Real Assets as an Inflation Hedge: What Holds Up When Money Loses Value
Why real assets — infrastructure, real estate, commodities-linked projects — historically outperform paper assets during inflation.
Why real assets work when paper does not
Real assets generate cash flows that often reprice with inflation: tolls, rents, utility tariffs, commodity-linked revenues. Bonds and cash deposits do the opposite — their fixed nominal payments are silently eroded. In sustained inflation, a portfolio without real-asset exposure is structurally short the one thing you cannot print.
The global and tax angle
The principle in this article applies everywhere, but the numbers do not. Cross-border investors face an additional set of variables — source-country withholding tax, treaty access, capital-gains treatment by residency, reporting obligations under CRS and FATCA, and the impact of holding structures on net IRR. Two investors taking identical positions can end up with materially different post-tax outcomes purely because of where they are resident and how they hold the asset.
Before committing to any cross-border deal, map the tax stack: corporate tax already paid at the asset level, withholding tax on outbound distributions (and whether a treaty reduces it), and personal or corporate tax in your residency. On Aqmār, the SPV jurisdiction, operating-asset jurisdiction, and standard distribution mechanics are disclosed in the deal pack so your tax adviser can model the post-tax return rather than reconstructing it from emails after the fact.
Ready to invest with structure?
Browse vetted projects on Aqmār — every deal held in escrow until ownership and documentation are verified.