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Home » Insurance » All about Critical Illness Insurance

All about Critical Illness Insurance

by Radhey Sharma

critical illness insurance, health insurance

So here is the scenario which helps me drive home the point about the importance of critical illness insurance policy in India.

Suppose you are hospitalized with a major heart attack and your spouse is told by the doctor that you need to be operated upon. Big deal you think, you have health insurance or mediclaim to take care of this mishap. But there is a small hitch though.

The operation is going to cost you around Rs 5 lakhs, more than what your mediclaim can provide for and don’t forget the hospitalization bills which includes room rent, medicines and what not.

If only there was someone who could pay that 5 lakhs.

Well, you are in good luck, pardon the heart attack. Health insurance companies are ready to make a one time payout to you but you need to have critical illness plan to avail that.

Searching for Best Critical Insurance Policy India? Here is the updated article.

What is Critical Illness Insurance plan ?

Simply put, this is a health policy where in if you are diagnosed with any critical illnesses, then you are given a lump sum money, irrespective of whether you were hospitalized or not. So in that sense, this does not qualify as a reimbursement policy but is a defined benefit plan.

A critical illness will most probably affect the earning potential of an individual so the benefit paid out by such a policy will help the entire family in dire times.

To take an example, if in the above case, the person has a mediclaim policy of Rs 2 lakh and a critical illness insurance policy of say Rs 6 lakhs, and if the hospitalization charges for the 5 lakh operation was Rs 1.5 lakhs, then the mediclaim will reimburse Rs 1.5 lakhs as should be the case normally and over and above this, another 5 lakh will be given out under the critical illness terms and conditions.

You will love to read this too  Importance of Health Insurance

These policies are provided both by general insurance companies and life insurance companies, the latter as riders to a life insurance policy that you take from them.

What is defined as critical illness ?

Most of the insurance companies have their own definition of critical illnesses but there are some 10 -12 that are common.

The common list of critical illnesses are :

  • Paralysis
  • Cancer
  • Stroke
  • Coronary artery surgery
  • Renal failure (failure of both kidneys)
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Major organ transplants like kidney, lung, pancreas or bone marrow
  • Aorta surgery
  • Heart valve replacement

Critical-Illness-Insurance

Points to note for critical illness insurance policy

As is the case with financial products, there are many caveats you need to be aware of when purchasing such a policy.

If you die within 30 days of the illness being diagnosed, you will not get the claim. You will also not get the cover if the illness is diagnosed within 90 days of taking the policy. These differ between insurers so please read the fine print.

The term CRITICAL is up for discussion – so a minor heart attack cannot possibly be a critical case and so the insurance company will not dole out the benefits to you. Once you make a claim, the insurer will have a panel of experts to infer whether the case is critical and payout needs to happen. So do not assume that you will get the money if you have a heart attack or say, cancer – the criticality of the diseases is very important in the purview of critical illness policy.

You will love to read this too  Do top up health insurance plans make sense ?
While general insurers offer a critical illness insurance cover for 1-5 years, life insurers provide it as a rider for a longer term—10-20 years.

Some insurers will limit the amount of money that will get paid out if a critical illness is diagnosed. When this happens, the rest of the sum assured is carried forward to cover other illnesses. So more future claims can be done till the entire sum assured is consumed – after that, naturally the policy terminates. This feature is called coverage continuation option.

Some insurers will allow you to top up the sum insured in the future. This is when your liabilities increase, so check that before you buy.

Please remember that this is not a replacement for a mediclaim policy but a supplement – you might still land up in the hospital with a illness which is not covered under the critical illness and run up a huge bill. So take mediclaim first and then go for a critical illness cover.

How to pick the right cover ?

Before you call the only agent you know and ask for a cover, make sure you –

  • understand how many critical illnesses are covered under the plan you are taking
  • have compared at least 3-4 policies to arrive at the right one
  • go for a policy with the highest age renewal limit
  • understand the exclusion i.e. what will not be covered
  • go for one with coverage continuation option
  • understand whether there is an option to increase the sum insured

How much cover do I really need ?

You can use a rule of thumb here. Approximately, 2 to 3 times of your income is advisable.

You will love to read this too  How to Make Car Insurance Claim (Part-1)

So for someone earning say 5 lakhs, the sum insured could be between 10 – 15 lakhs.

Comparison of policies in India

I have done comparison of 3 general insurance companies. Take your pick.

Critical Illness Comparison

Critical Illness Comparison

PS : This article is a request by reader Rakesh.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Rakesh says

    February 27, 2012 at 12:32 pm

    @Radhey,

    Thanks for this post, you do they great care of your readers.
    From the chart it looks like Bajaj Allianz is the cheapest. Do you have any experience with any of the above companies?

    • Vivek K says

      February 27, 2012 at 2:21 pm

      @Rakesh, Bajaj is cheapest because the number of illness covered by them is the least. You must check the list before finalising one.

      I’d also like to see their claim settlement ratio specific to critical illness policy. Can it be found somewhere Radhey?

      • Radhey Sharma says

        February 27, 2012 at 6:10 pm

        @Vivek K, It can be found in the IRDA website. Another work on my list , lol !

    • Radhey Sharma says

      February 27, 2012 at 6:09 pm

      @Rakesh, I don’t yet but I am doing an analysis for all of them. Will take a month probably to come out. Will do a post then.

  2. Vivek K says

    February 27, 2012 at 2:19 pm

    Is there any option of family floater in critical illness policy?

    • Radhey Sharma says

      February 27, 2012 at 6:10 pm

      @Vivek K, Not that I know of but I did read somewhere that it is available.

      Can someone find out ?

    • Manikaran Singal says

      July 13, 2012 at 6:49 pm

      Vivek, recently Max bupa has come up with Health assurance plan which offers CI benefit in floater plan

  3. vikrant says

    February 27, 2012 at 6:54 pm

    I have been doing some research on CI and found that Bharti AXA covers 20 critical illness.

    1. Cancer
    2. First heart attack
    3. Coronary artery disease
    4. Coronary artery bypass surgery
    5. Heart valve surgery
    6. Surgery to aorta
    7. Stroke
    8. Kidney failure
    9. Aplastic anaemia
    10. End-stage lung disease
    11. End-stage liver failure
    12. Coma
    13. Major burns
    14. Organ / bone marrow transplantation
    15. Multiple sclerosis
    16. Fulminant hepatitis
    17. Motor neurone disease
    18. Primary pulmonary hypertension
    19. Terminal illness
    20. Bacterial meningitis

    “Sum Insured
    ” “3 lacs
    ” “5 lacs
    ”
    “Age band
    ”
    “3m to 25 yrs
    ” 722 1,203
    “26 to 35 yrs
    ” 987 1,644
    “36 to 40 yrs
    ” 1,752 2,920
    “41 to 45 yrs
    ” 3,210 5,350
    “46 to 50 yrs
    ” 4,830 8,050
    “51 to 55 yrs
    ” 7,201 12,001

    Renewal discount
    You get a 5% discount on the renewal
    premium for every claim-free year, up to a
    maximum of 25%.

    • Radhey Sharma says

      February 27, 2012 at 6:58 pm

      @vikrant,

      This is really good stuff Vikrant.
      I am actually analyzing them myself, which ones have you checked till now ?

      • vikrant says

        February 27, 2012 at 7:06 pm

        @Radhey Sharma,

        I looked at ICIC LOM, HDFC ERGO, TATA AIG and BAJAJ ALLiance, Actually i was looking for maximum number of disease and i found that Bharti AXA has that. Not sure if anyone else is giving even more than AXA, I never looked at the price point, however from this article seems like Bharti AXA is cheap. the only disadvantage is max cover 5L. and i was looking for atleast 25 L. also not sure about the claim ratio, but when i called CC they told its 92%

        • Radhey Sharma says

          February 27, 2012 at 7:11 pm

          @vikrant,
          I know for sure ICICI Pru offers more than that. Around 35 in number.

          Check the below.
          http://www.iciciprulife.com/public/Health-plans/Crisis-Cover.htm

          Are you documenting your analysis or are you going as it comes ? If you have documented, then you can send across to me and I can use that in my analysis.

    • Rakesh says

      February 27, 2012 at 8:25 pm

      @Vikrant,

      Good research, 5L is way too less these days, if they increase it to 20L they will be more competitive.

  4. vikrant says

    February 27, 2012 at 7:22 pm

    Actually i am not, i am gathering these details from different sources,like blogs, i also spoke with mediassist , and they shared the details of CI for the Above 4 company, it stated 8 to 11 diseases only.

    This one 35 disease is really good, what i dont like to the PTD and accidental death, They need to remove that and only keep it as CI, that way it would be prized lower, I am also looking at Personnel accident separably so mixing wont make sense.

    • Radhey Sharma says

      February 28, 2012 at 5:22 am

      @vikrant, I agree with that, bundling CI with PTD and accidental death is making a mess of things.

      But that is what we have, isn’t it.

      • vikrant says

        February 28, 2012 at 1:47 pm

        @Radhey Sharma, True Rodhey, unfortunately These insurance companies do things which is going to benifit them…

        Are you going to update this post with comparison once you complete your research of CI?

        • Radhey Sharma says

          February 28, 2012 at 4:28 pm

          @vikrant, I will do that yes.

    • Vivek K says

      February 28, 2012 at 9:52 am

      @vikrant, Hi Vikrant, Thanks for sharing Bharti AXA details, it is very helpful.
      Even I am looking at personal accidental insurance and CI separately. I have narrowed down personal accidental insurance with Bajaj Allianz and doing some feedback research on net. Their claim settlement ratio is 91%.

      For CI I was looking at Tata AIG but Bharti covers more illness so need to do a comparison and bit more research now. I personally don’t like ICICI due to the bad goodwill they have in market.

      • Radhey Sharma says

        February 28, 2012 at 4:27 pm

        @Vivek K, Why do you say ICICI has a bad goodwill in the market ? Is it with respect to CIs or generally ?

        • Vivek K says

          February 28, 2012 at 4:37 pm

          @Radhey Sharma, It is my general opinion about ICICI. I have always read negative things about ICICI. The way their recovery agents treat home loan defaulters, the amount of “mistakes” they do in credit card bills and make customers run to rectify it for no fault of their own. The word “ethics” does not seem to exist in their dictionary.
          The other day I posted a link from jagoinvestor about how customers fought and got money back. Again they were from ICICI.
          There is an online consumer court forum who assist people in filing cases. Even they have blacklisted ICICI, mentioning that maximum number of cases are against them.

          I know there may be others like them as well but ICICI is right on top in my blacklist.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            February 28, 2012 at 4:41 pm

            @Vivek K, Hmmm, a bit scary !

          • Vivek K says

            February 28, 2012 at 8:08 pm

            @Radhey Sharma, Here’s the evidence: –
            http://consumercourt.net.in/
            Note the text “BEWARE OF ICICI BANK and HDFC BANK: HIGHEST NUMBER OF COMPLAINTS ARE AGAINST THESE BANKS.”

  5. vikrant says

    February 28, 2012 at 1:45 pm

    @ vivek, Hi Vivek, bajaj allianz, premium or personnel gaurd? and are you planning to take this directly from company or medimanage? additionally may i know what made you took Bajaj A agains others apart from claim radtio?

    • Vivek K says

      February 28, 2012 at 2:27 pm

      @vikrant, So far I was enquiring about personal guard. I read on internet that the premium personal guard is no longer available but I have to check again. I am dealing directly with Bajaj Allianz.
      Why I chose Bajaj Allianz: –
      1) High claim settlement ratio. This is one of the biggest criteria for me because even if your claim is genuine, companies make you run for your money.
      2) 125% SA in case of PTD. The main reason for me to buy accidental insurance is to protect myself in case any mishap. All other companies provide 100% SA.
      3) Coverage of upto 60 times of your monthly income.

      There are other reasons as well like reasonable premium, good coverage for other disabilities but the above are my top 3 reasons.

      I came across medimanage very recently. I am considering them so that they can assist during the time of claim. I am sure they are more empowered than me. Do you know anything about their services and charges?

      • vikrant says

        February 28, 2012 at 2:36 pm

        @Vivek K, No service charges Vivek, They are free of cost, all you got to do it take the policy from them and they are good.

        • Vivek K says

          February 28, 2012 at 2:39 pm

          @vikrant, So are you saying they will assist in settling the claims without charging anything?
          Do you know if their services are effective and they are able to win battle with insurance companies?

          • vikrant says

            February 28, 2012 at 2:44 pm

            @Vivek K, Vivek, They wont fight with the insurance companies, its juts that they will collect your document, submit for claim, talk to the insurance companies or the TPA, if you have any issues. if you have a valid claim then you wont need the battle. And yes i have used their services from my comapny, they are good you dont have to run around, they do the running for you, however it might take good amount of time cause TPA and INS companies will do all possible to reject your claim if you are not careful and not submitting all the documents.

          • vikrant says

            February 28, 2012 at 2:48 pm

            @vikrant, In case you need help call them and talk to this guy from medimanage by name ANIKET, he is good and would help you answer all your question, if you want tell him i referred you. the good point is he will never persue you to buy the policy, he will give you all the required info and you can take your time and decide to buy when you want.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            February 28, 2012 at 4:35 pm

            @vikrant, Great, that is the kind of service which will help.

          • Vivek K says

            February 28, 2012 at 2:52 pm

            @vikrant, That’s good enough effort for me, at least my family will have someone to rely on at the time of the need. I really hope that’s never required 🙂 but you still need to prepare for the worst.

            Thanks for sharing the information Vikrant. I think I might talk to their executives and see how they go about it. Cheers!

          • vikrant says

            February 28, 2012 at 2:54 pm

            @Vivek K, your bet my friend. and thank to you too for sharing your comments.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            February 28, 2012 at 4:40 pm

            @Vivek K, Let’s pray we never come to this situation at all ever.

            Better to take the relevant insurances chaps.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            February 28, 2012 at 4:34 pm

            @vikrant, Remember that insurance companies offer a better service to group insurnace than to individuals. I am nto saying through medimanage the service will be better or worse, but my take is that one needs to fight the battle themselves.

            Remember when you buy directly from a general insurance company, you get a Health Advisor who helps you with the claim.
            Chase him to get your job done !

          • Vivek K says

            February 28, 2012 at 4:44 pm

            @Radhey Sharma, More often than not the guy would have left the company when the time arrives for settling a claim. Even if the guy is there he is still representing the company who would try hard to reject the claim.
            In case of medimanage or someone similar the chances of company disappearing altogether is very slim. So, you have some support.

            I agree we have to fight our own battles but good to have a supporter with you especially when it is representing customer and certified by IRDA. What do you say Radhey?

  6. Rakesh says

    February 28, 2012 at 3:17 pm

    @Vikrant / @Vivek,

    Good discussion on CI, got to know few more things. I too would go with medimanage, seems like they are doing a good job.

    • Vivek K says

      February 28, 2012 at 4:15 pm

      @Rakesh, I wish they provide one stop solution for all kinds of insurance and not just medical. 🙂

      • Radhey Sharma says

        February 28, 2012 at 4:36 pm

        @Vivek K, SO can someone update after talking to MediManage, I will contact them separately and do a coverage on them on what they offer and what they don’t.

        Good discussion going on guys, keep up the good work.

        • Vivek K says

          March 2, 2012 at 12:13 pm

          @Radhey Sharma, Ok, I had a chat with them and they deal in all kinds of health insurance like medical, accidental, CI etc. They deal with corporates and individuals both.
          I have asked for details on accidental policies, I might use their services to buy a policy.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            March 2, 2012 at 7:21 pm

            @Vivek K, Good stuff Vivek, I will contact them this weekend.

          • Rakesh says

            March 2, 2012 at 9:55 pm

            @Radhey,

            You can also ask them to write a guest post here with various services they offer, it will benefit lot of your readers.

          • Vivek K says

            March 2, 2012 at 10:00 pm

            @Rakesh, That’s a good idea. They are associated with jagoinvestor, I am sure they won’t mind associating with wealthwishers too. 🙂

          • Radhey Sharma says

            March 3, 2012 at 7:43 am

            @Vivek K, Just wrote to them !

          • Vivek K says

            March 3, 2012 at 7:15 pm

            @Radhey Sharma, Did you hear anything from medimanage? They were supposed to email me the accidental policy details but haven’t heard anything from them yet. A bit strange, having second thoughts now about their service.

          • Rakesh says

            March 3, 2012 at 9:20 pm

            @Vivek,

            They do take time to reply but they make sure they reply. In the past i had asked them quote for health insurance, they took over week to reply.

          • Radhey Sharma says

            March 3, 2012 at 11:33 pm

            @Vivek K, Expecting too much guys !
            I mailed them and I usually give others 7 days to respond !

          • Vivek K says

            March 5, 2012 at 6:02 pm

            @Radhey Sharma, My bad! I got the comparison the very same day but the email went to my spam folder. All good.

  7. anand says

    July 10, 2012 at 5:04 pm

    Hi All,

    As you all experts replying, I do have one query as below:
    Suppose I have mediclaim policy of 7 lakh and even critical illness policy of 5 lakh. And I get dignosed with and undergone to illness under critical illness category. And suppose expences occur 4 lakh.
    Then am I entitled to claim under both policies? If yes then what about document need to be supplied as hospital won’t provide same original copy they may marked duplicate copies.

    COul you please help me so that I can take decision to go for policy

    • TheWealthWisher says

      July 10, 2012 at 8:58 pm

      If you get hospitalized for 24 hrs, then yes, mediclaim would be help in reimbursement to the extent of actual spends during hospitalization. As far as critical illness is concerned, you will get a one time payout which is not related to your mediclaim at all. So there is 100% chance that you get money from both policies.
      As far as documents are concerned, a duplicate will work as you cannot get 2 originals.

    • Rakesh says

      July 10, 2012 at 9:01 pm

      @Anand,

      Very valid point on the documents. Mediclaim will pay for your hospitalization expenses whereas critical illness will pay you 5 lakhs upfront if you are diagnosed with the disease. So in the above case the disease will be diagnosed first and the hospitalization done at a later date.
      Also it would help to get the documents notarized.

      • TheWealthWisher says

        July 12, 2012 at 7:12 am

        Yeah, attesting the document will help and I think the insurance companies might ask for it. I missed that, sorry. Thanks Rakesh.

  8. Manikaran Singal says

    July 13, 2012 at 6:48 pm

    Friends just to add some points over here. I was a big fan of Critical illness policy and used to advise all my clients untill i understood the Criticality aspect through
    the policy wordings. some are as below

    Kidney Failure requiring Regular Dialysis:End stage renal disease presented as chronic irreversible failureof both kidneys to function, as a result of which either regular
    renal dialysis (haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) is institutedor renal transplantation is carried out.

    First Heart Attack of Specified Severity:The first occurrence of myocardial infarction which means thedeath of a portion of the heart muscle as a result of inadequate
    blood supply to the relevant area.

    All the conditions are related to some specific severity. I discussed this with one of my doctor frien to which he replied that in these health conditions there are very few chances that they discharge the patients.and also there are very rare chance of the patient to survive.
    Now this means that as long as he’s in hospital, he has to bear hospitalisation cost. Thus for him hospitalisation cover is more important then Critical Illness. and moreover as CI policy is a fixed benefit plan, so i generally feel that one should continue with the cover only till he doesn’t accumulate the same amount in “Health benefit fund”.So now i m not in favour of critical illness plan.

    In Accident policy i feel that one should not ignore the “Temporary total disablement benefit”…and one should go with one which offers the maximum of this.

  9. Rakesh says

    July 13, 2012 at 7:01 pm

    @Mani,

    Thanks for your detailed explanation on CI. So in the above case you would advise individual to have a good Sum Insured in his mediclaim policy. Also in the above case if CI is taken for 5 lakhs, the company would pay him, right.
    So there is benefit of taking CI in the above case.
    Agree with you on accident policy. Can you recommend any companies which you have advised your clients and share your experience?

    • Manikaran Singal says

      July 14, 2012 at 10:39 am

      Yes, i advise clients to get good sum assured in mediclaim and also to built a corpus as “health emergency fund”.
      Yes, if CI is taken then company will pay the lumpsum amount provided the condition of criticality satisfies.
      I personally recommend Apollo Munich Personal accident policy.It offers 15 lakh of TTD benefit which i guess is maximum is the industry. But Please note that the coverage under PA policy completely depends on one’s current income.

      • Rakesh says

        July 14, 2012 at 11:08 pm

        @Mani,

        Thanks once again for your feedback. I had shortlisted Apollo Munich & Bajaj Allianz for Personal accident, still not decided which to go with.
        As for CI, given today’s lifestyle we live in i think by the time we get to 40-45 years the chance of a stroke is very likely. Would it not be better to go for a CI then?

        • Manikaran Singal says

          July 15, 2012 at 10:50 am

          Rakesh, CI is a good policy and yes, as you rightly said that chance of major health disease going forward in today’s lifestyle is very much there.
          But One has to be planned from every front, I don’t think 5 lakh or 10 lakh cover would be enough for that kind of health condition. Maintain enough liquidity and save enough corpus for managing that kind of emergency.

  10. Rakesh says

    July 15, 2012 at 5:31 pm

    Mani, Thanks once again, very rightly said 10 lakh would not be enough but at least something is better than nothing. And of course good amount of mediclaim is required too.

    • TheWealthWisher says

      July 17, 2012 at 7:11 am

      Some serious discussions guys, keep it up !

  11. Damn says

    December 3, 2012 at 7:24 pm

    Hi,

    Is there any website where the different critical illness insurance policies can be compared? Have searched around a lot without much success. Would also appreciate if someone recommends the best product in terms of maximum term, fixed premium and widest coverage of diseases. Thanks in advance.

  12. ankur says

    January 23, 2013 at 12:18 pm

    I agree with @manikaran rgd the fineprint of the critical illness…..we as lay man would just see that our policy covers 20 illness but there are a lot of if and buts with which the company would play with.That is quite disheartening.. i had personally liked max bupa..but will do some more research before opting for one now…..

    • TheWealthWisher says

      January 24, 2013 at 8:02 am

      Which one did you go for Ankur finally ?

  13. ankur says

    January 24, 2013 at 12:42 pm

    As i had mentioned i had shortlisted MAX BUPA for its coverage of 20 illness,floater policy,lifetime renewable and online features but i must admit the fine print of each particular illness broke my heart! If your illness dont turn out the way your company want it be you are stck with a sore thumb in those critical times! im now in two minds whether to just increase my mediclaim policy OR take a smaller CI than i had proposed…….. would be helpful if someone puts up the claim settlement ratio of all the companies.

  14. Ashwani says

    March 27, 2013 at 9:01 pm

    this is good stuff. the discussions happened gave me a good insight on various aspects while taking a CI policy.

    am looking for a CI policy cover. will definitely be looking forward to advises on this forum.

  15. ARUN says

    June 2, 2013 at 1:32 pm

    can u pls tell me the link on IRDA website where i can view the claim settlement ratio of all these insurance companies

  16. ARUN says

    June 2, 2013 at 1:33 pm

    Hi Radhey,

    can u pls tell me the link on IRDA website where i can view the claim settlement ratio of all these insurance companies

Trackbacks

  1. Tax Saving Schemes | Tax Saving Investments | How to Save Tax says:
    April 6, 2017 at 5:56 pm

    […] Health insurance – popularly known as Mediclaim policies – can also be decent tax saving schemes for individuals. Mediclaim policies cover the costs occurred due to accident or hospitalisation. It can also cover the expenses of pre and post hospitalisation procedure depending on the sum assured of the insurance policy. Mediclaim policies offer tax benefits under Section 80D. A policyholder can avail tax benefit on the premiums paid for their own health insurance policies as well as for their parents (senior citizen). Also, money received after the maturity of the Mediclaim policy is tax-free under the critical illness insurance policies. […]

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WealthWisher Financial Advisors (Also referred as The wealthwisher.com or TW2) is an Advice platform, where we help an individual, managing personal finance in easy and smart manner & taking informed decision . The person managing WealthWisher Financial Advisors Mr. Madhupam Krishna is a SEBI registered Advisor. Post advise, one can execute transactions with your banker, stock broker or agent/ financial intermediary. We also offer transaction services through various associations, at a substantially lesser cost to our clients, as compared to other financial intermediaries, so that you start your financial plan with savings. WealthWisher Financial Advisors may earn commission or distributor incentives for providing transaction services or referring customers with third party service providers as per customer’s agreement. Our recommendations rely on historical data. Historical/ past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. The information and views presented here are prepared by WealthWisher Financial Advisors. The information contained herein is based on our analysis and upon sources that we consider reliable. We, however, do not vouch for the accuracy or the completeness thereof. This material is for personal information and we are not responsible for any loss incurred based upon it. This document is solely for the personal information of the recipient. The products discussed or recommended here may not be suitable for all investors. Investors must make their own informed decisions based on their specific objectives and financial position and using such independent advice, as they believe necessary. While acting upon any information or analysis mentioned here, customers may please note that neither WealthWisher Financial Advisors nor any person connected with any third party companies or service providers of WealthWisher Financial Advisors, accepts any liability arising from the use of this information and views mentioned here. Each recipient of this document should make such investigations as they deem necessary to arrive at an independent evaluation of an investment in the securities of the companies referred to in this document (including the merits and risks involved), and should consult their own advisors to determine the merits and risks of such an action. Stocks in the equity portfolios are filtered at various levels. Initially, the stocks are filtered on the basis of the size of the company and the sector of the company. The company's fundamental parameters are tested using various parameters related to inventory days, employee cost, power cost, taxation etc. Finally, the volatility in the price performance as well as the future growth prospect is viewed and accordingly the stocks are classified in various portfolios. While building Mutual funds portfolio, factors like size of the funds, the historical performances (return) of the schemes, expenses ratio ,the sector in which the scheme invests and volatility are considered.
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