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India’s SIP stoppage ratio spiked to a record 298% in April 2025, signaling investor caution amid volatility, valuations, and liquidity stress. Yet, shifting folio patterns hint at optimism and strategic reallocation among retail investors.
There are some rather surprising trends in SIP stoppage ratio (SIPs stopped to new SIPs opened) in last few months. Between January and March 2025, the SIP stoppage ratio was consistently above 100%, meaning for every SIP opened, more than one SIP was closed. In April, the SIP stoppage ratio spiked to 298%, meaning for every new SIP opened, 3 SIPs have been closed or not renewed. The impact was felt in SIP folios. The SIP folios contracted by 91 lakh folios in the month of April 2025 alone and since January 2025, nearly 1.18 crore SIP folios have vanished.
| Apr-24 | May-24 | Jun-24 | Jul-24 | Aug-24 | Sep-24 | Oct-24 |
| 52.24% | 88.38% | 58.68% | 51.40% | 57.14% | 60.72% | 60.91% |
| Nov-24 | Dec-24 | Jan-25 | Feb-25 | Mar-25 | Apr-25 | |
| 79.12% | 82.73% | 109.15% | 122.76% | 128.27% | 297.74% | |
| FY 2019-20 | FY 2020-21 | FY 2021-22 | FY 2022-23 | FY 2023-24 | FY 2024-25 | FY 2025-26 |
| 57.84% | 60.88% | 41.74% | 56.94% | 52.41% | 75.63% | 297.74% |
Amidst the sharp spike in the SIP stoppage ratio, there is still room for hope. Firstly, the SIP folios may have contracted by 1.18 crore in 2025, but overall SIP folios are still growing month-after-month. That shows that the SIP contraction has been compensated by an increase in non-SIP or lumpsum folios. This could either be opportunistic, or it could be a wait-and-watch approach. Either ways, the investors are still there.
Secondly, in the last 5 months active equity funds have shown compounded monthly growth in folios of 1.36%, while passive fund folios grew 1.86%. Debt fund folio growth may be relatively lower, but this category is seeing progressive improvement. This means that folios are shifting from active equity funds to passive funds and debt funds. That is normal allocation shifts among asset classes; not a real sign of concern.
There is one more trend of investors consolidating folios and exiting marginal SIPs. This is good in the long run, although we await PAN based investor data for ratification.
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