High Net-worth Individuals (HNIs) are gradually reducing their exposure to physical gold and increasing allocations to Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs). This is not a sudden shift but a structural change in how gold is included within portfolios.
Gold continues to remain an important asset, but the preference is moving from physical ownership to financial exposure.
Why Physical Gold Is Becoming Less Efficient?
Physical gold comes with several inefficiencies that reduce overall returns:
- GST at purchase and making charges lower effective investment value
- Storage costs, such as lockers, create ongoing expenses without returns
- Selling can be inconsistent due to purity checks and liquidity constraints
These factors collectively make physical gold less suitable for modern, structured portfolios.
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Why Sovereign Gold Bonds Are Preferred?
SGBs, issued by the RBI, provide exposure to gold in a paper or digital format without storage issues. In addition, they offer a fixed annual interest of 2.5% on the issue price, creating an income component that physical gold lacks.
This makes SGBs more efficient for long-term allocation and easier to hold over time.
Tax Efficiency Advantage
Tax treatment is a major driver of this shift.
While the interest earned on SGBs is taxable, the key advantage is that capital gains on redemption at maturity are completely tax-free for individual investors.
In contrast, physical gold is taxed on sale, with no comparable benefit for long-term holding. This makes SGBs significantly more tax-efficient for long-term investors.
Key Takeaway
The shift from physical gold to SGBs is driven by efficiency rather than preference. While physical gold remains relevant as a possession asset, SGBs function as a financial instrument that better aligns with modern portfolio construction and long-term wealth planning.
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