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Reserve Bank of India frees up bank capital with NBFC risk weight rollback | Current Affairs | Vision IAS

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Reserve Bank of India frees up bank capital with NBFC risk weight rollback

2 min read

RBI's Decision on Bank Loan Risk Weights

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reversed its previous decision to increase the risk weights on bank loans to non-banking financial companies (NBFCs). This move aims to release substantial capital for banks and stimulate loan growth.

Background and Changes

  • The risk weight for bank loans to NBFCs was increased by 25 percentage points in November 2023.
  • This was applicable when the external risk weight of NBFCs was below 100%.
  • As a result, bank loans to highly-rated NBFCs (AAA, AA, and A) saw a sharp increase in risk weight.

Impact on Loan Growth

  • Bank loan growth to NBFCs dropped significantly from 15% year-on-year to 6.7% by December 2024.
  • Overall bank credit growth fell from 20% to 11.2% in the same period.

Restoration of Lower Risk Weights

  • Anil Gupta from Icra stated that restoring lower risk weights will enhance credit flow to NBFCs and positively impact their capital ratios.
  • Banks will need to set aside less capital for such loans, freeing up resources.

Microloan Risk Weights

  • For microloans categorized as regulatory retail or business loans, the risk weight will be 75%.
  • Microloans classified as consumer credit will have a 100% risk weight instead of the previous 125%.
  • This change removes the confusion created by the November 2023 circular and clarifies the risk weight criteria for microloans.

Consequences for the NBFC Sector

  • Prior increases led NBFCs to seek alternative funding sources due to declining bank borrowings.
  • The change is seen as a positive shift for the NBFC sector, addressing limited funding options amid adverse dollar movements affecting external commercial borrowings (ECBs).
  • Tags :
  • RBI
  • NBFCs
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