Investing in S&P500 Index Fund from India





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I am an Indian Citizen residing in India. Can I invest in an S&P500 Index fund while residing in India?










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  • With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
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up vote
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down vote

favorite
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I am an Indian Citizen residing in India. Can I invest in an S&P500 Index fund while residing in India?










share|improve this question









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Sucheta Saha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
    – Rupert Morrish
    Nov 26 at 19:08













up vote
16
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
16
down vote

favorite
1






1





I am an Indian Citizen residing in India. Can I invest in an S&P500 Index fund while residing in India?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Sucheta Saha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I am an Indian Citizen residing in India. Can I invest in an S&P500 Index fund while residing in India?







stocks india index-fund






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Sucheta Saha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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edited Nov 26 at 20:20









yoozer8

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asked Nov 26 at 9:11









Sucheta Saha

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Sucheta Saha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Sucheta Saha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
    – Rupert Morrish
    Nov 26 at 19:08


















  • With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
    – Rupert Morrish
    Nov 26 at 19:08
















With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
– Rupert Morrish
Nov 26 at 19:08




With no comment from the person who flagged this off-topic explaining why, I'm voting to leave it open.
– Rupert Morrish
Nov 26 at 19:08










2 Answers
2






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up vote
17
down vote














Can I invest in S&P500 Index fund, while residing in India




You can invest in US funds. Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme one can invest up to USD 250,000 per year.



Option 1:

Open an account with an international broker. This is time consuming and KYC etc would take time. Transferring funds will also involve a bit of paperwork. You can then invest into a range of funds that track the S&P 500.



Option 2:

Open an Account with an Indian broker [or with AMFI]. There are quite a few fund houses that offer funds that invest in US markets; for example ICICI, Franklin, Motilal Oswal, DSP Blackrock, Birla Sunlife, etc. Most of these invest in a broad range of equity. Motilal has NASDAQ 100; it has filed a prospectus for S&P.



This would be more convenient in terms of KYC or depositing / withdrawing as your interaction will be with the Indian fund house.






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    up vote
    5
    down vote













    There are 2 aspects to your questions as I perceive it. Whether or not you are eligible to invest in it as a non-US resident and whether or not you have access to it outside the US.



    The short answer to both is yes.



    You're perfectly fine to invest in USA based ETFs as a non-resident. The second part I cannot help directly with since I'm not based in India but for instance, in the EU, you can open local broker accounts to invest in cross-continent ETFs or skip that altogether and invest in ETFs and similar financial products through a robo-advisor (like Moneyfarm, Scalable, ETFmatic etc).



    I'm fairly certain that for a big market like India you should be able to find someone offering broker accounts and/or robo-advisor options that include USA ETFs.






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      17
      down vote














      Can I invest in S&P500 Index fund, while residing in India




      You can invest in US funds. Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme one can invest up to USD 250,000 per year.



      Option 1:

      Open an account with an international broker. This is time consuming and KYC etc would take time. Transferring funds will also involve a bit of paperwork. You can then invest into a range of funds that track the S&P 500.



      Option 2:

      Open an Account with an Indian broker [or with AMFI]. There are quite a few fund houses that offer funds that invest in US markets; for example ICICI, Franklin, Motilal Oswal, DSP Blackrock, Birla Sunlife, etc. Most of these invest in a broad range of equity. Motilal has NASDAQ 100; it has filed a prospectus for S&P.



      This would be more convenient in terms of KYC or depositing / withdrawing as your interaction will be with the Indian fund house.






      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        17
        down vote














        Can I invest in S&P500 Index fund, while residing in India




        You can invest in US funds. Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme one can invest up to USD 250,000 per year.



        Option 1:

        Open an account with an international broker. This is time consuming and KYC etc would take time. Transferring funds will also involve a bit of paperwork. You can then invest into a range of funds that track the S&P 500.



        Option 2:

        Open an Account with an Indian broker [or with AMFI]. There are quite a few fund houses that offer funds that invest in US markets; for example ICICI, Franklin, Motilal Oswal, DSP Blackrock, Birla Sunlife, etc. Most of these invest in a broad range of equity. Motilal has NASDAQ 100; it has filed a prospectus for S&P.



        This would be more convenient in terms of KYC or depositing / withdrawing as your interaction will be with the Indian fund house.






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          17
          down vote










          up vote
          17
          down vote










          Can I invest in S&P500 Index fund, while residing in India




          You can invest in US funds. Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme one can invest up to USD 250,000 per year.



          Option 1:

          Open an account with an international broker. This is time consuming and KYC etc would take time. Transferring funds will also involve a bit of paperwork. You can then invest into a range of funds that track the S&P 500.



          Option 2:

          Open an Account with an Indian broker [or with AMFI]. There are quite a few fund houses that offer funds that invest in US markets; for example ICICI, Franklin, Motilal Oswal, DSP Blackrock, Birla Sunlife, etc. Most of these invest in a broad range of equity. Motilal has NASDAQ 100; it has filed a prospectus for S&P.



          This would be more convenient in terms of KYC or depositing / withdrawing as your interaction will be with the Indian fund house.






          share|improve this answer















          Can I invest in S&P500 Index fund, while residing in India




          You can invest in US funds. Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme one can invest up to USD 250,000 per year.



          Option 1:

          Open an account with an international broker. This is time consuming and KYC etc would take time. Transferring funds will also involve a bit of paperwork. You can then invest into a range of funds that track the S&P 500.



          Option 2:

          Open an Account with an Indian broker [or with AMFI]. There are quite a few fund houses that offer funds that invest in US markets; for example ICICI, Franklin, Motilal Oswal, DSP Blackrock, Birla Sunlife, etc. Most of these invest in a broad range of equity. Motilal has NASDAQ 100; it has filed a prospectus for S&P.



          This would be more convenient in terms of KYC or depositing / withdrawing as your interaction will be with the Indian fund house.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 26 at 13:32









          Glorfindel

          3291311




          3291311










          answered Nov 26 at 11:48









          Dheer

          49.1k961144




          49.1k961144
























              up vote
              5
              down vote













              There are 2 aspects to your questions as I perceive it. Whether or not you are eligible to invest in it as a non-US resident and whether or not you have access to it outside the US.



              The short answer to both is yes.



              You're perfectly fine to invest in USA based ETFs as a non-resident. The second part I cannot help directly with since I'm not based in India but for instance, in the EU, you can open local broker accounts to invest in cross-continent ETFs or skip that altogether and invest in ETFs and similar financial products through a robo-advisor (like Moneyfarm, Scalable, ETFmatic etc).



              I'm fairly certain that for a big market like India you should be able to find someone offering broker accounts and/or robo-advisor options that include USA ETFs.






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                5
                down vote













                There are 2 aspects to your questions as I perceive it. Whether or not you are eligible to invest in it as a non-US resident and whether or not you have access to it outside the US.



                The short answer to both is yes.



                You're perfectly fine to invest in USA based ETFs as a non-resident. The second part I cannot help directly with since I'm not based in India but for instance, in the EU, you can open local broker accounts to invest in cross-continent ETFs or skip that altogether and invest in ETFs and similar financial products through a robo-advisor (like Moneyfarm, Scalable, ETFmatic etc).



                I'm fairly certain that for a big market like India you should be able to find someone offering broker accounts and/or robo-advisor options that include USA ETFs.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  5
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  5
                  down vote









                  There are 2 aspects to your questions as I perceive it. Whether or not you are eligible to invest in it as a non-US resident and whether or not you have access to it outside the US.



                  The short answer to both is yes.



                  You're perfectly fine to invest in USA based ETFs as a non-resident. The second part I cannot help directly with since I'm not based in India but for instance, in the EU, you can open local broker accounts to invest in cross-continent ETFs or skip that altogether and invest in ETFs and similar financial products through a robo-advisor (like Moneyfarm, Scalable, ETFmatic etc).



                  I'm fairly certain that for a big market like India you should be able to find someone offering broker accounts and/or robo-advisor options that include USA ETFs.






                  share|improve this answer














                  There are 2 aspects to your questions as I perceive it. Whether or not you are eligible to invest in it as a non-US resident and whether or not you have access to it outside the US.



                  The short answer to both is yes.



                  You're perfectly fine to invest in USA based ETFs as a non-resident. The second part I cannot help directly with since I'm not based in India but for instance, in the EU, you can open local broker accounts to invest in cross-continent ETFs or skip that altogether and invest in ETFs and similar financial products through a robo-advisor (like Moneyfarm, Scalable, ETFmatic etc).



                  I'm fairly certain that for a big market like India you should be able to find someone offering broker accounts and/or robo-advisor options that include USA ETFs.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Nov 26 at 13:18









                  Glorfindel

                  3291311




                  3291311










                  answered Nov 26 at 9:49









                  Leon

                  2,0211318




                  2,0211318






















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