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NSE EGRs to commence trading from May 18. Here’s what gold investors should know
The exchange said its technology infrastructure and liquidity framework are expected to make gold investing more transparent, secure, and easily accessible for investors across the country.
According to NSE, EGRs could also help bring gold closer into the mainstream capital markets ecosystem, support financial inclusion, and reduce reliance on fragmented pricing systems that currently dominate the physical gold market.
What is a gold EGR?
An Electronic Gold Receipt is a digital representation of ownership of physical gold. Each EGR corresponds to a fixed quantity of gold stored in a regulated vault under a framework supervised by the Securities and Exchange Board of India.Similar to shares or other securities, ownership of gold is reflected directly in an investor’s Demat account. The gold backing these receipts is certified, standardised, and held by licensed vault managers within a regulated ecosystem involving exchanges, clearing corporations, and depositories.
One of the major features of EGRs is flexibility in investment size. Investors do not need to purchase large quantities of gold to participate. The receipts are available in multiple denominations—including 1 kilogram, 100 grams, 10 grams, 1 gram, and even 100 milligrams—allowing participation across different investor categories.
The framework also addresses concerns around purity, which has traditionally been a key issue in physical gold purchases. EGRs are available in internationally recognised standards of 999 purity, regarded as the highest level of 24-karat gold purity, as well as 995 purity. Since the gold is certified and guaranteed, investors are protected from quality-related uncertainties that can arise in the physical market.
The broader objective of the EGR is to build a transparent and regulated gold trading ecosystem in India, while gradually positioning the country as a global benchmark setter for gold prices. The platform is designed to bring retail investors, jewellers, bullion traders and refiners into a single ecosystem, helping create more uniform and market-driven pricing instead of fragmented city-specific rates.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
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