The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said banks should make provisions of two per cent against loans given to a foreign step-down subsidiary of an Indian company.
The provisions are in addition to the country risk provision that banks do for overseas loans. For all standard loans, banks make a provision of 0.4 per cent. This would mean banks will hike their final lending rates, too, to take care of the provision. They would also not readily lend at a time when they are struggling with capital.
"Banks shall make additional provision of two per cent… against standard assets representing all exposures to the step-down subsidiaries, to cover the additional risk arising from complexity in the structure, location of different intermediary entities in different jurisdictions exposing the Indian company, and hence the bank, to greater political and regulatory risk," RBI said in a notification on its website.
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While there is no bar on giving such loans, both funded and on a non-fund basis, the Indian parent should hold at least 51 per cent in the direct subsidiary and the step-down subsidiary's control should be in the hands of the Indian promoters, RBI said. "This is negative for banks having high overseas loan book. ICICI Bank (about 20 per cent of total loans) is most impacted. Among PSU banks, Bank of Baroda, and Bank of India have the highest overseas loans (about one-third of total loans)," said Parag Jariwala, vice-president, institutional research, banking and financial services, Religare Capital Markets.
To aid companies to raise foreign money without risk to the country, RBI recently allowed Indian companies to raise rupee resources from foreign investors directly. However, for foreign operations, companies are still mostly dependent on banks. Most of the time Indian banks finance these companies or provide a line of credit for these operations.
According to an analyst with a domestic brokerage, this provision will have significant impact for banks. "Typically, 60-70 per cent of the international loans are given to step-down subsidiaries and SPVs. If banks have to make provisions against them, it would be a significant number," said the analyst requesting anonymity.
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