How Mutual Funds Work
Mutual funds pool money from many investors to purchase a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities. For international investors, this provides an easy way to achieve diversification without managing individual assets.
SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) vs Lumpsum
When investing in mutual funds, you generally have two main approaches:
- SIP (Systematic Investment Plan): You invest a fixed amount regularly (e.g., monthly). This leverages "rupee/dollar-cost averaging" because you buy more units when prices are low and fewer when prices are high, smoothing out market volatility over time.
- Lumpsum: You invest a large amount of money all at once. This strategy aims to maximize the time your money is in the market to benefit from long-term compound growth.
The Power of Compounding
The secret ingredient of mutual fund investing is compound interest—earning interest on your interest. The longer you stay invested, the more pronounced the compounding effect becomes. Use this mutual fund calculator to simulate how different expected rates of return and investment timeframes can snowball your wealth into a substantial corpus for retirement, buying a house, or other financial goals.