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

A man walks past a Rupee installation at the Reserve Bank Of India (RBI) headquarters in Mumbai, India, April 8, 2026. 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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