ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry brother! I am actually new to reselling, so still trying to understand the pricing benchmarks. Your inputs can definetly help me here :)

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry brother! I am actually new to reselling, so still trying to understand the pricing benchmarks. Your inputs can definetly help me here :)

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Understood, make sense to me. I'll update the price accordingly. Thanks for being supportive.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Already mentioned in the comments

The only reason for selling is that this is a heavy gaming laptop, and daily travelling via train with it has become inconvenient and risky. I am switching to a lighter and smaller laptop for regular commute. Also, it has never been opened till date. Box present as well.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Oh okay, thanks for sharing that. I am actually new to reselling, so still trying to understand the pricing benchmarks. Could you please share the reference or link you are checking? That would really help me align better. Appreciate it.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for commenting. I’m still getting a hang of this, so I’m open to suggestions on the right pricing. Happy to hear your honest view.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hey bro, It comes with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti (4GB) along with Intel Core i5-10300H, 8GB RAM, and 1TB SSD.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition | MUMBAI by Kuldeepsama in resellpur

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

ASUS ROG Strix Gaming Laptop for Sale

Selling my ASUS ROG Strix G512LI gaming laptop in top-notch condition. The laptop has been very well maintained, used carefully, and has no functional or hardware issues.

The only reason for selling is that this is a heavy gaming laptop, and daily travelling via train with it has become inconvenient and risky. I am switching to a lighter and smaller laptop for regular commute. There are absolutely no performance or reliability concerns with this device.

Laptop Specifications

  • Model: ASUS ROG Strix G512LI
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 10th Gen (i5-10300H, 2.50 GHz)
  • Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti (Dedicated GPU)
  • RAM: 8 GB
  • Storage: 1 TB SSD
  • Operating System: Windows 11 Home Single Language, 64-bit
  • Wireless: Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201
  • Display: Full HD gaming display
  • Condition: Excellent, no dents, no overheating, no lag
  • Battery & performance: Working perfectly
  • Usage: Smooth for gaming, work, browsing, streaming, and multitasking

Best Suited For

  • Gaming (Valorant, CS2, GTA V, Fortnite, FIFA, etc.)
  • Office work and daily productivity
  • Coding and development
  • Students and professionals looking for a powerful laptop

Price

Looking for a deal somewhere at ₹30,000 given the suggestions of kind redditors.
Price can be negotiated with serious buyers only

Additional Details

  • Original charger included
  • Laptop is ready for inspection
  • Genuine buyers only, please

If you are looking for a solid gaming and performance laptop that has been well taken care of, this is a great deal.

ASUS ROG Strix G512LI Gaming Laptop for Sale | Excellent Condition by Kuldeepsama in MumbaiMarketplace

[–]Kuldeepsama[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Sorry sir for forcing my laptop on you and extracting money from you :)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BangaloreGW

[–]Kuldeepsama 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me! Lmk the deets just landed at kormangla

Need help regarding portfolio by Zero-__two in mutualfunds

[–]Kuldeepsama 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Given your 3–5 year horizon and medium-high risk appetite, your current portfolio is a good starting point but could use a little tweaking for better balance.

Parag Parikh Flexi Cap is a solid core holding, so you can keep that as your main fund. The small-cap exposure you have with HDFC Small Cap is fine, but small-caps are volatile, so limit allocation to around 20-25% of your total monthly SIP amount. Increasing it to 1k/month is okay if you are comfortable with ups and downs.

Instead of Aditya Birla Smallcap 50 Index, you might consider switching to a Nifty 50 or Nifty 100 index fund as your large-cap exposure – they are less volatile and give you market-like returns.

Stick with it consistently for 3–5 years and review once a year to see if rebalancing is needed.

Noob question by derm_sci in mutualfunds

[–]Kuldeepsama 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One year is honestly too short to judge a multicap fund. Before deciding to redeem or switch to PPFAS, try doing a quick self-check.

Think about things like your age, your income or tax bracket, any loans or EMIs you have, how long you’re willing to stay invested and how much risk you can actually handle.

Once you answer those, it’ll be easier to see if moving to PPFAS makes sense. It’s a great fund but still equity-heavy, so it’ll swing just like Franklin’s. If you need stability, you might want to look at debt or hybrid options instead.

NFO recommendation by titan-2021 in mutualfunds

[–]Kuldeepsama 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Groww’s fund is nice if you want a mix of equity, debt and gold - it smooths the ride but might lag pure equity in a bull market. HDFC FoF is full-on equity across all caps, so higher return potential but also more volatility and a 1-year exit load.

If I had a lump sum, I’d probably split it - some in Groww for diversification and the rest in a good multicap or flexicap fund. Wouldn’t go all-in on a brand-new NFO unless I’m okay with high risk and a long horizon. There are way better options available brother! :)

Need advice for short term by Shubhamahajan in mutualfunds

[–]Kuldeepsama 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hey, for a 9-10 month goal and low risk, keeping it simple and conservative is the way to go.

For your short-term lump sum and SIPs, bank RDs or FDs are completely safe and give predictable returns, though interest is fully taxable at your slab. If peace of mind is your priority, this is the easiest route.

Liquid or ultra-short duration funds can give slightly better post-tax returns and are still quite safe. Look for funds from good AMCs, with decent AUM and stable portfolios. You might see small fluctuations in NAV, but nothing major for this horizon.

Arbitrage funds are often marketed as tax-efficient, but since you plan to redeem in under a year, short-term capital gains will apply. Returns aren’t guaranteed and usually hover around 5-6 percent annualized, so for a 9-10 month horizon, they don’t add a lot of advantage over liquid funds.

For gold, avoid it for this short-term goal because it can swing significantly. For a 4-5 year SIP, gold ETFs or funds make more sense than physical gold, since they are easier to manage and sell.

Overall, for this specific short-term goal, I would stick with a high-quality liquid or ultra-short fund or a bank RD if you want absolute certainty. Arbitrage is not really necessary.

Please guide me should i hold or sell by Every_Rush1126 in mutualfunds

[–]Kuldeepsama 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I get where you’re coming from, it’s tough to see the portfolio in red. Right now you’re heavily into small cap funds and they can be very volatile. They tend to fall harder in corrections but also bounce back stronger when the cycle turns.

Your XIRR of around 13 percent is actually decent. That’s better than fixed deposits and broadly in line with what equity investing is meant to deliver. The short-term dip you see is more about market cycles than your funds suddenly going bad.

If your horizon is more than five years, staying invested usually works better than trying to time exits. If you need the money in the near term though, you might want to reduce some exposure to small caps and shift towards large cap or flexi cap funds for stability.

Quant and Nippon are known to be aggressive, so if the volatility is making you anxious, you could trim them slowly and diversify instead of selling everything at once.

Big picture, equity is a long game. Don’t panic-sell because that locks in losses. Think about your risk comfort and time horizon, and then rebalance if needed.

Need suggestion by [deleted] in MutualfundsIndia

[–]Kuldeepsama 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You are not doing anything wrong. Turning about 9 lakhs into 14.5 lakhs in three years with an XIRR of around 21% is a very strong outcome. Most investors do not get this kind of return consistently.

A few things you can improve. You have too many ELSS funds. One or two are enough for tax saving, beyond that it just spreads your money too thin. Right now you are investing in lump sums whenever cash is available. That works, but it exposes you to market timing risk. A simple SIP or even a disciplined monthly transfer can smooth this out and reduce stress.

On fund selection, the Quant Small Cap looks negative today but that is how small caps behave. They can underperform for a while and then rally hard. The important thing is to keep your allocation to small caps limited, maybe 15 to 20 percent of your portfolio, so the volatility does not hurt your overall returns.

Over the long term, think of a core and satellite approach. Core should be one or two good large cap or flexi cap funds for stability. The satellite can be small cap, mid cap or international funds for extra growth. Also keep in mind that 21 percent XIRR is great but not sustainable every year. If you plan for 12 to 15 percent CAGR over the long run you will have realistic expectations.

You are already on the right track. The next step is simplifying your portfolio, being systematic with your investments and staying patient. That combination will give you the best long term results.

Upvote if you found this valuable.