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Decoding SEBI’s June 2026 Board Decisions: What SEBI’s June 2026 Board Decisions Mean for India’s Capital Markets

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), at its Board meeting held on 19 June 2026, approved a series of regulatory reforms spanning corporate actions, alternative investment funds, mutual funds and debt markets. While each reform addresses a distinct aspect of the securities market, collectively they reflect SEBI’s continued emphasis on strengthening India’s capital market ecosystem through greater operational efficiency, ease of doing business, improved market infrastructure and enhanced investor protection.

The approved measures are built upon consultation papers issued over the past few months, incorporating stakeholder feedback before their final adoption. For issuers, merchant bankers, fund managers, institutional investors and other market participants, these decisions provide valuable insight into the regulator’s evolving approach towards facilitating capital formation while maintaining market integrity.

This article examines four significant reforms approved by the SEBI Board and their broader significance for India’s capital markets.

 

Reintroducing Open Market Buy-backs Through Stock Exchanges

Buy-backs continue to be an important capital management tool for listed companies, enabling them to return surplus capital to shareholders, improve capital structure and signal confidence in the company’s financial position. Recognising changes in the taxation framework applicable to buy-backs and feedback received from market participants, the SEBI Board approved amendments to the SEBI (Buy-back of Securities) Regulations, 2018 to reintroduce open market buy-backs through stock exchanges with effect from 1 August 2026.

The approved framework introduces an additional avenue for companies to undertake buy-backs alongside the existing tender offer and book-building routes. At the same time, SEBI has incorporated several operational safeguards. Companies undertaking open market buy-backs through stock exchanges will be required to complete the buy-back within 66 working days, with at least 40% of the earmarked amount to be utilised during the first half of the buy-back period.

The Board has also approved dissemination of buy-back information to shareholders through electronic means in addition to newspaper advertisements, enhancing availability of information. Promoters and their associates will remain restricted from participating in the open market buy-back, and their holdings will remain frozen at the ISIN level during the buy-back period to prevent inadvertent trading.

Another notable change is the decision to make the appointment of a merchant banker discretionary. Where a company chooses not to appoint a merchant banker, the associated responsibilities will be allocated among the company, its compliance officer, statutory auditor, secretarial auditor and the stock exchanges.

Taken together, these amendments seek to provide companies with greater flexibility in undertaking buy-backs while reducing procedural complexity and continuing to preserve transparency and investor protection.

 

Accelerating Capital Formation Through the GARUDA Framework

Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) have emerged as an increasingly important source of private capital across sectors including infrastructure, private equity, venture capital and private credit. As the AIF ecosystem continues to expand, reducing procedural timelines for launching investment schemes has become an important regulatory objective.

To facilitate faster deployment of capital, the SEBI Board approved the Green-Channel: AIF Rollout Upon Document Acknowledgement (GARUDA) mechanism through amendments to the SEBI (Alternative Investment Funds) Regulations, 2012.

Under the approved framework, regular AIF schemes, being schemes other than Large Value Funds, Accredited Investor-only schemes and Angel Funds, will now be able to launch within ten working days following the prescribed filing process, representing a significant reduction in the timelines previously applicable.

The Board has also introduced a differentiated approach for Accredited Investor-only schemes and Angel Funds. Recognising the sophistication of accredited investors, these schemes have been exempted from the requirement of filing the Private Placement Memorandum through a merchant banker and may now be launched immediately upon grant of SEBI registration or filing of the Private Placement Memorandum, as applicable.

The GARUDA framework builds upon SEBI’s broader efforts towards improving ease of doing business in the alternative investment space. By shortening regulatory timelines without altering disclosure requirements or investor protection standards, the mechanism is expected to facilitate quicker deployment of capital while enabling fund managers to respond more efficiently to investment opportunities.

 

Facilitating Efficient Liquidity Management for Mutual Funds

Recognising these practical challenges arising from temporary liquidity mismatches during the trading day, the SEBI Board approved amendments to the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 2026 permitting mutual funds to avail intraday borrowings for specified operational purposes.

Importantly, the approved framework is designed to facilitate operational efficiency rather than leverage. Intraday borrowings may be utilised only for managing temporary liquidity mismatches during the day and must ordinarily be repaid before the close of business. Where any borrowing extends beyond the day, it must remain within the existing regulatory borrowing limits and comply with the purposes already permitted under the Mutual Fund Regulations.

The framework also incorporates several safeguards. Asset Management Companies are required to maintain appropriate documentation and adopt board-approved policies governing the utilisation of intraday borrowing facilities. Further, the Board has expressly clarified that intraday borrowings shall not be used as a source of leverage.

By recognising operational realities while preserving prudential safeguards, the approved framework seeks to improve settlement efficiency without altering the fundamental risk profile of mutual fund schemes.

 

Strengthening India’s Listed Securitisation Market

The Board also approved significant amendments to the SEBI (Issue and Listing of Securitised Debt Instruments and Security Receipts) Regulations, 2008 with the objective of aligning the listed securitisation framework with the Reserve Bank of India’s securitisation regime and supporting the development of India’s listed securitisation market.

Among the key amendments is the permission for RBI-regulated entities to undertake single-asset securitisation transactions by exempting them from the existing 25% obligor concentration limit, accompanied by enhanced disclosure of concentration risk in the offer document.

The approved amendments further shift periodic disclosure and reporting responsibilities to the servicer, recognising that the servicer is responsible for the day-to-day administration and reporting of the underlying assets. Governance requirements relating to Special Purpose Distinct Entities have also been aligned with the RBI framework by limiting representation of RBI-regulated originators on the trustee board.

Additional amendments clarify the regulatory position regarding transactions involving originators and Special Purpose Distinct Entities belonging to the same group, while also empowering SEBI to appoint a replacement trustee where an existing trustee’s registration is suspended or cancelled, thereby ensuring continuity of securitisation structures in appropriate cases.

Collectively, these amendments seek to promote regulatory consistency, improve operational efficiency and facilitate the development of India’s listed securitisation market while maintaining appropriate investor protection safeguards.

 

Conclusion

The June 2026 SEBI Board decisions demonstrate a measured and consultative approach towards regulatory reform. Although the approved measures apply to different segments of the securities market, they share common objectives: improving capital formation, facilitating ease of doing business, strengthening market infrastructure and preserving investor confidence.

From providing listed companies with greater flexibility in undertaking buy-backs to enabling faster deployment of private capital through the GARUDA mechanism, improving liquidity management for mutual funds and strengthening the regulatory framework governing listed securitisation transactions, the reforms collectively seek to improve the efficiency of India’s capital markets without compromising investor safeguards.

As SEBI notifies the corresponding amendments and operational circulars, issuers, merchant bankers, fund managers, intermediaries and investors will need to closely evaluate the revised regulatory framework and its practical implications across different segments of the securities market.

This blog is authored by our Partners Arka Mookerjee and Pracheta Bhattacharya.

Why the June 19 SEBI Board Meeting Matters: Understanding the Regulatory Mechanisms Shaping India’s Capital Markets

India’s Capital Markets Are Entering Their Next Phase

Over the past decade, India’s capital markets have undergone a structural transformation. Equity participation has widened, domestic institutional investors have emerged as a stabilising force, the Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) ecosystem has expanded rapidly, and technology has transformed how investors access financial products. Alongside this growth, regulators have had to address a new challenge, not simply expanding the market, but ensuring that its underlying infrastructure evolves with increasing scale, sophistication and complexity.

Against this backdrop, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has released a series of consultation papers over the past two months addressing diverse areas of market regulation. At first glance, proposals relating to buy-backs, AIFs, online bond platforms and IPO price discovery may appear unrelated. However, viewed collectively, they reflect a common regulatory objective: refining the mechanisms through which capital is raised, deployed, traded and returned within India’s securities markets.

With the SEBI Board scheduled to meet on 19 June 2026, these consultation papers provide an opportunity to understand the broader regulatory direction shaping India’s capital markets. Rather than predicting the Board’s decisions, this article examines the policy questions that these proposals seek to address and the mechanisms through which SEBI proposes to respond.

 

Capital Returning by Companies: Revisiting the Buy-Back Framework

Efficient capital allocation does not end once capital has been raised. Mature capital markets also require efficient mechanisms through which companies can return surplus capital to shareholders.

The buy-back of shares represents one such mechanism. Under the existing framework, listed companies may undertake buy-backs through specified routes prescribed under the Companies Act, 2013 and the SEBI (Buy-Back of Securities) Regulations, 2018. Historically, these included tender offers and open market purchases, including purchases through stock exchanges.

However, the stock exchange route was phased out and ultimately discontinued with effect from 1 April 2025, following concerns regarding equitable treatment of shareholders and the tax regime then applicable to buy-backs. SEBI observed that the price-time priority mechanism could result in a small number of shareholders participating in the buy-back, while others wishing to participate received no opportunity to do so.

The April 2026 consultation paper revisits this position in light of subsequent developments. Rather than merely proposing the return of the stock exchange route, the paper examines whether earlier concerns can now be addressed through revised safeguards governing execution, disclosure, promoter participation and trading restrictions.

A second consultation paper builds upon this proposal by considering operational refinements, including shareholder communication through electronic modes, timelines for completion of buy-backs, removal of separate trading windows and additional safeguards relating to promoter holdings.

Viewed together, these papers illustrate an important regulatory principle. SEBI is not simply reconsidering a discontinued mechanism; it is examining whether market efficiency can be enhanced without compromising investor protection or fairness.

 

Capital Flowing into Businesses: The GARUDA Mechanism for Alternative Investment Funds

If buy-backs concern capital returning to investors, Alternative Investment Funds represent the opposite end of the capital formation cycle, mobilising private capital into businesses.

India’s AIF ecosystem has expanded significantly over recent years. The consultation paper notes substantial growth in both the number of registered AIFs and cumulative capital commitments, resulting in a corresponding increase in applications requiring regulatory processing.

Traditionally, AIFs have been required to file their Placement Memoranda through merchant bankers at least thirty days before launching a scheme, enabling SEBI to review disclosures prior to launch. As the market has grown, SEBI has progressively reviewed whether this level of regulatory scrutiny remains necessary across all categories of investors.

The proposed Green-Channel: AIF Rollout Upon Document Acknowledgement (GARUDA) mechanism reflects this evolution.

Rather than fundamentally altering disclosure obligations, the consultation paper proposes streamlining the launch process. For regular schemes, the filing period may be reduced from thirty days to ten working days. For Accredited Investor-only schemes and Angel Funds, the proposals contemplate direct filing with SEBI, replacement of merchant banker due diligence certificates with management undertakings, and immediate launch upon filing.

Importantly, the consultation paper does not advocate a uniform relaxation of regulation. Instead, it differentiates regulatory processes based on investor sophistication. Accredited Investors, by definition, are regarded as possessing the financial capacity and expertise to evaluate investment risks and therefore may warrant a different procedural framework.

The GARUDA proposal, therefore, represents a broader shift towards risk-based regulation, where regulatory intensity increasingly reflects the characteristics of the market participant rather than adopting identical processes across all investment products.

 

Broadening Access to Debt Markets: Online Bond Platform Providers

A well-developed capital market requires efficient channels for both equity and debt financing.

Recognising the growing role of digital platforms, SEBI previously introduced a dedicated regulatory framework governing Online Bond Platform Providers (OBPPs). These platforms enable investors to access eligible debt securities through regulated digital infrastructure.

The current consultation paper focuses not on redesigning this framework but on expanding its scope.

Among the principal proposals is permitting OBPPs to offer products, securities and services regulated by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA). The paper observes that while stock brokers are already permitted to undertake securities market activities within GIFT International Financial Services Centre through prescribed structures, no equivalent clarity presently exists for OBPPs.

Additional proposals include permitting specified tax-saving bonds to be offered through OBPPs and reviewing the regulatory framework governing the appointment of Compliance Officers.

Collectively, these proposals illustrate a continuing regulatory emphasis on improving market access while maintaining regulatory oversight and deepen the bond markets.. Rather than creating new distribution channels, SEBI proposes expanding the capabilities of existing regulated intermediaries in response to the evolving structure of India’s debt markets.

 

Capital Entering Public Markets: Refining Price Discovery

An efficient listing process extends beyond the issuance of securities. The manner in which prices are discovered on the first day of trading contributes significantly to market confidence, liquidity and orderly trading.

SEBI’s consultation paper on the pre-open call auction mechanism examines precisely this aspect of market infrastructure.

The existing framework provides for a sixty-minute call auction session prior to the commencement of regular trading for IPOs and re-listed securities. During this period, eligible orders are collected and matched to determine an equilibrium price before continuous trading begins. The framework also incorporates dummy price bands designed to minimise erroneous orders while facilitating orderly price discovery.

The consultation paper reviews the operation of these mechanisms in light of market experience and seeks stakeholder views on potential refinements.

Although highly technical, these proposals underscore a broader regulatory objective. Efficient capital markets depend not only upon disclosure and governance, but also upon robust trading infrastructure capable of supporting orderly price formation during critical market events.

 

The Common Thread: What These Consultation Papers Tell Us About SEBI’s Regulatory Philosophy

Considered individually, each consultation paper addresses a distinct segment of the securities market. Considered collectively, however, they reveal several recurring themes that characterise SEBI’s evolving regulatory approach.

First, they demonstrate a continued emphasis on ease of doing business. Whether through faster AIF scheme launches, expanded activities for Online Bond Platform Providers or more efficient buy-back mechanisms, the proposals seek to reduce procedural complexity without diluting regulatory safeguards.

Secondly, they reflect an increasing reliance on risk-based regulation. Rather than imposing identical requirements across all market participants, the proposals distinguish between investor categories, intermediaries and products based upon their respective risk profiles and levels of sophistication.

Thirdly, they reinforce the importance of market infrastructure. Efficient capital markets depend not only upon substantive regulation but equally upon the mechanisms through which transactions are executed, prices are discovered, and investors access financial products.

Finally, each proposal retains a consistent emphasis on transparency, disclosure and accountability. Even where procedural requirements are simplified, corresponding safeguards remain integral to the proposed framework.

 

Looking Beyond June 19

Whether the SEBI Board adopts these proposals in their present form remains to be seen. Consultation papers are, by design, an invitation for stakeholder participation rather than statements of final policy.

Their significance nevertheless extends beyond any single Board meeting.

Taken together, these papers illustrate the questions currently shaping India’s regulatory landscape: How should capital be returned to investors more efficiently? How can private capital be mobilised with fewer procedural barriers? How should digital market infrastructure evolve? And how can trading mechanisms continue to support orderly and transparent markets?

Viewed through that lens, the consultation papers offer more than a preview of possible regulatory amendments. They provide a window into the next phase of India’s capital market development—one characterised by calibrated regulatory reform, operational efficiency and increasingly sophisticated market infrastructure.

This blog is authored by our Partners Arka Mookerjee and Pracheta Bhattacharya.