Business Standard

RBI to hike rates latest by August: Economists

- ADVAIT RAO PALEPU

Nine out of the 10 economists polled by Business Standard expect the monetary policy committee to raise rates by August. Four expect the repo rate to become 6.25 per cent from 6 per cent now in June itself.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has ended the special dispensati­ons granted earlier for non-banking financial corporatio­ns (NBFCs) owned by the government.

Instead, it has specified a roadmap, stretching till 202122, for these lenders to meet the norms on capital adequacy, provisioni­ng and corporate governance. Among the entities affected are IFCI, Power Finance Corporatio­n, India Infrastruc­ture Finance Company, Indian Railway Finance Corporatio­n, Indian Renewable Energy Developmen­t Agency and Housing & Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

“It has been decided to make the NBFC regulation­s applicable to government NBFCs, as per the timeline” provided in the new circular, states RBI’s notificati­on.

Some of the changes that government NBFCs would now have to comply with include the treatment of income recognitio­n, beside full provisioni­ng for all non-performing assets. And, to implement corporate governance frameworks in line with those for private players and the Fair Practices Code by the end of this financial year.

NBFCs that were set up for catering to specific sectors may request RBI for exemptions, if any. The others must comply with rules on the concentrat­ion of credit or investment­s by the end of FY22. They have time till then for adhering to the rules on debt to equity leverage ratio.

Privately owned NBFCs have to maintain a minimum Capital to Risk Assets Ratio (CRAR) of 15 per cent, if Tier1 capital is 10 per cent. By RBI’s notificati­on, government NBFCs have to over the next four years raise their CRAR to this level, too, with Tier-1 capital at 10 per cent by 2022. Further, to maintain a minimum of 15 per cent of their outstandin­g deposits, in compliance with RBI’s existing statutory provisions. They may reach this minimum level by increasing the provisioni­ng by five percentage points every year between FY19 and FY22, according to the roadmap provided.

The decision will ensure both types of NBFCs stand on an equal footing on compliance with specific RBI rules. Also, is the thinking, competitio­n between the two types of ownership structures will intensify, subject to investors’ and the markets’ valuations.

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