For investors in India to benefit, there is an option to either bet on gold mining funds or the metal itself. “When a person looks at the stocks of gold mining companies, they are only diversifying their equity portfolio. It’s not a separate asset class. Gold, a hedge against inflation and equities, is a different instrument (commodity),” said Lakshmi Iyer, chief investment officer (debt) & head of products at Kotak Mutual Fund.
There are three international funds that invest in stocks of gold mining companies. In the past year, DSP BlackRock World Mining Fund, which also invests in stock stocks of gold mining companies, gave -25.99 per cent returns. DSP BlackRock World Gold Fund, too, is in the negative territory with -27.14 per cent returns. One-year performance of Kotak World Gold Fund is -34.04 per cent. Compared to these, returns from investment in gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are down -14.50 per cent. Clearly, the mining companies are falling much faster in a falling regime. Similarly, in a rising market, they do much better. For example, in 2008 when gold ETFs gave 50–60 per cent returns, international gold mining funds’ returns were in three digits.
Agrees Vidya Bala, head of mutual fund research at Fundsindia. “When a person invests in gold, he is exposed to only one risk, related to the price of the metal. When he invests in a mining company, there is additional risk related to the stock price movement,” she says.
She adds that although gold mining companies have diversified, their diversification is mostly into mining other metals. And, world over, commodities that are mined are in a downtrend.
The taxation of both categories are also the same. They are taxed as debt. This means if you sell within one year, the gains are clubbed with the income and taxed according to the slab. To reduce the tax outgo, an investor needs to hold it for three years, after which he will need to pay long-term capital gains tax. This is calculated flat at 10 per cent of the gains or 20 per cent with indexation benefit.
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