SEBI IT Resilience Plan banner showing market stability and technology systems

SEBI Proposes Bold ITRI Move to Boost Market Stability

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Komal Thakur AUTHOR

Whenever I track developments from SEBI, or the Securities and Exchange Board of India, I try to see beyond the headline and analyse what that actually entails for the future of India’s financial markets.

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And this time, SEBI proposes to introduce an IT Resilience Index (ITRI) that caught my eye not because it sounds fancy but because it tackles something that most of the investors usually don’t care about: the invisible backbone of our markets’ tech systems.

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We often focus on stock movements, IPOs, or mutual fund returns. But what happens if the systems running exchanges or clearing corporations fail? That’s where this proposal becomes far more important than it initially appears.

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The article explains how the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has proposed an IT Resilience Index to assess and enhance the robustness, security, infrastructure, high availability and related areas of technology systems in vital market institutions as part of efforts to ensure that India’s financial markets are resilient.

Why SEBI Is Focusing on IT Resilience

India’s capital markets have become more digital over the years. From online trading platforms to real-time settlement systems, everything depends on seamless IT infrastructure.

Market Infrastructure Institutions (MIIs), which include stock exchanges, depositories, and clearing corporations, handle enormous volumes of transactions daily. A small glitch over here isn’t just an inconvenience; it’s a big thing that needs to potentially upend the entire financial ecosystem.

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SEBI’s proposed IT Resilience Index is essentially an attempt to quantify how strong, reliable, and secure these systems really are. From my perspective, this is a shift from reactive regulation to proactive risk management, and that’s a big deal.

What Exactly Is the IT Resilience Index (ITRI)?

The ITRI is proposed as a systematic, standardised framework to evaluate the health of IT systems across MIIs. Instead of vague assessments, SEBI wants a structured scoring mechanism that reflects how well critical systems perform under stress, disruption, or cyber threats.

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What stands out to me is the focus on automation and objectivity. Data would be collected through the system primarily, which minimises human dependency and ensures there is no human bias, thus maintaining consistency in the approach. In simpler terms, SEBI is saying: β€œLet the systems evaluate themselves based on real performance data.”

The Nine Parameters That Will Define IT Strength

One of the most interesting parts of the proposal is the weighted scoring system. SEBI has identified nine key parameters to measure IT resilience:

  • Availability (20%)
  • Security (20%)
  • Integrity (10%)
  • Governance (10%)
  • Reliability (10%)
  • Monitoring (10%)
  • Business Continuity (10%)
  • Modularity & Flexibility (10%)
  • Scalability & Incident Handling (10% combined)

From my viewpoint, the heavy weight given to availability and security makes complete sense. If a system isn’t available when needed, or worse, if it’s vulnerable to cyber threats, everything else becomes irrelevant.

Automation: The Most Important Piece of the Puzzle

What gives me comfort is SEBI pushing for system-driven computation of the index. The regulator has made it clear that the process needs to be as automated as possible and with minimum manual intervention.

This matters because:

  • It minimises manipulation or subjective interpretation
  • It ensures consistency across institutions
  • It makes the framework scalable over time

In an age where data integrity is paramount, such methodology adds robustness to trust in the evaluation itself.

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Also Read:Β SEBI’s 3% Exit Load Rule: Critical Risk Every Investor Must Know

The Role of Industry Standards Forum (ISF)

SEBI is not building this framework in isolation. The MII will be instrumental in further shaping the model through its Industry Standards Forum (ISF). The ISF will, within three months of the final circular:

  • Define detailed sub-parameters
  • Finalise scoring methodologies
  • Set baseline thresholds
  • Establish standard operating procedures (SOPs)

I like this kind of cooperative effort myself. It makes certain that the framework does not remain simply regulatory in its approach, but also operational and executable.

Reporting, Timelines, and Accountability

There was another thing that caught my eye, and that’s the systematic reporting process. MIIs will be required to:

  • Compute the index every six months
  • Do so within 60 days of the period ending
  • Results are to be submitted to SEBI within 90 days

But it doesn’t stop there. They must also include:

  • Comparative analysis of previous periods
  • Observations from boards or oversight committees
  • Details of corrective actions

This turns the ITRI into much more than a score; it becomes an ongoing benchmarking and improvement tool.

What This Means for Investors Like Us

At first glance, this looks like a technical or institutional reform. But the implications are deeper from an investor’s perspective. A stronger IT backbone means:

  • Reduced chances of trading disruptions
  • Better protection against cyber risks
  • Improved reliability of market operations

Fundamentally, it injects a level of trust in the market, which directly links to its participation and growth in the long run.

A Step Towards Future-Ready Markets

On a broad scale, the financial markets are shifting towards automation, algorithmic trading and AI-driven systems. India is no exception. With the introduction of an IT Resilience Index, SEBI is essentially preparing the ecosystem for:

  • Higher transaction volumes
  • More complex financial products
  • Increased cyber threats

It is a matter of building a strong foundation before scaling up further, which is exactly what a fast-growing market like India requires.

Timeline and What Happens Next

According to the proposal:

  • MIIs will get six months to implement the framework after finalisation
  • The first reporting cycle is expected for the half-year ending September 30, 2026
  • Public comments are open until April 15, 2026

Interestingly, SEBI has also written that a beta version of this framework is already there, which means it’s not just theoretical; it’s already in practice.

My Take: A Quiet but Powerful Reform

Not every regulatory move makes news, but some of them quietly change the system, and I think this is one of those. The IT Resilience Index won’t be driving a stock price tomorrow, but over time, it will:

  • Improve operational stability
  • Reduce systemic risks
  • Strengthen investor trust

And in the world of finance, trust is everything. The successful implementation of this by SEBI could establish India as a model for other emerging markets in technology governance in capital markets.

Final Thoughts

As someone who follows financial regulations and markets closely, I view this as a structural reform and look at it strategically rather than simply through the lens of another compliance requirement.

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It reveals a deeper realisation that in today’s markets, technology isn’t a support; it is the system. And ensuring its resilience is no longer optional, it’s essential.

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Also Read:Β SEBI’s Strategic Shift: Mutual Fund Rules Get a Strict Reset

Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and reflects personal views and analysis. It should not be considered as investment advice. Readers are advised to consult a financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

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AUTHOR

Komal Thakur

I’m Komal Thakur, a finance content strategist with 2+ years of experience at Investik Future. I’m passionate about understanding market movements and financial behavior. I simplify investing, trading, and wealth-building into clear, actionable insights that anyone can applyβ€”making finance less confusing for everyday investors.