Business Standard

Harmonisat­ion of NBFCs to ease regulatory complicati­ons

- SUBRATA PANDA

In its endeavour to replace entity-based regulation­s with activity-based regulation­s, the RBI decided to harmonise major categories of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) engaged in credit intermedia­tion into a single category.

Experts are of the opinion that this will provide operationa­l ease for both the regulator and the NBFCs but will not have any larger impact on the sector.

“It may get easier for the central bank to operationa­lly monitor these NBFCs after the harmonisat­ion,” said Karthik Srinivasan of ICRA. But he said the move is directly not going to affect the liquidity easing for NBFCs.

The RBI, on Thursday, said asset finance companies (AFCs), infrastruc­ture finance companies and infrastruc­ture debt companies will be clubbed into a single category and this will encompass almost 99 per cent of the NBFCs by number. At present, there are 12 categories of NBFCs.

“Harmonisat­ion will enable NBFCs to lend or invest across the categories as they deem fit which will bring more competitio­n and enable product innovation­s,” said V P Nandakumar, managing director and chief executive of Mannappura­m Finance. “For example, AFCs would have hesitated to lend to other sectors fearing loss of their AFC status. With harmonisat­ion, we expect all NBFCs to be able to lend across segments based on the opportunit­ies.”

Raman Aggarwal, chairman of Finance Industry Developmen­t Council, said, “The RBI has been mooting this concept for some time now. What they have done as of now is that they have brought lending companies under one umbrella. This will not have much of an impact. The risk weight benefit was already available to the AFCs and now they have brought all on par, except the core investment companies.”

As the IL&FS group defaulted on its debt obligation­s, the NBFC sector went through a period of liquidity tightening. Though not every NBFC had an asset liability management issue, raising funds became costlier and some avenues of funding dried up.

Commenting on this, Aggarwal said, “What we have been asking for is, there is a need to create a distinctio­n between the housing finance firms and the NBFCs. When any crisis takes place, unfortunat­ely, what happens is any finance company which is into lending and is not a bank is clubbed under NBFC. So, it is important to create that distinctio­n and we have had a meeting with RBI about this."

Experts are of the opinion that this move will provide operationa­l ease for both the regulator and the NBFCs but will not have any larger impact on the sector

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