Meta Description: Only 6% of Indians invest in stocks. LIC agents outnumber equity believers in every colony. We unpack why India still thinks Sensex is satta.
📌 At a Glance:
In most Indian homes, stock market = gambling + heartbreak.
Your parents believe in FDs, LIC, and land, not Tesla, Tata Elxsi, or T+0 settlement.
And honestly?
With scams, crashes, and cousin Rahul’s Yes Bank story — they’ve got receipts.
So, why does India still treat the stock market like it’s a local matka shop?
Let’s break it down.
🧠 1. Because Nani’s Friend’s Son Lost Everything in 2008
Every Indian family has that one horror story:
“Amit uncle sold his house and put it in Unitech. Now he lives in Nagpur.”
Trauma spreads fast.
Good returns? Slow whispers.
And Indian memory is long:
We forgot what we ate for lunch, but still remember Harshad Mehta, Ketan Parekh, and the Global Financial Crisis.
🏦 2. Because We’re Raised to Worship “Guaranteed Return”
- Fixed Deposits = Safe
- LIC = Divine
- PPF = Patriotism
- Stocks = “Beta paagal ho gaya hai kya?”
To an Indian parent, 8% interest > 18% CAGR.
Because 8% is “certain”, and 18% is “shayad.”
Even the new LIC ad should just be:
“LIC: Because Your Dad Thinks Stocks Are Haram.”
🤓 3. Because No One Taught Finance in School (But We Can Draw a Cow’s Digestive System)
Indian education taught us:
- Pythagoras theorem
- Name of Mughal emperors’ pets
- Rani Laxmibai’s horse’s speed
But not:
- What is a mutual fund?
- What is compounding?
- What is equity?
So when Zerodha asks people to invest in index funds, Indian uncles are like:
“Index matlab Sensex ka bhai?”
🎲