Home > Money > Question
Need Expert Advice?Our Gurus Can Help
Vivek

Vivek Shah  | Answer  |Ask -

Financial Planner - Answered on Feb 06, 2023

Vivek Shah is a SEBI registered investment advisor and certified financial planner from FPSB India. He has over 18 years of experience in financial planning.
Shah founded Finrise, a financial planning and wealth management firm, in 2011. He believes that equity investment is the only way to generate long term wealth.
He has an MBA in finance, a degree in chartered accountancy and is a registered life planner from Kinder Institute of Life Planning, USA.... more
Aslam Question by Aslam on Feb 01, 2023Hindi
Listen
Money

what future lies ahead now for Adani stocks ?

Ans: First of all we need to understand the questions being asked by Hindenberg and try to evaluate whether the allegation made by them makes any sense. If anyone goes through the Hindenberg report than the allegations and questions asked can be bifurcated into below broad categories:

1) Violations of Exchange and listed rules
2) Dubious Intra- Party Transactions
3) Use of Shell companies outside india ( Mauritius) to manuipulate the stock price
4) Money laundering through private Adani companies in listed companies of Adani inorder to look Balance sheet good.
5) Inexperienced Chartered accountants to audit the companies.
6) Using stocks as collateral for debt.

Looking at this points and also the allegations done by Hindenberg, i am fine to believe that there few acts which they taken for granted and manipulate the exchange and listing rules but calling Adani company as CON or Fraud is not what i would call this company. Companies margin are very low as compared to their cost of capital but being an infrastructure led company its takes long gestation period to realise the cash flows. Adani is playing important role in building infrasturcture in India with ports, power, airports etc and even though company is highly levered to build the assets and cash flow, the company has good physical assets in the balance sheet. Even though it may not a investible company for a retail invstor with the sort of volatility and margins they are earning.

Valuations are very much stretch with last 2 years price going to the roof. As a retail investor, one should avoid this company due to many uncertainties going forward.

Disclaimer: This is just for educational purpose and this should not be takne as advise for buy or sell.
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.
Money

You may like to see similar questions and answers below

Vivek

Vivek Shah  | Answer  |Ask -

Financial Planner - Answered on Feb 23, 2023

Asked by Anonymous - Jan 27, 2023Hindi
Listen
Money
Good Time To Buy Adani Stocks?
Ans: First of all we need to understand the questions being asked by Hindenberg and try to evaluate whether the allegation made by them makes any sense. If anyone goes through the Hindenberg report than the allegations and questions asked can be bifurcated into below broad categories:

1) Violations of Exchange and listed rules
2) Dubious Intra- Party Transactions
3) Use of Shell companies outside india ( Mauritius) to manuipulate the stock price
4) Money laundering through private Adani companies in listed companies of Adani inorder to look Balance sheet good.
5) Inexperienced Chartered accountants to audit the companies.
6) Using stocks as collateral for debt.

Looking at this points and also the allegations done by Hindenberg, i am fine to believe that there few acts which they taken for granted and manipulate the exchange and listing rules but calling Adani company as CON or Fraud is not what i would call this company. Companies margin are very low as compared to their cost of capital but being an infrastructure led company its takes long gestation period to realise the cash flows. Adani is playing important role in building infrasturcture in India with ports, power, airports etc and even though company is highly levered to build the assets and cash flow, the company has good physical assets in the balance sheet. Even though it may not a investible company for a retail invstor with the sort of volatility and margins they are earning.

Valuations are very much stretch with last 2 years price going to the roof. As a retail investor, one should avoid this company due to many uncertainties going forward.


Disclaimer: This is just for educational purpose and this should not be taken as advise for buy or sell.

..Read more

Latest Questions
Dr Nagarajan J S K

Dr Nagarajan J S K   |1566 Answers  |Ask -

NEET, Medical, Pharmacy Careers - Answered on Jul 03, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9376 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 03, 2025

Money
I was living in Europe for some 15 years and I am a citizen of European country now. I have now moved back to India and am OCI card holder and I work here in a global MNC. My question is about the mutual fund investments that I had made in India while I was living in Europe. I had invested through my NRI account. It is investment of some 70 lakhs rupees in mutual funds. Now that I work here in India and am resident here, do you have some advice if I should sell these mutual funds and buy those from my local bank accounts in India? What happens if I plan to sell my mutual funds? Can the money come back to local India account or it can only go to NRI bank account? My intention is to stay in India going forward. Please advice.
Ans: You were living in Europe for 15 years. Now you are back in India and working with a global MNC. You are an OCI card holder and a citizen of a European country. You had invested Rs 70 lakh in Indian mutual funds earlier through your NRI account. Now, as you are living and working in India, you are a resident under Indian tax rules. You are asking whether to redeem these funds and reinvest via your resident bank account. You also want to know what happens when you sell them.

Let’s break this down slowly and clearly.

Understand Your Residential Status First

As you are now living in India and working here,

You have likely become a Resident Indian for tax purposes.

This happens if you stay in India for more than 182 days in a financial year.

Since you are working full-time in India, you are now a Resident and Ordinarily Resident (ROR).

Your investment and tax treatment will now follow ROR status.

This is the starting point for any decision.

How Your Mutual Fund Investments Are Tagged Now

Your investments were made through your NRI account earlier.

Your KYC and mutual fund folios are still in NRI status.

You are now a Resident Indian, but your folios are not yet updated.

This mismatch between tax status and folio status must be corrected.

You should update KYC status to Resident Individual immediately.

Steps to Update Your KYC Status from NRI to Resident

Contact the mutual fund house or your MFD (Mutual Fund Distributor).

Submit a fresh KYC form with updated status: Resident Individual.

Provide PAN, Aadhaar, new bank account, and India address proof.

Submit the declaration form (Change in KYC details).

Mention that you are no longer an NRI.

Once this is done, your mutual fund status becomes aligned with your tax status.

Should You Redeem and Reinvest?

Now the most important part. Let us understand.

Avoid unnecessary redemption. Don’t sell only for switching status.

Redeeming means capital gains tax.

Then reinvesting means fresh exit load periods.

You may lose growth due to market timing gaps.

Instead, just change your status from NRI to Resident.

Let the investment continue as-is, now under updated KYC.

So, unless there’s poor performance or change in goal, do not redeem.

What If You Still Want to Redeem Some Funds?

If you do want to redeem for any reason:

Redemption proceeds can come to your resident bank account.

You need to update the folio to reflect resident status first.

Once status and bank account are updated, money will come into your Indian savings account.

It will not go to NRI account anymore after KYC update.

You do not need to use your old NRI account anymore.

This is fully allowed under Indian mutual fund rules.

Tax Rules You Should Be Aware Of

As a Resident Indian, tax rules apply as follows:

Equity Mutual Funds:

LTCG (Long-Term Capital Gains) above Rs 1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%.

STCG (Short-Term Capital Gains) taxed at 20%.

Debt Mutual Funds:

Both LTCG and STCG taxed as per income slab.

No indexation benefit now for new debt fund units.

Hybrid Mutual Funds:

If equity-oriented, they follow equity taxation.

If debt-heavy, taxed like debt funds.

You need to evaluate fund types before redemption.

Keep Using Regular Funds via MFD with CFP

Don’t shift to direct mutual funds.

Direct plans may appear low-cost but are high risk without guidance.

You can make mistakes in fund selection or exit timing.

Work with an MFD who holds a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) credential.

They will help you align your current plan with your goals.

They also manage asset allocation, rebalancing, and taxes.

Use regular plans for continued support and monitoring.

Why Not Shift to Index Funds or ETFs

Index funds only mirror the market.

They never beat the market.

There is no flexibility or active decision-making.

ETFs require demat, and timing is difficult.

You need active management as you build for India-based goals.

Use funds with fund managers who adjust for volatility.

Stick with actively managed funds in regular mode.

Check These Things Right Away

Update your mutual fund KYC status to Resident Individual.

Change bank details to Indian resident savings account.

Add nominee if not already done.

Review current fund performance.

Keep only funds that align with future goals.

Avoid multiple redemptions and reinvestments unless needed.

Your Rs 70 lakh corpus should now work as your India portfolio.

How to Use This Rs 70 Lakh Corpus Effectively

Divide based on goals: Short term, Medium term, Long term.

Short-term goals: Use hybrid or debt funds.

Long-term goals: Use diversified equity funds.

Emergency buffer: Use liquid or ultra-short funds.

Keep 6–12 months of expenses in safe funds.

Rest should grow in long-term growth funds.

Let a CFP guide this reallocation carefully.

What You Must Avoid Now

Don’t keep using old NRI bank account.

Don’t use NRO/NRE account for fresh investments.

Don’t invest through platforms that don’t allow status updates.

Don’t go for ULIPs or insurance-based investments.

Don’t try to handle all changes without help.

Don’t use index funds or ETFs now.

Take help. This is a key phase in your financial journey.

Investment Strategy Going Forward

Invest future savings via your resident account.

Work with MFD with CFP background.

Use goal-based SIPs.

Create a mix of hybrid, equity, ELSS and liquid funds.

Rebalance yearly.

Review performance every 6–12 months.

This gives structure and confidence to your portfolio.

Think About These Future Areas

Retirement corpus: How much do you need by 60?

Health corpus: Any health emergency fund needed?

Travel or lifestyle planning: Allocate for that too.

Parents' support: Any family support required?

Global exposure: If needed, consider international funds with rupee-hedge.

This gives your plan a 360-degree structure.

Finally

Don’t redeem mutual funds just to change status.

Just update KYC from NRI to Resident Individual.

Update bank account to local Indian savings account.

Your Rs 70 lakh stays intact, without tax loss or exit loads.

Work with a trusted CFP to align your new India goals.

Avoid direct and index funds completely.

Use regular funds with long-term guidance.

This is your fresh start in India.

Build on it steadily and smartly.

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

...Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9376 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 03, 2025

Money
Hello sir I have app 1cr debt and I have one flat 65lkhs and one more joint property 70lkhd and my salary is 1 lkh can you please suggest how to get out of this debt around 50 lkhs are credit cards
Ans: Reaching out shows your intent to correct things. That is the first right step. Debt stress can feel heavy. But with a structured plan, it can be solved.

Let us now evaluate your position and form a recovery roadmap.

Your Present Financial Snapshot
From your message, here’s what we understand:

Your salary is Rs. 1 lakh per month.

Total debt is around Rs. 1 crore.

Out of that, Rs. 50 lakhs is credit card debt.

You own one flat worth Rs. 65 lakhs.

You have a second joint property worth Rs. 70 lakhs.

This debt-to-income ratio is very high. Urgent action is needed.

Key Issues to Address
There are several concerns we need to resolve:

Monthly income is too low for this debt size.

Credit card interest is extremely high.

EMIs or minimum payments may eat up most of your income.

Assets are present, but not generating income.

Stress can affect your career, health, and relationships.

Let’s move step by step to find a practical way forward.

The Core Problem: High-Interest Credit Cards
Let’s first focus on the biggest danger—credit card debt.

Interest on credit cards is 36–42% yearly.

This is the costliest form of debt.

Most of your EMI goes to interest only.

Principal keeps growing silently.

Even minimum due is hard to manage after a point.

This debt must be brought down first. Otherwise, no plan will work.

Step 1: Prepare a Realistic Cash Flow Statement
Start by understanding your monthly numbers clearly:

List all income sources.

Write down your monthly fixed costs.

Include EMIs, card dues, utilities, groceries, etc.

Find how much is left as surplus.

If it is negative, that's a red flag.

Without cash flow clarity, recovery is not possible.

Step 2: Categorise Your Loans
Break your debts into 3 groups:

Group A – Credit Card Loans
Total around Rs. 50 lakhs.

Highest urgency.

Needs restructuring or consolidation.

Group B – Personal Loans or Unsecured Loans
If any, they come next in priority.

Usually carry high interest.

Group C – Secured Loans (Home Loans, Vehicle Loans)
They carry lower interest.

Can be addressed after managing Group A.

You can now begin a repayment plan with correct priority.

Step 3: Consider Debt Consolidation Options
You can reduce the number of loans and lower interest rate.

Explore These Options:
Talk to a bank about a personal loan to close credit cards.

Ask about top-up on existing home loan.

Get a low-interest loan from family or close friends.

Avoid NBFC payday loans or instant loan apps.

This step lowers interest burden and simplifies EMIs. You must act quickly here.

Step 4: Liquidate Idle or Unproductive Assets
You own two properties. Ask these questions:

Is any property lying vacant?

Can it be sold or rented out?

Can the joint property be monetised with co-owner help?

Is one flat giving rent below EMI value?

Emotionally, we all value property. But here, it’s blocking your financial freedom. A Certified Financial Planner can evaluate whether selling one asset to clear debt is beneficial.

Remember, real estate doesn’t solve cashflow issues. Right now, cashflow is critical.

Step 5: Create a 3-Year Repayment Strategy
Now make a written, visual plan.

Identify how much debt can be cleared in Year 1.

Allocate surplus each month in a fixed order.

Cut down on all non-essential expenses.

Avoid new purchases or lifestyle expenses.

Set up automatic EMI payments where possible.

Discipline is your best tool now. More than income, consistency matters here.

Step 6: Increase Income Sources
At Rs. 1 lakh monthly income, it is hard to repay Rs. 1 crore.

Find ways to increase cash inflow:

Take part-time work or freelance assignments.

Try to shift to a higher paying job.

Ask your employer about salary revision.

If spouse is not working, explore income from their side.

Rent out a portion of your house.

Even Rs. 10,000 extra monthly helps pay one EMI. Every rupee saved or earned counts now.

Step 7: Stop Using All Credit Cards Immediately
This is very important.

Lock or block all cards.

Stop minimum payments; switch to planned EMIs.

If needed, hand them to a trusted family member.

You must now treat credit card use as a red zone. Use only debit card and cash.

Step 8: Negotiate With Lenders Proactively
Most people avoid talking to lenders. But doing that helps.

Contact your credit card companies and:
Request for a settlement.

Ask for restructuring with lower interest.

Offer a one-time settlement if you can sell a flat.

Tell them your financial situation honestly.

Banks do help when they see sincere effort. But don't delay.

Step 9: Protect Your Mental and Emotional Health
Debt stress affects mind and body.

Don’t suffer in silence.

Discuss your plan with spouse or trusted family.

Take small wins seriously.

Stay focused on long-term stability.

Avoid shame or self-blame.

Many people go through financial lows. But most recover with planning.

What to Avoid at All Costs
Don’t take fresh loans to pay old ones.

Don’t borrow from unregulated apps or NBFCs.

Don’t cash out insurance policies unless absolutely needed.

Don’t go for chit funds or lottery-based schemes.

Stick to simple, proven methods. A Certified Financial Planner will help you stay on track.

Role of a Certified Financial Planner in Your Situation
You must not fight this alone. A Certified Financial Planner will help you:

Restructure your debts in right order.

Create a budget and monitor monthly.

Calculate ideal EMIs.

Plan asset sale timing.

Check CIBIL score impact.

Avoid long-term financial damage.

With a CFP, recovery is faster and more stable.

Final Insights
Your financial situation is serious but not impossible.

You have assets. You have income. You just need a practical plan.

Focus fully on:

Killing credit card debt.

Rebuilding monthly cash surplus.

Making tough but wise decisions.

Once the debt is cleared, you can start afresh. With patience and correct steps, you will succeed.

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

...Read more

Dr Nagarajan J S K

Dr Nagarajan J S K   |1566 Answers  |Ask -

NEET, Medical, Pharmacy Careers - Answered on Jul 03, 2025

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.

Close  

You haven't logged in yet. To ask a question, Please Log in below
Login

A verification OTP will be sent to this
Mobile Number / Email

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to

Resend OTP in120seconds

Dear User, You have not registered yet. Please register by filling the fields below to get expert answers from our Gurus
Sign up

By signing up, you agree to our
Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy

Already have an account?

Enter OTP
A 6 digit code has been sent to Mobile

Resend OTP in120seconds

x