- Benjamin Graham
When your portfolio drops 10%, your brain doesn't see a "temporary dip in NAV." It triggers the same neural pathways as a physical threat. To your subconscious, a falling market feels less like a financial shift and more like being hunted by a predator.
This is why many investors exit at the wrong time-not because of logic, but because of emotion.
We forget the 10-year growth trajectory and focus entirely on the last 10 days. This Recency Bias is why investors often sell at the bottom-exactly when they should be buying more.
"In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine."
- Benjamin Graham
Today, that "group" has taken a new form-WhatsApp forwards, news headlines, and everyday conversations. The moment the narrative turns to "the bull run is over," the natural instinct is to follow the crowd and move to safety, even if it means booking losses.
Constant exposure to such opinions and noise creates a sense that something is seriously wrong-when in reality, it may just be a normal phase of the market.
"Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful." - Warren Buffett
Here is your tactical roadmap for staying rational when the world feels like it's ending:
The investors who succeed are not the ones who avoid fear, but the ones who don't let fear control their decisions. Because in the end, market corrections are temporary- but the impact of emotional decisions can be permanent.
Staying calm during volatility is not easy. But it is one of the most important steps toward building long-term wealth.
Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully.




