India’s bank, insurance regulators not inclined to allow commodity derivative investments, SEBI says

The logo of Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is seen on its headquarters in Mumbai, India, March 24, 2025. REUTERS
May 4 (Reuters) – The Reserve Bank of India ​and the Insurance Regulatory and Development ‌Authority of India are not inclined to allow banks and insurance companies to invest in commodity ​derivatives, the chairman of India’s markets ​regulator said on Monday.
The Securities and Exchange Board ⁠of India in September said it will ​engage with the government to enable banks ​and pension funds to trade commodities as part of its agenda to strengthen commodities markets.
In his statement ​on Monday, SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey ​added that India’s pension fund regulator had also looked ‌at ⁠allowing pension funds to invest in commodity derivatives, but did not disclose whether it had made a decision.
Shares of Multi Commodity ​Exchange of ​India (MCX), India’s ⁠first listed exchange, fell 3.4% after the chairman’s comment.
Separately, SEBI ​will soon issue an advisory to ​market ⁠intermediaries on emerging risks from Anthropic’s Mythos and other artificial intelligence tools, Pandey said, adding that ⁠the ​regulator wants intermediaries to ​be prepared for potential system vulnerabilities.

Reporting by Jayshree P ​Upadhyay and Chandini Monnappa; Editing by Janane Venkatraman

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