Dalal Street recently hit a fresh all-time high a few weeks back, but it took the Sensex and Nifty over a year to scale previous all-time highs.
India’s stock market has been one of the weakest performers globally in 2025 so far. The Sensex has delivered just 1.9% returns, making it the worst performer among 17 major global indices, while the Nifty 50 has risen only 3.2%. This is sharply lower than gains seen in other markets.
South Korea’s KOSPI has surged 53.5%, Germany’s DAX is up 36%, Brazil’s Bovespa has climbed 38.5%, and Japan’s Nikkei has rallied 22.5%. Even markets like Hong Kong, the US and China have delivered far better returns, with the Hang Seng up 19.3%, the S&P 500 gaining 17.72% including dividends, and China’s Shanghai Composite rising 14.22%.
WHY HAS DALAL STREET UNDERPERFORMED?
High valuations, muted earnings growth for four consecutive quarters and heavy foreign selling have weighed on sentiment. The Nifty is trading at about 19.3 times forward earnings, while the Sensex is valued at around 22 times trailing earnings.
At the same time, foreign institutional investors have pulled out nearly Rs 1.4 lakh crore from Indian equities in 2025, shifting money to other emerging and developed markets where returns have looked more attractive.
Against this backdrop, recent sessions have seen markets turn volatile, with several days ending in the red.
This has left investors asking a familiar question: does the current fall offer a long-term buying opportunity, or is caution still the better approach?
NOT EVERY FALL IS A CRISIS
Dr. Ravi Singh, Chief Research Officer at Master Capital Services Ltd, says market falls often look frightening in the moment, but investors need to separate fear from facts.
“Every market fall create panic in the moment, but not every fall is a crisis. Some corrections are just the market taking a breath after an upward rally,” he said.
According to Singh, the reason behind the fall matters more than the fall itself. If markets are correcting due to global cues, short-term panic or profit booking, it may actually offer a gradual entry opportunity.
However, if the decline is supported by weak earnings, rising inflation or sharp moves in interest rates, jumping in too quickly can be risky.
He advises investors against deploying all their money at once during uncertain phases. “The safest way in such times is not to invest whole capital but to do small investments in 25:75. Invest in parts, give the market time to settle, and only focus on quality companies. Patience matters more than timing right now.”
BUYING THE DIP NEEDS DISCIPLINE
Swapnil Aggarwal, Director at VSRK Capital, cautions investors against treating every correction as a buying signal.
“Recent market corrections can offer selective opportunities, but a broad ‘buy the dip’ approach may not be prudent just yet. Valuations in certain segments remain elevated, and volatility could persist in the near term,” he said.
Aggarwal believes investors should avoid trying to guess the exact bottom. “Instead of trying to time the market bottom, investors should continue with systematic investment plans (SIPs), which help average costs and reduce timing risk.”
He adds that large lump-sum investments should be handled carefully. “Large lump-sum investments should be approached cautiously and preferably staggered over time, focusing only on fundamentally strong stocks and diversified funds.”
DIP OR DEEPER CORRECTION? HOW TO TELL THE DIFFERENCE
One of the biggest challenges for retail investors is understanding whether a fall is just a short-term dip or the beginning of a deeper correction.
Dr. Singh explains that short-term dips usually happen suddenly and recover quickly. “A normal dip usually comes suddenly and goes just as fast. It is often driven by some news, global market weakness, or traders booking profits,” he said.
In such cases, he notes, the broader trend usually remains intact. A more serious correction shows different signs. “Prices keep slipping day after day, rallies fail, and selling spreads across most sectors. Even good stocks stop performing for a while.”
Singh advises investors not to react to one bad trading session. Instead, markets should be watched over a few weeks to see if strength returns or weakness deepens.
Aggarwal adds that volumes and fundamentals offer clear signals. “Short-term dips are often triggered by temporary news or sentiment shifts, usually occur on lower trading volumes, and do not impact company earnings or economic indicators,” he said.
“A deeper correction, on the other hand, involves a broad-based decline across sectors, higher trading volumes due to panic selling, and is often supported by weakening fundamentals such as slowing growth, rising interest rates, or poor earnings outlook.”
WHERE VALUE EMERGES DURING MARKET FALLS
According to experts, corrections often help separate strong businesses from weak ones.
“During such times, sectors linked to daily needs and stable demand usually hold up better, such as Banking leaders, FMCG, pharmaceuticals, power companies, and large IT firms often become attractive when prices cool off,” said Dr. Singh.
He warns investors against chasing speculative stocks. “Weak small-cap companies, heavily debt-loaded firms, and stocks that went up only on hype become very risky in falling markets.”
Aggarwal agrees and says investors should focus on businesses with strong balance sheets. “Value is often found in fundamentally strong, defensive, and large-cap sectors that can withstand volatility,” he said, pointing to banking, healthcare, FMCG and quality capital goods companies.
At the same time, he urges caution in overvalued small and mid-cap stocks, cyclical metals, select PSU names, penny stocks and real estate developers with weak financials, which tend to fall harder during periods of stress.
Experts agree that market falls can offer opportunities, but only when approached with discipline and patience. Rather than reacting to short-term noise, investors are better off focusing on phased investments, quality businesses and long-term goals.
In a year where Indian markets have lagged global peers and seen sharp swings after record highs, how investors navigate this phase may prove more important than trying to predict the next market move.




























