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From 2025 volatility to 2026 stability: A roadmap for Indian investorsFixed income, on the other hand, long overshadowed by equities, is also regaining relevance as yields stabilise with narrowing premia and investors are forced to reconsider the role of debt as a source of income and portfolio stability.
Anubhav Srivastava
Last Updated IST
Anubhav Srivastava
Managing Partner, Aryzen Capital Advisors
Anubhav Srivastava Managing Partner, Aryzen Capital Advisors

As we look ahead to 2026, the global order appears calmer than in recent years, though far from comfortable. While recent years were defined more by inflation shocks, abrupt monetary tightening, and volatility, that phase is now giving way to a relatively stable and somewhat predictable macroeconomics. As such, it seems ever more likely that investment outcomes will depend less on “surprises” and more on policy consistency, execution, and restraint.

For investors, this shift is consequential and demands a pivot. As the phase of broad, momentum-driven gains fades, we may see scattered performance increasingly tied to balance sheet strength, cash flow visibility, and capital allocation discipline rather than “narrative driven momentum.” As Index-level gains mask wide differences beneath the surface, individual company metrics may reveal broader trends.

Fixed income, on the other hand, long overshadowed by equities, is also regaining relevance as yields stabilise with narrowing premia and investors are forced to reconsider the role of debt as a source of income and portfolio stability.

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India growth remains among the highest globally, (supported in no small, measure by public capital expenditure, services exports, and incremental progress in manufacturing), expectations from domestic markets are high may yet outpace performance. The real challenge for those seeking to manage public’s funds,’ may just be investor mandates which seek greater emphasis on execution quality, return on invested capital, and governance standards. While domestic participation in financial markets, a la SIPs,’ remains deep, a moderation in speculative excess may be beneficial for long-term wealth creation though secular SIP flows are yet to stand the test of a market fall.

Portfolio diversification continues to remain important. Investors are likely to pay more attention to currency dynamics, driven in no small measure by the Indian Rupee depreciation of 2025 and “FOMO” emanating from precious metal melt-up. While support for the dollar investments remain, interest rate and growth differentials are narrowing potentially prompting a rethink. For India, a sharply weaker dollar is neither likely nor necessary. A broadly range-bound dollar, combined with calibrated rupee depreciation, would support export competitiveness without importing undue inflation therefore, in the coming 12 months, Rupee stability is likely to matter more to investors than direction.

And what of precious metals which have seen momentous levels closing 2025? In this environment, gold and silver retain relevance in Indian portfolios. Gold continues to serve as a hedge against global uncertainty, currency volatility, and tail risks, particularly for long-term savers. Silver, while more volatile, benefits from its dual role as a monetary metal and an industrial input, especially in renewable energy and electronics. Neither should be viewed as a primary return driver over extended periods, but as a stabilising allocation within a diversified portfolio.

Technology, particularly artificial intelligence, is moving from experimentation to implementation. Indian firms are increasingly focused on productivity gains, cost efficiency, and decision support rather than headline innovation and this is where AI gains relevance.

For households and savers, 2026 reinforces a simple truth. Rising incomes and deeper market participation do not automatically translate into economic security. Asset allocation, tax efficiency, and risk management continue to matter more than short-term market calls especially in a deglobalising world order. Therefore, making financial planning a continuous process rather than a one-time decision.

The defining advantage in 2026 may well be restraint. In a world saturated with information and investible themes, the ability to filter noise and align decisions with long-term objectives matter more than speed or conviction. The year ahead is unlikely to deliver dramatic inflection points. Instead, it will quietly reveal the outcomes of earlier choices—steady, unspectacular, and ultimately, more enduring.

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(Published 29 December 2025, 03:34 IST)