I am a retired State govt PSU employee getting monthly pension of 1 lakh+. My immovable assets include one house (earning rent) , one 2 BHK flat. I have a Mutual Fund Corpus of 1.0 crores, Stocks worth about 15 lakhs and Deposits in banks and other institutions worth 10 lakhs. Since 85% of my money is invested in Equities, I want to rebalance my portfolio so that 25% of corpus is in debt . instruments. Please advice
Ans: Current Financial Snapshot
Retired State govt PSU employee, monthly pension > Rs?1?L
Immovable assets: one self-occupied flat and one rented house
Investment assets:
Mutual fund corpus: Rs?1?Cr
Stock investments: Rs?15?L
Bank/institution deposits: Rs?10?L
Your total investible corpus ≈ Rs?1.25?Cr
Existing equity exposure (mutual funds + stocks) ≈ 85% of corpus
You want to rebalance so that 25% of corpus is in debt
Key Strengths in Your Situation
Reliable pension income > Rs?1?L/month
Rental income on immovable asset adds stability
No mention of loan liabilities—likely debt?free
Significant equity exposure provides growth potential
Awareness of need to rebalance to debt instruments
This solid base, combined with income, gives you a strong starting point.
Why Debt Allocation Matters at This Stage
Debt investments offer capital preservation and stability
Builds income buffer and reduces equity drawdown risk
Ensures cash flow for expenses without needing to sell equity
Reduces portfolio volatility during market corrections
By keeping 25% in debt, you preserve capital and secure steady income.
How to Implement the 25% Debt Allocation
1. Determine target corpus allocation
Total investible corpus ≈ Rs?1.25?Cr
25% target debt allocation ≈ Rs?31?L
Current debt/deposit amount is only Rs?10?L
You need to shift ≈ Rs?21?L from equities to debt
2. Phased Rebalancing Strategy
Sell equity mutual funds and stocks gradually
Avoid selling large lumpsum outright
Allows capital gains to spread over years and taxes
3. Provide for tax efficiency in rebalancing
Equity: LTCG taxed at 12.5% above Rs?1.25?L/year, STCG at 20%
Debt: taxed at slab rate
Spread sales to stay under LTCG threshold annually
Suggested Debt Instruments for Allocation
1. Short?term and Ultrashort Debt Funds
Low interest rate risk, good liquidity
Suitable for monthly pension supplementation
Taxed per slab rate; maintain modest allocation
2. Banking?oriented Debt Funds
Low credit risk; ideal for capital preservation
Provide better post?tax returns than FDs in medium term
3. Hybrid Debt Funds (Conservative Hybrid)
Funds invest 75–80% in debt, 20–25% in equity
Provide stable and modest upside
Suitable as buffer when you shift out of pure equity
Step-by-Step Portfolios Rebalancing Plan
1. Identify equity investments to reduce
Preferably reduce underperforming mutual funds or stocks with no heavy gains
Sell equity funds across fund categories for broad distribution
2. Execute phased liquidations over 2 years
Example: Sell 10% every quarter = ~Rs?5.25?L per quarter
Over 2 years you transfer roughly Rs?21?L to debt instruments
3. Deploy proceeds into debt ladder
40% into liquid and ultra-short funds
30% into banking debt funds
30% into conservative hybrid funds
4. Periodic review and course?correction
Every 6 months review market value of debt component
If debt falls below 25%, sell small equity and rebalance
This renews the 25:75 debt:equity ratio
Maintaining Equity Exposure
After shifting Rs?21?L out of equity, remaining corpus is Rs?1.04?Cr
You may maintain ~75% equity allocation = approx Rs?78–80?L
You should retain:
Current Rs?1?Cr mutual funds less sold portion
Stocks reduced only modestly to fund rebalancing
Preserves growth exposure while honouring your comfort with volatility
Portfolio Monitoring and Adjustment
Every 6 months:
Check equity/debt ratio
Realign if debt is Rs?1?L/month is stable
Rental income further adds buffer
Debt allocation supplement:
Redeem monthly blending yields for living expenses
Improves self-reliance
You don’t need to sell equity prematurely for monthly cash flows.
Handling Capital Gains Tax
Spread LTCG over years via phased redemption
Use gains under Rs?1.25?L limit to avoid tax
Report STCG and debt gains correctly
Use CFP guidance to schedule redemption tax-effectively
Asset Allocation Summary
Asset Class - Corpus Allocation --- Portfolio Role
Equity Mutual Funds ≈ Rs?75?L Long?term growth
Stocks Rs?15?L High?growth but moderate risk
Debt Instruments Rs?31?L Capital safety, pension supplement
Real Estate / Rental Already held Cash flow, not in financial corpus
Equity remains majority but debt provides necessary stability.
Why Actively Managed Funds Matter
You asked to avoid index funds – this aligns well
Advantage of active funds:
skilled managers for volatility
better downside risk control
higher chances to beat benchmark
Always use regular plans via Certified Financial Planner
Regular plans bring consistent review and professional advice
Direct plans lack this monitoring and rebalancing guidance
Emergency Reserve Chances
Debt allocation can double as emergency reserve
But still also keep 6–12 months of expenses in liquid format
Will handle unexpected events without equity disruption
Estate Planning and Retirement Distribution
In later years, debt allocation may rise further
Consider systematic withdrawal plan during retirement
Reinvest residual gains annually to maintain balanced risk
Professional Oversight and Review
A Certified Financial Planner ensures correct allocation
Helps manage tax, rebalancing, and changing needs
Reviews investments, adjusts strategy, and protects family
Final Insights
You have built a robust financial foundation with steady pension and assets
Your rebalancing plan repositions portfolio for stability and income
Keeping debt at 25% ensures capital isn’t eroded in bear markets
Phased approach preserves growth via equity and avoids tax burdens
Review and rebalance semi-annually with CFP support
You can enjoy retirement confidently while preserving wealth
With structured action and active management, your investments remain aligned with your ongoing financial needs, income, and risk profile.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment