“Our municipal bonds are quite small compared to what we witness in the US… I would urge pension funds and insurers to look at increasing support to municipal bond issuances,” he said, speaking at an event organized by industry lobby grouping Assocham here.
Very few civic bodies have used the route to raise long-term resources for funding, even as policymakers have been trying hard to increase their usage.
Rao expressed satisfaction with the activity in the corporate bond repo market, saying it stands at over Rs 10,000 crore a month and will increase to over Rs 18,000 crore a month in two months.
He also urged the bond market to come up with newer, innovative ways to tap into the available opportunity so as to increase the activity in the market. Citing the example of mutual fund body Amfi’s campaign aimed at popularising mutual funds, he said the bond market can also create a similar campaign which will help the sector gain traction and end up aiding economic growth through capital formation. He also said that there is a need for market participants who actually trade to use the request for quote (RFQ) platform, and added that the regulator is considering to allow more thematic bonds issuances on the lines of social and sustainability bonds. Speaking at the same event, life insurance behemoth LIC‘s managing director R Doraiswamy said the insurer has a mandate to invest 15 per cent of its resources in infrastructure and would want a mature corporate bond market just for the same.
At present, the insurer invests majorly in investment grade paper rated AA+ and above, but it will be keen to look at other avenues as well, including infrastructure investment trusts, he added.
SBI managing director Ashwini Kumar Tewari called out the near-exclusion of low-rated companies as a problem for the development of the corporate bond market, stating that many of such companies come back to raise money from the banks rather than the bonds.