Official AMFI data
Arthkar
Crash case study · real NAV data

How SBI MIDCAP 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

-78.6%

4 Jan 20089 Mar 2009

Index fell

-61%

Sensex, peak to trough

Recovery time

Not yet

as of 3 Jul 2026

₹1L at the peak → today

₹6,24,686

worst-possible timing, held on

The full round trip

NAV from 1 Jan 2008 to 8 Oct 2010 — peak ₹38.68, bottom ₹8.26.

The ₹1 lakh stress test — invested at the worst possible moment

Invested at the pre-crash peak (4 Jan 2008)₹1,00,000
Value at the bottom (9 Mar 2009)₹21,355
Value one year after the peak₹29,447
Value today (3 Jul 2026)₹6,24,686

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

₹35,56,590

Return

+1382%

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 Mid Cap funds in this crash

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All figures computed from published AMFI NAV history for SBI MIDCAP 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.