GoalBridge

GoalBridge I am a SEBI Registered Investment advisor. I help people achieve their goals in a structured manner

For many individuals, buying a home is a lifelong dream, while for others, upgrading to a bigger or more comfortable hom...
12/05/2026

For many individuals, buying a home is a lifelong dream, while for others, upgrading to a bigger or more comfortable home may be an important financial goal. Over the years, people usually accumulate savings by investing in various assets such as shares, mutual funds, gold, or property. When the time comes to achieve these goals, some of these investments may need to be liquidated.

However, selling such investments may result in capital gains, which are generally taxable. The Income Tax Act provides certain exemptions that allow taxpayers to reduce or defer capital gains tax if the gains are reinvested in specified avenues within the prescribed timelines. Check out in the latest infographic and my blog - https://goalbridge.in/understanding-capital-gains-tax-exemptions-for-home-buyers/

In personal finance, the biggest leaks rarely come from market crashes.They come from social obligations dressed up as f...
12/05/2026

In personal finance, the biggest leaks rarely come from market crashes.

They come from social obligations dressed up as financial decisions.

An insurance policy continues, not because it is suitable, but because a relative sold it.

A demat account stays open, not because it is needed, but because a family acquaintance helped set it up.

A mutual fund sold by friend/relative lingers in the portfolio, not because it performs, but because exiting it feels awkward.

Individually, these decisions seem harmless. Collectively, they quietly erode your wealth.

Read on in my latest blog:

https://goalbridge.in/the-costliest-word-investors-struggle-to-say-no/

Glad to be invited by Network18 Group to be a part of investor awareness campaign in collaboration with AMFI. Here is th...
06/05/2026

Glad to be invited by Network18 Group to be a part of investor awareness campaign in collaboration with AMFI. Here is the youtube link of the brief video on goal based planning. This video byte is also presently running on CNBC-TV18 and News18 .

https://youtu.be/DS1lV5ZHlEw

As part of International Women’s Day initiative, I was invited by Premier Carriers to conduct a  Financial Wellness Work...
13/03/2026

As part of International Women’s Day initiative, I was invited by Premier Carriers to conduct a Financial Wellness Workshop to encourage women to take confident steps toward financial independence and long-term wealth creation. It was wonderful interacting with all inquisitive young women who were eager to learn about personal finance. Conversations like these help create a more financially aware and empowered community of women.

Stock market scams in one form or the other continue to witness an unprecedented rise in India. Scamsters target gullibl...
10/02/2026

Stock market scams in one form or the other continue to witness an unprecedented rise in India. Scamsters target gullible investors through WhatsApp, Telegram and other social media platforms, luring them with the flashy claims of quick returns. This is despite SEBI’s warnings cautioning investors against unsolicited messages on WhatsApp and other similar groups.

To appear credible and gain trust of investors, the miscreants create fake expert profiles. In many instances, they impersonate SEBI registered investment advisers (RIA), forging their licenses. A recent tactic involves circulating screenshots of SEBI’s official list of RIAs to falsely convince investors that they are dealing with a legitimate, registered professional.

So, how can an investor differentiate between a genuine RIA and an imposter?

Read on in in latest blog:

https://goalbridge.in/2-ways-to-protect-your-hard-earned-money-from-stock-market-fraudsters/

A room filled with curiosity and a flood of questions on a lazy afternoon – that’s how I would describe the investor awa...
28/01/2026

A room filled with curiosity and a flood of questions on a lazy afternoon – that’s how I would describe the investor awareness session I conducted for the staff of LSEG Data & Analytics some time back.

During such sessions, I usually ask the audience one simple but revealing question:

“If you had to share one mistake, regret, or financial pain point from your life, what would it be?”

The responses are always honest. And often uncomfortable.

Not closing a loan early.
Trying to time the markets.
Buying unsuitable financial products.
All valid regrets.

But the most common answer, by far, is almost always the same:

“I wish I had started investing earlier.”

Whether they are in their 40s or even 50s, many carry this quiet regret. Not because they didn’t earn enough. Not because they made terrible mistakes. But because they underestimated one simple force – COMPOUNDING.

Compounding does not look dramatic in the early years. It feels slow. Almost boring. But give it time, and it becomes unstoppable. The real magic isn’t in finding the “best” product or timing the market perfectly. It lies in starting early and staying consistent.

You can recover from wrong products.
You can correct asset allocation mistakes.
You can restructure loans.

But you cannot buy back time.

Every wealthy person you listen to will tell you a version of the same truth: there is no secret recipe to wealth creation. It is boringly simple and universally applicable.

Start early.
Stay invested.
Let compounding do its job.

The earlier you begin, the less you need to be perfect.

And that is perhaps the most comforting lesson of all.



https://goalbridge.in/

Recently, during my conversation with a new NRI client, she revealed her plans to eventually return and retire in India....
16/01/2026

Recently, during my conversation with a new NRI client, she revealed her plans to eventually return and retire in India. Upon further enquiry, I discovered she had a corporate health cover abroad but had discontinued her health insurance policy back home.

I advised her to buy a fresh independent personal cover in India. During the mandatory telephonic health underwriting, the insurer discovered that she had been diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis five years ago. Her policy was rejected outright.

Read on in my latest blog:



https://goalbridge.in/the-one-mistake-nris-make-that-could-prove-costly-during-retirement/

During such IPO frenzies, one behavioural bias that gets amplified is FOMO (Fear of Missing Out). Promoters often capita...
06/01/2026

During such IPO frenzies, one behavioural bias that gets amplified is FOMO (Fear of Missing Out). Promoters often capitalise on buoyant market sentiment to raise capital at elevated valuations. The result is peak optimism, expensive pricing, distorted price discovery – and ultimately, investors bearing the brunt. Read on in my latest blog - how you as an investor should treat IPOs

https://goalbridge.in/what-retail-investors-should-learn-from-the-ipo-rush-of-2025/

I know people who have created huge wealth from humble incomes and disciplined savings. And, also those earning exceptio...
30/12/2025

I know people who have created huge wealth from humble incomes and disciplined savings. And, also those earning exceptionally well, yet constantly struggling financially due to poor cash-flow control and negligible investments. That is why, when I sit down to prepare a financial plan for a client, the one figure I pay very close attention to is Net Worth. It reveals far more than income ever can. It helps distinguish between those who are superficially rich and those who are genuinely on the path to long-term wealth creation. Read on in my latest blog how to prepare your networth statement and track it annually.



Link below:

https://goalbridge.in/the-one-figure-to-track-from-2026-the-ultimate-scorecard-of-your-financial-life/

This table below was published recently by popular newspaper Mint. Different investment options have been ranked in orde...
29/12/2025

This table below was published recently by popular newspaper Mint. Different investment options have been ranked in order of their return performance – from the highest to the lowest for each calendar year in the 10-year period – 2016 to 2025. They broadly fall under the following 4 asset classes – Fixed Income (debt), Equity, Gold and Real Estate.

Can you decipher any pattern in the returns of the asset classes above, from one year to the next? You will not be able to, because there isn’t any. Markets revert to the mean, reminding us that no country or asset class stays at the top forever. In fact, one year’s winner rarely becomes the next decade’s hero. The best-performing asset keeps changing, year after year.

The absence of any predictable pattern in this table underlines the importance of broad-based asset allocation in a portfolio.
Read on in my latest blog



https://goalbridge.in/asset-allocation-how-balance-beats-brilliance/

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