How a youngster can build a balanced portfolio for life needs

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Arun is 27 years old. He started working about four years back.

His parents do well financially and are not dependent on him. Both are in government sector and have pensionable jobs.

He wants to contribute ₹5 lakh towards his sister’s wedding that is scheduled after six months. Additionally, he wants to set aside ₹5 lakh for own wedding that he expects to happen in the next 3-5 years. Any excess can go towards retirement.

Arun has bought life cover for ₹1 crore and a private health insurance plan of ₹10 lakh. His parents and sister are covered under separate plans.

His only savings are ₹8 lakh in EPF and ₹15 lakhs in bank fixed deposits. Of this, he has set aside ₹10 lakh towards emergency corpus. This can cover 12-15 months of his expenses.

Further, every month, ₹20,000 goes towards EPF. He can invest another ₹80,000 per month.

He knows he can invest aggressively given his age and income profile, but he is not clear about whether he will be comfortable with portfolio ups and downs.

Recommendations

Arun has got his insurance covered. He must, however, revisit the insurance portfolio once he gets married or assumes a financial liability such as loan. The emergency fund of ₹10 lakhs is robust too.

For his sister’s wedding, he can set aside ₹5 lakh from his fixed deposits. The wedding is too soon to take any investment risk.

For his wedding, he has just given a ballpark. Additionally, the timing is also not very certain. Assuming we have four years to save for his wedding, he will need to invest about ₹11,500 per month to accumulate his wedding fund. He can put this money in a bank recurring deposit or a debt mutual fund.

The rest of the amount (around ₹68,000) can go towards his long-term goals, including retirement. He is already contributing to EPF. Given his age, he must consider allocating money to growth assets such as equities.

At this life stage, it is important not to get bogged down with retirement planning calculations. Many life milestones are yet to come, and the best earning years are ahead of him. His time and energy are better spent on enhancing career and income prospects. From an investment perspective, he just needs to continue investing regularly.

He is new to risky investments and is unsure about his risk appetite. There are a few things that you can learn only through experience. Risk appetite is one such thing. While his age ensures this risk-taking ability is high,behavioural DNA defines his risk appetite otherwise. He wouldn’t know his true risk appetite unless he experiences market ups and downs first-hand.

Two approaches

There are two approaches he can take.

1. Not take any risk. Stick with EPF, PPF and bank fixed deposits. Given his age, such a conservative portfolio is not warranted. Moreover, he would never discover his risk appetite.

2. Take risk but reduce portfolio volatility. This is a better approach.

He can work with an asset allocation approach. From the incremental investments, he can route 50 per cent of the money towards equity and the remaining towards fixed income. He can start with a small allocation and inch up to 50-60 per cent in the equity investments.

After saving for his marriage expenses he can invest another ₹88,500 for long-term savings, out of which ₹20,000 already goes towards EPF. Assuming he wants to go with 50:50 allocation, ₹44,000 from his monthly savings can be in equity products.

For equity investments, he can

1. Start with a large-cap or a multi-cap fund. A simple large-cap index fund will do. Or

2. Pick a dynamic asset allocation fund or a balanced advantage fund. Or

3. Pick a single asset allocation fund that invests in domestic stocks, international stocks, and gold. Or

4. Pick a large-cap index fund, an international stock fund and a gold ETF/mutual funds. This replicates the third approach but is cumbersome to invest for a new investor.

The first approach is simple since picking up an index fund is an easy decision. For the second and third approach, he will have to pick up an actively managed fund and choosing one can be tricky. However, the second and third approaches are likely to be less volatile and easy to stick with. This is just the initial choice. As he gets more comfortable with equity investments, he can add different types of funds in the portfolio.

In the fixed income portfolio, he is already contributing to EPF. He can also invest in PPF. Beyond these two products, he can consider bank fixed deposits or a good credit quality and low duration debt mutual fund. For his income profile, debt MFs will be more tax efficient than bank FDs. However, debt funds carry higher risk than bank FDs.

The writer is a SEBI-registered investment advisor and founder of www.PersonalFinancePlan.in

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Financial Planning – How a single parent can meet her goals

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Nirmala, aged 37, single parent to two daughters aged 9 and 7, wanted to plan for her financial goals. Her monthly income was ₹1.4 lakh and expenses were ₹60,000 including travel and medical needs. She owns an apartment in South Chennai valued at ₹80 lakh. Nirmala began working since the last two years and has limited financial resources. Her goals were the usual ones, and she wanted to reach these comfortably without exposing the capital to risks in the long term. That said, she was willing to invest in large-cap equities for long-term goals such as retirement and wealth creation.

Goals, assets, risk profile

Nirmala

wanted to prioritise the following goals. She first wanted to set up an emergency fund of ₹7.2 lakh and also get health insurance for herself and daughters. Next, she intended to build a fund of ₹10 lakh each, at current cost, to be gifted to her daughters when they would turn 24. Nirmala also wanted to purchase gold worth ₹50,000 every year till her retirement. An annual retreat trip for ₹60,000 per annum was on her wish-list too. For the long-term, Nirmala wanted to set up a fund to provide for her retired life from 60 years of age, at a current cost of ₹30,000 per month, and also wanted to create a surplus fund at current cost of ₹50 lakh at her retirement in addition to the retirement corpus.

Nirmala’s asset position was as follows. Her EPF balance was ₹3 lakh with annual contribution of ₹1.6 lakh, and her PPF balance was ₹1.5 lakh with annual contribution of ₹1.5 lakh. She had cash in hand of ₹10 lakh, gold worth ₹20 lakh, a house valued at ₹80 lakh and a car worth ₹6 lakh.

Nirmala was focused on safety of capital but understood the importance of allocating a portion of investments to equity towards her long-term goals. But she was very particular about keeping the balance money in avenues that would avoid capital erosion despite opportunities for better returns.

Review and recommendations

We advised Nirmala to keep ₹7.2 lakh in fixed deposits (from her cash balance of ₹10 lakh) towards emergency funds. She could reserve the balance ₹2.8 lakh for her career growth needs that was imperative under the present conditions. We recommended that she take medical insurance with sum insured of ₹10 lakh for herself and her daughters, in addition to the employer-provided health cover. Nirmala is a divorcee and both her daughters are staying with her. Their education and other expenses are to be managed by the father and hence, Nirmala need not opt for life insurance.

To provide for the fund gift to her daughters when they turned 24, we advised Nirmala to invest in large-cap funds. She needed to invest ₹7,800 per month for 15 years towards the gift to the first daughter and ₹7,200 per month for 17 years towards the gift to the second daughter. At an expected annualised return of 9 per cent, Nirmala should be able to build a corpus of ₹27.6 lakh and ₹31.60 lakh respectively.

Taking into account her provident fund contributions, Nirmala had to invest ₹34,000 per month towards her retirement. She needed to accumulate ₹4.48 crore to retire at the age of 60, assuming a life expectancy of 90 years. It was assumed that her expenses till retirement would increase at 7 per cent annually. After retirement, with intended moderation in lifestyle, it was assumed that her expenses would increase at 6 per cent per annum. With Nirmala particular about avoiding capital erosion, it was suggested to set an expected return of 7 per cent per annum. Though this is achievable in the current environment, an exposure of 10 per cent to equity-related investments was advised to ensure adequate returns.

We advised Nirmala to use voluntary PF contribution and NPS to manage her fixed income allocation towards retirement, and large-caps and mid-caps for equity investments. The retirement corpus with 50:50 equity and debt allocation was planned with these products. Based on her cash flow with allocated investments towards her multiple goals, it may be difficult for Nirmala to start building her surplus fund, if some money has to be kept aside for unexpected expenses. But she could increase her savings in subsequent years to build a surplus fund at current cost of ₹50 lakh that would translate to ₹2.37 crore at her retirement. The PPF, not mapped to any of her goals, could also be used towards building the surplus.

Cash flow (₹)

Monthly

Income

1,40,000

Expenses

60,000

Surplus

80,000

Annual surplus

9,60,000

Funding needs & goals:

Annual retreat trip

60,000

Gold purchase

50,000

PPF

1,50,000

Gift to Daughter 1

93,600

Gift to Daughter 2

86,400

Retirement

4,08,000

Total

8,48,000

Balance

1,12,000

After funding the goals, the balance money could be used towards building long-term surplus fund or to have a better lifestyle. The choice was Nirmala’s to decide about how to deploy the money.

Planning for the future within three years of employment, especially for a late entrant on to the employment scene, was a wise thing for Nirmala to do. By adhering to the plan, she could avoid costly errors. We advised her to seek professional help to draft a will at the earliest.

It would take four to five years for Nirmala to reach the planned asset allocation of 40:60 in equity:debt in the pre-retirement phase. We advised her to maintain a ‘behaviour journal’ during this time to study her emotions on the volatility induced by equity-oriented investments. This would help her gauge her risk tolerance better and adjust asset allocation accordingly to equity, debt and other investments.

Asset allocation is the key to a successful financial plan. “History shows you don’t know what the future brings” is a quote to be recalled while thinking of asset allocation.

The writer is a SEBI-registered investment advisor at Chamomile Investment Consultants

Mind it!

A behaviour journal can help study emotions, gauge risk tolerance, and adjust asset allocation accordingly

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