If You Had Invested ₹10,000 in Infosys IPO in 1993, It Would Be Worth ₹3 Crore Today.

In 1993, Infosys came out with its Initial Public Offering (IPO). At that time, the company was still a small player in India’s growing IT industry. Most investors didn’t know much about it. The IPO was priced at just ₹95 per share.

Fast forward to today — that same investment of ₹10,000 made back then is worth over ₹3 crore.

Yes, you read that right — a small investment that could have bought you a scooter in the ’90s can now buy you a luxury car.

What Made Infosys So Successful?

The story of Infosys is really the story of India’s IT revolution. Founded by seven engineers led by N. R. Narayana Murthy, the company focused on quality software services at a time when India was just opening its economy.

Over the next three decades, Infosys grew into a global powerhouse, creating thousands of millionaires through stock options and long-term compounding.

The Power of Long-Term Compounding

Let’s understand this through simple math.

1993: Infosys share price = ₹95 Today (adjusted for bonuses & splits): Equivalent price per share = around ₹1,800 Infosys has given multiple bonuses and stock splits, increasing the number of shares many times over. That’s how ₹10,000 turned into more than ₹3 crore — not overnight, but over 30+ years of patience, reinvestment, and belief.

Key Lessons for Investors

Time is your best ally. Compounding works silently, but powerfully, over decades. Don’t chase quick returns. Infosys wasn’t an overnight success — it took years of consistency. Invest in good businesses, not just cheap stocks. Great companies always reward patience. Ignore the noise. Even Infosys saw multiple crashes — 2000 dotcom, 2008 crisis, 2020 pandemic — but the long-term trend stayed upward.

The Bigger Picture

Infosys is not the only example.

₹10,000 in Wipro in 1980 would be worth over ₹500 crore today. ₹10,000 in Asian Paints two decades ago would be worth more than ₹40 lakh. All these stories point to one thing — wealth is created not by timing the market, but by spending time in it.

Final Thought

If you’re just starting your investment journey, don’t worry about the perfect stock or perfect time.

Start small, stay invested, and let compounding do its quiet magic.


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