On Mar. 2, RBI to conduct ₹25,000 cr switch auction

Web searches failed due to domain restrictions. Proceeding with the article content (Tier 4 primary source) plus established knowledge of RBI debt management operations.


RBI Switch Auction of Government Securities — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Instrument Government Securities (G-Secs) — dated central government bonds
Mechanism Government sells long-dated bonds to market participants and simultaneously buys back short-dated (near-maturity) bonds
Auction date (latest) March 2, 2026
Amount ₹25,000 crore
Auction window 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Result announcement Same day (March 2, 2026)
Settlement date March 4, 2026 (T+2)
Securities exchanged FY27-maturing bonds → bonds maturing after FY32 (minimum 5-year extension)
FY27 redemption quantum ₹5.47 lakh crore
Auctions in the series 3rd switch auction of the month (Feb–Mar 2026)
Conducting authority Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — as government's debt manager
Legal basis RBI Act, 1934; Government Securities Act, 2006
Eligible participants Primary Dealers (PDs), scheduled commercial banks, select institutional investors
Platform RBI's Negotiated Dealing System – Order Matching (NDS-OM)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Fiscal

Legal / Constitutional

Monetary Policy

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. In a switch auction, the government sells long-term bonds and buys back short-term bonds simultaneously — it does NOT involve cash injection into the economy. [S1]
  2. The March 2, 2026 switch auction was worth ₹25,000 crore and was the third switch auction RBI conducted that month. [S1]
  3. FY27 government bond maturities stand at ₹5.47 lakh crore — the primary driver of the switch auction series. [S1]
  4. Securities in the March 2 auction: FY27-maturing bonds replaced by bonds maturing after FY32. [S1]
  5. Auction window: 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM; settlement on March 4, 2026 (T+2). [S1]
  6. RBI acts as the government's debt manager under Section 20 and Section 21 of the RBI Act, 1934.
  7. The Government Securities Act, 2006 is the principal statute governing G-Sec issuance, trading, and management.
  8. Switch auctions are classified as Liability Management Operations (LMOs) — distinct from OMOs (which affect money supply).
  9. Unlike buyback auctions, switch auctions do NOT involve a net cash outflow from the government — it is an exchange of securities.
  10. The NDS-OM (Negotiated Dealing System – Order Matching) is the electronic platform on which G-Sec auctions are conducted in India.
  11. A switch auction steepens the yield curve by reducing short-end supply and increasing long-end supply.
  12. Primary Dealers (PDs) are mandated underwriters in G-Sec auctions; they play a key role in switch auction participation.
  13. Proposed Public Debt Management Agency (PDMA) — if created — would take over these operations from RBI; currently still with RBI.
  14. Switch auctions are revenue-neutral for the government in the short run but reduce rollover risk and smooth cash flow management.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III — Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development.

Specific syllabus headings: - Government Budgeting; Fiscal Policy - Money and Banking; Role of RBI - Public Debt Management; Capital Markets

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The RBI's resort to multiple switch auctions in early 2026 underscores the risks inherent in India's public debt structure. Examine the concept of switch auctions and evaluate their effectiveness as a tool of liability management." (GS-III, 250 words)

  2. "Distinguish between switch auctions, buyback auctions, and Open Market Operations (OMOs) conducted by the RBI. How does each instrument influence the government securities market and monetary transmission?" (GS-III, 150 words)

  3. "In the context of a large FY27 redemption calendar, critically analyse the macroeconomic implications of crowding out and suggest measures for prudent debt management in India." (GS-III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Open Market Operations (OMOs) Also RBI G-Sec interventions; often confused with switch auctions — key distinction is money supply impact
Government Securities Market in India Structural backdrop: who issues, who buys, how G-Secs are priced
Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003 Governs debt targets and fiscal consolidation; context for why liability management matters
Public Debt Management Agency (PDMA) Proposed shift of debt management from RBI to an independent agency — a recurring UPSC question
Yield Curve and Monetary Transmission Switch auctions affect the yield curve; essential for understanding RBI's monetary toolkit
Primary Dealers System in India PDs are critical participants in all G-Sec auctions including switch auctions
Union Budget — Borrowing Programme Gross/Net Market Borrowings, the annual borrowing calendar that sets the context for switch operations
RBI Act, 1934 & Government Securities Act, 2006 Statutory base for all debt management operations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Switch auction ≠ OMO: OMOs inject/absorb base money (affect liquidity and money supply); switch auctions only exchange securities of different maturities — no net change in money supply. Aspirants frequently conflate the two.

  2. Switch auction ≠ Buyback: In a buyback, the government pays cash to retire bonds early. In a switch, it pays with new long-dated bonds — no net cash outflow. Confusing these is a common MCQ trap.

  3. Wrong implementing body: Debt management is conducted by RBI (not SEBI, not NITI Aayog, not Ministry of Finance directly). SEBI regulates the corporate bond market, not G-Secs.

  4. Settlement timing: Settlement is T+2, not same-day (T+0) or T+1. The March 2 auction settled on March 4 — a fact that could be tested.

  5. Direction of the switch: Short-to-long, not long-to-short. The government replaces near-maturing (short) bonds with long-dated bonds — aspirants sometimes reverse this, confusing it with yield-lowering buybacks.


11. Sources

Note: Both WebSearch queries failed due to domain access restrictions for the session. This note is grounded entirely in the article content (Tier 4 primary source) and established public knowledge of RBI operational frameworks (RBI Act, 1934; Government Securities Act, 2006; NDS-OM platform) — all verifiable against rbi.org.in and pib.gov.in in normal retrieval conditions.