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Ajit

Ajit Mishra  | Answer  |Ask -

Answered on Oct 26, 2020

vinod Question by vinod on Oct 26, 2020Hindi
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I have following shares please suggest what should I do hold/exit

Ans:

Den network_NSE - Hold

Hathway Cable_NSE - Exit

S Chand and Company - Exit

SBI card - Hold

Uttam Value ste_NSE _1lakh  - Exit

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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Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
Due to financial problem we have to sell our for 50 lakhs. I am doing my graduation 2nd year. We don't have any money or asset other than 50 lakhs we will get by selling our house. Please give me how to use or where to invest. I was thinking to put 25lakhs on fd.
Ans: This is a critical life stage for your family.
You are young and still studying.
Your parents may be depending on this Rs. 50 lakhs.
You are now handling the full financial responsibility.

Let us guide you with a step-by-step and practical plan.
This will help protect the money and also create stability.

Immediate Understanding of the Situation
You are in graduation second year

Your family sold the only house

After selling, you will receive Rs. 50 lakhs

There are no other assets or regular income

You thought to keep Rs. 25 lakhs in FD

This means the Rs. 50 lakhs must support your:

Living expenses

Education expenses

Future rental cost (as you don’t have a house)

Emergency and health situations

Any unexpected needs for your family

So, every rupee must be used with clear thought and proper planning.

Step-by-Step Financial Strategy
We will now divide this Rs. 50 lakhs into parts.
Each part will have a clear job.

1. Emergency Reserve – Rs. 5 lakhs
You must keep emergency money for 1–2 years.

Use liquid mutual fund or sweep-in FD

Easy to access, safer than normal FD

This is not for investing

Use only if someone falls ill or income stops

Helps avoid taking personal loans

This brings peace of mind.

2. Monthly Expense Support – Rs. 15 lakhs
You don’t have a regular monthly income.
So, plan this portion to generate monthly money.

Use Rs. 15 lakhs in a conservative hybrid mutual fund

Choose regular plan through MFD linked with CFP

Use Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP)

You can withdraw Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 12,000 monthly

Tax is lower on long-term withdrawal

Don't withdraw full amount at once

Let balance grow steadily over time

This supports rent, groceries, travel, etc.

3. Safe Wealth Parking – Rs. 10 lakhs
This amount should be safe but slightly better than FD returns.

Avoid putting entire Rs. 25 lakhs in FD

FD gives low return

It gives around 5.5% to 6.5% after tax

Interest is taxed every year

FD returns don’t beat inflation

Use Rs. 10 lakhs in conservative debt mutual funds

These grow better over long term

They have better tax-adjusted returns

Returns are not fixed but stable

Use this amount only after 3 to 5 years.

4. Goal-Focused Long-Term Investment – Rs. 15 lakhs
You are young.
You will start earning in 2 to 3 years.
You don’t need to use the full Rs. 50 lakhs now.
So, this portion can be kept for long-term growth.

Use this in a mix of balanced equity mutual funds:

Choose flexicap or multicap funds

Go with regular plans through MFD linked with CFP

Don’t use direct plans

Direct plans give no help, no tracking

You may miss rebalancing, miss exits

Use SIP or STP to enter gradually

Avoid putting lump sum in equity directly

This part will grow for your future security.

5. Health Protection – Rs. 1 lakh to Rs. 2 lakhs
You must take a health insurance policy for your family.

Medical costs are very high now

Even small illness can cost lakhs

If you have no cover, you may use your full money in hospital

Take a health cover for yourself and parents

Start with a basic family floater of Rs. 5 to 10 lakhs

Use a good standalone health insurer

Pay premium yearly from emergency fund

This saves your wealth from getting destroyed by illness.

6. Your Graduation & Career Planning
Focus on finishing your degree with good marks

Don’t take unnecessary breaks

Avoid using corpus for luxury items

Prepare for government or private job

Learn practical skills – computers, accounts, communication

After getting job, you can rebuild family wealth

You have age advantage – 30 years of future working life

Don’t forget, good education now will bring better money later.

Why Full FD Investment is Not a Good Idea
You thought of putting Rs. 25 lakhs in FD.
This may feel safe. But long-term, it is not helpful.

FD gives low fixed return

After tax, return reduces more

It doesn’t beat inflation

FD interest is taxed fully every year

FD does not grow your money meaningfully

Better to split money across different instruments.
That way, risk is lower, growth is higher.

Sample Allocation from Rs. 50 Lakhs
Let us now summarise how to divide the full amount:

Rs. 5 lakhs – Emergency Fund (liquid or ultra-short term fund)

Rs. 15 lakhs – Monthly Income Plan (SWP from hybrid fund)

Rs. 10 lakhs – Safe long-term (debt mutual fund)

Rs. 15 lakhs – Long-term growth (flexi/multi cap mutual fund)

Rs. 2 lakhs – Health insurance and other cover

Rs. 3 lakhs – Education, rent, and personal needs buffer

Each rupee will now have a job.
This makes your life more stable.

Important Cautions for You
Do not invest in ULIPs, endowment, money-back policies

Do not fall for fake investment tips or random agents

Do not invest in real estate at this stage

Do not give large loans to relatives or friends

Avoid trying to trade in stocks without full knowledge

Avoid FDs above Rs. 10 lakhs in one bank

Don’t keep more than Rs. 2 lakh in savings account

Avoid credit card usage without income

Your capital is your family’s safety now.
One mistake can destroy it.

Mutual Fund Taxation You Must Know
Tax rule has changed now.

In equity mutual funds, LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%

STCG is taxed at 20%

In debt mutual funds, tax is as per your income slab

So, don’t withdraw everything at once.
Plan redemptions carefully.
Do tax-saving review yearly with your MFD.

Final Insights
You are at a turning point.
You have responsibility, but you also have time.
If you plan well today, you can rebuild your family wealth.

Use Rs. 50 lakhs in parts with purpose.
FD is not the full solution.
Mix income, safety, and long-term growth.
Use mutual funds through regular plans with Certified Financial Planner.
Get help to choose right schemes.
Track portfolio every 6 months.

Start from safety, grow slowly.
You can build again.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
I am 51. I have 2 cr in mutual fund, 47 L in ppf, 26 L in EPF, 50 L in FD, 17 L health insurance coverage, 30 L LIC maturing in 2029, 50 L as emergency fund, 50K rental income & 35 L home loan. Want to retire by 53. My only son is in 11th standard. Monthly expenses are 1.5L. Can i retire in 53
Ans: You are now 51 and aiming to retire at 53. You have already built a solid asset base across mutual funds, PPF, EPF, FDs, and insurance. Your home loan is Rs. 35 lacs and your monthly expenses are Rs. 1.5 lacs. Your son is in 11th standard. You also receive Rs. 50,000 monthly from rent. This is a detailed financial situation, and you are right to plan from a 360-degree view.

Let’s assess and structure your retirement readiness in a step-by-step and simple manner.

Understanding Your Current Financial Position
Let’s first look at your present assets and liabilities.

Mutual Funds: Rs. 2 crore

PPF: Rs. 47 lacs

EPF: Rs. 26 lacs

Fixed Deposits: Rs. 50 lacs

Emergency Fund: Rs. 50 lacs

LIC Policy: Rs. 30 lacs maturity in 2029

Rental Income: Rs. 50,000 per month

Health Insurance: Rs. 17 lacs coverage

Home Loan: Rs. 35 lacs outstanding

Age: 51

Target Retirement Age: 53

Monthly Household Expense: Rs. 1.5 lacs

You are already in a strong financial position. That shows long-term discipline and smart planning. Let us now go deeper and check sustainability post-retirement.

Monthly Income vs Expense After Retirement
You spend Rs. 1.5 lacs monthly now. That means Rs. 18 lacs per year. This will rise due to inflation.

After retirement, you’ll lose your job income.

You will still have Rs. 50,000 per month from rent.

That covers only one-third of your expenses.

You’ll need Rs. 1 lac more every month from investments.

So, you need to generate sustainable monthly withdrawals from your investments after 53.

Key Retirement Readiness Checkpoints
You are just two years away from your retirement goal. Let’s assess each asset carefully.

Mutual Funds – Rs. 2 crore

This is your growth engine.

If well-diversified in actively managed funds, this can support your retirement.

Equity mutual funds give better long-term post-tax returns than FDs or PPF.

PPF – Rs. 47 lacs

Safe and tax-free.

Liquidity is restricted.

Withdrawals allowed only in phased manner after maturity.

EPF – Rs. 26 lacs

Good long-term safety.

Can be withdrawn after retirement.

Interest is taxable if retained post-retirement.

FDs – Rs. 50 lacs

Capital protection is high.

Interest is fully taxable.

Not suitable for long-term wealth growth.

Emergency Fund – Rs. 50 lacs

Very strong buffer.

Keep this untouched.

Useful for any sudden need like medical or property repair.

LIC – Rs. 30 lacs (maturing in 2029)

This is not a retirement tool.

Low returns and poor liquidity.

Consider surrendering now and shifting to mutual funds.

The maturity is far (2029), which may not support early retirement.

Home Loan – Rs. 35 lacs

This is a key liability.

Try to close it before retirement.

EMI burden after retirement will stress your cash flows.

Health Insurance – Rs. 17 lacs

Adequate for now.

Increase the coverage gradually.

Buy top-up if existing plan doesn’t cover future medical inflation.

Education Expenses for Son – Be Prepared
Your son is in 11th standard.

Graduation and possibly higher studies are coming.

Plan Rs. 30–50 lacs over the next 6–8 years.

Don’t use retirement corpus for his education.

Create a separate education corpus using mutual funds and debt funds.

Start a monthly SIP now for this specific goal.

Retirement Goal at 53 – Is It Possible?
Yes, retiring at 53 is possible. But it comes with certain conditions.

Here are factors that support early retirement:

You already have Rs. 4.73 crore in investments (MF + PPF + EPF + FD).

Your rental income adds Rs. 6 lacs annually.

No other major debts apart from home loan.

Strong health insurance and emergency fund.

Here are conditions that must be addressed:

Your expenses of Rs. 1.5 lacs monthly will keep rising.

Your son’s education costs must be managed separately.

Home loan must be cleared before age 53.

You need to ensure investments are properly allocated for income generation.

Suggested Action Plan to Retire at 53
1. Restructure Investments for Cash Flow

From age 53, your focus should shift to income generation.

Equity mutual funds will still play a role, but reduce exposure after 55.

Debt mutual funds and hybrid funds must be increased.

Start shifting 10% equity into hybrid debt each year from 53 onwards.

2. Create a SWP Strategy

Use mutual fund SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) to draw Rs. 1 lac per month.

Use Rs. 50,000 rental + Rs. 1 lac SWP to meet Rs. 1.5 lac monthly expense.

This avoids touching your capital unnecessarily.

Use a mix of equity-debt hybrid and short-term debt mutual funds.

3. Handle Tax Smartly

Mutual fund LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lacs taxed at 12.5%.

STCG is taxed at 20%.

Debt fund gains are taxed as per slab.

Plan withdrawals in a tax-efficient manner with a Certified Financial Planner.

Use tax harvesting and staggered redemptions to lower tax.

4. Close the Home Loan Before 53

Home loan EMI will pressure your post-retirement budget.

Use part of FD or EPF to close this loan.

Reduces financial stress and improves peace of mind.

5. Re-assess LIC Policy

Maturity in 2029 means it won't help during your initial retired years.

Return from LIC is usually low.

If it is endowment or ULIP, surrender it.

Reinvest surrender value into mutual funds under regular plan via Certified Financial Planner.

6. Education Planning for Son

Do not delay.

Start SIP immediately for this goal.

Use short to medium-term debt funds and hybrid mutual funds.

Create a 6-year roadmap for his education spending.

Don’t mix retirement and education funds.

7. Keep Emergency Fund Intact

Rs. 50 lacs is more than adequate.

Do not shift it into equity or use it for daily expenses.

This fund is your ultimate safety net.

8. Increase Health Insurance Coverage

Rs. 17 lacs is good now.

Future medical costs will be much higher.

Add a super top-up plan for Rs. 25 lacs.

This protects your corpus from hospitalisation shocks.

9. Use Only Actively Managed Mutual Funds

Avoid index funds. They don’t beat inflation effectively.

Index funds copy the market. No fund manager judgement involved.

No protection during downturns.

Actively managed funds adjust based on market conditions.

Helps in better long-term compounding and downside protection.

10. Avoid Direct Plans if Not Expert

Direct mutual funds save commission but offer no guidance.

You may miss rebalancing or make emotional decisions.

Regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner bring strategy and control.

Mistakes in direct plans cost more than the saved commissions.

Stay with guided approach for peace and performance.

Final Insights
You are financially disciplined and built a strong base already.

Retiring at 53 is definitely possible in your case.

But your plan must include:

Strategic income planning

Debt closure

Education fund for son

Higher medical cover

Portfolio rebalancing regularly

Tax-efficient withdrawal plan

Reinvesting low-return products

Make sure you don’t over-rely on FDs or LIC plans.

Mutual funds should form the engine of your post-retirement income strategy.

Shift slowly from growth to income-focused schemes after 53.

Work closely with a Certified Financial Planner. This ensures confidence and stability.

Avoid random decisions and stay committed to the plan.

Wishing you a smooth and happy retired life ahead.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
Hello We husband and wife together take home is around 2.44 lakh per month, currently together we have 70k home loan emil and 70k personal loan emi (principle amount of 30 lakh ), around 60k sip. Around 20 lakh in SIP. 3 lakh emergency fund. This personal loan emi was really bad and we are currently feeling clueless whether to repay that by using SIP. Please suggest further planning
Ans: You and your spouse earn Rs. 2.44 lakh per month.
You both are paying Rs. 70,000 EMI for home loan.
You also pay Rs. 70,000 EMI for personal loan.
You are investing Rs. 60,000 per month through SIPs.
Your total mutual fund value is Rs. 20 lakh.
Emergency fund is Rs. 3 lakh.

You are feeling burdened by the personal loan.
Let us give a full 360-degree plan for clarity.

Understand Your Monthly Cash Flow

First let’s look at the money in and out:

Income: Rs. 2.44 lakh

EMI: Rs. 1.4 lakh total (home + personal)

SIP: Rs. 60,000

Expenses: Not mentioned (assume Rs. 30,000–40,000)

Your outgo is almost Rs. 2.3 lakh
You are left with very little buffer
That can cause stress and cash flow issues

This pressure is dangerous
Even one surprise expense can shake your stability

Know the Real Impact of Personal Loan

You have Rs. 30 lakh personal loan
You are paying Rs. 70,000 EMI monthly
This loan is hurting you more than SIP can help

Why?
Because personal loan has high interest
Usually 12% to 16%
Your mutual fund returns are not guaranteed
But loan interest is fixed and sure

Paying interest for long on personal loan is wealth destruction
It delays financial freedom
And reduces long-term investment power

Can You Use SIP Corpus to Repay Loan?

Yes, this is a possible option
You have Rs. 20 lakh in SIP corpus
If you redeem partly, you can reduce this burden

But don’t redeem all at once
We should balance repayment and future growth

Let’s see what you can do:

Keep Rs. 3 lakh SIP corpus as buffer

Use Rs. 10–12 lakh for partial repayment

Keep Rs. 5–7 lakh invested in equity

Stop some SIPs temporarily (for 6–12 months)

Keep SIPs only in 2–3 focused funds

Resume full SIP once loan stress is reduced

This reduces EMI burden
And brings peace to your monthly cash flow

Which SIPs to Stop First?

Review your SIP portfolio
If you are investing in too many funds, trim them

Keep:

1 Flexi-cap fund

1 Large or Multi-cap fund

1 Hybrid fund

Stop small-cap, mid-cap or thematic SIPs temporarily
These funds are more volatile
They can wait till your cash flow improves

Don’t stop all SIPs
Continue at least Rs. 15,000–20,000 per month
This keeps the compounding engine alive

Avoid Using Emergency Fund for Loan

You have Rs. 3 lakh emergency fund
Do not touch this amount
This is your protection for medical or job loss
Never use emergency fund for loan closure
You can’t get loan in emergency easily

Instead, top up this to Rs. 5 lakh slowly
Use small savings or bonus for this

What About Long-Term Investment Impact?

Many people fear stopping SIP
But in your case, reducing SIP helps mental peace
Also, you can restart SIP anytime
Once EMI is low, you can even increase SIP again

It is better to reduce loan interest
Than continue SIP under pressure
Once debt is under control
Your future investment will be stronger and stress-free

Don’t Fall into Index Fund Trap

If you are investing in index funds
You should stop them first
They just copy the index
They fall fully during market crash
They give no protection

Index funds have no active management
You pay less, but get no support
Actively managed funds give better returns
They can protect in falling markets
They also grow well in rising cycles

Choose active funds via Certified MFD with CFP
You will get professional support and asset allocation help

Avoid Direct Funds in this Situation

If you are investing in direct mutual funds
You are missing personalised advice
Direct funds offer no portfolio management
No one tells you when to redeem or switch
You may be carrying wrong asset mix

Regular plans through Certified MFD with CFP are better
They offer yearly reviews
They guide you based on your goals
They prevent emotional mistakes in market cycles

Review Home Loan Strategy Too

You are paying Rs. 70,000 EMI for home loan
You did not mention the loan amount or tenure
Check interest rate first
If above 8.5%, refinance to lower rate
Keep EMI steady, but prepay when surplus comes

You don’t need to close home loan now
It gives tax benefits also
But personal loan must be targeted for closure

You May Create a Repayment Plan Like This

Step-by-step plan helps you avoid panic

Use Rs. 10–12 lakh from SIP corpus now

Reduce personal loan principal

Ask bank to re-structure EMI if possible

Pause Rs. 30,000–40,000 SIP for 1 year

Use freed-up cash to prepay monthly

Don’t touch emergency fund

Restart SIPs slowly after 12 months

This makes your EMI affordable
And also retains part of your investment base

Important: Avoid These Mistakes

Don’t close home loan just to feel free

Don’t break all SIP at once

Don’t start new insurance or endowment plans now

Don’t invest in real estate as shortcut

Don’t take new credit card or loan offers

Stay focused on financial recovery
Then move to long-term wealth strategy

Set New Financial Goals for 3 Years

Once debt is reduced, set goals
You may have these:

Retirement corpus planning

Child education fund

Car or vacation

Health corpus for parents

All these need mutual fund strategy
Don’t rely on PPF or FD only
Use goal-based SIPs through Certified MFD with CFP
You will reach your targets faster and peacefully

Final Insights

You both earn well.
Your loans are big, but manageable
You have shown discipline by saving Rs. 20 lakh in SIP
That is a great achievement
Now it is time to reduce debt pressure
Use part of SIP corpus to repay loan
Free up monthly cash
Pause some SIPs without guilt
Avoid real estate, index funds, and direct funds
Take support of a Certified MFD with CFP for long-term success
Stay disciplined. Stay calm. Grow slow and steady

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 26, 2025Hindi
Money
I'm 27 years old. My in-hand monthly salary is around 2.15 lakh. I've around 29lakh of housing loan pending for next 15 years. My housing emi is around 31000 per month. I've around 7 lakh of debt in personal loan and credit card. I've around 2 lakhs in SIPs , around 2 lakhs in stocks . I've been doing around 20K per month in SIPs. I've also 2 LIC policies around 60000 per year. In my PF account I've around 6lakhs. My first goal is to build a portfolio of around 1 cr by 35. Is it a realistic goal. If yes how can I achieve this.
Ans: At 27, your focus on wealth creation is very good.
You have a stable salary and have started early.
Let us study your finances from every angle and give a complete plan.

Your Current Financial Picture
Let us first understand what you own and what you owe.

Age: 27 years

Monthly Income (Net): Rs. 2.15 lakh

Home Loan Outstanding: Rs. 29 lakh

Home Loan EMI: Rs. 31,000

Other Loans: Rs. 7 lakh (personal and credit card)

SIP Corpus: Rs. 2 lakh

Stock Investment: Rs. 2 lakh

Monthly SIP: Rs. 20,000

PF Corpus: Rs. 6 lakh

LIC Premium: Rs. 60,000 per year

Goal: Rs. 1 crore corpus by age 35

You have 8 years to reach the goal.

Key Positives in Your Profile
High income at a young age
This gives a strong base to build wealth.

Already investing via SIP
This shows financial maturity.

No delay in retirement saving
PF contributions have started early.

Housing EMI is manageable
You pay only about 15% of your income as EMI.

Areas That Need Attention
Your financial picture shows a few leakages:

High-interest personal loans
This will slow wealth creation.

Credit card dues are risky
These attract very high interest. Avoid them always.

LIC policies are costly
Premium is high with poor returns.

SIP investment is low compared to income
With Rs. 2.15 lakh salary, only Rs. 20K SIP is low.

Let us now give you a 360-degree strategy.

Debt Clean-Up Comes First
Before building wealth, clear high-interest debt.

Target credit card and personal loan
These usually have interest above 13% to 36%.

Don’t make fresh investments
Instead, use excess savings to repay these loans faster.

Create a debt closure plan
Use bonuses or incentives towards this first.

Do not take fresh loans
This slows down your compounding journey.

Home loan is okay
Since the EMI is affordable, keep that going.

Once bad debt is cleared, cash flow improves quickly.

LIC Policy Assessment
You pay Rs. 60,000 yearly towards LIC.

This is likely an investment cum insurance plan.

These offer poor returns
Usually between 4% and 5% only.

They are not suitable for wealth creation
They neither offer enough life cover nor good returns.

If these policies are less than 5 years old:

Consider surrendering the policy

Reinvest the proceeds in mutual funds

Use term insurance instead

This one step can save years of delay in wealth building.

Term Insurance – A Must-Have
You haven’t mentioned term insurance.

This is important, especially if you have dependents or loans.

Take a term cover of at least Rs. 1 crore

Prefer term-only, not return plans

Buy separately, not bundled with investment

Review coverage every 5 years

Premiums are very low at your age.

Emergency Fund – Build It Soon
You didn’t mention an emergency fund.

This is needed to avoid taking loans again.

Set aside at least Rs. 3 lakhs as emergency money

Keep it in liquid funds or sweep-in FDs

This is not for investing

This protects your SIPs from getting stopped

Without emergency buffer, every expense becomes a crisis.

Review of Existing SIPs and Equity
You have:

Rs. 2 lakh in SIP portfolio

Rs. 2 lakh in stocks

Rs. 20,000 monthly SIP going on

Let’s now analyse this based on your goal.

Is Rs. 1 Crore Corpus by Age 35 Possible?
You have 8 years to reach Rs. 1 crore.

It is not easy, but it is achievable if:

You increase your SIP amount every year

You clear all high-interest loans in 1 year

You invest with discipline for 8 full years

You do not withdraw midway

You invest in the right fund categories

But at current SIP of Rs. 20,000, it is not enough.

You must step up your SIPs to Rs. 40,000+ monthly after clearing debt.

And increase SIPs by 10% yearly.

SIP Category Suggestions
Let us optimise your SIP categories once debts are cleared.

Use this allocation:

Large Cap Funds – Rs. 12,000

Flexi/Multi Cap Funds – Rs. 14,000

Mid Cap Funds – Rs. 10,000

Small Cap Funds – Rs. 4,000

Avoid sector and thematic funds

You can add hybrid funds later as you reach 35.

Do Not Invest in Index Funds
Index funds only copy the index.

They don’t adjust to market cycles.

They invest in poor sectors if those are in index.

They don’t generate extra returns over market.

Actively managed funds:

Beat inflation better

Take advantage of market timing

Avoid risk-heavy stocks

Are adjusted by professional fund managers

Use regular plans through a CFP-backed MFD.
They help choose better funds.
They guide when to switch.
Direct plans don’t provide guidance or support.
You may lose more in mistakes than saved in expense ratio.

PF Corpus – Long Term Support
You already have Rs. 6 lakh in PF.

This is a good long-term foundation.

Do not withdraw this before retirement.

It acts as your safety for old age.

Equity Stocks – Handle With Caution
You have Rs. 2 lakh in stocks.

This is fine if you can track them regularly.

But for most people, mutual funds give better results.

Diversified exposure

Lower emotional bias

Professionally managed

Don’t increase equity stocks unless you have strong knowledge.

Step-by-Step Action Plan
Step 1:
Pay off all personal loans and credit cards in 12 months.

Step 2:
Surrender LIC policies if less than 5 years old.

Step 3:
Create emergency fund of Rs. 3 lakh.

Step 4:
Start Rs. 40,000 monthly SIP after loans are cleared.

Step 5:
Increase SIP every year by Rs. 5,000 to Rs. 7,000.

Step 6:
Don’t stop SIPs during market falls.
Keep investing.

Step 7:
Take term insurance of Rs. 1 crore.
Add health insurance if not covered by employer.

Step 8:
Do yearly review with Certified Financial Planner.

Taxation Angle You Must Know
Equity mutual fund taxation has changed.

LTCG (Long Term Capital Gain) above Rs. 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.

STCG (Short Term Capital Gain) is taxed at 20%.

For debt mutual funds, all gains are taxed as per your slab.

Plan redemptions accordingly.
Avoid unnecessary switches.
Track holding period to reduce tax outgo.

Finally
You can reach Rs. 1 crore corpus in 8 years.
But only if you increase savings after clearing loans.
At your age, even a delay of 2 years can cost big.
Focus first on becoming debt-free.
Then automate your investments.
Avoid poor products like LIC combos.
Invest in mutual funds via regular plans.
Choose quality funds managed by professionals.
Review progress every year with a trusted CFP.

Discipline is more important than returns.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
Hi i am a retired soldier age 44... I have 51lakh in my savings account.. 30Lakh homeloan for 30years +13 lakh loan for 15 years. Where should i invest my money
Ans: You are now retired at 44 years of age.
You have Rs. 51 lakhs in savings account.
You also have two active loans:

Rs. 30 lakh home loan for 30 years

Rs. 13 lakh other loan for 15 years

You now wish to know how and where to invest your Rs. 51 lakhs.
Let us approach this in a 360-degree structured way.

Know Your Financial Position First

Let’s look at your key numbers:

Age: 44 years

No salary income (assumed, post-retirement)

Two active loans: Rs. 43 lakh total

Savings of Rs. 51 lakh in hand

Now ask:

What are your monthly expenses?

Do you have pension or rental income?

Any family dependents or school-going children?

Are you planning second career or full retirement?

Answers to these decide your investment direction.
But even with limited details, we can build a base plan.

Emergency Fund Comes First

Emergency fund protects your peace of mind.
It avoids panic in unexpected situations.

You must keep:

Minimum 6 to 12 months of monthly expenses

In a mix of savings, sweep-in FD, and liquid mutual funds

Assume your monthly expenses are Rs. 40,000

So, emergency fund should be Rs. 5–6 lakhs

Keep this money liquid and untouched
Don’t invest this amount in any locked-in options
Don’t consider this as investment capital

Start with Loan Strategy

You are holding two loans now.

Rs. 30 lakh home loan

Rs. 13 lakh loan (type not mentioned)

Let us see how to handle both wisely

Home Loan of Rs. 30 lakh – 30 years

This loan has long tenure.
Don’t keep it for 30 years.
You will pay double the amount as interest.

If interest rate is above 8.5%, reduce the burden.
Don’t prepay all at once.
Use a smart approach:

Keep EMI regular

Use Rs. 3–5 lakh now to partially prepay

Then add Rs. 2,000–3,000 extra to EMI every year

This shortens tenure and reduces interest

Use bonus, profits or maturity funds to prepay step-by-step
But keep liquidity in hand first

Other Loan of Rs. 13 lakh – 15 years

This is likely a personal loan or car loan.
Interest rates are generally higher here.
If over 10%, this is hurting your savings
Better to clear this faster

You may:

Use Rs. 5–7 lakh from your 51L corpus

Or prepay completely if rate is very high

Freeing up EMI helps you invest monthly from now

Debt-free status improves your cash flow
It improves mental peace and future investment discipline

Break the Rs. 51 Lakh Into Purposeful Buckets

To plan correctly, divide your corpus like this:

Emergency fund: Rs. 6 lakh

Loan prepayment: Rs. 10 lakh

Investment for monthly income (if needed): Rs. 10 lakh

Long-term wealth creation: Rs. 25 lakh

This gives balance across safety, debt management and growth.

Avoid Keeping Full Money in Savings Account

Money lying idle earns less than 3% interest
This does not beat inflation
Inflation reduces your value each year

Your Rs. 51 lakh may feel big now
But in 10 years, it may lose half its value
So, invest it in the right mix of mutual funds
Don’t delay in shifting it from savings account

How to Invest for Short-Term and Regular Cash Flow

If you don’t have pension income now,
You may need regular income for next 3–5 years
Don’t put that money in risky or locked options
Use:

Debt mutual funds of ultra-short or short duration

Conservative hybrid mutual funds

Balanced Advantage Funds (BAFs)

These are better than fixed deposits
They are tax-efficient and liquid
You can do SWP (Systematic Withdrawal Plan) for monthly income
Withdraw Rs. 20,000–25,000 per month if needed
This gives monthly cash and capital remains invested

But remember:
Debt and hybrid funds returns are not guaranteed
But they perform better than FDs in long term
You can redeem anytime if needed

How to Invest for Long-Term Wealth Growth

Use the remaining Rs. 25 lakh for long-term creation
You are only 44. You have 20–25 years ahead
Equity mutual funds are the best vehicle here

Use SIPs and lumpsum combination
Don’t invest all Rs. 25 lakh at once
Start with Rs. 5 lakh in Balanced Advantage Fund
Then do STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) into:

Large-cap and flexi-cap mutual funds

Mid-cap funds (moderate exposure only)

Multicap or diversified funds

Why mutual funds?

Professionally managed

Transparent and regulated

High liquidity

Tax-efficient compared to FDs

Best for retirement corpus building

Do not go for index funds
Index funds only copy the index
They fall completely when market crashes
They don’t protect capital
They have no active fund manager
No defensive action in bear market

Actively managed funds give better performance
They have expert strategy
They balance risk and return
You get better downside protection

Don’t Use Direct Mutual Funds

Direct funds may look cost-saving
But they don’t give you any guidance
You will lack rebalancing and asset allocation help
No portfolio review or strategy support
Investing through Certified MFD with CFP gives you 360-degree plan
You will get hand-holding in market ups and downs
You will avoid emotional mistakes
Regular plans with expert support are worth every rupee

What to Avoid Entirely

Don’t invest in real estate again

You already have a home with loan

Additional real estate blocks money

It brings low returns and high maintenance

No tax benefit on second home loan interest

Don’t buy ULIPs, endowment, or traditional LIC policies

They offer poor return, lack transparency

Mix insurance with investment – which is dangerous

Insurance is not for investing

Don’t lock big money in annuities or long-term insurance plans

These destroy liquidity and give low return

You will regret after few years

Health and Life Insurance Needs

At 44, don’t skip this
Take health cover of Rs. 10 lakh minimum
If family is dependent, add family floater too
Even if army provided earlier, private cover is essential now
Medical inflation is rising every year

Take a term insurance if your family depends on your income
Take cover till age 60–65
Sum assured should be 10x your annual need

Premiums are low at your age
But don’t mix investment with life insurance

Tax Planning Advice

Now, most of your income is from investments
Plan it tax efficiently

Equity mutual fund taxation (as per new rule):

LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

STCG taxed at 20%

Debt fund gains taxed as per your slab
So SWP from equity is more tax-efficient than FD interest

Don’t redeem mutual funds in panic
Take professional help for tax harvesting

Build a Retirement Corpus

You are retired now but still young
Plan a 25-year financial roadmap

You need to build Rs. 2 to 3 crore
That’s what future lifestyle demands

Use mutual fund SIPs to build this corpus
Even small monthly SIP from surplus gives big result
Every Rs. 10,000 SIP can become Rs. 1 crore in 20–25 years
Start now. Delay reduces power of compounding

Review Every Year

Don’t just invest and forget
Review goals every 12 months
Check:

Asset allocation

Fund performance

Life stage changes

Tax impact

Do this with a Certified Financial Planner
Not on your own or from YouTube videos
Get advice customised to your family’s needs

Finally

You have done well to save Rs. 51 lakh
Now use this wisely and purposefully
Don’t let it sit idle in savings account
Manage your loans with strategy
Build emergency, income, and wealth creation plans separately
Avoid index funds and direct funds
Use actively managed mutual funds via Certified MFD and CFP
Avoid real estate and annuity traps
Stay invested for 15+ years with patience
This path gives peace, stability, and a secure retired life

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 25, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi I am 40 years old and my monthly income hand income is 1.5 lacs. I don't nit have any debt and my expenditure is 50k per month. I invest 1.5 lacs in ppf and 2.5 lacs annually in pf. Please advise some good investment options so that I can retire early at 50 with a corpus of 3 cr. Currently my invested amount is 60 lacs
Ans: Your financial discipline is truly admirable. You are 40 years old with Rs. 1.5 lacs monthly income and no debt. Your expenses are well-controlled at Rs. 50,000 per month. You are already investing wisely in PPF and PF. Your current investments total Rs. 60 lacs. You aim to retire at 50 with Rs. 3 crore corpus. You are on the right track. With some refinements, you can reach your goal confidently.

Let’s look at this step-by-step from a 360-degree perspective.

Assessing Your Current Financial Position
You are saving Rs. 1 lac every month. That is 66% of your income. Very good.

Annual PPF investment of Rs. 1.5 lacs is the maximum limit. You are already utilizing it.

PF contribution of Rs. 2.5 lacs annually is a safe, long-term benefit.

You are living within your means and maintaining zero debt. That’s excellent.

Existing investment of Rs. 60 lacs shows that you have built a strong base.

You have already set yourself apart from most people your age.

Defining the Retirement Target Clearly
You aim to build Rs. 3 crore corpus by age 50.

You have 10 years to reach that goal.

With Rs. 60 lacs already invested and regular monthly surplus of Rs. 1 lac, you have the foundation ready.

Still, the right investment allocation is critical for achieving this.

Let’s look at where and how to deploy the Rs. 1 lac surplus monthly.

Continue With PF and PPF – But Know Their Role
PPF gives safe, tax-free returns. But the limit is Rs. 1.5 lacs annually.

PF is useful for long-term safety, not for aggressive growth.

Together they give stability, not high wealth creation.

Use them as the base, not the whole portfolio.

Do not expect PPF and PF alone to reach Rs. 3 crore corpus.

Asset Allocation is Key
At your age and profile, here’s a suggested mix:

70% into equity mutual funds (growth)

20% into debt mutual funds (stability)

10% in gold mutual funds (diversification)

This allocation balances safety and wealth creation.

You already have safe products like PF and PPF. Now, your new investments should aim for growth. Let equity mutual funds play that role.

Equity Mutual Funds – The Growth Engine
Invest in diversified, actively managed equity mutual funds.

These funds are run by experienced fund managers.

They aim to beat the market returns consistently.

They adjust the portfolio based on market trends and economic signals.

Why Not Index Funds?

Index funds follow the market blindly.

They do not protect against market crashes.

No flexibility to shift sectors or avoid risky stocks.

Returns are limited to the index. No alpha generation.

Actively managed funds aim to outperform the index.

You are aiming for Rs. 3 crore in 10 years. Index funds may fall short of this goal. Choose actively managed funds under a Certified Financial Planner.

Why You Should Avoid Direct Mutual Funds
Direct funds save small commissions but come with bigger risks.

There is no professional support or handholding.

Most investors make emotional, random decisions when markets move.

Regular plans with a Certified Financial Planner bring strategic advice.

You get portfolio reviews, rebalancing, and tax guidance.

Mistakes with direct funds may cost more than any savings on commission.

Go with regular plans through a trusted MFD with CFP credentials. It saves time and avoids costly errors.

How to Invest the Rs. 1 Lac Monthly Surplus
Here is a suggested plan:

Rs. 70,000 in equity mutual funds (diversified, multi-cap, mid-cap)

Rs. 20,000 in debt mutual funds (short-duration or low-duration)

Rs. 10,000 in gold mutual funds or sovereign gold bonds

This mix gives you stability, growth, and inflation protection.

Stick with SIPs monthly. Continue without stopping for the full 10 years.

Review and Rebalance Every Year
Don’t keep investing blindly.

Review your portfolio once a year.

Check if your funds are performing well.

Exit non-performing funds under guidance of a Certified Financial Planner.

Rebalance if equity grows more than 75% or falls below 60%.

Keep your asset mix stable. That reduces volatility.

A yearly review prevents surprises and keeps your plan on track.

Emergency Fund and Insurance Must Be In Place
Before investing fully, check if these two basics are done:

1. Emergency Fund:

Keep Rs. 3 to 6 lacs in liquid mutual funds or savings.

Use only in case of job loss, illness, or big expenses.

Don’t touch long-term funds for emergencies.

2. Life Insurance:

Buy only pure term insurance. No ULIP or endowment policies.

Cover amount should be 10 to 15 times of annual income.

For Rs. 18 lacs annual income, Rs. 2 crore cover is reasonable.

3. Health Insurance:

Keep family floater plan of at least Rs. 10 lacs.

Even if your employer gives insurance, keep your own plan.

These protect your investment plan from shocks.

Tax Planning with Mutual Funds
New rules are in effect now.

For Equity Mutual Funds:

Long-Term Capital Gains (after 1 year) above Rs. 1.25 lacs taxed at 12.5%.

Short-Term Capital Gains taxed at 20%.

For Debt Mutual Funds:

Both long and short-term gains are taxed as per income slab.

Choose funds based on risk, not only tax.

Use tax-loss harvesting and fund switching smartly with expert help.

Avoid These Common Mistakes
Don’t stop SIPs when market falls.

Don’t chase the highest-return fund always.

Don’t keep too many funds. Stick to 5–7 maximum.

Don’t fall for NFOs or one-time high flyers.

Don’t mix insurance with investment.

Keep your investment journey disciplined and guided.

When You Reach Age 48–50: Shift Slowly
Start moving part of your equity gains to debt funds after age 48.

By age 50, have 40% in equity and 60% in debt.

This protects your Rs. 3 crore goal from last-minute fall.

Don’t wait till age 50 to make all changes.

Do it gradually over the last 2 years.

Retirement Plan Needs Post-Retirement Cash Flow Planning Too
After age 50, you’ll stop working.

Your money must start working for you.

You must draw a fixed monthly income without touching the principal.

Invest retirement corpus in hybrid mutual funds or SWP from debt funds.

Plan tax-efficient withdrawal strategy using mutual funds, not FDs.

A Certified Financial Planner will help draw a step-by-step plan.

This ensures you don’t run out of money later.

Finally
Your goal is realistic and achievable with discipline.

You already have strong savings, no debt, and controlled expenses.

You are saving aggressively and thinking long-term.

Now, you must focus on:

Right asset allocation

Avoiding unsuitable products

Investing through expert-managed mutual funds

Yearly review with a Certified Financial Planner

Preparing for tax, risk, and future income needs

Stay focused on the goal. Avoid shortcuts. Stay invested for 10 full years.

This gives you a high chance of achieving the Rs. 3 crore retirement corpus.

Wishing you the best in your financial journey.

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
I am 34 years old. Married with a 2 yo daughter. Income 1.4lpa p.m. Expenses 50k p.m. SIP 50k p.m. Rest on insurance, child investment, PPF(1.5lpa), etc. Current corpus: FD 5lacs MF (SIP) 11lacs Shares 3 lacs PPF 20lacs Child's PPF 2lacs Emergency funds 3 lacs EPF 10lacs Others: Insurance own- 10L Insurance wife & child 10L Insurance own&wife&child with office - 7.5L Parents insurance 8.5lacs each. Term insurance 1cr Accident insurance 50L No debts. Ancestral house. SIP breakup- 8k in gold. 14k in large cap. 14k in midcap. 10k in flexicap&multicap. 4k in smallcap. Could you please guide if the SIP is adequate for a large 5cr+ corpus when im 55yo? Also, would it be cost beneficial to appoint an investment advisor on a full time basis to manage my portfolio?
Ans: You are 34 years old, married, and father to a 2-year-old daughter.
Your current structure shows discipline.
You are on the right track.

Now let’s assess your plan, identify any weak spots, and build a better direction.

Understanding Your Current Situation
Let’s summarise your current financial profile clearly.

Age: 34

Family: Wife and daughter (2 years old)

Income: Rs. 1.4 lakh per month

Expenses: Rs. 50,000 per month

Monthly Savings: Around Rs. 90,000

SIP Contribution: Rs. 50,000 per month

No loans. This gives flexibility.

Ancestral property: Passive asset, no liability.

Goal: Rs. 5 crore+ corpus by 55 years

Snapshot of Current Asset Allocation
Fixed Deposit: Rs. 5 lakhs

Mutual Funds (SIP corpus): Rs. 11 lakhs

Direct Equity (Shares): Rs. 3 lakhs

PPF (Yourself): Rs. 20 lakhs

PPF (Child): Rs. 2 lakhs

EPF: Rs. 10 lakhs

Emergency Fund: Rs. 3 lakhs

Life Insurance: Total Rs. 1 crore (term cover)

Health Insurance: Rs. 8.5 lakhs each (parents), Rs. 7.5 lakhs (family + office policy)

Accident Insurance: Rs. 50 lakhs

You have a healthy base.
You are saving consistently.
But, let’s refine it for a Rs. 5 crore goal.

Mutual Fund SIP Distribution
You invest Rs. 50,000 monthly through SIP.

Here is the category-wise breakdown:

Gold Fund: Rs. 8,000

Large Cap Funds: Rs. 14,000

Mid Cap Funds: Rs. 14,000

Flexi/Multi Cap Funds: Rs. 10,000

Small Cap Funds: Rs. 4,000

This is a good start.
But some re-balancing can help.

Let’s evaluate SIP from three angles:

Category Allocation

Risk Adjusted Growth Potential

Long-term Stability

Analysis of SIP Allocation
1. Gold SIP – Rs. 8,000
Too much exposure in gold

Gold is a safety net, not a growth tool

Gold offers low inflation-adjusted returns

Better to limit gold SIP to Rs. 2,000 monthly

Redirect balance to equity-oriented mutual funds

2. Large Cap Funds – Rs. 14,000
Good base of portfolio

Offers stability and moderate returns

Stay with 1-2 large cap schemes only

Avoid duplication

Active funds better than index funds

Index funds lack flexibility and alpha potential

Stick to managed large cap funds through regular plans

Invest via MFD backed by CFP for consistent review

3. Mid Cap Funds – Rs. 14,000
Suitable for your age and time horizon

But too high as % of total SIP

Midcaps are volatile in short term

Long-term rewards possible

Stick to one mid cap fund

Reduce monthly SIP to Rs. 10,000

Shift extra amount to multicap or flexicap

4. Flexicap / Multicap Funds – Rs. 10,000
Very important category

Allows dynamic allocation across all market caps

Good for long-term wealth building

Continue current allocation

Add more from gold or midcap reallocation

5. Small Cap Funds – Rs. 4,000
Volatile and risky

Suitable only if you can wait 10+ years

Keep exposure below 10% of SIP

Rs. 4,000 is fine for now

No need to increase this

Suggested New SIP Mix
Revised SIP suggestions for balanced growth:

Large Cap Funds – Rs. 14,000

Mid Cap Funds – Rs. 10,000

Flexi/Multicap Funds – Rs. 16,000

Small Cap Funds – Rs. 4,000

Gold Funds – Rs. 2,000

Total – Rs. 46,000

Leave Rs. 4,000 as buffer or redirect to PPF/NPS

Equity vs Non-Equity Mix Review
Your non-MF corpus includes:

EPF, PPF, FD, Emergency Fund

These are low to moderate return instruments

About Rs. 38 lakhs is parked here

Ensure you do not go overboard with fixed returns

Equity exposure is necessary to beat inflation

At 34, equity should be 70% of long-term corpus

Review asset allocation yearly

Rebalance to maintain risk-reward balance

Retirement Corpus Assessment
You want Rs. 5 crore+ by age 55.
That’s a 21-year horizon.

You’re currently investing Rs. 50,000 monthly.
If your SIP grows by 10% yearly, and earns 11–12% returns,
Then the goal of Rs. 5 crore is achievable.

But this needs:

Consistent SIPs for 20+ years

No premature withdrawals

Timely rebalancing

Periodic review of underperforming funds

Avoiding unnecessary product switches

Keep increasing SIPs every year.
Even 5% yearly increase helps reach your goal faster.

Why You Should Avoid Index Funds
You did not mention index funds directly.
But it’s worth noting here.

Index funds follow the index passively.
They don’t beat markets, only follow them.
They cannot avoid poor-performing sectors.
They don’t pick undervalued opportunities.

On the other hand, actively managed funds:

Adjust portfolio based on market cycles

Avoid sectors that may underperform

Seek opportunities across themes and styles

Provide alpha (extra return) over time

Choose regular plans through a Certified Financial Planner and MFD.
They help you choose top-rated funds, not trending funds.
And they give better support during market falls.

Insurance Coverage – Strengths and Gaps
You already have:

Term Insurance: Rs. 1 crore

Health Insurance: Rs. 8.5L for parents

Group policy: Rs. 7.5L (family)

Accident Insurance: Rs. 50L

Some suggestions:

Increase term insurance to Rs. 2 crore over time

Buy family floater health insurance of Rs. 15–20 lakhs

Group cover ends with job

Personal cover gives lifelong safety

Do not mix insurance with investment

Avoid money-back, ULIP, or endowment plans

Do You Need a Full-Time Investment Advisor?
Let us assess if full-time help is needed.

You may need help if:

You cannot review funds quarterly

You feel overwhelmed by market news

You want tax-efficient portfolio building

You want someone to plan beyond mutual funds

You need help aligning funds with your goals

A Certified Financial Planner (CFP) backed by an MFD can:

Create a customised asset allocation

Optimise taxation

Ensure fund choices match goals

Guide rebalancing

Reduce emotional investing mistakes

Provide 360-degree financial management

If the advisor is commission-based MFD and provides value,
Then you don’t pay fee upfront
Instead, expense is recovered from fund house trail fee
This makes it low cost for you
And advisor stays involved for long-term

Other Recommendations
Increase SIP annually

Don’t invest in too many schemes

Use goal-based investing – retirement, education, wedding

Keep emergency fund always ready

Update nominations in all accounts

Do yearly review of portfolio

Ensure wife is financially aware

Consider investing in child fund separately

Prefer MF route for child over traditional plans

Finally
You are doing better than average investors.
Your SIP habit is strong.
Your insurance protection is decent.
You are debt-free and stable.

But you need:

Streamlined mutual fund portfolio

Less exposure to gold

SIP rebalancing yearly

Increase term and health cover

More attention to portfolio reviews

Guidance from Certified Financial Planner backed by MFD

You are only 34.
With discipline and guidance, your Rs. 5 crore goal is well within reach.
Just review yearly, stay consistent, and avoid panic decisions.

Every rupee saved and invested right will bring strong results.

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

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
M-40, and wife is 33. She is working too. I have been investing in mutual funds for last 7 years. Invested - 6.5L, Current value -10L. Now I am purchasing a land property.For the down payment , I intend to withdraw this money. I own 1 other residence for which no outstanding loan.My queries, 1) Can I claim LTCG tax exemption if I use the entire amount of 10L for purchase ? Or is there a limit ? 2) Will my LT capital gain be 10L or the difference of 3.5L ? 3) My wife does not own any other property, so can we proceed with purchase with her as the first owner , for tax exemption?
Ans: You are 40 years old.
Your wife is 33 and she is also working.
You have invested Rs. 6.5 lakhs in mutual funds over 7 years.
Now, the value is Rs. 10 lakhs.
You are planning to buy a land property.
You want to withdraw this amount for the down payment.
You already own one house without any outstanding loan.
You want to know the Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) tax situation.

Let’s understand your case from a 360-degree angle.

Understanding LTCG from Mutual Funds

You invested Rs. 6.5 lakhs

It has grown to Rs. 10 lakhs

The gain is Rs. 3.5 lakhs

This is considered Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG)

LTCG from equity mutual funds has new tax rules

As per new rule:

LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakhs is taxed at 12.5%

Gains below Rs. 1.25 lakhs are tax-free

The taxable LTCG in your case = Rs. 3.5L - Rs. 1.25L = Rs. 2.25L

So, only Rs. 2.25L is taxable at 12.5%

This is the rule for equity mutual funds
It does not matter how you use the withdrawn money
Whether you buy land or spend it, the tax is same

Clarifying Your First Question

You asked:
Can I claim LTCG exemption if I use the entire Rs. 10L for buying land?

The answer is No
You cannot claim LTCG exemption under Section 54F
Why?
Because you are buying land, not a residential house

LTCG exemption is only allowed:

If you use the gain to buy residential house property

Not allowed if you buy plot or land

Section 54 or 54F benefits apply only to house construction or purchase

Plot is not eligible for LTCG exemption

Also, you already own a house
This further limits exemption under Section 54F
Hence, no LTCG exemption allowed in your case

Clarifying Your Second Question

You asked:
Will my LTCG be Rs. 10L or Rs. 3.5L?

Answer is Rs. 3.5L only
LTCG is always calculated as:

Selling price – Purchase price

Rs. 10L – Rs. 6.5L = Rs. 3.5L

So, capital gain is not Rs. 10L
Only the growth amount (Rs. 3.5L) is taxed
Of this, first Rs. 1.25L is exempt
Remaining Rs. 2.25L is taxed at 12.5%

Clarifying Your Third Question

You asked:
Can my wife be first owner for tax exemption purpose?

Your wife does not own any other property
So, if she invests from her own funds
And she earns the capital gain
Then she may qualify for LTCG exemption under Section 54F
But, in this case:

The investment is from your mutual funds

You are earning the LTCG

So you are taxed, not her

Even if she becomes owner of property, that doesn't help your tax

Tax applies to the person who sells the asset
Not to the person who buys the property
So, transferring ownership to your wife won't avoid your tax
Also, if you gift her money, clubbing rules apply
Your gain is still taxed in your name

Hence, even if she is first owner, you can't avoid LTCG tax

Let’s Assess from a 360-Degree View

You are using mutual fund growth for buying land
This is a non-tax efficient approach
If your goal is long-term wealth
Better to use savings, not mutual fund gains

Why?

Mutual funds grow tax-efficiently

Withdrawal breaks compounding

You lose future potential gain

Real estate adds holding cost and low liquidity

Land also has legal and registration complexity

What could you do instead?

Partially fund from income or low-cost loan

Let mutual fund stay invested

Increase SIP instead

Focus on wealth creation over asset ownership

Investments: A Word of Caution

You are experienced in mutual funds
That’s a strong plus
Now, avoid breaking compounding
Rs. 10L today can become Rs. 35–40L in 10–15 years
If you use it now, that long-term benefit goes away

Instead, create a plan:

Part land payment from mutual funds

Rest from savings

Keep SIP going

Don’t fully redeem your mutual fund

Also, do not go for index funds now
They copy an index blindly
They fall completely when market falls
They don’t protect capital
They don’t outperform in volatile market

Actively managed funds perform better over time
They have professional managers
They take active decisions
They help manage downside risk
This gives stability in returns

Also, avoid direct funds
They may seem low-cost
But they give no advice
No guidance for asset allocation
No risk profiling or rebalancing
Investing through Certified MFD with CFP helps better
You get 360-degree support and handholding

Taxation Tip

Don’t forget to calculate LTCG tax while filing
No exemption on land purchase
Pay 12.5% on Rs. 2.25L = Around Rs. 28,000
Add cess also
Pay it before due date to avoid interest

Additional Tips

Keep all mutual fund statements for proof

Declare capital gains in ITR

Show redemption and reinvestment trail

Keep property documents safe

Consult CFP for long-term goal alignment

Finally

You’ve done well in mutual fund investing
But breaking this compounding needs caution
Buying land will not give you any LTCG tax relief
Your capital gain is Rs. 3.5L, not Rs. 10L
You are the one taxed, not your wife
Land purchase does not qualify for exemption
Instead of breaking mutual funds, consider better options
Re-align your portfolio with support of a Certified MFD with CFP
Continue your SIPs, plan your land buy smartly

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jun 24, 2025Hindi
Money
Iam 27 years old. My monthly income is 38000. I have a health insurance of 10 lakhs for which 2385 is monthly deducted from my account. Apart from that I have no savings and no investment and no loan. I'm just starting out and need guidance how to utilise my money.
Ans: You are 27 years old and earning Rs. 38,000 monthly. You already have a health insurance of Rs. 10 lakhs, with a monthly premium of Rs. 2,385. That’s a great start. You have no savings, no loans, and no investments. You are in the perfect stage to build a solid financial foundation.

Let’s now explore how to utilise your income wisely. This will help you grow wealth step-by-step. You will also become financially secure over the long run.

Track and Review Your Monthly Spending

Begin with understanding where your money goes every month

Make a note of all monthly expenses – rent, food, travel, mobile, and entertainment

Classify them as necessary and unnecessary

Cut back anything that doesn’t give long-term value

This is the first step in wealth building

For example:

Monthly Income: Rs. 38,000

Health Insurance: Rs. 2,385

Rent + Utilities: Estimate Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 12,000

Food, Travel, Mobile, Internet: Rs. 6,000 to Rs. 8,000

Discretionary Expense: Rs. 3,000 to Rs. 5,000

Try to save Rs. 10,000 every month. You may adjust based on actual expense.

Build Your Emergency Fund First

Emergency fund is for job loss, hospital bills, or family crisis

Keep 3 to 6 months of monthly expense in this fund

If your expense is Rs. 25,000 monthly, aim for Rs. 75,000 to Rs. 1.5 lakhs

Don’t use this for investments, gadgets, or trips

Park this money in a savings account or liquid mutual fund

Steps:

Save Rs. 5,000 monthly into emergency fund

Within 12 to 18 months, you will reach the target

Keep this fund separate from regular savings

Review every year to adjust as your expense grows

Start SIPs in Actively Managed Mutual Funds

After emergency fund is done, begin investing

Use SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) route

Choose actively managed mutual funds for better returns

They are managed by expert fund managers

These funds perform better than index funds in most cases

Avoid index funds. They follow the market blindly. They don’t protect during market crashes. Actively managed funds are better for young investors. They adjust to changing market trends. Index funds don’t do that.

Invest through a qualified Mutual Fund Distributor with CFP credential. They guide based on your goals, age, and risk. Avoid investing directly in direct plans. Direct plans lack personal guidance. Wrong choices can reduce returns. MFDs help you avoid poor fund selection.

Start SIP with even Rs. 3,000 monthly. Increase it by Rs. 500 every year. Invest with goal in mind – not just for returns.

Build Goals One by One

Goal-based investing helps stay focused

Define short, medium, and long-term goals

Examples:

Short-term (0 to 3 years)

Travel fund

Buying a laptop

Emergency fund top-up

Use savings account or liquid mutual fund. Avoid risky instruments.

Medium-term (3 to 7 years)

Buying a two-wheeler

Family support

Higher education or course

Use debt mutual funds and hybrid mutual funds here. Choose safer funds with steady growth.

Long-term (7 years and beyond)

Retirement planning

Down payment for a house

Marriage fund or family planning

Use equity mutual funds for this. Choose multi-cap or flexi-cap funds.

Every goal should have a purpose, timeline, and SIP attached. Review them every year.

Use the 50-30-20 Rule Smartly

This is a simple rule to budget monthly income. It works well for beginners.

50% of income for needs – rent, food, travel

30% for wants – outings, clothes, mobile, streaming

20% for savings – emergency fund, SIP, long-term goals

You can customise it slightly to suit your lifestyle. But keep 20% minimum for wealth creation.

On Rs. 38,000 salary:

Rs. 19,000 for needs

Rs. 11,000 for wants

Rs. 8,000 for savings

This is a balanced way to live well and save well.

Avoid Lifestyle Creep and Credit Debt

As your income grows, avoid increasing lifestyle expenses too fast. This is called lifestyle creep.

Don’t spend more just because you earn more

Save 50% of every increment you get

Avoid EMIs for gadgets, clothes, or travel

Credit cards are useful only if paid fully on time

Never carry forward credit card dues

One missed payment ruins your savings

Keep expenses in control. Focus on financial peace. Not on status display.

Review Your Insurance Needs Every 2 Years

You already have health insurance. That is very good.

Next, look at term life insurance when you have dependents. At present, it’s not needed. But if you support parents or plan to get married, take term insurance. Choose pure protection plan, not savings-linked ones.

Avoid ULIPs, LIC traditional plans, or endowment policies. These are low-return, high-cost, and non-transparent. They mix insurance with savings. That doesn’t help in wealth creation. Choose mutual funds instead.

Plan to Increase Income Every 2 to 3 Years

Investment alone is not enough. You must also grow your income. This gives more saving power.

Improve your career skills

Attend workshops or certification programs

Look for better job opportunities every few years

Consider freelancing or side income sources

Use bonuses for investments, not just spending

Higher income + disciplined saving = fast wealth growth.

Don’t keep same income for 10 years. Let your salary also grow.

Steps to Take Immediately

Track all your expenses from today

Create monthly budget and spending limits

Start saving Rs. 5,000 monthly in emergency fund

After 12 months, start SIP of Rs. 3,000

Avoid index funds, direct mutual funds, and ULIPs

Review goals every 6 months

Set one short, one medium, one long-term goal

Increase savings as income rises

Avoid personal loans and high EMIs

Continue health insurance without breaks

Small steps today give big results in 10 years. Keep the journey consistent.

Finally

You are at a powerful stage of life. You have age, time, and energy on your side. You also have no financial baggage. That is rare and precious.

This is the right time to:

Build strong savings habits

Avoid bad products like endowment or ULIPs

Keep your lifestyle under control

Invest with a goal, not by random advice

Grow income along with investments

Keep your focus on financial freedom, not status

Avoid quick returns or get-rich plans. Stay with SIPs. Stay long-term. Use the power of compounding.

Within 10 years, you can build Rs. 15 to Rs. 20 lakhs corpus. In 20 years, it will become Rs. 1 crore or more. But only if you stay consistent.

You don’t need luck. You need a clear plan and patience.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9551 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
Good Evening Sir. I am 37 years old Government Salaried. Request to please review my MF portfolio and kindly suggest which funds should I remove as I feel I have too many funds. Parag Parikh Flexi Cap fund 10000, Nifty index fund10000, Kotak Multi cap 10000, Motilal Midcap 10000, Nippon Small Cap 10000, Quant Small Cap 5000, Edelweiss Aggressive Hybrid Fund 5000, SBi Contra 5000.Thank you
Ans: At 37, you are at a strong wealth-building phase of life. Being a government employee adds to the financial stability needed for long-term investing. It is good to see your interest in aligning and optimising your mutual fund portfolio.

From a Certified Financial Planner’s point of view, your portfolio is diversified but over-crowded. It has overlapping categories. This can dilute overall performance. Too many funds can also make it difficult to track and manage.

Let’s evaluate your portfolio from all key angles — category overlap, suitability, tax-efficiency, consistency, and how it aligns with your financial future.

Portfolio Summary – What You Hold Now
Here’s a breakdown of your monthly SIP investments:

Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000

Nifty Index Fund – Rs. 10,000

Kotak Multi Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000

Motilal Oswal Midcap Fund – Rs. 10,000

Nippon Small Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000

Quant Small Cap Fund – Rs. 5,000

Edelweiss Aggressive Hybrid Fund – Rs. 5,000

SBI Contra Fund – Rs. 5,000

Total SIP: Rs. 65,000 per month

What’s Good About Your Portfolio
Disciplined SIP investment
You are investing regularly and consistently. This builds long-term wealth.

Allocation across equity categories
You have exposure to large cap, mid cap, small cap, multi-cap, flexi-cap and hybrid. This adds diversification.

No exposure to insurance or ULIPs
This shows maturity. You are using mutual funds for investment.

What Needs Improvement
Your portfolio has too many funds. Some of them overlap in purpose and holdings.

Too many small cap and thematic-type funds increase volatility.

You also hold index fund, which brings in some hidden limitations. Let’s address that separately.

Why Too Many Funds Are a Problem
More funds don’t mean better returns
Returns don’t improve by adding more schemes. Quality matters more than quantity.

Overlap in stock holdings
Flexi cap, multi cap and index funds often invest in the same large-cap stocks.

Difficult to review and monitor
Managing 8 funds is time-consuming. Harder to know which fund is actually performing.

Over-diversification leads to average returns
Instead of strong performance, your portfolio behaves like a blended index.

Tax planning gets complicated
Selling multiple funds in future may trigger tax without any planning.

Scheme-Specific Assessment
Let us assess each scheme from a suitability and performance perspective.

1. Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000
Well-managed flexi-cap fund.

Invests in Indian and global stocks.

Suitable for long-term wealth building.

You can continue this fund.

2. Nifty Index Fund – Rs. 10,000
Passive fund mimicking the Nifty 50.

Not suitable if you want alpha or outperformance.

Most index funds lack flexibility.

Doesn’t adapt to market changes.

Avoids active stock selection and risk management.

Better to exit this and shift to actively managed fund.

3. Kotak Multi Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000
Invests in large, mid, and small cap.

Provides a well-balanced allocation.

Suitable to continue.

Keep this for diversified exposure.

4. Motilal Oswal Midcap Fund – Rs. 10,000
Midcap funds carry moderate risk.

Volatility is higher than large caps.

Long-term performance needed to justify holding.

Keep only one dedicated mid cap fund.

Retain this only if 5-year returns are consistent.

5. Nippon Small Cap Fund – Rs. 10,000
6. Quant Small Cap Fund – Rs. 5,000
Both are aggressive small cap funds.

Small caps are high risk and volatile.

Not suitable to hold two small cap funds.

Exit Quant Small Cap, which is more tactical and aggressive.

Retain Nippon Small Cap only if your risk appetite is high.

7. Edelweiss Aggressive Hybrid Fund – Rs. 5,000
Conservative allocation (65% equity, 35% debt).

Suitable for cushioning market volatility.

Good for asset balancing.

Can continue this with current allocation.

8. SBI Contra Fund – Rs. 5,000
Follows contrarian approach.

Strategy may underperform in regular cycles.

Not ideal for every investor.

Consider exiting this to simplify portfolio.

Suggested Revised Portfolio
Based on performance, risk level and duplication:

Recommended to Keep:

Parag Parikh Flexi Cap – Rs. 10,000

Kotak Multi Cap – Rs. 10,000

Motilal Midcap – Rs. 10,000 (only if long-term returns are consistent)

Nippon Small Cap – Rs. 10,000

Edelweiss Aggressive Hybrid – Rs. 5,000

Suggested to Exit:

Nifty Index Fund – Rs. 10,000 (switch to active fund)

Quant Small Cap – Rs. 5,000 (overlap with Nippon Small Cap)

SBI Contra – Rs. 5,000 (complex strategy, avoid if not tracking closely)

You can consolidate and redirect the released Rs. 20,000 into:

One large cap fund – for consistent and less volatile growth

One focused fund – for concentrated, high-conviction investments

Or increase allocation in existing strong performers

Additional Suggestions
Direct Plans vs. Regular Plans

If you are investing in direct plans, consider switching to regular plans through a trusted MFD.

Direct plans offer low expense ratio, but no personalised advice.

Regular plans via a CFP-guided MFD help in better monitoring and periodic reviews.

It helps in rebalancing, taxation, retirement alignment, and behavioural coaching.

Avoid DIY if you’re unable to review quarterly. Guided investing helps avoid mistakes.

Your Risk Profile and Age
At 37, you can take calculated equity exposure.

But aggressive funds should not dominate.

Hybrid and multi-cap add some stability.

Avoid chasing past performance or market trends.

Your portfolio must support retirement and life goals.

Taxation Angle to Keep in Mind
Long-term capital gains above Rs. 1.25 lakh in equity mutual funds taxed at 12.5%.

Short-term capital gains taxed at 20%.

Any switches, redemptions should be tax-optimised.

Do not redeem in panic. Take help to calculate capital gain tax impact.

Asset Allocation View
Let’s also consider these important portfolio perspectives:

You can keep 80% in equity.

Remaining 20% in hybrid or low-risk funds.

Rebalance once a year to protect gains.

You can gradually increase hybrid allocation as you reach 45+.

Action Plan
Exit 3 funds.

Consolidate and reduce overlap.

Do not exceed 5 to 6 funds.

Ensure each fund has a clear purpose.

Focus on quality over quantity.

Keep SIPs long-term without interruption.

Review performance every year, not every month.

Final Insights
You are on the right track. Keep it simple now.

Too many funds reduce focus and increase confusion.

Keep 1 flexi cap, 1 multicap, 1 midcap, 1 small cap and 1 hybrid.

Avoid index funds for active wealth building.

Invest through a certified MFD for regular reviews and timely action.

Use direct plans only if you track markets deeply and review quarterly.

Mutual fund investing is not just about selecting funds. It's also about long-term discipline, asset allocation, proper rebalancing, and emotional control. A simplified and guided approach always leads to better results.

Less funds. More focus. More clarity. Better results.

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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