In May 2026, Parle Melody toffees went viral on social media. Nostalgia erupted. Within hours, shares of Parle Industries — a BSE-listed infrastructure company with zero connection to confectionery — shot up over 5%. The real maker, Parle Products, has never been listed.
It was funny. It was also revealing.
This was not an isolated incident. In 2021, Bombay Oxygen Investments — an NBFC with nothing to do with medical oxygen — surged 133% during the COVID crisis because its name contained the word "oxygen." When LG Electronics India debuted in late 2025, investors piled into LG Balakrishnan & Bros, a Coimbatore auto-parts maker. The pattern repeats with almost ritualistic regularity: a headline breaks, a vaguely named stock somewhere on BSE gets swept up, SEBI issues a clarification, the stock collapses.
These episodes are usually laughed off as quirky Dalal Street folklore. But they point to something far more expensive than a few bad trades. They reveal that a large section of Indian retail investors is not buying businesses. They are buying names, stories, and emotional associations — and that confusion is quietly costing them their financial futures.
- Many Indian investors buy stocks based on name recognition, not business fundamentals.
- This pattern — repeated across bull and bear markets — leads to buying at peaks and panic-selling at bottoms.
- The fix is not more research. It is a fundamental shift in how you think about what a stock actually represents.
Your Brain on Stocks: Familiarity Feels Like Safety
A stock is a fractional ownership claim on a real business — its assets, its earnings, its management quality, its competitive position. But the human brain does not naturally process it that way. What it does process effortlessly is familiarity. A name you have heard before feels safer than one you have not. A brand you grew up with feels more investable than an industrial manufacturer you cannot picture.
This is the availability heuristic at work — a mental shortcut where the brain substitutes a difficult question ("Is this company undervalued relative to its future earnings?") with an easy one ("Have I heard of this name before?"). The easier question gets answered instantly. The harder one never gets asked.
Brokerage apps make this worse. Their interfaces are designed for speed, not reflection. One tap to buy. One tap to sell. The friction that once forced investors to pause — calling a broker, filling a form, waiting for execution — is gone. What remains is a dopamine loop that rewards action over thought, and reaction over analysis. This behavioral gap is where the most expensive investor mistakes are born.
The Real Cost Is Not the Loss. It Is the Pattern.
A single bad stock pick is manageable. The real damage comes from the behavioral loop it creates. An investor buys a familiar name during a rally, watches it correct, panics, sells at a loss, and then — when the next rally arrives — repeats the same sequence with a different familiar name. Each cycle feels unique in the moment. But over a decade, the pattern produces the same outcome: money transferred from emotional buyers to patient sellers.
SEBI data tells part of this story. In FY25, 91% of individual F&O traders lost money — collectively over ₹1.06 lakh crore. But even in the cash market, where leverage is lower, the pattern persists. Retail investors poured over ₹1.2 lakh crore into equities in FY24 when markets were euphoric, then turned net sellers in FY26 when corrections arrived. Buying high and selling low is not a mistake people make once. It is a rhythm their brains are wired to repeat.
The counterintuitive truth is that doing less — much less — is often the hardest investing skill to master. The investors who consistently build wealth in Indian equities are rarely the ones tracking markets daily or chasing the next breakout stock. They are the ones who bought quality businesses, held them through multiple corrections, and resisted the urge to act on every headline. In a market that rewards patience and punishes impulsivity, boredom is an underrated edge.
The Parle moment was entertaining. But the thousands of retail investors who bought shares in a company they knew nothing about — because it sounded like something they loved — paid real money for that entertainment. The market has a long memory. So should you.
