Home Blog Page 28

7 Signs That You Are a Good Investor

“The investor’s chief problem – and even his worst enemy – is likely to be himself.” – Benjamin Graham

Every bull market creates confident investors. When markets are rising, almost every decision looks smart. The real test comes when a portfolio falls 30% in three months and you have to decide what to do next.

I have been advising clients for 25 years. In that time I have met hundreds of people who described themselves as good investors. Some of them were. Many of them had simply been investing during a period when markets rewarded almost everyone. The difference between the two groups became visible in 2008, in 2020, and in every correction in between.

The 7 signs below are not about your returns. They are about your process, your self-awareness, and your behaviour under pressure. Those are the things that actually determine long-term outcomes.

⚡ Quick Answer

A good investor is not someone who always picks winners. They are someone who knows their own knowledge limits, maintains a documented financial plan, keeps an emergency fund so they never have to sell investments at the wrong time, rebalances their portfolio systematically, invests in non-financial assets too, and has realistic expectations – including the humility to recognise when they need professional help.

Signs of a good investor - self-awareness, financial plan, emergency fund, rebalancing

Sign 1: You Know the Limits of Your Own Knowledge

The most dangerous investor is the one who does not know what they do not know. They pick stocks based on tips from a WhatsApp group and believe it is research. They invest in a new fund category because a TV anchor mentioned it and call it conviction.

A good investor has an accurate map of their own competence. They know which instruments they understand well enough to evaluate independently – and they know which ones require either deep learning or professional guidance. Acting within your actual circle of competence, not your imagined one, is one of the most protective behaviours in investing.

If you have a realistic, honest assessment of your investment knowledge – neither inflated by confidence nor deflated by unnecessary doubt – that is a strong sign. If you have made deliberate decisions about where to manage your own money and where to use a professional, that is better still.

Sign 2: You Know What You Own and Why

Can you list your investments – FDs, mutual funds, insurance policies, stocks, NPS, PPF – from memory or from a single document? Do you know the current value of each? Do you know why you hold each one?

A surprising number of investors have portfolios they cannot fully describe. Policies bought years ago and forgotten. Mutual fund folios from multiple AMCs with overlapping holdings. FDs at different banks with different maturity dates. Stock holdings from tips given by colleagues in 2018.

A good investor maintains a clear, current inventory of everything they own. Not because they are obsessive – because they are organised. An investment you cannot describe clearly is an investment you cannot manage well.

“The best investors I have worked with over 25 years share one trait above all others: they are honest with themselves. About what they know, what they own, how they behaved in the last correction, and what they actually need from their money.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

Sign 3: You Have a Written Financial Plan – and You Review It

Having investments is not the same as having a financial plan. A plan connects each investment to a specific goal, a timeline, a required corpus, and a current progress status. It tells you whether you are on track for retirement at 60, whether your child’s education corpus is adequate, and whether your emergency fund is properly sized.

A good investor has this plan – in writing – and reviews it at least once a year. The review is not just a performance check. It is a check on whether the goals themselves have changed, whether the timeline has shifted, and whether the investment allocation still makes sense given where things stand.

Most importantly: a good investor executes the plan consistently, not just when markets are favourable. The discipline to continue SIPs when markets are falling is worth more than any market-timing skill.

Do you have a written retirement plan that you review annually?

A RetireWise retirement plan gives you exactly this – a goal-linked, written plan with a review schedule built in from day one.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

Sign 4: You Have an Emergency Fund That You Leave Untouched

This is where most investors separate themselves from good investors. When a financial emergency hits – a medical expense, a sudden job loss, a family obligation – the bad investor liquidates their equity portfolio. Often at exactly the wrong time. Often at a significant loss.

A good investor has 6-12 months of expenses in a liquid, accessible instrument – a liquid fund, a short-duration debt fund, or a savings account – that is mentally and physically separate from their investment portfolio. This fund exists precisely so that no emergency ever forces them to disturb their long-term investments.

If the first thought in any financial emergency is “I’ll use the emergency fund,” that is a strong sign. If the first thought is “which investment should I sell,” that is a sign the emergency fund is either absent or insufficient.

Sign 5: You Rebalance Your Portfolio Systematically

Over time, a portfolio drifts from its original asset allocation. Equity funds that performed well become a larger proportion of the portfolio than planned; debt that underperformed becomes smaller. A portfolio that was 60-40 equity-debt may become 75-25 after a bull run.

A good investor rebalances – selling some of what has grown disproportionately and adding to what has underperformed – to restore the original intended allocation. This is counter-intuitive and emotionally difficult. It means selling things that are performing well and buying things that are not. It is one of the most evidence-backed behaviours in long-term investing.

If you review your asset allocation at least once a year and rebalance when it has drifted more than 5-10 percentage points from your target, you are doing something most investors never do.

Sign 6: You Invest Beyond Money

The investors who accumulate the most financial wealth are rarely those who spent every waking hour on their portfolio. They invested in their careers, which grew their income. They invested in their health, which reduced their medical liabilities. They invested in their relationships, which created informal support networks. They invested in knowledge, which reduced expensive mistakes.

Financial planning is not just about returns on capital. It is about the quality of the life the capital is meant to support. A good investor understands this balance – and does not sacrifice health, family, and personal growth in the relentless pursuit of an extra percentage point of return.

Sign 7: You Feel Appropriately Uncertain – Not Paralysed, Not Overconfident

Complete certainty about an investment is a warning sign, not a comfort. The market rewards those who think probabilistically – “this investment has a good chance of performing well over 10 years given these factors” – not those who think deterministically – “this stock will definitely go to Rs 500.”

A good investor holds their investment views with appropriate confidence: enough to act on them, not so much that they cannot revise them when new information arrives. They feel some uncertainty, which means they are thinking carefully. But that uncertainty does not paralyse them.

If you can hold a position with conviction while remaining genuinely open to evidence that you are wrong – and if you can act on that evidence when it comes – that is one of the rarest and most valuable qualities in investing.

Read – Timing the Market vs Time in the Market: Why Staying Invested Wins

Read – Low Risk High Return Investment: Why It Does Not Exist and What to Do Instead

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I honestly assess my investment knowledge level?

A useful test: can you explain, without looking anything up, how a debt mutual fund’s NAV is affected by interest rate changes? Can you calculate the approximate XIRR on a multi-year SIP investment? Can you read a mutual fund factsheet and identify concentration risk in the portfolio? If these questions reveal significant gaps, your investment knowledge is at a level where professional guidance adds more value than self-management. That is not a criticism – it is simply useful information for deciding how much time to invest in learning versus delegating.

What is the ideal emergency fund size for someone in their 40s?

The standard recommendation is 6 months of expenses. For someone in their 40s with EMIs, school fees, and family obligations, I typically recommend 9-12 months. The reasoning: job market recovery after a retrenchment in your 40s takes longer than in your 20s; medical emergencies become more likely and more expensive; and your investment corpus is large enough that forced liquidation at a market low has a significant impact on your retirement trajectory. Invest this in a liquid fund or short-duration debt fund – not in a savings account (lower returns) and not in fixed deposits with premature withdrawal penalties.

How often should I rebalance my portfolio?

The most practical approach is threshold-based rather than calendar-based. Set a trigger: if any asset class drifts more than 5-10 percentage points from its target allocation, rebalance. Review allocation once a year regardless of drift. This avoids both the problem of rebalancing too frequently (trading costs, tax implications) and too infrequently (portfolio becoming misaligned with your risk profile). For most investors, this means rebalancing roughly once every 1-2 years in normal markets, and potentially more frequently during sharp corrections or rallies.

Being a good investor is not about intelligence, income level, or how many hours you spend watching markets. It is about self-awareness, process discipline, and the ability to behave well when markets are behaving badly. All seven signs above are learnable. None of them require a finance degree. They require honesty about where you are today and a willingness to close the gaps.

Know yourself. Know what you own. Know your plan. The rest follows.

Want to become a more structured, plan-driven investor?

RetireWise builds retirement plans that address all 7 signs – from a written, goal-linked plan to a proper emergency fund to a systematic rebalancing schedule.

See Our Retirement Planning Service

💬 Your Turn

Honestly – how many of these 7 signs apply to you right now? Which one is the biggest gap you need to close? Share in the comments.

Good Enough Beats Perfect in Financial Planning – Every Time

I have watched more retirement plans fail from inaction than from bad investment choices. The client who spent three years researching which mutual fund was “the best” before starting any SIP. The executive who postponed buying term insurance because he was waiting to find the perfect policy. The couple who never wrote a Will because they could not agree on the exact distribution of every asset.

Each of them was searching for perfection. Each of them would have been significantly better off with a good-enough decision made promptly.

In financial planning, the cost of delay is concrete and calculable. The cost of a suboptimal fund choice is marginal by comparison.

The Core Principle

Carl Richards put it directly: “The goal isn’t to make the perfect decision about money every time, but to do the best we can and move forward. Most of the time, that’s enough.” In financial planning, a good decision executed today almost always outperforms the perfect decision made 2 years from now. Time in the market, time for compounding, and time for insurance to actually protect you – these cannot be recovered once lost.

Good vs Perfect Financial Decisions India

Where Perfectionism Shows Up in Financial Planning

The perfectionism trap takes different forms depending on the financial decision. Understanding the patterns helps you recognise when you are in one.

The fund selection paralysis. “I need to find the best mutual fund before I start.” This is the most common variant. The person spends months reading reviews, watching YouTube recommendations, comparing 5-year and 10-year returns across dozens of schemes, and ultimately decides to wait for more information before committing. Meanwhile, a peer who started a SIP in a top-quartile (not top-1%) diversified equity fund two years earlier is significantly ahead purely from compounding time – regardless of whether the specific fund chosen was optimal.

The reality: the difference in returns between a top-10 fund and the top-1 fund over a 20-year retirement horizon is marginal compared to the difference between starting today and starting in two years. A well-diversified large-cap or flexi-cap fund from a reputable AMC will serve most retirement goals adequately. Start. Optimise later if needed.

The insurance amount perfectionism. “I need to calculate the exact right sum assured before I buy term insurance.” This calculation can be done approximately in 20 minutes – 15 to 20 times annual income plus outstanding debts minus liquid assets. Yet people defer the purchase for months trying to arrive at a precise number, running scenarios, consulting calculators, and waiting for one more variable to be settled. During this time, they have no cover.

The reality: buying Rs. 2 crore of cover today when the “correct” number might be Rs. 2.3 crore is vastly better than having no cover while you calculate. Insurance protects against the unexpected – the unexpected does not wait for your calculations.

The retirement corpus target obsession. “I need to figure out exactly how much I need before I can plan properly.” This feels like due diligence. It is actually a sophisticated form of avoidance. The corpus target depends on assumptions about inflation, longevity, investment returns, healthcare costs, lifestyle choices, and a dozen other variables that cannot be perfectly known at age 40.

The reality: start with a reasonable estimate (25 to 30 times annual expenses is a sound starting framework), review it every few years, and adjust. The person who starts a Rs. 30,000 monthly SIP today based on an approximate target will have a far better retirement than the person who waits 3 years to start a Rs. 40,000 SIP based on a precise target.

The Will drafting delay. “We can’t agree on exactly how to split our assets, so we haven’t written the Will yet.” This is particularly dangerous because the consequences of the delay fall on the people you are trying to protect, not on you. A Will that distributes 60% to spouse and 20% each to two children, drafted and signed today, is infinitely better than the perfect Will you and your spouse plan to finalise after a few more family discussions.

“In my 25 years of advising, I have never met a client who wished they had started their SIP later or bought insurance more slowly. I have met many who wished they had started earlier. The regret of delay is consistent. The regret of imperfect early action is rare.”

When Good Enough Is Genuinely Good Enough

Good enough in financial planning means: a decision that puts you substantially ahead of not deciding, made with the information you currently have, that can be reviewed and improved later. This is not a concession to laziness. It is the recognition that in financial planning, unlike surgery, most decisions are reversible or improvable over time.

A SIP in a flexi-cap fund can be switched to a different fund. A term cover of Rs. 2 crore can be topped up when income rises. A Will can be updated as circumstances change. None of these need to be perfect at inception – they need to be started.

The genuinely irreversible decision in financial planning is the one you did not make. The SIP not started. The insurance not bought. The Will not written. Those cannot be undone.

The 80/20 Rule Applied to Financial Decisions

The 80/20 principle is directly relevant here. Roughly 80% of the value from most financial decisions comes from the first 20% of the thinking – the basic decision to start, to insure adequately, to diversify sensibly. The remaining 80% of the thinking time is spent on the marginal optimisation that produces 20% of the additional value.

This does not mean financial planning should be careless. It means the time allocation should match the value. Spend significant time on: whether to invest at all and how much, whether you are adequately insured, whether your Will exists and is updated, whether your retirement corpus is on track. Spend less time on: whether Fund A or Fund B is the better choice within the same category, whether to buy 40 or 45 more units in a given month, whether a 10.5% or 10.25% interest rate on a loan is preferable when both are within your budget.

A Good Plan Started Today

RetireWise builds retirement plans that are good and actionable – not perfect and delayed. If you have been waiting to start proper retirement planning until you have all the information, this is the sign to start. Explore how we work.

See Our Services

One question for you: Is there a financial decision you have been delaying because you are waiting to have all the information before acting? What would it take to make a good-enough decision on it today?

7 Ways to Reduce the Financial Side Effects of Marriage

“Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” – Leo Tolstoy

In my 25 years of practice, I have rarely seen a retirement plan destroyed by a bad market. I have seen dozens destroyed by a bad marriage – or more precisely, by a marriage where money was never discussed openly.

A client came to me a few years ago. His wife wanted to move back to their hometown after retirement. He had been planning to retire in Bengaluru. They had been married 22 years. Neither had ever explicitly said what retirement looked like to them. The financial plan was technically sound. But it was built on an assumption that turned out to be wrong.

Marriage changes everything about financial planning. Not because two incomes are better than one, though that helps. But because retirement is fundamentally a shared life – and a plan built on one person’s vision of that life will always be incomplete.

⚡ Quick Answer

The “side effects” of marriage on finances are real – lifestyle adjustments, shared goals that may conflict, combined and separate financial obligations, and the need for explicit money conversations that most couples avoid for years. The 7 ways to reduce these side effects: manage home finances like a small business, set goals together, make a joint financial plan, maintain some financial independence each, budget together, set basic ground rules, and talk openly about money regularly.

Marriage and financial planning - how to manage money together as a couple

Why Marriage Creates Financial Side Effects

A New York Times columnist once wrote something I have quoted to many couples over the years. He noted that marital happiness matters far more to personal wellbeing than professional success. You can recover from career setbacks if your marriage is strong. You cannot fully recover from an unhappy marriage even with professional triumphs.

Money is one of the most common sources of marital discord – in rich families and poor ones alike. Not because couples disagree about wanting financial security – everyone does. But because they hold different assumptions, different spending styles, different risk tolerances, and different visions of what a good life looks like. And they rarely make these differences explicit until a conflict forces the conversation.

The financial side effects of marriage are predictable. Lifestyle adjustments – whose spending habits win? Goal conflicts – urban retirement or hometown? Income management – joint accounts or separate? Responsibility gaps – one partner managing everything while the other stays uninvolved. These are not insurmountable problems. They are conversations that need to happen – proactively, before they become crises.

7 Ways to Reduce the Financial Side Effects of Marriage

1. Manage home finances like a business. This sounds unromantic but it is pragmatic. A family, like a business, has cash inflows (income) and cash outflows (expenses). When both partners track these together – with a simple shared statement of income and expenses each month – neither is surprised and both are accountable. The goal is not to police each other. It is to have a shared view of the financial reality you are both living in.

2. Set goals together – explicitly. Your retirement vision and your spouse’s retirement vision may not be the same. Where you live, what you do, how you spend, what you leave behind – these are questions that need explicit answers from both partners, not assumed alignment. Write them down. Review them every year. Discover the gaps before they surprise you at 55.

3. Make a joint financial plan. If you already have an individual financial plan, marriage requires revisiting it. A joint plan covers dual income (if both are working), shared financial goals, individual financial goals, emergency fund, life insurance on both lives, and nomination/will arrangements. It is not just two separate plans stapled together. It is a plan for the combined financial life of both people.

“The financial plans I have seen succeed most consistently are the ones made by both partners together – not just reviewed together, but built together. When both partners own the plan, both partners protect it.”

– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise

4. Maintain some financial independence. Joint accounts work for shared expenses. But both partners also need some financial space – a personal account where each manages their own discretionary spending without justification. The proportion is a conversation to have together, but the principle matters: financial interdependence should not become financial suffocation. A spouse who feels they must account for every personal expenditure often develops financial resentment that shows up in other ways.

5. Budget together. The household budget is the most practical expression of shared financial management. Both partners should know how much is coming in and where it goes – housing, groceries, transport, education, entertainment, savings. When budgeting is done by only one partner, the other is making spending decisions without full information. That creates recurring friction.

Does your retirement plan reflect both your vision and your spouse’s?

A RetireWise retirement plan engages both partners in the goal-setting process – ensuring the plan is built on shared vision, not assumed consensus.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

6. Set ground rules for financial decisions. Some examples of ground rules that couples find useful: purchases above a certain threshold (say Rs 10,000) require a discussion before commitment; neither partner guarantees a loan for a third party without the other’s agreement; income windfalls (bonuses, inheritance) are split between a shared goal and individual discretion; financial information is shared openly – no hidden accounts, no hidden debt.

One rule I recommend universally: both partners should know where all the money is. Which bank, which mutual fund folio, which insurance policy, which NPS account. This is not about surveillance – it is about continuity. If one partner becomes incapacitated or dies, the other must be able to manage. A financial emergency is made significantly worse when the surviving partner has to simultaneously deal with grief and discover where the family’s assets are held.

7. Talk about money regularly. Monthly is ideal. Quarterly is the minimum. The conversation does not have to be long – 30-45 minutes reviewing what was spent, what was saved, whether goals are on track, whether any assumptions need revisiting.

Also talk about scenarios: What if one of us loses income for 6 months? What if we have an unplanned medical expense of Rs 10-15 lakh? What if a parent needs financial support? These conversations, when had proactively, build alignment. When they happen reactively – in the middle of the crisis they concern – they often produce conflict instead.

Read – Why You Must Involve Your Spouse in Financial Planning

Read – 7 Financial Planning Mistakes That Are Costing You Retirement Security

Frequently Asked Questions

Should married couples have joint accounts or separate accounts?

Both, typically. A joint account for household expenses (rent/EMI, groceries, utilities, children’s education) works well because both partners see the full household picture. Separate personal accounts for individual discretionary spending preserves autonomy. Many couples also maintain separate investment folios and a joint emergency fund. The exact structure depends on income levels, spending styles, and trust – but the principle of transparency in shared finances combined with some individual financial space serves most couples well.

How do we handle finances when one partner earns significantly more than the other?

The most common and equitable approach: agree on a household expense amount that both contribute to proportionally (not equally) based on income, and maintain separate discretionary spending from what remains. The higher-earning partner contributing more to shared expenses while both maintain personal financial space respects the income difference without making either partner feel financially subordinate. The key is explicit agreement – what the split is, why, and how it will be revisited if income changes.

What financial documents should both partners know about?

Both partners should have a list of: all bank accounts (account numbers, bank names), all mutual fund folios and demat accounts, all insurance policies (life, health, vehicle) with policy numbers and nominee details, NPS account details, PPF account, outstanding loans (home, vehicle, personal), property documents and their location, the family’s will and its location, and contact details of the financial advisor, accountant, and lawyer. A simple one-page financial summary document, updated annually, protects the family in any emergency.

The financial side effects of marriage are real – but they are manageable. Every one of the 7 steps above is fundamentally about one thing: making the implicit explicit. Making assumptions into conversations. Making solo decisions into shared ones. The couples I have seen build lasting financial security are the ones who did this consistently – not just at marriage, but every year through the decades that followed.

Money conversations are not unromantic. They are the most practical form of care.

Want a retirement plan that your spouse helped build?

RetireWise engages both partners in the planning process – aligning goals, clarifying assumptions, and building a plan that both people own.

See Our Retirement Planning Service

💬 Your Turn

How often do you and your spouse talk explicitly about money? Are you managing home finances as a team or is one person carrying the full load? Share in the comments.

Equity Markets at All-Time Highs: What Should You Actually Do?

“The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient.” – Warren Buffett

Every time the market touches a new all-time high, I receive a wave of calls. Some are from investors who want to exit because “the market is too high.” Others are from investors who want to put in a large lump sum because “the market is going up.” Both groups, in my experience, usually make the wrong decision.

I have watched this pattern through multiple market cycles: the 2007-08 bull run and crash, the 2013 recovery, the 2017-18 run, the 2020 crash and recovery, the 2021-24 bull market. Each time, investors at all-time highs split into the same three groups – and the group that does best is almost never the one you would expect.

⚡ Quick Answer

When markets are at all-time highs, most investors react emotionally rather than strategically. The three common reactions – panicking and exiting, staying paralysed, or trying to time a re-entry – all underperform the fourth option: continuing the existing plan without change. Markets spending time at all-time highs is normal, not alarming. The question to ask is not “is the market too high?” but “am I on track for my financial goals at my planned asset allocation?”

Equity markets at all time high - what investors should do

The Three Investor Reactions at Market Highs

Category 1: Investors who invested at the previous peak and now want to exit at breakeven. These investors entered during the last bull run, watched the market correct, spent months or years waiting to recover, and now that they are at or near breakeven, they want out. “I will never invest in equities again.”

The painful truth: these investors have experienced all the volatility of equity without capturing most of the returns. They bought near the top, held through the pain of the correction, recovered to roughly where they started, and are about to exit just as the next phase of returns begins. They will watch from the sidelines as markets continue higher, then re-enter at the next peak – and repeat the cycle.

Category 2: Investors who believe in equities but think the current market is too high. These investors want to time the market. They will wait for a correction before investing. They know the general principle of “buy low, sell high.” The problem is that no one knows when or how much the market will correct. Waiting for a 10% correction that does not come for 18 months means 18 months of returns missed. Waiting for a 20% correction that comes after a further 30% rise means the “correction” price is still higher than today’s.

The data on market timing is consistent and sobering: missing the best 10 trading days in any decade typically reduces long-term returns by 50% or more. Those best days often occur immediately after the worst days – which is precisely when the market-timer is sitting out.

Category 3: Investors who stay invested and keep their SIPs running. These investors do not call me in a panic. They continue investing because their financial plan tells them to, not because they have a view on where the market goes next. Their SIPs run automatically. They rebalance once a year. They review their goal progress – not the Sensex level.

Across every market cycle I have observed over 25 years, this group consistently builds the most wealth.

The market does not care about your entry point. Time in the market does.

RetireWise builds retirement plans that work at market highs, market lows, and every point in between – because the plan is built around goals, not market levels.

See How RetireWise Plans for Long-Term Goals

Why “The Market Is at an All-Time High” Is a Misleading Statement

A market that never reached new all-time highs would be a market in permanent decline. All-time highs are the normal condition of a healthy equity market over long periods. The Sensex has spent the majority of its history at or near all-time highs, because in any growing economy, corporate earnings grow, and market values follow.

The Sensex was at “an all-time high” of 5,000 in 1999. An investor who refused to invest then because the market was “too high” would have missed the entire run to 80,000+ by 2024. Every single point along that journey was, at the time, close to an all-time high.

The relevant question is not “is the market at an all-time high?” The relevant question is “are valuations stretched relative to earnings growth?” Even this question – which requires analysing PE ratios, earnings trajectories, and macroeconomic conditions – is best left to fund managers with research teams rather than individual investors trying to time entry and exit.

What Market Timing Costs

The cost of market timing is not always visible because the counterfactual – what would have happened if you had stayed invested – is invisible. The investor who exits at the market high and misses the next 30% rally does not see that loss on their statement. They see the cash in their savings account. The cost is opportunity foregone, not principal lost.

This is why market timing continues despite overwhelming evidence against it: the losses are invisible and the feeling of safety is tangible. The investor who exits at a market high feels prudent. The investor who stays invested and sees the market fall 15% temporarily feels anxious. The outcome over 10 years consistently favours the one who felt anxious over the one who felt prudent.

What You Should Actually Do at Market Highs

Continue your SIPs without interruption. Market highs do not change the case for systematic investing. Your SIP will buy fewer units at high prices and more units when the market eventually corrects. This is rupee cost averaging working as designed.

Rebalance if your asset allocation has drifted. A significant market rally may have pushed your equity allocation above your target – say from a planned 60% to an actual 70%. Rebalancing back to 60% by moving some equity gains to debt or liquid funds is a disciplined, non-speculative response to a high market.

Review your goal timeline, not the market level. If your retirement is 15 years away and your corpus is on track, a market at all-time highs is not your problem. If your retirement is 3 years away and your corpus is heavily in equity, reducing equity exposure progressively is appropriate – not because the market is high, but because your time horizon no longer supports maximum equity risk.

Read: How an Economic Crisis Can Be Beneficial for Long-Term Investors

The investor who waits for the perfect time to invest is waiting for something that does not exist. The perfect time to invest was yesterday. The second-best time is today – in line with your existing plan, at your existing asset allocation, without any heroic market calls.

Time in the market. Not timing the market.

Is your current portfolio positioned for your goals – or positioned around your market view?

A RetireWise plan is built around your specific retirement goal, timeline, and risk capacity – not around where the Sensex is today.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

Your Turn

Which investor category do you fall into when markets are at highs – and has market timing ever actually worked for you over a 5-year period? The honest answers are often more instructive than any theory. Share in the comments.

10 ways to prevent a Debt Trap or come out of one

What is Debt Trap? I don’t think I need to explain this…

Before I lay down the rules, I confess that no single point or remedy below claim to be a solution. But yes, a combination of these steps can be used to eradicate a debt problem. This is an exhaustive list, hence you may not relate to some steps. Ignore those but do give them a reading as situations change and you must be aware rather than feel sorry later. So please go through the steps carefully and apply them to your own life or share them with people whom you know are facing a debt trap.

Image courtesy of ratch0013 / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

[ss_click_to_tweet tweet=”10 ways to prevent a Debt Trap or come out of one” content=”” style=”default”]

10 top tips to avoid Debt Trap

  1. The first rule is to use cash only. By cash I mean your own cash, which you have earned or invested. This does not mean that you should not go in for a loan at all. Stick to two basic loans- home and auto loans.
  2. Never go overboard. In fact, do save a little money regularly instead of spending all the money you earn. Saving does not mean that you save to bail yourself out one day. It should be a self-induced disciplined activity.
  3. In case you feel that debt has started surfacing, try to save as much as possible. Start saving at least 50% of your income. So, for example, if you see you marriage date has been fixed and you have to take a loan to finance it, start saving immediately. The cash will help you minimize the loan.
  4. Always be aware of your liabilities. Your mind should be clear on how much you owe to the world around you. It has been seen that ignorance about how much you owe leads to debt augmentation. So, even though you rely on the bank to calculate the your monthly balance on your credit card, after each swipe for a purchase you should have a fair idea of how much your credit card bill will be on the due date. It is always useful to make a list of people whom from whom you have borrowed money and you should be aware of the terms and condition of the loans.
  5. Try to live with one credit card only. Or at max two. More than this will cause wastage and confusion. One of my bosses used to boast that he has 11 credit cards with a total credit limit of Rs18 lakh. He was very proud of this fact and used to say to me “I carry 18 lakh in my pocket”. I did not respond to him that time, as I myself was not so aware of credit card debts. However, if he meets me today, I would simply tell him, “Now a days, banks are running short of secured places to keep their cash, so they have converted it into plastic and have kept it with the general public. In case it is robbed, the public can be blamed”.
  6. Before reading further, immediately cut the extra credit cards and discontinue them by paying the dues and informing your bank that you won’t require them. Your bank may not like the idea and may try to woo you back with some freebees like an enhanced limit. Do not fall into the trap. Walk out of it by committing yourself to one or just two credit cards.
  7. If you have issues while settling the dues on the credit cards that you wish to discontinue, speak to the issuer. Request them to convert the balance into EMIs and destroy the card the moment you clear all the equated payments. If you have a large number of cards with small payments pending on each, you may transfer the balances to one and then settle it.
  8. You credit card bill must be settled every month with the present month’s earnings or salary. The balance should not spill over to the next month. So, instead of paying the minimum dues partially, pay the entire amount due.
  9. Never pay off credit card dues from an emergency fund. As discussed, it should be paid from that very month’s salary. In case it is exceeding your capacity to repay from your salary, instead of using emergency cash, resort to EMIs to repay. If EMIs are costly, pay from the emergency fund and replenish it with the EMIs and then don’t dip into it again.
  10. Never allocate more than 20% to EMIs of one loan. If you are taking a housing loan, the EMI should not be more than 20% of your income. (you may say its not possible, you may be right but…) Normally, housing loans are the biggest type of loan a person undertakes, so if you are able to tame this one, your chances of becoming a winner are bright.

Getting into the debt trap is easy but coming out is a herculean task so it will be better that live in your means. Please share your experience in the comment section.

For more personal finance tips, check my book “Financial Life Planning”.

How To Live & Die — Khushwant Singh’s 8 Rules for a Happy Life

Khushwant Singh died on March 20, 2014, at the age of 99. He was India’s most irreverent writer — columnist, novelist, historian, and proud whisky drinker. He left behind this verse that he loved to recite:

Khushwant Singh — how to live and die

The horse and the mule live for 30 years, and know nothing of wines and beer.
The goat and sheep at 20 die, and never get a taste of Scotch and rye.
The cow drinks water by the tonne, and at 18 is mostly done.
The cat in milk and water soaks, and then in 12 short years it croaks.
The modest, sober, bone-dry hen, lays eggs for others, then dies at 10.
All animals are strictly dry; they sinless live and swiftly die.
But sinful, ginful, rum-soaked men survive for three score years and ten.
And some of them, though very few, stay pickled till they’re 92.

When I first read these lines two years before his death, I dismissed him. He was the son of Shobha Singh Ji — a man who owned half of Delhi — so what did he know of real hardship? His love for single malt and golden fried prawns was famous. Easy to be philosophical, I thought, when life has been generous.

Then he died. And the obituaries came. And in one of them, someone shared an article he had written at the age of 96 on how to stay happy. Eight simple points. Written by a man who had watched an entire century unfold — Partition, Independence, Emergency, liberalisation, the rise of a new India — and had lived through all of it with his eyes wide open.

I read those eight points and changed my mind about him completely. These are not the thoughts of a pampered man. These are the distilled observations of someone who had seen enough of life to know what actually matters. I share them here with my own commentary — because every single one of his points has a direct financial dimension that most people miss.

⚡ The Eight Points

Good health. A healthy bank balance. Your own home. An understanding companion. No envy. No gossip. A meaningful hobby. Daily introspection. Khushwant Singh wrote these at 96. They hold up completely in 2026 — and every single one has a financial angle that most people overlook.

How to Stay Happy — Khushwant Singh’s Eight Points, with My Notes

“I’ve often thought about what it is that makes people happy — what one has to do in order to achieve happiness.”

First: Good Health

“First and foremost is good health. If you do not enjoy good health, you can never be happy. Any ailment, however trivial, will deduct something from your happiness.”

(Health is now the most precious and expensive asset a person can hold. I see youngsters dealing with hypertension, diabetes, insulin resistance — all by their early 40s. The process of earning a comfortable life takes a systematic toll on health. Be in a career or business that does minimal damage to your body. Build investment practices that keep you calm, not anxious. A retirement corpus built on a broken body is a poor trade.)

Second: A Healthy Bank Balance

“It need not run into crores, but it should be enough to provide for comforts, and there should be something to spare for recreation — eating out, going to the movies, travel and holidays in the hills or by the sea. Shortage of money can be demoralising. Living on credit or borrowing is demeaning and lowers one in one’s own eyes.”

(Notice he did not say “maximize your net worth.” He said enough — with some to spare. The answer to “how much is enough?” is goal formulation. Know what amount you need for which goal. Arrive at a savings rate that gets you there. Debt is a burden that quietly chips away at your self-respect. Even if you repay your credit card every month, ask yourself: why are you resorting to short-term credit for monthly consumption in the first place?)

Third: Your Own Home

“Rented places can never give you the comfort or security of a home that is yours for keeps. If it has garden space, all the better. Plant your own trees and flowers, see them grow and blossom, and cultivate a sense of kinship with them.”

(I agree — property is part of a complete asset allocation. Emotionally, there is no question that a home of your own provides a sense of permanence and dignity that renting cannot replicate. The financial question is not whether to own, but when, where, and at what price. Those are the calculations that matter — and the ones most people skip because the emotional pull is so strong.)

Fourth: An Understanding Companion

“If you have too many misunderstandings, it robs you of your peace of mind. It is better to be divorced than to be quarrelling all the time.”

(An understanding partner is the most underrated variable in a financial plan. Your spouse should be involved in every significant financial decision — not just informed after the fact. And Khushwant Singh is right that a bad marriage is expensive in every sense. Divorces are financially and emotionally draining. Choose your life partner with as much care as you give your largest investment.)

Planning a life — not just a portfolio?

At RetireWise, we help senior executives build retirement plans that account for life as it actually is — health costs, family obligations, the home question, and what “enough” really means for you.

Explore RetireWise

Fifth: Stop Envying Others

“Stop envying those who have done better than you in life — risen higher, made more money, or earned more fame. Envy can be corroding; avoid comparing yourself with others.”

(Stick to your own goals. Someone else has a different life, a different starting point, and different priorities. Do not get pulled into buying a bigger car, taking a more expensive holiday, or making an aggressive stock bet because a peer did it. Their financial plan is not your financial plan. The day you stop comparing is the day your financial decisions get dramatically cleaner.)

Sixth: Avoid Gossip

“Do not allow people to descend on you for gup-shup. By the time you get rid of them, you will feel exhausted and poisoned by their gossip-mongering.”

(In financial life, gup-shup is herd mentality. The WhatsApp group tip, the neighbour’s hot stock, the relative’s guaranteed scheme — all gossip in financial clothing. Advice is always free to give and cheap to take. But advice worth acting on carries a price — the price of qualified, accountable, fee-based counsel from someone who has skin in getting it right.)

Seventh: Cultivate a Meaningful Hobby

“Cultivate a hobby or two that will fulfil you — gardening, reading, writing, painting, playing or listening to music. Going to clubs or parties to get free drinks, or to meet celebrities, is a criminal waste of time. It’s important to concentrate on something that keeps you occupied meaningfully.”

(Every rupee spent on a meaningful hobby is money well spent. Every rupee spent on impressing others is money that evaporates. Beyond the financial dimension — a meaningful hobby is your retirement plan’s greatest ally. Retirement without purpose is retirement without happiness. The people I see most at peace in their 60s are the ones who had a second life waiting for them beyond the office.)

Eighth: Daily Introspection

“Every morning and evening devote 15 minutes to introspection. In the mornings, keep the mind absolutely quiet.”

(Every serious thinker on happiness — from the Stoics to modern psychology — arrives at this same point. Elizabeth Gilbert captured it well in Eat, Pray, Love: “We search for happiness everywhere, but we are like Tolstoy’s fabled beggar who spent his life sitting on a pot of gold, under him the whole time. Your treasure — your perfection — is within you already. But to claim it, you must leave the busy commotion of the mind and abandon the desires of the ego and enter into the silence of the heart.” The financial version of this is simple: a quiet mind makes far better long-term decisions than a reactive one.)

Khushwant Singh — how to live a happy life with financial wisdom

A man who lived to 99 and wrote these eight points at 96 understood something most financial plans miss entirely: money is a means, not a destination. Khushwant Singh never confused the two.

Plan your finances so you can live his eight points — not so you can afford to ignore them.

💬 Your Turn

Which of Khushwant Singh’s eight points do you find hardest to actually live — not just agree with? Share below.

Last Minute Tax Saving Tips Before the Financial Year Ends (2026 Update)

“The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax.” – Albert Einstein

It is end of the financial year. Clients call with the same question every March: “What can I still do to reduce my tax?” No matter what income bracket, no matter how many planning conversations we have had during the year, tax saving always becomes urgent in February and March.

If you had started earlier, many more options would have been available – salary restructuring, systematic ELSS investments, NPS contributions spread across the year. But since you are here now, let us work with what is still possible.

⚡ Quick Answer

Last-minute tax saving before March 31 can still be done through: submitting expense proofs to your employer (HRA, home loan, tuition fees), topping up health insurance to claim Section 80D, making an ELSS investment before the year ends (Section 80C, Rs 1.5 lakh limit), and contributing to NPS for the additional Rs 50,000 deduction under Section 80CCD(1B). Important 2026 update: dividends from mutual funds and ELSS are now taxable at your slab rate, not tax-free as they were before 2020. Choose the growth option.

Last minute tax saving tips before financial year ends India

Step 1: Submit Expense Proofs Before the Deadline

Your employer cannot give you the benefit of these deductions unless you have submitted the documentation. Many salaried employees lose deductions they are fully entitled to simply by not submitting proofs on time.

Submit the following immediately if you have not already: rent receipts and rental agreement for HRA (if you pay rent), home loan statement showing interest paid and principal repaid (for Section 24 and Section 80C), tuition fees paid for up to two children (Section 80C), and any medical expenses for specified diseases for yourself or dependents (Section 80DDB).

Your employer’s HR or payroll team will have a deadline – usually mid-to-late January or early February. Miss it, and you claim these deductions yourself at ITR filing time, which is fine but requires more documentation and effort.

Step 2: Use Section 80C (Up to Rs 1.5 Lakh)

The Section 80C deduction limit is Rs 1.5 lakh per year. This includes EPF contributions (your share), home loan principal repayment, tuition fees, life insurance premiums, PPF, NSC, and ELSS investments.

Most salaried professionals partially fill this through EPF and home loan principal already. Check your remaining headroom and consider an ELSS investment to top it up before March 31. ELSS has a 3-year lock-in but gives you the equity growth potential alongside the tax benefit – it is generally the most efficient use of remaining 80C capacity.

Note for 2026: ELSS dividends are taxable at your slab rate since the abolition of DDT in 2020. Always choose the growth option for ELSS investments. The old “dividend option is tax-free” advice no longer applies.

Step 3: Section 80CCD(1B) – NPS for an Additional Rs 50,000

This deduction is over and above the Rs 1.5 lakh Section 80C limit. An NPS contribution of up to Rs 50,000 in Tier 1 gives you an additional deduction entirely separate from 80C. For someone in the 30% tax bracket, this saves Rs 15,000 in tax (plus surcharge if applicable).

The caveat: NPS is locked until age 60, has a mandatory annuity requirement at maturity (minimum 40% must be annuitised), and the equity allocation is capped at 75% for active choice. Evaluate whether this fits your overall retirement structure before treating it purely as a tax-saving instrument.

Tax saving done at the last minute costs more than tax planning done in April.

RetireWise builds financial plans that include tax efficiency as a year-round strategy – not a February panic exercise. The savings over 15 years are substantial.

See How RetireWise Integrates Tax Planning

Step 4: Section 80D – Health Insurance Premium

The current Section 80D limits are Rs 25,000 per year for health insurance premiums for yourself, spouse, and dependent children. If your parents are below 60, an additional Rs 25,000. If your parents are senior citizens (60+), the additional limit is Rs 50,000.

The total possible deduction if you and your senior citizen parents are all covered: Rs 75,000 per year. This is often underutilised because people do not cover their parents or keep inadequate cover.

An additional deduction of Rs 5,000 (within the overall limit) is available for preventive health checkups for yourself, spouse, children, and parents. This does not require insurance – it applies to actual health checkup expenses.

Step 5: Section 54 – Capital Gains from Property

If you sold a residential property and had long-term capital gains this financial year, you have options before March 31. You can reinvest the gains in another residential property within 2 years (or construct within 3 years), or deposit the gains in a Capital Gains Account Scheme before filing your return to preserve the exemption window.

Alternatively, invest the capital gains within 6 months in NHAI or REC bonds under Section 54EC (maximum Rs 50 lakh, 5-year lock-in) to claim the exemption.

Capital gains tax planning on property is complex and time-sensitive. Consult your CA before March 31 if this applies to you.

The Most Important Point: Saving Tax Is Not the Same as Good Investing

The worst financial decision I have seen clients make is putting money into endowment insurance policies or ULIPs purely for the Section 80C benefit. The tax saving does not justify a product with poor returns, high charges, and inflexible terms.

Tax saving should always be done with instruments that serve your financial goals independently of the tax benefit. ELSS makes sense because it is a well-regulated equity investment with a reasonable lock-in. PPF makes sense because it is a safe, long-term debt instrument. These remain good investments even without the tax benefit. An endowment policy does not.

Read: How Your Family Can Help You Reduce Tax Liability

Last-minute tax saving is better than no tax saving. But April tax planning is better than last-minute tax saving. The goal is to make this the last year you are doing this in March.

Save wisely. Not just quickly.

What would year-round tax planning save you over 15 years?

For a senior executive in the 30% bracket, it is often Rs 15-25 lakh over a working career. A RetireWise conversation includes exactly this calculation.

Book a Free 30-Min Call

Your Turn

What is the one tax-saving step you always leave to the last minute – and keep telling yourself you will do differently next year? Share in the comments. And if this is your last year doing it at the last minute, I want to hear that too.

10 Financial Priorities for Your 30s: What Actually Matters (2026 Guide)

At 30, most people know they should be doing something with their finances. They are earning, perhaps buying their first home or car, watching colleagues talk about SIPs and NPS. What is less clear is what sequence matters most – what to do first, what can wait, and what the decisions you make in your 30s actually cost you if you get them wrong.

I asked a client recently what he had done financially in his 30s. He listed a home loan, some FDs, a few LIC policies bought under pressure in March, and an SIP he started and stopped twice. He was 52 when we met, with a retirement corpus significantly behind where it should have been for his income level. “If I had known what to focus on,” he said, “I would have done it differently.”

This is the list I wish someone had given him at 30.

Why Your 30s Are the Most Important Financial Decade

A Rs. 15,000 SIP started at 30 and grown at 12% CAGR produces approximately Rs. 5.2 crore by age 60. The same Rs. 15,000 SIP started at 40 produces Rs. 1.5 crore by age 60. Same money, same returns, 10 years of difference. Your 30s are not just one decade of saving – they are the decade whose compounding reaches furthest into your retirement. What you do in your 30s shapes every decade after it.

10 Financial Mantras for Your 30s India 2026

10 Financial Priorities for Your 30s

1. Get Adequately Insured – Term and Health

Your 30s are when dependents arrive – a spouse, children, perhaps ageing parents becoming financially reliant on you. This is also when a term insurance policy is cheapest. A Rs. 1.5 crore term plan for a 32-year-old non-smoker costs Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 12,000 annually. The same cover at 42 costs Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 30,000. Buy early, when you are healthy and premiums are low.

Health insurance as an individual (not just the employer group cover) is the second priority. Employer cover disappears when you change jobs or retire. A family floater with a base sum insured of Rs. 10 to 15 lakh, supplemented by a super top-up, protects the household and is most affordable to buy before pre-existing conditions appear.

2. Build an Emergency Fund Before Investing

Three to six months of household expenses in a liquid fund or savings account, accessible within 1 to 2 days. This fund is non-negotiable before long-term investments – without it, any unexpected expense (medical, job loss, car breakdown) becomes a debt event. Build it once. Leave it alone except for actual emergencies. Replenish it fully after any draw-down.

3. Start Retirement SIPs – Do Not Wait for the “Right” Amount

The single most valuable financial decision of your 30s is starting equity SIPs early. The corpus calculation does not need to be precise – start with whatever your monthly surplus allows after mandatory expenses and EMIs. The compounding time you preserve in your 30s is irreplaceable in your 40s and 50s.

For asset allocation: the 100-minus-age rule (70% equity at age 30) is an oversimplification. A more nuanced approach for a 30-year-old with a 30-year horizon is 70 to 80% equity (flexi-cap, large-cap, or diversified equity funds) and 20 to 30% debt (PPF, NPS debt allocation, short-duration funds). Review and rebalance every 3 to 5 years. Reduce equity as you approach retirement, not on a rigid age-based formula but based on your actual distance from retirement and corpus adequacy.

4. Open an NPS Account

National Pension System Tier 1 offers the best tax efficiency for long-term retirement savings. Section 80CCD(1B) allows an additional Rs. 50,000 deduction over and above the Rs. 1.5 lakh Section 80C limit – entirely for NPS. At a 30% tax bracket, this saves Rs. 15,000 per year in tax while building a retirement corpus. Under the new tax regime (where 80C is not available), NPS under the employer contribution route (Section 80CCD(2)) remains available and valuable. Open a Tier 1 account. Contribute consistently. Leave it untouched until retirement.

5. Get Tax Planning Right From the Start

The new tax regime vs old tax regime decision now requires an annual assessment. For most salaried individuals in their 30s with a home loan, Section 80C investments, and HRA, the old regime may still be preferable until income crosses Rs. 15 to 20 lakh. Above that, the new regime’s lower rates often win. Calculate both before the financial year begins, not in February when you are in panic-buying mode.

Avoid the classic mistake: buying insurance policies in March to “save tax.” Tax-saving should be an outcome of investing in the right instruments for your goals, not the primary reason to invest in any instrument.

6. Write a Will

It takes 2 to 4 hours and costs Rs. 3,000 to Rs. 8,000 via an online service. Most people in their 30s with a child, a home loan, and growing financial assets do not have a Will. The consequences of dying intestate are procedural hassle and potential family disputes for the people you are trying to protect. Write it. Update it when circumstances change.

7. Address Expensive Debt Aggressively

A home loan at 8.5 to 9.5% (post-tax: approximately 6 to 7% for those in the old tax regime claiming HRA) does not need to be pre-paid aggressively – the opportunity cost of using that money for equity investment is real. Personal loans, credit card rollovers, and consumer credit at 18 to 42% annual interest are different: these must be closed as quickly as possible. There is no investment strategy that justifies holding 36% consumer debt.

8. Think Carefully Before Buying a House in Your Early 30s

This is a contrarian point. A home loan in your early 30s on a property that takes 40 to 50% of your monthly take-home in EMI is a major constraint on retirement savings at the most valuable compounding time in your life. It is not that buying property is wrong – it is that buying too soon or too large, driven by social pressure and the belief that “property always goes up,” can permanently impair the retirement corpus.

Evaluate carefully: the EMI as a percentage of income, the opportunity cost of the down payment, and the rental yield relative to the cost of ownership. Our buy vs rent analysis helps work through this honestly.

9. Invest in Your Career and Income

The highest-return investment in your 30s is often your own income growth. A Rs. 10 lakh salary at 30 growing to Rs. 30 lakh at 40 (10% CAGR) funds retirement savings in a way no investment can match if the principal is small. Continuous skill development – certifications, domain expertise, management capabilities – has outsized long-term return on investment compared to marginal optimisation of investment portfolios.

10. Review and Track Annually

A financial plan made at 30 is not meant to last unchanged until 60. Review it annually: check corpus trajectory against retirement targets, review insurance adequacy as income and dependents change, assess whether the tax regime choice remains optimal, and update nominations and the Will when life events occur. The annual review is the maintenance that keeps the plan on track.

Building Retirement Wealth from Your 30s

RetireWise works with clients who start early as well as those who start late – but the clients in their 30s who start now have the most to gain. Explore how we approach long-horizon retirement planning.

See Our Services

One question for you: If you could go back to your 30s and change one financial decision, what would it be – and what stopped you from making the right call at the time?