Beyond Fixed Deposits: How Indians Are Redefining Financial Security

5

Bhopal: Indian households are steadily moving away from traditional fixed deposits (FDs) as their preferred savings instrument, with fresh data from RBI and mutual fund industry showing a clear shift towards equities, mutual funds, stocks, and alternative assets in 2025–26.

The trend, visible across urban and semi-urban middle-class families, has accelerated after successive repo rate cuts (total 125 bps in 2025) brought FD rates down to 6–7% for most tenures, while post-tax real returns turned negative or near-zero in an environment of 4–5% retail inflation.

Key Numbers That Tell the Story

  • Bank FD growth slowed sharply Aggregate term deposits with scheduled commercial banks grew only 4.8% YoY in December 2025 lowest in 8 quarters compared to 12–15% annual growth seen in 2022–24.
  • Mutual fund folios & SIPs explode Total mutual fund folios crossed 23 crore (December 2025), up 28% YoY. Monthly SIP inflows hit record ₹25,440 crore in December 2025- 38% higher than December 2024. Equity mutual fund AUM surged 42% YoY to ₹32.8 lakh crore.
  • Direct equity participation jumps Demat accounts reached 17.8 crore (January 2026), adding 3.1 crore new accounts in 2025 alone. Average daily cash segment turnover on NSE rose 31% YoY.
  • Small savings & PPF inflows flat or declining Net collections under Public Provident Fund (PPF) and Sukanya Samriddhi grew only 3.1% in FY25- lowest in a decade.

Why Households Are Moving Away From FDs

  1. Negative real returns Post-tax FD returns (6.0–6.5% for most retail depositors) are now below CPI inflation (4.2–5.1% range in late 2025), eroding purchasing power.
  2. Attractive alternatives
    • Equity mutual funds (large-cap & flexi-cap categories) delivered 18–24% CAGR over 5 years.
    • Direct stocks (Nifty 50) returned ~15–17% annually.
    • Even debt funds & hybrid funds outperformed bank FDs after tax.
  3. Behavioural shift among younger households Millennials and Gen-Z (25–40 age group) now form ~62% of new SIP folios and show higher risk appetite. Financial literacy campaigns, UPI-linked mutual fund platforms, and easy demat account opening have lowered entry barriers.
  4. Tax efficiency Long-term capital gains tax on equity (12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh) remains far more favourable than interest income taxed at slab rate (up to 30% + surcharge).

Changing Portfolio Allocation Patterns

Asset ClassShare in Household
Financial Savings (2022)
Share (2025-end est.)Change
Bank Deposits (FD+RDA)58%46%–12 %
Mutual Funds (Equity + Debt)11%19%+8 %
Direct Equity / Stocks9%15%+6 %
Small Savings (PPF, NSC, SSY)14%12%–2 %
Gold & Sovereign Gold Bonds8%8%stable

Source: RBI Household Financial Savings Report, AMFI, CDSL, internal estimates

Expert Views

  • RBI Bulletin (Jan 2026): Declining real returns on deposits and rising awareness of capital market opportunities are driving portfolio rebalancing among households.
  • AMFI CEO N. S. Venkatesh: The shift is structural, not cyclical. SIP culture has now reached Tier-2 & Tier-3 cities.
  • Chief Economic Advisor V. Anantha Nageswaran: “Higher equity participation improves household wealth creation and supports deeper domestic capital markets.

Risks & the Road Ahead

While the move away from FDs is positive for long-term wealth creation, experts caution about:

  • Increased volatility exposure for retail investors
  • Need for better financial education to prevent mis-selling
  • Potential liquidity pressure on banks if deposit growth continues to lag

Still, the direction is clear: Indian households are gradually accepting market risk in exchange for higher expected returns a quiet but powerful structural change in the country’s financial savings behaviour.

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.