India's capital markets deepening and becoming more resilient amid global uncertainty: SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], March 14 (ANI): Tuhin Kanta Pandey, Chairman of Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), on Saturday said India's capital markets are not only expanding but are also becoming deeper, more diversified and resilient despite global uncertainties.
Speaking at the Moneycontrol Global Wealth Summit 2026, Pandey said the country's capital markets have witnessed significant growth over the past decade, driven by rising investor participation, expanding market capitalisation and a rapidly growing alternative investment ecosystem.
He further noted that "since FY15 our market capitalisation has grown at a CAGR of about 15 per cent. The corporate bond market has expanded steadily at a CAGR of around 12 per cent. The primary market has remained an important channel for capital formation, facilitating around Rs 9.7 trillion of capital raising annually."
"The number of unique investors in the securities market has grown at roughly 21 per cent CAGR, indicating a broadening investor base and rising household participation," he said.
He further advised investors to stay patient as geopolitical tensions, technological disruption and energy shocks create volatility across global financial markets.
"If there is one word to describe markets today, it is uncertainty," Pandey said.
He noted that geopolitical tensions and conflicts are reshaping economic relationships and influencing capital flows worldwide.
Pandey further noted that volatility has become a defining feature of modern financial markets, particularly as the information environment has evolved and shocks spread quickly across economies.
"For retail investors, the best strategy would be to remain patient," he said.
According to Pandey, episodes of extreme volatility are not new and markets have historically recovered after major global disruptions.
"One lesson becomes clear: periods of extreme volatility don't last forever," he said.
"In the past we have witnessed disruptions caused by Covid-19 and the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Markets witness turbulence but they eventually stabilise," he said.
Pandey said that volatility itself should not be viewed as a sign of market weakness.
"Can markets remain efficient when uncertainty itself becomes the norm?" he asked.
"The real test of a market is not whether volatility appears, but whether the system runs smoothly and efficiently when it appears."
Pandey also highlighted how structural shifts in the global economy are influencing markets.
At the same time, geopolitical tensions, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, are influencing trade, energy supplies and economic relationships worldwide.
"Technological change, particularly the rise of artificial intelligence, is reshaping industries and business models across the spectrum," he said.
Pandey said these trends indicate that India's capital markets are deepening and becoming increasingly resilient even amid global volatility. (ANI)
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