Spotlight

The Month You Skip Your SIP Is the Month You Lose

Investors who pause during a downturn usually miss the recovery, and that’s where the real gains hide

Mohit Handoo Founder, Member of  “Compass”
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Wealth creation through investing is often associated with timing the market, picking the right stocks, or finding the next big opportunity. In practice, the people who build wealth do it differently, through consistency, patience, and discipline that keep them invested through market ups and downs. Systematic investment plans, or SIPs, in mutual funds offer that kind of structure.

A SIP works by investing a fixed amount at regular intervals, typically monthly, into a mutual fund of your choice. The amount can be as small as a few hundred rupees, which makes it accessible to a wide range of investors. More importantly, it removes the need to time the market. Because money goes in every month regardless of where markets are, you automatically buy more units when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. Over time, this averaging effect can work in the investor’s favour.

The bigger driver of wealth through SIPs is compounding. When returns are reinvested and allowed to grow, the base on which they are earned keeps expanding. The longer the investment horizon, the more pronounced this effect becomes. An investor who starts a SIP in their twenties and stays invested for twenty-five or thirty years is likely to see a very different outcome from someone who starts a decade later, even if the monthly amount is similar. Time, in this context, is not just helpful. It is the single most important variable.

1 June 2026

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Markets reward the investor who keeps showing up, not the one who waits for the perfect moment.

Equity mutual funds are the natural choice for building wealth over the long term through SIPs. Over extended periods, equity as an asset class has historically delivered returns that beat inflation by a meaningful margin. This matters because wealth is not just about growing a number. It is about growing purchasing power. A corpus that does not keep pace with inflation is not really growing at all.

Many investors hesitate to hold equity funds when markets fall. This is where the SIP structure helps. Because the investment is automatic and the amount is fixed, it takes the decision out of your hands. Those who stop their SIPs during downturns often miss the recovery, which is where a large part of the long-term return gets generated. Staying the course through the full cycle is what makes the difference.

Another advantage of SIPs is that they can be scaled up as you go. As income grows, raising the monthly amount, even modestly, can have a significant impact on the final corpus. A step-up SIP, which lifts the investment automatically each year, is one way to align contributions with rising earnings without any active effort.

Building wealth through SIPs is not complicated, but it does ask for a degree of discipline that many investors underestimate. Markets will go through phases that test conviction. There will be years when returns look disappointing, and the temptation to pause or exit feels real. The ones who build lasting wealth are usually those who treat their SIP like any other fixed expense, something that goes out every month without debate.

The tool is simple. The returns, over the years, can be significant. What it takes is starting, staying consistent, and giving the process enough time to work.

“Activity finishes the Miracle Process, of turning nothing into some Miracle. But disciplined skilful activity, not just activity.”

Disclosure: This article is written by Mohit Handoo, Founder, Member of “Compass”. The views expressed are his own. This is partner content and not an Outlook Money editorial feature. Outlook Money does not provide investment advice or endorse any products or services mentioned.

Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully.

Disclaimer: The Views are Personal and not a part of the Outlook Money Editorial Feature

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