New era of investment in gold

Gold import

By Vikash Agarwal

Budget 2015 first proposed Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme – an investment scheme where investors could buy gold in the form of Gold Bonds from Government of India. Recently, cabinet has given its approval for the same and detail norms are likely to be out in the near future.

 

Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme – Some of the salient features of this scheme are-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                 As of today you can invest in gold through any of the following products. Gold ETF is the most cost effective way to invest in gold. Similarly, gold mutual funds invests in gold ETFs and is more expensive than ETFs. Someone can also invest in gold futures on exchanges. Jeweler’s “investment schemes” are another product in which one can pay monthly installments and finally get jewelery at the time of maturity. The Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme is more efficient than all these products. Because- in case of gold ETFs and mutual funds, you pay fund manager (1 to 2 per cent every year) to manage the funds while in case of Gold Bonds you would earn interest. So we expect money from these two products to move to Gold Bonds. Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme would suit investors who invest in gold for the purpose of diversification of investment portfolio (in form of gold ETFs or mutual funds). An investor can gain in two ways – one, you can play on the price of gold and second you get interest on your deposits.

 

Gold Deposit Scheme

 

Gold Deposit Scheme was first announced by Arun Jaitely in his Budget 2015 speech. The broad idea is to encourage everyone to deposit their idle gold in banks, which in turn can be loaned to jewellers or used for other useful purpose. This would be win-win for all the participants as the depositor would be paid interest, jewellers can directly get gold loaned from banks and India can save a lot of foreign reserves which it spends in importing gold.

 

How Gold Deposit Scheme Works?

 

Depositors would first need to take their gold to the approved collection centres, which would verify the purity and take deposit of the gold. After the consent of the customer, the collection centres would send the gold to refineries to melt it. Collection centers would issue certificate for the gold deposited which would be taken to bank to open Gold Savings Account, which would be denominated in grams of gold. The refineries can store the gold on behalf of banks for mutually decided fee. There would be no charge to customers for this. Jewelers can open Gold Metal Loan Account, denominated in grams of gold with the bank and the bank would pay interest to depositors depending on duration of deposit while the jewellers  would pay interest to the bank for borrowing.

 

Salient Features

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(The writer is an investment consultant based in Rourkela)

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