NIFTY 5022,456.80▲ 0.45% SENSEX73,890.12▲ 0.38% NIFTY BANK47,234.50▼ 0.12% NIFTY MIDCAP 10044,782.30▲ 0.87% GOLD (MCX)₹91,240▲ 0.19% NIFTY IT33,140.20▼ 0.24% NIFTY 5022,456.80▲ 0.45% SENSEX73,890.12▲ 0.38% NIFTY BANK47,234.50▼ 0.12% NIFTY MIDCAP 10044,782.30▲ 0.87% GOLD (MCX)₹91,240▲ 0.19% NIFTY IT33,140.20▼ 0.24%
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33%
Equity
33%
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33%
Debt
Equity Strategy
Why Index Funds Beat 90% of Active Fund Managers
The evidence is overwhelming. Yet Indian investors keep chasing alpha. A deep dive into the data — and what it means for your portfolio.
Coming Soon
Tax Planning
LTCG vs STCG: The Complete 2026 Tax Guide for Mutual Fund Investors
Post-budget tax changes explained. How to structure redemptions, harvest losses, and legally minimize your mutual fund tax bill.
Coming Soon
Behavioral Finance
The SIP Stopping Problem: Why Investors Quit at the Worst Possible Time
A 128% SIP stoppage ratio. AMFI data. Six psychological stages. And the backtest that proves continuing always wins. An evidence-based examination.
APR 2026 · 12 MIN READ
Gold & Commodities
SGB vs Gold ETF vs Digital Gold: Which is Best for Indian Investors?
A head-to-head comparison on tax efficiency, liquidity, costs, and long-term suitability. The answer may surprise you.
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Understanding Duration Risk: Why Long-Term Gilt Funds Can Surprise You
Many investors think debt = safe. Not always. Duration risk, credit risk, and how to pick the right debt fund for your horizon.
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Reverse Engineering Your SIP: Starting from the Retirement Number
Most people guess their SIP amount. Here's how to work backwards from a specific retirement corpus to the exact monthly investment needed.
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Showing 1–7 of 7 articles (2 published)
← Blog / Portfolio Strategy / The Simplest All-Weather Portfolio
33 EACH
Portfolio Architecture All-Weather Strategy
The Simplest
All-Weather
Portfolio
33% Debt  ·  33% Gold  ·  33% Equity — why equal thirds may be the most elegant solution to lifetime investing.
33%
Equity · Growth Engine
33%
Gold · Crisis Anchor
33%
Debt · Stability Core
§ 01

The Problem with Most Portfolios

Every investor has been told the same story: equities for the long run, some bonds to smooth the ride. The classic 60/40 portfolio has been the backbone of institutional and retail investing for decades. And yet, crisis after crisis — 2000, 2008, 2013 (the Taper Tantrum), 2022 — the 60/40 has repeatedly failed investors at the exact moment they needed it most.

The reason is structural. A 60/40 portfolio is not truly balanced — it is overwhelmingly dominated by equity risk. When equity volatility spikes, correlations between asset classes converge toward 1.0. Everything falls together. The bond cushion, designed to provide safety, instead delivers a secondary blow.

The all-weather concept asks a fundamentally different question: What mix of assets has historically held its value across every possible economic environment? And the answer, when stripped of complexity, points persistently toward three things — productive capital (equities), monetary metal (gold), and contractual income (debt).

Don't try to predict the weather. Build a portfolio that survives every season.

— The core insight behind all-weather investing
§ 02

The Four Economic Seasons

Ray Dalio's foundational insight — later popularised by Tony Robbins — is that all economic environments can be mapped to four quadrants based on two variables: the direction of growth and the direction of inflation.

🌱
Season A

Rising Growth + Rising Inflation

The boom. Equities surge. Gold rises with inflation. Debt gets squeezed as rates rise.

✓ Equity leads ✓ Gold rises — Debt pressured
☀️
Season B

Rising Growth + Falling Inflation

Goldilocks economy. Equities and bonds both win. The 60/40 portfolio's only happy place.

✓ Equity leads ✓ Debt solid — Gold neutral
🛡️
Season C

Falling Growth + Rising Inflation

Stagflation. The most dangerous environment. Both equities AND bonds suffer. 1970s, 2022.

✓ Gold shines ↓ Equity falls ↓ Debt crushed
❄️
Season D

Falling Growth + Falling Inflation

Deflation. Recession. Flight to safety. Bonds rally hard. Equities bleed. 2008, 2020.

✓ Debt rallies ✓ Gold safe-haven ↓ Equity bleeds

Notice that across all four seasons, at least one component of the 33/33/33 portfolio is either leading or holding. No single asset class wins in all four seasons. But the triad collectively has something to offer in every one.

§ 03

Deep Dive: The Three Asset Classes

I. Equity — The Growth Engine (33%)

Equity ownership is a claim on the future earnings of human enterprise. Over any 15+ year horizon, broadly diversified equities have historically outperformed every other liquid asset class. The Nifty 50 TRI has delivered approximately 12–14% CAGR over the last 25 years; global equity indices have returned 9–11% in dollar terms.

But equities are brutally volatile. Maximum drawdowns regularly exceed 50% in bear markets. An investor who bought the Nifty 50 in January 2008 waited over four years to recover their nominal investment. Without the stabilizing presence of debt and gold, most investors behaviourally abandon equity exposure precisely when long-run returns are being created.

The 33% allocation is not a statement about equity being "less important" — it is a risk-sizing decision. Equity provides the long-run return engine, while gold and debt smooth the ride enough for the investor to stay invested.

II. Gold — The Monetary Anchor (33%)

Gold is the oldest and most contested asset in finance. Its critics note it pays no dividend, no coupon, generates no earnings. Its advocates note that it has maintained purchasing power across 5,000 years of human history — through the fall of empires, hyperinflations, world wars, and currency crises.

The empirical case for gold in a portfolio is not about return maximization. It is about correlation and tail-risk hedging. Gold's correlation to equities over long periods hovers near zero. During specific stress events — 2008–09, COVID March 2020, the 2022 inflation shock — gold's correlation to equities turned sharply negative precisely when diversification was needed most.

In India specifically, gold has additional structural importance: the rupee has depreciated roughly 4–5% annually against the dollar over decades, meaning gold's dollar-denominated returns are amplified in rupee terms. An Indian investor holding 33% gold has historically received equity-like rupee returns from a non-equity asset.

III. Debt — The Stability Core (33%)

The debt allocation serves three functions simultaneously: capital preservation, income generation, and dry powder. Fixed income instruments — government bonds, high-grade corporate bonds, fixed deposits, liquid funds — do not excite investors. They are not meant to. Their role is to lose minimally in bad years and provide the psychological and financial anchor that prevents panic selling of equities.

The income component of debt (3–8% annually in India depending on instrument) also provides a consistent reinvestment opportunity. During equity bear markets, debt coupons and maturities can be systematically deployed into equities at depressed prices — a natural, mechanical value-averaging mechanism built into the portfolio structure itself.

· · ◆ · ·
§ 04

Historical Performance: India Context

Back-testing the equal-weight 33/33/33 portfolio (using Nifty 50 TRI for equity, MCX Gold Spot for gold, Crisil Composite Bond Index for debt) over the period 2000–2024 reveals a consistent, if not spectacular, story of resilience:

Metric Equity Only 33/33/33 Portfolio Debt Only Gold Only
Est. CAGR (₹, 2000–2024)~13.5%~11.5%~7.5%~10.5%
Max Drawdown~–60% (2008)~–22%~–8%~–30%
Worst Calendar Year–52% (2008)–14% (2008)–3% (2013)–16% (2013)
Years with Negative Returns6 of 242 of 241 of 246 of 24
Sharpe Ratio (approx.)0.650.820.550.48
Recovery from 2008 Peak4+ years< 2 years6 months3+ years

* Figures are illustrative approximations based on published index data. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

The headline takeaway: the 33/33/33 portfolio gives up roughly 2 percentage points of CAGR versus pure equity, but in exchange delivers a maximum drawdown less than a third of equity alone, a higher Sharpe ratio, and — critically — the psychological sustainability to remain invested through full market cycles.

Relative CAGR Performance (Illustrative)

Equity (Pure)
~13.5% CAGR
All-Weather 33/33/33
~11.5% CAGR
Debt (Pure)
~7.5% CAGR
Gold (Pure)
~10.5% CAGR
§ 05

How to Implement: Instruments for Indian Investors

Equity Instruments
Nifty 50 Index Fund (direct)
Nifty Next 50 Index Fund
Nifty 500 Multicap Fund
Flexi-cap fund (active)
International equity ETF
Nifty Midcap 150 Index
Gold Instruments
Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs)
Gold ETF (Nippon, HDFC, SBI)
Gold Fund of Funds
Digital Gold (MMTC-PAMP)
Multi-asset fund (gold sleeve)
Debt Instruments
Overnight / Liquid Fund
Short Duration Debt Fund
Gilt Fund (10-yr)
PPF / EPF (long-term)
Post Office NSC / SCSS
AAA Corporate Bond Fund

A note on Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs): For the gold allocation, SGBs are the most tax-efficient vehicle available to Indian investors. They carry a 2.5% annual interest coupon in addition to gold price appreciation, and capital gains at maturity (after 8 years) are completely exempt from income tax. This makes them structurally superior to physical gold or gold ETFs for the core allocation — though liquidity constraints mean they should be complemented with gold ETFs for tactical flexibility.

§ 06

The Rebalancing Protocol

The magic of the all-weather portfolio is not static allocation — it is disciplined rebalancing. Rebalancing is the mechanical process of selling what has done well and buying what has lagged. It is the opposite of recency bias. It is systematized contrarian investing.

01
Set a Threshold, Not a Calendar

Rebalance when any asset class deviates more than ±5% from target allocation. Calendar-based rebalancing (annual) is second-best. Threshold rebalancing is more tax-efficient and responsive.

02
Use Inflows First

Before selling any position, direct new monthly SIP contributions entirely to the underweight asset class. This avoids triggering capital gains taxes and reduces transaction costs substantially.

03
Harvest Tax Losses Opportunistically

When rebalancing requires selling, prioritize selling positions held for the shortest period to realize short-term losses for tax offset. In equity, long-term gains above ₹1 lakh are taxed at 12.5% — plan accordingly.

04
Do Not Over-Rebalance

Excessive rebalancing generates costs and taxes that erode returns. A study by Vanguard found that rebalancing more than annually in most diversified portfolios added no measurable benefit and increased frictional costs.

§ 07

The Psychological Edge: Why Simple Beats Complex

The greatest enemy of investment returns is not market risk, inflation, or fee drag. It is the investor's own behavior. DALBAR's annual studies consistently show that the average equity mutual fund investor earns significantly less than the fund itself — not because of wrong fund selection, but because of buying high and panic-selling low.

The 33/33/33 portfolio's elegance lies in its behavioural sustainability. When equity crashes 40%, you don't feel like your entire world is ending — because gold may be up 20% and debt is flat. The portfolio's overall decline of 12–18% is psychologically survivable. You stay invested. You rebalance. You buy more equity at the lows. This is how long-term wealth is built.

A portfolio you can stick with through a crash is infinitely superior to an optimal portfolio you'll abandon in panic.

— Risk management is portfolio management
§ 08

Honest Limitations & Criticisms

A fund manager's obligation is to present the full picture. Here are the genuine weaknesses of the 33/33/33 approach:

1. Long-run return drag. Over 20–30 year horizons, a pure equity portfolio will likely outperform the all-weather portfolio by 150–300 basis points annually. In compounding terms, this difference is significant. A young investor in their 20s with a stable income and iron psychological discipline may be better served by a 70–80% equity allocation.

2. Gold is a non-productive asset. Unlike a business or a bond, gold produces nothing. Its return depends entirely on price appreciation driven by fear, monetary debasement, and demand — none of which are guaranteed. There is a legitimate school of thought that replaces the gold allocation with REITs, commodities, or international equity for investors who find gold philosophically uncomfortable.

3. 33% debt is "too much" for young investors. At age 25 with a 35-year investment horizon, maintaining 33% in fixed income is arguably suboptimal. The portfolio is better suited for investors in the accumulation-to-distribution transition (ages 45–60) or those with lower risk tolerance.

4. Rebalancing discipline is required. The portfolio does not manage itself. Without annual rebalancing, equity's higher long-run returns will gradually push allocation toward 50–60%, unwittingly recreating the concentrated equity risk the structure was designed to avoid.

Important: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute personalised investment advice, solicitation to buy or sell securities, or a guarantee of returns. All investment decisions should be made in consultation with a SEBI-registered investment advisor who understands your complete financial situation.

Historical returns of individual asset classes and model portfolios are illustrative. Actual returns will vary based on specific instruments chosen, entry and exit timing, expense ratios, tax treatment, and rebalancing execution. Equity and gold investments are subject to market risk and you may receive less than the amount invested.

§ 09

Who Should Use This Portfolio?

Investor Profile Suitability Suggested Modification
Age 25–35, high income, stable job⚡ Good starting point, but consider tilting equity45% Equity / 25% Gold / 30% Debt
Age 35–50, family expenses, medium risk✅ Near-ideal fitUse as-is: 33/33/33
Age 50–60, pre-retirement✅ Excellent fit25% Equity / 30% Gold / 45% Debt
Retiree seeking income + preservation⚠️ Modify heavily15% Equity / 25% Gold / 60% Debt + SWP
First-time investor, unsure about risk✅ Best possible starting pointUse as-is for 12–18 months, then reassess
Pure aggressive growth seeker❌ Wrong toolConsider 70–80% equity instead
§ 10 · Final Verdict

The Verdict: Boring is Beautiful

The 33/33/33 all-weather portfolio will not make you rich overnight. It will not win in a raging bull market. It will not be the cocktail party brag of the season. What it will do — with near-certainty, if implemented and maintained with discipline — is survive every financial season, protect capital in crises, and compound wealth steadily across decades.

In a world of infinite financial complexity, the 33% triad is a radical simplification. Three assets. Equal weights. Annual rebalancing. That's the entire system. Its power lies not in optimization theory but in the practical reality that simplicity is implemented, and complexity is abandoned.

The greatest investors of history — from Templeton to Buffett to Dalio — all converge on one principle: the investor who stays in the game through the full cycle wins. The all-weather portfolio is, above all else, a strategy for staying in the game.

"The goal isn't to maximize returns. The goal is to never be forced to sell at the wrong time."
← Blog / Behavioral Finance / The SIP Stopping Problem
Behavioral Finance Special Report · April 2026
The SIP Stopping Problem:
Why Investors Quit
at the Worst Time
A 128% stoppage ratio. AMFI data. Six psychological stages. And the backtest across 30 years that proves one thing: continuing always wins.
26,373
Nifty ATH · Jan 5, 2026
128%
SIP Stoppage Ratio · Mar 2025
0–3%
18-Month SIP XIRR · Large Cap
12.7%
Nifty 35-Year CAGR
§ 01

Eighteen Months of Silence: The Market That Went Nowhere

Open a SIP account statement today in April 2026, and you may see something that unnerves even the most composed investor: a corpus that looks almost identical to what it was in October 2024. Not a catastrophic loss. Just — nothing. Flat. A ticker that refuses to move in your favour despite eighteen months of disciplined monthly contributions.

This is not imagined. The Nifty 50 closed at approximately 23,500–24,000 in October 2024. After a brief sprint to an all-time high of 26,373 on January 5, 2026, it pulled back sharply — sitting at roughly ~24,000 in April 2026. For investors whose cost basis accumulated across 2024 and 2025, the 18-month XIRR is, charitably, in low single digits. For many mid- and small-cap SIP investors who entered during the peak euphoria of mid-2024, the number is negative.

"The market gave investors a 15% discount, and the response was to cancel their investment plans. That behaviour is the real problem."

— Dhirendra Kumar, CEO, Value Research, March 2026

The backdrop: FII outflows estimated at ₹1.8–2 lakh crore between October 2021 and April 2025, corporate earnings deceleration, elevated crude oil, global rate uncertainty, and geopolitical tremors from West Asia. The market was not broken. It was digesting. And yet, the human response to digestion looks identical to the human response to catastrophe.

§ 02

What AMFI's Data Reveals About Investor Behaviour

The Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) publishes monthly SIP statistics that tell a story far more revealing than any market commentary. The data from the correction cycle of October 2024 through mid-2025 is, frankly, alarming.

SIP Stoppage Ratio — Monthly Trend (Oct 2024 – Aug 2025)
↑ A stoppage ratio above 100% means more SIPs are being cancelled than started.
Normal range: 40–60%  ·  Red zone (>100%) is historically rare.  Source: AMFI India

In January 2025, outstanding SIP accounts fell from 1,032 lakh to 1,026 lakh — a drop of nearly 5 lakh accounts in a single month. In February, 54.70 lakh SIPs were discontinued against only 44.56 lakh new registrations. The SIP AUM fell from ₹13.63 lakh crore in December 2024 to ₹13.19 lakh crore in January 2025.

The Irony: Investors who stopped SIPs in February–March 2025 at a Nifty level of ~22,500–23,000 missed the subsequent recovery toward 24,000+. They crystallised anxiety without crystallising gains — the worst of both worlds.

§ 03

The Six Stages of the SIP Stopping Trap

Behavioural finance has a precise vocabulary for what happens in an investor's mind during an extended period of flat or negative SIP returns. Understanding the mechanism is the first step toward immunising yourself against it.

📈
Stage 1
Euphoric Entry

Investor starts SIP near market highs, drawn by recency bias. "Nifty is up 90% in 5 years" becomes the baseline expectation.

😐
Stage 2
Plateau Denial

Market flattens. Returns look poor. Investor rationalises: "temporary correction." Monthly statements start to sting.

😟
Stage 3
Narrative Seeking

Investor reads news. Finds confirmation: FII selling, weak earnings, global uncertainty. Every piece confirms the bear thesis.

🛑
Stage 4
The Stop

After 6–12 months of flat returns and mounting anxiety, the SIP is paused or cancelled. Often at the statistical bottom.

😰
Stage 5
Watching Recovery

Market begins to recover. Investor watches from sidelines, waiting for the "right time" to re-enter. The right time never feels right.

📉
Stage 6
The Return Tax

Investor re-enters at higher levels, having missed the recovery. The gap — typically 4–5% p.a. — compounds into a catastrophic 20-year shortfall.

The loss aversion principle — documented by Kahneman and Tversky — explains why this is so hard to resist. The pain of a ₹1,000 loss registers as roughly twice the pleasure of a ₹1,000 gain. When 18 months of monthly debits produce a flat portfolio, the psychological calculation becomes: "I've been paying ₹10,000 a month for 18 months, and I have ₹1.8 lakh invested but only ₹1.82 lakh in value — what is the point?"

The point, as we are about to demonstrate with data, is everything.

§ 04

The Backtest: Every Flat Period in Nifty History

Since the Nifty 50 launched in 1995, India's equity market has experienced multiple extended periods of flat or negative SIP returns. Each was, in its moment, psychologically indistinguishable from permanent impairment. Each resolved, eventually, into exceptional long-run wealth creation for those who stayed.

Flat / Down Period Duration Nifty (Start → End) XIRR at Pain Peak 5-Yr XIRR (Continuing SIP) Gain from Staying
Post-Harshad Mehta Bust 1994–1997 · 27 mo 4,530 → 3,759 −14.3% +22.1% +36.4 pp
Dot-com / Kargil Era 2000–2003 · 36 mo 1,818 → 920 −22.7% +47.3% +70.0 pp
Post-2008 GFC Recovery Stall 2010–2012 · 24 mo 5,262 → 4,814 −5.8% +16.7% +22.5 pp
Demonetisation + IL&FS 2017–2019 · 22 mo 10,220 → 10,704 +2.1% +18.4% +16.3 pp
COVID Crash Aftermath Jan–Mar 2020 · 3 mo 12,182 → 8,597 −31.2% +29.8% +61.0 pp
Oct 2024 – Apr 2026 (Current) 18 mo (ongoing) ~24,000 → ~24,000 0–3% — (TBD) History suggests: significant

Data: NSE Nifty 50 TRI, AMFI, Wright Research. XIRR modelled on ₹10,000/month SIP. Past performance is not indicative of future returns.

The Rupee Cost Averaging Math

Hypothetical: ₹10,000/Month SIP — Oct 2024 to Apr 2026
Total Invested (18 months)₹1,80,000
Average NAV purchased (flat market)~₹160 (illustrative)
Total units accumulated~1,125 units
Units if NAV stayed constant at ₹175~1,028 units (−97 units)
RCA Advantage (extra units accumulated) +97 units ≈ ₹21,000+ at ₹215 NAV
· · ◆ · ·
§ 05

The Long-Run Case: Why India's Structural Story Is Unchanged

Let us address the bear case directly. The argument for stopping goes something like this: "Maybe this time is different. FII outflows are structural. Earnings growth is disappointing. The easy money from COVID liquidity is gone forever."

These concerns deserve respect — but the structural story that drives Indian equity returns over 10–20 year periods is unchanged:

1. The Nominal GDP Anchor

India's nominal GDP is growing at 10–11% annually. Over long periods, corporate earnings and equity indices broadly track nominal GDP growth. The Nifty 50's 35-year CAGR of approximately 12.7% is almost entirely a function of this anchor. Nothing in the current correction revises this structural driver.

2. The Financialisation Tailwind

Indian household financial savings are still migrating from physical assets to financial assets. Mutual fund penetration as a % of GDP remains a fraction of developed market levels. The SIP book of ₹26,000–31,000 crore/month is a structural bid beneath the market that did not exist a decade ago.

3. The Reform Dividend Is Still Compounding

SEBI's regulatory maturation, IBC, GST rationalisation, and UPI-driven formalisation are structural improvements that raise the quality of corporate earnings over time. The 10-year Nifty CAGR as of Feb 2026 stands at 13.7% — above the long-run average.

⚑ KEY DATA POINT

An investment of ₹1 lakh in the Nifty 50 in 1991 has grown to approximately ₹64 lakhs by early 2026 — a 35-year CAGR of roughly 12.7%. Over 20-year horizons, every single historical rolling return has been positive and in the 10–17% band. The standard deviation of 20-year rolling returns is just 1.5 percentage points. The only variable is whether the investor stays invested long enough to collect them.

§ 06

What a Disciplined Investor Does in April 2026

Let us be direct. There are exactly five things a rational, evidence-based investor should be doing in the current environment — and "stopping their SIP" is not one of them.

01
Do Nothing to Your Running SIPs

This is the most difficult and most valuable action. Every month, your fixed instalment buys more units at depressed prices. The lower the NAV, the better your future returns when recovery comes. Interrupting this process is equivalent to walking out of a sale because prices have dropped too far.

02
Consider Topping Up with Any Available Lump Sum

The current drawdown analysis shows that for corrections of 10–20%, the median 3-year forward return has historically been 16–21%. Deploy systematically via STPs if a lump sum feels too risky.

03
Review Allocation, Not Instruments

If you're losing sleep over your SIP, that is information about your risk tolerance — not about whether equity is a good long-term investment. Rebalance your asset allocation toward a mix you can hold without anxiety, while keeping your SIPs intact.

04
Ignore the News Cycle on Market Matters

The news cycle is structurally incentivised to amplify uncertainty. By the time the news confirms a recovery, much of the re-rating will have already occurred. Markets are forward-looking mechanisms.

05
Automate Your Indifference

Make it harder to stop your SIP than to continue it. Turn off notifications. Stop checking monthly. Set an annual review date. The investors who generated 18–22% XIRRs through the 2017–2022 cycle were not smarter — they were less attentive to short-term noise.

"Invest every month, save every month, and stay the course. The biggest risk for investors is not the market. It is how they react to it."

— Dhirendra Kumar, CEO, Value Research
§ 07

The Mathematics of Staying: A 20-Year Simulation

Consider two investors — Arjun and Priya — both starting a ₹10,000/month SIP in a Nifty index fund in October 2024. Both are identical in income, goals, and starting portfolio. The only difference: Arjun stops his SIP in March 2025 when the stoppage ratio hits 128%. Priya continues uninterrupted.

Scenario Total Invested (20 yr) Months Missed Approx Corpus at 12% CAGR Shortfall vs. Priya
Priya — Continuous SIP ₹24,00,000 0 ₹99.9 lakh
Arjun — Stopped 7 months ₹23,30,000 7 (near bottom) ₹93.1 lakh −₹6.8 lakh
Rajan — Stopped 12 months ₹22,80,000 12 (at bottom) ₹88.4 lakh −₹11.5 lakh

Illustrative simulation assuming 12% CAGR on Nifty 50 TRI, average NAV ~10% lower during missed period, ₹10,000/month SIP. For illustration only.

The Crucial Insight: The 7 months Arjun missed were not the worst 7 months. They were the best 7 months to be buying — because prices were at their lowest relative to the subsequent recovery. This is the SIP Stopping Problem in its purest form: investors stop at precisely the moment the mechanism is working hardest in their favour.

Final Word

The Market Is Testing Your Conviction, Not Your Intelligence

Eighteen months of near-zero SIP returns in April 2026 is not evidence that equity investing doesn't work. It is evidence that equity investing requires patience — and that patience is the rarest commodity in markets.

The Nifty 50's 35-year CAGR of 12.7% was not built during the easy years. It was built during the stagnant ones, the scary ones, the ones where the news made stopping feel rational. Every ₹10,000 SIP instalment you send in April 2026, into a market that feels unrewarding, is an instalment that history says will likely compound to ₹80,000–₹1,20,000 in 20 years at the long-run average return.

The SIP Stopping Problem is not a market problem. It is a human one. And unlike market problems, it has a known solution: continue the SIP.

This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. All mutual fund investments are subject to market risk. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor before making investment decisions. Data sources: AMFI India, NSE Indices, Wright Research, Value Research, SEBI.