News and developments
GIFT City’s Next Phase: How India’s IFSC Is Becoming a Global Financial Hub
For years, India-linked international financing transactions were routinely structured through offshore jurisdictions such as Singapore, Dubai, Mauritius or London. Whether it involved fund management, aircraft leasing, offshore debt, private credit or cross-border investment platforms, global capital often flowed into India through foreign financial centres rather than through India itself.
That dynamic is now beginning to change.
GIFT City’s International Financial Services Centre (“IFSC”) is rapidly evolving from a niche offshore financing zone into a much broader institutional financial ecosystem. What started as an experiment in international banking and foreign currency transactions is now attracting activity across:
Importantly, this evolution goes far beyond infrastructure financing alone.
The next phase of GIFT City is increasingly about positioning India within the architecture of global finance itself.
Why GIFT City Matters Beyond Infrastructure Financing
The first wave of interest in GIFT City was driven largely by offshore lending and infrastructure financing. But global investors are now using IFSC structures for a much wider range of financial activities. The reason is straightforward: international investors prefer jurisdictions that offer familiarity, flexibility and efficient cross-border structuring.
Historically, India’s domestic regulatory ecosystem often created friction around:
The IFSC framework was designed to reduce many of these barriers while still operating within an Indian regulatory environment. That combination is what makes GIFT City strategically important.
The Real Shift Happening Inside GIFT City
The ecosystem is now moving beyond basic offshore banking activity into a much more sophisticated financial platform. Earlier, most activity centred around:
Today, the conversation has expanded significantly. The IFSC ecosystem is increasingly seeing growth across:
Bottom of Form
This is the transition that changes GIFT City from a financing corridor into a financial ecosystem.
Aircraft Leasing Has Become One of GIFT City’s Biggest Growth Areas
One of the most visible examples of this shift is aircraft leasing. India is one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets, but historically, a substantial portion of aircraft leasing activity was routed through jurisdictions such as Ireland and Singapore.
GIFT City is increasingly positioning itself as an India-linked alternative. This matters because aircraft leasing sits at the intersection of:
As aviation financing grows, GIFT City is expected to become increasingly relevant for:
Why Private Credit Funds Are Increasingly Interested in IFSC Structures
Private credit is becoming one of the fastest-growing segments in global finance, particularly as traditional banks face tighter regulatory oversight and exposure limits. Many private credit platforms now seek:
This aligns naturally with the IFSC ecosystem. Increasingly, GIFT City structures are being explored for:
As India’s capital markets mature, alternative lenders are expected to play a much larger role across infrastructure, real estate, aviation and technology-linked sectors.
Sustainable Finance Is Becoming Central to the IFSC Ecosystem
Another major trend shaping GIFT City is the rise of ESG-focused capital. Global institutional investors are increasingly allocating capital toward:
This is creating growing demand for internationally aligned financing ecosystems capable of supporting:
For India, this is strategically important because future infrastructure and industrial growth will increasingly depend on access to climate-focused institutional capital.
Treasury Operations and Cross-Border Financial Management
A quieter but increasingly important trend involves multinational groups exploring GIFT City for treasury and financial management operations. Large businesses increasingly require integrated systems for:
This is the kind of activity typically associated with mature international financial centres. Its gradual emergence within GIFT City signals a deeper level of institutional evolution.
Regulation Still Matters: Sophisticated Structures Require Sophisticated Planning
Despite increasing flexibility, IFSC-linked transactions are far from legally simple. Many structures continue to involve overlapping considerations relating to:
As institutional participation grows, legal and regulatory planning becomes even more important because many transactions now span multiple jurisdictions simultaneously.
Why International Investors Still Prioritise Arbitration and Enforcement
Global investors ultimately care about predictability. That is why many IFSC-linked transactions continue to rely on:
For institutional capital providers, enforceability often matters just as much as economics. This is particularly relevant for:
The Bigger Strategic Question: Can India Build Its Own Global Financial Centre?
The larger objective is much broader: to internalise more India-linked financial activity within an internationally competitive Indian ecosystem. In practical terms, that means reducing reliance on foreign offshore jurisdictions for:
Whether GIFT City can eventually rival established global financial hubs remains an open question. But the direction is becoming increasingly clear.
What the Next Decade Could Look Like
Over the coming years, GIFT City is expected to see significant expansion across:
The ecosystem is gradually shifting from a specialised regulatory zone into a broader institutional financial platform.
Conclusion
GIFT City is entering a much more sophisticated phase of development. The conversation is no longer limited to offshore lending or infrastructure financing alone. Instead, the IFSC ecosystem is increasingly expanding into aircraft leasing, private credit, fund management, sustainable finance and cross-border financial intermediation.
That transition is strategically important not only for investors and financial institutions, but also for India’s broader position within global capital markets. As the ecosystem matures, successful IFSC-linked structures will increasingly depend on:
The next chapter of GIFT City may ultimately be less about competing with domestic financial centres and more about whether India can establish a globally relevant offshore financial ecosystem of its own.
By Aditya Bhattacharya, Partner, King Stubb and Kasiva
https://ksandk.com/people/aditya-bhattacharya/
