
Money Mind | Nitesh 📈
3.7K posts

Money Mind | Nitesh 📈
@MoneyMindPro
💰 Money • Markets • Mindset 📈 Investing & Wealth Creation 🧠 Helping people make better financial decisions 🚀 Learn. Invest. Grow.















A ₹1 crore flat. 20-year home loan. Or... 20 years of disciplined investing while living on rent. Which one creates more wealth? Let's take a simple example. Person A buys a ₹1 crore flat with a home loan. Every month, a large part of the salary goes toward the EMI. Person B lives in the same area on rent. Instead of paying a higher EMI, they invest the monthly difference consistently in equity mutual funds. After 20 years... Person A owns a house. Person B may have built a substantial investment portfolio. So who is richer? The answer isn't as simple as social media makes it sound. It depends on: • Property price appreciation • Rental inflation • Home loan interest rate • Investment returns • How long you stay in the same city • Most importantly... whether you actually invest the money you save instead of spending it. I've seen people become wealthy through real estate. I've also seen people create more wealth by renting and investing. There is no universal winner. The biggest mistake is making a ₹1 crore decision without running the numbers. Before buying a home, ask yourself: Am I buying an asset... or buying peace of mind? Sometimes both are worth it. Sometimes neither is. What's your view? 🏠 Buy or Rent? #MoneyMind ❤️ #PersonalFinance #RealEstate #Investing #houseloan



Yesterday, one of my friends, a software engineer in his mid-40s, asked me something that stayed on my mind. He said, "I've spent my entire career in IT. But now the competition feels tougher than ever. AI is changing everything. I'm not sure I want to do this for another 15–20 years. What options do I have?" It made me realize... This isn't just one person's concern. Many experienced professionals are quietly asking the same question. Not because they've stopped working hard. But because industries evolve, technology changes, and careers don't always follow a straight line. Maybe the biggest career risk today isn't AI. It's depending on a single source of income for decades. I'm curious... If you were a software engineer in your 40s, what would your next move be? • Stay in tech and upskill? • Move into management? • Start a business? • Teach or consult? • Build a second source of income? I'd genuinely love to hear different perspectives. #MoneyMind ❤️ #Career #SoftwareEngineer #AI #FinancialFreedom


Yesterday, one of my friends, a software engineer in his mid-40s, asked me something that stayed on my mind. He said, "I've spent my entire career in IT. But now the competition feels tougher than ever. AI is changing everything. I'm not sure I want to do this for another 15–20 years. What options do I have?" It made me realize... This isn't just one person's concern. Many experienced professionals are quietly asking the same question. Not because they've stopped working hard. But because industries evolve, technology changes, and careers don't always follow a straight line. Maybe the biggest career risk today isn't AI. It's depending on a single source of income for decades. I'm curious... If you were a software engineer in your 40s, what would your next move be? • Stay in tech and upskill? • Move into management? • Start a business? • Teach or consult? • Build a second source of income? I'd genuinely love to hear different perspectives. #MoneyMind ❤️ #Career #SoftwareEngineer #AI #FinancialFreedom













It took me 10 years to build a 1Cr portfolio. Today, one of my portfolios is up close by 1Cr in a single trading day. Honestly, this is surreal. Last 3.5 years have gone into experimenting across different markets, building better investing strategies. One key learning has been -- that maybe I would not even need to withdraw even 50% of my invested amount ever. So generating cash flows from such portfolios become extremely critical. Hence, I have been selling Put Options on close to 30% of portfolio value. This pretty much takes care of all my expenses. Would highly recommend doing this on high quality stocks.






