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Gold ETFs delivered returns of 14 per cent last financial year. By comparison, the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex and the National Stock Exchange Nifty delivered near-zero returns.
Gold ETFs had raked in close to Rs 7,000 crore in FY21 as they delivered over 37 per cent returns in 2019-20. However, FY21 proved to be a lacklustre year for gold and a blockbuster one for equities, with the Sensex climbing 68 per cent.
Even as gold’s performance has improved in recent months, experts believe that investors might be waiting on the sidelines to enter at better prices.
Even as returns improve, gold ETFs face a new challenge in the form of loss of indexation benefit. Changes brought in tax laws will lead to a higher tax outgo for gold ETF investors. Experts see the development as disrupting flows into the product.
“Gold has continued its outperformance of 2022 in the first three months of 2023, led by softness in bond yield and a moderation in the dollar index, compared to a few months ago. The challenges in the US and European banks have led investors to move towards a flight for safety, leading to gold prices climbing up 7 per cent in rupee and 8 per cent in US dollar terms in March 2023,” observes Axis Securities in a report.
“A clear direction is likely to emerge only when volatility settles at lower levels for a longer time. Until then, gold will continue to find an edge over other asset classes. Fundamentally, gold prices are inversely correlated with bond yield direction. Based on the current macroeconomic development, gold will continue to be the preferred asset class until uncertainties over the Russia-Ukraine conflict fades. It will continue to attract investments as a proven hedge against other asset classes,” the report adds.
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