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Operation Sindoor: Should mutual fund investors brace for impact or stay the course?
Operation Sindoor: Should mutual fund investors brace for impact or stay the course?

Mint

time08-05-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

Operation Sindoor: Should mutual fund investors brace for impact or stay the course?

The Indian government's bold military response—Operation Sindoor—in response to the Pahalgam attack on April 22 has created understandable jitters in financial markets. However, history offers a reassuring narrative for long-term investors, especially mutual fund participants. The immediate impact of any political upheaval is seen instantly in the stock markets. However, mutual funds are relatively safer investments since they invest in a range of stocks, sectors and asset classes, thus diversifying the risk. So, investors of mutual funds are generally in a sweet spot vis-à-vis stock investors. Here's a data-backed breakdown of how markets have behaved during past conflicts and how you should approach your mutual fund investments now. Historically, India's capital markets have shown short-term volatility during military conflicts but have bounced back strongly over time. Below are key examples: Event 1 month before During conflict 1 year after Kargil War (1999) -8.3% +36.6% +29.4% Uri Surgical Strike (2016) -0.3% +0.4% +11.3% Balakot Airstrike (2019) +0.8% -0.4% +8.9% Source: MFI Explorer (Compiled by Kotak Mutual Fund) Even in the case of full-blown wars like Kargil, market corrections were temporary. Within a year, investors were well-compensated for staying invested. Although stock markets recovered, macroeconomic indicators did reflect some pressure—mainly inflation and fiscal deficit. War GDP (%) WPI inflation (%) Fiscal deficit (%) Kargil War (1999) 6.18 → 8.85 5.90 → 3.30 9.10 → 9.20 1962 Sino-Indian War 3.72 → 2.93 0.24 → 3.80 2.93 → 3.99 1965 Indo-Pak War 5.99 → 7.45 6.17 → 10.98 4.86 → 5.72 1971 Bangladesh War 3.30 → 1.19 5.54 → 5.60 2.38 → 6.82 Source: IMF, RBI, Sunidhi Research (Compiled by Kotak Mutual Fund) Inflation tends to spike and fiscal discipline gets challenged in prolonged conflicts, but India's GDP has demonstrated resilience across these timelines. In the wake of Operation Sindoor, investors might feel a natural urge to react swiftly to protect their portfolios. However, data and market behavior suggest that a calm, disciplined approach often outperforms impulsive decision-making. "SIP works on rupee cost averaging method. It means over a long period of time, your cost of purchase becomes average due to the bear and bull market and your investments become less volatile in comparison to lumpsum investments. Volatility is the part and parcel of equity investments. Investors should stay put in such volatility rather than converting their notional loss into permanent loss. Therefore, you should continue your SIPs and focus on long term wealth creation," says Preeti Zende, a Sebi-registered investment advisor and founder of Apna Dhan Financial Services. 1. Continue SIPs: Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) are built to withstand volatility. They capitalize on rupee-cost averaging—meaning you buy more units when prices fall and fewer when they rise. This smoothens the cost over time and ensures you don't try to time the market, which rarely works. Example: An investor who continued their SIP through the 2016 Uri Strike and 2019 Balakot Airstrike periods saw handsome gains a year later. Market dips turned into opportunities for wealth accumulation. 2. Top-up SIPs: If you have surplus cash and a long-term horizon (5–10+ years), consider increasing your SIP amounts temporarily. This is akin to buying quality assets at a discount, especially in fundamentally strong equity funds. 3. Staggered lumpsum investments: If you've recently received a bonus, sale proceeds, or idle funds, avoid putting it all into the market at once. Break it into 3–6 tranches over the next few months. This strategy cushions you from near-term volatility and helps ride the market's recovery phases. 4. Rebalance if needed (not panic sell): If your asset allocation has skewed heavily toward equity or debt due to market movements, consider rebalancing. But do it in a planned manner, ideally under a financial advisor's guidance—not as a knee-jerk reaction. 1. Avoid panic selling: Emotional selling during sharp market corrections often results in crystallizing losses. Many investors who exited during COVID-19's market crash in March 2020 missed the V-shaped recovery that followed just months later. 2. Don't stop SIPs: Pausing or stopping SIPs during turbulence undermines the whole purpose of long-term investing. Even skipping a few SIPs can lead to a substantial difference in final corpus due to missed units at lower NAVs. 3. Don't overcorrect portfolio allocation based on headlines: Geopolitical tensions, while serious, typically create temporary distortions. Avoid completely shifting to debt or gold just based on fear. Stick to your original investment strategy unless your financial goals have changed. Disclaimer: Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Consult your financial advisor before making decisions.

India-Pakistan conflict: How should mutual fund investors deal with geopolitical threats?
India-Pakistan conflict: How should mutual fund investors deal with geopolitical threats?

Economic Times

time07-05-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

India-Pakistan conflict: How should mutual fund investors deal with geopolitical threats?

Live Events With the ongoing India-Pakistan conflict after the Indian Armed Forces' precision strike on terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), the mutual fund investors are recommended to stay invested and avoid knee-jerk decisions, according to a release by Kotak Mutual Fund 'It is difficult to predict the market direction however, the last major conflict has triggered temporary drawdowns before markets rebounded. Staying invested and avoiding knee-jerk decisions may be prudent for long-term wealth creation,' Said Kotak Mutual fund house recommends that investors investing via SIP can consider topping up their ongoing SIP if possible, and should not exit from the existing SIP, whereas the investors making lumpsum investments may consider adding investments in a staggered way, and should not sell in sharing how the current conflict could play out on the economy and markets, the fund house said that if it is a prolonged conflict then macro-economic variables such as inflation and fiscal deficit could increase, and markets may correct the other hand, if there is no conflict or a conflict for a limited period, the impact on the economy will be limited, and even the markets may have been two such surgical strikes since 2016 (Uri and Balakot) and the impact on the market has been the Uri Surgical Strike, which was between 18-28 September 2016, the market dropped by 0.3% from the day of the attack till the strike, and on the day of strike, it went up by 0.4%. One year after the strike, the markets surged by 11.3%, the release the time of the Balakot Airstrike, which was between 14-26 February 2019, the market went up by 0.8% from the day of the attack till the strike and on the day of the strike, it went down by 0.4%. One year after the strike, the markets surged by 8.9%.'Government action suggests there is low possibility of a war. However, in case of a full-blown war, we must note that since 1950, India has seen 4 major wars. In the last major conflict (Kargil-1999), the equity markets have remained robust after an initial panic,' the release to the release by Kotak Mutual Fund, at the time of Kargil War, which went on between 3 May to 26 July 1999, the market dropped by 8.3% just one month before the war and during the war, it surged 36.6%. After one year of the war, the market gained 29.4%.'Short term market swings during geopolitical events are unsettling, but history shows that they rarely derail India's long term growth story. In the long term, the macroeconomic factors and corporate earnings drive the stock market performance,' said the fund house.

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