ETFs now constitute 13% of Mutual Fund AUMs at ₹6.95 lakh cr
Retail investors push ETFs to become the preferred mode of investment with lower risks, diversification, and ease of trading, according to a study
Retail investors push ETFs to become the preferred mode of investment with lower risks, diversification, and ease of trading, according to a study
Central banks shore up gold reserves to prepare for turbulent times, pushing up prices across the globe. The trend is here to stay.
MSCI methodology makes India underweight in global indices. As a result, investors fail to capitalise on Indian equities.
Year-to-date global Gold ETF outflows stand at $11 billion and total holdings have fallen by 189 tonnes at the end of September 2023.
The clamour for passive fund schemes — exchange-traded funds — is on the rise in India. Assets under management for ETFs have grown from around ₹5,400 cr as of 2014 to around ₹4 lakh cr currently.
The rating agency expects total outstanding supply of corporate bonds to increase from around ₹33 lakh crore in FY20 to ₹65 lakh crore-₹70 lakh crore in FY25, with innovations playing a key role.
Gold exchange traded funds added a record 877 tonnes during 2020, nearly 231 tonnes more than the 2009 record of 646 tonnes. Experts argue much of gold's growth drivers will continue in 2021 too.
According to CRISIL Research, the Indian mutual fund industry’s assets under management can touch the ₹50 lakh crore mark by March 2025, and multiple triggers will aid this massive growth.
At a time when India’s benchmark equity indices are hitting fresh highs every week, statistics show that gold is losing its safe haven sheen.
A World Gold Council report says global demand for gold has taken a beating, falling by as much as 19% in the third quarter of this year.