&w=3840&q=100)
India widens global investor access to $639 bn corporate credit market
Bloomberg
By Saikat Das, Subhadip Sircar and Bhaskar Dutta
India has expanded the usage of a derivative product popular with foreign investors, according to people familiar with the matter, giving them wider access to the nation's $639 billion credit market.
The financial regulator for the special economic zone known as GIFT City has allowed global banks including HSBC Holdings Plc and Standard Chartered Plc to offer total return swaps for corporate bonds, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing a private matter.
The expansion of these swaps to corporate debt — in addition to government bonds — comes as India's credit market is booming. Indian companies have issued a record amount of local currency notes, while the high-yield private credit market is also growing. Construction conglomerate Shapoorji Pallonji Group raised $3.4 billion this year in the country's biggest private credit deal.
Total return swaps allow foreigners to get exposure to India without the need to open a domestic account. Under a swap, investors receive returns from an underlying asset without directly owning it, in exchange for fees to the other party. These instruments have become popular since the announcement of India's inclusion in global bond indexes, helping drive $22 billion of inflows into the nation's sovereign debt.
While the approvals for the swaps are only for onshore rupee debt, there is also demand from banks to offer these derivatives for dollar bonds from companies in GIFT City, according to the International Financial Services Centres Authority.
'We will soon be floating a consultation paper in this regard,' K Rajaraman, chairman of the regulator said in an earlier interview.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
9 minutes ago
- Economic Times
How will Trump's 25% tariffs affect India's key sectors?
Indian markets reacted negatively to US tariffs. Donald Trump imposed 25% tariffs on India. Most sectoral indices closed lower. Textiles, automobiles, oil & gas, and pharmaceuticals are likely to be affected. Textile stocks could face pressure. There is ambiguity on the auto sector impact. Oil & gas sector also faced a drop. Pharma sector also declined due to the tariffs. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Mumbai: All sectoral indices, except FMCG and media, closed lower on Thursday as investor sentiment turned sour after US President Donald Trump announced 25% tariffs on India effective on August 1 along with additional non-tariff penalties for buying crude oil from sectors like textiles, automobiles, oil & gas and pharmaceuticals are likely to be more susceptible to the adverse impact of tariff imposition. A look at what's in store for the sectors that are expected to bear the brunt of the tariffs:Textile stocks could remain under pressure as the sector will be among the most impacted by the tariffs given that US is its biggest market."Margins are expected to take a hit till global trade stabilises," said Prerna Jhunjhunwala,VP equity research, textile and retail, Elara Capital. Vardhman Textiles and Kitex Garments tumbled 5% each while Gokaldas Exports dropped 4.5% on Thursday. Indo Count Industries and Welspun Living shed 4% each. "Textiles and gems and jewellery stocks are expected to see the most adverse impact due to their high dependence on the US," said Sunny Agrawal, head of Fundamental Equity Research, SBICAPS said there is some ambiguity on the impact of tariffs on the auto sector since it was already subjected to 25% tariffs in the earlier round of tariff imposition."While domestic focused auto companies are not expected to see major impact, companies which have a high exposure to the US markets are likely to witness impact, but the extent of impact is unclear," said Nifty Auto Index shed as much as 1.5% during the day but erased some of the losses and closed 0.4% lower. Balkrishna Industries fell 2.8% and Bharat Forge declined 2.3%. Exide industries, Samvardhana Motherson International and MRF Ltd closed over 1% lower. Emkay Global said auto is better placed than feared (as India barely exports vehicles to the US, while auto components may eventually benefit from tariffs on China, Canada, and Mexico).The Nifty oil & gas index dropped 1.5% on Thursday with 14 out of 15 stocks on the index ending lower. Mahanagar Gas tumbled 4.1% while Adani Total Gas and Gujarat State Petronet slid 3.4% and 2.8%, respectively."Investors are beginning to build in the impact of supply constraints due to the US sanctions on Russia for crude oil purchases by China and India and the non-tariff penalties for buying crude oil from Russia on India," said Swarnendu Bhushan, co-head - Institutional Research, Prabhudas Lilladher. "This could drive up crude oil prices and result in lower gross marketing margins for oil marketing companies." IOC, Hindustan Petroleum, GAIL India Oil India and Bharat Petroleum Corporation moved between 1.5- 2.5% Pharma fell 1.3% and Nifty healthcare index dropped 1.1% on Thursday as US is the biggest market for domestic drugmakers. "In absence of overnight alternatives for generic drug makers, US is not likely to impose tariffs on pharma as healthcare cost in US would move up significantly," said Agrawal."Although US has allayed domestic manufacturing, there have been concerns on viability to produce and sell in the US."


Economic Times
9 minutes ago
- Economic Times
India's retail traders gain formal access to algo trading under Sebi's new framework
Starting August 1st, Indian retail investors gain formal access to algo trading under Sebi's new framework, moving from unregulated activity to supervised trading. While this democratizes automated trading, retail algos, subject to strict checks and slower execution, differ significantly from the sophisticated, faster systems used by institutions. The 'kill switch' provides a safety net against systemic disruptions. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads August 1 is the day when retail investors in India can officially access algorithmic trading software, transforming from what has been an unregulated, informal activity so far. Nishanth Vasudevan finds out what Sebi's new, tighter framework means for retail investors and whether it could change the way they trading-short for algorithmic trading-is a computer programme that automatically places buy or sell orders based on a set of pre-defined retail investors must place trades manually through the brokers' trading app or platform. In algo, software does the trades on its own when certain predetermined conditions are met. You could set an algorithm to buy a stock if it falls below ₹100 or sell if it crosses ₹ now, rules for a lot of retail algo trading were grey, with open APIs or application programming interfaces (digital tools from brokers that allowed traders to use their own algos) and little regulatory oversight. From August 1, all that changes as retail algo trading comes under formal regulatory supervision and only approved software will be allowed to be used for retail investors can access algo trading only if registered with stockbrokers and as per the conditions laid out by Sebi. If you're using a third-party algo-from a fintech or algo vendor-it must be empanelled with the stock exchange, and your broker must do the necessary checks before allowing it. The algo itself must be registered with the You need to register it with the exchange through your broker if the algo fires off orders fast enough to cross a limit, measured as the number of orders per second. If the number of orders is below that threshold, the algo need not be can't just download an algo software from the internet and start firing trades. Only algo providers empanelled with the exchange are allowed to offer this. These firms can provide it only through a registered broker. Every algo strategy must be registered with the exchange and will be assigned a unique ID. Automated trading has mostly been the preserve of institutional investors, trading desks, and FPIs. Big trading firms like Jane Street use super sophisticated algorithms that execute orders in microseconds. By formalising it, Sebi has tried to democratise that doesn't mean that the playing field is level-the big players will continue to have an advantage in terms of speed, flexibility and algo software used by retail investors is not the same as what big institutions or proprietary desks use. The retail version will have to go through strict checks and approvals, while institutional and prop trading desks use in-house algos, which are customised and large institutions connect directly to the exchange through direct market access (DMA)-a system that allows them to place orders directly, bypassing the broker. This route is not available to retail investors. DMA gives algo trades the edge in terms of faster execution. While retail investors will also be allowed to access algo software, the level of regulatory controls is tighter, while speed and flexibility are modest compared to what institutions safety nets are aimed at ensuring that the algo trades do not snowball into a bigger issue. While regulations ensure oversight by brokers, exchanges and Sebi, one key safeguard is the 'kill switch', which allows exchanges to halt trades from a particular algo. This is aimed at averting a systemic disruption on account of one software for retail traders may not be as efficient as what institutions use, but it does open possibilities. Automation brings discipline to trading, while retail investors can do rule-based trading strategies consistently without much effort. So, retail algos may not outrun big machines, but it's a good place to start.


Time of India
9 minutes ago
- Time of India
India's retail traders gain formal access to algo trading under Sebi's new framework
Starting August 1st, Indian retail investors gain formal access to algo trading under Sebi's new framework, moving from unregulated activity to supervised trading. While this democratizes automated trading, retail algos, subject to strict checks and slower execution, differ significantly from the sophisticated, faster systems used by institutions. The 'kill switch' provides a safety net against systemic disruptions. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads August 1 is the day when retail investors in India can officially access algorithmic trading software, transforming from what has been an unregulated, informal activity so far. Nishanth Vasudevan finds out what Sebi's new, tighter framework means for retail investors and whether it could change the way they trading-short for algorithmic trading-is a computer programme that automatically places buy or sell orders based on a set of pre-defined retail investors must place trades manually through the brokers' trading app or platform. In algo, software does the trades on its own when certain predetermined conditions are met. You could set an algorithm to buy a stock if it falls below ₹100 or sell if it crosses ₹ now, rules for a lot of retail algo trading were grey, with open APIs or application programming interfaces (digital tools from brokers that allowed traders to use their own algos) and little regulatory oversight. From August 1, all that changes as retail algo trading comes under formal regulatory supervision and only approved software will be allowed to be used for retail investors can access algo trading only if registered with stockbrokers and as per the conditions laid out by Sebi. If you're using a third-party algo-from a fintech or algo vendor-it must be empanelled with the stock exchange, and your broker must do the necessary checks before allowing it. The algo itself must be registered with the You need to register it with the exchange through your broker if the algo fires off orders fast enough to cross a limit, measured as the number of orders per second. If the number of orders is below that threshold, the algo need not be can't just download an algo software from the internet and start firing trades. Only algo providers empanelled with the exchange are allowed to offer this. These firms can provide it only through a registered broker. Every algo strategy must be registered with the exchange and will be assigned a unique ID. Automated trading has mostly been the preserve of institutional investors, trading desks, and FPIs. Big trading firms like Jane Street use super sophisticated algorithms that execute orders in microseconds. By formalising it, Sebi has tried to democratise that doesn't mean that the playing field is level-the big players will continue to have an advantage in terms of speed, flexibility and algo software used by retail investors is not the same as what big institutions or proprietary desks use. The retail version will have to go through strict checks and approvals, while institutional and prop trading desks use in-house algos, which are customised and large institutions connect directly to the exchange through direct market access (DMA)-a system that allows them to place orders directly, bypassing the broker. This route is not available to retail investors. DMA gives algo trades the edge in terms of faster execution. While retail investors will also be allowed to access algo software, the level of regulatory controls is tighter, while speed and flexibility are modest compared to what institutions safety nets are aimed at ensuring that the algo trades do not snowball into a bigger issue. While regulations ensure oversight by brokers, exchanges and Sebi, one key safeguard is the 'kill switch', which allows exchanges to halt trades from a particular algo. This is aimed at averting a systemic disruption on account of one software for retail traders may not be as efficient as what institutions use, but it does open possibilities. Automation brings discipline to trading, while retail investors can do rule-based trading strategies consistently without much effort. So, retail algos may not outrun big machines, but it's a good place to start.