RBI asks asset reconstruction companies to invest 15% in securities receipts
Listen to this Article
In a bid to improve the sale of bad loans in the banking system, the Reserve Bank of India has tightened the regulatory framework for asset reconstruction companies.
The RBI said ARCs will henceforth have to mandatorily invest and hold minimum 15 per cent (against 5 per cent earlier) of the Security Receipts issued by them against the assets acquired from banks on an ongoing basis till the redemption of all the receipts.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said “we have upped the requirement of skin in the game for ARCs so that it becomes costly just to participate in parking (of assets/ loans).
“It will make it more difficult for ARCs to just allow an asset to sit on their balance sheet and collect management fees for that. We are open to new players entering the ARC business, taking over new ARCs.”
In its amended regulatory framework for ARCs, the RBI crunched the planning to six months (instead of 12 months as at present) allowed for ARCs to formulate a plan for realisation of non-performing assets of the selling bank acquired for the purpose of reconstruction.
Before bidding for the stressed assets, the ARCs can ask the auctioning banks to give adequate time, not less than 2 weeks, to conduct a meaningful due diligence of the account by verifying the underlying assets.
The central bank said the ARCs should also be members of Joint Lenders’ Forum and should be a part of the process involving the JLF with reference to such stressed assets. (The Hindu)
Category : RBI | Comments : 0 | Hits : 606
The Supreme Court on Friday set aside the rejection of an IRS officer’s candidature for appointment as a member of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), ruling that the involvement of the th...
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday unveiled a set of liquidity-boosting measures aimed at infusing more than $23 billion (around ₹2 lakh crore) into the banking system, after review...
RBI has issued draft rules to tighten dividend payouts by banks by linking distributions to capital adequacy, asset and profit quality, setting a uniform prudential framework effective from FY27. In t...


Comments