Poging GOUD - Vrij
Large exposure rule begins to squeeze corporate lending
Mint Mumbai
|September 25, 2025
A six-year-old Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rule meant to keep a check on banks’ lending to large corporate groups is once again causing heartburn for lenders.
The framework, last revised in 2019, limits how much banks can lend to a company and to a group of connected companies. The rule aims to avoid overexposure to any group and concentration of resources. Banks need to keep single-company exposure at 20% of their capital base, and a group of connected companies at 25%.
The sticking point is how RBI calculates the exposure.
“RBI uses the higher of committed (sanctioned) creditlines or outstanding loans to arrive at exposure. Therefore, even if those loans remain undisbursed and unused, they add to the corporate exposure,” said a senior banker at one of India’s largest lenders. “This is leading to us being cautious about lending to some companies that are close to the limit.”
According to the banker, a clutch of banks is close to the 25% ceiling for the top one or two conglomerates, leading to a renewed push to tweak the rule.
The banker said that in a project loan, credit is disbursed based on meeting particular milestones and is therefore released in tranches. However, the entire sanctioned loan is counted as exposure as per current rules.
An email sent to RBI on Friday remained unanswered till presstime.
Dit verhaal komt uit de September 25, 2025-editie van Mint Mumbai.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
RBI may stay on pause as inflation clouds outlook
A Mint poll suggests the central bank may also maintain its neutral stance
4 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Pvt Adani co quietly builds ₹50,000-cr orders, eyes buyouts
A little-known Adani Group company has quietly emerged as one of India’s largest infrastructure platforms and is now looking to strengthen its in-house project execution capabilities through acquisitions, according to an India Ratings report of 2 April and an executive familiar with the matter.
2 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Cash-futures split, likely HFT play signal rebound
The steep market correction in the last 30 minutes of Friday's trading was likely a one-off affair due to a technical index review, with the stage set for a bounce within a narrow 300-point range that the Nifty has largely traded over the past month, analysts said.
3 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
GATES SPENT YEARS CRAFTING HIS IMAGE. NOW IT'S CRACKING.
Revelations of the billionaire philanthropist’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein are eroding efforts to burnish his reputation
13 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
The high-stakes hunt for the next Amazon in the AI haystack
Where will the money be made next in artificial intelligence? Bankers are gearing up to sell SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI to investors in a series of giant IPOs. Should investors just buy anything with a hint of AI, or try to find the bottlenecks in the parts of the AI supply chain, the “stack,” where bottlenecks capture more of the value?
3 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Youthful workers at Infosys are now fewest in 15 years
Almost half of Infosys Ltd’s 320,000 employees are now over 30 years old, the highest in the last 15 years, underscoring the challenges faced by the country's second-largest information technology (IT) services firm as more young people explore careers beyond the IT sector.
3 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
RIL cuts new hires by 90,000 in FY26, headcount nears 420,000
Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), one of India’s largest employers, may have reduced its new hirings by as much as 90,000 in fiscal year 2026 (FY26) from the previous year.
3 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Beyond Dalal Street: Why global exposure is key to diversification
Investing in global stock markets is increasingly being seen as a hedge against concentration and currency risks
4 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
The U.S. has found a way to down a drone without spending $1 mn
On a ridge overlooking the South China Sea, a group of U.S. Marines in tactical vehicles took aim at a fixed-wing drone soaring toward them.
3 mins
June 01, 2026
Mint Mumbai
SpaceX, OpenAI fuel Asian AI bets
Investors increasingly honing in on Asian supply chain
2 mins
June 01, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
