The Securities and Exchange Board of India has officially approved a pilot project focused on the tokenization of corporate bonds using distributed ledger technology. The initiative marks one of the country’s most significant regulatory moves toward integrating blockchain-based infrastructure into mainstream financial markets.
SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey confirmed the development during the CareEdge Debt Market Summit 2026 in Mumbai and later reiterated the details while speaking with reporters. He explained that the regulator planned to initially roll out the project on a limited scale before considering broader implementation across the corporate debt market.
Tokenization involves converting traditional financial assets into digital tokens recorded on distributed ledger systems such as blockchain networks. These systems allow multiple participants to access synchronized transaction records without depending entirely on centralized intermediaries. Regulators believe the technology could reduce manual processes, improve operational transparency, and accelerate settlement efficiency.
SEBI has formally initiated a pilot project to test blockchain-based tokenization of corporate bonds with the goal of enabling faster settlement, greater transparency, and improved liquidity.
According to Pandey, the pilot will specifically evaluate whether distributed ledger technology can improve trading and settlement processes compared with the existing market infrastructure. He reportedly stated that tokenization could create opportunities for faster and more autonomous settlements while potentially increasing market liquidity.
Focus on Efficiency and Transparency
SEBI intends to examine whether tokenized bond infrastructure can deliver four key benefits: shorter settlement cycles, better traceability of transactions, automated servicing of debt instruments, and enhanced transparency for all participants in the market ecosystem.
Pandey clarified that the initiative was not designed to replace the current corporate bond framework but rather to determine whether blockchain technology could add an additional layer of efficiency to the existing system. He also stated that SEBI plans to collaborate with multiple stakeholders while developing the operational and technological structure for the pilot.
The SEBI chairman indicated that the implementation process would take time and estimated that different phases of the project could unfold over the next six to nine months. At the same time, he emphasized that regulators would proceed cautiously because of risks linked to emerging technologies, particularly concerns associated with quantum computing and future cybersecurity challenges.
Existing Blockchain Use Expands Further
India’s capital markets have already seen limited adoption of blockchain-based monitoring systems. Depositories such as National Securities Depository Limited and Central Depository Services Limited currently use distributed ledger technology to monitor security creation and covenant compliance for non-convertible securities.
SEBI’s earlier 2021 framework regarding security and covenant monitoring laid the foundation for blockchain adoption in debt markets. However, the new pilot goes significantly further by exploring the actual tokenization and settlement of bond instruments rather than simply monitoring compliance activity.
The regulator’s proposal extends blockchain use beyond compliance tracking and into the actual issuance, settlement, and servicing of corporate bond instruments.
Pandey also confirmed that the Reserve Bank of India was close to finalizing guidelines related to the corporate bond repo platform. He noted that stock exchanges and SEBI were operationally prepared to launch the platform once RBI approvals are completed.
Corporate Bond Market Faces Participation Challenges
During the summit, Pandey highlighted the rapid expansion of India’s corporate bond market over the past decade. Outstanding corporate bonds reportedly increased from around Rs 17.5 lakh crore in FY15 to more than Rs 59 lakh crore currently, reflecting annual growth of roughly 12%. In FY26 alone, debt issuances raised approximately Rs 9.1 lakh crore, nearly double the amount mobilized through equity markets during the same period.
Despite this growth, SEBI remains concerned about weak retail participation in the bond market. The regulator’s investor survey reportedly showed that awareness of corporate bonds stood at only 10%, while household penetration remained below 1%.
SEBI believes deeper blockchain integration and regulatory reforms could improve accessibility, transparency, and retail participation in India’s rapidly expanding corporate bond market.
The regulator is also reviewing disclosure requirements for debt-only listed entities and exploring a separate classification for debt brokers to reduce entry barriers and encourage specialized intermediaries. Additionally, SEBI is examining reforms to municipal debt securities aimed at strengthening financing options for urban infrastructure and increasing retail investor participation.
The pilot project arrives as tokenized real-world assets continue expanding globally, with regulators and financial institutions increasingly exploring blockchain-based financial infrastructure. India’s move signals a growing willingness among policymakers to test practical blockchain applications within regulated capital markets rather than limiting discussions to theoretical innovation.







