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Nifty 50 Explained: What Australian and NZ Investors Need to Know

Nifty 50 Explained: What Australian and NZ Investors Need to Know

February 8, 20267 min readTeam Indus
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Introduction

The Nifty 50 is India’s flagship stock market index — the equivalent of Australia’s ASX 200 or the S&P 500 in the United States. It tracks the 50 largest and most liquid companies listed on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) of India, covering approximately 65% of the total market capitalisation of the NSE.

For investors in Australia and New Zealand looking at India as a portfolio diversifier, the Nifty 50 is typically the starting point. Whether you’re buying an India ETF on the ASX or investing in an Indian Nifty 50 index fund through a platform like Indus, chances are you’re getting Nifty 50 exposure. Understanding what’s inside it — and how it compares to what you already own — is fundamental.


What Companies Are in the Nifty 50?

The Nifty 50 includes India’s most established companies across multiple sectors. If you’re familiar with Indian business, you’ll recognise many of these names: Reliance Industries, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), HDFC Bank, Infosys, ICICI Bank, Hindustan Unilever, Bharti Airtel, ITC, and State Bank of India, among others.

The sector composition is what makes it interesting for Australian and NZ investors. The Nifty 50 is heavily weighted toward financial services (~35%), information technology (~15%), and oil, gas & consumable fuels (~12%). Compare that to the ASX 200, which is dominated by financials and mining. The overlap between the two indices is minimal — which is precisely what makes India an effective portfolio diversifier. Through Indus, you can invest in Nifty 50 index funds directly from Australia or NZ, with expense ratios far lower than ASX-listed alternatives.


Nifty 50 vs ASX 200 vs NZX 50

Feature

Nifty 50 (India)

ASX 200 (Australia)

NZX 50 (NZ)

Number of companies

50

200

50

Exchange

NSE (National Stock Exchange)

ASX

NZX

Top sector

Financial services (~35%)

Financials (~28%)

Utilities & healthcare (~30%)

Second sector

IT (~15%)

Mining/materials (~20%)

Financials (~18%)

Currency

INR

AUD

NZD

GDP growth (country)

~6.5-7% (2025-26)

~2% (2025-26)

~1.5-2% (2025-26)

Population trend

Growing (1.4B+, median age 28)

Slow growth (27M)

Slow growth (5.3M)

Data is approximate and based on publicly available information as of early 2026. GDP projections are estimates and may vary by source.

The demographic and economic profiles are starkly different. India has a young, growing population driving domestic consumption, digital adoption, and infrastructure spending. Australia and NZ are mature economies with aging populations. For an Australian or NZ investor whose portfolio is concentrated in local equities, the Nifty 50 offers exposure to a fundamentally different growth trajectory.


Historical Performance

The Nifty 50 has delivered approximately 12–14% annualised returns in INR terms over the past 15–20 years. That’s one of the strongest track records among major global indices.

A few important caveats for overseas investors. First, these returns are in Indian rupees. The INR has depreciated against the AUD and NZD over time, which reduces AUD/NZD-denominated returns. A 12% INR return with 1.5% annual rupee depreciation gives you roughly 10.5% in AUD terms — still strong, but different from the headline number.

Second, past performance doesn’t predict future results. India’s market has periods of sharp corrections (2008, 2020) alongside years of exceptional growth. The Nifty 50 dropped roughly 50% during the 2008 financial crisis and around 35% during the COVID crash in March 2020. In both cases, it recovered and went on to new highs — but short-term volatility is real.

Third, India’s market is increasingly being driven by domestic retail participation. Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) now channel over ₹20,000 crore monthly into mutual funds, providing consistent demand. This structural flow didn’t exist a decade ago and changes the market’s character. As an overseas investor, you can participate in this same SIP discipline through Indus — automated monthly investing in AUD or NZD, converted and allocated without you lifting a finger each month.


How to Invest in the Nifty 50 from Australia or NZ

You have three main routes:


Option 1: ASX-Listed India ETFs

ETFs like NDIA (Global X India Nifty 50 ETF) track the Nifty 50 directly and trade on the ASX in AUD. Simple to buy through any Australian brokerage. Management fees around 0.69%. No PAN card or Indian bank account required. But your only option is the index as-is — no customisation, no SIP automation, and fees are higher than Indian index funds.


Option 2: Indian Nifty 50 Index Funds (Direct Plans)

Indian AMCs offer Nifty 50 index funds with expense ratios as low as 0.05–0.30% for their plans — significantly cheaper than ASX ETFs tracking the same index. Through a platform like Indus, you can invest in these directly from Australia or NZ, set up automated SIP in AUD or NZD, and build a portfolio that goes beyond just the Nifty 50. Indus is open to any AU or NZ resident and all you need is a local driver’s licence to start.


Option 3: US-Listed India ETFs

Funds like iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA) trade on NYSE and can be accessed through platforms like Stake, Hatch, or Sharesies. This adds USD currency conversion costs and US withholding tax considerations on top of the INR exposure. Generally more expensive and complex than the other two options for most AU/NZ investors.


Beyond the Nifty 50: Nifty Next 50, Midcap 150, and More

The Nifty 50 covers India’s largest companies, but India’s market has significant depth beyond the top 50. Some of the most interesting growth stories in India are in the mid-cap and small-cap segments.

Nifty Next 50 tracks companies ranked 51–100 by market cap. These are large companies on the cusp of entering the Nifty 50 — think of it as the “feeder league.” Historically, the Nifty Next 50 has at times outperformed the Nifty 50 due to its mid-large-cap positioning.

Nifty Midcap 150 and Nifty Smallcap 250 capture the next tiers. These indices have delivered higher returns than the Nifty 50 over certain periods but with significantly higher volatility. They’re not available through ASX ETFs — you’d need to invest in Indian mutual funds directly to access these segments.

This is one of the key advantages of investing directly in Indian equity mutual funds rather than relying on ASX ETFs: the ability to go beyond the Nifty 50 and build a portfolio that captures India’s growth across market segments. Through Indus, you can access mid-cap, small-cap, flexi-cap, and sectoral equity funds alongside Nifty 50 index funds — all from a single platform, with just your local driver’s licence to get started.


Risks to Consider

  • Currency risk: The Nifty 50 is denominated in INR. If the rupee depreciates against AUD/NZD during your investment period, your returns in local currency terms will be reduced. SIP investing through Indus provides natural averaging of the exchange rate over time — your fixed AUD or NZD amount buys more units when the rupee is weak and fewer when it’s strong.

  • Market volatility: India’s market can be more volatile than developed market indices. Drawdowns of 15–30% are not uncommon during global risk-off events. A long-term investment horizon (5+ years) helps ride out these cycles.

  • Concentration risk: The Nifty 50 is heavily weighted toward financials and IT. The top 10 stocks represent a significant portion of the index. Consider complementing Nifty 50 exposure with mid-cap or sector-diversified funds for broader coverage.

  • Valuation: India’s market often trades at a premium to other emerging markets on a P/E basis. This reflects growth expectations but also means there’s less margin of safety if those expectations aren’t met.

  • Regulatory and political risk: Changes to SEBI regulations, tax treaties, or government policy can affect returns. India’s regulatory environment has generally been investor-friendly in recent years, but it’s a factor to monitor.


Invest in the Nifty 50 from Australia or New Zealand

Indus gives you access to Nifty 50 index funds — and hundreds of other Indian equity mutual funds — directly from Australia or New Zealand. Set up automated SIP investing in AUD or NZD, pay lower fees than ASX-listed ETFs, and start with just your local driver’s licence. Open to all AU and NZ residents. NZ investors pay 0% Indian tax on returns.

INVESTING IN INDIA

Frequently Asked
Questions

Both are Indian benchmark indices, but they track different exchanges and different numbers of companies. The Nifty 50 tracks 50 companies on the NSE. The Sensex (also called BSE Sensex or S&P BSE Sensex) tracks 30 companies on the BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange). There’s significant overlap — most Sensex companies are also in the Nifty 50. The Nifty 50 is broader and is the more commonly referenced index for investment products.
Yes. If you invest in an Indian Nifty 50 index fund through a platform like Indus, you can set up a SIP — a fixed AUD or NZD amount invested automatically each month. This isn’t possible with ASX-listed ETFs, where you’d need to manually place a buy order each month. SIP is one of the most popular ways to invest in the Nifty 50 because it automates the discipline and averages your entry price over time.
Index funds tracking the Nifty 50 are widely considered a sensible starting point for Indian market exposure. They offer broad diversification across India’s 50 largest companies, low expense ratios, and transparent composition. Many financial commentators suggest index investing as an entry point before exploring active or sector-specific strategies. That said, it’s not personalised advice — your suitability depends on your goals, risk tolerance, and existing portfolio.
There’s no single right answer — it depends on your overall asset allocation, risk appetite, and investment horizon. Some global asset allocation models suggest 5–15% in emerging markets, with India as a significant component. Many NRIs allocate a higher share due to familiarity and personal connection. Speak with a qualified financial adviser about what’s appropriate for your situation.
For NZ residents investing through Indus, DTAA compliance is automated and TDS on mutual fund returns is zero. For AU residents, TDS is deducted in India on capital gains, but you may claim a foreign income tax offset on your Australian tax return. If you buy an ASX-listed Nifty 50 ETF instead, gains are taxed purely under Australian CGT rules with no Indian tax involvement.