The SIP Trap: Why Most Investors Quit Just Before Compounding Starts Working
Learn why most SIP investors quit within 3 years due to expectations, why market corrections are beneficial, and why consistency beats timing.
Most SIP investors don't fail because they chose the wrong mutual fund.
They fail because they quit too early.
A surprisingly large number of investors stop their SIPs within the first few years because the results don't match their expectations. They see market crashes, flat returns, or slower growth than they imagined and conclude that investing isn't working.
Ironically, this often happens right before compounding begins to make a meaningful difference.
The 3-Year Illusion
Imagine you start a £1,000 monthly SIP.
After 3 years:
- Total invested: £36,000
- Portfolio value: Maybe £38,000–£42,000
Not very exciting.
Many investors look at these numbers and think:
"I've invested for years and barely made any money."
The problem isn't the SIP. The problem is the expectation.
Equity investing is not designed to create life-changing wealth in 3 years.
Markets Don't Move In Straight Lines
Most people imagine investing like this:
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Reality looks more like this:
📈📉📈📉📉📈📈📉📈
Markets rise. Markets fall. Sometimes they do nothing for years. This is completely normal.
In fact, falling markets are often the best thing that can happen to a long-term SIP investor.
Why Market Crashes Help SIP Investors
Suppose your SIP amount is fixed at £1,000.
When markets fall:
- Fund prices become cheaper
- Your SIP buys more units
- Future recovery becomes more powerful
Think of it like shopping. If your favorite product suddenly goes on a 40% discount, you usually buy more. Most investors do the opposite with mutual funds. They stop buying when everything becomes cheaper.
The investors who continue their SIPs through bear markets often benefit the most during the recovery.
The Real Secret: Consistency Beats Timing
Nobody can consistently predict:
- Market crashes or market tops
- Interest rates and economic cycles
- Elections and macro shifts
Trying to time the market is usually a losing game. A SIP works because it removes the need to predict anything.
You simply invest:
- Every month
- In good markets and bad markets
- During uncertainty and optimism
Consistency becomes your edge.
Why 10 Years Is The Magic Number
The first few years of investing are usually boring.
Years 1–5
Most of the portfolio consists of money you personally contributed. Compounding is still warming up.
Years 5–10
Returns become noticeable. The portfolio starts generating meaningful growth.
Years 10+
This is where things get interesting. Your returns begin generating their own returns. The compounding curve starts bending upward. Many investors spend years building momentum only to quit before reaching this stage.
The Inflation Problem Nobody Talks About
Even if your SIP grows, inflation is working against you.
For example: A portfolio worth £1 Million after 20 years sounds impressive. But if inflation averages 6%, that £1 Million may only have the purchasing power of roughly £310,000–£350,000 in today's money.
That's why looking only at portfolio value can be misleading. You must also understand:
- Inflation-adjusted value
- Purchasing power & real wealth
This is exactly why WealthCalculator shows both: Portfolio Value and Inflation-Adjusted Portfolio. Most calculators only show one.
Try This Yourself
Want to see how much compounding and inflation affect your savings? Calculate your SIP corpus, inflation-adjusted corpus, and real purchasing power using our SIP Calculator:
Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) Calculator
Solve for future values and discount compounding returns for inflation to plan your real-world targets.
Signs You're Thinking Like A Long-Term Investor
- ✓ You focus on years, not months
- ✓ You continue investing during market corrections
- ✓ You understand that volatility is normal
- ✓ You track purchasing power, not just portfolio size
- ✓ You judge results over decades, not quarters
The Bottom Line
The biggest threat to your wealth is not market volatility. It's impatience.
Most investors quit during the most important phase of the journey — the years when compounding is quietly building momentum.
Stay invested.
Keep your SIP running.
Ignore short-term noise.
And most importantly, focus on what your future money will actually be worth after inflation, not just the number shown in your investment account.