Rupee Cost Averaging — SIP's Secret Weapon
Rupee Cost Averaging (RCA) is the mathematical phenomenon inherent to SIP where investing a fixed rupee amount at regular intervals automatically results in pur...
Rupee Cost Averaging — SIP's Secret Weapon
Rupee Cost Averaging (RCA) is the mathematical phenomenon inherent to SIP where investing a fixed rupee amount at regular intervals automatically results in purchasing more units when prices are low and fewer units when prices are high. Over time, this makes the investor's average cost per unit lower than the simple average market price — a structural advantage that converts market volatility from an enemy into an ally.
Here is the one thing that converts a fence-sitter into a SIP investor: the mango analogy. Consider someone who goes to the fruit market every Saturday and spends exactly ₹200 on mangoes. One week they cost ₹100 per kg — the buyer gets 2 kg. Next week they drop to ₹50 per kg — the buyer gets 4 kg. Over two weeks, ₹400 was spent and 6 kg obtained. The average cost is ₹66.67 per kg — which is lower than the simple average market price of ₹75 per kg. How? Because more quantity was naturally bought when prices were cheap. SIP does exactly the same thing with mutual fund units. An important nuance often overlooked is this: many investors and even some distributors panic when markets fall and think about stopping SIPs. But a falling market is precisely when RCA works hardest. Those months of low NAV accumulate bonus units that will multiply when markets recover. This pattern has played out through the 2008 crisis, the 2013 taper tantrum, the 2020 COVID crash, and every correction in between. The SIP investors who stayed the course through crashes always came out ahead. Market dips are a SIP investor's best friend — the more volatile the journey, the lower the average cost.
A Practical Example
Meera invests ₹10,000 per month via SIP. Here is her 12-month journey through a volatile market cycle:
Meera's average cost (₹85.91) is lower than the average market NAV (₹88.50). The crash in months 3-5 was painful to watch — but those months alone contributed 424 units that are now worth ₹47,488. The dip was her best friend.
What Makes This Important
Step-by-Step Calculation
Comparing SIP vs Lump Sum in a volatile year using the NAV data above: SIP Investor (₹10,000/month × 12 months): Total invested: ₹1,20,000 Units accumulated: 1,396.33 Average cost: ₹85.91 per unit Value at year-end NAV ₹112: ₹1,56,389 Return: +30.3% Lump Sum Investor (₹1,20,000 invested on Day 1 at NAV ₹100): Units purchased: 1,200.00 Value at year-end NAV ₹112: ₹1,34,400 Return: +12.0% SIP outperformed by ₹21,989 (18.3 percentage points) because RCA captured the low NAVs in months 3-5. Note: If NAV had risen steadily from ₹100 to ₹112 without dips, lump sum would have won. RCA rewards volatile paths, not smooth ones.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. RCA lowers your average cost but does not guarantee profits. If a market falls and never recovers, you could still face losses. However, the Indian equity market (Nifty 50) has recovered from every downturn in history when given sufficient time (5-10 years).
🧠 Quick Quiz
3 questions to check your understanding
