India is preparing a major overhaul of its corporate debt market, with regulators considering stricter disclosure standards for listed bonds and laying the groundwork for tokenized bond trading as part of a broader push to modernize the country’s financial system.
Securities and Exchange Board of India Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Tuesday that the regulator is reviewing whether listed debt securities should face disclosure obligations similar to those imposed on publicly traded equities. The move signals a significant shift in India’s approach to corporate debt markets, which policymakers have long viewed as too shallow and overly dependent on banks for funding.
Pandey said the review is aimed partly at improving ease of doing business while also boosting investor confidence and transparency in the bond market.
India’s equity market has expanded rapidly over the past decade, becoming one of the world’s most active retail trading hubs. By contrast, the corporate bond market remains relatively underdeveloped, limiting long-term financing options for companies, particularly infrastructure and industrial firms that require large pools of capital.
Analysts say the imbalance has left India’s financial system heavily reliant on bank lending, increasing concentration risks and constraining access to market-based financing.
The regulator’s review suggests authorities may now be seeking to narrow the information gap between equity and debt investors. Traditionally, bond markets in India have operated with lighter disclosure requirements than equity markets, partly because many issuers targeted institutional investors rather than retail participants.
But as India attempts to broaden participation in debt markets and attract global capital, regulators appear increasingly focused on improving transparency standards.
The proposals also come amid wider reforms aimed at transforming India into a more technology-driven financial hub. Pandey said SEBI is moving ahead with plans to pilot tokenisation of corporate bonds, with an initial rollout expected within six to nine months. The initiative would use distributed ledger technology, commonly associated with blockchain systems, to convert traditional corporate bonds into digital tokens that can be traded and settled electronically.
Tokenization is increasingly being explored globally by regulators, banks, and exchanges because it promises faster settlements, lower transaction costs, and greater transparency compared with conventional financial infrastructure. Under traditional systems, bond settlements can take days and involve multiple intermediaries, including custodians, clearing houses, and brokers. Tokenized securities, by contrast, can theoretically settle almost instantly on a shared digital ledger.
That could significantly improve liquidity in India’s corporate debt market, where trading volumes remain relatively thin compared with developed markets. The technology could also reduce operational risks and broaden investor access by enabling fractional ownership and round-the-clock trading.
India’s move mirrors a global trend. Major financial institutions, including BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, and Franklin Templeton, have been experimenting with tokenized funds, bonds, and money-market products. Governments and regulators are also viewing tokenization as a potential bridge between traditional finance and blockchain-based systems without fully embracing volatile cryptocurrencies.
The development also aligns with growing interest in “real-world asset” tokenization, one of the fastest-growing areas within digital finance. Industry advocates have noted that placing traditional assets such as bonds, stocks, and private credit instruments on blockchain-based systems could eventually reshape capital markets by making them more efficient and accessible.
India’s regulators, however, have historically adopted a cautious approach toward crypto-related technologies, particularly after years of concern over financial stability, capital controls, and retail investor protection. SEBI’s proposed pilot, therefore, represents a carefully controlled attempt to harness blockchain infrastructure for regulated financial products rather than speculative digital assets.
The move comes when India is simultaneously trying to mobilize larger pools of domestic and international capital to fund infrastructure expansion, energy transition projects, and industrial growth initiatives. A deeper and more liquid bond market is seen as critical to achieving those ambitions, especially as banks face tighter capital requirements and rising balance-sheet pressures.
Economists have long argued that India’s economic growth aspirations cannot rely solely on traditional bank financing. Thus, developing robust debt markets is expected to help diversify funding sources, improve risk allocation, and lower borrowing costs for companies over time.
The reforms are expected to mark one of the most consequential structural changes to India’s capital markets in years, positioning the country at the forefront of digital transformation in emerging-market finance.
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