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In this episode, Monika introduces what she calls the Three Pool Retirement Strategy — a framework she personally uses to think about retirement and one that aims to replace anxiety with clarity. Ahead of a brief break while travelling to Berlin, she addresses one of the biggest worries people have about retirement: not necessarily building the corpus, but managing it after work stops. Rather than relying solely on withdrawal-rate formulas, she explains how dividing retirement money into three distinct pools — a two-year “Spend It” pool in fixed deposits, a ten-year “Protect It” pool in debt funds, and a long-term “Grow It” pool in equity — creates liquidity, stability, and growth while reducing the fear of running out of money.
She then walks through how each pool works and how they interact over time. Fixed deposits provide a buffer against market crashes and eliminate the need to sell investments in bad times. Debt funds act as a bridge for the following decade, periodically replenishing the cash pool, while equity remains untouched for long stretches, allowing compounding to do its work. By ring-fencing money according to time horizons rather than chasing maximum returns, retirees can create a system that prioritises peace of mind. Monika argues that the real purpose of retirement planning is not to squeeze out every extra percentage point of return, but to ensure that money quietly supports life rather than constantly demanding attention. She promises to return in a future episode with the numbers and corpus multiples required to make the strategy work effectively.
In listener questions, Archanaa Panda asks whether a large investment made into a Balanced Advantage Fund near market highs should be rebalanced after disappointing returns, leading to a discussion on evaluating funds over three-, five-, and ten-year periods and considering tax-efficient switches only when portfolio fit and long-term performance justify it; an anonymous listener in her thirties seeks guidance on creating a self-funded health reserve for her ageing father who is largely uninsurable, prompting Monika to discuss super top-up policies, dedicated healthcare buffers, and why diversified funds are preferable to sector-specific healthcare funds; and another anonymous 28-year-old listener asks whether to focus on stocks or mutual funds while beginning his investment journey, giving Monika an opportunity to reinforce the importance of emergency funds, health insurance, and using mutual funds as a simpler and more reliable path to long-term financial independence.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) The Three Pool Retirement Strategy for Peace of Mind
(00:00 – 00:00) How the Spend It, Protect It and Grow It Pools Work Together
(00:00 – 00:00) When Should You Rebalance an Underperforming Mutual Fund?
(00:00 – 00:00) Building a DIY Health Fund for Parents Without Insurance
(00:00 – 00:00) Why Mutual Funds Beat Stock Picking for Most Young Investors
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi
By Monika Halan5
44 ratings
In this episode, Monika introduces what she calls the Three Pool Retirement Strategy — a framework she personally uses to think about retirement and one that aims to replace anxiety with clarity. Ahead of a brief break while travelling to Berlin, she addresses one of the biggest worries people have about retirement: not necessarily building the corpus, but managing it after work stops. Rather than relying solely on withdrawal-rate formulas, she explains how dividing retirement money into three distinct pools — a two-year “Spend It” pool in fixed deposits, a ten-year “Protect It” pool in debt funds, and a long-term “Grow It” pool in equity — creates liquidity, stability, and growth while reducing the fear of running out of money.
She then walks through how each pool works and how they interact over time. Fixed deposits provide a buffer against market crashes and eliminate the need to sell investments in bad times. Debt funds act as a bridge for the following decade, periodically replenishing the cash pool, while equity remains untouched for long stretches, allowing compounding to do its work. By ring-fencing money according to time horizons rather than chasing maximum returns, retirees can create a system that prioritises peace of mind. Monika argues that the real purpose of retirement planning is not to squeeze out every extra percentage point of return, but to ensure that money quietly supports life rather than constantly demanding attention. She promises to return in a future episode with the numbers and corpus multiples required to make the strategy work effectively.
In listener questions, Archanaa Panda asks whether a large investment made into a Balanced Advantage Fund near market highs should be rebalanced after disappointing returns, leading to a discussion on evaluating funds over three-, five-, and ten-year periods and considering tax-efficient switches only when portfolio fit and long-term performance justify it; an anonymous listener in her thirties seeks guidance on creating a self-funded health reserve for her ageing father who is largely uninsurable, prompting Monika to discuss super top-up policies, dedicated healthcare buffers, and why diversified funds are preferable to sector-specific healthcare funds; and another anonymous 28-year-old listener asks whether to focus on stocks or mutual funds while beginning his investment journey, giving Monika an opportunity to reinforce the importance of emergency funds, health insurance, and using mutual funds as a simpler and more reliable path to long-term financial independence.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) The Three Pool Retirement Strategy for Peace of Mind
(00:00 – 00:00) How the Spend It, Protect It and Grow It Pools Work Together
(00:00 – 00:00) When Should You Rebalance an Underperforming Mutual Fund?
(00:00 – 00:00) Building a DIY Health Fund for Parents Without Insurance
(00:00 – 00:00) Why Mutual Funds Beat Stock Picking for Most Young Investors
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi

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