World Gold Council Launches 'Gold as a Service' to Digitize India's Gold Market

The World Gold Council has announced a 'Gold as a Service' platform designed to create new market infrastructure linking physical gold custody with digital systems. This open platform aims to standardize operations and reduce complexity to improve access to digital gold products across India. With Indian households holding over 25,000 tons of gold, the initiative seeks to modernize and digitize access for millions of investors. The shared infrastructure is expected to enable seamless digital gold products within India's fintech and UPI payments landscape.

Key Points: Gold as a Service Platform to Boost Digital Gold Access in India

  • Links physical gold custody to digital systems
  • Aims to reduce operational complexity
  • Targets India's 25,000-ton household gold
  • Enables scalable digital gold products
  • Fosters trust and interoperability in fintech
2 min read

World Gold Council's 'Gold as a Service' platform to improve access to digital gold: Report

World Gold Council's new platform aims to modernize India's gold market, linking physical custody with digital systems for easier investment.

"presents a transformative opportunity to modernise and digitize access for millions of Indian investors - Abhishek Bhatia, BCG"

New Delhi, March 23

The World Gold Council's 'Gold as a Service' platform announced on Monday to create a new market infrastructure to link physical custody of yellow metal with digital systems will improve access to digital gold products.

The report from Boston Consulting Group India said Gold as a Service would act as an open platform, connecting the physical custody of gold with the "digital systems used to issue and manage gold-backed products."

By standardising custody coordination, reconciliation, compliance and redemption, the new model aims to reduce operational complexity, improve access and enable greater consistency across digital gold products, the report said.

The report described "Gold as a Service" as a platform to support the issuance and operation of scalable, interoperable digital gold products.

"God is deeply woven into India's cultural and financial fabric, with households holding over 25,000 tons. 'Gold as a Service' presents a transformative opportunity to modernise and digitize access for millions of Indian investors," said Abhishek Bhatia, Managing Director and Partner, BCG

Bhatia said the shared infrastructure will enable seamless digital gold products' access across India's fintech ecosystem and UPI-driven payments landscape.

"By fostering trust and interoperability, it empowers innovators, from neobanks to jewellery retailers, to scale gold-backed savings, remittances, and micro-investments, making it easier for millions to save and invest in gold digitally," he said.

The World Gold Council noted that gold has already undergone meaningful digitalisation, with trading, clearing and recordkeeping now largely electronic and a growing range of digital gold products such as tokens, now available.

Despite these innovations, digital gold, however, remains limited in scale largely due to structural constraints due to limited standardisation and reduced fungibility.

Gold as a Service is proposed to solve these challenges and modernise how gold integrates with an increasingly digital financial ecosystem, the report noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
My parents have always bought physical gold. The idea of digital gold is interesting, but will people trust it as much? The cultural connection to holding real jewellery is very strong. Hope they build that trust properly.
R
Rohit P
Standardisation is the key. Right now, every fintech app has its own digital gold product with different rules. A common platform will make comparing and redeeming much simpler. Good for micro-investments!
S
Sarah B
As someone new to India, I find the deep connection to gold fascinating. A digital platform that makes it accessible for savings and remittances could be incredibly powerful for financial inclusion here.
V
Vikram M
While the intent is good, I'm cautiously optimistic. We've seen many "transformative" digital platforms fail on execution. The proof will be in seamless redemption for physical gold when needed. That's the real test.
K
Karthik V
This could revolutionize gold loans as well. If the digital holding is standardized and trusted, banks and NBFCs can offer quicker loans against it. Big potential for the economy!

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