As markets reel under sharp volatility and investors watch portfolios shrink on screen, veteran investor Vijay Kedia has offered a timely reminder that market corrections test far more than wealth—they test temperament. In a strongly worded post on X, Kedia urged investors not to let falling stock prices hijack their peace of mind, stressing that losses remain notional until they are booked.
His message comes at a time when the ongoing global uncertainty and sharp drawdowns in equities have rattled retail investors, many of whom entered the market during the euphoric bull run of recent years. With fear rising and confidence fading, Kedia’s post cut through the panic with a simple but powerful distinction: what investors see in their Demat accounts may belong to the market, but what sits in their bank accounts is what truly belongs to them.
“Your Demat statement belongs to the market. Your bank statement belongs to you. The rise you saw was a paper profit. The fall you see today is a paper loss. Nothing is real… until you sell,” Vijay Kedia said in a recent post on X.
The remark resonated widely because it speaks to a common psychological trap in investing—treating every market fall as a permanent loss rather than a temporary fluctuation. Kedia acknowledged that even his own portfolio is under pressure, but he cautioned against letting worry spiral into emotional exhaustion. According to him, panic does not improve portfolio performance; it only harms peace, mood and even family life.
Markets test patience before they create wealth
Kedia also framed the current selloff not merely as a crisis, but as a formative phase in an investor’s journey. Drawing from his own experience, he said he too had faced many such periods of uncertainty and had worried through them. Over time, however, he learned that market downturns are not episodes to fear, but lessons to absorb.
“These situations are not here to break you… they are here to build you. They are what make you a seasoned long-term investor forever. You have to win over your mind. Events create uncertainty… but fear is shaped within,” Vijay Kedia said.
The broader takeaway from his message is that long-term investing is not just about stock selection or timing the market—it is also about emotional discipline. Bull markets may reward conviction, but bear phases reveal whether that conviction is real or merely borrowed from optimism.
Kedia’s words arrive as a much-needed reality check for investors trying to navigate uncertainty. His central point is clear: markets will always move in cycles, but the investors who build lasting wealth are often those who learn to stay calm when everything around them feels unstable. In the end, as Kedia put it, it is not the market but one’s temperament that creates wealth.
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