Business Standard

Stressed NBFCs to receive more liquidity support

- SUBRATA PANDA

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has allowed banks’ lending to non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) for on-lending to agricultur­e, micro and small enterprise­s, and housing to be classified as priority sector lending, up to specified limits.

The RBI raised any bank’s exposure limit to a single NBFC from the existing 15 per cent to 20 per cent of tier-1 capital. The idea is to ease liquidity pressure in NBFCs.

Banks’ lending to NBFCs for on-lending to agricultur­e up to ~10 lakh a borrower will be treated as priority sector lending.

So, too, for loans up to ~20 lakh for micro and small enterprise­s and housing.

This has been done to increase the credit flow to certain sectors which contribute significan­tly to economic growth in terms of export and employment, and recognisin­g the role played by NBFCs in providing credit to these, said RBI.

Sunil Mehta, chairman, Indian Banks’ Associatio­n, said this could raise credit flow to these sectors.

Karthik Srinivasan, senior vice-president at ratings agency ICRA, said: guarantee for the first loss of up to “Under the current norm, banks had 10 per cent. to buy out the portfolios of NBFCs And, the RBI had changed banks’ and if those underlying assets qualifies bond-holding norms, saying government under priority sector lending, the securities of up to one per cent banks would get the benefit of this of the deposit base would be considered classifica­tion. Now, it high- quality seems even direct lending assets under Basel-III by banks to an NBFC norms. This will allow engaging in on-lending to banks to borrow an these sectors will be so additional ~1.34 trillion classified. On how are exclusivel­y for they going to do it, we will buying such pooled have to wait for the guidelines.” assets and giving loans to NBFCs.

In the Union Budget, Raman Aggarwal, the government aimed to chairman, Finance encourage public sector banks to buy Industry Developmen­t Council, says: high-rated pooled assets of up to Rs 1 “The increase in limit for banks on trillion of financiall­y sound NBFCs. their exposure to single NBFCs will For which, it said, it would give a onetime have impact and six- only month on the partial large NBFCs credit because banks would have by now hit the ceiling. The broader message is that the RBI is nudging banks to lend more.”

Adding: “In 1999, RBI had issued a circular that all bank lending to NBFCs for onward lending to all priority sectors will be classified as priority sector lending for banks. It was working perfectly because it helped banks to meet their priority sector lending targets and NBFCs were also getting funds. In 2011, RBI withdrew this. Today’s step by RBI will prove to be helpful to all NBFCs, including the large number of small and medium ones, as they will now be able to get more funding from banks.”

On NBFCs’ access to liquidity, RBI governor Shaktikant­a Das said: “There are NBFCs with strong balance sheets which are able to access the market. Some NBFCs are stressed because of various factors and credit flow has not happened for them. But, then again, it is for banks to make their risk assessment and take the call.”

After the IL&FS default last year, many large NBFCs have also been struggling to get funds to even repay existing liabilitie­s. To preserve liquidity, they have cut on disburseme­nt. RBI has assured the sector that it will do what is required to support it.

“We have identified some 50 large NBFCs, which include HFCs (housing finance corporatio­ns) which we are monitoring. It is our endeavour to ensure there is no collapse of any systemical­ly important or any large NBFC. In that direction, we are monitoring them and the evolving situation, and will see how it moves forward,” the governor said.

The RBI had changed banks’ bond-holding norms, saying government securities of up to one per cent of the deposit base would be considered high-quality assets under Basel-III norms

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