惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
D
DataBreaches.Net
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
F
Full Disclosure
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
L
LangChain Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
B
Blog RSS Feed
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
B
Blog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
I
Intezer
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
博客园_首页
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
AI
AI
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Vercel News
Vercel News
罗磊的独立博客
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
博客园 - 司徒正美
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
GbyAI
GbyAI
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
A
About on SuperTechFans
P
Privacy International News Feed

Portfolio Big Story: In-Depth Analysis and Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

Welcome To The World of AI-nomics Clouded under El Nino skies India Inc and Its Capex Chronicles Will The Rupee Recovery Last? RBI’s new rules: Why your CIBIL score matters more now Your All-round Guide to NPS Micron, Samsung, SK hynix, TSMC, Nvidia: When bits and bytes take a large bite of the stock markets Fishing for Higher Yields? G-Secs, SDLs, FRSBs, Corporate Bonds are Good Bets Crude Oil and The 900-Million Barrel Question 5 Governance Traps That Destroy Wealth: What SEBI Orders Reveal About Stock Frauds IT Sector Outlook: How Much More Can The BSE IT Index Get Beaten Down? Nifty 50, Nifty 500: Dissecting the potential winners and losers amid war and volatility How AWS, Microsoft, Google, Adani and Reliance are driving India’s data centre boom Is US Private Credit sector headed for 2007-08 redux? S&P Ratings’ Ramki Muthukrishan unpacks the details Stock markets and AI: How to use artificial intelligence tools to up your investing game Six Passive Equity Funds to Buy the Dip IOCL, BPCL, HPCL, ONGC, MRPL, CPCL, Oil India: Stocks in the line of fire US-Iran War: WhatNext For Oil, Gold, Dollar and Rupee Gift City IFSC: All About Investing For Residents and NRIs Rare Earth Elements: The Hidden Backbone of AI, EVs and Supply Chains Balance Beats Bravado When Cycles Turn Base metals outlook: Copper, Aluminium, Zinc, Lead & Nickel: Will the rally sustain in 2026? Budget: 5 Budget cues to look out for Tata Steel, JSW Steel, Jindal Steel, SAIL: What’s Ahead For India’s Steel Sector? The first year of Trump 2.0 Sectors to Play in 2026 Equities in 2026: What Investors Should Know About The Great Humiliator ICICI Prudential midcap, Kotak Multicap, DSP Smallcap, Mirae Asset Flexicap, Helios Large and Midcap et al: Your guide to best performing funds of 2025 Stock Markets in 2025: Year of the Reboot From Zomato, PB Fintech and Paytm in 2021 to Groww, Lenskart and Meesho in 2025: The good, bad and ugly of IPOs over last five years New Labour Codes: Impact on Your Salary, EPF and Gratuity Passive Funds In The Mid-cap Universe: What’s On Offer? Macroeconomic Indicators and Why Investors Should Keep Track 5 Must-Know Regulations on Health Insurance Nifty 50, Sensex: Mr Perma Bull takes some market lessons from Mr Doom Halo of the Gold rally: Nifty 50, S&P 500 versus Gold and lessons to learn from the yellow metal’s boom in the last 5 decades Apollo Hospitals, KIMS, Rainbow Hospitals, Global Health, Max Health, et al: How Hospital Stocks Stack Up on Key Metrics ICICI Prudential Multi-Asset, Canara Robeco Large Cap, SBI Balanced Advantage, Nippon India Small Cap, Motilal Oswal Midcap: Five funds to consider this Diwali for long term investing How to Get Unclaimed Money in Banks, Lockers, Stocks, Mutual Funds, Dividends, Insurance, Pension and Small Savings Mixing Assets for Smarter Returns BSE Capital Goods, BSE PSU, BSE Industrials, BSE India Manufacturing and BSE CPSE: All Set to Outperform One Big Beautiful Bubble: Oracle, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta Platforms, Palantir et al in the danger zone? Sun Pharma, Cipla, Dr Reddy’s, Zydus Lifesciences, Divi’s Labs, Torrent Pharma et al: Parsing through the pharma value chain Nifty50, Nifty Midcap, Nifty Smallcap, Gold and Silver: Why It is Time to Get Real on Return Expectations How real-money games exploited players and drained ₹20,000 crore each year NSE, Tata Capital, SBI AMC, Lenskart, Pine Labs, HDFC Securities: Are unlisted shares a trap or opportunity for investors? CreditAccess Grameen, Spandana Sphoorty, Fusion Finance, Satin Creditcare, Ujjivan SFB et al: Are Microfinance Lenders Out Of The Woods Yet? Where is the Indian Rupee Headed? TCS, Infosys, HCLTech, Wipro: Did IT services companies get trapped by ‘dumbest idea in the world’? EPF: How to make transfers, settlements and part withdrawals smooth Dow Jones, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite: Wall Street Strategist Peter Berezin decodes the blind side of US markets From Dull to Dazzling: Will Platinum Continue to Shine? The investor’s edge: Reading annual reports right HAL, BEL, Cochin Shipyard, Mazagon Dock, GRSE, Zen, Data Patterns: Defence dreams fuel bull barrage Oil after the boil RBI Rate and CRR Cut: Here’s What to do With Your FDs, Small Savings and Debt Funds Best credit cards in India (2025): Choose the right one for your spending style Where is Silver price headed next? bulls or bubble? Falling Interest Rates: What Should New and Existing Home Loan Takers Do? Ather, Ola, TVS, Bajaj et al and India’s Shift to e-2Ws: Should Investors Throw Their Hat in the Ring? UPS or NPS: A deep dive on why government employees can consider swtiching to the Unified Pension Scheme Nifty 50, Nifty Oil & Gas, Gold, Reliance Industries: Two rivals debate the logic behind charts, patterns and technical analysis HUL, Nestle India, Britannia, Godrej Consumer Products, Marico, Dabur, Emami, Jyothy Labs et al: A deep dive into the underperformance and valuation derating of FMCG stocks Bank, Pharma, IT, FMCG and Auto: How are the Sectors Poised Going into FY26? Small and large caps put up the best show relative to their benchmarks in the market correction gone by Market Volatility to Persist, But India Well-positioned: Sankaran Naren Do not let greed and fear overpower your common sense: Sandeep Mittal IPS, ADGP - Cyber Crime Wing, Tamil Nadu Digital warfare and how you should arm yourself BSE Metals, BSE Consumer Durable, BSE Oil & Gas, BSE FMCG: Which Sector will Outperform in the Next Market Rally? What Do Trump’s Tariffs Mean for Indian Auto, Pharma and Steel Stocks? Dow Jones, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite: Decoding the market sell-off with Wall Street veteran Andy Constan Deep dive into the Nifty IT, TCS, Infosys bear market: Why the writing was on the wall and investors caught off foot have only themselves to blame Unlock your unclaimed assets
Sensex, Midcap, Smallcap, Sectors: What they don’t tell you about mutual fund SIPs
By Kumar Shankar Roy · 2026-05-24 · via Portfolio Big Story: In-Depth Analysis and Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

First brought in as a concept more than three decades ago, SIP, or systematic investment plan, today has virtually become the comfort food Indian investors binge monthly. In April 2026 alone, more than ₹31,000 crore flowed into mutual funds through SIPs across over 10 crore accounts. For full FY26 (April 2025 to March 2026), SIP contributions (gross) stood at nearly ₹3.5 lakh crore — over eight times the level seen a decade ago. That tsunami of mostly retail investor money has helped Indian markets absorb the massive ₹1.8-lakh crore sale of equities by foreign portfolio investors last fiscal.

None of this makes the SIP faith irrational. Discipline over two decades has indeed produced many rags-to-riches stories. But the journey and the outcome has not been equally rewarding for everyone.

That unevenness is not merely theoretical. Over one-third of the two-year SIPs in mutual fund schemes across market-cap categories are currently showing losses. SIP discipline remains useful, but it is not a 100 per cent autopilot route to wealth. Returns depend not only on staying invested, but also on where one invests, when the SIP begins and how markets behave along the way. Time can heal many market wounds, but it cannot be blindly assumed to rescue every poor outcome.

SIP may have become India’s default investing habit. But, a mere fund SIP does not create returns; it simply distributes entry points for your monthly investments. What SIP return investors finally earn depends on the sequence of prices, the portfolio chosen and whether the exit value is high enough to reward the units accumulated over time.

In this article, we focus on the other side of the SIP story for equity funds. Why? Because a proactive investor in today’s dynamic world can no longer afford to outsource their financial awareness to a system incentivised by assets rather than absolute outcomes. Distributors earn trail commissions to keep your capital parked, while fund managers are strictly bound by mandates to deploy your monthly SIP inflows, even when they may know the broader market is severely overvalued.

This apparent conflict of interest actively champions “lazy investing.” A “fill it, shut it, forget it” approach is a dangerous luxury in a hyper-evolving world where rapid technological shifts, such as AI, are aggressively rewriting business models and market cycles.

Understanding SIPs

By now most investors know that when markets fall, each SIP buys more units; when markets rise, each SIP buys fewer units. For instance, a ₹10,000 SIP buys 100 units at a NAV of ₹100, but 125 units if the NAV falls to ₹80. Over time, investors hope they have accumulated mutual fund units at a relatively lower average cost. But, this is assuming markets swing up and down rather than only rising steadily. This way, SIP smooths out timing risk, letting build their portfolio steadily instead of trying to pick the perfect moment to invest all at once.

In a mutual fund SIP, the investor is not buying the units at the same price every month. She is buying units at different prices (NAVs), as the price of the underlying securities change. The return (XIRR) is, therefore, not merely a function of where the buying starts and ends. It is a function of every purchase price in between. This is why two SIPs with similar point-to-point returns can produce different return (XIRRs).

The message marketed to investors is simple — markets may be volatile, but SIPs will take care of wealth creation if they mute the noise and ignore the ups and downs. Such messages are useful, but they are also incomplete.

But make no mistake, doing a SIP is nothing close to a return promise, even if SIP calculators can make you feel there is a finality in their theoretical projections.

At the end of the day, SIP is just a cash-flow method. A monthly SIP can produce very different results depending on when the market falls, and when it rises. For instance, a strong multi-year rally in the Sensex during a five-year SIP can result in compounding at nearly 19.75 per cent XIRR, as in the 2016-21 cycle.

By contrast, high starting valuations followed by a market correction just as the five-year SIP matured deflated returns to a modest 6 per cent XIRR, as seen in 2021-26 period ended May 20. And if a severe crash hits right at the end, it can temporarily leave a negative -2.6 per cent XIRR for a five-year Sensex SIP, as in 2015-20 period.

In other words, the same disciplined habit — same monthly “debits,” same cash invested can look like a windfall in one cycle, mediocre in another and disappointing in a third. The difference isn’t the investor; it’s the path the market took.

The problem is not SIP. In fact, the problem is the mythology built around it. Yes, SIPs reduce timing regret. But, they do not remove market risk, valuation risk, category risk or the danger of chasing yesterday’s fund/index winners. They can make bad timing less painful, but they cannot make every entry point wise.

Market decides SIP path

To show how market-swings shape SIP outcomes, we modelled a ₹10,000 monthly investment in the Sensex over five years. We illustrate four hypothetical contrasting market paths: A sharp early dip followed by a recovery, a steady growth trajectory, a flat market with late gains and a strong early rally (see TABLE 1).

As you would notice, each path results in drastically-different final portfolio values and annualised returns (XIRR), ranging from 2.8 per cent to 10.9 per cent. This is despite identical cash flows and the exact same starting and ending index levels.

These examples underscore a critical reality. While SIPs smooth out entry timing, they cannot neutralise sequence-of-returns risk. The path the market takes largely decides whether disciplined investing feels like a windfall, a steady gain or a disappointment.

The projections assume a cumulative index growth of 50 per cent over five years (target ending Sensex: 112,977), an approximate PE ratio of 18 at end of the fifth year vs current starting PE of about 20, and annualised earnings growth of 10-12 per cent. To map these market levels to a realistic mutual fund structure, the index was scaled down to represent a base Unit NAV (for example, 75,318 translates to a starting NAV of ₹75.32).

Using AI modelling, we selected four illustrative market paths from countless possibilities, each reaching the same endpoint.

Crisis: An early, severe drop resulting in a 27.0 per cent maximum drawdown, followed by extended stagnation and a late recovery.

Steady upside: A smooth, linear rise interrupted only by minor 4.5 per cent corrections.

Flattish: Minimal overall growth for years, featuring an 8.0 per cent mid-cycle slump, before a sudden jump at the very end of the tenure.

Strong rally: Rapid, front-loaded growth causing an immediate NAV spike, followed by a prolonged plateau and a mild 2.5 per cent correction.

Distribution of SIP returns

The aforementioned theoretical scenarios prove that the market’s path dictates your return. But what paths have Indian equities historically taken? To move from theory to empirical evidence, we ran rolling historical SIP returns across different market caps and themes over the last 20 years ended May 20, 2026.

We tested five-year, seven-year and 10-year SIP horizons (see TABLE 2).

The results show a massive dispersion in outcomes. The real question is not whether SIPs made money once, but where most outcomes clustered and how bad the downside became.

The width of the SIP probability curve tells the real story.

* Time heals broad markets, but kills the windfall: The data validates the core tenet of long-term investing, provided you stick to broad indices. Notice how extending a Sensex SIP from five to 10 years acts as a powerful volatility shock absorber. The ‘less than 8 per cent XIRR’ possibility shrinks dramatically from 22 per cent down to just 6 per cent. However, time also actively crushes upside variance. Over a rolling 10-year period, the historical probability of earning a massive Sensex windfall (>15 per cent) collapsed to zero

* The fat tails of small-caps: Stepping outside the large-cap safety net exposes investors to a much-wider dispersion of destinies. A five-year small-cap SIP is the ultimate coin toss. Historically, there was a 55 per cent chance of a phenomenal windfall, paired directly with a 32 per cent chance of landing in the ‘less than 8 per cent’ zone. More importantly, time does not heal small-caps as perfectly as large caps. historical small-cap SIPs still faced a 11 per cent risk of sub-8 per cent returns, with the absolute worst-case scenario remaining in break-even territory (0 per cent).

* The thematic trap: Perhaps the most crucial takeaway lies in the thematic divergence. The standard industry advice is to “give it more time” when an equity SIP is underperforming. For highly-cyclical themes, this advice can be fatal. Look at the BSE PSU matrix. Over a fiveyear horizon, 64 per cent of SIPs landed in the sub-8 per cent XIRR zone. When investors extended their horizon to 10 years, hoping time would bail them out, the sub-8 per cent return actually expanded to 71 per cent. After 120 months of averaging down, the absolute worstcase scenario remained negative (-11 per centXIRR).

Our probability matrix shows that while a decade of patience might save a Sensex investor, it can actively destroy capital in cyclical or thematic funds. This exposes the ultimate flaw of “lazy investing.” If your SIP has compounded brilliantly over five-seven years, especially in a mid-cap, small-cap or sector/thematic fund, leaving that ballooned corpus entirely at the mercy of the market is mathematically reckless. Sectors revert to the mean violently, and as historical data show, massive windfalls can evaporate if you overstay the cycle. Negative SIP return instances, though infrequent, do happen even in case of broad-market stock baskets (see Table 5).

Returns you cannot SIP

The danger of sector/thematic investing isn’t just about picking the wrong sector. It is actually about picking the right basket at the exact wrong time. An explosive half-decade growth creates the illusion of a permanent structural shift. But a new SIP doesn’t buy the last five years, it buys the next five. And the next five are usually governed by a brutal law of financial physics called ‘mean reversion’.

While the mutual fund industry may not have had a dedicated thematic fund for every single micro-sector back in 2008 or 2011, the underlying index data reveal exactly how these market cycles behaved. Our analysis maps the absolute peak of five-year trailing returns for each sector between 2011 and 2021, and tracks what happened to fresh SIP money over the subsequent 60-month window.

Look at the BSE Auto index. At its peak euphoria in December 2013, investors stared at a staggering 39 per cent five-year CAGR. But an investor starting a five-year SIP on that exact date suffered through a cyclical winter, generating a pathetic 1-2 per cent XIRR on their fresh money. This was because much of the money was invested at elevated levels in 2017–18, just before the index fell sharply near the end date.

The cyclical value traps are even more destructive. Investors who saw a respectable 11.7 per cent trailing 5-year CAGR return in PSUs in June 2011 and blindly started a SIP ended up actively destroying their wealth, yielding a -2 per cent return over the next 60 months. The Power and Oil & Gas sectors mirrored this exact trends.

Yes, there are exceptions too such as Capital Goods and Industrials. They prove that if a new earnings cycle perfectly aligns with momentum, returns can persist. Whereas in themes like IT, FMCG, and Financial Services, a peaking trailing return reliably signalled that the easy money had already been made.

SIPs are often treated as a behavioural cure-all. They are not. SIP fixes the habit problem. It does not fix the entry-price problem. It ensures regular investing. It does not ensure that the chosen category is still attractively placed.

First takeaway is that a SIP in a diversified equity fund is not the same as a SIP in a narrow sector/thematic fund. A SIP started after a broad market correction is not the same as a SIP started after a euphoric category rally. The debit may be identical every month; the risk being bought is not.

This brings to our second takeaway. We do not say that investors should avoid strong-performing categories. That would be too simplistic. The real lesson is that trailing returns should trigger questions, not commitment. What drove the return? Was it earnings growth, valuation expansion (see TABLE 4), policy excitement, liquidity or a temporary cycle? Has the index or category already doubled from its lows? Is the SIP being used to build long-term allocation, or to chase a hot table?

A top-5/10 SIP performers table is useful evidence of what has worked. It is poor evidence of what will work next.

Knowing when to book profit, shift gains

Warren Buffett has emphasised his investment decisions which appear sudden are usually the result of a framework built over years: Clarity on why one is buying, what would change the thesis and when one should act. SIP investors need a similar discipline. A SIP can remain the route to accumulation, but it should not become an excuse for investing without a destination or review plan. Before starting, define the goal, time horizon, asset allocation and conditions for rebalancing or shifting accumulated gains through an STP. In euphoric or panic-driven markets, such a framework prevents both blind continuation and impulsive exit.

When we map out over two decades of rolling SIP returns across broad, sectoral and thematic indices, a system emerges (see TABLE 3).

Exceptional returns are rarely a sign of permanent structural growth; they are almost always a signal of peak cyclical euphoria. Crucially, the data prove that when extreme returns flash, the culprits are usually sectoral indices, not the broad market.

While broad indices have strict historical speed limits, sectors can experience dizzying, unsustainable peaks. For example, the highest-ever five-year SIP return for BSE Industrials hit 54.6 per cent, and BSE Realty reached 48.8 per cent.

Broad market SIPs require a completely different set of rules. Because highly-diversified funds represent the broader economy, their historical ceilings are much lower. The data confirm that broad markets (Sensex, BSE 500) almost never breached a 25 per cent XIRR over a five-year period. 

Because of these hard historical ceilings, the “euphoria zone” for a large-cap or flexi-cap SIP sits squarely between 18 per cent and 20 per cent. Over the last two decades, whenever a five-year SIP in the Sensex or BSE 500 breached the 18 per cent mark, it reliably signalled a market top. If your core equity portfolio hits this number, it is your mathematical signal to stop hoping for more and execute a standard asset-allocation rebalance, sweeping excess equity profits into safer places.

Mid- and small-cap funds carry a much harsher penalty because they behave almost exactly like the highly-volatile thematic sectors. Their historical peaks soar far above the broad market: The absolute highest five-year SIP return for the BSE Smallcap reached a staggering 39 per cent, while the BSE Midcap hit 33 per cent.

Because they are capable of such extreme highs, the cyclical winters that follow are unforgiving. Our historical backtesting shows that when a five-year SIP in a mid- or small-cap index simply crossed the 20 per cent threshold, the median forward three-year return from that exact moment was quite low. So when they deliver outsized 20 per cent+ returns over half a decade, even if they haven’t hit their absolute historical maximums, it is a mandate to harvest those gains and rotate into calmer waters.

Published on May 23, 2026