Why Even High Earners Need an Emergency Corpus

 


Conversation Over Lunch

CFP Vaidy & His Cousin Balaji

“Finally back home!” laughed Balaji as he slid into the restaurant booth next to his cousin Vaidy. Like every visit to India, he had dropped into the cousins’ office unannounced, pulled them out in the middle of a busy workday, and whisked them off for lunch.

“How’s life in the US?” asked Vaidy.

“Good now… but I had a bit of a scare two months back,” Balaji replied. “I was laid off for nearly eight weeks. Nothing to do with performance, the company was restructuring. Luckily, it all settled and they rehired me, but those two months were stressful.”

“You never mentioned!” said Vaidy.

“I didn’t want to alarm the family. And honestly, I thought I was secure, good salary, solid lifestyle… why worry? But then I remembered the COVID years. Some of my close friends lost jobs. One had to sell his car to pay hospital bills when his father was infected. I had promised myself back then that I’d maintain an emergency fund… but I got complacent.”

Vaidy nodded. “That’s exactly why we keep emphasising the emergency corpus when we advise clients.”

Balaji sighed. “I thought insurance would cover everything. But when my dad fell sick, the insurance deductible and co-pays were huge. I had to swipe credit cards. Paid interest for months.”

“This is precisely what we see,” said Vaidy. “People think insurance is enough. But certain out-of-pocket expenses, job loss, temporary salary cuts, even natural disasters, they need immediate liquidity. If there’s no emergency fund, people are pushed toward loans or forced to sell investments or property.”

Balaji nodded thoughtfully. “When I got laid off recently, I realized how fragile things can be. I had savings, but all locked in retirement accounts or long-term investments. Withdrawing early would attract penalties, and selling them when markets were down made no sense.”

“That’s where the corpus helps,” Vaidy added. “Ideally 6 to 12 months of expenses - liquid, accessible. It protects retirement goals, provides peace of mind, and keeps debt away. And during a market downturn, having cash ready gives flexibility to seize opportunities rather than sell in panic.”

They paused as lunch was served, and Balaji smiled. “You know, losing my job briefly was a wake-up call. I don’t want to live paycheck-to-paycheck even with a good salary. When I return, emergency corpus is priority number one.”

“As a personal favour,” laughed Vaidy, “do it before your next vacation otherwise, our next lunch discussion will be on what went wrong again!”

Balaji chuckled. “Deal. And this time, I’ll help my buddies set up theirs too.”

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How Naidu Discovered the Truth About SIPs - Part 2

 



“So When Should I Start?”

Debunking the Remaining Myths on SIPs

Naidu poured himself a glass of water as Srini continued.

“You asked why SIPs are still trusted so much,” Srini said. “Because even though SIPs don’t guarantee profits, they build discipline. And discipline, not luck, creates long-term wealth.”

“So SIP is basically paying myself first every month,” Naidu summarised.

“Exactly. And here’s another myth, many people think SIPs are only for long-term goals.”

“That’s what I believed too,” Naidu admitted.

“SIPs work for long-term goals like retirement,” Srini said, “but they can also be used for short-term goals like vacations or down-payment planning. It depends on the type of fund and your risk appetite.”

Naidu suddenly smiled. “You know, I almost dropped the idea because I thought SIP needs big money. I assumed minimum ₹5,000 or something.”

Srini laughed. “That’s the best myth of all. You can start SIPs with ₹500 a month. The point is to start, and increase gradually as income grows.”

“Hmmm…” Naidu paused. “Another friend told me once you start an SIP, you can’t stop or change it. Is that true?”

“No,” Srini shook his head. “You can increase, decrease, pause or cancel an SIP anytime. You’re completely in control.”

“That’s a relief!” Naidu exhaled. “But one last doubt, does SIP remove the need to time the market?”

“It reduces it, but it doesn’t eliminate it,” Srini clarified. “Instead of throwing one big lump sum at the market hoping the timing is right, SIP spreads your investment across months. But you still need to choose the right funds and review performance periodically.”

Naidu leaned forward. “So overall, SIPs are not magic, but they create a system. And the system creates money.”

Srini smiled. “Now you’ve got it.”

“And why do you personally recommend SIPs?” Naidu asked.

“For four simple reasons:

1.      They force disciplined investing even on months when spending temptation is high.

2.      They are flexible you start small and scale up.

3.      They average out cost protecting against market volatility.

4.      They make investing effortless thanks to auto-debit.”

Naidu stood up excitedly. “Enough talk, I’m ready to start. Let’s fix how much and where to invest.”

Srini laughed. “We’ll plan based on your goals. Investing without clarity is like driving without a destination.”

As they walked out of the café, Naidu said, “I came thinking SIP means guaranteed plan. Now I leave thinking SIP means guaranteed discipline.”

Srini smiled. “And discipline,” he replied, “is what ultimately builds wealth.”

About the Author

How Naidu Discovered the Truth About SIPs - Part 1

 


“SIP? I Thought It Was a Guarantee!”

A Conversation Begins

“Naidu! After so many years, I can’t believe we randomly bumped into each other at the café!” Srini laughed as they found a comfortable corner table.

“Same here!” Naidu smiled. “And since we exchanged numbers, I’ve been following your WhatsApp status daily. You post a new blog every single morning. Tax, investments, Wills - you’re unstoppable!”

Srini grinned. “It’s my small way of sharing what I learn.”

“Well, your blog on SIPs got me thinking,” Naidu admitted. “The one on mutual funds. I never understood SIPs before, and honestly, I thought SIPs were guaranteed investment plans. That’s why I called you today. I want to start investing, but I want to understand things properly.”

“That’s exactly why I write,” Srini replied. “Let’s start from the basics. First, SIP is not an investment by itself.”

Naidu looked puzzled. “Then what is it?”

“SIP is only a method of investing in mutual funds,” Srini clarified. “Think of it like depositing money regularly into your savings, but instead of a bank, it goes into a mutual fund of your choice.”

“So SIP is just the way I invest… not the product?” Naidu repeated slowly, as if correcting years of misunderstanding.

“Right,” Srini nodded. “You choose the fund, equity, debt, hybrid, international - and then decide how much you want to invest every month. The SIP just automates it.”

Naidu leaned back. “Okay, but I had another belief, SIP means no loss. That’s why everyone recommends it!”

“That’s a myth,” Srini replied firmly. “SIP doesn’t protect you from losses. When markets fall, your fund value also falls. The big advantage of SIP isn’t no loss,  it’s rupee cost averaging.”

“That term sounded fancy in your blog,” Naidu chuckled. “Explain it in simple words?”

“Very simple,” Srini said. “When markets are low, your SIP buys more units. When markets are high, it buys fewer. Over time, the average purchase cost reduces,  and that helps build wealth.”

Naidu nodded slowly. “Makes sense. But another doubt, do SIPs guarantee returns? I know fixed deposits give sure interest.”

“No guarantee,” Srini answered. “SIPs, especially in equity funds, are market-linked. Equity SIPs earn better in the long term only if you stay invested with patience. Debt SIPs feel stable but even they can fluctuate.”

Naidu scratched his head. “So SIP isn’t safe like FD and it isn’t guaranteed. Then why do people still trust it so much?”

Srini smiled knowingly. “That is exactly what we’ll discuss next.”

Click here to go to Part 2.