RBI permits retail investors to participate directly in govt securities
RBI permits retail investors to participate directly in govt securities
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 In a major move aimed at encouraging small investors to become direct investors in govt bonds or stated simply to an infinite source of lending to the govt, the RBI said it will allow them to directly buy government debt, making India the first Asian country to do so and among a handful globally.

 The central bank, tasked with managing a whopping Rs 12 lakh crore in government borrowing target next fiscal, hopes the move will allow greater depth to the gilt market in particular and the overall debt market in general thus deepening the financial markets as lack of depth has been the biggest bane of the domestic debt market all this while.

In effect the RBI has opened a long, endless tap for the government to borrow from, just as is done in the domestic stock market now, with the only difference being this will be under direct the watch of the RBI. Currently, the RBI allows small investors to buy government bonds via the Gobid platform on BSE and NSE, but it has not gained any traction.

While no country allows direct retail participation as the RBI has promised now, Britain, Brazil and Hungary allow small investors to buy/sell through third-party controls. This is the second major step that the RBI is taking to encourage retail investors to enter the gilt market after it had allowed entry through the stock exchanges a few years back but did not elicit the intended result.

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