14. How Are Government Securities Traded in India?
Government securities (G-Secs), including Treasury Bills (T-Bills) and long-term government bonds, are traded in India through both wholesale and retail platforms. These platforms provide access to a wide range of participants—from institutional investors like banks and insurance companies to individual retail investors.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is the central authority managing the issuance and trading framework of these securities.
Trading Platforms for Government Securities
Platform
Description
NDS-OM (Negotiated Dealing System – Order Matching)
RBI’s institutional trading platform for wholesale G-Sec transactions.
RBI Retail Direct
Direct online access for individual investors to buy/sell G-Secs.
Stock Exchanges (NSE/BSE)
Government bonds are listed and traded on secondary markets like equity.
Over-the-Counter (OTC)
Large block trades between institutions, settled through RBI clearing.
1. NDS-OM (Institutional Trading)
Developed and operated by the Reserve Bank of India.
Allows real-time anonymous electronic order matching for G-Sec trades.
Access restricted to banks, primary dealers, mutual funds, insurance firms, and large financial institutions.
Trades are settled via the Clearing Corporation of India Ltd (CCIL).
Supports both outright trades and repos in government securities.
2. RBI Retail Direct Portal
What is it?
A dedicated platform launched by RBI in 2021 to democratize access to G-Secs.
Enables retail investors to open a Retail Direct Gilt (RDG) account and trade G-Secs without intermediaries.
Features:
Zero account opening or maintenance fees.
Access to both primary auctions (new issues) and secondary market (resale of existing securities).
Easy online KYC, bid submission, payment, and settlement.
Process:
Register on rbiretaildirect.org.in
Participate in weekly G-Sec auctions or buy from the secondary market.
Receive interest and redemption proceeds directly into your linked bank account.
3. Stock Exchange Trading (NSE/BSE)
G-Secs are listed on NSE and BSE in dematerialized (demat) form, like equity shares.
Investors can trade them using their trading and demat accounts via registered brokers.
Provides additional liquidity and market access for retail and institutional participants.
Benefits:
Familiar interface for equity traders.
Live price quotes and order depth visibility.
Delivery-based settlement through depositories like NSDL and CDSL.
4. Over-the-Counter (OTC) Market
Large institutions and corporates execute bulk deals privately, especially in off-market hours.
Terms (price, yield, volume) are negotiated bilaterally.
Post-trade reporting is mandatory, and trades are cleared via CCIL.
F. Settlement and Clearing
Process
Description
Clearing Authority
Handled by Clearing Corporation of India Ltd (CCIL)
Settlement Type
T+1 (for most retail trades), DVP (Delivery versus Payment) for bulk
Interest Payment
Automatically credited to registered bank account
Instruments Traded
Type of G-Sec
Description
T-Bills
Short-term, zero-coupon (91/182/364 days)
Dated G-Secs
Bonds with 1–40 year maturity and fixed coupons
Floating Rate Bonds (FRBs)
Interest resets every 6 months based on benchmark
Sovereign Green Bonds
Issued to finance environment-friendly projects
State Development Loans (SDLs)
Bonds issued by state governments
Key Takeaways
Government securities in India are traded via the NDS-OM platform for institutions and RBI Retail Direct for individuals.
G-Secs are also listed and traded on NSE and BSE using demat and trading accounts.
RBI has simplified access through its Retail Direct portal, allowing zero-cost online investment in sovereign bonds.
Clearing and settlement are managed by CCIL, ensuring transparency and timely payouts.
The structure ensures safe, regulated, and accessible participation in India’s government bond market for both retail and institutional investors.