The Race — 2005 to 2025 (₹1 Lakh Invested, Indexed to 100)
The chart below animates the actual year-by-year journey of ₹1,00,000 invested across three asset classes and inflation. Watch how Gold surges in crises, Equity crashes hard and recovers, and Real Estate moves in a slow steady line. All values indexed — base 100 = ₹1 lakh in 2005.
Year-by-Year: The Full Scorecard
Every data point below is sourced from primary institutional publications. Gold prices from RBI Handbook / MCX. Nifty 50 year-end levels from NSE India. Real estate index estimated from NHB RESIDEX 7.7% national average CAGR. Inflation index from MoSPI CPI data.
| Year | Gold (₹/10g) | Gold Idx | Nifty 50 | Nifty Idx | RE Idx | Infl Idx |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | ₹7,000 | 100 | 2,100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| 2006 | ₹8,400 | 120 | 3,250 | 155 | 108 | 107 |
| 2007 | ₹9,428 | 135 | 5,400 | 257 | 116 | 114 |
| 2008 | ₹12,361 | 177 | 2,960 | 141 | 125 | 122 |
| 2009 | ₹15,417 | 220 | 5,200 | 248 | 135 | 131 |
| 2010 | ₹18,448 | 264 | 6,135 | 292 | 145 | 141 |
| 2011 | ₹24,130 | 345 | 4,624 | 220 | 156 | 151 |
| 2012 | ₹30,864 | 441 | 5,905 | 281 | 168 | 162 |
| 2013 | ₹29,667 | 424 | 6,304 | 300 | 181 | 175 |
| 2014 | ₹28,006 | 400 | 8,183 | 390 | 195 | 188 |
| 2015 | ₹26,344 | 376 | 7,946 | 378 | 210 | 200 |
| 2016 | ₹28,623 | 409 | 8,186 | 390 | 226 | 213 |
| 2017 | ₹28,991 | 414 | 10,531 | 501 | 244 | 227 |
| 2018 | ₹31,438 | 449 | 10,863 | 517 | 262 | 242 |
| 2019 | ₹35,220 | 503 | 12,168 | 579 | 283 | 258 |
| 2020 | ₹48,651 | 695 | 13,982 | 666 | 304 | 275 |
| 2021 | ₹46,000 | 657 | 17,354 | 826 | 328 | 293 |
| 2022 | ₹51,000 | 729 | 18,105 | 862 | 353 | 313 |
| 2023 | ₹59,000 | 843 | 19,426 | 925 | 380 | 333 |
| 2024 | ₹72,000 | 1,029 | 23,644 | 1,126 | 409 | 355 |
| 2025 | ₹1,10,000 | 1,571 | 23,500 | 1,119 | 441 | 352 |
Why Each Asset Performed the Way It Did
── GOLD: THE RUPEE DEPRECIATION PLAY
India is the world's second-largest gold consumer, and gold prices in rupees are driven by two variables: the global USD gold price and the USD/INR exchange rate. The rupee has depreciated from ~₹44/$ in 2005 to ~₹86/$ in 2025 — a 49% depreciation. This alone adds structural returns to gold in INR terms, even when the global price is flat.
On top of this, the global gold price in USD rose from ~$435/oz in 2005 to ~$2,600/oz in 2025 — a 5.9× increase driven by central bank buying (India's RBI added 72.6 tonnes in FY2024 alone), geopolitical risk, and falling real interest rates globally. Result: gold in INR went from ₹7,000 to ₹1,10,000 per 10 grams — a 15.7× return and 14.8% CAGR.
Gold's fatal flaw: it generates zero income. No dividend. No rental yield. And it had a brutal 6-year flat period from 2012–2019 (barely 3% CAGR) while equity delivered 15.8% CAGR in the same window. Timing matters enormously for gold — more than for any other asset class.
── EQUITY: THE LONG-TERM COMPOUNDER
The Nifty 50 moved from ~2,100 in 2005 to ~23,500 in 2025 — an 11.2× price return, or 12.8% CAGR. The Nifty 50 TRI (including dividends reinvested) delivered approximately 12.9–13.5% CAGR. India's nominal GDP growth of ~11% annually (real 6.5–7% + inflation 4–5%) was the structural foundation for corporate earnings growth.
The path was violent. Four major crashes: −55% (2008), −28% (2011), −23% (2015–16), −38% (March 2020). Each recovery took 18–36 months. Every crash looked permanent in the moment. None were. The investor who held through all four crashes turned ₹1 lakh into ₹11.3 lakh. The one who sold at the 2008 bottom and sat in cash for 2 years turned ₹1 lakh into roughly ₹4 lakh.
Equity's structural advantage over the other two assets is three-fold: it is the most liquid (T+1 settlement), has the lowest transaction costs (zero for index ETFs), and the lowest minimum entry amount (₹500 via SIP).
── REAL ESTATE: THE PERCEPTION VS REALITY GAP
Real estate at 7.7% CAGR nationally barely beats inflation. After deducting stamp duty (5–7%), registration fees, broker commissions (1–2%), maintenance, property tax, and vacancy periods, the all-cost-adjusted real return is closer to 1–3% annually — the worst risk-adjusted return of any asset class studied here.
The 2013–2019 period was particularly damaging for residential real estate investors. After the 2007–2012 boom, the NHB RESIDEX showed effectively zero real appreciation in most cities for 6 years. RERA (2016), Demonetisation (2016), and the NBFC crisis (2018) compounded the stagnation. Many investors who bought in 2012–2014 at peak valuations are only now recovering their nominal capital.
The wealth illusion in Indian real estate is driven almost entirely by leverage. A ₹50 lakh property purchased with a ₹10 lakh down payment that appreciates to ₹70 lakh looks like a 5× return on equity — but is only a 40% return on the total property price, achieved over 8 years at 4.3% CAGR. Strip away leverage, and real estate underperforms both gold and equity on every 20-year timeframe.
Head-to-Head: Every Parameter That Matters
| Parameter | 🟡 Gold | 🟢 Equity | 🟠 Real Estate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20-Yr Nominal CAGR | 14.8% | ~12.9% (TRI) | 7.7% |
| Real CAGR (after 6.5% CPI) | +7.8% | +6.0% | +1.1% |
| ₹1L → Value in 20 Years | ₹15.7 Lakh | ₹11.3 Lakh | ₹4.4 Lakh |
| Generates Income? | No (zero yield) | Yes (dividends) | Yes (rent 1.5–3%) |
| Liquidity | High (same day) | Very High (T+1) | Very Low (months) |
| Minimum Entry | ₹1 (digital gold) | ₹500 (SIP/ETF) | ₹20–50 Lakh+ |
| Transaction Costs | 1–3% | ~0% (ETF) | 7–10% (all-in) |
| Worst Single Year | −5% (2015) | −52% (2008) | ~−3% (2016) |
| Best 5-Year Window | 2019–24: +25% CAGR | 2014–19: +14% CAGR | 2005–10: ~10% CAGR |
| Inflation Hedge? | Yes (structural) | Yes (long-term) | Barely (≈ inflation) |
| Storage/Maintenance Cost | Locker fees | Zero | Annual maintenance |
| LTCG Tax (Post-2024) | 12.5% | 12.5% | 12.5% (indexed) |
Returns Are Half the Story — Risk Is the Other Half
A 14.8% CAGR in Gold sounds extraordinary — but includes a 6-year flat period. Equity's 12.9% came with 4 crashes of 23–55%. Real estate's 7.7% came with a 7-year stagnation and near-zero real appreciation nationally from 2013–2019. The asset that delivered the best return over 20 years also had the most concentrated, event-driven performance.
Three Uncomfortable Truths from 20 Years of Data
Truth 1: Real estate is not the wealth creator most Indians believe. At 7.7% CAGR nationally — barely above 6.5% inflation — it is the weakest major asset class over 20 years. The perception of real estate wealth is driven by leverage and survivor bias. People remember the plots that 10×'d in 5 years, not the ones that stagnated for a decade in tier-2 cities.
Truth 2: Gold is a legitimate 20-year inflation hedge with extraordinary data. But it is not a steady compounder — it moves in violent multi-year cycles. Six years of flat performance (2013–2019) followed by a 3× surge in 6 years (2019–2025). Gold rewards patience and is best used as a portfolio stabiliser (10–15% allocation) rather than a standalone wealth-building vehicle.
Truth 3: Equity is the most powerful long-term compounder — but demands emotional discipline that most investors lack. You had to hold through four major crashes to earn the 12.9% TRI CAGR. The investors who sold at the 2008 bottom and sat in cash, or the ones who stopped SIPs during COVID, systematically destroyed the very returns that made equity the second-best 20-year performer.
Every Number Is Traceable to a Primary Source
- → NSE India / niftyindices.com — Nifty 50 price index and Total Return Index (TRI) historical data
- → RBI Handbook of Statistics on the Indian Economy — Gold price series (annual average, Mumbai market), CPI inflation, bank FD rates
- → MCX India — Cross-verification of 2024–25 gold spot price
- → NHB RESIDEX (National Housing Bank) — India's only official residential property price index, covering 50 cities
- → MoSPI (Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation) — Consumer Price Index (CPI) annual data
- → RBI Annual Report FY2024 — Central bank gold reserves and purchases
- → Finance Act 2024 — Long-term capital gains tax rates for all three asset classes