Friday, January 1, 2021

Money Sense: Ms. Laxmi Iyer

 Money Sense

1.      Retirement is the most distant financial goal requiring most savings. How can one start to have a process where one keeps investing adequate amounts for retirement without compromising on the most immediate goals?

To invest for retirement while not compromising on other investment goals requires early start. The cardinal rule of retirement planning is to start as early as possible. Early investors usually have higher risk appetite and therefore can take exposure in high risk-high return assets like smallcaps. Thus an early allocation into a smallcap fund provides potential for a far larger gain will lesser SIP. This way an investor can invest for other investment needs as well. As the delay in retirement occurs, the SIP amount needed to save the same retirement amount goes up. It is this that leads to compromises.

 

2.      Most salaried people have provident fund. Why does one need additional retirement investments?

Provident fund primarily is a debt investment product with a relatively lower return accrual. Thus, to build up a substantially large retirement corpus via PF, an investor would need to allocate relatively larger amounts to fulfil the retirement requirement.   To work around this situation, an investor can invest into equities fund through SIP. Given the return potential of equities over long term, an investor can potentially end up building a much higher corpus. Moreover, given the critical nature of retirement, the backup investment plan via equities gives a strong buffer and helps ease the old age retirement.


3.      How can one plan for retirement savings keeping PF contributions in mind?

Retirement and the whole list of investment objectives must be seen in its entity. Only then can an investor identify how much contributions are required for each objective; what is the level asset allocation needed; the timeline, and the SIP amount required to achieve those objectives. Having said that, assuming you have only one objective: ie retirement; and that you know your final retirement amount; you will have to calculate whether PF can generate that sum by the time of retirement. If there is any gap, then it means you will have to invest into other plans to fulfil that gap.

 

4.      Can there be a strategy wherein one can harness tax saving investments for the purpose of retirement savings?

An investor can utilise the ELSS growth option to avail the tax saving while also buildup capital by utilising in the growth potential of equity. The ELSS options gives the investor a potential avenue to save tax upto 1.5 lakh a year.  Other than that,  the investor can also invest in NPS which provides additional tax deduction of Rs 50,000. Through the NPS option the investor can allocate in various asset categories and simultaneously build capital in that plan as well.

 

5.      Popular tax saving and long investments are low risk investments. Can sticking to them and PF savings be enough for retirement?

We are humans. It’s never enough. Having said that, if an investor wants to live on a tight monthly budget then perhaps a debt centric investment plan may suffice. But to generate a surplus and substantial corpus, equities will need to come into the asset mix. Top global pension and retirement funds are basing their investment and payout strategy around equities -  there must be some reason to do that.

 

6.      What are the first steps of starting retirement investments?

 

To plan for retirement, one must know how much income will a person need, so as to stay comfortably well from month to month in retirement. Then the investor may need calculate how much corpus must one must have that will generate this monthly income as annuity. Once you have that corpus amount, you know the goal and the time you have at hand to build up that retirement fund.

This process will give you the retirement strategy, the rate of return required and the funds needed each month for investment.  

 

7.      What should be the strategy to pick retirement investments?

 

The approach should be that our investments must over achieve the target. That, the corpus should get built with as little risk as possible without compromising the return potential - And that, the investment for retirement must not elbow out other more immediate investment objectives.

 

8.      Can you outline steps required to build an investment portfolio for ample retirement savings?

The retirement portfolio of an individual varies from person to person and is dependent on the nature of their income, the time left for retirement, the size of corpus needed, and the competing investment objectives. Having said that, ELSS, NPS, real estate, all have a role in ensuring a comfortable retirement

 

9.      With the recent changes in taxation has NPS become an attractive component of any retirement portfolio?

The attraction quotient has certainly increased with fresh tax incentives. NPS is eligible for a tax deduction under Section 80CCD of the Act. While 10% of the salary contributed in NPS is eligible for a tax deduction of up to INR 1.5 lakh, this deduction is capped under the overall limit of Section 80C. But in addition to this, you can claim an extra deduction of ₹50,000 under Section 80CCD (1b) of the Act taking your total deduction limit from INR 1.5 lakh to INR 2 lakh. So you could either put INR 2 lakh in NPS to claim full deduction benefits or put just INR 50,000 in NPS to claim the extra deduction under Section 80CCD (1b).  Moreover, the tax impact at the time of withdrawal and annuity purchase too have been relaxed. This has improved the wealth creating potential and the tax efficiency of the option.

 

10.  What are the essential steps one needs to take while tracking the progress of one’s retirement investment portfolio?

The first important step is to have a plan and stick to it. Once you have a plan and its roadmap, then an investor can benchmark the real performance against it. This will help the investor understand any deviation from the plan and would be better able to take corrective action.

 

 

11.  When and how does one rebalance the portfolio?

As mentioned earlier, the portfolio must be monitored at periodic interval and not on frequent basis. The swift frequency will create emotional churn within the investor and will more often than not lead to off-roading from the plan. The rebalancing can happen when the actual performance is deviating majorly from the planned path. Other than that, the asset rebalancing may happen when the investor is transitioning from one life stage to another. Due to this stage transition, the investor would have to change the asset allocation profile from risky, to lesser and lesser risk profile as the age progresses.

 

12.  What are some of the most common mistakes people make while making retirement investments?

There are many investment mistakes that investors commit while planning for retirement. The first of which is of course not planning for retirement early. This leads to higher investment outflow later and elbows out other investments at later date. Other than that investors tend to under-invest in growth assets which limits the potential size of the eventual corpus. Other than that some common mistakes are not sticking to asset allocation plan; to under-allocate, to move assets on market sentiments and to not be mindful of tax impact.


- Ms. Laxmi Iyer, CIO, Debt and Head: Products: Kotak Mahindra MF.