Women’s Day special: Ahead of International Women’s Day, several women investors shared their financial queries about SIP planning, lump-sum investments, retirement planning, and even starting a business. After analysing the queries, financial expert Harshvardhan Roongta suggested a few mutual fund schemes and financial strategies that women can adopt to achieve financial freedom.
Here are the key insights from the expert based on real investor scenarios.
According to Roongta, assuming a 12 per cent annual return, a Rs 6,000 monthly SIP would grow to around Rs 13.75 lakh in 10 years, which is significantly lower than the target.
To reach the Rs 30 lakh goal, she should increase her monthly SIP to around Rs 13,000.
The existing funds are good for diversification. However, if she increases the investment amount, she can consider adding a mid-cap fund.
Roongta believes that market volatility often creates wealth-building opportunities. If an investor understands short-term fluctuations, investing the entire amount as a lump sum can work.
Balanced Advantage Funds dynamically adjust equity and debt exposure depending on market valuations.
Leela can split the Rs 5 lakh investment between these two schemes.
If she is uncomfortable investing the full amount immediately, she can park the money in a liquid fund and gradually transfer it to equity funds through a Systematic Transfer Plan (STP).
Investor: Fatima
Fatima wanted to know whether she still needs the National Pension System (NPS) if she is already investing in mutual funds.
Roongta explains that retirement planning has two phases:
Between the ages of 30 and 60, investors focus on building a retirement corpus.
After retirement, the corpus is used to generate a regular income.
With mutual funds, investors have flexibility. They can shift funds into options like Systematic Withdrawal Plans (SWP), fixed deposits, rental income or annuity products.
However, NPS is a more disciplined and structured retirement product. At retirement, investors can withdraw 60 per cent of the corpus, while 40 per cent must be used to buy an annuity that generates pension income.
Investor: Lovely (Punjab), an MBA student planning to launch a food truck business.
Roongta says entrepreneurial ambition is commendable, but financial preparation is essential.
1. Personal Emergency Buffer
Before starting a business, one should have at least one year of living expenses saved.
For example, if monthly expenses are Rs 50,000, the emergency corpus should be around Rs 6 lakh.
2. Business Capital Planning
Initial expenses may include:
Since early business revenue is often reinvested, maintaining personal financial stability is crucial before launching the venture.
(Disclaimer: The above article is meant for informational purposes only, and should not be considered as any investment advice. ET NOW DIGITAL suggests its readers/audience to consult their financial advisors before making any money related decisions.)
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2026-03-06T12:42:36Z