The yield on India’s 10-year benchmark government bond (IN063335G=CC) ended almost unchanged at 6.5142% on November 7, 2025, closely tracking its previous close of 6.5150%. The market remains stable amid ongoing RBI bond purchases and anticipation of a major new 10-year bond auction scheduled soon.
India’s 10-year benchmark government bond yield (IN063335G=CC) showed negligible movement, closing at 6.5142% on November 7, 2025, marginally down from the previous close of 6.5150%. This flat trend reflects cautious trading as investors await the upcoming auction of a new 10-year bond that is poised to replace the current benchmark and guide future yield movements.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) continues its steady buying in the government securities market, purchasing government bonds worth nearly ₹500 crore daily to support liquidity and maintain interest rate stability. These open market operations aim to counterbalance supply pressure from increased government borrowings.
Despite easing inflation and recent policy rate cuts by the RBI, bond yields have remained resilient due to external factors like rising global yields, a weak rupee, and the widened spread between Indian and US 10-year Treasury yields. The RBI's engagement with market participants this week indicates active monitoring and readiness to intervene for yield stabilization.
The upcoming government auction of the new 10-year 6.48% 2035 bond, worth ₹32,000 crore, will be an important event to watch as it can influence near-term bond yield direction.
Key Highlights:
India’s 10-year government bond yield ended nearly flat at 6.5142% vs previous close of 6.5150%
RBI continues market support with regular bond purchases, absorbing liquidity
Bond yield resilience despite RBI rate cuts attributed to global yield uptick, weak rupee
Spread between India and US 10-year yields remains elevated, influencing market dynamics
Upcoming 10-year 6.48% 2035 bond auction (₹32,000 crore) closely watched by investors
RBI actively engaging market participants to assess conditions and manage yields
Sources: Trading Economics, CCIL India, ANI News, Business Standard