HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceBeyond borders: Why global investing makes sense for Indian portfolios

Beyond borders: Why global investing makes sense for Indian portfolios

Investors must diversify globally as 95.8 percent of the total market capitalisation is in markets beyond India’s borders. This will mitigate domestic risks and potentially boost returns with currency gains and provide access to high-growth sectors like artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and luxury brands.

July 03, 2025 / 19:07 IST
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Diversify investment portfolio
Global exposure offers Indian investors access to high-growth sectors where domestic markets are still evolving.

Don’t keep all your wealth within the four borders. As Indian equity markets continue to hit record highs, it’s tempting for investors to remain rooted at home. However, here's a critical reality check: India comprises just 4.2 percent of the global equity market capitalisation as of December 2024. That means a staggering 95.8 percent of investment opportunities lie beyond our borders—in markets like the US, Europe, and emerging economies that house dominant players in artificial intelligence (AI), semiconductors, electric vehicles (EVs), and luxury brands. With the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) offering legal routes for outbound investment and dollar-linked instruments now more accessible, the key question is: Why should your portfolio remain geographically confined when global avenues are expanding? Also consider this—many of our future aspirations (like iPhones, foreign education, and gold purchases) are dollar-denominated. So, isn't it prudent for our investments to match that currency exposure?

India’s Position in the Global Market

MetricIndia (2024)Global Benchmark
Market CapitalisationUSD 5.18 trillionUSD 120+ trillion (global total)
Share of Global Equity Cap4.2% (Dec 2024)100%

Despite being the 5th largest equity market, India’s single currency–single geography–single asset concentration limits global participation and increases risk. Global diversification is not mandatory—but it is smart.

The Case for Diversification: Returns & Risk (Rs vs. $)

Portfolio Type10-Year CAGR (2014–2024)VolatilityCOVID-19 Crash & Recovery
India-Only (Nifty 50, Rs)~11–12%High (>20%)–37% crash, +73% recovery
Globally Diversified (60/40, $ terms)~9–10% in USDModerate (15–17%)–25% crash, +85% recovery
Globally Diversified (converted to Rs)~13–14% in INRModerateINR depreciation added ~3–4% p.a.

Global portfolios may show lower dollar-denominated returns (~9–10%), but when converted back to INR, returns improve due to rupee depreciation (historically averaging 3–4% annually vs. USD). This acts as a natural hedge, enhancing long-term INR gains.

Example: If USD appreciates from Rs 60 (in 2014) to Rs 83 (in 2024), that's a ~38% gain just from currency conversion—boosting your foreign investment returns even if global market CAGR is stable. Hence, diversifying globally in dollar-denominated assets not only reduces domestic risk but also benefits from currency tailwinds.

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Also read | China funds give up to 53% returns in a year: Should you look to invest?

TCS Angle: A Hidden Hurdle in Foreign Investing 

AspectDetails (AY 2025–26)
Annual LimitUSD 2,50,000 per individual under LRS
TCS ThresholdRs 10 lakh/year (raised from Rs7 lakh)
TCS Rate20% on amount above Rs10 lakh

Suppose you invest Rs 15 lakh abroad in a US ETF via LRS in FY 2025–26.

- Amount over threshold = Rs 15 lakh – Rs 10 lakh = Rs 5 lakh