HomeNewsBusinessRBI determined to make banks lend to crisis-ridden mutual funds: Will lenders pay heed?

RBI determined to make banks lend to crisis-ridden mutual funds: Will lenders pay heed?

Banks fear huge bad loans going ahead from such exposure in low-rated papers where mutual funds have parked money. Someone needs to guarantee these loans, ideally the government or the central bank.

April 30, 2020 / 20:31 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Just three days after it announced a special liquidity facility for mutual funds (SLF-MF) following the Franklin Templeton fiasco, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said regulatory benefits announced under the SLF-MF scheme will be extended to all banks.

This is irrespective of whether banks avail funding from the Reserve Bank or deploy their own resources to lend to mutual funds. The RBI had announced the Rs 50,000 crore SLF-MF to ease liquidity strains on funds due to high redemption pressure. To begin with, let’s understand what these regulatory benefits for banks are.

Story continues below Advertisement

Firstly, the central bank had said liquidity support availed under the Rs 50,000 crore SLF-MF would be eligible to be classified as held to maturity (HTM) even in excess of 25 per cent of total investment permitted to be included in the HTM portfolio.

This means, banks don't have to worry about treasury losses. Bonds in HTM category won't have mark-to-market losses.  Secondly, exposures under this facility will not be reckoned under the Large Exposure Framework (LEF). Under norms, banks have exposure limits to sectors. Removing this ceiling with respect to such funding, banks are free to lend to mutual funds.