For a long time, Indian portfolios were built on two familiar pillars: equities for growth and bonds for stability. That framework still matters but it is no longer enough. As India’s wealth ecosystem matures, alternative investments are moving from the margins to a meaningful third pillar, helped by a rising pool of HNIs and UHNIs, a generational handoff of wealth and a rapidly expanding wealth-advisory ecosystem.
The numbers confirm the shift. As of December 2025, commitments to Alternative Investment Funds stood at about Rs.15.74 lakh crore, with net investments of roughly Rs.6.45 lakh crore. SEBI’s March 2026 data show commitments had risen to about Rs.16.94 lakh crore and investments to around Rs.6.76 lakh crore. Broader industry estimates place India’s alternatives AUM at around USD 152 billion in December 2025 and project it could rise to about USD 276 billion by 2030, implying annual growth of 11 to 14%.
The rise of a third pillar
The deeper change is not just in AUM but in mindset. Portfolio construction is moving beyond the old “stocks versus bonds” framework toward a more complete architecture of public markets, fixed income and alternatives. Traditional products such as mutual funds and insurance-linked savings plans are designed to be simple, diversified, liquid and transparent. But they are also constrained by standardisation and suitability rules; by design, they are ready-made, byte-sized building blocks.
Alternatives sit at the other end of the spectrum. They offer greater control over the kind of risk an investor wants to take, the style of exposure, the structure and the size of each sleeve within the portfolio. The menu spans structured credit, special situations, real estate, private equity, venture capital and hybrid strategies, each serving different investor needs on risk profile, return expectations, investment horizon and repayment schedule. This is where the franchise-cricket analogy fits. In a sophisticated portfolio, AIFs are like impact substitutes. They are not meant to replace the core playing eleven of listed equity and debt, which still do most of the heavy lifting. But introduced at the right moment and in the right role, they can change the texture of the game, adding spice, resilience and traction to the portfolio. More importantly, they allow investors to introduce specific reward-risk profiles exactly where they are needed, rather than accepting a one-size-fits-all mix.
How alternatives build resilience
The strongest argument for alternatives is not that they will always generate higher returns. It is that they can help build more resilient portfolios by enabling investors to navigate market cycles with a better-matched set of exposures. Private equity and growth capital can participate in value creation before they appear in public markets. Private credit and structured solutions can offer contractual or quasi-contractual income streams with negotiated seniority, collateral and covenants, often with lower mark-to-market volatility than equities.
What matters is role clarity. A private-credit allocation can provide contractual cash flows and downside protection in stressed conditions; growth equity can capture value creation outside listed markets; and absolute-return strategies can help monetise volatility rather than merely absorb it. Used this way, alternatives do not replace the core portfolio they improve its balance across market conditions.
Fees, alignment and value
Alternative investments are often criticised for higher fees. That criticism is understandable but incomplete. The right question is not simply what the fee is but what the investor is paying for. In traditional products, fees largely cover management, administration and distribution. In alternatives, fees often cover origination, due diligence, structuring, monitoring and active risk management. If a strategy offers access to returns unavailable in public markets, more control over exposure and better alignment between manager incentives and investor outcomes, the higher fee can be justified. The reward structure should mirror the risk structure.
Technology and a mature alternatives ecosystem
Technology will play a defining role in the next phase of alternatives. It has already made onboarding, reporting and portfolio monitoring easier; going forward, data and analytics will help investors and advisors compare strategies, evaluate fees and understand exposures more clearly.
A mature Indian alternatives ecosystem is likely to feature three things: A broader pool of assets across private credit, infrastructure, secondaries, real assets and absolute-return strategies; clearer segmentation between low-cost standardised products and genuinely bespoke exposures; and a more demanding, fee-literate investor base that evaluates alternatives by role, structure and net outcomes rather than headline return claims alone. For alternatives to become a durable third pillar, managers will need to explain clearly what they offer and how economics align with investor goals. Advisors will need to move from pitching products to designing portfolios. Investors will need to become more structure-aware, role-aware and fee-literate. If these conditions are met, alternatives will not replace stocks and bonds; they will complement them.
Sanjeev Sadanand Patkar is the Chief Investment Officer of FYERS Assets. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Cafemutual.
Alternative investments are no longer a niche—they’re becoming an essential part of modern wealth management.
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