You should continue.

Your wife’s rental income is small but steady. This adds strength.

Your combined financial base can reach your retirement target if you refine your allocation now.

» Your Daughter’s Future Fund Need

You need Rs 75 lakh for your daughter’s education and marriage. You should keep this goal separate from your retirement goal.

Your current SIP and future allocations should create a dedicated fund for this goal. A long-term fund can grow well when managed actively.

Do not mix this fund with your retirement needs. Mixing leads to shortage in old age. Always keep this corpus ring-fenced.

» A Strong Asset Mix For Your Retirement Path

A balanced mix is needed. You need growth assets to beat inflation. You also need stable assets for income.

You must avoid index funds because they do not give flexibility. Index funds follow a fixed index. They cannot make active changes in different markets. They cannot move to better stocks when markets change. They force you to stay in weak sectors for long. They also do not help you in down cycles because they cannot protect you by shifting to safer options. This can hurt retirement planning.

Actively managed funds are better because:

They give active asset selection.

They give scope for better returns.

They give flexibility to change sectors.

They give downside management.

They give access to a skilled fund manager.

They support long-term planning more safely.

Direct plans also carry risk. Direct plans do not give guidance. They do not give behavioural support. They do not give market timing help. They do not give portfolio shaping. They leave all the judgement to you. One mistake can cost years of wealth.

Regular plans with guidance from a Certified Financial Planner help you shape decisions. They help you remain disciplined. They help you avoid panic. They help you decide allocation changes at the right time. This saves wealth in long-term.

» How Your Investment Journey Should Grow in the Next 3–5 Years

Continue your SIP.

Increase SIP when your income rises.

Shift part of your stock holding into planned long-term mutual funds to reduce concentration risk.

Build a defined daughter’s education fund.

Keep a part of your REC bond maturity amount for long-term.

Avoid locking too much into fixed deposits for long periods.

Build a safety fund for one year of expenses.

This will create a full structure.

» Your Rental Income Role

Your rental income of Rs 10,000 per month is small but steady. Over time it will rise. This income will support your monthly cash flow after retirement.

You can use this for utilities or health insurance premiums. This gives a cushion.

» Your Emergency Buffer

You should keep at least one year of essential cost in a safe place. This can be in a liquid account or short-term fund. This protects you in shocks.

Since you plan early retirement, a strong buffer is important. It gives peace even in low months.

» A Structured Retirement Approach

A complete retirement plan for you should include:

A clear monthly income plan after retirement.

A corpus that can grow and protect.

A rising income system that matches inflation.

A separate daughter’s future fund.

A health cover plan for your family.

A tax-efficient withdrawal plan.

A market cycle plan to protect you in tough times.

This holistic approach keeps your family strong for decades.

» What You Should Build by Retirement Year

Your aim should be to reach a strong multi-crore range in investments before retirement. You already hold a large amount. You will add more in the next 3 to 5 years through SIP, stock growth, bond maturity, and disciplined saving.

Once you reach your target range, you can start the shifting process:

Move a part to stable assets.

Keep a part in long-term growth assets.

Create a monthly income strategy.

Keep a reserve bucket.

Keep a child future bucket.

Keep a long-term growth bucket.

This structure protects you in all market conditions.

» Final Insights

Your financial journey is already strong. You have a good income. You have saved well. You have multiple asset types. You have a clear timeline. And you have clear goals. This foundation is solid.

In the next 3 to 5 years, your focus should be on growing your combined corpus to a strong multi-crore range, keeping a separate fund for your daughter, reducing risk in unplanned assets, and building a stable long-term structure.

With the present path and a disciplined structure, you can retire peacefully and support your family with confidence for many decades.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...Read more

Samraat

Samraat Jadhav  |2499 Answers  |Ask -

Stock Market Expert - Answered on Dec 08, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10874 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Dec 08, 2025

Money
Hello my name is saket, I monthly salary is 43k and my saving is zero. My Rent is 15 k and 10 k i send to my parents. How can i save money and investments.
Ans: 1. Your Current Monthly Numbers

Salary: Rs 43,000

Rent: Rs 15,000

Support to parents: Rs 10,000

Left with: Rs 18,000 for food, travel, bills, and savings

You have very little room, but saving is still possible if done smartly.

2. First Step: Build a Small Emergency Buffer

You must build Rs 10,000 to Rs 20,000 emergency money.
This protects you from taking loans for small issues.

How to build it:

Save Rs 3,000 to Rs 5,000 every month in a simple bank savings account

Do this for the next few months

Don’t touch it unless truly needed

3. Create a Mini Budget (Very Simple One)

Try this split from the remaining Rs 18,000:

Daily living (food + transport): Rs 10,000 – 11,000

Personal expenses (phone, internet, basics): Rs 3,000 – 4,000

Savings + investments: Rs 3,000 – 5,000

If this feels difficult, reduce food/transport costs by small adjustments.

4. Where to Invest Once You Have Emergency Money

(For minors: This is general education. For actual investing, get guidance from a trusted adult or family member.)

After you build emergency money, start small monthly investing.

You can begin with:

Rs 1,000 to Rs 2,000 SIP in a simple, diversified equity fund

Increase the SIP whenever salary increases or expenses reduce

Avoid complicated products.
Keep it simple.
Focus on consistency.

5. Easy Practical Ways to Increase Saving

These small moves help a lot:

Avoid food delivery

Use public transport as much as possible

Reduce subscriptions you don’t use

Fix a daily expense limit

Keep a separate bank account only for savings

Even Rs 200 saved daily = Rs 6,000 monthly.

6. Increase Income Slowly

Try small income boosters:

Weekend tutoring

Freelancing

Part-time projects

Selling old gadgets

Learning new skills for future salary growth

Even Rs 3,000 extra income changes your savings life.

7. Build the Habit First

The amount doesn’t matter in the beginning.
The habit matters more.

Even saving Rs 500 every month is better than zero.
Once salary grows, you will already know how to save.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

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

...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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