RBI Issues Master Direction on Credit Derivatives, 2026
The RBI has issued the final Master Direction on Credit Derivatives, 2026, allowing derivatives on credit indices and total return swaps on corporate bonds. Credit derivatives let lenders transfer default risk - like insurance against a borrower failing to repay - and the move aims to deepen India's corporate bond market.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued the final Master Direction - Reserve Bank of India (Credit Derivatives) Directions, 2026. This step puts in place the formal rulebook that will allow new credit-derivative products in India, namely derivatives on credit indices and total return swaps on corporate bonds. The final rules came after the RBI released draft directions on 6 February 2026, examined the feedback received from market participants and stakeholders, and made suitable changes before finalising them.
A credit derivative is a financial contract that lets one party transfer the risk of a borrower failing to repay (called credit risk or default risk) to another party, without actually selling the underlying loan or bond. In simple terms, it works like insurance against default. For example, a bank that has lent money or holds a company's bonds can use a credit derivative to protect itself if the borrower defaults. The buyer of protection pays a regular fee, and the seller of protection agrees to pay up if a default happens. A "credit index" bundles the credit risk of many borrowers together, while a "total return swap" lets one party receive the full return (interest plus price change) of a bond in exchange for a fixed payment, effectively moving the bond's risk and reward to another party.
This move was announced in the Union Budget for FY 2026-27 and in the RBI's Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies dated 6 February 2026. The aim is to develop India's corporate bond market by giving banks, financial institutions and investors better tools to manage and trade credit risk. When investors can hedge default risk more easily, they are usually more willing to buy corporate bonds, which helps companies raise long-term money.
For India, a deeper corporate bond market reduces the heavy dependence on bank loans for financing and supports long-term investment in infrastructure and industry. By allowing these instruments under a clear RBI framework, the central bank is trying to balance market development with financial stability, since derivatives, if misused, can also spread risk.
For aspirants, remember that a credit derivative transfers credit (default) risk and acts like insurance against a borrower defaulting; that the RBI is the regulator; that the new products are derivatives on credit indices and total return swaps on corporate bonds; and that the broader goal is to deepen India's corporate bond market. Note also the policy chain: announced in the Union Budget FY 2026-27, draft issued 6 February 2026, final Master Direction now issued.
Key Points to Remember
- The RBI issued the final Master Direction on Credit Derivatives, 2026, after reviewing feedback on its 6 February 2026 draft.
- A credit derivative transfers a borrower's default (credit) risk to another party - it works like insurance against default.
- New products allowed: derivatives on credit indices and total return swaps on corporate bonds.
- The buyer of protection pays a fee; the seller pays out if a default occurs.
- The move was announced in the Union Budget for FY 2026-27.
- Aim: deepen India's corporate bond market and give better tools to manage credit risk.
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC Prelims (Economy - financial instruments, derivatives), Banking exams (RBI functions, corporate bond market), and SSC CGL (General Awareness).
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