SEBI Chairman Shri Tuhin Kanta Pandey and BSE MD & CEO Shri Sundararaman Ramamurthy reflect on how the SENSEX evolved alongside India’s capital market architecture over four decades
When the SENSEX was introduced in 1986, India’s capital markets were small, tightly regulated, and largely inaccessible to the average household. Trading volumes were thin, participation was limited, and the idea of equity as a long-term wealth-building tool was still unfamiliar to most Indians. Four decades later, the index has outlasted multiple political regimes, economic crises, regulatory overhauls, and technological revolutions, quietly becoming one of the country’s most enduring financial reference points.
Tracked daily by investors, institutions, policymakers, and global funds, the SENSEX has evolved in tandem with India’s broader market architecture. From manual trading floors to algorithm-driven systems, from market-cap weighting to free-float methodology, and from a closed economy to a globally integrated one, the index has absorbed structural change without losing relevance.
Today, the SENSEX represents nearly 40 percent of India’s total market capitalisation and serves as the underlying benchmark for ETFs, index funds, and one of the world’s most actively traded index derivatives contracts. Its transition in 2003 to a free-float market-cap methodology aligned it with global index construction standards, reinforcing its credibility among international investors while retaining its domestic relevance.
Speaking on the milestone, Tuhin Kanta Pandey, Chairman of Securities and Exchange Board of India, noted that the index’s longevity reflects more than just market performance. It mirrors the institutional maturity of India’s capital markets, shaped by regulatory reform, stronger disclosure norms, improved governance, and expanding investor protection frameworks. Over time, the SENSEX has functioned as a real-time ledger of economic confidence, responding not just to corporate earnings but to shifts in policy, capital flows, and systemic resilience.
From liberalisation in the 1990s to the rise of domestic mutual funds, and more recently, the surge in retail participation and digital trading platforms, the index has continuously recalibrated itself to reflect the changing composition of India Inc. Its constituent churn over the years captures the transition of the economy itself, from traditional manufacturing dominance to services, technology, financial services, and consumption-led growth.
For BSE Limited, which houses the index, the 40-year mark is as much about continuity as it is about adaptation. Sundararaman Ramamurthy, Managing Director and CEO of BSE, described the SENSEX as an institutional memory of India’s markets. He emphasised that the index has remained relevant because it has evolved with the ecosystem, incorporating technology-led efficiencies, supporting new asset products, and reflecting shifts in market participation without compromising its role as a stable benchmark.
Notably, the SENSEX’s long-term compounded annual growth rate has broadly tracked India’s nominal GDP growth over the same period. That alignment has reinforced its perception as a proxy for the country’s economic expansion rather than a short-term trading instrument alone. Through financial crises, global shocks, and domestic slowdowns, the index has demonstrated that consistency, rather than volatility, is what builds long-term investor trust.
As India’s markets move deeper into an era defined by financialisation, data-driven trading, and expanding global linkages, the role of legacy benchmarks like the SENSEX is also being redefined. While new thematic and sectoral indices proliferate, the SENSEX continues to serve as the common language between retail investors, policymakers, and global capital.
Four decades on, the index is no longer just a number flashed across trading screens. It is a historical record of how India’s capital markets learned to absorb reform, survive disruption, and institutionalise trust, one trading day at a time.
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