Investing just in Indian stocks, bonds, or mutual funds means your portfolio is tied quite closely to India’s economy, rupee value, politics, and performance cycles. When things go well domestically, that can work in your favour, but when India or even emerging markets broadly suffer setbacks, your investments may take heavy hits.
How International Mutual Funds Can Help Diversify Your Portfolio
Here are the ways international mutual funds can benefit you:
Global Exposure
International mutual funds, such as US mutual funds, allow you to own parts of companies overseas—ones that do not exist in India or are underrepresented.
Global funds provide access to sectors such as US tech, European luxury, or Latin American consumer goods.
When these economies grow or outperform, your portfolio benefits independently of how Indian markets move. Recent data shows many Indian investors saw international funds outperform domestic ones in periods when Indian indices lagged.
Currency Advantage
You get exposure to foreign currencies automatically when you invest in funds like NASDAQ mutual funds. If the rupee weakens versus the dollar, euro, or yen, your returns in rupee terms increase beyond just the asset gain.
Conversely, if the rupee strengthens, that works against you. But over recent years, rupee depreciation has added to returns from international funds.
Risk Mitigation
Because not all risks are global, investing abroad spreads your exposure: political risk, regulatory risk, and local economic slowdown in India will hurt domestic-only portfolios more.
When the Indian market undergoes downturns, international holdings may rally or stay stable, reducing overall portfolio volatility.
Theme & Industry Access
Some industries or themes are weakly represented or absent in India: say, advanced semiconductors, biotech innovation, global luxury, or ESG-oriented industries.
International mutual funds often include these themes, giving you exposure to innovation and trends that Indian-only portfolios miss. This adds diversity in what drives returns.
Better Valuations
At times, Indian markets look “hot”, valuation multiples high, expectations baked in. It becomes expensive to find undervalued growth domestically. Foreign markets may offer better value in sectors or entire regions trading at more reasonable P/E multiples.
International funds allow shifting part of the portfolio to markets where valuations look safer or more attractive. Analysts note this especially during times when Indian large-cap or midcap valuations run up.
Expert Management
Global markets bring complexity, including currency risk, regulatory risk, and geopolitical factors. Active managers or fund houses offering international mutual funds often have teams specialised in analysing global macro trends, sector outlooks, foreign companies, and currencies.
This professional oversight helps in reducing blind spots that individual investors (in India) may have when trying to pick foreign assets themselves.
Taxation
For Indian investors, these mutual funds, whether directly investing in foreign equities or via Fund of Funds (FoFs), are classified as non-equity capital assets under current tax rules. This means they are taxed similarly to debt funds and treated as per the slab rate of an individual. Unlike domestic equity funds, these do not qualify for the ₹1.25 lakh LTCG exemption under Section 112A.
Conclusion
International mutual funds can add real diversification benefits to your portfolio, especially if you are currently heavily exposed to India-centric risks. They offer access to different economic cycles, sectors not well represented in India, and currency exposure, which can work in your favour.
That said, they are not free lunches. Currency risk, regulatory complexity, fees, potential overlap, and foreign economic risk all mean that international exposure involves trade-offs. For many Indian investors, modest exposure (say 5-20%) may offer a good balance of benefits and risks, provided they have a long enough time horizon and accept some volatility.