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Why bonds could be the next big move for Indian retail investors

With interest rates stabilising and new rules making debt markets more accessible, bonds are quietly becoming a powerful tool in the average investor’s portfolio.

November 26, 2025 / 18:00 IST
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Indian bond yields are no longer depressed the way they were a couple of years ago. The 10-year government security has been hovering a little above 6.5 percent in November 2025, creating a solid base level for rupee debt returns. At the same time, the Reserve Bank of India has resumed buying government bonds after a six-month pause, injecting liquidity and helping keep yields in a tight, predictable band. For investors who are tired of sharp swings in equities and underwhelmed by big-bank fixed deposits, this combination of reasonable yields and central bank support is making high-quality bonds look far more attractive than before.

Why bonds now compete seriously with FDs

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The most striking shift is in relative returns. RBI floating rate savings bonds currently offer about 8.05 percent, resetting every six months at the National Savings Certificate rate plus 35 basis points. That is roughly 100–200 basis points higher than five to ten-year fixed deposits at large banks such as State Bank of India, where comparable FDs are closer to 6.05 percent, and still comfortably above the 10-year G-sec yield. On the corporate side, many AAA-rated and high-grade bonds continue to offer yields that beat top-bank FDs, while still carrying investment-grade ratings from agencies such as CRISIL and ICRA. For conservative investors, that means the possibility of FD-plus returns with better transparency on pricing and the option to trade in the secondary market if liquidity allows.

Reforms that are opening the bond market to small investors