IPO Mania and Market Lessons: Why Early Losses Can Save You Later

Brokerage Free Team •November 1, 2025 | 5 min read • 18 views

Dear Reader,

They say prevention is better than cure. Yet, most investors seem determined to learn that lesson the hard way — burning their fingers on red-hot IPOs, losing their savings in derivatives trading, or going all-in on the next crypto craze.

In this week’s perspective, we reflect on the ongoing IPO mania in India and share some timely lessons for investors: why sometimes it’s better to fail fast and fail cheap than to cling to false optimism.

🧨 The IPO Mania: A Reality Check

When Paytm launched its IPO in 2021, it became India’s biggest listing at the time — a symbol of the country’s digital growth story. But within days of listing, the stock fell more than 40%. Many retail investors, caught in the frenzy, saw their savings evaporate.

It wasn’t the first time — and won’t be the last.
From Zomato to Mamaearth, several digital-age IPOs have followed a similar pattern: hype-fueled listings, euphoric valuations, and sobering post-listing realities.

📊 Historical data shows that over 70% of IPOs underperform benchmark indices within the first year of listing.
The reason? Excitement often overrides evaluation.

⚙️ Fail Fast, Fail Cheap — What It Really Means

Kumar argues that for both startups and investors, the “fail fast” mindset is essential.
In the startup world, failing fast helps companies identify flawed models early and pivot before they burn too much capital. In investing, the same principle applies — learn early, lose little.

If you must make mistakes, make them small and make them soon.
Don’t bet your entire portfolio on untested ideas or trendy narratives.

💭 Lesson Learned: The market rewards patience, not overconfidence. Treat early losses as your tuition fee — not a catastrophe.

🧠 Why Smart People Make Dumb Investment Decisions

Behavioral finance offers a clue: investors aren’t rational — they’re emotional.
Even seasoned professionals fall prey to biases like:

  • Herd Mentality: “Everyone’s buying this IPO — I should too.”

  • Overconfidence Bias: “I can exit before it crashes.”

  • Recency Bias: “This stock doubled last month; it’ll keep rising.”

The truth is, the market punishes emotion and rewards logic.
Investors nod at sound advice but still succumb to hype because greed and FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) cloud judgment.

💭 Lesson Learned: Awareness of your biases is the first step toward mastering them.

📉 Pain Is the Best Teacher — If You Learn from It

Every investor carries scars — a stock that tanked, a hot tip that failed, an IPO that promised the moon. These losses hurt, but they’re invaluable teachers.

The real tragedy isn’t losing money; it’s not learning from the loss.
Successful investors are those who view mistakes as data, not disasters. They analyze what went wrong, adjust their strategy, and move on — wiser and more resilient.

💭 Lesson Learned: The only failed investor is one who refuses to evolve.

💼 The Investor’s Paradox: Boring Wins, Exciting Burns

Here’s an irony:
Most investors ignore disciplined, long-term investments like mutual funds because they seem “boring.” Yet they rush into volatile IPOs and options trading because they seem “exciting.”

But markets don’t reward excitement — they reward consistency.
Boring investments like SIPs or diversified index funds quietly compound wealth, while “thrill-based” bets often erode it.

💭 Lesson Learned: Excitement is entertainment, not a strategy.

🧾 How to Fail Cheap — A Practical Checklist

Here’s how to apply the “fail fast, fail cheap” philosophy to your portfolio:

  1. Start Small: Experiment with small sums in new sectors or IPOs before scaling up.

  2. Diversify Early: Never let one idea dominate your capital.

  3. Avoid Leverage: Borrowed money magnifies both gains and losses.

  4. Keep a Learning Journal: Record every investment decision and outcome.

  5. Review Regularly: Identify patterns in your mistakes — and fix them.

  6. Know When to Quit: Don’t let ego keep you in a losing trade.

💭 Lesson Learned: Risk control is not about avoiding failure — it’s about surviving it.

🔍 Why This Lesson Matters More Than Ever

The current wave of tech and digital IPOs has shown that valuation ≠ value.
Many new-age businesses, though innovative, are yet to prove profitability. Investors, blinded by buzzwords like “AI,” “Fintech,” or “Disruption,” often forget that at the end of the day, cash flow is king.

Closing

Investing is not about avoiding mistakes altogether — that’s impossible. It’s about making smart, survivable mistakes and learning from them quickly.

So, the next time you’re tempted by a flashy IPO or a hot tip, pause and ask yourself:

“Am I investing, or am I speculating?”

If it’s speculation — make sure it’s a small, affordable lesson.
Because in the long run, those who fail fast, fail cheap, and learn deeply are the ones who build lasting wealth.

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