Online publication Deep Blue Group Planning Guide: Are you afraid to invest? Here's an eight-step guide to take charge of your finances
Take charge of your finances with
this eight-step guide by Deepali Sen, a consultant at Winvestor, DSP
Blackrock's investor education initiative
According to a Neilson study
sponsored by DSP Blackrock, 77% of working Indian women do not take their own investment decisions, primarily because they are afraid to
take risks. You worked hard for it, you saved it; are you ready to learn how to
make it work for you? Presenting baby steps to making good investments.
Find a Reason to Invest
Even if you save every rupee you
earn today, its value after 10, 20 or 30 years, is not going to be able to buy
you the lifestyle you lead today, simply because inflation raises prices, on an
average between 7.5% to 8.5% per year (the last 10 years CPI shows an average
8.2% rise).
Take Stock
Get all your investments
together—from bank statements, fixed deposits and real estate, to insurance,
stocks, bonds and gold. Make a list of your liabilities (loans, credit card
outstandings...); What are your post-tax inflows from salary/ professional/
rental/ dividend income?; What are your outgoings (groceries, annual
maintenance contacts, mediclaim premiums, entertainment expenses...)? Note down
what doesn't make sense; you can either do your own research or get an expert to answer your queries. If
nothing more, atleast you now know your net worth.
Stay Reasonably Liquid
Keep three to four months worth
of outgoings liquid to deal with contingencies.
Tag Goals to Assets
Identifying goals and tagging
investments to them, make goals more tangible. This will also indicate whether
or not you need to make additional investments. Tag short-term assets to
short-term goals and long-term assets to long-term goals. If you are getting
married in six months, equity is not a great idea. On the other hand, if you
want to buy a house in seven years, equity is your best bet.
DSP Money Manager, HDFC Cash
Managment Fund and ICICI Prudential Savings Fund are good options for parking
contingency funds; while HDFC Top 200, DSP Top 100 and ICICI Focused Bluechip
could help you meet future goals.
Insure Yourself
Your insurance should be high
enough to take care of your debts (car/housing/education loans) and your future
responsibilities (children's education, parents' medical bills...). The greater
your existing savings/assets, the lower your insurance needs—your savings could
be used to cater to some of your family's future requirements. Do not attempt
to bundle insurance and investments; your premiums will be much higher for a
relatively lower benefit.
Invest
The only way to learn how to swim
is to get into the water. The same holds true for investing. An investment
ratio of 80:20 (equity: fixed income) prescribed for a 20-year-old just
starting to earn, should gradually change to 50:50, the nearer you are to
retirement.
Read, Research, Get Help
From news channels and blogs that
offer case studies to websites and financial advisors that customise investment
plans for you, there's no dearth of professional resources at your disposal.
Understanding how things work will also ensure that you won't be taken for a
ride. If something's not working for you, you can always walk away. But if you
don't take that first step, you'll stay exactly where you are.
Make a Will
Yes, even if you are barely 20,
and have no more than a few thousand to your name. The day you start earning is
the day someone stands to inherit. In fact, you should do this, even before you
start investing.
WHAT SHOULD I LOOK FOR IN AN
ADVISOR?
Aditi Kothari, Executive Vice
President, DSP BlackRock and founder of Winvestor, offers some sage advice on
choosing a financial advisor
1. Ensure that your advisor
listens to you and presents different options to suit your needs, as opposed to
pushing you to buy specific products without considering your financial
situation and your goals.
2. Your financial advisor needs
to be realistic and explain all the risks of the products he or she is advising
you to buy. If he or she is guaranteeing returns especially in the equity
markets, please be cautious.
3. Make sure your advisor answers
your questions in as much detail as you require. Ask all the questions that you
need to, however basic they may seem, so that you are confident about your
investment decisions.
4. Trust your intuition. If your
gut tells you something is not right, get a second opinion. There are many
advisors out there. It is wise to do a reference check or to be referred to an
advisor by a trusted source.
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