Stock Loans Against India-Listed Equity
Institutional securities-backed lending against shares listed on India’s principal equity exchanges — for controlling shareholders, founders, and family offices holding positions on the SEBI-regulated market.
India equity markets.
The firm structures stock loans against shares listed on India’s two principal cash equity venues. The instrument allows founders, family offices, controlling shareholders, and concentrated single-stock holders to release liquidity against their India-listed position — without selling, and without disturbing voting control or the share register. Beneficial ownership remains with the borrower throughout. The full position is recovered on repayment.
Indicative terms are calibrated to the specific position. Loan-to-value is set against the underlying’s single-stock liquidity and free float. Tenor typically runs twelve to thirty-six months for institutional transactions. Recourse profiles span non-recourse, limited-recourse, and full-recourse — chosen against the borrower’s downside-protection objectives. Loans can be denominated in INR or in cross-currency structures (USD, EUR, GBP, or another major currency) depending on the borrower’s redeployment requirements.
India stock loans at a glance:
| Listed venues | BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange), National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) |
|---|---|
| Regulator | Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) |
| Currency | INR, with cross-currency options |
| Principal indices | S&P BSE Sensex, S&P BSE 100, S&P BSE 500 |
| Tenor | 12–36 months (institutional) |
| Recourse profile | Non-recourse, limited-recourse, or full-recourse |
| Loan-to-value | Calibrated per position |
Regulatory references for any specific transaction are mapped at the structuring stage with the borrower’s chosen counsel. The information above is published for general orientation and is not legal advice.
Each India exchange, covered.
BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange)
Asia’s oldest stock exchange. Most large Indian issuers are dual-listed on BSE and NSE; the Indian takeover code carries specific open-offer and creep mechanics that materially affect the structuring of large institutional positions.
View BSE stock loans → NSE · MumbaiNational Stock Exchange of India
India’s largest equity exchange by trading volume. Dual-listing with BSE is universal among large-capitalisation issuers; choice of execution venue is a tactical rather than structural decision in most cases.
View NSE stock loans →What people most often ask about India.
Q · 01 Which India exchanges does the firm cover for stock loans?
Q · 02 What is the typical loan-to-value for a stock loan against India-listed equity?
Q · 03 Which currency can a India stock loan be denominated in?
Q · 04 Who regulates stock-loan transactions in India?
Countries adjacent to India.
Hong Kong · Japan · China · South Korea · Taiwan · Singapore · Australia · New Zealand · Thailand · Indonesia · Malaysia · Philippines · Vietnam
A specific India position to discuss?
Submit a confidential enquiry. A senior principal will respond within one business day.