Have SIPs failed?
The word on the street is that SIPs
have failed. Investors who have been investing steadily through Systematic
Investing Plans find that their investors too are deep under water. Even SIPs
that have been running for long periods are in losses or barely breaking even.
There's no denying this. If you started an SIP about five years ago when the
Sensex (^BSESN : 10534.87 +186.04)
was at 5,000 and invested Rs 10,000 a month in a fund that about kept pace with
the Sensex, you would be just about even today. You would have invested Rs 6
lakh but the current value of investment would be about Rs 5.9 lakh. The losses
are far worse for SIPs that were started later. Investors who started SIPs say,
three years ago, are down by a total of 24% over a period when the Sensex has
lost 14%.
Naturally, investors are seriously
put off by this. After all, SIPs were supposed to be the panacea of fund
investment. They epitomise the slow and steady method of investment that people
like me advise, don't they? Then how can SIP apparently do so much worse than
lump-sum investments? There are even articles in the press saying that fund
investors are cancelling their SIP plans in some numbers. Why has this
happened? And are investors right in stopping their investments now?
The first thing that is obvious here
is that SIPs do not guarantee profits under all circumstances. The point of
SIPs is that you keep buying at all levels-high and low-regardless of what your
instincts urge you to do. You automatically buy more when the market is low and
less when the market is high. Without an SIP, investors invariably tend to do
the opposite. In the long-term, given the general upward trend of stock prices,
this strategy leads to much better profits than picking and choosing and trying
to time the markets themselves.
But that does not amount to magic.
In the face of the kind of collapse that the stock markets have seen over the
last year, no investing strategy is immune. If you have been doing an SIP over
the last five years, then most of that period, you have been investing at very
high levels of the markets. You have been investing when the market was at
10,000 and 15,000 and 20,000 and even 22,000. It's no surprise that now when
it's down to 9,000 or 10,000 you are in losses.
And as for comparing this to a lump
sum investment made five years ago, obviously anyone making a single investment
at 5,000 and comparing it to 10,000 has doubled his money. But such people do
not exist. I can't imagine any human being who could have invested five years
ago and then stopped investing more. To actually have followed such a strategy
you would have to able to foresee the future or be a genius. To compare this to
a real world investors' SIP is a useless exercise of 20/20 hindsight.
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