India’s got over 2.5 lakh HNIs with $1M+ sitting around. 70% stays in fixed deposits and property. Paradox: the richest investors are the least diversified.
Been advising ultra-HNI families and family offices for a decade. HNI portfolio building in India is stuck in 1990 thinking. Equities = risky. Alternatives = confusing. International = money laundering. That’s why RedeFin built frameworks-because hand-waving kills wealth.
This walks through actual โน5 Crore+ portfolio mechanics in Indian tax and regulatory reality. Asset allocation, rebalancing, tax moves, alternatives. Not textbook stuff. 500+ relationships, 10 years of execution.
Why HNI portfolio strategy matters right now
HNI wealth grows 12.5% CAGR. But decisions in the next 24 months determine if you catch that wave or watch it pass.
The trap: HNIs historically had four levers-property, stocks, gold, FDs. Modest returns. Nifty did 10-12% CAGR over the past decade. Fixed deposits? 5-7%. Gold? Lumpy. Property? Illiquid, taxed to death.
Menu expanded. Private credit: target yields of 14-18%; net realised returns typically 10-14% after loss provisions. Real estate AIFs: top-quartile 16-20% IRR; median 12-16% IRR. Structured products: transparent now. International: not a luxury anymore-essential for INR hedging.
Yet HNIs in India allocate 15-25% to alternatives. Globally? 19-24% for HNIs generally; 30-40% for ultra-HNIs only. Gap’s nuanced. Risk and opportunity in one.
Three portfolios: โน5 Cr, โน10 Cr, โน25 Cr+
Start with asset allocation. Built three models from 500+ HNI families. Not gospel-taxes, timelines, family stuff varies. But these are the right benchmarks to start from.
| Asset Class |
โน5 Cr Portfolio |
โน10 Cr Portfolio |
โน25 Cr+ Portfolio |
| Equities (Indian) |
40% |
35% |
30% |
| Fixed Income |
20% |
15% |
10% |
| Alternatives (Private Credit, RE AIFs, Structured) |
20% |
30% |
40% |
| Gold |
10% |
10% |
8% |
| International (Equities & Bonds) |
5% |
5% |
7% |
| Cash & Equivalents |
5% |
5% |
5% |
The pattern
Bigger corpus = lower equity weight, higher alternatives. Two reasons. First, you’ve got enough capital for illiquid, high-return stuff. Second, at โน25 Cr, liquidity stops mattering. โน5 Cr portfolio is still building. โน25 Cr portfolio is squeezing returns.
Why equities shrink as you get richer
Counterintuitive. Larger portfolio = fewer stocks?
Yes. โน5 Cr portfolio generates โน25-30 L annual income after tax. Equities are the growth engine. โน25 Cr portfolio already makes โน1 Cr+ annual from fixed income and alternatives alone. Now the mission shifts: protect purchasing power, generate uncorrelated returns.
Private credit: target yields of 14-18%; net realised returns typically 10-14% after loss provisions; zero correlation to stocks or rates. Real estate AIFs: top-quartile 16-20% IRR; median 12-16% IRR; inflation hedge, tangible. Structured products: downside limits, equity upside. Not speculation. Capital allocation based on size and risk tolerance.
12.5%
HNI Wealth CAGR
10-12%
Nifty 50 10Y CAGR
10-14%
Private Credit Net Returns
12-16%
RE AIF IRR (Median)
Why push 40% alternatives at โน25 Cr+?
Real talk: Indian HNIs treat alternatives like a niche thing. Wrong.
Alternatives solve the core problem: equity market saturation. Want 18% IRR at โน25 Cr? Can’t do it 100% stocks. Nifty did 10-12% CAGR over 10 years. Need ballast.
Private credit AIFs: target yields of 14-18%; net realised returns typically 10-14% after loss provisions; by lending mid-market companies. Real estate AIFs: top-quartile 16-20% IRR; median 12-16% IRR; from better assets and access than retail. Structured products: bespoke risk-return for your tax bracket.
Hurdle? โน1 Cr minimums (market practice, not SEBI-mandated minimum-varies by fund). But if you’re โน5 Cr+ HNI, that’s your pass to institutional returns.
“The average HNI allocation to alternatives in India is 15-25%, compared to 19-24% globally for HNIs; 30-40% only for ultra-HNIs. That gap represents both risk management and genuine opportunity for deeper expertise.”
– Arvind Kalyan, Founder & CEO, RedeFin Capital
Asset-by-Asset Breakdown for โน5 Cr Portfolio
Equities (40% = โน2 Cr): Split into large-cap core (โน80 L), mid-cap growth (โน70 L), and small-cap alpha (โน50 L). This is not individual stock picking-it’s index plus manager selection. Large-cap core should be index-tracking to minimise fees. Mid-cap and small-cap can be via active managers with 3-5 year track records. Review quarterly; rebalance when allocations drift beyond 5%.
Fixed Income (20% = โน1 Cr): Government securities (40%), high-quality corporate bonds (35%), and inflation-linked bonds (25%). This is boring by design. The goal is stability and tax-efficient coupon income. Avoid duration risk; ladder maturities to 3-5 years on average. Expected yield: 6-7% pre-tax.
Alternatives (20% = โน1 Cr): At โน5 Cr, your alternatives bucket has โน1 Cr to deploy. Recommend: Private credit fund (โน40 L), real estate AIF (โน35 L), structured product (โน25 L). This diversifies return drivers and reduces single-manager risk. Expected blended return: 15-16% pre-tax.
Gold (10% = โน50 L): Not jewellery. Use SGBs (Sovereign Gold Bonds) for tax-deferred returns and annual coupon, or digital gold for liquidity. This is inflation hedge and crisis insurance. Rebalance only when allocation drifts above 12% or below 8%.
International (5% = โน25 L): Invest via GIFT City fund managers or direct US/UK equity exposure. This hedges INR devaluation risk and gives you access to global brands. Keep it simple: one global equity fund + one international bond fund.
Cash (5% = โน25 L): High-yield savings accounts or money market funds. This is rebalancing ammunition and emergency reserve. Yield: 6-7% post-tax.
Rebalancing: The Discipline That Matters
I’ve seen HNI portfolios grow 3x over a decade, only to collapse because they were never rebalanced. A โน5 Cr equity portfolio that delivered 15% returns becomes 45% of your total portfolio in Year 2. Now you’re massively overexposed. Risk of drawdown increases. Returns become lumpy.
Rebalance annually on a fixed date (I recommend January 31st for tax efficiency). Use a 5% drift tolerance: if any allocation moves beyond ยฑ5% of target, fine-tune back. For example:
If equities were allocated 40% (โน2 Cr) and market returns push them to 45% (โน2.25 Cr) of a โน5 Cr portfolio, fine-tune. Sell โน25 L in equities, buy โน25 L in underweighted alternatives or fixed income.
This discipline does two things: it forces you to sell high and buy low, and it keeps risk profile stable. Over 20 years, disciplined rebalancing typically outperforms buy-and-hold by 0.5-1.5% annually in blended HNI portfolios.
Tax-Efficient Structuring for HNI Portfolios
Taxation is not an afterthought-it’s structural. An HNI paying 42% marginal tax (income + surtax) needs to think differently about return attribution.
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG): Equities held 12+ months enjoy 10% tax (no indexation benefit). Debt instruments held 36+ months get 20% with indexation. Real estate held 24+ months gets 20% with indexation. For a โน5 Cr HNI, LTCG optimisation across asset classes can save โน20-50 L over 5 years.
Section 54EC: If you’ve made a long-term capital gain on real estate, reinvest in specific bonds (REC, NHAI, NABARD) within 6 months to defer tax entirely. For many HNIs, this is the most efficient channel to park post-sale proceeds.
AIF Structuring: Investing via Category III AIFs (private equity/hedge funds) means you defer gains until the fund exits. If the fund holds assets 24+ months, you get LTCG treatment on your returns. This is superior to equities from a tax perspective, especially at higher corpuses.
Gold Structuring: Hold via SGBs rather than physical gold or ETFs. SGB coupons (2.5% annually) are taxed as income but the coupon rate is attractive. On maturity, sale is tax-free. Over 8 years, this saves 35-40% vs. Physical gold holding.
Tax-Efficient Moves for HNI Portfolios
- Use LTCG tax advantage to hold equities and real estate long-term; avoid short-term churning.
- Deploy Section 54EC for capital gain deferral on real estate sales.
- Structure alternatives via AIFs to defer and improve gains.
- Use SGBs for gold to capture coupon and avoid wealth tax.
- Review your portfolio’s tax efficiency annually; rebalance with tax-loss harvesting in mind.
- Avoid mutual funds in your core equity allocation if you’re trading frequently; direct stocks or index funds are more tax-efficient for long holds.
International Diversification: Beyond INR Risk
The rupee has depreciated approximately 24% against the US dollar over the past decade (โน67/$ in 2016 to ~โน83/$ in 2026). A โน1 Cr investment in US equities in 2015 would benefit from this currency tailwind. Currency is a return driver.
For HNIs with โน5 Cr+, I recommend 5-7% allocation to international assets. This serves three purposes: currency diversification, access to global brands (FAANG, luxury goods, healthcare), and portfolio hedging during INR crises.
Use GIFT City funds or direct US/UK platforms for ease. Expected 10-year return: 8-10% USD terms, which could translate to 12-15% INR terms if rupee depreciates as history suggests.
Private Credit: The Emerging Core for HNI Portfolios
Private credit is no longer alternative. It’s core. And here’s why.
The average private credit fund in India targets yields of 14-18% pre-tax; net realised returns typically 10-14% after loss provisions by lending to mid-market companies that struggle to access bank credit. These are not startups or distressed firms-they’re profitable, growing businesses needing โน10-100 Cr loans for expansion or acquisition.
For an HNI, this offers three advantages:
1. Return visibility: Unlike equities, private credit returns are relatively stable. Loans have fixed coupon rates and covenants. If underlying companies are sound, you know what you’re earning.
2. Downside protection: Debt holders are senior in bankruptcy. If a portfolio company struggles, you recover 60-80% of investment before equity holders get zero.
3. Inflation hedging: Many private credit structures have floating-rate components linked to base rate. As RBI tightens, your returns rise proportionally.
The trade-off: illiquidity. Private credit is locked for 4-5 years minimum. This is not for money you’ll need in the next 2 years. But for a โน5 Cr HNI with 20-year horizon, allocating โน40-50 L to private credit is prudent.
Real Estate AIFs: When Public Real Estate Doesn’t Work
Real estate is a third of HNI wealth in India. But most of that is personal residential property or small commercial holdings. What’s missing is institutional-grade real estate investment.
RE AIFs-SEBI-registered funds that pool capital to buy and manage commercial real estate-have become sophisticated. Top-quartile funds are delivering 16-20% IRR; median funds 12-16% IRR by buying leased properties, optimising, and selling within 5-7 years.
For a โน5 Cr HNI, investing โน30-50 L in a real estate AIF makes sense because:
1. You get diversification across multiple properties and geographies.
2. Professional asset managers handle leasing, maintenance, and capital recycling.
3. Returns are tax-efficient under AIF rules.
4. Entry minimums (usually โน1 Cr per fund) are accessible.
The risk: fund manager quality. Not all RE AIFs are equal. Examine track record, property management, tenant credit, and exit strategy before committing.
The Role of Structured Products
Structured products-notes that combine equity upside with capital protection-have become mainstream for HNI portfolios.
Example: A 5-year structured product that gives you 80% participation in Nifty 50 upside, with 100% principal protection at maturity. You get asymmetric risk-return: capped downside, reasonable upside, and intermediate coupons.
For HNIs who find pure equities too volatile but fixed income too boring, structures offer middle ground. They’re also useful during high-valuation markets (like now) when you want to cap your equity exposure but maintain exposure.
Use carefully: structure complexity is high. Fees are buried. Always understand the issuer’s credit risk and the product’s liquidity.
Monitoring and Reviewing Your โน5 Cr+ Portfolio
A portfolio is not built; it’s maintained. Here’s the review discipline:
Monthly: Check performance dashboards. No action required, just awareness.
Quarterly: Review individual manager performance (equities, alternatives, fixed income). Are they in top quartile vs. Peers? If consistently bottom quartile for 12+ months, replace.
Semi-annually: Review allocations vs. Targets. If drift beyond 5%, rebalance.
Annually (January): Full portfolio review. Tax optimisation. Fee audit. Strategy reset if life circumstances change.
Every 3-5 years: Reassess asset allocation strategy. As your corpus grows or goals shift, allocation targets may need adjustment.
Key Insight
The HNIs who build generational wealth are not the ones who time markets or chase hot stocks. They’re the ones who build a strategy, commit to it, rebalance disciplined, and let compounding work. Over 20 years, this beats 80% of active traders.
Different asset classes use different return metrics, making comparison difficult. Equities report total return. Bonds report yield-to-maturity. Real estate reports IRR. Private credit reports blended returns.
To compare apples to apples, use a common denominator: expected 10-year annualised return after tax and fees.
Nifty 50: 10-12% pre-tax, 6-7% after 30% average tax.
Fixed Income: 6-7% pre-tax, 4-4.5% after 30% average tax.
Gold (SGBs): 5-6% pre-tax (via coupon), 3-3.5% after tax.
Private Credit: 14-18% target yields; 10-14% net realised pre-tax, 7-10% after 30% average tax.
Real Estate AIFs: Median 12-16% IRR; top-quartile 16-20% IRR; 8-13% after tax depending on quartile.
International Equities: 8-10% USD, 12-15% INR (currency included).
Now you can build a blended portfolio target. A 40/20/20/10/5/5 allocation should deliver 9-11% after-tax returns, depending on manager selection and market conditions.
This is a structural shift, not a fad. Institutional investors globally have moved from 10-15% alternatives allocation to 30-40%. Ultra-HNIs in India are following, albeit 5-7 years behind; general HNI population remains at 15-25%.
Why? Because alternatives fill a gap. Public equity markets are mature and priced for perfection. Real estate is illiquid and concentrated. Fixed income yields are compressed. Alternatives offer return premium with downside control.
For HNIs, this shift is your moment. The best private credit funds and real estate AIFs are raising capital now and have strong track records. In 5 years, as more capital chases these opportunities, returns will compress. Lock in returns now.
I could spend 5,000 words on private credit alone. For now, three essentials:
1. Manager selection is paramount. The difference between a top-quartile and median private credit fund is 300-400 bps annually. Spend time on due diligence.
2. Concentration risk is real. If 30% of a fund’s portfolio is lent to one company and that company defaults, your IRR falls from 16% to 10% overnight. Diversification within the fund matters.
3. Illiquidity is a feature, not a bug. You can’t withdraw in Year 2. This means the fund can take illiquidity risk (better assets, better pricing) that public markets can’t. This drives the return premium.
AIFs come in three categories. Understanding them is critical for HNI allocation:
Category I (Venture Capital, PE, Infrastructure): โน1 Cr minimum (market practice). Lower risk profile. Returns 15-20% IRR. 5-7 year lock-in. Most suitable for core HNI allocation.
Category II (Private Credit, Real Estate, Debt): โน1 Cr minimum (market practice). Medium risk. Returns 12-18% (private credit and real estate vary; see prior sections). 3-5 year lock-in. Good for income-focused HNIs.
Category III (Hedge Funds, Derivatives): โน25 L minimum. Higher risk, higher return. 20-30% IRR possible but also drawdowns. Only for experienced investors with high risk appetite.
For a typical โน5 Cr HNI, allocate to Category I and II funds only. Avoid Category III unless you have specific conviction.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I invest in real estate directly or via RE AIFs?
Direct real estate requires capital (โน50 L+), active management (tenant sourcing, maintenance, tenant disputes), and liquidity constraints (3-5 year exit). RE AIFs require smaller capital (โน1 Cr pooled), passive management, and professional handling. For a busy HNI, AIFs are superior. However, if you enjoy property management and have specific local market expertise, direct real estate can work. Recommendation: 60% AIF, 40% direct for a โน5 Cr HNI.
Is 5% international allocation enough?
For currency and geographic diversification, 5-7% is minimum. I’d recommend 5-10% depending on your INR exposure in your business. If your business generates revenue in INR, a 7-10% international allocation hedges currency risk. If you’re already INR-heavy operationally, 5% is sufficient.
How often should I review my portfolio?
Monthly dashboards (no action), quarterly performance reviews (action if bottom quartile), semi-annual rebalancing checks, annual full review. Don’t review daily or weekly-it tempts overtrading. Over 20 years, monthly monitoring and annual action beats constant tinkering.
What if my risk appetite is lower than these allocations suggest?
Reduce equities and alternatives proportionally. Move to 30% equities, 25% fixed income, 15% alternatives, 15% gold, 10% international, 5% cash. Expected return drops to 7-8%, but volatility is significantly lower. Your preference on risk-return trade-off is personal; these models are baselines.
Should I invest via direct stocks or funds?
For core large-cap (40% of equity allocation), use index funds to minimise fees. For mid-cap and small-cap (10% of equity allocation), use active funds with 3-5 year track records. Avoid direct stock picking unless it’s your expertise-most HNIs underperform indices. Fees and taxes kill returns.
How do I start if I have โน1-2 Cr only?
Start with the โน5 Cr model but with smaller cheques. Equities: โน40 L. Fixed income: โน20 L. Alternatives: โน15 L (wait until you hit โน5 Cr for AIF minimum cheques; until then, use structured products or debt funds). Gold: โน10 L. International: โน5 L. Cash: โน10 L. Upgrade to AIF allocation as you accumulate.
This is a guided introduction to HNI portfolio construction. If you’re building a โน5 Cr+ portfolio, reach out to RedeFin Capital’s Moonshot (Wealth Management) vertical. We work with 200+ HNI families on personalised allocation strategies, tax optimisation, and multi-generational wealth planning.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalised investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Please consult a registered investment adviser before making investment decisions.
Sources & References
- Knight Frank, Wealth Report, 2025
- Knight Frank Wealth Report, 2025
- NSE, Historical Data, 2025
- PwC/Lighthouse Canton, India Private Credit Report, 2026
- CRISIL AIF Benchmark, 2025
- Capgemini World Wealth Report, 2025