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    You are at:Home » How to effectively diversify the retirement corpus?
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    How to effectively diversify the retirement corpus?

    ONS EditorBy ONS EditorMay 11, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
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    How can I effectively plan my father’s retirement, considering he is 57 years old and approaching retirement after a dedicated career?
    My parents own land valued at ₹2.5 crore (which they plan to sell), two properties worth about ₹90 lakh, an LIC policy with an expected maturity value of ₹35 lakh, mutual fund investments amounting to ₹12 lakh, and additional assets worth ₹6-7 lakh. In the next 2-3 years, we intend to sell the current properties and purchase a 3BHK apartment priced at around ₹1.75 crore. My parents maintain a modest lifestyle with monthly expenses of ₹45-55K, but I want to ensure they have the means to travel and enjoy their retirement fully. Our aim is to generate a steady monthly income of ₹1.2 lakh while growing their investment portfolio to beat inflation. What would be your suggestions for organizing investments, optimizing asset allocation, and establishing a reliable income stream for their retirement, including any advice on financial products, real estate decisions, or tax-efficient strategies?

    —Name withheld on request

    Congratulations on being so proactive about your parents’ retirement. It’s great to see children plan not just for their parents’ security but also for their happiness, including travel and a quality lifestyle. Let’s structure this carefully:

    Funds availability and passive income planning

    Your parents have built a solid base of assets over the years. Once they sell the land (valued at ₹2.5 crore) and the properties (worth ₹90 lakh), additional asset worth ₹7 lakh, considering the maturity of their LIC policy ( ₹35 lakh) and mutual fund investments ( ₹12 lakh growing to around ₹16 lakh in 3 years at 12% CAGR), their total asset value will be around ₹3.98 crore.

    However, some important deductions must be made:

    Purchase of new 3BHK: ₹1.75 crore

    Home interiors and setup: ₹25 lakh (important to factor this upfront)

    Emergency fund: ₹5 lakh (to be kept in fixed deposit or liquid funds)

    Health insurance: If not already in place, ensure a comprehensive health insurance policy (at least ₹20 lakh floater cover for both, with room rent flexibility and no disease sub-limits)

    After these expenses, your net investable corpus will be around ₹1.93 crore 

    Monthly income needed vs corpus

    You are targeting a monthly income of ₹1.2 lakh, which is excellent to provide for their current lifestyle and aspirational goals like travel.
    However, considering lifestyle inflation of 6% and an assumed life expectancy up to 90 years, the required corpus for sustaining ₹1.2 lakh per month, inflating over time, is approximately ₹2.57 crore.

    Since the available investable corpus is ₹1.93 crore, the income you can realistically generate initially is around ₹90,000 per month post-tax, inflation-adjusted.

    So, start with ₹90,000 monthly withdrawals and gradually step up withdrawals every few years in line with inflation.

    Boost returns slightly by asset allocation to beat inflation and ensure corpus longevity.

    Asset allocation strategy

    To achieve a balanced approach that aligns growth, income generation, and capital protection, a multi-bucket investment strategy can be highly effective. Here’s a breakdown:

    Bucket 1: ₹42,60,000 in debt mutual funds, offering stability and liquidity with a post-tax return of 7%. It’s best suited for short-term needs.

    Bucket 2: ₹47,41,000 in conservative hybrid mutual funds, blending debt and equity for moderate risk and a return of 8.5%, aimed at steady income with some growth.

    Bucket 3: ₹74,21,000 in hybrid and large-cap mutual funds, targeting medium- to long-term growth with a balanced risk profile and an expected return of 10%.

    Bucket 4: ₹28,78,000 to multi-cap equity funds, aiming for high growth across market caps with a higher risk, and an estimated return of 14%.

    This strategy spreads risk while aligning investments with different financial goals.

    The assumed average tax rate is 15% on all expected returns. It is very important to have a multi-asset investment strategy for retirement planning, wherein for the first five years, you invest in an asset class generating post-tax 7%. You can have a mix of guaranteed income schemes such as the senior citizen saving scheme and debt mutual funds. One can contribute ₹15 lakh maximum in SCSS, so your father and mother jointly can invest a total of ₹30 lakh for the next five years and get 8.2% annually, amounting to ₹2.46 lakh and the balance from ₹15.54 lakh from debt MFs.

    The issue with SCSS is that it is not inflation-adjusted, and the tax benefit is only up to 50,000 of the interest earned. You can completely avoid investing in it or invest ₹15 lakh in your father’s name and, after five years of lock-in, transfer the proceeds to conservative hybrid funds.

    a. Senior citizen savings scheme (SCSS) and debt mutual funds (target 7% post-tax):
    Invest ₹15 lakh lock-in for five years at ~8.2% return (taxable interest).
    It’s suitable because safety matters most for early retirement years. In case SCSS is chosen, you will have to withdraw money from bucket 2 for years 3 and 4, as ₹27 lakh invested in debt MF will enable three years of inflation-adjusted redemption. Choose debt mutual funds with high-quality sovereign and AAA bonds.

    b. Conservative hybrid mutual funds:
    Invest the bucket 2 funds in conservative hybrid mutual funds or a dynamic asset allocator fund, which invests more than 35% or more in equity and derivative to get a return of ~8.5–9% post-tax.

    c. Aggressive hybrid and large-cap mutual funds:
    Invest in aggressive hybrid and large-cap mutual funds for higher returns (10% post-tax) with higher equity exposure for a tenure of 8-9 years. And transfer the corpus to bucket 1 or  2 for enabling systematic withdrawals with safety of accumulated corpus amount.

    d. Multi-cap mutual funds:
      Invest the balance left in a multi-cap MF portfolio well diversified among large-, mid- and small-cap categories, which will ensure growth for the next 20 years at post-tax return of about 14%. Then transfer the available corpus to a safer MF category (bucket 1 or 2) for a smooth a systematic withdrawal.

    Systematic withdrawal plan

    Set up a systematic withdrawal plan (SWP) from the debt mutual funds, and withdraw monthly amounts to their bank account for regular expenses.

    Rebalance every 3–5 years: Shift funds from growth buckets (3 or 4) into safer buckets (1 or 2) as they approach requirement timelines.

    This ensures that even as they spend, their corpus is growing at a higher rate to outpace inflation.

    Additional recommendations

    Create an emergency fund: ₹5 lakh minimum, preferably parked in a liquid mutual fund or a sweep-in FD.
      This ensures liquidity without disturbing long-term investments.

    Comprehensive health insurance: If not already bought, immediately purchase a senior citizen health insurance plan. Premiums may be higher, but you must have health insurance to prevent paying high medical bills if any health issue arises.

    Will and estate planning: Encourage your parents to create a will to distribute assets easily later without any legal issues.

    Lifestyle: Plan a separate “travel fund” from any bonuses, maturity proceeds, or surplus gains. It ensures travel doesn’t disturb the primary corpus.

    You are already on the right path. Just by structuring the investments and reviewing them every few years, you can ensure that your parents live a secure, comfortable, and joyful retirement, full of travel, comfort, and dignity.

    By Nehal Mota, co-founder and CEO, Finnovate



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