RBI Governor Calls for Deeper Financial Markets as India Shows Resilience

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra emphasized India's economic resilience and the need for deeper financial markets. The economy grew at 8.2% average during 2021-25 with inflation staying within tolerance bands. He highlighted measures to enhance market efficiency including new derivatives and clearing systems. Five key areas for improvement include liquidity enhancement and credit derivatives market development.

Key Points: RBI Governor Malhotra on Deeper Financial Markets

  • India's economy grew 8.2% average in 2021-25
  • RBI enhancing market efficiency with new instruments
  • Five key areas for improvement identified
  • Banks must ensure fair market access for all
3 min read

RBI Governor Malhotra calls for deeper, more efficient financial markets as India shows resilience amid global headwinds

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra calls for deeper financial markets as India shows resilience amid global headwinds, highlighting growth, inflation control, and market reforms.

"The next phase of growth will depend on deepening liquidity, broadening participation, and strengthening market infrastructure - RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra"

New Delhi, May 2

India's financial markets have demonstrated remarkable resilience amid global uncertainty, but the next phase of growth will depend on deepening liquidity, broadening participation, and strengthening market infrastructure, Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra said in his keynote address at the 25th FIMMDA-PDAI Annual Conference in Amsterdam.

Speaking on the theme "Indian Financial Markets - Resilience and Resurgence," Malhotra noted that the Indian economy has remained among the fastest-growing major economies since the pandemic, supported by strong macro fundamentals, structural reforms, and prudent policy management. The economy grew at an average of 8.2 per cent during 2021-25, with 7.6 per cent growth estimated for 2025-26 and 6.9 per cent projected for 2026-27.

Inflation has largely stayed within the RBI's tolerance band, with headline CPI projected at 4.6 per cent for FY27, while fiscal consolidation is progressing through improved tax buoyancy and better quality of expenditure. The banking and NBFC sectors have strengthened balance sheets, and corporate bond issuances have broadened financing channels beyond bank credit. On the external front, foreign exchange reserves cover 11 months of imports, and gross FDI is expected to rise to about USD 90 billion in 2025-26.

Turning to financial markets, Malhotra highlighted several measures undertaken by the RBI to enhance efficiency and transparency. These include an agile liquidity management framework, extension of the benchmark issuance strategy to State Development Loans from FY27, and the introduction of total return swaps on corporate bonds and derivatives on corporate bond indices to aid credit risk management. The RBI has also rolled out forward contracts on government securities, which are being increasingly used by long-term investors like insurers.

On market infrastructure, the RBI has expanded central clearing for FX forwards up to 36 months, introduced electronic trading platforms for forex options, and implemented initial margin regulations for non-centrally cleared derivatives. Transparency has been improved through mandatory reporting of OTC rupee derivatives and FX trades. For foreign investors, the RBI has eased FPI norms for corporate bonds, expanded the Voluntary Retention Route, and permitted non-residents to open rupee accounts in their own regions.

Enhancing liquidity across all G-sec tenors, broadening OTC interest rate derivatives beyond a few products, encouraging Indian banks to evolve as global INR market-makers, expanding usage of the FX Retail platform for retail users, and developing the credit derivatives market, which remains underutilised are the five key areas that have room for improvement, according to Malhotra.

The Governor stressed that while banks and primary dealers enjoy privileged access to liquidity facilities and market-making rights, they also carry the responsibility to ensure fair, transparent and inclusive access for all users.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who tracks EM economies, I've got to hand it to India—8.2% average growth post-pandemic with inflation under control is genuinely impressive. The ECB-style liquidity framework and central clearing expansion are smart moves. Just hope the RBI doesn't get too complacent with these macros; global headwinds aren't done yet.
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Nisha Z
Good to see the VRR (Voluntary Retention Route) being expanded for FPIs—that's the kind of stable capital we need. But I wish the address had touched more on retail participation in forex markets. The FX Retail platform is great, but awareness among common people is still low. Banks need to push this harder.
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James A
% projected GDP for FY27—those numbers look impressive on paper, but ground reality for small businesses and retail investors is still tough. The governor is right to focus on market infrastructure, but I hope the RBI also ensures that these improvements don't just benefit big players. Inclusive access needs more than just a mention.
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Priya S
The part about State Development Loans (SDLs) getting a benchmark issuance strategy from FY27 is a big deal! State government bonds have always been the poor cousin of G-secs. If we can get a proper yield curve for SDLs, it'll open up a whole new avenue for pension funds and insurers to invest. Well done, RBI.
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Rahul R
One point that worries me—the governor talks about Indian banks becoming global INR market-makers, but look at the current state of our PSU banks. Their tech infrastructure is still lagging. If we want them to compete with global players in forex and derivatives, they need serious upgrades

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