India Rolls Out Sweeping Financial Reforms to Lure Foreign Capital Back
India’s long-awaited push to overhaul its financial services sector is gathering pace, as policymakers move decisively to attract foreign capital into the world’s fastest-growing major economy. From opening up insurance and pension sectors to easing capital market rules, the reforms mark one of the most ambitious attempts in years to deepen India’s financial ecosystem and fund long-term growth.
The urgency behind the reform drive has intensified after US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs of 50 percent on Indian goods in August, one of the highest rates globally. The move has hurt exports to India’s largest overseas market and raised concerns around the country’s manufacturing ambitions, prompting New Delhi to double down on domestic reforms to offset external shocks.
Insurance and Pension Sectors Open the Door to Full Foreign Ownership
In a landmark step this week, lawmakers approved a bill allowing 100 percent foreign ownership of insurance companies, dismantling a long-standing cap that had restricted overseas participation. The move is expected to channel much-needed capital and expertise into an industry widely seen as under-penetrated despite India’s vast population.
Regulators are also extending similar liberalisation to the $177-billion pension fund sector, paving the way for full foreign ownership. Until now, overseas investment in both insurance and pensions had been capped at 74 percent.
“This is deregulation in action,” said Vivek Ramji Iyer, partner at Grant Thornton Bharat. “Opening these sectors sends a strong signal that India is serious about long-term capital formation.”
Global insurers such as Allianz, Axa and Nippon Life, which have operated in India for years through joint ventures, are expected to gain greater flexibility to scale operations, invest capital independently and accelerate growth.
Also Read : Markets Remain Volatile With Losses Extending, Rupee Shows Signs Of Recovery
Reforms Aligned With India’s 2047 Development Vision
The broader reform package aligns closely with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ambition to make India a developed economy by 2047. Achieving that goal would require sustained economic growth of nearly 8 percent annually — a pace policymakers believe is possible only with deeper capital markets and accelerated industrialisation.
Key elements of the reform agenda include:
-
Liberalisation of insurance and pension ownership norms
-
Overhauled regulations for banks and capital markets
-
Measures to redirect household savings from gold and property into equities and bonds
-
Policies to encourage long-term financing of infrastructure and factories
“The latest spate of reforms will help revive global investor sentiment amid tariff worries,” said Pramod Kumar, chief executive officer of Barclays Plc’s India business. “Foreign investment flows are likely to increase, creating more opportunities for global banks.”
Big-Ticket Foreign Deals Signal Renewed Interest
A string of high-profile transactions underscores growing overseas appetite for Indian financial assets. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) recently agreed to acquire a minority stake in Shriram Finance for $4.4 billion, the largest single foreign investment in India’s financial services sector.
This followed Mizuho Financial Group’s agreement to buy a controlling stake in KKR-backed Avendus Capital, while Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group became the largest shareholder in Yes Bank earlier this year.
Reflecting this trend, India recorded net foreign direct investment of $7.6 billion between April and September, more than double the inflows seen during the same period last year, according to Reserve Bank of India data.
Capital Markets and Consolidation Take Centre Stage
Beyond insurance and pensions, policymakers are also pushing consolidation and scale across corporate India. The total value of mergers and acquisitions targeting Indian companies has climbed 15 percent this year to nearly $90 billion, with Japanese investors playing a prominent role.
Easier merger rules and a more supportive regulatory stance are encouraging companies to grow through acquisitions. State-run banks, which remain dominant lenders, have been granted greater freedom to fund takeovers, allowing them to compete more actively with global peers.
India’s capital markets have also remained buoyant. Companies have raised a record $22 billion through initial public offerings in 2025, while the Nifty 500 Index has delivered total shareholder returns of 122 percent over the past five years, comfortably outperforming the S&P 500.
Regulatory Tweaks Aim to Improve Market Depth
In another significant move, the securities market regulator recently reduced brokerage fees paid by domestic mutual funds and cut base management charges. The step is among the most sweeping changes ever to the industry’s fee structure and is aimed at improving efficiency and participation in equity markets.
“These reforms alert investors sitting on the sidelines that now is as good a time as any to relook at India,” said Andrei Stetsenko, partner at Farley Capital. “The economy is firing on multiple cylinders.”
Challenges Persist Despite Reform Momentum
Despite the reform push, Indian equities have underperformed global peers this year. The Nifty 50 has gained about 10 percent, while foreign investors have withdrawn nearly $18 billion from equities, marking one of the largest annual outflows on record.
The rupee’s 5 percent decline this year, making it Asia’s worst-performing currency, has also emerged as a near-term risk for markets.
“I do see a positive impact from reforms, but it will be slow,” said Abhishek Thepade, portfolio manager at DNB Asset Management. “The lack of a clear trade deal continues to dampen sentiment.”
Long-Term Bet on Reform-Led Growth
Still, many global investors believe the current mix of reforms, relative market underperformance and easing monetary conditions could make Indian assets more attractive over time.
“Reform is always good, but impacts happen with a lag,” said Joshua Crabb, head of Asia-Pacific equities at Robeco. “India is laying the foundation for long-term capital, and that ultimately matters more than short-term volatility.”
As India presses ahead with its big-bang financial reforms, policymakers are betting that patient foreign capital will return — not overnight, but steadily — to fuel the country’s next phase of growth.
