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Mayank

Mayank Chandel  |2510 Answers  |Ask -

IIT-JEE, NEET-UG, SAT, CLAT, CA, CS Exam Expert - Answered on Jun 11, 2023

Mayank Chandel has over 18 years of experience coaching and training students for various exams like IIT-JEE, NEET-UG, SAT, CLAT, CA and CS.
Besides coaching students for entrance exams, he also guides Class 10 and 12 students about career options in engineering, medicine and the vocational sciences.
His interest in coaching students led him to launch the firm, CareerStreets.
Chandel holds an engineering degree in electronics from Nagpur University.... more
Aditya Question by Aditya on May 16, 2023Hindi
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Career

Sir, Got 79.33% in 12th PCM and 85.8166 percentile in JEE main. Which are the bestBTECH options for me. aditya

Ans: Aditya
it is very difficult to tell what is the best B.Tech options available for you from the limited information that you have provided.

Fot that I will need complete JEE details, like
JEE-AIR
JEE-CAT RANK- If applicable
State of Eligibilty
Career

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Radheshyam

Radheshyam Zanwar  |5988 Answers  |Ask -

MHT-CET, IIT-JEE, NEET-UG Expert - Answered on Jul 30, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 30, 2025Hindi
Career
Hloo Sir, I have scored 78.45 percentile, crl: 320k+ in JEE Mains, category: general. I am a dropper. I scored 65 percentage in class 12, given improvement this year but the results not went well. Sir, I want to ask that The best college and branch I could get ? I am too late to ask this, sorry for that, a lot of my time passed away due to some genuine reasons. Does it will create any problem now to take admission? I was also thinking of New Age Colleges (school of technology) such Newton, Scaler, etc. The private colleges which I would get I don't think they might be good except a few but as it is late so taking admission might be difficult there also. Sir, please suggest which is the best college I could get acc to my score. Should I go for new age colleges, are they really good/worth it as the fees is also higher side. I will be required to take loan for further studies, so if the college is decent, taking loan will be easy. "I was thinking of a decent college where overall growth can take place and not only academic growth." I have also appeared for MHTCET and UPTAC Counselling. Rank alloted to me in MHTCET Counselling is 25245 Thank You Sir
Ans: Hello dear
Your best options are in state-level colleges through MHTCET (such as some mid-tier government or private colleges in Maharashtra) or UPTAC counseling (like AKTU-affiliated colleges), such as Newton, Scalar, etc.

(1) Focus on admission through MHTCET: Aim for PCCOE Pune, VIT Pune, or JSPM, especially in core branches like IT, ECE, or even CSE in lower-round counseling.

(2) Avoid expensive, low-recognition colleges as you mentioned.

(3) Skip JEE-based options: Your JEE rank is too high for NITs or top private colleges like VIT, SRM, etc., and your 12th-grade marks might limit your chances in places with minimum cutoff requirements.

(4) You can still take admission now! Many counseling rounds are still ongoing, so don’t delay further.

Good luck.
Follow me if you receive this reply..
Radheshyam

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Dr Nagarajan J S K

Dr Nagarajan J S K   |2095 Answers  |Ask -

NEET, Medical, Pharmacy Careers - Answered on Jul 30, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10014 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 30, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 25, 2025Hindi
Money
Sir, I've choosen NIET Greater Noida for BTech CSE, total college fees is coming 11.5 lakhs, we have paid 50k, thinking to get 7.5 lakh as loan from bank, we don't have collateral, earlier we thought that we'll take rest amount from Bihar Student Credit but bank is saying that u can get loan from only one place but drcc is saying that they'll get even after having a loan from bank. I'm short of 3.5 lakhs. My boards percentage is 73.8%.Help me sir to get ideas of how to get the rest amount for my college fees
Ans: – Choosing BTech CSE at NIET is a positive step.
– Good that you're planning your funding early.

? Understanding Your Current Funding Gap
– Total fees: Rs. 11.5 lakh.
– Already paid: Rs. 50,000.
– Planning bank loan: Rs. 7.5 lakh (no collateral).
– Still short: Rs. 3.5 lakh.

? Bank Loan and Bihar Student Credit Card Confusion
– Banks typically allow one loan per student for education.
– However, Bihar Student Credit Card scheme allows funding even if partial loan is taken.
– Visit your district DRCC office in person and explain full loan structure.
– Get a written clarification from them.

? Strategies to Arrange Rs. 3.5 Lakh Gap
– Try increasing the bank loan to maximum allowed under unsecured category (up to Rs. 7.5–10 lakh).
– If DRCC agrees to fund the remaining, you can split the loan.
– Explore NIET’s own installment payment plans. Many colleges have semester-wise fee breakup.
– Request fee extension from the college for the shortfall.
– Approach family, friends, or alumni network for a small temporary interest-free loan.

? Explore Private Education Finance Options
– NBFCs like HDFC Credila, Avanse, or InCred may help with flexible funding.
– They offer loans without collateral up to Rs. 10–15 lakh, depending on course and college.

? Improve Chances of Loan Approval
– Show strong academic intent and purpose to lenders.
– Prepare a course plan, placement record of NIET, and your career goals.

? Finally
– Don’t worry too much. There are multiple small ways to bridge this Rs. 3.5 lakh gap.
– Be proactive with DRCC and college. Keep pushing through.
– You’ve already taken the right steps by planning ahead. Stay focused.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10014 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 30, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 23, 2025Hindi
Money
I am 59 years now.Next year i am retiring.currently i am having Rs 9 cr equity,RS 80 LAKS MF,Rs 50 laks FD and Rs 85 laks PF and having 2 house owned.I am expecting Rs 2 laks for my monthly income after retirement.I am having 1 daughter she is 22 years and studying
Ans: At age 59, with retirement just a year away, your planning so far shows strong discipline.
Your goal of Rs 2 lakhs monthly income after retirement is very achievable.
Let’s look at your situation from all angles to build a secure post-retirement financial roadmap.

? Retirement Readiness Assessment

– Your current corpus is excellent.
– Rs 9 crore in equity is significant.
– Rs 80 lakhs in mutual funds adds strong diversification.
– Rs 50 lakhs in FD offers fixed income security.
– Rs 85 lakhs in PF ensures steady post-retirement liquidity.
– Two houses add to your overall stability and confidence.

– With Rs 11.15 crore in financial assets, your financial independence is assured.
– Your target of Rs 2 lakhs monthly income (Rs 24 lakhs annually) is realistic.
– Even assuming modest returns, this can sustain for 30+ years of retirement.

? Portfolio Allocation Post Retirement

– Shift from aggressive to balanced allocation now.
– Reduce direct equity exposure gradually.
– Allocate into hybrid or balanced advantage mutual funds.
– Keep 30%–40% in equity-oriented funds for inflation protection.
– Move 20%–25% to debt-oriented mutual funds for regular income.
– 15%–20% in FDs for short-term needs and emergencies.
– Retain your PF. Start withdrawing gradually after retirement.

– Use a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) from mutual funds for regular monthly income.
– Prefer growth option and withdraw as per requirement via SWP.
– This gives you tax efficiency and cash flow predictability.

? Monthly Income Plan

– You aim for Rs 2 lakhs/month post-retirement.
– A smart combination of sources can give this.

Use SWP from mutual funds: target Rs 80,000–Rs 1 lakh/month.

Interest from FD: Rs 30,000–Rs 40,000/month.

Partial PF withdrawal: Rs 40,000/month for 15–20 years.

Rental income (if available from 2nd house): Additional support.

– Rebalance every 1–2 years to adjust for inflation and market changes.

? Risk Management and Safety

– Keep Rs 25–30 lakhs in FD or ultra-short debt funds.
– This acts as emergency and buffer for market volatility.
– Avoid new high-risk equity bets at this stage.
– Your current equity should be gradually rebalanced.

– Avoid ULIPs, PMS or structured products from banks or agents.
– They are unsuitable post-retirement.

– Ensure asset safety through joint ownership and nomination updates.

? Tax Planning

– After retirement, your taxable income will change.
– SWP from mutual funds is tax-efficient due to capital gains benefit.
– Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.
– Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) on equity funds is taxed at 20%.
– For debt funds, gains are taxed as per your slab.

– FD interest is fully taxable as per slab. Spread FDs in family names.
– Consider gifting funds to daughter (once she earns) to save tax.

– Create a family income-splitting strategy to optimise overall taxation.

? Role of Mutual Funds After Retirement

– Mutual funds will play a central role now.
– Use regular plans through a trusted MFD with CFP credential.
– Avoid direct plans.

– Direct plans lack guidance, reviews, and emotional coaching.
– With regular plans, you get active monitoring and risk control.
– In retirement, having a Certified Financial Planner guiding you adds immense value.

– Stay away from index funds.
– Index funds blindly follow the market.
– They lack downside protection and fund manager expertise.
– Active funds offer rebalancing, risk controls and better retirement fit.

? Daughter’s Education & Support

– At 22, she may need support for higher education or career goals.
– Keep aside Rs 15–20 lakhs in debt funds or FD for her future needs.
– This avoids disturbing your retirement corpus.
– Do not rely on equity for short-term educational needs.

– Once she starts earning, encourage her to plan own finances early.

? Estate and Legacy Planning

– Make a clear Will without delay.
– Include all financial and real estate assets.
– Mention nominees clearly in all accounts and investments.
– Register the Will if possible for legal strength.

– Keep a secure record of passwords, account numbers and bank lockers.
– Share with trusted family members.

– Plan your corpus distribution well – spouse, daughter, charity if desired.
– Protect legacy from legal disputes with proper documentation.

? Health Coverage and Contingency

– Maintain a strong health insurance policy.
– Do not rely only on savings for medical emergencies.
– Take a top-up health plan if needed.
– Ensure spouse is also covered.

– Medical inflation is high. Keep Rs 10–15 lakhs buffer in debt funds.
– This ensures you don’t withdraw from retirement income for health costs.

? Use of Property

– You own two houses.
– Live in one and rent the other if feasible.
– Avoid selling unless absolutely needed.

– Rental income helps reduce pressure on mutual fund withdrawals.
– However, do not consider property as a retirement plan.
– Illiquidity and maintenance are major risks in old age.

? Inflation and Lifestyle

– Rs 2 lakhs per month is good today.
– But inflation will erode it slowly.
– After 10 years, you may need Rs 3.5–4 lakhs/month for same lifestyle.

– So keep at least 35% of portfolio in growth assets like equity funds.
– This ensures your portfolio beats inflation over the long term.

– Revisit your retirement plan every 2 years.
– Adjust withdrawals and investments based on market and expenses.

? Behavioural and Emotional Discipline

– Avoid panic during market volatility.
– Stay disciplined with withdrawal strategy.
– Work with your Certified Financial Planner to avoid emotional investment errors.

– Retirement is a long phase – maybe 25+ years.
– You need growth, income, safety, and peace.
– Stick to the strategy. Don’t chase returns.

– Make spending priorities clear – needs vs wants.
– Focus on health, relationships, experiences – not on flashy lifestyle.

? Action Plan (Next 6–12 Months)

– Rebalance portfolio: Reduce equity, increase hybrid and debt funds.
– Setup SWP from mutual funds for regular cash flow.
– Allocate emergency corpus in FD or liquid funds.
– Create Will and update nominees.
– Review health insurance coverage for self and spouse.
– Keep Rs 15–20 lakhs separate for daughter’s education.
– Finalise post-retirement income plan with Certified Financial Planner.

? Finally

You are entering retirement from a position of great strength.
You have created a solid foundation with over Rs 11 crore in financial assets.
With the right guidance, steady withdrawals and discipline, your retirement life can be peaceful.

Stay focused on safety, tax-efficiency and sustainable income.
Avoid risky products, emotional decisions and large lifestyle jumps.
Let your wealth serve your life goals without tension.

A Certified Financial Planner can support you regularly in these next decades.
Not just for returns, but also for reviews, rebalancing and family safety.
Wishing you a peaceful and prosperous retirement journey ahead.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |10014 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 30, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 23, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi. I am 27-yrs old and earn 1,36,000 monthly after all the deductions, and get bonus once a year of around 2-2.5 lakhs. I need a solid financial planning for my future. I live with my parents so I dont have to pay the rent, I will get married by the next year though and some money would surely go for the same. My fixed monthly bill sums up around Rs. 26,147 monthly; out of which 24,000 goes for my mba fees, of which 12 monthly installments are still left. And rest goes for wifi and other subscriptions. Then, I send around 10,000 to my brother as well for his personal expenses. I pay a total of Rs. 60,000 towards health & term insurance for me and my family. It has to be paid once a year. Now from rest of the amount I have to save, spend and invest. Currently I have 3.7 lakhs in FD, 1.31 lakhs in PPF, 3 lakhs in EPF, 3.5 lakhs in mutual funds SIP, 50k stocks (very less). Below is my current monthly investment plan (few are new and I update amount often): -Mirae Asset tax saver ELSS : 5000 -Parag Parikh Flexicap fund : 3000 -HDFC Sensex Index fund : 2500 -Mirae Asset Large & Midcap : 1500 -Nippon India Small cap fund : 1000 -DSP Healthcare Fund : 3000 -PPF : 5000 -HUL stock SIP : 2500 -NTPC stock SIP: 500 (idk why I added it but nvm) -Gold ETF : 2000 I plan to invest more in direct stocks, 10k in some aggressive debt/infra fund for car/house and 5k into traveling, and increase the amount of other schemes as well. And from this month, I will invest in NPS too, maybe 5k monthly. My main question: Suggest me a good financial plan like, how much money should I invest/save/spend. I'm fine with modifying my current schemes and amount. I shop and travel a lot so most of my money goes into it. As of now, my goals are: 1. To build/buy a home 2. Buy a car 3. Create long-term wealth 4. Funds for my shopping, travel and entertainment 5. Liquid/cash for my expenses 6. An emergency fund 7. A solid retirement plan (5k into PPF, 5k into NPS, and 7k EPF is sufficient I believe and EPF would also increase every year as per my salary increment)
Ans: – You’re doing well for your age.
– At 27, you already have strong intent and diversified investments.
– Living with parents has helped reduce liabilities, which gives you a head start.
– Managing MBA fees and supporting your brother is commendable.
– You’ve included health and term insurance early, which many skip.
– Let's now structure your plan with purpose and clarity.

? Income and Expense Summary

– Net monthly income: Rs. 1,36,000.
– MBA EMI: Rs. 24,000/month (12 months remaining).
– Brother support: Rs. 10,000/month.
– Fixed bills: Rs. 2,147/month.
– Annual insurance premium: Rs. 60,000 (Rs. 5,000/month equivalent).
– Approx. available for saving/investing/spending: Rs. 1,36,000 – 41,147 = Rs. 94,853.
– However, you also mentioned high discretionary spending on travel and shopping.
– We'll allocate wisely while keeping your lifestyle intact.

? Current Investment Analysis

– Mutual Funds: Rs. 3.5 lakh is a good start.
– Stocks: Rs. 50,000 (experimental, should be limited for now).
– EPF: Rs. 3 lakh (backed by stable contributions).
– PPF: Rs. 1.31 lakh (good for long-term compounding).
– FD: Rs. 3.7 lakh (helpful as emergency fund buffer).

? SIP Distribution Review

– ELSS (Rs. 5,000): Good for tax-saving, but you already have EPF + PPF.
– Flexicap (Rs. 3,000): Excellent for long-term core equity exposure.
– Sensex Index Fund (Rs. 2,500): Avoid this. Index funds offer no downside protection.
– Actively managed funds provide alpha in volatile Indian markets.
– Large & Midcap (Rs. 1,500): Good balance. Continue.
– Small Cap (Rs. 1,000): Volatile. Keep under 10% of total SIP.
– Healthcare (Rs. 3,000): Sectoral funds carry risk. Make this optional.
– Gold ETF (Rs. 2,000): Consider reducing to Rs. 1,000.
– Stock SIPs (Rs. 3,000): HUL is fine, NTPC may not align. Exit NTPC SIP.
– PPF: Rs. 5,000/month is fine.
– NPS: Planning Rs. 5,000/month is good, but regular funds through Certified Financial Planner offer better flexibility.
– Infrastructure/aggressive debt: Good idea, but choose with guidance.

? Recommended Monthly Allocation Plan (Post MBA EMI phase)

Income: Rs. 1,36,000
Assumed allocation after MBA EMIs end (after 12 months):

– Rs. 25,000 – Equity mutual funds (core diversified)
– Rs. 5,000 – PPF (continue as is)
– Rs. 5,000 – NPS (optional; better to redirect to MFs via CFP)
– Rs. 5,000 – Travel fund (short-term debt or liquid fund)
– Rs. 3,000 – Gold (for diversification, not more)
– Rs. 2,000 – Direct stock SIP (restrict this portion)
– Rs. 5,000 – Emergency fund (until you reach 6 months of expenses)
– Rs. 5,000 – Insurance/medical corpus (for top-ups, yearly premiums)
– Rs. 30,000 – Short-term goal bucket (home/car in 4–5 years)
– Rs. 30,000 – Shopping & discretionary expenses

? Emergency Fund Planning

– Ideal emergency fund: Rs. 2.5 to 3 lakh (minimum 6 months of basic expenses).
– You already have Rs. 3.7 lakh in FD.
– That can be earmarked as emergency fund.
– Continue to replenish it when you use it.

? Home & Car Goal

– Do not rush into real estate.
– Instead, create a goal-based mutual fund portfolio.
– For home down payment in 5–7 years, use aggressive hybrid and dynamic bond funds.
– For car purchase, allocate Rs. 10,000/month in a short-duration debt fund.
– Avoid loans early in life unless necessary.

? Retirement Planning

– You’ve already started with EPF, PPF, and NPS.
– This gives a stable base.
– Don’t depend only on these for retirement.
– These are conservative and fixed-income focused.
– Add long-term SIPs through Certified Financial Planner in diversified equity funds.
– That can give higher compounding.
– Increase SIPs as your salary increases.
– Avoid direct funds. A qualified MFD with CFP credential can guide you with reviews.

? Stock Investing Perspective

– Direct stocks require deep research.
– Time, temperament, and knowledge are key.
– Keep max 5% of your net worth in direct stocks.
– Better to focus on mutual funds for long-term growth.
– Avoid random stock SIPs without clear conviction.

? Travel and Shopping Fund

– Allocate a separate Rs. 5,000–7,000/month.
– Use liquid funds for short-term travel.
– Avoid using your long-term investments for discretionary expenses.
– Budget these in advance and automate them.

? Yearly Bonus Planning

– Use your annual Rs. 2–2.5 lakh bonus wisely.
– Split it:
– 30% for investment top-up (mutual funds or car/home goals).
– 30% for insurance, medical reserves.
– 20% for travel or celebration.
– 20% to replenish emergency fund if needed.
– Avoid spending it all impulsively.

? Insurance Review

– Rs. 60,000/year for health and term insurance is reasonable.
– Ensure term insurance covers at least 15x of annual income.
– Health insurance should have Rs. 10–15 lakh family floater.
– Top-up health insurance if needed as medical costs are rising.
– Reassess insurance needs post-marriage.

? Marriage Expenses

– Don’t dip into long-term funds.
– Decide your wedding budget now.
– Allocate from bonus or short-term liquid fund.
– Avoid loans for wedding expenses.
– Stay within means.

? PPF, EPF and NPS Coordination

– PPF (Rs. 5,000/month) – Keep for long term tax-free compounding.
– EPF (Rs. 3 lakh) – Continue contributions via employer.
– NPS – Don’t over-prioritise.
– MFs are more flexible, have no lock-in, and are managed actively.
– If investing in NPS, claim tax benefit under Section 80CCD(1B).
– Review options every 2–3 years with a CFP.

? Tax-Saving Strategy

– ELSS, EPF, PPF, term insurance all qualify under 80C.
– NPS gives additional benefit under 80CCD(1B).
– Don’t overdo ELSS if 80C limit is already reached.
– Instead, divert that to long-term diversified mutual funds.
– Tax optimisation should not lead to poor allocation choices.

? Fund Rationalisation (Immediate Actionable)

– Exit Index Fund. Actively managed funds perform better in India.
– Review Healthcare fund. Sectoral funds should be optional only.
– Reduce Gold ETF to Rs. 1,000/month.
– Stop NTPC SIP unless you have a conviction-based reason.
– Avoid adding more direct stock SIPs for now.
– Add a multi-cap or focused equity fund instead.
– Always invest via a Certified Financial Planner through regular plans.
– This brings guidance, review, and emotional discipline.

? Future Strategy Post-Marriage

– Expense patterns will change.
– Plan household budget with spouse jointly.
– Continue insurance protection for both.
– Start a family health cover.
– Increase SIPs as income grows.
– Set common financial goals.
– Avoid lifestyle inflation and loans early in marriage.

? Best Practices Going Forward

– Set clear short, medium and long-term goals.
– Use separate SIPs for each.
– Track investments every 6 months.
– Don’t switch funds frequently.
– Don’t blindly follow trends or YouTube influencers.
– Avoid direct mutual fund platforms.
– Regular plans via a qualified MFD bring better outcomes.
– Be consistent and disciplined.

? Finally

– You are financially aware, which is rare at your age.
– With structured investing, you’ll create significant wealth.
– Keep life insurance and health insurance up to date.
– Limit direct stock exposure.
– Avoid overlapping funds and sectoral traps.
– Define goals, automate SIPs, and review annually.
– Don’t hesitate to consult a Certified Financial Planner for detailed reviews.
– Be patient. Wealth creation takes time and consistency.

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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