It is generally mentioned that SIPs are better than lumpsump but that is so that one can average out the investments and don’t end up investing lumpsum when markets are high.
But one can also invest lumpsum if you have money to put but beware that if say the market starts tanking after your lumpsum investment, your portfolio of that mutual fund goes down too. Also, many people do SIPs to make sure they are disciplined with investing. You should definitely find some website where you find that say you say 1 Lakh invested on X date and what value it is on Y date vis-a-vis say the same 1L invested in 10 sip instalments but still starting from same date as lumpsum.
I don’t understand your second question, what do you mean by take out amount of sip?
For 3rd question, you really cannot predict what date you should invest every month to be more profitable. At least I don’t know any.
1. Sip under what circumstances goes wrong …
When you don’t know your objective.
2. When to take out the amount of sip ..
When you think that you have reached your goal/ when you see something troublesome in your charts/analysis.
3. How sip should be done so it’s more profitable …
There are no hard and fast rules. You are doing SIPing that means you are ready to buy it at any cost but slowly, steadily and for a long period of time. Unfortunately conventional ways don’t allow us to get instant gratification.
Skip to 1:11. The father explains his son about his periodic investment (SIP) on a no load mutual fund. The Jerk movie is from year 1979. 🙂 Very good n funny movie indeed. But the structure of SIP/periodic investment has been the same for a long long time.
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Btw, I will recommend this movie to all of you. 🙂