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In this episode, Monika reflects on her own journey through the Indian stock market, beginning with the boom-and-bust years surrounding the Harshad Mehta scam in the early 1990s, when speculation, stock tips, and market euphoria repeatedly lured retail investors into buying high and selling low. She explains how the Indian mutual fund industry gradually transformed investing by introducing the Systematic Investment Plan (SIP), adapting the principle of rupee cost averaging into a disciplined investment habit that matched the rhythm of salaried earners. Over time, SIPs helped shift investor behaviour away from speculation and towards long-term wealth creation, becoming one of the biggest success stories in India's financial markets.
She then examines the recent wave of criticism aimed at SIP investing and separates genuine concerns from misplaced fear. Monika addresses arguments around expensive market valuations, inflation-adjusted returns, and foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows, explaining why these factors matter differently for lump-sum investors than for disciplined SIP investors. While acknowledging that SIPs have sometimes been oversold without enough emphasis on asset allocation, she argues that the evidence still strongly supports long-term, diversified SIP investing. Her message is clear: don't abandon a proven strategy because of short-term pessimism. Instead, build an appropriate asset allocation, continue investing through market cycles, and avoid fear-driven decisions promoted by "merchants of doom."
In listener questions, an anonymous couple asks whether their ₹9 crore retirement corpus is sufficient to comfortably increase spending after being inspired by the book Die with Zero, prompting Monika to discuss retirement multiples, her Three Pool Retirement strategy, healthcare planning, and estate planning conversations with ageing parents; Harsh Kumar questions whether recurring expense ratios make Gold ETFs less attractive than DigiGold over very long periods, leading to a discussion about the hidden impact of annual costs, regulation, liquidity, and the importance of questioning conventional financial wisdom; and another anonymous 24-year-old professional seeks guidance on balancing education loan repayment, investing, and plans for higher studies, opening up a practical conversation about prioritising debt repayment, maintaining long-term SIPs, building contingency savings, and adjusting asset allocation before and after returning to the workforce.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) The Big SIP Fight: Why Long-Term Investing Is Under Attack
(00:00 – 00:00) Do Expensive Markets, Inflation and FII Selling Really Make SIPs a Bad Idea?
(00:00 – 00:00) Can You Afford to Spend More in Retirement?
(00:00 – 00:00) Gold ETFs vs DigiGold: Which Is Better for Long-Term Investors?
(00:00 – 00:00) Should You Repay Your Education Loan Before Investing?
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi
By Monika Halan5
44 ratings
In this episode, Monika reflects on her own journey through the Indian stock market, beginning with the boom-and-bust years surrounding the Harshad Mehta scam in the early 1990s, when speculation, stock tips, and market euphoria repeatedly lured retail investors into buying high and selling low. She explains how the Indian mutual fund industry gradually transformed investing by introducing the Systematic Investment Plan (SIP), adapting the principle of rupee cost averaging into a disciplined investment habit that matched the rhythm of salaried earners. Over time, SIPs helped shift investor behaviour away from speculation and towards long-term wealth creation, becoming one of the biggest success stories in India's financial markets.
She then examines the recent wave of criticism aimed at SIP investing and separates genuine concerns from misplaced fear. Monika addresses arguments around expensive market valuations, inflation-adjusted returns, and foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows, explaining why these factors matter differently for lump-sum investors than for disciplined SIP investors. While acknowledging that SIPs have sometimes been oversold without enough emphasis on asset allocation, she argues that the evidence still strongly supports long-term, diversified SIP investing. Her message is clear: don't abandon a proven strategy because of short-term pessimism. Instead, build an appropriate asset allocation, continue investing through market cycles, and avoid fear-driven decisions promoted by "merchants of doom."
In listener questions, an anonymous couple asks whether their ₹9 crore retirement corpus is sufficient to comfortably increase spending after being inspired by the book Die with Zero, prompting Monika to discuss retirement multiples, her Three Pool Retirement strategy, healthcare planning, and estate planning conversations with ageing parents; Harsh Kumar questions whether recurring expense ratios make Gold ETFs less attractive than DigiGold over very long periods, leading to a discussion about the hidden impact of annual costs, regulation, liquidity, and the importance of questioning conventional financial wisdom; and another anonymous 24-year-old professional seeks guidance on balancing education loan repayment, investing, and plans for higher studies, opening up a practical conversation about prioritising debt repayment, maintaining long-term SIPs, building contingency savings, and adjusting asset allocation before and after returning to the workforce.
Chapters:
(00:00 – 00:00) The Big SIP Fight: Why Long-Term Investing Is Under Attack
(00:00 – 00:00) Do Expensive Markets, Inflation and FII Selling Really Make SIPs a Bad Idea?
(00:00 – 00:00) Can You Afford to Spend More in Retirement?
(00:00 – 00:00) Gold ETFs vs DigiGold: Which Is Better for Long-Term Investors?
(00:00 – 00:00) Should You Repay Your Education Loan Before Investing?
If you have financial questions that you’d like answers for, please email us at [email protected]
Monika’s book on basic money management
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-money-english/
Monika’s book on mutual funds
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-mutual-funds/
Monika’s workbook on recording your financial life
https://www.monikahalan.com/lets-talk-legacy/
Calculators
https://investor.sebi.gov.in/calculators/index.html
You can find Monika on her social media @monikahalan.
Twitter @MonikaHalan
Instagram @MonikaHalan
Facebook @MonikaHalan
LinkedIn @MonikaHalan
Production House: www.inoutcreatives.com
Production Assistant: Anshika Gogoi

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