Monday, December 22, 2025

Nifty 50 Zero Returns in 1 Year? 26 Years Data Show It’s Normal!

Nifty 50 zero returns in one year are normal. A 26-year rolling-return study proves such flat phases repeat and aren’t a cause for worry.

Every few months, headlines scream that the Nifty 50 has delivered zero returns over the last one year. Recent examples include “Sensex delivers 0% in 12 months” or “Nifty 50 gives zero returns in a year—is the market overvalued?”

It sounds alarming—after all, if the index hasn’t moved for a whole year, should you worry? But a deeper look at history tells a very different story. Zero 1-year returns are not an exception—they are part of the market’s normal rhythm.

Many of us investing in the equity market are always aware that prices can fall, but we expect them to recover in a few months or years. However, the most frustrating experience for equity investors is a sideways market. During such periods, even if the economy is on the right track, the market may deliver zero returns, negative returns, or returns lower than a typical bank fixed deposit. This can make the investment journey particularly discouraging for many investors.

Nifty 50 Zero Returns in 1 Year? 26 Years Data Show It’s Normal!

What the Latest Data Says

Between 19 September 2024 and 19 September 2025, the Nifty 50 moved sideways, resulting in a roughly 0% price return. News outlets jumped on this, portraying it as if the market had stagnated.

However, if you consider dividends (Total Return Index or TRI), the actual return is slightly positive. More importantly, when you look at history, these “flat” phases appear again and again.

Rolling Returns Reveal the Truth

To validate my point that this is not a new thing for the equity market, I have taken the Nifty 50 TRI data of the last 26 years. This is around 6526 daily data points. With this data, to understand how many times the Nifty 50 generated less than Bank FD returns, savings account returns, or zero to negative returns can be visualized. Hence, the best way is to use the 1-year rolling returns for these 26 years of daily data points.

Nifty 50 Zero Returns - Nifty 50 TRI 1 Yr Rolling Returns 1999 - 2025

Here’s what the data reveals:

  • Multiple zero or negative 1-year periods: Over these 26 years, there have been 1446 instances of negative returns for 1 year rolling returns.  It means around 23% times.
  • Less than 6% returns – Its around 2156 times the returns for 1 year rolling returns were less than 6%. It means around 34% of times.
  • Less than 3% returns – Its around 1780 times the returns for 1 year rolling returns were less than 6%. It means around 28% of times.
  • Not limited to crises: Zero returns occurred not only during major crashes (dot-com bust 2000–02, global financial crisis 2008, COVID-19 crash 2020) but also in otherwise normal years when markets simply consolidated.

Key Historical Episodes of Zero 1-Year Returns

Below are some prominent periods when Nifty 50 zero returns dominated headlines—long before 2025:

Period (approx.) Market Context
2000–2002 Dot-com bubble burst; Indian IT stocks corrected.
2008–2009 Global financial crisis shook all asset classes.
2011–2012 European debt crisis; policy paralysis in India.
2015–2016 Chinese slowdown & commodity slump.
2018–2019 NBFC crisis & pre-COVID slowdown.
2022–2023 Rate hikes & global inflation jitters.

These are just highlights—the full rolling-return data shows many smaller, less dramatic “flat” stretches.

Why Zero Returns Happen Often

  1. Normal Market Cycles
    Markets move in trends—bull phases, corrections, and sideways consolidations. A year of flat returns often precedes the next uptrend.
  2. Valuation Adjustments
    When earnings grow but prices pause, valuations cool down, creating a healthier base for future gains.
  3. Global Events
    International crises (oil shocks, interest rate spikes, wars) often lead to temporary stagnation, even if domestic fundamentals remain solid.

Lessons for Long-Term Investors

  1. Stop Obsessing Over 1-Year Numbers
    Investing is not a 12-month race. Nifty 50’s 5-year and 10-year rolling returns have historically rewarded patient investors handsomely, even if individual years disappoint.
  2. Equity is for LONG TERM – Never enter into equity with 1 year time horizon. You have to enter with the mindset of at least 5+ years and that also with proper asset allocation.
  3. Equity returns means not LINEAR – If you are expecting 10% returns from equity, it does not mean the market will deliver every year 10% like Bank FD. It is a roller coaster journey.
  4. Stick to Asset Allocation
    Your financial goals, not market moods, should drive how much you keep in equity vs. debt.
  5. Rebalance, Don’t React
    Periods of flat returns are a chance to rebalance portfolios, add to SIPs, or deploy fresh money at reasonable valuations.

The Power of Long-Term Investing

Imagine you invested Rs.10 lakh as lump sum in the Nifty 50 TRI on 30 June 1999 and stayed invested until 19 September 2025 (around 26 years) . Despite multiple “zero return” years, your investment would have grown to many times (Around Rs.3 Cr!!) the original amount, easily outpacing inflation and most fixed-income options. It means your Rs.10 lakh grown at 13% in the last 26 years. However, it does not mean every year the Nifty generated 13% returns.

Lump Sum Investment in Nifty 50 TRI 1999 - 2025

The lesson? Time in the market beats timing the market.

Conclusion

The next time you see alarming headlines about Nifty 50 zero returns, remember:

  • It has happened many times in the past 26 years.
  • It is a normal phase, not a crisis.
  • Long-term investors who stay disciplined ultimately win.

So, instead of worrying about a single year of flat returns, focus on your financial plan, asset allocation, and long-term goals. The market rewards patience, not panic.

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