Indian debt markets in December 2025 navigated a
complex mix of supportive domestic policy actions and
constraining external and supply-side pressures,
resulting in a month of modest yield softening rather than
a sustained rally. Government bond yields eased
meaningfully through the middle of the month as the
Reserve Bank of India stepped up liquidity support, but
those gains were partly retraced toward month-end amid
heavy borrowing supply, currency weakness and global
rate headwinds. The benchmark 10-year government
security yield began December near 6.85%, declined
steadily as RBI interventions took effect, touched a low of
around 6.54% on December 24, and then stabilized in the
6.60–6.61% range by the end of the month.
Despite the late-month uptick, yields finished December
lower than they began, translating into positive returns
for duration-sensitive bond funds, although the extent of
gains remained capped. The RBI played a central role in
shaping market dynamics during the month, delivering a
25 basis point repo rate cut to 5.25% and complementing
it with large-scale liquidity measures, including open
market operations (OMOs) totalling roughly ₹2 trillion in
December alone and cumulative purchases exceeding ₹3
trillion for FY26, the highest on record. These bond
purchases, focused largely on the 6–7 year segment
such as the widely traded 6.33% 2035 bond, significantly
eased systemic liquidity conditions and compressed
term premiums, offering relief to a market that had been
grappling with cash shortages stemming from currency
in circulation outflows and RBI forex interventions.
Additional support came from USD 5 billion buy/sell
swaps, which injected durable rupee liquidity of ₹2–3
trillion and helped anchor overnight rates closer to the
repo rate. At the shorter end of the curve, one-year
government bond yields remained relatively stable in the
5.84–5.90% range, while overnight index swap (OIS)
rates between 5.46% and 5.76% early in the month
reflected intermittent liquidity tightness that gradually
eased as RBI measures filtered through the system. Even
with these actions, however, liquidity conditions were not
unambiguously comfortable: surplus liquidity declined to
around ₹3.3 trillion at times, and RBI infusions had to
counter an estimated ₹1.5–2 trillion drain from strong
credit demand and ongoing forex operations.
On the fiscal and supply side, persistent pressures
limited the scope for a deeper rally in yields. The
government’s borrowing program remained heavy, with
record state development loan (SDL) issuances in the
December quarter and a particularly large supply pipeline for
Q4, which weighed on demand-supply dynamics even as
OMOs absorbed some of the pressure. Concerns around
fiscal slippage also lingered, driven by a combination of tax
cuts, moderation in GST collections, and a high central
government debt burden—estimated at over 60% of total
market borrowings—which kept investors cautious about
aggressively extending duration. Banks’ holdings of
government securities fell to around 35.3% year-on-year,
indicating some balance-sheet constraints, while pension
funds showed signs of reallocating toward equities amid
strong stock market performance, reducing a traditionally
stable source of long-term demand.
Currency movements further complicated the picture, as the
rupee depreciated sharply by nearly 2% during December,
slipping to around 90.8 per US dollar amid heightened global
risk aversion, US tariff announcements of up to 50% on
certain trade fronts, and a firm dollar environment. This
depreciation raised concerns about imported inflation and
triggered bouts of foreign portfolio investor outflows from
the debt market, contributing to intermittent yield hardening
despite domestic easing. Inflation data at home remained
benign, supported by falling food prices, favourable base
effects and a decline of about 4.4% in global crude oil prices,
but global inflation persistence and the risk of currency
pass-through prevented markets from pricing in an
aggressive or front-loaded easing cycle.
Global factors continued to exert influence throughout the
month, with US Treasury yields holding above 4%, limiting
the relative attractiveness of Indian debt, while ongoing
tightening bias in parts of Europe, China’s deflationary
signals, and broader geopolitical uncertainties added to
volatility. Strong domestic macro data also played a
nuanced role: Q2 GDP growth of about 8.2% year-on-year led
to upward revisions of FY26 growth expectations toward
7.2%, reinforcing confidence in the economy but
simultaneously tempering expectations of sharp rate cuts
and anchoring longer-term yields.
As a result, while the RBI’s dovish stance and liquidity
operations successfully stabilized the bond market and
delivered moderate gains, especially in the belly of the curve,
external headwinds, fiscal supply pressures and currency
risks ensured that December 2025 remained a month of
measured easing rather than a decisive bond rally,
leaving the market balanced between supportive policy
and persistent structural constraints heading into 2026.
