Expecting 20-25% Every Year? Let’s Talk Realistic Market Returns

What returns should investors realistically expect from the stock market? This article explains why 20–25% annual returns are rare, how market returns are linked to economic growth and inflation, and what long-term investors should plan for instead.

How Much Return Should We Really Expect From the Market?

Most investors begin their journey with an optimistic question:
“Can I earn 20–25% returns every year from the market?”

While such returns are possible in certain years, planning long-term financial goals around them is unrealistic. A more useful question is:
“What is a reasonable return to expect and plan for over the long term?”

Where Do Market Returns Come From?

Over long periods, equity returns are anchored to a few fundamental drivers. They do not come from stock tips or short-term predictions, but from how the economy itself grows.

The three key building blocks are:

  • Real economic growth
    This reflects how fast the economy expands after adjusting for inflation.
    India’s real GDP growth is expected to be around 6–7%, while developed economies grow closer to 1–2%.
  • Inflation
    Inflation increases the nominal size of the economy but erodes purchasing power.
    In India, inflation has averaged around 4–5% over the long term.
  • Equity risk premium
    Equity investors accept volatility and periods of loss. In return, they expect a modest premium over risk-free investments. This premium exists, but it is limited, not unlimited.

In simple terms:
Long-term equity returns ≈ Economic growth + Inflation ± valuation effects

Why 20–25% Every Year Is Unrealistic

History across markets shows no consistent link between high GDP growth and permanently high equity returns. There are several reasons for this:

  • Not all economic growth flows to listed companies
  • High growth stories are often already priced in through valuations
  • Profitability, regulation, capital efficiency, and dilution matter as much as growth

Sustained 20–25% annual returns over long periods are extremely rare and usually involve excessive risk or concentration, not diversified investing.

So What Is a Reasonable Expectation?

For India today:

  • Real economic growth: ~6–7%
  • Inflation: ~4–5%
  • Nominal economic growth: ~10–12%

After accounting for risk and market cycles, a sensible long-term equity expectation is:

  • Expect: ~10–12%
  • Aim (in favourable conditions): ~12–14%

These figures are planning assumptions, not guarantees.

Returns Don’t Arrive in Straight Lines

Even if long-term averages are reasonable, actual returns are uneven:

  • Some years deliver strong gains
  • Some years are flat or negative
  • Outcomes over 3–5 years depend heavily on entry valuations and discipline

Understanding this helps investors remain patient instead of chasing unrealistic consistency.

How Should Investors Plan?

A practical and disciplined framework is:

  • Plan conservatively for long-term goals
  • Aim slightly higher when markets cooperate
  • Treat anything above expectations as a bonus

If you plan assuming 25% returns and the market delivers 10%, the plan fails.
If you plan assuming 10–12% and the market delivers more, the investor benefits.

The Real Advantage in Investing

Long-term wealth creation depends less on chasing high returns and more on:

  • Staying invested through market cycles
  • Maintaining the right asset allocation
  • Managing behaviour during volatility

A disciplined investor compounding at realistic rates often outperforms someone chasing extraordinary returns.

Bottom Line

For a growing economy like India, a 10–12% long-term equity return expectation, with an aspirational 12–14% aim, is realistic, defensible, and aligned with economic reality.
This approach doesn’t cap upside—it ensures that your financial plan is built on assumptions strong enough to last.

-Sanket Daragshetti, Founder ThePairTrader