Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Sebi proposal on loan default disclosure­s runs into hurdle as RBI expresses concerns

- Jayshree P. Upadhyay and Gopika Gopakumar jayshree.p@livemint.com

MUMBAI: A Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) proposal to make listed firms disclose defaults on their loans within a day of it happening is stuck in a turf war between the central bank and markets regulator, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reservatio­ns about the Sebi proposal as it considers banks to be the biggest stakeholde­rs in default data and believes such data is not for public consumptio­n, these people said on condition of anonymity.

Sebi had initially released a circular on August 4 proposing default disclosure­s within a day, only to withdraw it on September 30, just a day before it was to become operationa­l. The circular had sought to bring bank loan default disclosure on par with delay in repayments on other kinds of debt instrument­s such as bonds, as required by Sebi’s Listing Obligation and Disclosure Requiremen­t regulation­s.

The market regulator’s board had discussed the implementa tion of this proposal in its December 28 board meeting, but could not reach a conclusion, Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi said after that meeting.

“While Sebi is seeking disclosure­s exerting its powers on listed entities, the Reserve Bank of India considers the debt to have severe impact on its regulated entities, ie, banks. They are the biggest stakeholde­rs,” said the first of the two people cited earlier. “Sebi’s thought process is to remove informatio­n arbitrage.”

Spokespers­ons for Sebi and RBI did not reply to emails seeking comment. RBI’s objections centres on the fact that loan default data is not for public consumptio­n, said the second of the two people cited earlier.

“The data on loan default should be for regulatory purposes only and not for public consumptio­n. All defaults cannot be attributed to malfeasanc­e. Some of them could be because of the business cycles. Look at the Supreme Court case on defaulters, for example,” said the second person.

In March 2017, RBI had submitted a list of big loan default cases more than ₹500 crore each) to the Supreme Court in a sealed envelope. The list was given in response to a public interest litigation on rising bad loans in the economy.RBI declined to make the list public, citing economic interest, fiduciary responsibi­lity and commercial confidence. The apex court is yet to decide whether the informatio­n can be made public or not.

According to Sandeep Parekh, managing partner at Finsec Law Advisors, the implementa­tion of the Sebi circular requires a calibrated approach from both the regulators.

“Till now the omerta code that existed between both borrower and lender to suppress informatio­n will be challenged by the circular (when implemente­d),” said Parekh. “RBI has realised that light shown on 10 years of opacity can have systemic issues and is therefore seeking a calibrated response. Similarly, Sebi itself may need to calibrate both nature of credit—not every operationa­l delay is a default—and period of default—immediatel­y may be too soon—and start with a consensus number. It can then tighten the screws over the next few years,” he added.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi. Sebi had initially released a circular on August 4 proposing default disclosure­s within a day, only to withdraw it on September 30
MINT/FILE Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi. Sebi had initially released a circular on August 4 proposing default disclosure­s within a day, only to withdraw it on September 30

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