1. Light on the wallet
Given that average per capital income of an Indian is approximately only Rs 25,000 (i.e. monthly income of Rs 2,083), a Rs 5,000 one-time entry in a mutual fund is still asking for a lot (2.4 times the monthly income!). And mutual funds were never meant to be elitist; far from it, the retail investor is as much a part of the mutual fund target audience as the next high networth investor. So if you cannot shell out Rs 5,000, that's not a huge stumbling block, take the SIP route and trigger your mutual fund investment with as low as Rs 500 (in most cases).
2. Makes market timing irrelevant
If market lows give you the jitters and make you wish you had never invested in equity markets, then SIPs can help you blunt that depression. Most retail investors are not experts on stocks and are even more out-of-sorts with stock market oscillations. But that does not necessarily make stocks a loss-making investment proposition.
Studies have repeatedly highlighted the ability of stocks to outperform other asset classes (debt, gold, property) over the long-term (at least 5 years) as also to effectively counter inflation. So if stocks are such a great thing, why are so many investors complaining? Its because they either got the stock wrong or the timing wrong. Both these problems can be solved through an SIP in a mutual fund with a steady track record.
3. Helps you build for the future
Most of us have
According to a study by Principal Mutual Fund if Investor Early and Investor Late begin investing Rs 1,000 monthly in a balanced fund (50:50 equity:debt) at 25 years and 30 years of age respectively, Investor Early will build a corpus of Rs 80 lakhs (Rs 8 million) at 60 years, which is twice the corpus of Rs 40 lakh (Rs 4 million) that Investor Late will accumulate. A gap of only 5 years results in a doubling of the investment corpus! That is why SIPs should become an investment habit. SIPs run over a period of time (decided by you) and help you avail of compounding.
5. Lowers the average cost
SIPs work better as opposed to one-time investing. This is because of rupee-cost averaging. Under rupee-cost averaging an investor typically buys more of a mutual fund unit when prices are low. On the other hand, he will buy fewer mutual fund units when prices are high. This is a good discipline since it forces the investor to commit cash at market lows, when other investors around him are wary and exiting the market. Investors may even be pleased when prices fall because the fixed rupee investment would now fetch more units.