BusinessLine (Chennai)

RBI, IRDAI lens on SFBs for forcing insurance products on borrowers

CRACKDOWN. Regulators mi ed as banks cancel sanctioned loans if borrowers decline to take an insurance product

- Hamsini Karthik Mumbai

Cracking down on misselling of insurance products, the banking and insurance regulators are questionin­g the need to forcefully bundle life insurance products with loans o ered by small finance banks (SFBs).

It was recently brought to the attention of the Reserve Bank of India that SFBs were forcing individual borrowers to get a life insurance product and the loan amount disbursed to borrowers was net of premium.

While MFIs (micro finance institutio­ns) are permitted to sell insurance products in JLG, or joint liability group, loans, it is not permitted in the case of loans sold to individual­s.

“It has come to a stage where banks threaten to cancel the sanctioned loan if a borrower declines to buy an insurance product. Since MFI loans have an impact on the livelihood, borrowers end up taking insurance whether they need it or not because they won’t be able to get the loan otherwise,” said a senior executive of an SFB aware of the developmen­t.

MIS-SELLING

Microfinan­ce (MFI) loans are largely small-ticket unsecured loans. Both the regulators, the RBI and the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (IRDAI) are probing SFBs and insurance companies for making life insurance products mandatory along with such loans.

“On a ₹40,000 loan if 10 per cent must be reduced because it should go towards the premium for a life insurance product, how would it benefit the borrower?

“The banking regulator has been warning SFBs for the last two years to review such products because they may not be beneficial to anybody — the borrower, the bank or the insurance company. But with malpractic­es continuing, the regulator is

Another aspect of these loans which is under scrutiny is whether the income assessment of the borrower has been done adequately

coming down on a few banks,” said a highly placed source aware of the matter.

LACK OF PERSISTENC­Y

What is also becoming a contentiou­s issue for the IRDAI is whether life insurance companies can maintain persistenc­e on such products. “Invariably after the first year’s premium is deducted, when the loan is

extended by the bank, the customer doesn’t pay premium on these policies. The persistenc­y ratios of such products are observed to be very weak,” said a senior executive of an SFB who didn’t want to be named.

Such bundled life insurance products merely add to the volume of policies sold and add little or negligible value to insurance companies. Another aspect of these loans, which is under scrutiny, is whether the income assessment of the borrower has been done adequately. In most cases where loans and life insurance products were bundled, it was uncovered that the assessed income for life insurance and for getting the loan were di erent.

“Annual household income for MFI loans is capped at ₹3 lakh, whereas there are instances of the sum insured working out to ₹5-8 lakh or more. These are glaring discrepanc­ies,” said a highly-placed source with knowledge of the issue.

Although bundling of life insurance products with loans is becoming a huge problem across the banking industry, the regulator is said to be focussed on MFI loans because of the economic implicatio­ns of such practices.

It is expected that there could be some directive or a circular from the RBI on such mis-selling of insurance products.

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