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By Ventura Analysts Desk 4 min Read
Is gold beating equities? Where should you invest now?
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If you have been following financial news over the past several months, you have probably seen the headlines. Gold prices have been on a strong run, touching record highs in both international and domestic markets. And in that same period, equity markets in several parts of the world, including India, have seen pockets of underperformance and volatility.

This has led many investors to ask a reasonable question: Is gold the better bet right now? Should you be shifting money away from stocks?

It is worth slowing down before drawing any conclusions from short-term performance numbers.

What has actually happened

Gold has performed well worldwide throughout 2024 and early 2025 due to various reasons. Central banks, especially those of emerging economies, have been purchasing gold in large quantities in order to cut their dependency on the US dollar. Geopolitical uncertainties have maintained the demand for gold as a haven. As uncertainty regarding interest rates remains in leading countries, gold has gained from its stable nature.

India, too, has seen its local gold prices rise owing to the depreciation of the Indian rupee against the US dollar.

Equities, on the other hand, have had a more mixed run. After a strong rally through 2023 and much of 2024, Indian markets have seen some consolidation. Valuations in the mid-cap and small-cap space became stretched, and there has been some correction. Broader indices have held up relatively better, but the sharp gains that retail investors got used to have slowed down.

So yes, over this particular window, gold has outperformed. But one period does not make a trend, and recent outperformance is one of the least reliable ways to decide where to put your money.

What gold actually is, as an investment

This matters because gold behaves very differently from equities, and understanding that difference is important before making any allocation decision.

Gold does not generate earnings. It does not pay dividends. It does not grow its business, hire people, or launch new products. Its price is driven almost entirely by sentiment, demand-supply dynamics, currency movements, and macro factors like inflation expectations and interest rates.

Over very long periods, gold has preserved purchasing power reasonably well. But it has not compounded wealth the way equities have. A rupee invested in a broad equity index 25 years ago has grown substantially more than a rupee invested in gold over the same period, despite gold's occasional strong runs.

Gold's real job in a portfolio is not to generate superior returns. It is to provide stability when other assets are under pressure. It tends to move differently from equities, which makes it a useful diversifier rather than a primary growth engine.

What equities offer that gold cannot

When you buy a share of a good business, you are buying a claim on that company's future earnings. If the business grows, earns more, and compounds its returns over time, your investment grows with it. That is a fundamentally different proposition from holding a metal whose value depends on what someone else will pay for it tomorrow.

India's corporate earnings story, while not without its rough patches, is tied to a growing economy, rising consumption, expanding manufacturing capacity, and a young demographic base that will drive demand for decades. These are structural tailwinds that gold simply does not offer exposure to.

That is not to say equities are without risk. They are volatile, sentiment-driven in the short run, and capable of painful drawdowns. But over 10, 15, or 20-year periods, well-chosen equities or equity mutual funds have historically rewarded patient investors more than gold has.

How to think about the current situation

Rather than asking which asset class is better right now, a more useful question is, 'What role should each play in your portfolio given your goals and time horizon?'

A few pointers worth considering:

  • If you have no gold exposure at all, a modest allocation somewhere between 10% and 15% of your portfolio is something many financial planners suggest as a reasonable hedge
  • If you are already heavily in equities and losing sleep over volatility, a small shift toward gold can reduce overall portfolio stress without abandoning growth assets entirely
  • If you are chasing gold purely because it has done well recently, that is a pattern worth being cautious about. By the time a rally is visible to everyone, a large part of the move has often already happened
  • Equity SIPs in periods of consolidation or mild correction are historically good entry points for long-term investors, not exit points

Different ways to hold gold today

If you decide to add or increase gold exposure, it is worth knowing that physical gold is no longer the only or even the most efficient option:

  • Sovereign gold bonds: Issued by the government, these offer the price appreciation of gold plus an additional 2.5% annual interest. They also have tax advantages on maturity. For most investors, this is one of the more sensible ways to hold gold.
  • Gold ETFs: These track gold prices and can be bought and sold on the exchange like stocks. Liquid, transparent, and no storage hassle.
  • Gold mutual funds: These invest in gold ETFs and are accessible through SIPs, making them convenient for regular investors.

Physical gold has its place, particularly for jewellery and cultural reasons, but as a pure investment vehicle, it comes with making charges, storage costs, and purity concerns that the alternatives avoid.

Conclusion

Gold beating equities over a recent stretch is not a signal to abandon your long-term investment strategy. It is a reminder that different assets perform differently at different points in the cycle, which is precisely why diversification across asset classes makes sense.

If your equity portfolio is well-constructed and aligned with your goals, a temporary period of gold outperformance should not be a reason to panic or pivot dramatically. What it might reasonably prompt is a review of whether your portfolio has an appropriate allocation to gold as a stabiliser.

Invest in equities for long-term growth. Hold some gold for balance and protection. Do not make major allocation shifts based on which asset has looked better over the past six months. That approach tends to lead investors toward buying high and selling low, which is the opposite of what works over time.

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