Gold loans are thriving in India
Hello, I am Priyanka Salve, writing to you from Singapore.
Welcome to the latest edition of Inside India — your one-stop destination for stories and developments from the world’s fastest growing large economy.
This week, I unpack what’s driving the rapid surge in gold‑loan growth in the world’s second‑largest bullion market. Loans against gold are a multibillion‑dollar industry in India, powered by households holding $5 trillion in bullion.
Enjoy!
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The big story
Indian households are sitting on a mountain of gold.
They own more than 34,000 tons of the yellow metal, as per a Morgan Stanley report from October last year, with Kotak Mahindra Bank pegging its value at about $5 trillion.
That vast reserve is now powering one of the fastest-growing lending segments in India. As other forms of consumer credit slow, gold loans have surged, driven by tighter banking rules for unsecured loans, a sharp rally in global gold prices, improved access, and perhaps a rising financial stress among households.
While about 90% of Indian households’ hoardings are still lying idle, according to Shripad Jadhav, business head of gold loans at Kotak Mahindra Bank, gold-backed lending is beginning to reshape India’s retail credit landscape, even drawing some global investors.
Global private equity firm Bain Capital has made a bold bet on loans against gold, with plans to acquire up to 41.7% stake in Manappuram Finance, India’s second‑largest gold loan provider.
The deal, approved by the Reserve Bank of India last month, signals how international investors see opportunity in the country’s most traditional but underutilized asset.
In December last year, Japanese financial behemoth MUFG said it was acquiring a 20% stake in Indian shadow banking firm Shriram Finance, which plans to double down on loans against gold.
RBI data shows gold loans more than doubled in one year, rising to 4 trillion rupees ($43.3 billion) in January from 1.75 trillion rupees a year earlier. Gold-backed lending is now the largest retail loan segment in the country after home and vehicle loans, as well as the fastest-growing retail credit category.
The actual size of gold loans in India is estimated to be 14 trillion rupees, said Yan Wang, chief emerging market strategist at Canadian firm Alpine Macro, adding that the RBI data only captures personal gold loans from certain commercial banks.
Non-banking financial companies, or NBFCs, account for 45%–50% of gold loan volume, according to a Macquarie report from last month — which is not captured by the RBI.
Gold rush
As India’s central bank tightened the rules around unsecured lending in late 2023, it cut off access to this line of credit for many small and private business borrowers, Hanna Luchnikava-Schorsch, head of Asia-Pacific economics at S&P Global Market Intelligence, told me.
“Personal loans growth has slowed from an average of 30% in six months to December 2023 to…
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