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Tweezing out for dormancy: RBI intends to intensify regulatory audits of NBFCs

  • By CS Anita Baid, Vice President, Vinod Kothari Consultants P. Ltd.

As per reports available on public domain[1], the RBI intends to intensify regulatory audits of non-banking finance companies, to find dormancy, non-compliance, non clarity of business models, or other risks that the regulator may wish to check. The intent seems to be weed out the truant ones out of the crowd of over 9000 NBFCs that exist. It is a fact that in the recent years, the RBI has been granting lesser new registrations, and canceling more of existing registrations, causing the number to come down. It is also important to note that if the number of NBFCs looks overwhelming, it is not because so many companies are into real operation: it is because the regulations currently define a company investing its owned capital into financial investments, with absolutely no access to either public funds or customer interface, as an NBFC, by imputing the public interest that actually does not exist. The number would have been a lot lesser had the regulator had the realisation that if there are no public funds, no customer interface and investment of owned funds being done, there is no reason for the regulator to interfere, as the intent of the country’s Central Bank cannot be to regulate investment activity that one does with one’s own money.

While this issue remains to be advocated for a potential reform, in the meantime, it is important for NBFCs to brace up for the RBI’s inquisitorial interest.

This article is intended to help NBFCs to be better prepared for such regulatory interface.

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