HomeNewsBusinessBanks reconsider alternative investment funds after central bank clarifies provisioning rules

Banks reconsider alternative investment funds after central bank clarifies provisioning rules

Recently, the RBI clarified on the earlier guidelines on AIF investments by banks suggesting certain relaxations for banks' AIF investments. Bankers, however, said they will be cautious and won't invest heavily in AIFs.

April 03, 2024 / 11:37 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Banks investments AIF
The central bank in December 2023 restricted banks and financial institutions from investing in AIFs that have exposure to their borrowers.

Some private sector banks are looking to invest in alternative investment funds (AIF) after the Reserve Bank of India recently clarified provisioning rules for lenders, at least three senior bank executives told Moneycontrol.

An AIF is typically a privately pooled fund, and generally, only institutions and high net-worth individuals (HNIs) invest in them because the outlay is substantial.

Story continues below Advertisement

As per the RBI’s latest clarifications, lenders will need to provision only the amount invested by the AIF in a debtor company linked to the lender, and not on the bank's entire investment in the scheme. The central bank in December 2023 restricted banks and financial institutions from investing in AIFs that have exposure to their borrowers.

Also read: Easier provisioning of AIF investments may help lenders allot more to such funds, say experts