How we plan to achieve a retirement corpus 50 times our annual expenses

Published: January 22, 2022 at 7:00 am

Last Updated on January 22, 2022 at 10:07 am

In this edition of the reader story, we meet a young couple who prefers anonymity. They share their money management journey and how they wish to achieve a retirement corpus 50 times annual expenses.

About this series: I am grateful to readers for sharing intimate details about their financial lives for the benefit of readers. Some of the previous editions are linked at the bottom of this article. You can also access the full reader story archive.

Opinions published in reader stories need not represent the views of freefincal or its editors. We must appreciate multiple solutions to the money management puzzle and empathise with diverse views. Articles are typically not checked for grammar unless necessary to convey the right meaning to preserve the tone and emotions of the writers.

If you would like to contribute to the DIY community in this manner, send your audits to freefincal AT Gmail dot com. They can be published anonymously if you so desire.


Join over 32,000 readers and get free money management solutions delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to get posts via email!
🔥Enjoy massive discounts on our robo-advisory tool & courses! 🔥

Please note: We welcome such articles from young earners who have just started their investing journey. See, for example, this piece by a 29-year old: How I track financial goals without worrying about returns.

We have also started a new “mutual fund success stories” series. This is the first edition: How mutual funds helped me reach financial independence. Now over to the author.

Context: my wife and I both work in tech. Our financial goals are a) retirement corpus so one of us can quit and start something b) we have a baby coming in June and want to ensure there is enough corpus for education, etc.

How did I start managing money?

We graduated from B-school seven years ago. The first four years were majorly spent repaying the education loan. My wife didn’t have a loan, and she started saving early in her post office FDs.

My savings for the first four years were limited to ELSS, epf and ppf. It was only after the loan was repaid that I seriously started investing. My net worth (in stock units) went up in the bull run, and I’ve been plain lucky.

We have separate term life insurance policies of 3.25Cr each. Health insurance from our employer of 10Lacs, personal health insurance of 5 lacs, and a cancer cover.

We have an emergency fund that covers six months. I want to take it to 12 months.

Our portfolio is tracked at an individual level and an overall level.

We don’t spend lavishly, try and save 70% of our income, and our current networth is ~24X our annual expenses.

Overall, 67% is market-linked, 25% is fixed income, and 5% is gold.

Breakdown of the 67% of market-linked: 50% is in the form of stock units of our employer, 6% is in the form of momentum smallcases, 7% is in the form of mutual funds, and 4% is in direct equity.

Breaking down fixed income, 15% is in Post office FDs, 2% is in PPF, 8% is in EPF.

All the gold is purchased through gold bonds.

Performance-wise, the company stock units that constitute 50% of our networth has gone up ~80% in the last year in value. Momentum smallcases have given an XIRR of ~50%. Direct stocks have gone up 20% in the past year. Mutual funds have an XIRR of 17.5%.

We plan to take the corpus to around 50X our annual expenses, and that’s when one of us quits (most likely, I will). I want to give entrepreneurship a chance. We don’t have any plans to buy a house.

Why do we not want to buy a house?

a) We live in the NCR region in a rented house. The yield of the apartment we’ve rented is ~3%. We feel that buying a house will lock the money in an asset class, reducing the pace of achieving our goals. We’ve included the annual rent in our annual expenses while computing the corpus to be safe.

b) No emotional reason to buy a house. Both our parents have 2-3 apartments across NCR and home town. They live in one and enjoy passive income from the other apartments.

c) At some stage, we would want to move cities/countries and have that flexibility and not tie our money to real estate.

We might consider buying real estate when the stock units from our company reach a sizeable amount, and we want to sell those.

Lessons:

1) Trust in experts. I started my career as a prop trader at 21. I realised early on that trading is not my cup of tea. Therefore I didn’t invest in direct equity—just mutual funds. In 2020, I started investing heavily in paid momentum smallcases because I felt the markets were inflated but didn’t want to miss out on the rally. This has served me well so far.

2) when in doubt, do nothing. I saw my net worth dip by ~50% in the covid fall. Thankfully my trading experience came in handy, and I didn’t panic. We didn’t need to liquidate anything and added more in March/Apr 2020 in some blue-chip companies.

3) Measurement and tracking: I set up an exhaustive tracker on google sheets to track all our investments in one place. The link I used is below. You can’t take corrective action if you can’t measure it. This has helped me get a bird’s eye view of our financial health.

4) Get a financial planner: I got serious about this in early 2020 after we got a financial plan made through a fee-only planner. My employer provides a financial planner, and that was the starting point. It helped structure my thoughts and set me up on this path. Honestly, I wasn’t very happy with the output from the financial planner, but that’s what pushed me to make my trackers and plans using their framework.

Finally, it’s a whole lot of luck. I’m very thankful to the market gods for the bull run, to my employer for the salary, stock units, and work, to my spouse for being financially prudent with her earnings and finally, both our parents for being financially independent 🙂

Reader stories published earlier

As regular readers may know, we publish a personal financial audit each December – this is the 2020 edition: How my retirement portfolio performed in 2020. We asked regular readers to share how they review their investments and track financial goals.

These published audits have had a compounding effect on readers. If you would like to contribute to the DIY community in this manner, send your audits to freefincal AT Gmail. They could be published anonymously if you so desire.

Do share this article with your friends using the buttons below.

🔥Enjoy massive discounts on our courses, robo-advisory tool and exclusive investor circle! 🔥& join our community of 5000+ users!
Use our Robo-advisory Tool for a start-to-finish financial plan! More than 1,000 investors and advisors use this!
New Tool! => Track your mutual funds and stock investments with this Google Sheet!
We also publish monthly equity mutual funds, debt and hybrid mutual funds, index funds and ETF screeners and momentum, low-volatility stock screeners.
Follow Freefincal on Google News
Follow Freefincal on Google News
Subscribe to the freefincal Youtube Channel. Subscribe button courtesy: Vecteezy.
Subscribe to the freefincal Youtube Channel.
Follow freefincal on WhatsApp Channel
Follow freefincal on WhatsApp
Podcast: Let's Get RICH With PATTU! Every single Indian CAN grow their wealth! 
Listen to the Lets Get Rich with Pattu Podcast
Listen to the Let's Get Rich with Pattu Podcast
You can watch podcast episodes on the OfSpin Media Friends YouTube Channel.
Lets Get RICH With PATTU podcast on YouTube
Let's Get RICH With PATTU podcast on YouTube.
🔥Now Watch Let's Get Rich With Pattu தமிழில் (in Tamil)! 🔥
  • Do you have a comment about the above article? Reach out to us on Twitter: @freefincal or @pattufreefincal
  • Have a question? Subscribe to our newsletter using the form below.
  • Hit 'reply' to any email from us! We do not offer personalized investment advice. We can write a detailed article without mentioning your name if you have a generic question.

Join over 32,000 readers and get free money management solutions delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to get posts via email!

About The Author

Pattabiraman editor freefincalDr M. Pattabiraman(PhD) is the founder, managing editor and primary author of freefincal. He is an associate professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He has over ten years of experience publishing news analysis, research and financial product development. Connect with him via Twitter(X), Linkedin, or YouTube. Pattabiraman has co-authored three print books: (1) You can be rich too with goal-based investing (CNBC TV18) for DIY investors. (2) Gamechanger for young earners. (3) Chinchu Gets a Superpower! for kids. He has also written seven other free e-books on various money management topics. He is a patron and co-founder of “Fee-only India,” an organisation promoting unbiased, commission-free investment advice.
Our flagship course! Learn to manage your portfolio like a pro to achieve your goals regardless of market conditions! More than 3,000 investors and advisors are part of our exclusive community! Get clarity on how to plan for your goals and achieve the necessary corpus no matter the market condition is!! Watch the first lecture for free!  One-time payment! No recurring fees! Life-long access to videos! Reduce fear, uncertainty and doubt while investing! Learn how to plan for your goals before and after retirement with confidence.
Our new course!  Increase your income by getting people to pay for your skills! More than 700 salaried employees, entrepreneurs and financial advisors are part of our exclusive community! Learn how to get people to pay for your skills! Whether you are a professional or small business owner who wants more clients via online visibility or a salaried person wanting a side income or passive income, we will show you how to achieve this by showcasing your skills and building a community that trusts and pays you! (watch 1st lecture for free). One-time payment! No recurring fees! Life-long access to videos!   
Our new book for kids: “Chinchu Gets a Superpower!” is now available!
Both boy and girl version covers of Chinchu gets a superpower
Both the boy and girl-version covers of "Chinchu Gets a superpower".
Most investor problems can be traced to a lack of informed decision-making. We made bad decisions and money mistakes when we started earning and spent years undoing these mistakes. Why should our children go through the same pain? What is this book about? As parents, what would it be if we had to groom one ability in our children that is key not only to money management and investing but to any aspect of life? My answer: Sound Decision Making. So, in this book, we meet Chinchu, who is about to turn 10. What he wants for his birthday and how his parents plan for it, as well as teaching him several key ideas of decision-making and money management, is the narrative. What readers say!
Feedback from a young reader after reading Chinchu gets a Superpower (small version)
Feedback from a young reader after reading Chinchu gets a Superpower!
Must-read book even for adults! This is something that every parent should teach their kids right from their young age. The importance of money management and decision making based on their wants and needs. Very nicely written in simple terms. - Arun.
Buy the book: Chinchu gets a superpower for your child!
How to profit from content writing: Our new ebook is for those interested in getting side income via content writing. It is available at a 50% discount for Rs. 500 only!
Do you want to check if the market is overvalued or undervalued? Use our market valuation tool (it will work with any index!), or get the Tactical Buy/Sell timing tool!
We publish monthly mutual fund screeners and momentum, low-volatility stock screeners.
About freefincal & its content policy. Freefincal is a News Media Organization dedicated to providing original analysis, reports, reviews and insights on mutual funds, stocks, investing, retirement and personal finance developments. We do so without conflict of interest and bias. Follow us on Google News. Freefincal serves more than three million readers a year (5 million page views) with articles based only on factual information and detailed analysis by its authors. All statements made will be verified with credible and knowledgeable sources before publication. Freefincal does not publish paid articles, promotions, PR, satire or opinions without data. All opinions will be inferences backed by verifiable, reproducible evidence/data. Contact information: letters {at} freefincal {dot} com (sponsored posts or paid collaborations will not be entertained)
Connect with us on social media
Our publications

You Can Be Rich Too with Goal-Based Investing

You can be rich too with goal based investingPublished by CNBC TV18, this book is meant to help you ask the right questions and seek the correct answers, and since it comes with nine online calculators, you can also create custom solutions for your lifestyle! Get it now.
Gamechanger: Forget Startups, Join Corporate & Still Live the Rich Life You Want Gamechanger: Forget Start-ups, Join Corporate and Still Live the Rich Life you wantThis book is meant for young earners to get their basics right from day one! It will also help you travel to exotic places at a low cost! Get it or gift it to a young earner.

Your Ultimate Guide to Travel

Travel-Training-Kit-Cover-new This is an in-depth dive into vacation planning, finding cheap flights, budget accommodation, what to do when travelling, and how travelling slowly is better financially and psychologically, with links to the web pages and hand-holding at every step. Get the pdf for Rs 300 (instant download)