Does away with much of auction process in this market and reinvestment checks
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has allowed foreign institutional investors to get directly in the debt market, by doing way with the auction process.
“FIIs/QFIs can now invest in government debt without purchasing debt limits till the overall investment reaches 90 per cent, after which the auction mechanism shall be initiated for allocation of the remaining limits, as currently in place for FII investments in corporate debt,” Sebi said on Friday. The investment limit for FIIs in government debt is capped at $30 billion.
Foreign investors, until now, had to purchase limits through periodic auctions, to be able to invest in the debt market. The acquired limits used to lapse once the securities were sold. Sebi has also eased restrictions on re-investments till the FII investment reaches 90 per cent of the overall limit.
Sebi had, earlier, scrapped the auction system in corporate debt, where the FII investment cap is $51 billion. In April, the Reserve Bank had decided to merge all debt groupings into only two broad categories.
The move could help get critical foreign inflows at a time when the government is struggling to rein in the current account deficit.
“This would help in simplifying the process of utilising the debt limits. After the increase in the limits in the past, it is logical to do away with the auction process till such time as the utilisation nears the available limits, and is a pro-active move in the right direction,” said Gautam Mehra, executive director, tax &