Gold in India holds a significant value. Both financially, as well as culturally. Gold as an investment instrument has been able to generate consistently rising returns over the last couple of decades, this coupled with a solid demand in the secondary market, and many practical use cases means that gold has become a truly significant financial instrument.
Like all things digital, gold investing has also become digital. To make gold investment convenient, and to modernize the investment method, new digital gold based financial instruments have come into existence. Example- digital gold, SGBs, etc.
Physical gold, as the name suggests, is tangible in nature. There are many forms in which physical gold can be purchased like gold ornaments, utensils, bullion like gold coins, bard, etc.
Physical gold has been the preferred investment method for the longest time. Reason being that ever since the early days, the tangibility of the assets helped grasp the true value of the assets. Also, a lack of digital gold based investment instruments meant that the only form in which gold investment could be done is by investing in physical gold in the form of jewellery, coins, bars, and utensils.
Sovereign gold bonds are government issued securities that are denominated in the grams of gold and are one of the best gold investment options available in the market. These are alternatives to hold physical gold, allowing the investors who want to purchase gold related security solely for the purpose of investment to enjoy interest income as well as the fluctuation in the value of the gold.
Sovereign gold bonds are in paper or digital format, i.e. the investor in the bonds would only get an acknowledgement and a proof of investment in the form of a paper or digital contract. I.e. there is no tangible gold that the investor gets to hold/see.
One of the biggest SGB investment benefits is the fact that, along with the rising intrinsic value, these financial instruments also offer interest income to the investor. The interest income is over and above the final sale or maturity value of the instrument. Hence, allowing the investor to maximize their returns.
The gold purchased in the form of digital gold is stored by the provider. How digital gold works is that the gold provider provides fractional ownership to the total underlying gold in proportion to the money invested.
One of the major advantages of digital gold is that the digital gold is backed by actual physical gold that is stored in secured vaults. The benefit of purchasing digital gold is that it saves the investor effort to securely store the gold, and also allows the investor to invest any amount they see fit. I.e. There is a minimal barrier to entry concerning the amount that needs to be invested. An investor can invest as low as INR 500 in digital gold, which is clearly not the case with physical gold. Hence, all things considered, digital gold is arguably the best way to invest in gold.
Irrespective of the investment avenue, gold related investment instruments offer capital fluctuation in relation with the actual market price fluctuation as seen in the physical gold. Looking at the track record, gold has produced exceptionally good returns over a longer investment timeframe, so all physical gold, digital gold, and sovereign gold bonds can help make exceptional returns in the form of capital appreciation.
This advantage is exclusive only to the sovereign gold bonds. SGBs along with the capital appreciation, also offers interest income to the investors. This allows the investors to enjoy a higher magnitude of total returns. SGB interest rates stand at 2.5% per annum on the initial investment sum.
Market fluctuation in the gold price has an impact on the value of the gold based financial instruments. Be it physical gold, sovereign gold bonds, or a digital gold security, these are not prone to the fluctuations in the gold price. An increasing gold price can help an investor make exponential returns, and vice versa.
When purchasing physical gold, especially in the form of utensils or jewellery, the jewellers charge a making charge. As the name suggests, this is a type of an additional cost over and above the value of the gold metal to create the gold in the form that is being sold.
In the context of investing in digital gold, certain platforms may charge brokerage or platform fees as a convenience charge to relay the service of providing the opportunity to invest digital gold to the investor.
This is a great advantage of investing in sovereign gold bonds (SGB), apart from the cost related to the purchase consideration, the investor does not have to bear any additional cost.
Tax implications is something an investor should keep in mind while formulating their gold investment strategies, as it can have a detrimental effect on the total returns made by the investor.
| Investment Type | Pros | Cons | | ----- | ----- | ----- | | Physical Gold | Physical gold as an asset is tangible, and universally accepted as it has a solid secondary market with high demand | Storage risk, making charges, theft risk | | SGBs | Government-backed, pays interest, tax benefits | Lock-in period, no physical ownership | | Digital Gold | Digital gold investment in India is convenient, secure storage, fractional ownership | Platform dependency, limited regulation |