Every successful investment journey starts quietly—like sowing seeds in fertile soil. In the first few years of your SIP (Systematic Investment Plan), returns may appear slow or negligible.
This is perfectly normal. Just as a farmer does not dig up the soil every week to check the seeds, an investor must not lose faith too early.The initial 3–5 years are the “effort stage” — you are sowing the seeds of your financial future.
Compounding works silently in the background. Remember, the first shoots take time to appear, but once they do, growth can be exponential.Why SIPs Feel Slow in the BeginningMany people expect quick profits and get disappointed when that doesn’t happen. In SIPs, your money is invested regularly and benefits from market ups and downs over time.
The early phase shows little growth because your contributions are small compared to the compounding potential that builds later. Think of it like a bamboo tree — for the first five years, you see almost nothing… but once it takes root, it shoots up rapidly within weeks.Stay Away from Panic and NegativityIn Kashmir and across India, many investors panic when markets fall. They stop SIPs, sell in fear, and lose faith just before the real growth begins. This is like abandoning a gold mine after digging only halfway.
Compounding rewards consistency and time — two things that panic can destroy instantly.When gold funds or mutual funds underperform temporarily, people assume they made a wrong decision. But markets move in cycles. The same gold or equity that was sold in frustration often performs strongly later. Stay the course — patience brings profits.
The Smart Investor MindsetAvoid unnecessary loans, gadgets, or impulse purchases. Treat every SIP as a step toward freedom, not an expense.Increase your SIP amount as your income grows — even a 10–15% annual top-up boosts long-term wealth remarkably. Do not compare your results with others on social media — they often show only the success, not the process. Trust the process, not daily market movements. From EMI to SIPAn EMI pays for depreciating assets — things that lose value over time.
A SIP builds appreciating assets — things that grow in value and give peace of mind.
Compounding doesn’t need prediction; it needs patience and consistency.
Conclusion: Let the Seeds GrowEvery Kashmiri investor should remember — wealth is not created overnight. Just like our apple orchards and saffron fields, investments need time, nurturing, and consistency. The first few years test your patience, but later years reward your persistence with abundance.Plant your financial seeds, water them regularly through SIPs, and let time bring the harvest. Trust the process, avoid panic, and let compounding create your second income.— Irshad Mushtaq
Investor | Entrepreneur | Founder – M I Securities
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