

Shobhit Jain
634 posts

@ShobhitInvests
Designing investors, not portfolios Behaviour • Structure • Discipline Long-term wealth creation in India Educational insights only – no recommendations






Is GDP the right measure of progress? In 1934, America's economy had collapsed by half in three years. Nobody had a clear picture of how bad things actually were. Simon Kuznets, an economist, was tasked with figuring it out, and what he built became GDP (GNP at the time). Kuznets wasn't trying to measure raw output. He wanted to measure welfare, how well people were actually doing. He was explicit about this. Armaments, advertising, the inflated cost of urban housing that people pay just to be close enough to earn a living, he wanted all of that excluded. The government didn't care. World War II was on the horizon, and what they needed was a production gauge. How many tanks, how many planes, how much steel? By 1942, GNP/GDP was that gauge. Everything counted. A dollar spent on a bomb and a dollar spent on a school lunch were the same dollar. Kuznets tried again in 1962: "Distinctions must be kept in mind between quantity and quality of growth. Goals for more growth should specify more growth of what and for what." By then, it was too late. GDP had become the scoreboard, and nobody was going to retire it. Recently, UN Secretary-General António Guterres put it bluntly: "When we destroy a forest, we are creating GDP. When we overfish, we are creating GDP." Economist Diane Coyle has a nice example. A widower marries his housekeeper. She does the same work she was doing before, in the same house, for the same person. But because he stops paying her a salary, GDP shrinks. She didn't stop working. The payment stopped. Or if you grow your own vegetables instead of buying them at the store, GDP falls. Cook dinner instead of ordering in, and GDP falls. The work is identical, but it just stops being counted. A country strips its forests bare, and GDP goes up. Cancer clusters emerge, hospital bills pile up, and GDP goes up. Public transport falls apart, everyone has to buy a car, and GDP goes up. The metric rewards the disease and the cure equally. GDP tells you real things about production and employment. But it was built in the 1940s to count tanks. We're now facing one of the biggest economic shifts in history, thanks to AI, and that's still the gauge we're using.

Dear investors, In the next 5–10 years, you could find yourself in a financial position you once only imagined. Keep going. Stay patient with the process, the results will come.

Nifty @ 26000 - Mutual Funds Sahi Hai. Invest for long term and Forget. Nifty @ 22000 - Mutual Funds need to be given 10 yr period as markets are cyclical. What will happen @ 19000 ? Invest in Mutual funds for your children. They will get good returns after 25 years. What value mutual funds managers are bringing on the table apart from being a beneficiary of law of averages. ? Did any of mutual funds catch the gold and silver rally? Did they inform their investors that equities are overvalued and need to look at other asset classes also. Mutual Funds are the most hyped up products in India with investors being given no real value for money. #Nifty #Sensex

The industry loves the "Invest and Forget" mantra because it keeps AUM sticky. But "forgetting" for 25 years often means forgetting to rebalance when equities are frothy. Look at the math: If you stayed 100% in Equities from Nifty 26,000 down to 19,000, you aren't "long-term investing"—you're just a passenger on a sinking ship. A simple 70:30 Equity-Gold split would have cushioned the fall and captured the recent 25%+ rally in bullion that most "expert" active managers completely missed

India imports 45% of its crude oil, 60% of its natural gas, and 97% of its cooking gas (LPG) from the Middle East. The further you go up the gas chain, the more dependent India gets




Good roundup of the markets by ET -


The industry loves the "Invest and Forget" mantra because it keeps AUM sticky. But "forgetting" for 25 years often means forgetting to rebalance when equities are frothy. Look at the math: If you stayed 100% in Equities from Nifty 26,000 down to 19,000, you aren't "long-term investing"—you're just a passenger on a sinking ship. A simple 70:30 Equity-Gold split would have cushioned the fall and captured the recent 25%+ rally in bullion that most "expert" active managers completely missed





The "Space Race" just got a massive Indian pivot. 🇮🇳 Eutelsat (now merged with Bharti-backed OneWeb) is in active talks with ISRO for future satellite launches. Why? Because the world is tired of the SpaceX/Ariane duopoly. Key takeaways: 🔹 Strategic De-risking: France & India are deepening ties to avoid "reliance madness." 🔹 Bharti’s Edge: With a 17.88% stake, Sunil Bharti Mittal is a kingmaker in global satellite internet. 🔹 Fully Funded: Eutelsat is cashed up through 2031 (€5B secured). India isn't just launching satellites; we are becoming the world's "Neutral Launchpad." 🛰️⚓ (Not a recommendation) @airtelindia #SpaceTech #ISRO #Eutelsat #BhartiAirtel #OneWeb


