Conversation of Ro-Ko
In a fictitious yet relevant world, two Indian legendary cricket players were practicing in nets. Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli were batting with their usual focus. As the kids play, both were taking on the bowlers one by one with sound of the ball striking the bat and goes in the air with much power. As they took turns, Virat, ever the playful, suddenly called out to Rohit.
“Hey, Rohit, let’s make a bet,” Virat said with a mischievous tone. “If you hit the longest six in the next match, I’ll give you Rs.1,00,000. But if you can’t, you’ll pay me just Rs.1000.”
Rohit paused, his bat resting on the ground and tightening the gloves. He thought about it for a moment before looking up at Virat and saying, “I don’t like the bet. I won’t participate.”
Virat was surprised. “Why not? You can easily hit a six. And Rs.1,00,000 is not bad deal, is it?”
Rohit smiled but shook his head. “Hitting a six is fun, yes, but it’s not the real game. The real game is in the little things—like running between the wickets, rotating the strike, and building partnerships. Those are the things that win matches.”
Virat trying to understand. Rohit added, “If you aren’t disciplined in the small things, you won’t be disciplined when it matters most. It’s the basics that make the big moments count.”
What we saw in just concluded ICC Champions Trophy was not about hitting 6s and 4s. It was more about small things planned in details. In Investment scenario, portfolio built with hot tips and borrowed information often gives excitement, but not necessary that it is long term sustainable.
Building a corpus is all about chasing a score. Investor may hit 6s and 4s when market gives them chance but when not, they must participate through SIPs systematically and average their investment game.