India's RBI mandates LEI and UTI reporting in Master Direction

Change
India's RBI issued a Master Direction today that mandates Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) and Unique Transaction Identifier (UTI) reporting for over‑the‑counter (OTC) derivative transactions in the financial markets it regulates.
India's RBI mandates LEI and UTI reporting in Master Direction
Why it matters
Regulated firms must now supply the required identifiers on every OTC derivative regulatory submission, creating a single enforceable standard for trade reporting. Reporting and operations teams will need to align data capture and submission processes to the consolidated directive or face non‑compliance consequences.
Implications
  • Treasury and regulatory reporting teams at banks and Non‑Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) that execute OTC derivative trades must update trade capture and filing systems to populate Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) and Unique Transaction Identifier (UTI) fields for each transaction — failure to do so will produce non‑compliant reports.
  • IT and operations teams at those firms must test and validate end‑to‑end reporting pipelines against the Master Direction's identifier formats before returning to live reporting to avoid reporting rejections.

Unlock the decision layer.

Go beyond headlines — see impact, exposure, and timing.

  • Implications: What actually changes downstream.
  • Who is affected: Which teams or operators are exposed.
  • What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and next moves.
  • Real-time alerts: Know the moment a change is published.
  • Ask AI: Clarify any brief instantly, in context.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.

Start free trial
Source

Tax Concept

Topics

Regulatory Actions Compliance Banking Regulation Capital Markets Financial Services

Stay updated

Don’t check for changes.
Get them as they happen.

Get real-time alerts for executed changes, a daily briefing of what matters, and a weekly summary to stay on top — without having to check constantly.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.