Source: BS
Context:
The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) approach to bank ownership and promoter control has evolved significantly over the past two decades. Recent approvals allowing foreign regulated institutions to take large stakes in Indian private banks indicate a renewed regulatory preference that raises important questions about India’s long-term banking capacity and financial sovereignty.
Evolution of RBI’s Bank Ownership Policy
Phase 1: Emphasis on “Skin in the Game” (Early 2000s)
- Promoters were encouraged to hold significant equity stakes to ensure commitment and accountability
- Example: Kotak Mahindra Bank (2001)
- Promoter holding: 61% at conversion from NBFC to bank
- RBI required reduction only to 49%, not dispersed ownership
Phase 2: Shift Towards Diversified Ownership (2005–2016)
- RBI began advocating dispersed shareholding to reduce promoter dominance
- 2013 Guidelines introduced:
- Mandatory Non-Operative Financial Holding Company (NOFHC) structure
- Promoter stake capped at 40% initially, to be reduced to 15% within 12 years
- Five-year lock-in on promoter stake
- 2016 Master Direction reinforced this approach
- Applied even to existing banks
- Target promoter holding: 15%
Core Concern: Over-Reliance on Foreign Capital
- India has too few banks for the size and credit needs of its economy
- Domestic entrepreneurs with patient, long-term capital are scarce
- Private equity-backed professional teams cannot meet systemic scale requirements
- Foreign capital alone cannot sustain India’s long-term credit growth
Policy Recommendations
- Reconsider frameworks on:
- Bank ownership norms
- Voting rights caps
- Blanket restrictions on industrial houses entering banking
- Encourage large, well-governed NBFCs to convert into banks
- Already possess:
- Advanced technology platforms
- Digital onboarding and data-driven credit assessment
- Robust risk management systems
- Already possess:





