The Power of Staying Invested: Stories from 2015–2025
Sayali Shirke / 30 Oct 2025/ Categories: Cover Stories, Cover Story, DSIJ_Magazine_Web, DSIJMagazine_App, Stories

Today it is licking its wounds after a sharp correction in the stock market that wiped out around 20 per cent of its value from the peak of September 2024 to the low of April 2025.
Over the past decade, India’s markets have weathered every storm— from demonetisation and the pandemic to tariff shocks. Yet, investors who stayed the course turned volatility into wealth. DSIJ, through this cover story, captures a timeless truth: in investing, patience is not passive—it is powerful. Time in the market truly beats timing the market [EasyDNNnews:PaidContentStart]
The Diwali fireworks on Dalal Street have sparkled. After a hiatus of almost one year, frontline indices are once again at a striking distance of lifetime high. Just months ago, the Nifty 50 index, which was trading at the 24,500 level, has now soared to a yearly high of 25,915 points, powered by euphoria over India’s growth story. Today, it is licking its wounds after a sharp correction in the stock market that wiped out around 20 per cent of its value from the peak of September 2024 to the low of April 2025. Global uncertainties struck like lightning; oil prices spiked from the low of USD 70 per barrel at the end of September 2024 to more than USD 80 per barrel at the end of January 2025, a foreign investor exodus ensued amid U.S. tariff threats and deceleration in earnings growth. In the chaotic din of financial news, one could almost hear the collective gasp of millions of investors checking their portfolios.
Priya Sharma felt that gut-punch too. A 40-year-old school teacher from Pune, Priya is not a market wizard or a day trader—just a middle-class Indian who began her investing journey back in 2015 with a ₹50,000 lump sum and a humble ₹5,000 monthly SIP in a Nifty 50 Index Fund. Her goal was simple—financial independence without speculation. Over the years, she faced every possible test of conviction—from the 2016 demonetisation jolt to the pandemic meltdown of 2020, when her portfolio plunged by nearly 36 per cent in a matter of weeks. Even in 2024–25, when global tariff tensions dragged the market lower, her portfolio value again dipped by around 10 per cent. Friends called her ‘too optimistic’, relatives told her to pull out—yet Priya stayed invested, whispering her quiet mantra: ‘Time in the market beats timing the market.’
Now, as the news ticker screams red and the Nifty slides in 2025 after Liberation Day when U.S. President Trump announced tariff, Priya faces her biggest test. Her `50,000 plus SIP kitty—which had swelled to surprising heights by the third quarter of 2024—is suddenly 10 per cent lighter in a week. Memories flash of past crises: China’s currency shake-up in 2015, demonetisation in 2016, the 2020 pandemic crash. Through each episode, the Indian market fell hard, only to roar back with double ferocity.
That patience paid off. Her total invested amount—₹50,000 initially and about ₹6.05 lakh through SIPs—has today grown to a portfolio worth ₹14.33 lakh, doubling her money despite all the crashes and corrections. Her net gain of ₹6.58 lakh translates to an impressive 14.1 per cent annualised return (XIRR) over nearly a decade. Each crisis that once looked like an exit signal turned out to be a compounding opportunity. Priya’s journey is proof that wealth in equities is not built by reacting to headlines, but by holding firm through them— because markets reward endurance, not emotion.
Priya takes a deep breath, recalling that journey: the Nifty’s climb from around 8,500 in early 2015 to over 25,000 by mid-2025, a roughly 15 per cent CAGR over ten years despite all the dips and tumbles. A decade of volatility still delivered solid growth; in fact, the Nifty 50’s total return was on the order of 400-500 per cent (5-6×) for those who stayed the course. And Priya did stay the course.


Sitting at her kitchen table, Priya opens her investment app. The numbers are daunting but not defeating. Her once humble portfolio, built through relentless ups and downs, is still in healthy green—far above what a safe Bank FD might have yielded. She whispers to herself the lesson of the last ten years: the real power lies in staying invested. In India’s resilient bull market, patience has been far more profitable than panic. Priya’s story is one of many that prove modest savings can turn into life-changing wealth if one simply trusts the process. As we revisit the rollercoaster 2015–2025 decade, these stories will show how ‘time in the market’ outshined every attempt at timing the market.
The Rollercoaster Decade – Key Milestones (2015–2025)
The past ten years in Indian equities were nothing short of a thriller—a journey through booms, busts, reforms, and resilience. The Nifty 50 index and Sensex charted an upward trajectory from 2015 to 2025, but it was never a smooth ride. Let us relive this rollercoaster chronologically, breaking it into eras that each tested investors’ resolve in different ways.
The following chart shows the journey of Nifty 500 in the last 10 years:

2015–2016: The China Shock and Demonetisation Test
In 2015, the Indian market’s first jolt came from a faraway dragon. China unexpectedly devalued the yuan in August 2015, sparking a global sell-off. On Black Monday (August 24, 2015), the Sensex plunged nearly 1,624.51 points to 25,741.56—almost 5.94 per cent—in a single day, dragging the Nifty down to about 7,809. Between July 2015 and February 2016, foreign investors fled emerging markets; the Sensex sank over 20 per cent during that span to around the 22,500 level. As if that was not enough, June 2016 brought the Brexit referendum shock, adding to global jitters. Indian equities were firmly in correction mode— the Nifty was about 15 per cent off its recent highs by early 2016, testing the patience of all the equity investors who had just started putting money in a year or two ago after the new government had assumed power at the Centre.
Yet, quietly, those systematic investors like Priya were sowing seeds that would soon sprout. Between February 2016 and September 2016, the indices had actually started recovering from the China/Brexit scare. Then came Demonetisation—the night of November 8, 2016, when India scrapped 86 per cent of its currency notes. Panic hit Dalal Street the next morning. The Sensex fell 1,688 points (6.12 per cent) and Nifty by over 6.3 per cent on November 9, 2016. It felt like a gut punch to an economy largely dependent on cash transactions; brokers frantically answered calls from clients wanting to sell. But this crash was short-lived. The cash ban, while chaotic, was cushioned by an immediate flood of liquidity into banks, and the RBI promptly eased monetary policy to stabilise markets. Within weeks, stocks bounced back as it became clear the financial system would not collapse. An investor who stayed put (or bought more) during the demonetisation dip ended up looking wise by early 2017.
2017–2019: The GST Boom and the IL&FS Crunch
As 2017 dawned, India undertook its biggest Tax reform: the rollout of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in July. The initial jitters around GST’s complexity gave way to optimism that a unified tax would boost formal businesses. Mid-Cap stocks and Small-Caps were on fire through 2017, many posting doubledigit gains as domestic liquidity surged. Even Mutual Funds based on the broader market gave returns of more than 50 per cent. In fact, the Nifty 50 itself finally breached the milestone 10,000 mark in July 2017 and Sensex 32,000, and kept climbing. By mid-2018, the index had hit fresh highs above 11,000. The bull market seemed unstoppable: corporate earnings were recovering, and India was one of the world’s fastest-growing economies.
But 2018 reminded everyone that no rally is linear. Two storm clouds appeared: a global trade war and a domestic credit crisis. Early 2018 saw volatility as the U.S.–China trade war and fears of rising U.S. interest rates led to almost a 10 per cent correction from January’s peak; Nifty slipped from 11,171 in late January 2018 to around 10,000 by March. Indian investors also grappled with the re-introduction of a tax on equity gains (the long-term capital gains tax was reintroduced in the year 2018 budget), which triggered some profit-booking. The market regained footing by mid-2018, even hitting a new high (~11,700 in August), but then came the IL&FS crisis in September. IL&FS, a major infrastructure lender, defaulted on debt payments, sending shockwaves through the financial system. Credit markets froze for NBFCs (non-bank finance companies). Stocks took a swift dive: the Nifty cracked from about 11,250 in early September to ~10,000 by October 2018. That ~11 per cent fall in weeks felt like a free-fall, especially in mid- and smallcaps which were already reeling. The Nifty Midcap 100 index sank almost 14 per cent in September 2018 alone. It was a testing time; margin calls hit leveraged traders, and conservative investors wondered if the decade-long bull run had finally met its nemesis.
But again, resilience shone through. Regulators and banks stepped in to contain the NBFC panic, and by early 2019, stability returned. The 2019 general elections then became the market’s focus. As exit polls in May 2019 predicted a proreform government returning to power, the stock market celebrated. On counting day (May 23, 2019), the Nifty surged past 12,000 for the first time in history, while the Sensex vaulted over 40,000. Although there was some ‘sell on news’ afterward, the milestone was symbolic—a 50 per cent rise in the index from its 2016 demonetisation lows. By end-2019, Nifty hovered around the 12,000 mark. An SIP investor from 2015 had already seen the index value double since they began, despite all the scares in between.
2020: COVID Cataclysm and a V-Shaped Rebound
No chapter in this decade was as dramatic as 2020. The year began on a high note: Nifty touched a peak of 12,430 in January 2020, with little clue of the catastrophe lurking in the shadows. Then COVID-19 hit. As the pandemic spread globally, fear crushed financial markets everywhere. From late February to late March 2020, the floor fell out from under Dalal Street. In just over a month, the Nifty 50 plunged ~39 per cent—from its mid-January high, it crashed to around 7,511 by March 24, 2020. It was one of the fastest, deepest crashes on record. On March 23 alone, the Nifty collapsed 13 per cent in a day, triggering trading halts. The Sensex too saw an eye-watering single-day drop of 3,935 points on March 23. It was pure panic: nationwide lockdowns froze economic activity, and no one knew how or when the world would reopen for business.
Investors who had never seen such a crash—even those hardened by 2008’s memories—were shell-shocked. Many dumped their Equity Funds at the bottom, vowing never to return. Yet, in hindsight, March 2020 was the buying opportunity of the decade. The Indian government and RBI unleashed massive fiscal and monetary stimulus. Global central banks did the same. By April, green shoots appeared. With astounding speed, markets turned around—a true V-shaped recovery. The Nifty reclaimed its pre-COVID 12,400 level by November 2020, just ~8 months after the bottom. From that 7,511 trough, the index doubled in value by early 2021—a 100 per cent-plus rebound that minted fortunes for bravehearts who added at the panic lows. Nifty’s rally off the COVID bottom outpaced even the Dow Jones, showcasing the strength of India’s comeback. For Priya, who kept her SIP running through those dark March days, the rewards were remarkable: by end-2020 her portfolio not only recovered but hit new highs, as she had accumulated a lot of low-priced units during the fall.
2021–2023: Post-Pandemic Surge Amid Global Headwinds
The post-pandemic period felt like whiplash in reverse. 2021 saw renewed exuberance in equities. As vaccines rolled out and lockdowns eased, India’s GDP and corporate earnings roared back. The Nifty 50 sailed past 15,000 and then 18,000 in quick succession. On October 11, 2021, it closed above 18,000 for the first time—marking a ~50 per cent gain in 2021 alone. The Sensex likewise crossed 60,000. Sectors like technology and pharma—which had been heroes of the pandemic—continued to outperform, buoyed by strong global demand for IT services and medicines. Meanwhile, a new class of retail investors, armed with trading apps and lockdown savings, poured money into stocks. By late 2021 and early 2022, one could say ‘India Inc.’ was in a sweet spot: growth was back, interest rates were low, and liquidity was abundant. The mid-2021 to early-2022 period saw many IPOs and a frenzy in segments like renewable energy and specialty chemicals.
However, volatility returned with a vengeance in 2022. In February 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine—a geopolitical earthquake that sent oil and commodity prices soaring. Brent Crude oil price surged from USD 91 per barrel on February 22 to USD 135.79 per barrel by the first week of March 2022. Commodity prices, represented by the S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity Index, were up by almost 35 per cent in the next couple of weeks. Global investors, already nervous about inflation, hit the sell button. Indian indices tumbled ~10–15 per cent from their peak by mid-2022. In one particularly brutal session on February 24, 2022, as news of the Ukraine war broke, the Sensex and Nifty both sank nearly five per cent Intraday (Nifty closed at 16,247.8, down 815.3 points that day). It was a stark reminder that even in a structural bull market, corrections are inevitable. Through 2022, the U.S. Federal Reserve also began aggressively raising interest rates to combat inflation, leading to foreign outflows from Indian stocks. By June 2022, the Nifty briefly dipped into near bear market territory (~18 per cent below its October 2021 high). Seasoned investors nodded that this was a healthy shake-out after the excesses of 2021. And indeed, the market found a bottom by summer 2022.
In late 2022 and into 2023, despite intermittent global headwinds, Indian equities regained an upward trajectory. Companies in banking, auto, and capital goods saw tailwinds from the domestic economic revival. By late 2023, the Nifty made new highs above 20,000. Foreign investors returned selectively, and India’s GDP growth ~6–7 per cent remained a shining spot globally. Even episodes like a short-lived U.S. banking scare (SVB crisis) or a mid-2023 correction due to an overvalued conglomerate’s stock rout (the Adani Group saga) could only cause temporary stumbles. Through all this, Priya’s portfolio quietly compounded. Every dip was an opportunity; her SIP acquired more units when markets were down, which then gained value in the next upswing. It was a virtuous cycle born of discipline.
2024–2025: Peak Prosperity and the Sudden Crash
The final chapter of the decade (2024–25) was a tale of two halves. 2024 began on a jubilant note as India geared up for general elections in the summer. The market loves political stability, and anticipation of a pro-growth government returning to power, along with hints of RBI cutting interest rates as inflation eased, sent the bulls into overdrive. Indeed, through late 2024, in September 2024, the Nifty 50 raced upward, reportedly touching 26,200 at its pinnacle. The Sensex correspondingly neared the historic 85,000 mark. It was as if a decade’s worth of structural reforms – GST, digital payments, bankruptcy code, infrastructure upgrades – all culminated in an ‘India shining’ rally. Corporate profits were at record levels, and India had become the world’s fifth-largest economy, fuelling a burst of investor optimism.
But as we entered the last quarter of the year 2024, caution flags emerged. Valuations of the Indian equity market, measured through price to earnings ratio, were stretched and trading above two standard deviations of its long-term average. This higher valuation was not supported by earnings growth posted by India Inc., which showed a remarkable downward trend and slipped into single-digit growth compared to double-digit growth exhibited by them in prior quarters. Foreign nstitutional Investors (FIIs) started a stampede out of Indian equities, pulling billions amid a global risk-off. (In fact, FIIs were net sellers of ₹1.14 lakh crore in Indian stocks in the month of October 2024 alone.) A mix of international and local factors hit sentiment: a hawkish U.S. Fed, a flare-up in Middle East tensions affecting oil, and an untimely spike in Indian inflation that stoked fears of RBI raising rates again. From its euphoric peak, the Nifty 50 plunged roughly 17.25 per cent from its September peak, by the first week of April 2025. By October 20, 2025 – the day we opened this story – the index was back around 26,000, having seesawed wildly.
For investors, especially newcomers who joined in the 2020– 2021 boom, the last one year correction was a rude awakening. But for mature investors like Priya, it was just another curve in the long road. After all, anyone who had been invested since 2015 had seen the Nifty go from ~8,000 to ~25,000 in 10 years, turning every ₹1 into ₹3 or more. Even accounting for the latest drop, the Nifty delivered roughly 12 per cent annualised returns over the decade, vastly outperforming safer assets. A ₹1 lakh in a bank FD would perhaps have doubled to ~₹2 lakh in 10 years; that same ₹1 lakh in Nifty index fund SIPs turned into ₹4–5 lakh. The Sensex similarly went from ~27,000 in 2015 to ~86,000 at 2024’s peak. Wealth was created for those who endured.
Equity All-Stars: Ten-Year Superstars
To further illustrate the rewards of endurance, look at some equity all-stars from 2015 to 2025 (many of which our protagonists held). These numbers tell a clear story – Indian businesses created enormous wealth for shareholders who held on.
Nifty 50 Stocks
▪️Adani Enterprises – Stock up ~44.82 per cent annually (40.15×) over 2015–25, the flagship company of the Adani Group, founded in 1988 and now operating as a diversified business incubator for the group's ventures. ₹5 lakh became ~₹2 crore in the last ten years.
▪️Trent (Consumer) – Stock up ~42.48 per cent annually (34×), retail company owned by the Tata Group that operates various retail formats such as fashion stores (Westside, Zudio) and hypermarkets (Star), fuelled by jewellery and watch dominance. A true multibagger: ₹5 lakh became ~₹1.72 crore.
▪️Bajaj Finance (Finance) – Stock up ~35.3 per cent annually (20.2×), maintaining leadership in India’s consumer finance. Steady compounding: ₹5 lakh became ~₹1.03 crore.
Following is the Top 10 Wealth Creator from Nifty 50:

BSE 500 Index (excluding top 50)
Broader market stocks – up roughly 350–400 per cent over the decade (with big swings in between), indicating many smaller companies grew even faster than the blue chips.
▪️Authum Investment & Infrastructure (Finance) – Stock up ~121.55 per cent annually (142×) over 2015–25, this Mumbai-based NBFC has turned out to be one of the decade’s biggest wealth creators. Once a little-known financial services firm, Authum transformed through strategic acquisitions and diversification into asset reConstruction and investment management. A ₹5 lakh investment ten years ago would now be worth a staggering ₹7.12 crore, showcasing how small-cap. financials can outshine even the most celebrated blue chips when vision meets execution.
▪️Lloyds Metals & Energy (Minerals & Mining) – Stock up ~81.77 per cent annually (19.7×) over 2015–25, Lloyds Metals has gone from being a regional player to an iron ore powerhouse. The company’s integrated mining operations and value-added expansion into sponge iron have re-rated its valuation dramatically. What was once a penny stock in the metals space is now a benchmark of turnaround success — ₹5 lakh invested a decade ago is now worth nearly ₹98 lakh.
▪️PTC Industries (Industrial Products) – Stock up ~72.01 per cent annually (11.3×) over 2015–25, this precision casting manufacturer serving Aerospace, Defence, and industrial sectors has seen exponential growth driven by India’s push for indigenous defence manufacturing. A quiet compounder, PTC leveraged high-end metallurgy and export opportunities to scale globally. A ₹5 lakh investment ten years ago would have grown to around ₹56.7 lakh, proving that innovation-driven manufacturing can be just as rewarding as technology or finance.

These figures show equity vastly outperformed fixed income. A lump sum in any of these top stocks or even the indices would have trounced other assets. And a monthly SIP in the Nifty 50? It returned about 14–16 per cent annualised over 2015–2025, by rough estimates, meaning each `1 lakh invested via SIP doubled every 4–5 years, on average. The exact numbers vary, but the direction is clear: staying invested through the turmoil turned ordinary savers into millionaires.
Lessons from the Long Game – Why Staying Invested Works
Looking back at 2015–2025, one might ask: How did simply ‘doing nothing’ (or steadily adding funds) beat the smartest market timing? The decade offers rich lessons on why staying invested in India worked so well, and how investors can harness those insights going forward.
The India Growth Engine: Underpinning the market’s rise was India’s robust economic growth. A young population, rising middle-class incomes, rapid urbanisation – these mega-trends kept demand growing. Even when global headwinds hit, India’s domestic story provided a floor. Companies in banking, consumer goods, tech, etc., kept expanding. Reforms like GST and the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC) improved efficiency and transparency, boosting corporate earnings, and not to forget the big corporate tax cut. By 2025, India’s GDP was among the top 5 globally. This structural growth translated into stock returns. The Nifty’s 12 per cent CAGR was not magic; it was a reflection of 10 per cent earnings CAGR plus dividends and a bit of valuation re-rating. It reinforces the adage: ‘Markets are slaves to earnings in the long run.’ Staying invested meant you participated in a decade where Nifty companies’ profits perhaps doubled, and so did the index (and then some). Those who jumped out missed chunks of this earnings compounding.
The Power of Compounding and Reinvestment: A simple but often forgotten factor – reinvesting dividends and gains – drives long-term wealth. Many Nifty 50 companies paid regular dividends. Investors like Priya who kept their money in the market had those dividends automatically buying more units or stocks. Over ten years, this adds up significantly (Nifty Total Return Index was higher than Nifty Price Index by 15–20 per cent over the decade). It is the snowball effect. The key was to not interrupt the compounding by pulling out money needlessly.
Behavioural Pitfalls – The Cost of Panic: Two big biases harm investors: recency bias (overreacting to recent events as if they will last forever) and loss aversion (pain from losses leading to irrational decisions). In 2020, many could only see the doom of the pandemic and sold at the bottom – a classic recency bias trap, as if the market would never recover. They locked in losses. Studies have shown that investors who panic-sell and try to re-enter later often do worse by 5–10 per cent per year compared to those who stayed put, due to missing the best rebound days. It is said ‘more money has been lost preparing for corrections or trying to anticipate crashes than in the crashes themselves.’ 2015–2025 exemplified that: every sharp drop (2015, 2016, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2025) was temporary. Long-term investors were made whole and then some, if they stayed invested. In fact, an oft-quoted metric – if you missed just the 10 best days of each year, your returns fell dramatically. And those best days often came right after the worst days. The lesson: do not try to outsmart short-term volatility.
In essence, the long game worked because India’s story remained intact. Volatility was abundant, but it was the price of admission for superior returns. The market rewarded those who had the conviction to stick around. An investor who simply bought an index ETF in 2015 and looked at it ten years later would find a several-fold gain, despite multiple 10–30 per cent drawdowns in between. There is a saying: ‘Time in the market beats timing the market.’ The 2015–2025 journey turned that from theory to truth. Every crash turned out to be a comma in the long India story, not a full stop. And with each recovery, more investors learned to tune out the noise of TV headlines and focus on the signal of long-term growth.
Expert Voices: The Gospel of Patience
It is worth noting that many investment gurus in India preached these lessons throughout the decade. Legendary investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala (who sadly passed in 2022) often said his biggest wins (like Titan) came from holding for 5, 10, 20 years without losing faith. Another market veteran used to quip in his annual wealth creation studies that the biggest risk is being out of the market. He famously compared long-term investing to tending a garden: ‘You cannot pull the flowers to make them grow faster. You water and wait.
Finally, let us talk about risk and reward. None of this is to say equity investing is a cakewalk or guarantees profits in neat yearly increments. Not at all. The decade saw periods where returns were flat or negative for 1–2 years. But the aggregate result of enduring those periods was excellent. The lesson for the next decade is likely similar: there will be new challenges (maybe higher interest rates, maybe global slowdowns), but if India continues its growth trajectory, those who invest consistently should reap rewards. The magic really happens over 10, 15, 20 years – that is when compounding becomes astonishing (e.g., even a 15 per cent CAGR turns `10 lakh into `1 crore in 16 years). The 2015–2025 stories show many investors crossing that first decade milestone with life-changing gains. The next decade, 2025–2035, will surely create its own Priyas, provided they follow these learned lessons and stay in the game.
Conclusion
The past decade has been a crucible of market wisdom. The mantra ‘stay invested’ emerged not as a cliché, but as a proven strategy that turned ordinary salaried folks and homemakers into wealth creators. From 8,000 to 25,000, the Nifty’s ascent through 2015–2025 was powered by India’s ascent – an economy transforming into a $5 trillion giant (a milestone now within grasp by 2027). Those who hitched their wagon to India’s equity market rode through storms but ultimately basked in sunshine. Let us circle back to Priya Sharma, our middle-class teacher who began her journey in 2015. It is late 2025, and Priya is on the verge of retirement. Despite the recent crash, her portfolio – started with that ₹50,000 seed and watered diligently with SIPs – has grown into something that can comfortably fund her golden years. The market volatility that once gave her jitters has become mere background noise to her financial life. ‘I used to check my investments every day; now I check once a quarter,’ she laughs, ‘and mostly to decide where to invest the excess school bonus I get!’ Priya’s financial security is not just a personal win; it is emblematic of a larger narrative of wealth creation in India.
When we look at the nation today, we see 1.4 billion aspirations, new unicorn startups, a manufacturing renaissance under Make in India, and a financial system that has deepened via digitisation and inclusion. The stock market is essentially a barometer of this economic journey. Yes, it oscillates and even crashes, but over long periods it has only gone one way: up. For anyone still on the fence about equities, the stories from 2015–2025 offer a gentle nudge: start your journey, and stick with it. As India grows, your wealth can grow with it, but only if you remain invested through the cycles. It truly becomes not just wealth-building, but nation-building, as domestic capital fuels India’s enterprises.
In closing, the decade taught us a simple but profound truth: exit the market at your peril; embrace it, and India will carry you forward. The power of staying invested turned ordinary salaries into extraordinary fortunes, not by beating the market, but by joining it. The next time fear grips the markets, remember Priya’s cautionary tale. The real risk was never the temporary downturns, but being out of the market when it roared back. The horizon is bright – here is to the next decade of opportunity for those resolute investors who choose to ride India’s rise, undeterred by the waves, eyes fixed on the far shore.
Keep the faith, stay invested, and let the power of time and compounding do the rest.
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