The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may soon introduce new rules for classifying non-banking financial companies (NBFCs).
This update was shared by RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra during a recent press conference.
The move is important because it could impact several big companies, including the future of Tata Sons.
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New NBFC Classification Framework Coming Soon
RBI is working on a fresh framework to categorise NBFCs into different layers, such as upper and middle layers.
According to the governor, this new framework is expected to be released soon, possibly within the same month.
This classification helps RBI decide how strictly each NBFC should be regulated based on its size and importance in the financial system.
What is the “Upper Layer” and Why It Matters?
NBFCs in the “upper layer” are large and systemically important companies.
Because of their size, they are subject to stricter rules.
For the financial year 2024–25, around 15 companies were included in this category.
Some major names are:
Bajaj Finance
Shriram Finance
L&T Finance
HDB Financial Services
Tata Sons
Being in this category often comes with additional requirements, including the possibility of mandatory stock market listing.
The Tata Sons Listing Question
One of the key reasons this update is being closely watched is because of Tata Sons.
RBI had classified Tata Sons as an upper layer NBFC in September 2022.
Under existing rules, such companies were expected to get listed by September 30, 2025.
However, there is still uncertainty.
RBI has clarified that Tata Sons’ inclusion in the upper layer list does not affect its request for deregistration, which is still under review.
What Could Change Next?
The upcoming framework could decide:
Whether companies like Tata Sons must list publicly
How NBFCs are grouped and regulated
The level of compliance required for each category
This means the final rules could have a big impact on how large financial companies operate in India.
Why This Matters for the Market
A clearer classification system will help improve transparency and regulation in the NBFC sector.
It will also give companies better clarity on what rules they need to follow, while helping RBI keep a closer watch on large financial institutions.
In short, the upcoming RBI framework could reshape how NBFCs are regulated—and all eyes are now on what the final rules will say, especially regarding Tata Sons.
