The uncomfortable truth: wealth grows faster than clarity
It’s surprisingly easy to build assets without building a plan. A few investments here, a property there, maybe a business stake, insurance, some joint accounts — and before you know it, you’ve created a financial ecosystem that only you fully understand. That’s often the stage when people decide to invest in PMS: they want professional oversight, a clearer strategy, and someone actively managing the moving parts. But here’s what gets missed: the moment your wealth becomes “managed”, it should also become “transferable”. That’s where estate planning stops being a distant idea and becomes part of responsible investing.
PMS can grow wealth; it doesn’t automatically protect your legacy
Portfolio Management Services are built to streamline investments in a personalised way, matching your goals, horizon, and risk tolerance. It’s a strong solution when you don’t want to DIY your portfolio or when the stakes are high enough that “casual investing” no longer feels sensible. Yet even the most brilliantly managed portfolio can create headaches for your family if something happens to you unexpectedly. A PMS account may have nominees, statements, and reporting — but it doesn’t replace a clear, legally sound plan for how all assets and liabilities should be handled in the event of death or incapacity. PMS manages performance; estate planning manages continuity.
The best time to start is earlier than most people think
Many people assume estate planning is for retirement. In reality, it becomes relevant the moment any of these are true: you own property, you have dependants, you have multiple financial accounts, you run a business, or you simply have preferences about “who gets what”. Anand Rathi PMS calls estate planning a sensitive matter — and it is — but it also frames it as a way to simplify what could otherwise become complex, especially for HNIs and UHNIs with a wide array of assets. You don’t have to expect the worst when you start early. It implies that you’re removing doubt while being calm, well, and in charge.
What estate planning actually does (in plain language)
Estate planning is an in depth procedure that determines how your assets and bills will be distributed in case of your death or incapacitation. The idea is to ensure that you have resources to deal with according to your wishes, financial and legal arrangements have been prepared and your children will not be required to grapple with misunderstandings and wrangles. One of the biggest benefits is clarity for beneficiaries — especially if minors are involved — and reducing the risk of long legal battles that drain time, money, and emotional energy. It can also protect you, not just your heirs, by setting out powers of attorney and health directives if you can’t make decisions temporarily or permanently.
Why HNIs feel the “transmission loss” problem more sharply
When estates get larger, small inefficiencies become expensive. Anand Rathi PMS points out that inheriting large estates can trigger significant tax implications and transmission losses, and that planning can help minimise those with tools like trusts, gifting strategies, and structured arrangements. Estate planning also lets you set up charitable contributions properly, so your giving continues in a predictable, dispute-free way. This isn’t about being dramatic; it’s about recognising that wealth transfer can be costly when it’s left to chance.
How the process tends to unfold when it’s done properly
It begins with a sensible process of planning your own estate and that begins with an evaluation of all that you have and owe; liquid assets, properties, investments, business interests, insurance and liabilities. Next you name beneficiaries and needs, divide and manage goals, select the appropriate tools: will, trust, family structures, nominees, powers of attorney. The legal documents are written in a way that is non-ambiguous and in accordance with Indian laws. Lastly, you have to review your plan on a regular basis, as life evolves and changes, you get married, get divorced, have new children, assets, new laws, and your plan has to evolve with you.
