Ravi started investing seriously in 2020. The timing felt perfect. Markets bounced sharply after the pandemic crash, and within a year, his portfolio was up more than 50%. He felt he had figured it out.
By 2022, things looked very different. Markets corrected, returns flattened, and some of his ‘sure-shot’ stocks went nowhere. That confidence turned into confusion.
Then came 2023 and 2024. Strong again. New highs. Fresh optimism. If you look at Ravi’s journey, nothing unusual happened. This is exactly how equity markets behave. The problem is not volatility. The problem is how we react to it.
Equity investing in India has grown significantly over the past decade, bringing more investors into contact with exactly this kind of market cycle. Behavioural investing in India, or the study of how psychological biases shape financial decisions, explains a large share of why investors underperform the very funds they hold.
Equity returns are not consistent. And that is normal
If you look at market data over the years, one thing stands out clearly. Returns swing widely from year to year. Some years give 40% plus returns. Some barely move. Some even go deep into negative territory.
This applies across segments like large cap, mid caps, small caps. In fact, the smaller the segment, the sharper the swings. So when investors expect steady 12% or 15% every year, they are expecting something markets simply do not offer.
The hidden risk most investors ignore
We often talk about risk as ‘market going down’. But there is another risk that is more dangerous, especially for long-term goals. It is the order in which returns come. For example, two investors can earn the same average return over 10 years and still end up with very different outcomes.
Why?
Because timing matters more than averages when money is being added or withdrawn.
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Why this matters more today
As of today, markets have already delivered strong phases in recent years. Many portfolios are sitting on decent gains. This is where behaviour usually goes wrong:
- Investors assume recent returns will continue
- Allocation to equities increases without realising
- Risk creeps in silently
The issue is not investing in equities. The issue is overexposure at the wrong time.
Equity overexposure risk builds gradually, often undetected, as markets rise and the equity portion of a portfolio drifts above its intended weight.
A simple way to understand this
Let us consider someone who is close to a financial goal, whether it is retirement, buying a house, or funding education… If the markets fall sharply just before the money is needed, the impact is real and immediate. So, even if markets recover later, the damage is already done. This is why timing of returns matters more than average returns.
Large cap vs mid cap vs small cap behaviour
Looking at past data patterns:
- Large caps tend to be relatively stable, but still volatile
- Mid caps show stronger upside but sharper corrections
- Small caps can swing the most, both up and down
In good years, small caps can outperform everything
In bad years, they can fall the most
Chasing last year’s best performer usually leads to disappointment
Goal based investing in India is gaining traction as financial awareness grows, shifting the conversation from chasing returns to planning around outcomes.
What investors should do differently
Instead of trying to predict returns, focus on managing exposure
1. Asset allocation matters more than stock selection
A balanced mix of equity, debt, and cash reduces the impact of bad years
2. Gradually reduce risk near goals
If a goal is 3 to 5 years away, start shifting part of equity into safer instruments.
(Financial goals investing in India benefits enormously from a structured plan that separates short-term needs from long-term wealth building).
3. Do not assume recent returns will repeat
Strong past performance often leads to moderate future returns, but its not guaranteed.
(Portfolio rebalancing in India is not yet a widespread practice, which is why allocation drift goes unnoticed until a market correction makes it visible).
4. Stick to a plan during volatility
Frequent changes based on market moves usually hurt returns
5. Use systematic investing and withdrawal strategies
They help average out timing risk instead of depending on one entry or exit point
(Systematic investing in India through SIPs has made disciplined market participation accessible to a wide range of investors).
Markets are not unpredictable. They are just uneven.
Returns come in bursts, not in straight lines. Understanding this changes how you invest, you stop chasing performance, you respect risk, you plan better around goals.
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Disclaimer: The information provided in our blogs is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial, investment, or trading advice. Trading and investing in the securities market carries risk. Always conduct your own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Copyrighted and original content for your trading and investing needs.
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