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Reetika

Reetika Sharma  |628 Answers  |Ask -

Financial Planner, MF and Insurance Expert - Answered on Dec 17, 2025

Reetika Sharma is a certified financial planner and CEO of F-Secure Solutions.
She advises clients about investments, insurance, tax and estate planning and manages high net-worth individual’s portfolios.
Reetika has an MBA in finance from the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts of India (ICFAI) and an engineer degree from NIT, Jalandhar.
She also holds certifications from the Financial Planning Standards Board India (FPSB), Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) and Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI).... more
Santanu Question by Santanu on Dec 15, 2025Hindi
Money

Hi Mam, I trust you got me wrong in MF. My total MF value currently, - 93 Lakhs of value in Equity fund - 45.5 Lakhs of value in mix of equity and Debt. So in total around 1.38 CR

Ans: Hi,

Apologies for wrong interpretation of the data here. Let me correct the overall analysis as it totally changes the situation here.

Your current monthly salary - 1.8 lakhs; monthly expenses - 70k; potential to save - 1 lakh monthly.

Your current assets and investments include:
- a 4 BHK where you are currently living
- 3 apartments - values at 90 lakhs cumulative. Good but real estate is highly illiquid. It would be wise to sell atleast one of these and move these funds to liquid assets like mutual funds. It can be dedicated to your daughter's education. You can choose a mix of equity and balanced mutual funds.
- You have LIC of sum assured 25 lakhs and 8 lakhs - not at all recommended as every LIC gives an annual return of only 4-5% yearly over a long time and this doesn't even beat FD interest or inflation. Surrender these if you can and again go for good return generating assets. Current surrender might seem like a loss but making a practical choice right now will result in more amount from this money in future and will compensate present small loss.
- Term Plan - 25 lakhs, but insufficient for you. Increase it to 1 crore.
- 57 lakhs in PPF, EPF, SSY and NPS. Hold it. But try and reduce your contribution to bare minimum in SSY and PPF as these generate a very low return for you to meet your goals. These are some good debt instruments but increase your focus in creating more investments in mutual funds.
- Current MF - 93 lakhs and 45 lakhs in stocks - total 1.38 crores. Direct stock investment is not recommended as it is quite volatile and need constant monitoring along with fundamental technical knowledge. Wise for you to allocate 75% of your stocks valuation into equity mutual funds.
Also your portfolio size is quite big. Make sure to work with an advisor who can study and craft a proper investment portfolio keeping in mind your profile.

Your requirements/ goals:
- Daughter's Education (need minimum 20 lakhs in today's value) - current funds from selling 1 flat can be invested in aggressive mutual funds dedicated to this goal till she turns 18;
- Future Health (minimum requirement 25 lakhs) - start a dedicated SIP of 20k per month in aggressive funds for 7 years. It will give you 32 lakhs which will keep on growing till you need that fund;
- Your retirement after 7 years - 1 total corpus of 4 crores can fund you forever. Along with your current MF, stocks and debt investments, you need to invest 30k per month for 7 years in a mix of equity and hybrid funds to get 5 crores for retirement.

My advice would be to work closely with a professional Certified Financial Planner - a CFP who can guide you with exact funds to invest in keeping in mind your age, requirements, financial goals and risk profile. A CFP periodically reviews your portfolio and suggest any amendments to be made, if required.

Let me know if you need more help.

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

Milind Vadjikar  | Answer  |Ask -

Insurance, Stocks, MF, PF Expert - Answered on Oct 16, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - Oct 16, 2024Hindi
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Money
Hi Milind,I am 37 years and in a position to invest 1.4L per month in MF and have the below allocation. Can you please advise if the below looks fine? I am just starting to invest in MF for the 1st time and looking to accumlate 5 Cr in 10 years and use this to pay off home loans and personal loans in 3 years time with corpus of 1 Cr.What would be required to reach 1 Cr in 3 years? Please review the below MF and do recommend any changes as I will be able to invest heavily in those. 1.Small Cap - Quant (30K) 2.Mid Cal - Motilal Oswal (20K) 3.Large Cap - ICICI Prud Bluechip (20K) 4.Flexi Cap - PPFAS (30K) 5.Contra - SBI (20K) 6.Multi Cap - Nippon (20K)
Ans: Hello;

For getting 1 Cr in 3 years you may to increase monthly SIP amount to 2.4 L.

Else with the current monthly SIP of 1.4 L you may need 5 years to reach target of 1 Cr to pay off your loans.

Also for 5 Cr corpus target in 10 years you have two options top-up monthly sip of 1.4 L by 11% minimum each year upto 10 years.(After finishing 1 Cr target in 3/5 years)
Or
Do a flat monthly SIP of 2 L for 10 years.

Coming to your fund portfolio, I recommend the following:

1. PPFAS flexicap fund: 30 K
2. ICICI Pru Bluechip fund: 30 K
3. Motilal Oswal Midcap fund: 20 K
4. Nippon India Small cap fund: 20 K
5. ICICI Pru Value Discovery fund: 20 K
6. SBI Technology Opportunities Fund: 20 K

Happy Investing!!

You may follow us on X at @mars_invest for updates.

*Investments in mutual funds are subject to market risks. Please read all scheme related documents carefully before investing.

..Read more

Latest Questions
Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11185 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on May 25, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - May 25, 2026Hindi
Money
Hi, I am 43 yrs old, working as a Senior Delivery Manager in an IT company, CTC is 66lacs. My current investment in MF is 29Lacs, 11Lacs in ULIP insurance and 43Lacs in EPF and 25Lacs in Stocks. Current monthly investment I am doing 1.5lacs in MF, 42K in ULIP and 42K in EPF. I own 2 flats, 1 car, total pending principal amount is currently pending is 55 Lacs and monthly EMI I paid around 90K and all 3 EMI will run for next 7 yrs. My family is completely depending on me, including my wife(Home maker), my son 9yrs and my daughter 1 yr. What is your thoughts on my current investment plan, my liabilities? My monthly expenditure is around 1lacs including everything excluding EMI. I want to get my financial freedom soon so how much money I should have before I decide to get retired. Do I need to change anything on my investment plan? Any financial guidance from Gurus?
Ans: You are doing many things right. At 43, with a high income, disciplined investing habit, good EPF accumulation, decent MF corpus, and strong monthly savings capacity, you are already in a much stronger position than many families in your age group. Your commitment towards family security and wealth creation is clearly visible.

However, because your family is fully dependent on you and you have multiple liabilities running together, this is the stage where proper structuring becomes more important than just investing aggressively.

» Current Financial Position Assessment

– Your total financial assets are already meaningful:

Mutual Funds – Rs.29 lakhs
Stocks – Rs.25 lakhs
EPF – Rs.43 lakhs
ULIP – Rs.11 lakhs

– Total financial assets are around Rs.1+ crore range excluding property value.

– Your monthly investments are also very strong:

MF SIP – Rs.1.5 lakhs
EPF – Rs.42,000
ULIP – Rs.42,000

– Monthly savings discipline itself is excellent.

– Your income-to-expense ratio is healthy even after large EMIs.

This shows strong earning capability and disciplined cash flow management.

» Biggest Positive in Your Case

– Your age is still on your side.

– Your SIP amount is already large enough to create serious wealth over the next 10-15 years.

– Your EMI tenure is only another 7 years. Once loans close, your free cash flow can rise sharply.

– Your current lifestyle inflation looks controlled despite a high salary. That is a major strength.

– You are building assets while managing responsibilities together. That balance is appreciable.

» Area Which Needs Immediate Attention

Your biggest concentration risk is not investment risk.

It is “income dependency risk”.

Entire family depends on one income source.

You have:
– Home loans
– Young children
– Homemaker spouse
– Long responsibility runway

So your financial structure should focus strongly on:
– protection
– liquidity
– retirement independence
– reducing complexity

» About Your ULIP Investment

Your ULIP contribution of Rs.42,000 per month is quite high.

In many cases, ULIPs become less efficient because:
– insurance and investment are mixed together
– charges can reduce long-term efficiency
– flexibility is lower
– transparency is lower
– switching decisions become restricted
– returns may not justify long lock-in periods

Since you already have meaningful MF investing discipline, separating insurance and investment can improve efficiency.

If the ULIP has already crossed lock-in and surrender becomes financially practical, you may evaluate:
– reducing future allocation
– surrendering after detailed review
– redirecting future investments towards quality actively managed mutual funds

Actively managed mutual funds can offer:
– professional fund management
– downside management during market stress
– portfolio correction based on valuations
– flexibility across sectors and market caps

This becomes important for someone like you who cannot afford major capital destruction close to retirement goals.

» Why Active Funds May Suit You Better

You are in wealth-building stage, not passive accumulation stage alone.

Index investing has some limitations:
– no protection during market crashes
– full participation in overvalued sectors
– no valuation-based decision making
– no cash holding flexibility
– weak downside management
– blindly follows index composition

For high-income professionals with family dependency and large future goals, active allocation becomes more useful.

A good Certified Financial Planner along with a qualified Mutual Fund Distributor can help monitor:
– asset allocation
– taxation
– rebalancing
– market cycles
– risk reduction

That guidance itself adds long-term value.

» About Your Stock Portfolio

Direct stocks worth Rs.25 lakhs is acceptable only if:
– portfolio is diversified
– stock selection is research-based
– allocation is monitored
– emotional decisions are avoided

Otherwise, over time, excessive direct equity exposure can create concentration risk.

For senior IT professionals, career stability itself is linked to market cycles. So investment portfolio should not become too aggressive simultaneously.

You may slowly move towards:
– more structured mutual fund allocation
– lower stock concentration
– better diversification

» Your Loan Situation

Outstanding principal of Rs.55 lakhs is manageable considering:
– your income level
– high savings capacity
– remaining tenure only 7 years

This is not an alarming debt level.

However:
– avoid taking any fresh major loans
– avoid lifestyle upgrades through borrowing
– build stronger liquid reserves

Once EMIs close, your cash flow may improve by nearly Rs.90,000 monthly. That itself can accelerate financial freedom significantly.

» Emergency Fund Requirement

This is one area where many high earners underestimate risk.

You should maintain at least:
– 12 months of total household obligations

That includes:
– EMI
– household expenses
– school expenses
– insurance premiums

Considering your profile, emergency liquidity should be strong and easily accessible.

» Insurance Review

Since your family fully depends on you, adequate pure term insurance is very important.

You should review:
– whether existing life cover is sufficient
– whether family goals are fully protected
– whether liabilities are covered adequately

Also ensure:
– family floater health insurance is strong
– critical illness cover is available
– personal accident cover exists

Protection planning is extremely important for single-income families.

» How Much Corpus Needed for Financial Freedom

Your current family expenses:
– around Rs.1 lakh monthly excluding EMI

Future realities:
– children education inflation
– healthcare inflation
– lifestyle inflation
– retirement longevity

After including these, your long-term family requirement can become much larger than current expense levels suggest.

For someone with:
– young children
– dependent spouse
– high lifestyle responsibility
– long retirement horizon

Financial freedom generally requires a very substantial retirement corpus.

You should target a stage where:
– investment income alone can comfortably manage family expenses
– education goals are separately funded
– loans are fully closed
– medical contingencies are covered
– retirement income does not depend on salary

Considering your current savings pace, you are on a good path if:
– investments continue consistently
– income remains stable
– unnecessary liabilities are avoided
– asset allocation is improved

» Suggested Changes in Your Plan

– Continue strong MF SIPs
– Review ULIP continuation carefully
– Increase allocation towards actively managed diversified funds
– Reduce dependency on direct stocks gradually if concentration is high
– Build larger emergency corpus
– Avoid fresh liabilities
– Review term insurance adequacy
– Ensure goal-based investing for children
– Do periodic portfolio rebalancing
– Plan retirement corpus separately from children goals

» Finally

You are already in a financially progressive position. The next stage is not about investing more aggressively. It is about investing more intelligently and structurally.

Your income is strong today. If you combine that with:
– proper risk management
– disciplined investing
– controlled liabilities
– better portfolio structuring
– long-term consistency

then achieving financial freedom in your 50s is very much achievable.

The biggest wealth creators are not always the highest earners. They are the people who sustain disciplined investing for long periods while avoiding major mistakes. You are already showing many of those qualities.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/

...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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