We work hard for our savings. We sacrifice for our children's future. We invest with hope - not with the expectation of watching red numbers flash on a screen. So when war breaks out anywhere in the world, even thousands of kilometres away, it doesn't feel distant. It feels personal.
But here's something history quietly reminds us every single time:
Markets have lived through wars before. They have lived through crises before. They have lived through panic before.
And they have recovered - every single time.
This article is not here to dismiss your concern. It is here to give you perspective - the kind that turns anxiety into clarity, and clarity into the right decision for your financial future.
"The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient." - Warren Buffett
But here is what the data consistently shows: the initial reaction is almost always an overreaction. Once the dust settles - once investors realise that corporate earnings, consumption, and economic activity continue - markets recover, often faster than most people expect.
The table below covers every major crisis the Indian market has faced since 1991 - including wars, financial scams, global recessions, and pandemics - and what the Sensex delivered in the 3 years that followed each one.
| Year | Crisis / Event | Correction (Months) | Fall % | Post 36M Returns |
| 1991 | Gulf War / India Fin Crisis | 4 | 38.69% | 316.53% |
| 1992–93 | Harshad Mehta Scam | 12 | 54.41% | 84.85% |
| 1994–96 | Reliance, FII | 27 | 40.72% | 71.73% |
| 2000–01 | Tech Bubble | 20 | 56.18% | 115.60% |
| 2004 | BJP Lost Election | 4 | 27.27% | 217.41% |
| 2006 | FII Selloff | 1 | 28.64% | 70.65% |
| 2008–09 | Global Financial Crisis | 14 | 60.91% | 114.49% |
| 2015–16 | China Slowdown | 13 | 22.67% | 58.57% |
| 2020 | Covid-19 Crisis | 2 | 37.93% | 122.95% |
Nine crises. Nine recoveries. Not once - not even once - did the market fail to come back. And in every single case, investors who stayed the course saw their wealth grow significantly in the years that followed. The 2008 Global Financial Crisis - widely considered the worst financial catastrophe since the Great Depression - saw the Sensex fall 60.91%. It felt catastrophic. And yet, 36 months later, markets had delivered 114.49% returns. The investors who panicked and sold locked in their losses. The investors who stayed - or better yet, invested more - were rewarded handsomely.
- 1.47 billion people (as per Worldometer), many with rising aspirations and purchasing power.
- As per IBEF, India has a median age of under 30 years in 2025 - the youngest large economy in the world.
- Rapid digital penetration is bringing millions into the formal economy.
- Massive government spending on infrastructure, defence, and manufacturing.
- India increasingly becoming the world's preferred alternative to China for global supply chains.
In the short term - yes, some caution and awareness is sensible. Wars can cause oil prices to spike, currencies to weaken, and foreign investors to temporarily pull money out of emerging markets like India. These are real short-term risks that can cause your MF portfolio to look red for weeks or months.
But if your financial need is 10, 15, or 20 years away - the current geopolitical situation is noise. Uncomfortable, frightening-sounding noise. But noise nonetheless.
Your wealth will not be built or destroyed by what happens in a conflict zone thousands of kilometres away. It will be built by staying invested, letting compounding work, and not making emotional decisions during moments of fear.
- Do Nothing - If Your Investment Strategy Hasn't Changed : If you invested with a 10–15 year horizon and that horizon hasn't changed, your action plan is simple: do nothing. Let the storm pass. Markets have weathered every storm before this one.
- Keep Your SIPs Running : A falling market means your SIP is buying more units at lower prices. This is called rupee cost averaging - and it is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available to investors. Stopping your SIP during a correction is the single worst thing you can do. You interrupt your compounding and miss the cheapest buying opportunity.
- Review, Don't React : Use this time to review whether your asset allocation still matches your financial needs and risk appetite - not to make panic-driven changes. A calm conversation with your mutual fund distributor is worth more than any headline you will read today.
- Turn Off the News - Seriously : Financial news channels are designed to keep you watching. Fear keeps you engaged. But every hour you spend consuming crisis coverage increases the chance you will make an emotional, portfolio-damaging decision.
A qualified Mutual Fund Distributor plays an important role not just in selecting funds - but in helping investors stay disciplined when emotions run high.
- Ensuring asset allocation remains aligned to financial needs.
- Preventing panic-driven decisions.
- Encouraging systematic investing during downturns.
- Providing data-backed perspective instead of noise-driven reaction.
Markets test patience. Distributors help preserve it.
We understand that watching your MF portfolio fall - even temporarily - is genuinely uncomfortable. It is natural to feel anxious when the world seems unstable. These feelings do not make you a bad investor. They make you human.
But the investors who build lasting wealth are not the ones who never feel fear. They are the ones who feel the fear - and choose to look at the data instead of acting on the emotion.
The data is clear. India's fundamentals are intact. Every crisis that has come before has passed. Corporate earnings have grown through wars, pandemics, scams, and recessions. The Sensex, which was at 1,000 in 1990, crossed 85,220 in 2025. That journey was not smooth - but it was inevitable, because it was backed by the real economic progress of a billion people.
Your wealth is on the right side of that journey. Stay the course.
Source : ACE MF
Disclaimer: Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully before investing. Past performance may or may not be sustained in future and is not a guarantee of any future returns.





