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Topic Guide

Investing Fundamentals for NRIs

Master the basics. Skip the expensive lessons.

The how-to layer: SIP mechanics, lump-sum timing, compounding, XIRR vs CAGR, global ETFs, factor investing, and the common mistakes NRIs make when setting up their first India portfolio.

Calculators in this guide

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Articles in this guide

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Frequently asked

SIP or lumpsum — which is better for NRIs?

If you're investing AED income monthly, SIP is the natural fit (it smooths currency risk and enforces discipline). If you have a one-off sum — bonus, inheritance, property sale — research shows lumpsum beats staggered investing about two-thirds of the time, but staggering wins emotionally because it avoids the 'invested at the top' regret trap. Use the lumpsum and SIP calculators side-by-side to model both.

Why does XIRR matter more than CAGR for real portfolios?

CAGR assumes a single investment at a single date. XIRR handles the reality of multiple cash flows on different dates — exactly how a real SIP or top-up portfolio looks. If you ever see a higher CAGR number than XIRR for the same portfolio, it's usually a misleading calculation ignoring the timing of contributions.

Are ETFs better than mutual funds for NRIs?

For the global layer of a cross-border portfolio, yes — ETFs give you lower cost, better tax efficiency, and access to markets Indian mutual funds can't reach. For the India layer, actively managed mutual funds still have a place because the Indian market is less efficient than the US and some active managers genuinely beat the index. Most of our NRI clients use both.

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