Finance

RBI Issues New Global Reporting Rules for Offshore Rupee Trades

Reserve Bank Enhances Transparency: Phased Global Reporting for Rupee Derivatives to Begin July 2027

Nidhi Rohilla

The Reserve Bank of India has told banks to report their offshore rupee trading positions starting July 2026. The directive covers non-deliverable forward contracts traded in overseas financial centers and brings them under formal regulatory reporting for the first time.

Singapore and London Moved the Rupee, Now RBI Wants the Data

Rupee contracts traded in Singapore, London, and Dubai moved billions of dollars daily. Indian regulators tracked domestic currency activity closely but had no structured access to offshore activity. The new RBI offshore rupee rules directly close that gap.

Banks holding NDF positions in overseas markets must now report that data to the RBI as part of their standard regulatory submissions. The requirement applies to all banks operating under Indian regulatory jurisdiction, regardless of where the trades were executed.

Here is Exactly What Changes Under the New Framework

The updated FX reporting guidelines expand the existing OTC foreign exchange reporting structure in India to include offshore NDF positions. Previously, those positions sat entirely outside the RBI's formal data collection. From July 2026, they will not. Banks must submit position data on a scheduled basis. The RBI confirmed it will release detailed operational instructions before the deadline to guide compliance teams through the technical requirements.

Offshore Prices Moved First, Domestic Policy Responded Second

Rupee exchange rates in offshore markets frequently shifted overnight, often well before Indian trading sessions opened each morning. Domestic forex market participants in India absorbed those moves at the open, without regulators having full visibility into what drove them. The expanded NDF market regulation framework provides the RBI with access to structured pricing data. Officials stated the measure supports faster and more accurate responses to currency volatility and speculative activity.

Banks are Reviewing Internal Systems Ahead of July

Compliance teams across major Indian banks confirmed that they have begun assessing the system changes required to meet the July 2026 deadline. Industry bodies acknowledged the timeline publicly. The RBI has not disclosed specific penalties for non-compliance in any public communication issued to date.

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