Prepay your personal loans, Take top -up
The home loan and personal loan cannot be clubbed since both are different products. You can ask your home loan lender to give you a top-up loan on the security of the house and use that to prepay your personal loan. You will be eligible for a top-up loan only if your income is sufficient to repay both the home loan and the top-up loan and the property value is sufficiently large to provide an appropriate margin for both loans put together. If your existing home loan lender is not willing to consider your request, you can shift your loan to another lender with a request for a top-up loan which is likely to come at the same rate on the home loan.
* I had  applied for a credit card from the bank in which I have a savings  account. But they have rejected my application. What could be the reason  behind such action?
Before issuing credit cards or for that matter  any credit facilities, banks obtain the credit report of the applicant  from the Credit Information Bureau of India Ltd (CIBIL). A bank can  reject the credit card application if the applicant has a bad credit  record or inadequate income. You are entitled to know the reason for the  rejection of your application from the bank. Ask for a formal rejection  letter and if the bank refuses, then you can file a complaint to the  banking ombudsman at bankingombudsman.rbi.org.in. You can get a copy of  your credit report from CIBIL using this link www.cibil.com/  credit-score to download the form.
* I am a 44-year-old  businessman, with an annual inco-me of Rs 3.5 lakh. I have a life  insurance cover of Rs 12 lakh. Please tell me if this cover is enough;  if not please suggest me an action plan.
Considering your age and  annual income, you need to take a life cover of at least 12 times of  your annual income — i.e Rs 42 lakh. So you need to take an additional  life cover worth Rs 30 lakh. A term insurance policy for a 44-year-old  non-smoker for 25-year term — if bought online — would be cost you  upwards of Rs 11,289.
I have been investing in Reliance mutual  fund growth SIP since last three years. The return is not satisfactory. I  can continue my contribution to SIP for the next three to five years.  Is it advisable to continue my SIP or withdraw in loss?
Never stop  an SIP when the market is down. Generally, investments made in the  downturn reduce your average cost and produces excellent returns over  the long term. So you should definitely continue the SIP though you can  review whether the fund chosen by you is still appropriate or not.  Reliance MF-Growth is a mid-cap fund. By looking into the fund  performance, it has not beaten its respective benchmark returns.

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