Imagine you’re climbing a mountain, but for hours the trail flattens.
You’re not going up, but you’re still moving.
That’s a sideways market—the stock market equivalent of a plateau.
Most investors feel disappointed or even scared during these times:
- “My NAV hasn’t gone up for months.”
- “I’m putting money in every month, but I see no gains.”
- “Maybe it’s better to pause until things improve.”
Wrong move.
Why? Because most of the wealth in SIPs is created precisely during these flat or falling markets, thanks to a simple mathematical edge: investment averaging.
Table of Contents:
- The Nature of SIPs: Why They Work in All Market Cycles
- The Emotional Trap: Why Investors Pause SIPs
- History Speaks: SIP Performance During Major Market Crashes
- The Invisible Growth of SIPs in Sideways Markets
- The Most Profitable Investors? Those Who Didn’t Stop SIPs
- What Happens When You Stop SIPs? The Long-Term Impact
- How SIP Averaging Creates Hidden Gains in Downturns
- The Power of Compounding Is Destroyed by Gaps
- SIP vs Lump Sum: The Behavioural Edge of SIPs
- Discipline = Returns: Why Market Cycles Reward Patience
- Final Takeaway: Don’t React. Stay the Course.
1. The Nature of SIPs: Why They Work in All Market Cycles
A SIP is designed to work like a smart, emotionless robot:
- It invests a fixed amount at regular intervals.
- It automatically buys more units when the market is low, and fewer when it’s high.
- Over time, your average purchase cost drops—even if the NAV keeps fluctuating.
Let’s simplify with an example:
Month | NAV | SIP Amount | Units Bought |
---|---|---|---|
Jan | ₹100 | ₹1,000 | 10.00 |
Feb | ₹80 | ₹1,000 | 12.50 |
Mar | ₹60 | ₹1,000 | 16.67 |
Apr | ₹100 | ₹1,000 | 10.00 |
Total | ₹4,000 | 49.17 Units |
Your average NAV = ₹4,000 / 49.17 = ₹81.35
Final NAV in April = ₹100
Your portfolio value = 49.17 × ₹100 = ₹4,917
Gain: ₹917 or 22.9% in just 4 months—even though the NAV ended where it started.
That’s the SIP magic.
2. The Emotional Trap: Why Investors Pause SIPs
Investors often act emotionally, especially during volatility.
Here’s what typically happens:
- Fear dominates: “What if the market crashes further?”
- Loss aversion kicks in: Seeing red in the portfolio feels worse than the joy of future gains.
- Short-term thinking: “My SIP of ₹10,000 became ₹9,200 this month—I’m losing money!”
But the problem isn’t the market. It’s our behaviour.
What we forget:
Losses on paper aren’t real until you sell.
Stopping SIPs in downturns is like quitting a marathon because you’re tired at mile 10—when mile 26 is where all the cheering and glory happens.
3. History Speaks: SIP Performance During Major Market Crashes
Let’s look at actual market history.
📉 Global Financial Crisis (2008–2009)
- Jan 2008: Sensex at 20,873
- Mar 2009: Crashed to 8,160 (–60%)
- Recovery: By Nov 2010, it bounced back to 21,000
If you had paused SIPs in panic during 2008, you’d have missed buying at dirt-cheap NAVs.
But if you continued:
- Invest ₹10,000/month from Jan 2008 to Dec 2010 = ₹3.6 lakhs
- By end of 2010, that investment would have grown to ₹5.5 lakhs
- CAGR: ~23%
Imagine—a 23% return from investing through one of the worst crashes in history.
4. The Invisible Growth of SIPs in Sideways Markets
Between 2010 and 2013, Nifty moved from 5,000 to 6,300—a sideways period with no exciting headlines.
Investors felt nothing was happening, and many stopped their SIPs.
But here’s what actually happened:
- Investors who continued their SIPs accumulated units at stable, low prices.
- By 2014, when the Nifty crossed 7,500, their portfolios surged.
💡 Real Example
₹10,000 SIP/month from Jan 2010 to Dec 2013 = ₹4.8 lakhs
By 2014, portfolio value = ₹6.2 lakhs
Return: ~15% CAGR—even in a “boring” market!
5. The Most Profitable Investors? Those Who Didn’t Stop SIPs
Let’s use a thought experiment:
Two friends—Anita and Raj—both started a SIP in Jan 2008.
- Market crashed in 2008. Raj stopped his SIP. Anita continued.
- Market recovered in 2010. Raj resumed SIPs again.
Who made more money?
- Anita had accumulated more units at lower NAVs.
- Her average cost per unit was much lower.
- She made significantly more returns—even though both invested the same amount eventually.
In SIPs, time invested > timing the investment.
6. What Happens When You Stop SIPs? The Long-Term Impact
When you stop a SIP:
- You lose compounding momentum
- You miss buying during dips (which drive long-term returns)
- You delay wealth creation by years, not just months
Consider this:
SIP Duration | Total Invested | Value after 20 years (12% CAGR) |
---|---|---|
20 years | ₹24 lakhs | ₹1.0 crore |
Stopped for 2 years during crash | ₹21.6 lakhs | ₹83 lakhs |
Stopping for just 2 years costs you ₹17 lakhs in corpus value.
7. How SIP Averaging Creates Hidden Gains in Downturns
When NAV drops, you feel losses. But SIPs quietly buy more units.
Later, when the NAV rebounds, those extra units supercharge your portfolio growth.
It’s like planting extra seeds during a storm—they don’t grow instantly, but when the sun comes out, they flourish faster than you expect.
8. The Power of Compounding Is Destroyed by Gaps
Einstein called compounding the “8th wonder of the world.”
But for compounding to work:
- You must stay invested
- Interruptions reset the curve
- SIPs give you small, consistent inputs that build exponential results
Every gap or pause delays this curve—and the loss isn’t linear, it’s exponential.
9. SIP vs Lump Sum: The Behavioural Edge of SIPs
Most investors can’t stomach a lump sum of ₹10 lakhs during a crash.
But SIP lets you:
- Enter in small bites
- Stay calm during volatility
- Avoid regret if markets fall after investing
SIP is not just about returns—it’s about managing investor behaviour.
And behaviour, more than math, determines your financial success.
10. Discipline = Returns: Why Market Cycles Reward Patience
Every bull market has been born out of a bear market.
Every sideways market eventually gives way to a breakout.
The investor who continues SIPs without interruption—
- Buys low
- Holds long
- Earns big
Market cycles are inevitable. Your reaction to them defines your outcome.
11. Final Takeaway: Don’t React. Stay the Course
Stopping SIPs during market downturns or flat periods is like:
- Skipping gym because you’re not seeing six-pack abs in 3 months
- Quitting a diet because you gained 1 kg in a stressful week
- Abandoning a flight because there’s turbulence
Wealth creation needs consistency, not convenience.
👉 Let your SIP run—rain or shine.
👉 Let volatility be your ally, not enemy.
👉 Let time, not timing, build your fortune.
Because in the end, those who stayed the course are the ones who reached their goals.
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