Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

LENDERS’ ROUGH LOAN RECOVERY TACTICS DRAW REGULATOR’S IRE

- Shayan Ghosh shayan.g@livemint.com

RBI ON TUESDAY FINED BAJAJ FINANCE LTD ₹2.5 CRORE FOR FAILING TO REIN IN RECOVERY AGENTS

MUMBAI: When Manoj Uttam Jankar missed paying the last instalment of his loan taken from Bajaj Finance, he had no idea it would start an unending cycle of intimidati­on that would last even after he settled his dues.

The 42-year-old from Mumbai had taken the loan to buy a mobile phone but missed the April instalment because he suddenly lost his job as a guard in a security agency.

On a single day, December 23, the company tried debiting his account 28 times for repayments, said Jankar.

This was, Jankar said, even after he managed to repay the last pending instalment in cash on 16 December.

“Apart from the endless calls at the oddest of hours, during which I repeatedly explained my precarious finances, the company also presented a repayment mandate 28 times on December 23 leading to bank penalties against me because of cheque bounce charges,” said Jankar, who is still looking for work.

Dozens of stories such as Jankar’s have emerged on social media in recent months highlighti­ng the strong-arm tactics that have been employed by agents working for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) to extract dues from vulnerable borrowers.

Incessant calls and veiled threats are some of the most commonly used techniques by recovery agents.

Responding to a flood of complaints, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday fined Bajaj Finance Ltd ₹2.5 crore for failing to rein in recovery agents.

The quantum of the fine is not very significan­t, but industry watchers said it does a send a signal to banks and NBFCs against using coercive loan recovery tactics.

Bajaj Finance, one of India’s largest non-bank lenders with assets under management (AUM) of ₹1.04 lakh crore, did not respond to an email seeking comments. The action of the central bank gives hope to activists and lawyers working to protect borrowers from harassment by lenders.

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