homeeconomy NewsBlackrock's Larry Fink says India's piles of gold aren't helping the economy

Blackrock's Larry Fink says India's piles of gold aren't helping the economy

Blackrock CEO Larry Fink wants more people to invest bigger chunks of their surplus money in capital markets to build a bigger retirement corpus to budget for longer life expectancy. According to him, the world is facing a 'retirement crisis.' Blackrock has an interest in making this proposition. By Fink's own admission, more than half of Blackrock's assets (worth over $10 trillion) are investments in retirement plans.

By Sriram Iyer  Mar 27, 2024 3:38:49 PM IST (Updated)

4 Min Read

Indians love to own gold. It's valuable, less volatile over a long period of time, and is considered a safer bet in times of crisis like a pandemic or wars. However, Larry Fink, the Founder Chairman of Blackrock (the world's biggest asset manager), isn't very fond of the precious metal.

"The commodity (gold) has underperformed the Indian stock market, proving a subpar investment for individual investors. Nor has investing in gold helped the country’s economy," he said in his annual letter to shareholders.

"Compare investing in gold with, let’s say, investing in a new house. When you buy a home, that creates an economic multiplier effect because you need to furnish and repair the house. Maybe you have a family and fill the house with children. All that generates economic activity. Even when someone puts their money in a bank, there’s a multiplier effect because the bank can use that money to fund a mortgage. But gold? It just sits in a safe. It can be a good store of value, but gold doesn’t generate economic growth," he explained further.