How Union Budget 2026 Could Shape ETFs, Commodities

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Exchange traded funds (ETFs) have become one of the cleanest ways for Indian investors to access markets. They combine the diversification of a fund with the flexibility of a stock, while typically keeping costs and tracking transparent. In a year where macro variables can move asset prices quickly, ETFs also help investors shift exposures without rebuilding the portfolio from scratch.

Commodities are a natural use-case for ETFs because they behave differently from equities and bonds. In India, however, the listed commodity ETF universe is still narrow. Most investors effectively have two “pure” commodity ETF choices: gold ETFs and silver ETFs, both of which track domestic prices of the underlying metal. Beyond precious metals, exposure to commodities such as crude oil, natural gas, base metals or agricultural commodities is largely obtained through futures (primarily on MCX) or through equity proxies such as metal/energy sector ETFs. Futures can be efficient for price discovery, but they introduce leverage, margin calls and rollover costs, making them less suitable as a simple, long-term allocation tool.

Why Union Budget Matters For ETFs, Commodities

Against this backdrop, the Union Budget 2026 (for FY2026-27) becomes especially important for how ETFs and commodities may behave. The Budget influences three key channels— the growth impulse via capital expenditure and sector priorities, inflation and interest-rate expectations via the fiscal stance and borrowing programme, and relative pricing of commodities via policy and tax changes. First, the growth and capex impulse. 

The Capex Cycle And Growth Impulse

India’s public capex cycle has been a defining driver of domestic demand in recent years. Union government capital expenditure has risen materially over the last five financial years. For context, capital expenditure has increased from about Rs 3.4 lakh crore in FY20 to Rs 10.2 lakh crore in FY25 (revised estimate). If we include grants for creation of capital assets, “effective capital expenditure” rises from about Rs 5.2 lakh crore in FY20 to Rs 13.2 lakh crore in FY25 (RE). 

A Budget that sustains this capex momentum can keep a constructive demand outlook for industrial commodities (steel, aluminium, copper) and for capex-linked sectors. Even though investors cannot buy ETFs linked directly to these industrial commodities in India today, the transmission often shows up via sectoral ETFs (metals, infrastructure, capital goods) and broader indices with commodity-heavy constituents. Second, inflation, real rates and the bond market. 

Inflation, Bond Yields And Role of Gold

Budget arithmetic—especially the fiscal deficit path and the gross borrowing programme—matters for bond yields and therefore for debt ETFs. A higher-than-expected borrowing requirement can push yields up, which may temporarily pressure long-duration bond ETFs. 

The flip side is that if the Budget is perceived as inflationary, demand often shifts toward hedges such as gold and, increasingly, silver. RBI’s CPI (combined) annual average index has moved from 146.3 in FY20 to 192.6 in FY25, indicating the scale of cumulative price pressures over the period. Over the same timeframe, the RBI’s annual average domestic gold price rose from Rs 37,018 in FY20 to Rs 75,842 in FY25—illustrating why gold ETFs remain a strategic allocation during high-uncertainty macro phases.

Silver: At the Intersection of Growth and Inflation

Silver adds another dimension. Unlike gold, silver’s demand is partly industrial, making it sensitive to both the inflation narrative and the growth/capex narrative. RBI data shows the annual average domestic silver price rising from Rs 42,514 in FY20 to Rs 89,131 in FY25. 

A Budget that leans into manufacturing and the energy transition can support silver’s industrial demand expectations, while a Budget that raises concerns around fiscal slippage can simultaneously keep the safe haven bid alive. Third, policy and taxation. 

Policy and Taxation: The Often-overlooked Lever

For commodities, Budget proposals that tweak customs duties, compliance or import rules can alter the domestic price curve and investor appetite. Any change that affects landed costs of precious metals can be translated quickly into gold and silver ETF pricing. 

Likewise, policy signals on agriculture, fuel pricing, and strategic reserves can shape expectations in commodity futures even when there is no direct commodity ETF route. Putting it together, the Budget creates scenario outcomes for investors. 

Putting It All Together: Budget Scenarios, ETF Outcomes

A capex-heavy, growth-forward Budget may favour sectoral equity ETFs linked to metals and industrials and can keep silver supported via industrial demand. A fiscally looser or inflationary Budget can tilt flows toward gold (and to some extent silver) as portfolio insurance. A credibility-driven Budget that reinforces fiscal consolidation may be supportive for bond ETFs, and could keep precious metals more range-bound unless global factors dominate.

Final Takeaway for Investors

For investors, the key is to treat ETFs as building blocks. Use gold and silver ETFs for commodity allocation and hedging, use bond ETFs to express a view on the rate cycle and duration, and use sector ETFs to capture the capex transmission into equities—while recognising that India’s direct commodity ETF shelf is still limited beyond precious metals. The Union Budget 2026 will not decide only sector winners; it will also shape how portfolios balance growth participation with inflation protection in the year ahead.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publication.