Parag Parikh — The Behavioural Investor Who Died in Omaha

On 3 May 2015, a 60-year-old Indian investor named Parag Parikh got into a rental SUV outside the Omaha airport with his son Neil and three colleagues. They had just spent the day at Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting — the closest thing to a religious pilgrimage that the value-investing world has. On the ride back, the SUV collided with a truck. Parag Parikh died at the scene. He left behind a wife, two sons, a five-month-old mutual fund scheme, and the most influential book on behavioural investing ever written in India.

The Psychiatrist’s Son Who Studied Markets Instead

Parag Sumatilal Parikh was born in 1954 in a middle-class Jain family in Mumbai. His father was a practising psychiatrist. This detail mattered. Parag grew up listening to dinner-table conversations about why people behaved in ways that contradicted their own interests — about anxiety, about defence mechanisms, about the gap between what people said and what they did.

He took a B.Com from Sydenham College and, like several others of his era, gravitated to Dalal Street in the late 1970s. By 1982, at age 28, he had registered as a stockbroker. Most of his early competitors were fluent in ticker tape. Parag was fluent in Freud. It was not immediately obvious which was the more useful language.

For the next fifteen years, Parag Parikh ran Parag Parikh Financial Advisory Services (PPFAS), a small brokerage in Mumbai that grew quietly on a single differentiator: his clients never called to ask about the tip of the day, because he had taught them not to want tips. His advice was methodical, slow, and often framed in psychological terms rather than financial ones.

The Books That Changed a Country’s Investing Culture

Parag’s lasting intellectual legacy is his two books.

“Stocks to Riches” (2005) was the first major Indian-market book to apply behavioural finance — the field pioneered by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky — to Indian retail investing. Parag, unlike his academic peers, wrote in plain language. The book is structured around the ten most common psychological biases of Indian investors — loss aversion, anchoring, recency bias, confirmation bias, herding, overconfidence, mental accounting, regret aversion, endowment effect, and status quo bias. Each chapter uses specific Indian examples — Harshad Mehta’s cult, the IT bubble, real-estate mania — to show the bias in action.

The book sold 75,000 copies in its first three years, a figure no other Indian investing book before had crossed. It is still prescribed in Indian B-school behavioural finance electives.

“Value Investing and Behavioural Finance” (2009) — published in the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis — took the same framework a step further. It argued that value investing in India is not, fundamentally, an analytical discipline. It is a psychological one. The edge over the market, Parag wrote, is not in identifying undervalued businesses — that part is relatively easy and obvious. The edge is in sitting on them through the emotional noise, which is astoundingly hard.

“In India, the problem is not that investors cannot see value. It is that they cannot tolerate the loneliness of holding it.”
— Parag Parikh

The PPFAS Broking Years: Steady, Boring, Principled

From 1982 to 2012, Parag ran PPFAS as a broker and private wealth manager. He had a small but fiercely loyal client base. He refused certain kinds of business categorically:

  • He never wrote research reports under another broker’s name (he refused to produce “paid” research).
  • He never accepted payment for placing IPOs he had not personally subscribed to.
  • He never ran a margin-lending book to his retail clients — he believed leverage was poison to long-term compounding.
  • He did not take on any client whose stated goal was “making quick money.”

This made PPFAS slow-growing. But in three decades of running it, PPFAS never had a single client complaint registered with SEBI. Not one. In an Indian broking industry where almost every major house has faced investigations, this statistic alone was almost miraculous.

2012: The Second Act — PPFAS Mutual Fund

By 2012, Parag had decided to launch what he had been quietly designing for over a decade: a flexi-cap mutual fund that would combine value investing with behavioural finance, and — crucially — would be allowed to invest a meaningful percentage abroad.

The last point was important. At the time, almost all Indian mutual funds were domestic-only. Parag’s thesis was that Indian investors had two structural problems:

  1. They were 100% exposed to the Indian economy, even though global companies like Apple, Alphabet, Nestlé SA, and Berkshire Hathaway were often better-run than their Indian equivalents.
  2. They had no cheap, tax-efficient vehicle to diversify globally. Buying individual US stocks was a regulatory and currency headache.

PPFAS Long Term Equity Fund (later renamed Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund) launched on 24 May 2013. It was the first Indian mutual fund scheme to permanently allocate up to 35% of its corpus to foreign equities. The initial Indian holdings were classic Parag — ITC, Maruti Suzuki, Hero MotoCorp, HDFC Bank, Gulf Oil, CRISIL. The foreign holdings were Google (Alphabet), IBM, 3M, Nestlé SA.

The scheme raised around ₹150 crore in its NFO — a respectable but not earth-shaking number. At the time, the industry’s bigger houses considered the global-equity wrinkle an eccentricity.

Parag himself — and his entire family — invested 100% of their personal equity savings into the fund. His famous public line:

“I eat my own cooking. My money is not a small percentage of this fund. It is, quite literally, every rupee my family has in stocks. If the fund fails, I fail.”
— Parag Parikh, PPFAS AMC launch, 2013

The Skin-in-the-Game Principle

PPFAS Mutual Fund had, from day one, a formal rule that Parag personally authored and no other Indian AMC has ever adopted:

Every senior employee of PPFAS must invest 100% of their personal equity money only in PPFAS schemes. No individual stocks. No competing mutual funds.

The logic, in Parag’s own words: “You cannot be a thoughtful fund manager if your personal portfolio and your client’s portfolio are allowed to diverge. The moment they diverge, you will — consciously or unconsciously — prioritise the one that benefits you.”

This rule continues today at PPFAS, a decade after his death. No other Indian mutual fund house has it. For most asset managers, personal investing is treated as a private matter; at PPFAS, it is treated as a client obligation.

3 May 2015: Omaha

Every year for over a decade, Parag had travelled to the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska. It was, for him, a combination of professional seminar and personal retreat. He had been writing about Buffett and Munger for twenty years. He considered them, without irony, his intellectual fathers.

In May 2015, Parag made the trip with his son Neil Parag Parikh (the second-generation PPFAS leader) and three colleagues. The meeting that year — Berkshire’s 50th — had been especially grand. Parag met Charlie Munger briefly after the Q&A. He would call his wife from the airport that evening and tell her, simply, that it had been “a good day.”

Driving back to their hotel after the meeting, the rental SUV carrying Parag collided head-on with a truck on a Nebraska state highway. Parag Parikh died at the scene. He was 60 years old.

Neil, who survived the accident with serious injuries, was airlifted to a hospital in Omaha. It would be weeks before he could return to India. The news reached Mumbai overnight, and by morning the Indian financial press was in a peculiar kind of mourning — the man who had taught a generation of Indian investors how to not panic was gone, too early, in a way that would have required, from everyone he left behind, exactly the kind of calm he had written books about.

The Fund That Compounded After Him

PPFAS Flexi Cap’s NAV on the day Parag Parikh died was approximately ₹20. The fund had roughly ₹450 crore in AUM.

Under Neil Parikh’s leadership, and the continued stewardship of co-founder Raj Mehta and the original investment team, the fund compounded — through the 2016 demonetisation panic, the 2018 NBFC crisis, the 2020 COVID crash, the 2022 rate hikes. Every major redemption moment, which would have broken most AMCs, became a test of the Parag Parikh philosophy.

The fund did not just survive. It became, over the decade following his death, the fastest-growing flexi-cap mutual fund in India.

By April 2024:

  • AUM: approximately ₹60,000 crore — a 130× increase from death-date AUM
  • NAV: approximately ₹80, meaning a 4× return from the NAV at Parag’s death — an 11-year compounded return of approximately 14% in rupees, with substantial global diversification
  • Unit-holder count: over 2 million SIP investors, the highest of any non-index mutual fund in the country
  • The fund family — now expanded to include hybrid, liquid, and tax-saver schemes — collectively manages over ₹75,000 crore

A retail investor who bought ₹1 lakh of the fund at Parag’s death, and held, would today have over ₹4 lakh. No tip calls. No portfolio rotation. No Facebook Lives. Just the fund doing what Parag had designed it to do.

The Book That Became a Religion

The philosophical influence of PPFAS goes well beyond its AUM. The way Indian mutual fund managers speak about their craft today — the language of “circle of competence,” “behavioural discipline,” “own your own cooking,” “longevity over size” — is, in most cases, traceable to a Parag Parikh essay, book, or client letter.

The Annual Unit-holder Letter that PPFAS publishes every year — a tradition begun by Parag in 2013 and honoured by Neil ever since — is consciously modelled on Buffett’s letters. It is long, discursive, honest about mistakes, and rigorously plain-spoken. It is, by broad consensus within Indian asset management, the best-written annual communication any Indian AMC produces.

Samples of Parag’s writing:

“We had a year when our fund under-performed the index by almost 4%. I want to be very clear to our unit-holders: this is acceptable. In fact, it is inevitable. Any fund manager who tells you their scheme will beat the index every year is either lying to you or lying to himself. What matters is the shape of the under-performance. Were we concentrated in businesses that still deliver compounding value? If yes, the under-performance is a gift — it offers us cheaper entry. If no, the under-performance is a signal to reconsider.”
— Parag Parikh, 2014 Annual Letter

This kind of plain honesty — uncommon in the Indian mutual fund industry, where most communications are marketing dressed as analysis — became PPFAS’s single most powerful differentiator.

The Ten Biases, Condensed

Parag’s most enduring contribution to Indian retail investor education is the practical taxonomy of ten biases he wrote about for three decades. For this lesson, a condensed version:

  • Loss Aversion — Indian investors feel losses 2.5× as intensely as gains. This causes them to sell winners too early and hold losers too long.
  • Anchoring — They tie themselves to entry prices. “I bought at ₹100, so I won’t sell below ₹100” is the single most wealth-destroying sentence in Indian investing.
  • Recency Bias — They extrapolate the last 12 months infinitely. In 2000 they thought tech was the future. In 2008 they thought infra was the future. In 2022 they thought EV stocks were the future. Each time, they were rescued only by luck.
  • Confirmation Bias — They seek news that validates their existing positions. They ignore news that threatens them.
  • Herding — They take comfort in crowds. The largest retail flows into Indian mutual funds have historically come in the quarter before a major drawdown, not after.
  • Overconfidence — Male investors in particular are disastrously overconfident. The single most common mistake is believing that last year’s gain was skill, not luck.
  • Mental Accounting — They treat different buckets of money differently. Inherited money is “safe” money; bonus money is “gambling” money. Same rupees, different psychology, different outcomes.
  • Regret Aversion — They avoid obvious decisions because of the fear of a small immediate regret. A classic example: refusing to rebalance from debt to equity after a 40% market correction, because “what if it falls another 20%?”
  • Endowment Effect — They overvalue what they already own. Once you hold a stock, it feels worth more to you than the market will pay.
  • Status Quo Bias — They leave portfolios on autopilot for years, even when the original thesis is broken. Change is exhausting; inertia is easy; and inertia is expensive.

Parag’s argument, through all ten: value investing is not about finding the cheapest Excel sheet. It is about recognising, in yourself, which of these ten traps you are currently stuck in — and then doing the opposite.

The Day Neil Came Home

Neil Parag Parikh was released from the Omaha hospital ten days after the accident. He flew back to Mumbai in a wheelchair. His first meeting at the PPFAS office was not about redemptions, funds, or regulatory responses. It was a quiet meeting with the investment team where, according to a colleague present, Neil said only two sentences:

“We will continue exactly as my father did. The only difference is that he will not be in the room.”
— Neil Parikh, May 2015

That instruction has — by every metric visible from the outside — been honoured for a decade.

Lessons From the Behavioural Investor

  • The edge is psychological, not analytical. Parag’s lifelong thesis was that every investor in India can see what is undervalued. Almost none can stand the loneliness of holding it. The gap between those two is where returns come from.
  • Eat your own cooking. An investment manager whose personal portfolio is not identical to their client portfolio should, in Parag’s view, not be an investment manager. The separation is the moral hazard.
  • Under-performance is a part of the job, not the failure of the job. A great fund manager will have three or four years of below-index returns per decade. How they behave during those years — doubling down on thesis, or capitulating to style drift — is the whole game.
  • Diversify across countries, not just sectors. The single unique innovation of PPFAS Flexi Cap was its permanent foreign allocation. Parag, a decade ahead of SEBI’s broader opening, saw that an Indian investor needed Berkshire, Alphabet, and Nestlé SA in their portfolio as much as they needed HDFC Bank and ITC.
  • Write clearly, or do not write. Parag’s books sold because they were written in plain language. His annual letters are read because they never once use jargon to cover up a bad number. Clarity, not analytical depth, is what retail investors actually need.
  • The fund manager’s job does not end at death. If the philosophy is real, it continues. PPFAS post-2015 is the case study. A good process, well-documented and well-institutionalised, outlives its founder.

In the PPFAS office in Mumbai, there is a small bookshelf dedicated to Parag’s personal library — Kahneman, Tversky, Munger, Graham, Fisher, Buffett’s letters, and a handful of Hindi and Gujarati books on philosophy. The shelf is open to visitors. Anyone, any day, can walk in and borrow a book.

There is one rule. You must return it. Parag’s handwritten note on the shelf says so.

“The only thing worse than not reading a good book is not returning it so someone else can.”

The most behavioural investor in Indian history left behind, among many other things, the quietest joke about ownership.

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