For most investors, ₹1 crore is not just a number—it’s a milestone. It represents financial security, a home down payment, or simply the confidence that money is working for you. The good news: building this corpus in 10 years is not a fantasy. The bad news: it’s not easy—and it demands discipline more than brilliance.
According to an analysis by Value Research, the path to ₹1 crore is surprisingly straightforward in theory—but demanding in practice.
The math is simple—but not easy
Let’s start with the core number.
Assuming a 10% annual return, which is a reasonable long-term expectation from equity mutual funds, an investor needs to invest roughly:
₹50,000 per month via SIP for 10 years
If returns improve, the required SIP drops:
At 12% return → ₹45,000/month
At 14% return → ₹41,000/month
At 16% return → ₹37,000/month
Below is a table by Value Research showing how much you would ideally need to invest each month to reach the Rs 1 crore target, depending on your return expectations.
This is the first reality check:
The goal is achievable—but requires meaningful monthly commitment
Why equity mutual funds are central to the plan
For a 10-year goal, the strategy leans heavily on equities.
That’s because:
Fixed-income products rarely generate double-digit returns
Inflation erodes low-return investments
Equities offer inflation-beating, long-term growth potential
Which mutual funds should you choose? According to Value Research, for a 10-year horizon, equity mutual funds are the natural choice. While volatile in the short term, equity funds deliver superior, inflation-beating returns over longer horizons, making them suitable for meeting an ambitious target of Rs 1 crore.
A straightforward portfolio could look like this:
Flexi-cap funds (core holding): These funds invest across well-established companies and should form the stable backbone of your portfolio.
Mid-cap fund (growth booster): Mid-cap funds carry more volatility but have historically delivered strong returns over longer periods.
Small-cap fund (optional, for higher risk appetite): Only add this if you can stomach sharper short-term swings.
“A simple split, say 50 per cent in a flexi-cap fund and 25 per cent each in mid-cap and small-cap funds, keeps things manageable without over-complicating matters,” said the Value Research note.
The real driver: Consistency, not timing
One of the biggest misconceptions in investing is that returns drive wealth.
In reality, for goals like ₹1 crore:
Consistency matters more than returns—especially in the early years
In the first 5–7 years:
Most of your corpus comes from your own contributions
Compounding plays a limited role
It’s only in the later years that:
Returns begin to accelerate
Compounding starts doing the heavy lifting
This is why stopping SIPs during market volatility can derail the entire plan.
The smarter strategy: Step-up SIPs
Here’s where the strategy becomes more realistic.
Instead of committing ₹50,000 from day one, investors can use a step-up SIP:
Start with a lower amount
Increase it annually (say 5–10%) as income grows
This aligns investing with career growth and:
Reduces initial burden
Accelerates wealth creation over time
Even a modest annual increase can significantly reduce the starting SIP required.
Why not lumpsum?
“Rather than putting in a large sum all at once, a SIP spreads your investments across market conditions; you buy more units when markets are down and fewer when they are up. This is rupee cost averaging in action, and it works quietly in your favour over time.
The bigger risk with a lumpsum is timing. If you invest a large amount right before a market correction, your portfolio takes an immediate hit and can take months (or sometimes years) to recover. A SIP sidesteps this entirely, since your money enters the market gradually, smoothing out the peaks and troughs,” said the Value Research note.
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