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Relevance: GS-III (Indian Economy, Banking System, NBFCs, Financial Inclusion) Source: RBI Data / Economic Reports, July 2026

1 · What exactly happened?

Recently, global gold prices hit record highs. Because of this, a massive trend has taken over India: people are rushing to take loans against their family gold.

According to the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data from May 2026, gold loans given by NBFCs (like Muthoot or Manappuram) jumped by a massive 70%. For traditional banks, it was even crazier—gold loans doubled, growing by 105%! It has quickly become the fastest-growing type of retail loan in the country.

2 · Why this sudden behavioral shift?

Historically, Indians took gold loans only during desperate emergencies or medical crises. It was seen as a “last resort.” Today, that mindset has changed completely. Middle-class families and small business owners are now using gold as a smart, quick tool to fund business expansion, children’s higher education, and even travel.

The Spread
Moving Beyond the South
South India always dominated the gold loan market. Now, the trend has exploded nationwide, with massive growth in states like Uttar Pradesh (138%), West Bengal, and Rajasthan.
The Benefit
Unlocking ‘Dead’ Assets
India has thousands of tonnes of gold sitting idle in lockers. Gold loans convert this dormant wealth into active capital, directly helping small businesses and women-led households grow.
The Danger
The ‘Evergreening’ Trap
Some lenders allowed borrowers to just pay a tiny bit of interest and infinitely renew the loan without repaying the main amount. This hides bad loans and traps borrowers in endless debt.
RBI’s Strict Action
Stopping the Loop
The RBI has strictly ordered that these gold loans must be fully repaid within 12 months. Also, if gold prices suddenly crash, banks risk losing their safety net (the collateral value).

  • The Substitution Effect: The RBI noted that as people take more gold loans, they are taking fewer risky, high-interest “unsecured” personal loans. Borrowers are making smarter, cheaper choices.
  • Sluggish Wages: Analysts point out that regular salaries haven’t grown fast enough recently. To bridge the gap and raise cash, people are leveraging their physical gold.
  • A Parallel Risk: Alongside gold, NBFCs are aggressively giving out loans for Commercial Real Estate (up 40%). The RBI sees this as a highly risky area that needs strict watching.

UPSC Prelims Quick Facts
Bullet Repayment Loan A loan where you don’t pay monthly EMIs. Instead, you pay the entire principal amount (and often the interest) in one single “bullet” payment at the end of the loan tenure.
NBFCs Non-Banking Financial Companies. They provide bank-like services (loans) but do not hold a banking license and cannot accept standard saving deposits from the public.
Evergreening of Loans A bad banking practice where a lender gives a new loan to a struggling borrower just so they can pay off an old loan, artificially hiding the fact that the borrower is defaulting.
Financial Stability Report (FSR) A crucial report published by the RBI that assesses the overall health and hidden risks within India’s banking and financial system.

MCQ Practice Question
Q. With reference to ‘Bullet Repayment’ loans and the financial sector in India, consider the following statements:

  1. In a bullet loan, the borrower is required to pay structured monthly EMIs covering both principal and interest.
  2. The Reserve Bank of India strictly prohibits the ‘evergreening’ of loans to prevent the masking of stressed assets.
  3. Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) can issue loans but are not allowed to accept demand deposits from the public.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (b) 2 and 3 only

  • Statement 1 — Incorrect (the trap): A bullet loan does not involve monthly EMIs. The defining feature is that the borrower pays the entire principal amount in a single lump-sum (a “bullet”) at the very end of the tenure.
  • Statement 2 — Correct: The RBI comes down heavily on ‘evergreening’ because it hides bad loans (NPAs) and creates systemic risks in the economy.
  • Statement 3 — Correct: This is a core difference between banks and NBFCs. NBFCs cannot accept demand deposits (like regular savings or current accounts) from the public.

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