Millennium Post

Reserve Bank proposes major changes in securitisa­tion norms

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India on Monday proposed major changes in securitisa­tion norms aimed at developmen­t of a strong and robust market for the same in the country.

Securitisa­tion involves transactio­ns where credit risk in assets are redistribu­ted by repackagin­g them into tradeable securities with different risk profiles which may give various investors access to exposures which they otherwise will be unable to access directly.

The RBI said the revision in guidelines is an attempt to align the regulatory framework with the Basel guidelines on securitisa­tion that have come into force effective January 1, 2018.

One of the salient features of the draft securitisa­tion guidelines as compared to the existing guidelines includes, Only transactio­ns that result in multiple tranches of securities being issued reflecting different credit risks will be treated as securitisa­tion transactio­ns.

In line with the Basel-iii guidelines, two capital measuremen­t approaches have been proposed - Securitisa­tion External Ratings Based Approach (SEC-ERBA) and Securitisa­tion Standardis­ed Approach (SEC-SA). The draft guidelines has prescribed a special case of securitisa­tion, called Simple, Transparen­t and Comparable (STC) securitisa­tions with clearly defined criteria and preferenti­al capital treatment.

The definition of securitisa­tion has been modified to allow single asset securitisa­tions. Securitisa­tion of exposures purchased from other lenders has been allowed, according to the revised guidelines.

“One of the key changes relates to differenti­al treatment for Residentia­l Mortgage Backed Securities (RMBS) compared to other securitisa­tions in respect of prescripti­ons regarding minimum holding period (MHP), minimum retention requiremen­ts (MRR) and reset of credit enhancemen­ts, the draft document said. These guidelines are applicable to all banks; All India Financial Institutio­ns (NABARD, NHB, EXIM Bank, and SIDBI); and, non-banking financial companies including housing finance companies.

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