Source: IE
Context:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released a draft framework to reform External Commercial Borrowing (ECB) regulations, aiming to enhance access to foreign capital while ensuring prudent risk management. The proposal seeks to link borrowing limits to company financial strength, remove cost caps, and simplify end-use and maturity rules to align with global standards.
Key Proposals:
- Borrowing Limits Linked to Net Worth:
- Companies may raise funds up to the higher of $1 billion in outstanding ECBs or total external and domestic borrowings up to 300% of net worth, based on the latest audited balance sheet.
- The move ties borrowing capacity to the borrower’s financial resilience rather than a uniform cap.
- Market-Determined Interest Rates:
- The RBI proposes to remove the all-in-cost ceiling (currently capped at 450 bps over benchmark).
- Borrowing costs will instead be aligned with prevailing market conditions, improving pricing efficiency and flexibility.
- Simplified End-Use and Maturity Norms:
- End-use restrictions and minimum average maturity (MAM) requirements will be eased.
- This change will benefit large corporates in infrastructure and capital-intensive sectors that need flexible long-term funding.
- Broadened Borrower and Lender Base:
- The framework expands the pool of eligible borrowers and lenders, facilitating greater participation and capital inflow.
- Operational Guidelines:
- ECB proceeds must be repatriated immediately and credited to an INR account with a bank in India.
- Pending deployment, funds can be held in fixed deposits for up to 12 months.
- Funds meant for permissible foreign currency expenditure can be held in foreign currency accounts in India or invested in high-quality overseas deposits until use.
- Restructuring or insolvency cases may raise ECBs only if permitted under their resolution plan.
- Reporting Simplification:
- ECB reporting and compliance requirements will be streamlined to reduce administrative friction.





