Global Diversification Can’t Be an Afterthought Anymore

Ankita Pathak on 21 Jan 2026
sparklesAI Summary

Indian High-Net-Worth Individuals must globalize their investment portfolios to align with increasingly global lifestyles and avoid domestic financial limitations.

Key Takeaways

  • The Reserve Bank of India's Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) limit of USD 250,000 per PAN per year can prove inadequate, creating regulatory hurdles for legitimate international transfers crucial for global living.
  • Indian investors exhibit the world's highest home country bias, allocating nearly 100% domestically despite India being just 3% of global market cap and missing vast international opportunities, including innovation-driven sectors.
  • Building a truly diversified dollar-denominated portfolio proactively provides crucial choice, financial flexibility, and peace of mind to support a future that is global in every aspect.
Global Diversification Can’t Be an Afterthought Anymore

There’s a silent shift happening in the lives of India’s High Net-worth Individuals (HNIs), one that goes far beyond asset allocation models or tactical investing bets. It’s the lived reality of a global lifestyle. Whether it’s a child’s admission into an Ivy League college, long-term medical care abroad, securing a second home overseas, or applying for Golden or EB5 visas, HNIs today are planning, living, and retiring across borders.

Yet, even as lives globalise, money often doesn’t move with the same freedom.

Under the Reserve Bank of India’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), Indian citizens are legally allowed to remit up to USD 250,000 per PAN per year. That may sound generous, but in real-life scenarios, it can quickly prove inadequate.

Picture this: At 50, you’re diagnosed with a rare neurodegenerative condition. By 55, you’re wheelchair-bound. The best treatment is in New York and unexpectedly, life starts feeling better there. The suburbs are mobility-friendly, the care is world-class, and for once, you can visit a mall alone without needing a caregiver or being shadowed by house staff. You’ve been flying down twice a year for treatments, but now you’re considering a longer stay, perhaps six months in the U.S., six back home, while your daughter transitions into taking over the business.

You call your family office and chartered accountant, instructing them to transfer USD 800,000, enough to cover six months of five-star living and premium medical care for you and your wife. There's no shortage of funds back home. You've earned this comfort, and the money is yours.

But that’s when reality hits: since you still hold an Indian passport, any transfer above USD 500,000 between you and your spouse will trigger regulatory approval. Despite the money being fully legal, tax-paid, and meant purely for your well-being, accessing it across borders isn’t as seamless.

This is the true cost of inaction and not going global with your financial portfolio.

Think Geography-Agnostic, Not Geography-Blind

India constitutes just 3% of the global market cap, yet many Indian investors allocate nearly 100% of their portfolios domestically. This extreme home country bias, the highest in the world, ignores the vast opportunities outside India, where 97% of the global market cap and over 1,400 multibagger stocks reside. Investing should be opportunistic, not geographic.

‘Global investing’ has become synonymous with buying US-focused ETFs. It’s understandable, the U.S. remains the world’s largest economy and deepest capital market. But here’s the truth: it is still just another economy subject to its own booms and busts, policy disruptions, asset bubbles, and sector over-concentration. Today, over 40% of the S&P 500’s market cap is concentrated in just 10 stocks. Combine that with tariff wars and policy uncertainty, and what you get is a fragile façade of diversification. Just as you wouldn’t put all your money into a single Indian sector, betting exclusively on the U.S. isn’t global investing, it’s concentration risk by another name.

Real global investing demands looking across borders and beyond headlines. A Chinese EV company that ships to Europe, a U.S. semiconductor firm with less China exposure, or an EU company riding a wave of fiscal stimulus, all of these represent meaningful diversification.

It’s not about blind bets, but thoughtful rotation and picking resilient, high-quality companies globally.

Innovation: The Growing Asset Class

As we stand at the dawn of an AI-powered innovation revolution, which follows a historical pattern of multi-decade growth driven by breakthrough technologies, it's critical to note that India has a lot to catch up on. While countries like the US and China are driving advancements in AI, robotics, cloud computing, and biotech, staying confined within Indian markets could mean missing out on the next generation of global growth stories. There are profitable companies, with more than 50% global market share, 40% margins and high ROEs or simply put the next potential multi baggers.

The Right Vehicle for the Right Voyage

To do it right, investors need access to deep research, active sell-side support, management interactions, earnings calls, and robust analytical infrastructure.. Most people don’t do all of their domestic investing themselves and use funds for active management and better taxation structure. Likewise, global investing requires participation in right funds. A well-constructed dollar portfolio should ideally be liquid, open-ended, making it a practical and efficient alternative to domestic investments.

Global Living Deserves Global Thinking

We’ve embraced global culture in every aspect- our food, our travel, even our children’s ambitions. Isn’t it time our portfolios reflected the same worldview?

Building a dollar portfolio isn’t just about investing abroad, it’s about securing choice, flexibility, and peace of mind for a future that’s increasingly global in every sense. Whether you end up using it or not, the optionality it creates is worth far more than the annual remittance paperwork it takes to build it.

Ankita Pathak, Macro Strategist and Global Equities Fund Advisor, Ionic Asset

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