When investing in mutual funds, you usually have two options: invest a large amount at once (lumpsum) or invest smaller amounts regularly (SIP). Both strategies have different advantages depending on market conditions, investor temperament, and available capital.
Scenario: Total money invested = ₹6,00,000 over 10 years.
FV = 600,000 × (1 + 0.12)^10 ≈ ₹18,63,509
Observation: If markets generally go up, lumpsum yields higher (₹18.6L) than SIP (₹11.6L) for the same total principal because the lumpsum was invested earlier to capture full compounding. The SIP advantage is risk mitigation and discipline, not maximum upside if you have perfect timing.
You can do a two-step approach: put a portion as lumpsum and start a SIP on the remaining capital. This balances opportunity and risk.
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