India rushes to reform financial sector after $17 billion foreign exodus

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India is pushing rapid financial reforms after a record $17 billion foreign outflow, easing rules to spur lending and attract investors. Officials aim to rebuild confidence and sustain growth at 6.8% in FY2026.


India is moving swiftly to reshape its financial landscape after foreign investors pulled nearly $17 billion out of the country’s markets this year the steepest withdrawal in Asia. In response, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) have begun loosening long-standing regulations, allowing banks to finance mergers more freely, simplifying company listings, and expanding access for overseas funds.


The reforms mark a significant shift under newly appointed financial chiefs Sanjay Malhotra (RBI) and Tuhin Kanta Pandey (SEBI), both of whom are steering the system away from the tight controls imposed after India’s mid-2010s debt crisis. Over the next year, regulators are expected to unveil further measures aimed at boosting retail investor participation in smaller towns and easing banking restrictions.


Analysts describe the reforms as a “breath of fresh air” for India’s capital markets but caution that sustained growth will require deeper structural changes from simplifying taxes to cutting bureaucratic red tape. For now, New Delhi is betting on liberalization and investor optimism to restore foreign confidence and reaffirm India’s position as one of the world’s most dynamic emerging economies.