He believes the move will not only unlock lower international funding costs for large Indian corporates—whose ratings are often capped by the sovereign level—but also attract greater foreign portfolio inflows into the bond market.
With government bond yields already rallying on the news, Goenka sees India securing a stronger position in the global emerging market investment landscape, offering better risk-adjusted returns and fresh opportunities for fixed income investors. Edited Excerpts –
Q) Could this rating upgrade lead to a re-rating of Indian corporate bonds, and if so, which segments or sectors are likely to benefit the most?
A) “International country ratings cap ratings of Large Indian corporates. Now, as the sovereign ratings are upgraded, the cost of international funding for Indian companies will go down. This will sequentially lead to lower funding costs for companies in general”
Since your questions circle around the rating upgrade, I’m sharing Vishal’s comment on the S&P upgrade that we shared earlier yesterday as well:
Q) What changes can fixed-income investors expect in foreign capital flows into India’s debt market after this upgrade?
A) India was just upgraded by S&P to BBB with a Stable Outlook. The Government Bond market is rallying on this news, as this would encourage more foreign and FPI inflows into the bond markets.
A higher Credit Rating systematically gets more investments into the country as risk-adjusted returns are better. We see India remaining in the global spotlight for Emerging Market favourable asset allocation and bond yields to fall in the short term.
Q) After the status quo policy from the RBI, do you see further rate cuts in the rest of FY26 and why?
A) RBI kept the repo rate at 5.50% in August. July CPI was at 1.55%, a multi-year low. From here, policy is likely to pause and track the data.
The direction and timing of any move will also be shaped by US tariffs outcome and global policy, especially by the US Fed in September.
We think a further 25 bps is definitely on the cards for FY 26 and that we remain in the multi-year lower or stable interest rate environment.
Q) How should investors position themselves in the fixed income portfolio amid rate cuts and geopolitical concerns?
A) Firstly, allocation to fixed income in the overall portfolio should be higher now, given the equity volatility and the ongoing uncertain geopolitical instability.
Within fixed income, staying in the short end of the curve and investing in 2-3 year maturity higher yield corporate bonds will provide regular and consistent returns ranging from 8-12%, depending totally on the risk appetite and investment goals of the investor.
Longer maturity bonds have fallen in price and now offer better yields, so a part of the portfolio can be considered for government securities in this segment. The final mix should match your risk comfort, cash needs, and tax situation.
Q) If someone is a risk-averse investor and wants to deploy ₹10,00,000 – what would you recommend? Please give a percentage split.
A) One suggestive split for a conservative profile:
40% in AA+/AAA corporates (2–3 years)
25% in long-dated G-Secs/SDLs (10 years and above)
20% in ~1-year FDs for liquidity
Up to 15% in carefully selected, listed higher-yield corporates (2–3 years)
Use this as a starting point. Suitability depends on tax slab, existing portfolio holdings and cash-flow needs.
Q) How can investors determine the right balance between bonds, equities and hybrid instruments amid changing market dynamics?
A) Asset allocation & portfolio construction is personal and stems from the basic factor of investor appetite and external factors like global uncertainty and domestic slowdown in credit growth.
Given the current uncertain equities and growth outlook, investors can plan around 40% equities / 40% fixed income / 20% Gold. With the RBI on repo rate cut pause, a possible rate cut later in FY26 and a multi-year low CPI of 1.55%, a higher allocation to fixed income currently enables steady returns and a ‘wait and watch’ outlook towards equities.
Q) Can corporate bonds fund a ₹50,000 per month “pension”? What corpus is needed?
A) Depending on the risk appetite, bonds currently offer anywhere between 7% and 12% returns. The allocation needed to earn ₹50,000 per month (₹6 lakh a year) will depend on where you are within the credit continuum—from AAA ratings to BBB ratings.
With monthly payout or regular payout options, the investment required could range from ₹50 lakh to ₹85 lakh. A balanced approach aiming for around 9% returns can help achieve this target with roughly ₹66 lakh invested in corporate bonds.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)