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Business India News Updated Jun 25, 2026

RBI Opens Term Money Market to NBFCs and HFCs for Better Liquidity

The Reserve Bank of India has proposed widening access to the term money market to include NBFCs, HFCs, AIFIs, and companies. Currently, only banks and standalone primary dealers can participate in this market. The move is intended to deepen liquidity and improve the transmission of monetary policy across different maturities. The RBI has invited public comments on the draft guidelines until July 25.

RBI proposes wider access to term money market for NBFCs, HFCs and companies

Mumbai, June 25

The Reserve Bank of India on Thursday proposed opening the term money market to a wider range of financial institutions and companies in a move aimed at deepening market liquidity and improving monetary policy transmission across different maturities.

Under the draft directions released by the central bank, non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), housing finance companies (HFCs), All India Financial Institutions (AIFIs), and companies would be allowed to participate in the term money market, which is currently accessible only to banks and standalone primary dealers.

The RBI said the proposed framework is intended to strengthen the transmission of policy rates across various tenors and promote the development of a more active term money market. The central bank has invited comments from market participants and stakeholders on the draft guidelines until July 25.

At present, participation in the term money market is largely restricted to banks and standalone primary dealers, subject to prudential limits. The proposed changes would permit AIFIs and NBFCs, including HFCs but excluding base-layer NBFCs, to both borrow and lend in the market. Companies, meanwhile, would be allowed to participate as lenders.

Market participants believe the move could significantly expand the pool of borrowers and lenders in the unsecured money market, improving liquidity and price discovery in maturities beyond overnight borrowing.

The RBI has also proposed easing borrowing limits for standalone primary dealers. Under the draft norms, standalone primary dealers would be allowed to borrow up to 400 per cent of their net owned funds through term money and inter-corporate deposits taken together. Their borrowing limit in the call and notice money markets would continue to remain at 225 per cent of net owned funds on a fortnightly average basis.

For NBFCs and HFCs, the proposed borrowing limit in the term money market has been set at 200 per cent of net owned funds. AIFIs would be governed by board-approved limits within the existing regulatory exposure framework.

The draft guidelines state that participants will be free to negotiate interest rates, while transactions may be executed either over-the-counter or through authorised electronic trading platforms. The RBI has proposed extending market hours from the current 9 am to 5 pm to 9 am to 7 pm on business days, or as specified by the central bank from time to time.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally, some attention to NBFCs! The housing finance sector has been hit hard. But I'm curious about the borrowing limit of 200% of net owned funds for NBFCs and HFCs. Hope this doesn't lead to excessive leverage. Need to keep a close watch on risk management.

Michael C

As someone who works in finance, this is a welcome development. The term money market in India has been too bank-dominated for too long. Opening it up to AIFIs and companies should enhance depth and pricing efficiency across maturities. The extended market hours till 7 pm is also a practical change for execution.

Rohit P

RBI is slowly but steadily liberalising the money market. But I worry about the unsecured nature of these inter-corporate deposits. If a big NBFC defaults, the ripple effects could be significant. Maybe the RBI should look at some security mechanism or collateral requirements. Still, a step in the right direction for financial deepening.

Sarah B

This is an interesting policy move. I've seen similar steps in other emerging markets to broaden participation in short-term funding markets. The key will be how well the RBI monitors systemic risk. Let's see if this translates to better credit flow to the real economy, especially for infrastructure and housing.

Kavya N

Ye to bahut achha hua! Banks ne kabhi NBFCs ko sahi se support nahi diya. Ab directly market se funds le sakte hain. Mujhe bas yeh dar hai ki small NBFCs ko access nahi milega due to higher costs. Still, aage ka rasta clear hua hai. 👍

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