A glidepath is the predetermined trajectory along which a portfolio's asset allocation shifts from equity-heavy to debt-heavy as an investor approaches a target date (typically retirement). The intent is to gradually reduce volatility as the investor's human capital declines and the loss-absorption window shrinks.
Glidepaths come in two flavours: (a) To-retirement — the equity allocation falls only up to retirement and then stays fixed; (b) Through-retirement — the equity continues to fall for 10-20 years after retirement. Through-retirement glidepaths assume the investor still has 25+ year longevity exposure and needs continued equity exposure to combat inflation.
Typical Indian glidepath shape: 80% equity at age 25-35; 70% at 35-45; 60% at 45-55; 50% at 55-60; 40% at retirement; 30% by age 70. NPS Auto-Choice's "Aggressive Lifecycle Fund (LC-75)" and "Moderate Lifecycle Fund (LC-50)" embed similar glidepaths algorithmically.
Example 1: A 40-year-old with a target retirement at 60 holds an NPS Auto-Choice (Moderate) corpus. The equity weight is currently 50%; it will mechanically drop ~2% per year, reaching 30% by retirement. The investor doesn't have to make any allocation decision.
Example 2: A salaried investor builds a manual portfolio: 70% equity SIP, 30% PPF + EPF + debt MF. At age 50, they will mechanically rebalance to 50% equity. At age 60, to 35%. The rebalancing is tax-aware (via new contributions, then sales above LTCG exemption).
Glidepath risk: Sequence-of-returns risk — a market crash just before or just after retirement can derail withdrawals. Glidepaths reduce but don't eliminate this. Some retirees combine glidepath with a bond-tent (extra equity de-risk in the 5 years bracketing retirement).
Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process; we do not provide personalized retirement-planning advice.