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Articles
For generations, fixed deposits (FDs) were considered the safest and most reliable way to preserve wealth. Our parents and grandparents often swore by the “guaranteed” returns that FDs offered. But in today’s economic environment, especially for High Net-Worth Individuals (HNIs), sticking to fixed deposits isn’t just outdated but it could be the most expensive mistake.
The Illusion of Safety
FDs are marketed as “safe.” The idea is simple, you put your money in the bank, and the bank pays you an interest rate. No market volatility, no sleepless nights. But what is often overlooked is the silent erosion of wealth caused by two powerful forces: Inflation and taxation.
For an HNI, the problem is compounded because of higher tax slabs. The more you earn, the bigger the bite the government takes from your FD interest.
The Math Behind FD Returns
Imagine you invest ₹10 crore in a fixed deposit. Here’s what happens:
FD Interest Rate (average): 6% per annum
Annual Interest Earned: ₹60,00,000
Taxation on FD Interest (at 30%): ₹18,00,000
Post-tax Earnings: ₹42,00,000
Effective Return after Tax: 4.2%
Now let’s bring in the silent killer: Inflation.
Current Inflation Rate (average): 6%
So, while you’re earning a 4.2% post-tax return, the purchasing power of your money is shrinking at 6%.
Real Rate of Return = 4.2% – 6% = -1.8%
This means that even though your FD statement shows growth, your wealth is actually losing value of about ₹18 lakh every year in real terms.
The Silent Wealth Destroyer: Inflation
Inflation doesn’t announce itself with noise. It creeps in quietly, eating away the value of your money.
A ₹10 crore deposit today will not buy the same lifestyle 10 years later.
At 6% inflation, the value of ₹10 crore halves in roughly 12 years.
If your returns don’t consistently outpace inflation, you’re not preserving wealth but rather you’re eroding it.
FDs give you the illusion of safety but guarantee you a loss in real terms.
Why the Wealthy Stay Wealthy
There’s a famous saying: the wealthy stay wealthy because their money works harder than they do. HNIs don’t park their wealth in instruments that guarantee underperformance. Instead, they invest into:
Equities & Equity Funds: Historically, equities have beaten inflation with 10–12% average returns over the long term.
Real Estate & REITs: Strategic real estate investments provide both appreciation and rental yield.
Private Equity & Venture Capital: High risk, but also high reward—HNIs diversify here for outsized gains.
Global Investments: Exposure to international markets hedges against local inflation and currency risks.
Bonds & Debt Alternatives: Better post-tax efficiency compared to FDs, especially via tax-efficient debt funds.
In short, HNIs don’t settle for the bare minimum. They understand that wealth preservation today requires active allocation, smarter instruments, and diversification.
Why Yesterday’s Wealth Strategies Fall Short Today
For earlier generations, wealth preservation often meant relying on fixed deposits, gold, or real estate held over decades. These strategies worked in a different era, the one where inflation was lower, tax structures were simpler, and global investment opportunities were limited.
But the financial landscape today is very different. Inflation is consistently higher, taxation eats away at passive income, and capital flows seamlessly across borders. Simply parking money in fixed deposits or hoarding traditional assets no longer ensures the preservation, let alone the growth of wealth.
Consider this:
₹10 crore in a fixed deposit at 6%, after tax and inflation, will effectively shrink in purchasing power over 10 years.
The same ₹10 crore invested in equities, compounding at even a conservative 10% annually, could grow to more than ₹26 crore in a decade, far outpacing inflation.
What worked for your grandfather’s generation was right for its time. But today’s HNIs must adapt to a new environment: one that demands active wealth allocation, diversification, and strategies designed to beat inflation consistently. In a world where money loses value quietly every year, standing still is not an option.
The Expensive Mistake of Comfort
HNIs often stay in FDs for psychological comfort: safety, predictability, and simplicity. But comfort comes at a cost. Every year your money spends in a fixed deposit, it loses real value.
True safety for wealth is not the absence of volatility but it is beating inflation consistently. That requires stepping out of the comfort zone of FDs and into instruments that genuinely grow wealth.
Conclusion
Fixed deposits may have been the cornerstone of wealth preservation for previous generations, but for today’s HNIs, they are a guaranteed way to lose purchasing power. The math is simple:
FD Rate (6%) – Tax (30%) – Inflation (6%) = Negative Real Return.
The wealthy don’t grow wealth by watching it erode in bank accounts. They grow it by ensuring their money works harder than they do, in assets that beat inflation and taxation over time.
Inflation is the silent killer, and FDs are its willing co-conspirator.
For an HNI, the most expensive mistake is not market volatility, but the slow death of wealth hidden behind the illusion of safety.
