India's Capital Markets Boom: $105 Trillion Raised in a Decade, Says SEBI Chief

SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey announced that approximately USD 105 trillion has been raised through equity and debt issuances in the Indian market between FY2016 and FY2026. He highlighted a resilient and vibrant IPO market, with FY26 seeing USD 1.8 trillion raised through 329 offerings. The corporate bond market has expanded steadily at a 12% CAGR, while Mutual Fund Assets Under Management have grown nearly sevenfold since FY16. Pandey also noted the growing counterbalance from domestic institutional investors, making markets more resilient against global volatility.

Key Points: SEBI: $105 Trillion Raised via Equity, Debt in 10 Years

  • $105 trillion raised via equity & debt in 10 years
  • Vibrant IPO market with $1.8T raised in FY26
  • Corporate bond market grew at 12% CAGR
  • Mutual Fund AUM surged from ₹12T to ₹81T
3 min read

USD 105 trillion raised through equity and debt issuances in 10 years: SEBI Chief

SEBI Chair Tuhin Kanta Pandey reveals India raised ~$105 trillion from FY16-FY26. IPO market vibrant, corporate bonds & mutual funds see massive growth.

"This reflects not just market appetite, but issuer confidence in public markets as a platform for long-term capital. - Tuhin Kanta Pandey"

New Delhi, February 25

The Securities and Exchange Board of India Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey on Wednesday said between the Financial Year 2016 and Financial Year 2026, around USD 105 trillion has been raised through equity and debt issuances in the Indian market.

He also highlighted the resilient IPO market, saying it has been "particularly vibrant".

"In FY26 (April-Jan), companies raised about USD 1.8 trillion through 329 IPOs as compared to around USD 1.7 trillion raised through 320 IPOs in FY25. This reflects not just market appetite, but issuer confidence in public markets as a platform for long-term capital," he added.

"We have taken steps to strengthen anchor investor participation in IPOs. The anchor portion has been increased to 40%, with a defined allocation for mutual funds, life insurers, and pension funds. This encourages structured participation by long-term domestic institutions and improves the quality and stability of the anchor book," he said.

Further, he said the corporate bond market has also expanded steadily.

"It has grown at a CAGR of about 12% since FY15, reaching Rs 58.2 trillion as of end of Jan-2026. The asset management industry has seen a structural expansion. Mutual Fund AUM has grown from about Rs 12 trillion in FY16 to nearly Rs 81 trillion now," he said.

On the foreign portfolio investors, he said they continue to be an important part of this ecosystem as the equity assets under custody of FPIs have grown more than three-fold to about Rs 71 trillion by end of Jan-2026, as compared to about Rs 19 trillion at the end of FY16. Including debt and other instruments, total FPI assets under custody stand at about Rs 78 trillion.

"FPI flows are inherently cyclical. They respond to global liquidity conditions, currency movements, relative valuations, and policy stances of major central banks. What adds strength to India's market structure today is the growing counterbalance from domestic institutional investors. This makes our markets more resilient during global risk-off phases," he added.

Pandey further mentioned that India's performance in global indices also reflects this evolving maturity.

"Over the last six years, MSCI India (USD) Index has delivered a CAGR of around 9%, compared to about 6% for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. Performance, of course, may vary across market phases. But consistency over time shapes long-term allocation decisions," he said.

On the Alternative Investment Fund (AIF), Pandey said that to expand the investor pool in high-value AIF strategies, we have reduced the minimum investment threshold for Large Value Funds from Rs 70 crore to Rs 25 crore for accredited investors.

"The AIF ecosystem has grown from Rs 0.1 trillion in FY15 to about Rs 6.5 trillion by end of Dec-2025, channelling risk capital into startups, private credit, and emerging sectors."

"From Jan 1, 2026, investments by mutual funds and SIFs in REITs are treated as equity-related investments, encouraging broader participation. We have also expanded the scope of strategic investors in REITs and InvITs to include a wider set of Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs), including pension funds and provident funds with adequate corpus," he added.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great numbers, but I hope this capital is actually reaching the real economy and creating jobs. Sometimes these huge figures feel disconnected from the ground reality of small businesses struggling for credit.
R
Rohit P
The IPO market is on fire! So many new companies listing. As a retail investor, the increased anchor participation by MFs is reassuring. It means the big players have done their homework before we put in our hard-earned money.
S
Sarah B
As an expat investing in India, the consistent outperformance vs. other emerging markets (9% vs 6%) is what caught my eye. The regulatory steps on AIFs and REITs are also making the market more sophisticated and accessible. Well done, SEBI.
V
Vikram M
Mutual Fund AUM from 12 to 81 trillion rupees... that's the real story. More and more middle-class Indians are moving from gold and FDs to SIPs. A quiet financial revolution is happening.
K
Karthik V
While the growth is impressive, we must ensure retail investors are protected. With so many new IPOs and complex products like AIFs, financial literacy is lagging behind. SEBI's next focus should be on strong investor education campaigns.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50