logo
India's corporate bond market booms: Record Rs 10 trillion raised in corporate bonds in 2025, says Rajkumar Subramanian of PL Wealth

India's corporate bond market booms: Record Rs 10 trillion raised in corporate bonds in 2025, says Rajkumar Subramanian of PL Wealth

Time of India23-07-2025
India's corporate
bond market
has hit a historic milestone in 2025, with total fundraising nearing ₹10 trillion—a record high that signals a significant shift in corporate financing strategies.
According to Rajkumar Subramanian, Head of Product & Family Office at
PL Wealth
, this surge has been fueled by a combination of lower interest rates, abundant liquidity, and rising capital expenditure by corporates.
The trend highlights a maturing debt market, where private placements, shorter-duration issuances, and institutional investor appetite are driving growth.
However, Subramanian also notes that despite this boom, challenges such as limited retail participation and a shallow
secondary market
still need to be addressed to unlock the market's full potential. Edited Excerpts –
Q) How would you describe the current size and depth of the corporate bond
market
in India?
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Please select course:
Select a Course Category
Finance
Technology
Data Science
healthcare
Degree
Leadership
PGDM
Healthcare
Management
MCA
others
MBA
Product Management
Public Policy
CXO
Digital Marketing
Others
Artificial Intelligence
Project Management
Design Thinking
Operations Management
Data Science
Data Analytics
Cybersecurity
Skills you'll gain:
Duration:
9 Months
IIM Calcutta
SEPO - IIMC CFO India
Starts on
undefined
Get Details
Skills you'll gain:
Duration:
7 Months
S P Jain Institute of Management and Research
CERT-SPJIMR Fintech & Blockchain India
Starts on
undefined
Get Details
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Indonesia: Unsold Sofas at Bargain Prices (Prices May Surprise You)
Sofas | Search Ads
Search Now
Undo
A) India's corporate bond market has evolved into a substantial segment of the broader financial ecosystem, with outstanding issuances valued at over ₹53.6 lakh crore, representing nearly a quarter of the country's total bond market as per RBI's June 2025 data.
While this reflects impressive growth in absolute terms, the market's depth remains limited. Institutional investors—mutual funds, insurance companies, banks, and pension funds—dominate with over 95% of holdings.
Bonds Corner
Powered By
India's corporate bond market booms: Record Rs 10 trillion raised in corporate bonds in 2025, says Rajkumar Subramanian of PL Wealth
India's corporate bond market is experiencing unprecedented growth in 2025, nearing ₹10 trillion due to lower interest rates and increased capital expenditure. While institutional investors dominate, reforms are needed to enhance retail participation and secondary market liquidity. U.S. fiscal concerns influence global bond yields, impacting India despite domestic rate cuts.
India bonds flat as traders look ahead to RBI policy; liquidity ebbs
Weak Yen and BoJ Policy Anchor Japanese Bond Market
NBFCs lead India's corporate bond market as private placements dominate: Jiraaf Bond Analyser
Japan bonds fall on coalition's poll defeat as market reopens after holiday
Browse all Bonds News with
Retail participation is minimal, constrained by historical barriers such as high minimum investment thresholds and restricted access to transparent pricing.
Live Events
Despite a robust primary issuance environment, the secondary market remains thin, with average monthly turnover hovering below 4% of outstanding volumes.
Over-the-counter trades continue to dominate, limiting liquidity and price discovery. While structural foundations are in place, enhanced transparency, broader investor inclusion, and deeper secondary activity are essential to transform the market into a more vibrant and inclusive capital-raising avenue.
Q) What factors are driving the record-breaking surge in corporate bond issuances in 2025?
A) Several converging factors have propelled corporate bond issuance in 2025 to unprecedented levels, with total fund-raising nearing ₹10 trillion.
This marks a significant shift in corporate funding dynamics. Lower interest rates—following 100 basis points of cumulative rate cuts by the RBI—created an attractive window for issuers to tap long-term capital at competitive costs.
At the same time, narrowing spreads and abundant liquidity in the system further incentivized bond market access. Corporates have also displayed strong intent to finance capex and refinance high-cost legacy debt.
Non-financial corporate capital expenditure has seen double-digit growth, underpinned by rising business confidence and stronger balance sheets.
Issuers increasingly favour private placements, which offer streamlined execution. Notably, shorter-duration issuances (<5 years) have seen a sharp uptick, reflecting both issuer and investor preferences amid interest rate volatility.
Institutions such as mutual funds and insurers, seeking yields above traditional deposits, have remained active participants, supporting this supply glut.
Together, these factors signal a more mature borrowing environment—where strategic capital planning, investor appetite, and regulatory headroom are converging in favour of bond financing.
Q) How is the U.S. debt situation influencing global bond markets?
A) The growing fiscal strain in the U.S.—driven by rising deficits and mounting concerns over debt sustainability—is increasingly influencing global bond markets.
Recent Federal Reserve minutes highlight a cautious policy stance, with rates held steady and balance sheet normalization continuing through quantitative tightening.
This has kept long-end U.S. Treasury yields elevated, setting a higher benchmark for global sovereign and corporate yields. The steepening yield curve and elevated term premiums are prompting global investors to reassess duration risk and tighten allocations, particularly in emerging markets.
In India, despite a cumulative 100 basis points of policy rate cuts by the RBI between February and June 2025, the benchmark 10-year G-Sec yield has remained range-bound at 6.25%–6.45% from April through July—signalling muted monetary transmission.
This divergence underscores the influence of external headwinds, including sustained U.S. rate pressures, geopolitical uncertainties, and risk-averse investor sentiment, which are outweighing the impact of domestic policy easing.
As confidence in fiscal prudence erodes, investors are increasingly reallocating towards gold, shorter-duration debt, and high-grade corporate instruments. In effect, the U.S. fiscal trajectory is no longer a local issue—it is reshaping global capital flows and repricing risk across markets.
Q) Why has the issuance of ultra-long-term U.S. Treasuries slowed down recently?
A) The reduction in ultra-long-term U.S. Treasury issuance is driven by a complex interplay of market sentiment, fiscal optics, and evolving policy priorities.
Investor appetite for long-duration paper has waned amidst persistently high term premiums and volatile demand at recent auctions. As yields on 30-year Treasuries edge closer to 5%, the risk-reward dynamic has become less favourable — particularly in a climate of uncertain inflation trajectory and geopolitical tensions.
Fed communications have also reflected concerns around the balance sheet runoff's impact on market liquidity. Although the central bank continues to unwind its holdings, reinvestment preferences now lean toward shorter maturities, indirectly weighing on the long-end segment.
In parallel, the U.S. Treasury appears to be recalibrating its issuance strategy—emphasizing short- and medium-tenor securities to manage rollover risks, reduce interest costs, and retain flexibility amid fiscal headwinds. Until demand normalizes and policy direction stabilizes, ultra-long bond issuance is likely to remain subdued.
Q) What reforms could help deepen India's corporate bond market further?
A) To unlock the full potential of India's corporate bond market, a combination of regulatory, structural, and operational reforms is essential.
First, broadening participation through lower issuance thresholds and flexible investment norms—especially for pension and insurance funds—can catalyse demand and supply. CRISIL estimates such measures could enable ₹4–7 lakh crore in additional issuance capacity.
Second, aligning the tax treatment of debt mutual funds with other asset classes—by restoring indexation benefits and revisiting long-term capital gains taxation—can improve their competitiveness and encourage greater retail and institutional participation in the bond market.
Third, recent initiatives like SEBI's 'Bond Central' platform are encouraging steps toward improving transparency, standardizing disclosures, and lowering the investment minimums to ₹10,000. This could meaningfully widen the retail investor base.
Deepening the secondary market is equally critical. Encouraging market-making, credit default swap usage by funds, and establishing robust buyback frameworks will help address liquidity constraints.
Finally, supporting securitization, especially for stressed assets, can develop a diversified risk-return spectrum within the fixed-income space. These reforms, implemented in tandem, can transform the current institutional-heavy landscape into a more inclusive, liquid, and dynamic market.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Patna Metro will not start from 15th August? New date is..., Full list of metro stations include...
Patna Metro will not start from 15th August? New date is..., Full list of metro stations include...

India.com

time24 minutes ago

  • India.com

Patna Metro will not start from 15th August? New date is..., Full list of metro stations include...

Patna metro- File image Patna metro update: In a matter of good news for residents of Bihar, the first metro project of Bihar, the Patna Metro is now likely to be launched on August 23. Originally planned to be inaugurated on August 15, the operation of the Patna metro will begin only after mandatory safety checks are completed. Here are all the details you need to know about the Patna metro and which stations are expected to be operational in the first phase. As per media reports, Urban Development Minister Jiwesh Mishra confirmed that the preparations were initially aimed at the Independence Day launch, but August 23 is now being considered as an alternative. In the first phase of the metro, five stations are expected to be implemented: Patna metro: Which 5 Metro stations will be opened? New Patliputra Bus Terminal Zero Mile Bhootnath Khemnichak Malahi Pakadi However, readers should also note that during the initial phase, the metro will run only between New Patliputra Bus Terminal, Zero Mile and Bhootnath. Nitish Kumar asks officials to complete Metro project within deadline Patna Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar recently conducted an on-site inspection of the Patna Metro Rail Project, reviewing progress at key stations including Malahi Pakadi and Bhootnath Metro Station. The Chief Minister issued necessary directions to officials and emphasised the timely completion of the project. Details on Patna Metro Project Using a site map, Singh informed the Chief Minister about the facilities planned at Malahi Pakadi Metro Station, including escalators, ticket counters, passenger amenities, public and paid areas, lifts, and access paths to the platform. He added that a total 6.20 km stretch—covering Malahi Pakadi, Khemnichak, Bhootnath Road, Zero Mile, and Pataliputra Bus Terminal—is being given top priority for early completion. What's the total investment on Patna Metro Rail Project? The Bihar government has allocated Rs 115.10 crore for the execution of this section, with a target to operationalise it by August 15, 2025. (With inputs from agencies)

Indian Navy gets firepower boost with Brahmos fitted guided-missile frigate
Indian Navy gets firepower boost with Brahmos fitted guided-missile frigate

India Today

time24 minutes ago

  • India Today

Indian Navy gets firepower boost with Brahmos fitted guided-missile frigate

In a big boost to the Indian Navy's firepower, the Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) Ltd delivered 'Himgiri', the first of three Advanced Guided-Missile Frigates being built under the Indian Navy's Project 17A, on Thursday. The ship marks the 801st vessel and the 112th warship built and delivered by the GRSE to the Indian Navy. The 149-metre-long ship, with a displacement of 6,670 tonnes, is one of the largest and most technologically advanced warships constructed by GRSE in its 65-year journey as a Defence Public Sector total project is being undertaken at a whopping cost of Rs 21,833.36 crore and will significantly benefit India's Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), start-ups and Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs). The Himgiri is armed with BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles for anti-ship and land-attack roles, as well as Barak 8 surface-to-air missiles for aerial frigate is powered by a combined diesel and gas turbine propulsion system and features an Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, advanced combat systems, and full-spectrum warfare capabilities—spanning anti-air, anti-surface, and anti-submarine operations. The ship also focusses on crew comfort and operational flexibility, accommodating 225 personnel and aviation support for helicopter operations and stands as a key symbol of the 'Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan' by the Indian government. Currently, GRSE is working on 15 warships across four classes for the Indian Navy. Of these, Androth (the second Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft) and Ikshak (the third Survey Vessel Large) have completed sea trials and are preparing for delivery. The remaining 13 vessels are in various stages of construction. - EndsMust Watch

Karnataka launches Rs 1,000 crore Quantum Mission, to set up Q-city near Bengaluru
Karnataka launches Rs 1,000 crore Quantum Mission, to set up Q-city near Bengaluru

Indian Express

time24 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Karnataka launches Rs 1,000 crore Quantum Mission, to set up Q-city near Bengaluru

The Karnataka government Thursday unveiled a Rs 1,000-crore Quantum Mission with a vision to transform the state into a $20 billion quantum economy by 2035 and establish it as the 'quantum capital of Asia'. As part of this mission, it announced the establishment of Q-City (Quantum City) near Bengaluru – a futuristic integrated hub for quantum technology innovation, manufacturing, research, and talent development. The announcement was made during the inauguration of the Quantum India Summit 2025 held in Bengaluru, co-organised by the Department of Science & Technology (DST) and the Indian Institute of Science (IISc). Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Minister for Science & Technology N S Boseraju laid out the government's roadmap to foster quantum innovation and infrastructure across the state. 'By 2035, we aim to create 10,000 high-skilled jobs and establish Karnataka as the quantum capital of Asia,' Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said. He added that a Quantum Technology Task Force will be constituted to guide policy frameworks, while the government will also launch a Quantum Venture Capital Fund to back more than 100 startups and generate at least 100 patents in the sector. The overall initiative is expected to create over 2 lakh direct jobs. Minister Boseraju said, 'As part of this effort, our government will establish Q-City where world-class facilities will be provided. This city will integrate academic institutions, innovation centres, manufacturing clusters for quantum hardware, processors, ancillary units, and R&D hubs supported by quantum high-performance computing (HPC) data centres.' The minister said the state is already home to India's first commercially deployable quantum computer, built locally in Bengaluru by a team of Kannadigas. 'This computer is not just a proof of concept but a testimony to determination. Developed indigenously, it is already delivering commercial services,' he added. The state has already set up a Quantum Research Park at IISc Bengaluru, which has supported over 55 research and development (R&D) projects and 13 startups, while training more than 1,000 quantum professionals annually. To boost its activities, the state has sanctioned an additional Rs 48 crore in funding. Karnataka Thursday also announced plans to establish India's first Quantum Hardware Park, along with four innovation zones and a dedicated quantum chip fabrication facility, expected to be operational by the end of this year. 'Quantum chip fabrication capability will be operational by the year-end. This will enable domestic production of advanced quantum components and devices,' Boseraju said. The minister also emphasised the need for policy flexibility from the Centre to enable state-level innovation. 'The Government of India has launched the National Quantum Mission with an outlay of Rs 6,000 crore. For its successful implementation, the Centre must allow Karnataka to lead with innovative and decentralised approaches,' he said, addressing DST Secretary Abhay Karandikar. To develop talent across the state, the science and technology minister said, Karnataka will roll out a quantum curriculum at the higher secondary level in both English and Kannada under its Stream Labs initiative. The state will also introduce quantum skilling programmes in 20 colleges, expand DST-funded PhD fellowships to 150 students, and take these programmes to tier-2 and tier-3 cities and over 20 universities. The roadmap is structured around five strategic pillars: talent development, R&D pilots, infrastructure, industry support, and global partnerships. Karnataka also aims to develop 1,000-qubit quantum processors and pilot real-world applications in healthcare, cybersecurity, governance, agriculture, and early disease detection.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store