RBI sets up new category of NBFCs for infrastructure

October 27, 2009 06:49 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 06:45 am IST - Mumbai

RBI Governor D. Subbarao speaks at a press conference in Mumbai on Oct. 27, 2009, releasing the mid-year review of RBI's annual Monetary Policy for the fiscal year 2009-10.

RBI Governor D. Subbarao speaks at a press conference in Mumbai on Oct. 27, 2009, releasing the mid-year review of RBI's annual Monetary Policy for the fiscal year 2009-10.

To help infrastructure firms meet their huge demand for funds, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday created a new category of non-banking finance company that might bring down the lending rate for the sector.

“NBFCs engaged in financing of infrastructure would henceforth be classified in a new category called infrastructure NBFCs,” the RBI said in its monetary review.

The new category would also help NBFCs raise more money from overseas markets, for which the Government has raised the cap to $500 million from the earlier $100 million under the approval route.

Infrastructure NBFC, Srei Infrastructure CMD, Hemant Kanoria, said at present NBFCs lend money between 10 per cent and 14 per cent to the infrastructure sector.

“If, we are able to raise money from foreign market, it will also prompt us to bring down interest rates,” he said.

L&T Finance Assistant Vice-President, G. K. Shettigar, also said the move will help cut lending rates for infrastructure.

“Creating the infrastructure NBFC category will bring down the cost of lending per bank. NBFCs would now be able to extend loans on competitive rates since the cash reserve ratio that they (NBFCs) would need to maintain would be less compared to its counterparts,” he said.

The RBI also proposed to link the risk weights of banks’ exposure to such NBFCs to the credit rating assigned to the NBFC by external credit assessment institutions.

At present, the risk weight for banks’ exposure to systemically important non-deposit taking NBFCs is 100 per cent and asset finance companies carry a risk weight based on credit ratings.

Banks have to keep more money aside while lending if risk weights are higher.

As on August 2009, overall credit flow to NBFCs stood at Rs 23,837 crore, down from Rs 26,443 crore a year ago, the RBI data said.

Infrastructure sector as a whole requires around 500 billion dollars during the Eleventh Five Year Plan.

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