Key Takeaways
- ₹2 crore in a savings account loses ₹4-6 lakh per year in real purchasing power. Move to a liquid fund today — even before you have a full plan
- Deploy into equity via STP over 6-12 months. Investing ₹2 crore in one shot is an emotional and financial risk you don't need to take
- At 12% CAGR, ₹2 crore becomes ₹6.2 crore in 10 years. At FD rates (post-tax), it barely becomes ₹3 crore. Your allocation choice is worth ₹3+ crore
- Avoid the three wealth traps for large sums: real estate (illiquid, 2-4% returns), insurance-cum-investment plans (high fees, lock-in), and FDs (inflation-negative after tax)
The Problem With Having ₹2 Crore
This sounds counterintuitive, but having a large sum of money creates a very specific set of behavioral risks that smaller amounts don’t.
When you have ₹10,000/month going into a SIP, the stakes per decision feel low. You set it up and forget about it. But when you have ₹2 crore sitting in your account, every decision feels high-stakes. Every option has a massive opportunity cost. And every person you know has an opinion.
Your bank RM wants you in a ULIP. Your uncle says buy a flat. Your CA suggests FDs. A colleague swears by PMS (Portfolio Management Services). A finance influencer is shouting about small-cap funds.
The result? You do nothing. The money sits in your savings account for 6, 12, sometimes 18 months while you “research.” And every month of delay costs you.
On ₹2 crore, the difference between a savings account (3.5%) and a liquid fund (6.5%) is ₹6 lakh per year. The difference between a liquid fund and a deployed diversified portfolio (12% CAGR) is ₹11 lakh per year. Every month of analysis paralysis isn't free — it costs roughly ₹1 lakh in lost returns.
Step 1: Stop the Bleeding (Day 1)
Before any planning, move ₹2 crore out of your savings account into a liquid mutual fund.
This is not investing. It’s parking. But it immediately doubles your idle return from 3.5% to 6.5%, and the money is redeemable within 24 hours.
The difference between a diversified portfolio and an FD is ₹3.3 crore over 10 years. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a different life outcome.
Step 2: The Allocation Framework
There’s no universal answer. Your age, goal timeline, and risk tolerance determine your split. But here’s a framework that has worked well historically:
| Component | Age 30-40 | Age 40-50 | Age 50-60 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equity mutual funds | 60-65% (₹1.2-1.3Cr) | 50-55% (₹1.0-1.1Cr) | 35-45% (₹70-90L) |
| Debt mutual funds | 20-25% (₹40-50L) | 25-30% (₹50-60L) | 35-40% (₹70-80L) |
| Gold (SGBs/ETF) | 5-10% (₹10-20L) | 10-15% (₹20-30L) | 10-15% (₹20-30L) |
| Emergency liquid fund | ₹6-10L | ₹8-12L | ₹10-15L |
| Expected 10-year CAGR | 11-13% | 9-11% | 8-10% |
Carve out the emergency fund first. 6-12 months of living expenses in a liquid fund, completely separate from your investment portfolio. This money exists so that a job loss, medical emergency, or unexpected expense doesn’t force you to redeem equity at the wrong time.
A 60:30:10 equity-debt-gold portfolio has never delivered a negative return over any 7-year period in Indian markets since 2000. Over 10-year periods, the worst return was 8.5% CAGR, and the best was 16.2%. The blend smooths volatility while capturing long-term equity growth. Debt provides stability. Gold hedges against black swans.
Step 3: Deploy Via STP (Not Lump Sum)
The most dangerous thing you can do with ₹2 crore is invest it all in equity on a single day. If markets drop 15% the next month, you’ve lost ₹18-20 lakh on paper. You might handle that intellectually. You will not handle it emotionally.
Systematic Transfer Plan (STP):
- Your ₹2 crore is already in a liquid fund (from Step 1)
- Set up monthly auto-transfers from liquid to equity funds
- Allocate ₹10-20 lakh per month to equity over 6-12 months
- Each month, you’re buying at the current market price — sometimes high, sometimes low
- Over 6-12 months, you’ve dollar-cost-averaged your way in
Debt allocation: Deploy directly. Debt funds don’t have the same volatility risk, so you don’t need to phase it in.
Gold allocation: Buy Sovereign Gold Bonds if available (tax-free on maturity, 2.5% annual interest), or Gold ETF for instant deployment.
Step 4: What to Actually Buy
Within your equity bucket (₹1-1.3 crore):
| Fund Type | Allocation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Nifty 50 Index Fund | 35-40% | Core large-cap. Lowest cost (0.1-0.2%). Market return guaranteed |
| Nifty Next 50 Index Fund | 15-20% | Mid-cap growth exposure. Still passive and cheap |
| Flexi-cap active fund | 20-25% | Manager picks across caps. Potential for alpha |
| International fund (US/Global) | 15-20% | Geographic diversification. Rupee depreciation hedge |
Within your debt bucket (₹40-60 lakh):
| Fund Type | Allocation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Short-duration debt fund | 50% | Stable 7-7.5%. Low interest rate risk |
| Corporate bond fund | 30% | Slightly higher yield. Moderate risk |
| Target maturity fund (2030-2035) | 20% | Locks in current yields. Predictable maturity value |
At ₹2 crore, you'll get PMS (Portfolio Management Services) pitches — minimum ₹50 lakh entry. Be skeptical. After fees (2-2.5% annually + profit share), most PMS underperform a simple index fund portfolio. The fee drag on ₹2 crore over 10 years can cost ₹30-50 lakh. Index funds at 0.1-0.2% are the highest-conviction bet for 90% of investors.
The Five Things NOT to Do With ₹2 Crore
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Don’t buy real estate as an “investment.” Indian residential real estate has delivered 2-4% CAGR in most cities from 2014-2024 (NHB RESIDEX data). Add stamp duty (5-7%), brokerage (1-2%), maintenance, property tax, and zero liquidity. A ₹2 crore flat might be worth ₹2.5 crore in 10 years. A diversified portfolio would be worth ₹6.2 crore.
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Don’t buy insurance-cum-investment plans. ULIPs, endowment plans, and money-back policies have expense ratios of 3-6% in early years. They lock your money for 5-15 years. After charges, returns often trail inflation. Buy term insurance separately (₹1 crore cover for ₹10-15K/year) and invest the rest.
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Don’t put it all in FDs. A ₹2 crore FD at 7.5% earns ₹15 lakh/year pre-tax. After 30% tax, that’s ₹10.5 lakh. Inflation erodes ₹10-12 lakh. Your real return is near zero. You’ve essentially preserved capital in nominal terms while losing it in real terms.
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Don’t chase PMS or AIF with high fees. At ₹2 crore, you’re above the PMS threshold. You’ll get polished pitches showing 25% backtested returns. After fees, slippage, and market reality, most PMS don’t beat a Nifty 50 index fund over 10 years.
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Don’t try to time the market. “I’ll wait for a crash” is the most expensive sentence in investing. Investors who tried to time the Nifty 50 over 2010-2025 earned 3-4% less CAGR than those who deployed via STP regardless of conditions.
The bigger the sum, the stronger the urge to "do something clever" with it. Direct stocks, PMS, real estate, cryptocurrency — large sums attract complex strategies. But complexity is not sophistication. The wealthiest long-term investors in India are overwhelmingly boring: diversified funds, systematic deployment, low fees, zero drama. Boring is the strategy.
Tax Efficiency at ₹2 Crore
At this corpus size, taxes matter significantly. A few optimisations:
| Strategy | How It Works | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|
| Tax-loss harvesting | Book equity LTCG up to ₹1.25L tax-free each year, re-invest | ₹15,000-25,000/year |
| Debt funds over FDs | Debt fund gains taxed at slab, but you control when to realise | Deferred taxation |
| SGBs over physical gold | Tax-free on maturity + 2.5% annual interest | Full capital gains tax avoided |
| Step-up SIP for ongoing income | Invest incremental income via SIP — LTCG rate < salary rate | Ongoing tax efficiency |
Over 10 years, tax efficiency on ₹2 crore can compound to ₹5-10 lakh in additional wealth. Not life-changing, but free money.


