Source: BS
Context:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has withdrawn its 2016 circular that restricted banks from lending beyond a specified threshold to a single large corporate or group at the systemic level, while maintaining the large exposure framework at individual bank level.
Key Highlights:
- Previous Circular:
- Set credit exposure limits at the banking system level:
- ₹25,000 crore in FY18 → ₹15,000 crore in FY19 → ₹10,000 crore from FY20.
- Aimed to reduce concentration risk across the banking system.
- Set credit exposure limits at the banking system level:
- Current Framework:
- Large Exposure Framework continues:
- Single borrower: ≤20% of Tier-1 capital
- Corporate group: ≤25% of Tier-1 capital
- Large Exposure Framework continues:
- Reason for Withdrawal:
- Share of corporates in total banking exposure has fallen by ~10%, reducing systemic risk.
- The circular is no longer necessary to ensure financial stability, and its removal eases compliance burdens.
Market and Banking Impact
- Corporate credit demand remains muted due to:
- Slower capex cycle
- Alternative funding sources (bond markets, ECBs)
- Healthy cash reserves
- Some incremental lending may flow into:
- Infrastructure
- MSME sectors
- Potential funds returning to banks from bonds/ECBs: ₹3–4.5 trillion