Lesson 1 of 13 · Free
Contents
- 1 The Need to Invest
- 1.1 Why investing isn’t optional
- 1.2 What you’re actually saving for
- 1.3 The five asset classes Indian investors actually use
- 1.4 Five rules before you start
- 1.5 What you’ll need next
- 1.6 Inflation Maths Every Indian Investor Must Internalise
- 1.7 The Behavioural Edge: SIP Discipline Beats Lump-Sum Timing
- 1.8 FAQs — Why Invest at All?
The Need to Invest
Why saving alone isn’t enough. Five Indian asset classes, time horizon vs risk, and the five rules to follow before buying your first share.
Why investing isn’t optional
If you keep ₹1,00,000 in a savings account earning 3.5% for ten years, you’ll end up with about ₹1,41,000. Sounds reasonable until you remember inflation. Indian retail inflation has averaged roughly 5-6% over the same decade. The same basket of groceries that cost ₹1,00,000 today will cost around ₹1,79,000 in ten years. You went from being able to afford the basket to being able to afford only about 79% of it — even though the number in your bank account grew.
That’s the entire case for investing in one paragraph. Money parked in low-yield instruments doesn’t preserve purchasing power; it slowly loses it. Investing isn’t about getting rich quickly — it’s about making sure your savings keep up with the cost of living, and ideally outpace it.
What you’re actually saving for
Before picking instruments, name your goals. A 28-year-old saving for retirement in 2055 has a 27-year runway and can ride out short-term market drops. The same person saving for a down payment on a flat in 2028 cannot — that money needs to be safe and accessible. Time horizon dictates risk tolerance, which dictates instrument choice.
- Short term (0-3 years): savings account, fixed deposits, liquid funds. Liquidity matters more than return.
- Medium term (3-7 years): debt mutual funds, conservative hybrid funds, RBI floating-rate bonds.
- Long term (7+ years): equity mutual funds, direct stocks, real estate, index funds. Volatility is the price you pay for the higher long-term return.
The five asset classes Indian investors actually use
Cash and fixed income. Savings accounts, fixed deposits, PPF, EPF, RBI bonds, government securities. Predictable returns of 4-8%, principal safety (except for very long-dated bonds where rates can move). Beats inflation only marginally in good years; loses ground in high-inflation years.
Equity. Either direct stocks listed on NSE and BSE, or pooled exposure via mutual funds and ETFs. Long-term CAGR of 12-15% in Indian large caps over multi-decade windows, but year-on-year swings can be brutal — the Nifty fell 38% in March 2020 before rallying 80% over the following year. Equity rewards patience.
Real estate. Residential and commercial property, plus REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts). Returns 8-12% in tier-1 cities long term, but illiquid, lumpy, and expensive to enter. REITs make commercial real estate tradeable in market lots.
Commodities. Gold, silver, agri-commodities. Gold has averaged about 9% in INR over long windows and serves as a portfolio hedge during equity crashes. Best held as Sovereign Gold Bonds, gold ETFs, or digital gold rather than physical jewellery (which carries 15-25% making charges).
Alternatives. P2P lending, venture capital, art, crypto. High variance, illiquid, not for beginners. Treat as portfolio garnish, not main course.
Five rules before you start
- Build an emergency fund first. Six months of expenses in liquid form. Without this, a single accident forces you to sell investments at the worst possible time.
- Pay off high-interest debt. Paying down a 36% credit card guarantees a 36% return. No investment beats that risk-free.
- Get insurance before investing. A pure-term cover of 10-15× annual income and a family health policy of ₹5-10 lakh. Investing without insurance is gambling — one illness can wipe out a decade of savings.
- Pick the time horizon, then the instrument. Not the other way around.
- Start small, start now. A ₹5,000 monthly SIP started at 25 will beat a ₹15,000 SIP started at 35 — that’s compounding doing its job.
What you’ll need next
To actually invest in equity you’ll need three things: a bank account, a demat account (where shares are held electronically), and a trading account (which routes orders to the exchange). Most online brokers in India — Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, ICICI Direct — bundle the demat and trading accounts into one application. Setup is online, KYC-driven, and takes 24-48 hours.
The next 12 lessons cover everything that happens after you tap “Buy”. You’ll meet the regulators, the intermediaries, the IPO machinery, the price-discovery mechanism, and the corporate-action calendar that shapes returns.
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Inflation Maths Every Indian Investor Must Internalise
Indian retail inflation has averaged 5.7% over the last decade per RBI’s CPI data, with food inflation often touching 8-10%. A savings account at 3% interest is therefore guaranteed to destroy purchasing power. Consider a simple table that shows what ₹1 lakh becomes in 10 years under different post-tax returns versus inflation:
| Instrument | Post-tax Return | Value of ₹1 lakh after 10 yrs | Real Value (5.7% inflation) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Savings A/c | ~2.1% | ₹1.23 lakh | ₹70,500 (lost ₹29,500 of buying power) |
| Bank FD | ~5.0% | ₹1.63 lakh | ₹93,500 (still lost) |
| PPF | ~7.1% | ₹1.99 lakh | ₹1.14 lakh (small real gain) |
| Equity MF (SIP) | ~10-12% expected | ₹2.59-3.11 lakh | ₹1.49-1.78 lakh (meaningful real wealth) |
The Behavioural Edge: SIP Discipline Beats Lump-Sum Timing
AMFI data from FY 2024-25 shows ₹26,400 crore of monthly SIP inflows from 9.4 crore SIP accounts — proof that structural retail behaviour has shifted. The SIP investor avoids the two psychological traps that destroy returns: waiting for the “right time” (which never comes) and panic-selling at lows. Over a 20-year window covering the 2008 crash and 2020 COVID drawdown, a ₹10,000 monthly NIFTY index SIP would have grown to roughly ₹1.05 crore — a ~12% XIRR — without the investor needing to time anything.
FAQs — Why Invest at All?
Why not just keep cash in the bank?
Because the bank rate is below inflation. Every year you wait, your purchasing power shrinks silently. Inflation is the most consistent thief in personal finance.
What is the smallest amount I can start with?
SIPs start at ₹100 on platforms like Groww, Coin and Kuvera. Even ₹500 monthly invested at 12% becomes ₹49 lakh in 30 years — a financial education’s worth of demonstration.
Should I clear my home loan first?
Compare your loan rate (typically 8.5-9.5%) with your expected investment return (10-12%). If you have a 30-year horizon and equity exposure, investing while servicing the loan often outperforms accelerated repayment — but emotional comfort with debt matters too.
Where to Start Reading
For the absolute beginner, RBI’s “Project Financial Literacy” booklet is free and well-illustrated. Once that resonates, move to “The Intelligent Investor” by Benjamin Graham for value-investing philosophy, “One Up On Wall Street” by Peter Lynch for stock-picking intuition, and “Coffee Can Investing” by Saurabh Mukherjea for the Indian context. For YouTube, the Zerodha Varsity channel and the Pranjal Kamra-CA Rachana series are the most trustworthy free sources. Avoid pump-and-dump Telegram channels and influencers promising guaranteed returns — SEBI bans them periodically because they cause measurable retail losses. Building a 30-minute daily reading habit from these sources will compound your understanding much faster than market timing ever will.
The Three Investing Mindset Shifts
Most first-time investors trip over the same three mental hurdles. First, mistaking trading for investing — trading is short-horizon position-taking; investing is long-horizon participation in business growth. The same person can do both but never within the same portfolio bucket. Second, equating activity with progress — checking your portfolio daily, reading every news item, switching funds based on quarterly performance all feel productive but actively destroy long-term returns. Third, anchoring on absolute amounts instead of percentages — a 10% drawdown on ₹10,000 hurts the same as a 10% drawdown on ₹10 lakh, but the second feels worse and triggers panic selling. Reframing portfolio statements in percentage terms (instead of rupees) keeps your emotional state stable across portfolio growth.
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