The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has proposed new rules for properties and other non-financial assets that banks take over when borrowers fail to repay loans.
The draft guidelines were released on Wednesday to make the recovery process more transparent and better regulated.
These rules will apply to banks and other regulated entities that recover dues by taking control of pledged assets after a loan turns into a bad loan or Non-Performing Asset (NPA).
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Why RBI Wants New Guidelines
When borrowers stop repaying loans and all recovery efforts fail, banks sometimes take ownership of the pledged property or assets to recover their money.
However, there have been concerns over how these assets are valued, managed, and sold.
To address this, the RBI has proposed stricter rules on:
How long banks can keep such assets
How they should value them
How details should be disclosed in financial statements
5 Big Changes Proposed by RBI
Banks Can Take Assets Only After Loan Turns NPA
According to the draft rules, banks can take over assets only when:
The loan has officially become an NPA
Other recovery methods are unsuccessful
These assets will be known as Specified Non-financial Assets (SNFAs).
Banks can use these assets to recover either the full loan amount or only part of it.
Partial Recovery Will Be Treated Separately
If the asset takeover recovers only a portion of the loan amount, the remaining unpaid amount will be treated as a restructured loan.
In such cases, existing RBI restructuring rules will apply.
Regular Valuation Will Be Mandatory
The RBI also wants banks to reassess the value of these assets regularly.
Banks must continue showing the lower value of the asset in their books to maintain financial caution and transparency.
Banks Must Sell Assets Within 7 Years
One of the biggest proposed changes is the time limit for holding such assets.
The RBI has suggested that banks should not keep these properties forever.
Instead, they must sell them within a maximum period of seven years.
This move is aimed at preventing banks from accumulating large amounts of non-financial assets over time.
Banks Cannot Sell Assets Back to Borrowers
To avoid misuse of the system, banks will not be allowed to sell these assets back to:
The original borrower
Any related parties connected to the borrower
Banks will also have to clearly mention the value and details of these assets in their balance sheets.
What This Means for Banks and Borrowers
The RBI believes these draft norms will bring more transparency and accountability to the loan recovery process.
The proposed rules could also help improve trust in the banking system by ensuring that bad loan recoveries are handled in a more structured and fair manner.
