Plan across many futures. Results appear after you click Run Monte Carlo.
- Inputs explained in plain English
- ₹ Lakh/Crore or $ Million/Billion
- Guardrails / fixed spending
Plan across many futures. Results appear after you click Run Monte Carlo.
Choose a recipe, Copy, paste into Screener.in → “Create Screen”.
Top rank (local & global) with age-adjusted thresholds and a simple plan to reach the Top 10%.
Set ages & inflation → portfolio, contributions & spending → Run Monte Carlo.
Generate a clean query for Screener.in. Copy → paste → “Create Screen”.
Select country, set age & wealth → see your Top % locally and globally.
FIRE Planner Pro is a browser-based retirement planning calculator for people who want to estimate financial independence using realistic assumptions. It helps you model portfolio value, yearly contributions, expected return, volatility, inflation, fees, taxes, retirement spending, pensions, one-time expenses, and withdrawal rules.
The tool is useful for Indian investors because it supports familiar money units such as lakh and crore, and it keeps the calculation private in your browser. You can test different retirement ages, spending levels, return assumptions, and safety margins before making a long-term plan.
Educational tool only. This is not investment, tax, legal, or SEBI-registered financial advice.
Stock Screener India is a simple query generator for Screener.in. It creates ready-to-copy screening formulas for Indian stocks using quality, value, dividend, growth, and capital efficiency filters.
The goal is not to recommend stocks. The goal is to quickly narrow a large Indian stock universe into a smaller research list. After screening, you should still read the annual report, check business quality, management behavior, debt, cash flow, valuation, and risks.
Educational tool only. Screening is only the first step and is not a buy/sell recommendation.
Personal Wealth Rank estimates where your net worth stands compared with a selected country and a broad worldwide distribution. It is designed as a planning compass, not as a status symbol.
You can enter your age, country, and approximate net worth to see an estimated top-percentile position. The tool also shows rough thresholds for top 10%, top 5%, and top 1%, and gives a simple path estimate for reaching the top 10% over time.
Educational estimate only. Data distributions are stylized and should not be treated as exact official statistics.
Sequence risk, drawdowns, compounding, spending policies — explained clearly with examples.
Why hedges matter, barbell thinking, and a playbook for big shocks.
A practical framework for quality, value, and discipline.
Understand your wealth rank and how to use it. Link to the live checker inside.
The rare events that bend history — how to avoid ruin and stay positioned for upside, without prediction games.
Think in today’s money. Enter contributions, portfolio and spending as rupees you feel now. The planner converts your nominal return assumptions to “real” purchasing power after inflation, fees and tax drag. You’re deciding lifestyle, not guessing inflation.
Compounding + drawdowns = your flywheel. Two elements keep the flywheel going: (1) grow a base that throws off reliable cash flows; (2) protect that base so losses don’t set you back years. A deep early hit with withdrawals can permanently reduce the capital that future gains compound. If you must take risk, avoid taking it when you’re most fragile.
Start with ₹ 1.00 Cr, withdraw a flat ₹ 4.0 L at the end of each year (ignore inflation here to keep the idea clear). Two five-year paths use the same set of annual returns (four years of +10%, one year −30%) but in different order.
Educational content only — not financial advice.
The mission isn’t to avoid red days; it’s to avoid ruin. Big losses slow your compounding engine and steal years you can’t get back. A −50% crash needs +100% to recover — meanwhile the bills still arrive. Hedging is about building a plan that can absorb shocks while keeping you invested.
Setup: portfolio ₹1.50 Cr, annual spend ₹12.0 L (essentials ₹7.2 L), asset mix 60/40. Year-1 shock −30% in equities. No buffer: you sell more units at low prices to fund the year; recovery starts from a smaller base. With buffer: you fund essentials from cash/short bonds, trim flexible spending by a step (10%), and let the portfolio rebound. Small differences early snowball over a decade.
Rule: rebalance to 60/40 on schedule (no predictions). After a shock, some bonds go up — you sell a slice and buy equities low. Over many years this dampens drawdowns and nudges long-run returns without stock-picking.
Bottom line: build a portfolio that can take a punch — and a life that doesn’t require perfection to thrive. First survive — then optimize.
Educational content only — not financial advice.
Screens narrow the field; they don’t guarantee winners. Use them to find candidates, then read deeply and think independently.
Pair this with the Screener presets to build the initial list.
What is a wealth rank? It’s your percentile in a clearly chosen peer group by net worth (assets minus debts). Pick the right peers — age band and country/region — and the rank becomes a practical compass for goal-setting.
Open the live checker:
Educational content only — not financial advice.
TL;DR: Black Swans are rare, heavy‑impact events that we explain neatly only after they happen. Don’t try to guess dates; design your life and money so negative shocks don’t destroy you — and positive shocks can help you leap ahead.
Mediocristan: extremes don’t dominate (human heights). Extremistan: a few observations dominate the totals (markets, startups, technology waves). Most big financial and professional outcomes live in Extremistan, so thin‑tail assumptions understate reality.
Pattern: steady “safe” income builds confidence → position sizes creep up → a rare shock arrives → losses cluster exactly when liquidity vanishes.
Shield: cap leverage; keep a boring cash/short‑bond buffer for ugly weeks; size any “premium harvesting” small enough to ignore if it goes to zero.
A plan depends on one gatekeeper (a policy, platform, supplier, or trend) behaving the same way tomorrow. A sudden rule‑change flips the table.
Shield: avoid reliance on a single gate; cultivate more than one steady source of revenue/inputs; keep a practical runway so you can adapt instead of react.
Most experiments barely move the needle. One hits product–market fit and pays for the rest — the classic asymmetric outcome.
Design for it: put a small, fixed budget on repeated, independent attempts; measure pull; double on traction, park the rest without emotion.
New platforms or breakthroughs (AI, sensors, new rails) suddenly make certain skills and prototypes valuable. Those who kept options open can scale without having predicted the exact timing.
Design for it: maintain portable skills, keep lightweight prototypes alive, and be ready with simple pricing/packaging when pull appears.
| Bucket | What it holds | Why | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Safety (60–90%) | Cash/near‑cash, short gov/SDL/target‑maturity debt, essential insurance | Survive shocks without forced selling | It’s oxygen, not alpha — don’t chase yield here |
| Core growth | Broad, low‑cost equity (domestic + some global), rebalanced | Participate in long‑run growth | Process beats prediction |
| Optionality (5–20%) | Convex bets: small startup equity, micro‑SaaS/creator projects, royalties; time‑boxed trials | Capture positive swans; capped downside | Expect many zeros; one win pays |
You don’t beat Black Swans by guessing their arrival. You beat them by refusing to be fragile — and by arranging your bets so a good surprise can change your slope.
Kiran is a chemical engineer from National Institute of Technology Tiruchirappalli (NIT Trichy). He builds simple, private, client‑side tools that help people make disciplined, calm, better decisions.
His philosophy is straightforward: learn small, do consistently, and do it passionately — every day. Small improvements, repeated, beat grand plans that never get executed.
Interests include clear mental models, increasing optionality and resilience, practical hedging against big surprises, the study of “black swans,” and continuous learning — especially in AI.
Contact: kiranputhezhath@zohomail.in
Tools are designed to run in your browser.
Email: kiranputhezhath@zohomail.in
Educational content only. Nothing on this site is investment, legal, tax, or financial advice. Markets involve risk; past performance does not guarantee future results.
Contact: kiranputhezhath@zohomail.in
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Rough, educational estimates using stylized distributions. No advice.