HomeNewsBusinessExplained | Why the RBI barred lenders from investing in AIFs linked to borrower companies

Explained | Why the RBI barred lenders from investing in AIFs linked to borrower companies

Experts say the central bank brought in the measure to tackle the growing practice of loans being evergreened by lenders.

December 20, 2023 / 10:27 IST
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AIF RBI
The alternative investment industry in India, comprising Portfolio Management Services (PMS) and AIF, will grow to Rs 43.64 lakh crore in the next five years, a November 2023 PMS Bazaar report showed.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) directive on December 19 barring lenders from investing in alternative investment funds (AIFs) linked to borrowing companies is timely, and will prevent the evergreening of loans, experts told Moneycontrol.

Evergreening of loans happens when a bank tries to save a loan from defaulting so that it does not appear as a non-performing asset (NPA) in its books. This is done by giving a fresh loan to a borrower to pay up an old loan.

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The central bank brought in the measure to tackle the growing practice of loans being evergreened by lenders, the experts said.

“AIF was apparently being used for transactions that camouflaged the real status of some accounts by borrowing additional funds through the AIF to repay the existing debt of group concerns. Hence, the RBI was prompted to bring directives to prevent such hidden and indirect violations,” said Jyoti Prakash Gadia, Managing Director, Resurgent India.