Wednesday, May 27


Mumbai, Capital markets regulator Sebi will review whether there is a need to relax disclosure norms for debt-only issuers in its efforts to deepen the corporate bond market, Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Tuesday.

Speaking at an event organised by CareEdge Ratings here, Pandey also said that Sebi will launch a pilot on bond tokenisation to check if it helps in faster settlement of trades and more transparency.

“There is a need to review whether debt-only listed entities need the same rigour under LODR (listing obligations and disclosure requirements) regulations as equity-listed companies. We will take up this review in due course,” Pandey said.

He reiterated that Sebi is exploring a distinct regulatory classification for debt brokers which can lower costs, reduce entry barriers, and encourage dedicated debt market intermediaries.

Pandey said the exchanges are ready to launch the corporate bond repo platform discussed earlier immediately after RBI issues final guidelines.

The pilot on tokenisation will be on distributed ledger technology and test whether tokenisation can deliver faster settlement, better traceability, automated servicing, and greater transparency, Pandey said, affirming that Sebi remains open to innovation but will move carefully.

Sebi is also mounting efforts to deepen the municipal bond market, Pandey said adding that the Municipal Debt securities framework is being reviewed to help civic bodies finance urban infrastructure, allow pooled finance for multiple municipal bodies, and to increase retail participation in municipal bonds.

There is scale in the corporate debt market, Pandey said, stressing that the size alone is not enough and there needs to be diversity, liquidity, and wider participation.

Outstanding corporate bonds have grown from about Rs 17.5 lakh crore at the end of FY15 to over Rs 59 lakh crore, growing at 12 per cent annually.

In FY26, debt issuances mobilized Rs 9.1 lakh crore – nearly twice the amount mobilized through equity, he added.

Pandey rued that the retail participation in the bond market remains low, and underlined the need to devote more focus on awareness.

“While retail investors have embraced equities and mutual funds, corporate bonds remain unfamiliar to many households,” he said, pointing to a survey done by the regulator.

The Investor Survey shows corporate bond awareness at only 10 per cent, with household penetration at less than 1 per cent, he said, adding that “we need simpler access, better disclosures, and stronger fixed-income literacy.”

“The corporate bond market is the economy’s second engine of credit. It reduces over-reliance on banks. A deep bond market can finance infrastructure, productive capacity, urbanization, energy transition, housing, logistics and digital infrastructure,” he said.

  • Published On May 26, 2026 at 07:19 PM IST

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