India's RBI caps foreign portfolio investor debt allocations for 2026–27
Change
India's RBI capped foreign portfolio investor allocations in central government securities at 6%, state government securities at 2%, and corporate bonds at 15% of outstanding stock for the General Route for fiscal 2026–27, set revised half‑year rupee ceilings, and made Voluntary Retention Route investments subject to those limits from April 1, 2026.
Why it matters
Debt allocations across sub‑categories are now fixed by percentage shares and periodic absolute rupee ceilings, which limits the amount of new foreign capital that can be absorbed each allocation window. Funds that had planned to use separate retention capacity must now include Voluntary Retention Route holdings within the General Route ceilings, reducing available headroom for fresh inflows.
Implications
- — Authorised Dealer Category‑I banks' compliance and client‑relations teams must notify their constituents and customers of the revised FPI debt limits as directed in the circular, or remain non‑compliant with the Reserve Bank of India operational directive.
- — Foreign portfolio investor portfolio managers must rebalance or limit allocations so holdings remain within the specified percentage shares and half‑year rupee ceilings, or face non‑compliance with the foreign exchange limits issued under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999.
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