How quant Small Cap Fund survived The 2008 Global Financial Crisis
Lehman Brothers collapsed, global credit froze, and the Sensex fell from 21,000 to under 8,200 in 14 months — the deepest crash in modern Indian market history. FIIs pulled out ₹53,000 crore. Investors who fled locked in their losses; those who stayed saw one of the greatest recoveries ever.
The fall
-69.7%
11 Jan 2008 → 15 Jul 2008
Index fell
-61%
Sensex, peak to trough
Recovery time
Not yet
as of 3 Jul 2026
₹1L at the peak → today
₹3,89,347
worst-possible timing, held on
The full round trip
NAV from 1 Jan 2008 to 15 Feb 2010 — peak ₹73.5237, bottom ₹22.2849.
The ₹1 lakh stress test — invested at the worst possible moment
| Invested at the pre-crash peak (11 Jan 2008) | ₹1,00,000 |
| Value at the bottom (15 Jul 2008) | ₹30,310 |
| Value one year after the peak | ₹31,178 |
| Value today (3 Jul 2026) | ₹3,89,347 |
The lesson isn't that crashes don't hurt — it's that selling at the bottom turns a temporary fall into a permanent loss. The investor who bought at the absolute worst day and simply held is in profit today.
The unluckiest SIP experiment
Imagine starting a ₹10,000/month SIP on the exact peak day — the single unluckiest start date possible — and continuing for 24 months straight through the crash:
Invested
₹2,40,000
Worth today
₹28,47,385
Return
+1086%
Crash-month installments bought units cheap — that's the whole SIP thesis, demonstrated with real data instead of a brochure.
This fund in other crashes
Other Small Cap funds in this crash
All figures computed from published AMFI NAV history for quant Small Cap Fund. Past performance — including past recoveries — does not guarantee future results. This is educational research, not investment advice. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks.