Summary of this article
Having plenty of assets on paper does not help if you do not have enough cash to meet day-to-day expenses.
Unless the mindset shifts from simply “building wealth” to “creating income,” many retirees may continue to find themselves wealthy on paper, but financially stretched in everyday life.
When planning for long-term goals or retirement, it is important to align investments with clearly-defined goals and stay committed to that strategy, whether through SIPs or lump sum investments, until those goals are achieved.
Delhi-based Rajesh Verma worked hard, saved diligently, and spent 30 years making sacrifices. He thought he’d finally have peace of mind after retirement. He has a house worth crores of rupees. Some gold stashed away. And investments that took years to build patiently. Every month, he stresses about something as basic as – “Will the amount deposited in my bank account be enough to pay for my daily expenses, doctor’s visits, and inflation?”
This story is repeated in millions of Indian homes. A large number of retirees today are ‘asset-rich but income-poor’. They have valuable assets but no reliable or substantial stream of income after they retire. The root of the problem lies in Indian’s perception of wealth. Owning a home. Storing gold. Building assets that appreciate over time. What’s missing from the conversation is - Are your assets going to generate you income when your paychecks cease to exist?
The concern has come into sharper focus after Radhika Gupta, MD and CEO, Edelweiss Mutual Fund, highlighted the growing retirement income gap among Indian investors. Financial experts say that while SIPs, mutual funds, and retirement-focused products are gaining popularity, investor behaviour still remains heavily driven by emotions, short-term market movements, and the comfort of physical assets.
According to financial planners, Indian investors are slowly warming up to goal-based retirement investing and automated solutions like lifecycle funds. But unless the mindset shifts from simply “building wealth” to “creating income,” many retirees may continue to find themselves wealthy on paper but financially stretched in everyday life.
Santosh Joseph, CEO, Germinate Investor Services, says, “The reason why most investors are asset-rich, and income-poor is because they focus on gathering wealth, storing value, and accumulating appreciating assets. From an asset perspective, there are broadly three key factors: appreciation, liquidity, and stability. Whenever Indians start saving or buying an asset, their primary goal is largely appreciation and, to some extent, liquidity. Very rarely do they focus on income generation or stability as a benchmark.”
Echoing similar views, Abhishek Kumar, Founder of SahajMoney, says Indian investors have traditionally favoured physical assets like real estate and gold because they offer tangible security and are deeply rooted in cultural heritage.
“While these assets appreciate over time, they are often illiquid and fail to generate the consistent monthly cash flow required to cover daily expenses during retirement. The focus on accumulation over cash flow results in significant wealth being locked away, leaving retirees without enough accessible liquidity for their regular needs,” Kumar adds.
Now, the people who invest for income are looking at the yield an investment can generate. But those who focus only on assets are generally looking for maximum capital appreciation, without realising that capital appreciation alone may make them asset-rich, but not necessarily provide a steady income stream. Only later do they begin to think about selling those assets to fund their lifestyle.
“We need to help investors understand that they can live on the asset, meaning they can live off the income generated by the asset itself. So, there needs to be a slight shift in mindset here. We have been conditioned to gather and maximise assets, while often missing the importance of income-generating assets. It is not that investors are unaware of this, but the focus has traditionally not been in that direction.” Informs Joseph.
Are Investors Ready To Trust ‘Set-And-Forget’ Retirement Products?
The emergence of lifecycle retirement products, life-stage funds, and automatic asset allocation solutions is essentially telling investors: manage your time horizon and let the asset allocation work towards the desired outcome.
Now, this may still not be very easy for everybody to understand immediately. But just as investors gradually embraced mutual funds, SIPs, equities, and multi-asset investing, they will also learn to understand how these solutions can work for them.
“Initially, product managers believed that adding lifecycle or retirement-oriented products would automatically help investors, but the traction was relatively limited. In this new category of timeline-oriented funds, which are somewhat similar to target-duration concepts, investors get an opportunity to align their investment needs with the time horizon they have in hand,” says Joseph.
It is important to remember that not every investor begins investing with the same time frame. Some invest for five years, some for 20 years, while others are comfortable with 30-year horizons. This category is seeking to help investors align investments more effectively with those timelines.
“At the same time, the market and investors also need time to understand, appreciate, and embrace these products. Adoption may take time, but investors will eventually begin to see the benefits,” observes Joseph.
Biggest Behavioural Mistakes Investors Make While Planning For Long-Term Goals Like Retirement
SIP investing has truly gained strong acceptance among Indian investors. Even in April 2026, SIP contributions crossed Rs 32,000 crore, and the momentum has continued to strengthen month after month without showing signs of slowing down.
“While it is extremely positive that investors have embraced SIPs as a disciplined investment approach through market volatility, especially for long-term goals like retirement, one of the biggest behavioural mistakes investors make is getting carried away by short-term performance or temporary shifts in asset classes,” informs Joseph.
Kumar says that the most common behavioral mistake is panic stopping SIPs during market downturns, which prevents investors from benefiting from rupee cost averaging and long-term growth. “Additionally, many investors fail to account for inflation, meaning their final corpus may lack the purchasing power they originally anticipated. Frequent withdrawals from retirement funds to meet short-term lifestyle needs or unplanned family expenses also severely disrupts the growth of the corpus over time,” he adds.
When planning for long-term goals or retirement, it is important to align investments with clearly-defined goals and stay committed to that strategy, whether through SIPs or lump sum investments, until those goals are achieved.
“There will be many occasions when investors may feel tempted to rejig or rework their portfolio because markets have become volatile, rallied too quickly, or remained flat for an extended period. These situations are natural and unavoidable. However, the eventual winner is usually the investor who remains committed to their original time horizon and financial goals,” says Joseph.
A periodic review once every year or two to check whether the portfolio remains on track and whether the asset allocation balance is maintained is generally sufficient. Historically, over a 10 to 15-year period, asset prices have tended to move higher and deliver the desired outcomes.
Therefore, whether one is investing for retirement or wealth creation, the key is to align investment goals with time horizon and personal financial needs, and most importantly, remain committed to the mandate.
FAQs
1. Why are many Indian retirees described as ‘asset-rich but income-poor’?
Retirees have assets that include their home, gold or even land. But most of these assets may not be liquid or generate them a monthly income that they can live on after their salary income ceases. Having plenty of assets on paper does not help if you do not have enough cash to meet day-to-day expenses.
2. What are lifecycle or ‘set-and-forget’ retirement funds?
One of the latest retirement funds to gain popularity is lifecycle/target-date retirement funds which automatically re-balances your asset allocation depending on your age and retirement date. These funds are typically heavily invested in equities when you start saving for retirement and slowly decrease their equity allocation as you grow older and shift into safer investment avenues.
3. What are some of the biggest mistakes investors make while saving for retirement?
Financial advisors around the world warn investors about making these mistakes while investing towards retirement. They include - halting SIPs during market crashes, reacting emotionally to short-term market volatility, not accounting for inflation and withdrawing from your retirement fund. Instead of panicking during market dips and peaks, advisors recommend that investors stay focused on their financial goals and periodically review their portfolio.















