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HomeNewsOpinionOPINION | Acquisition Financing: RBI should keep prudence at the heart of reform 

OPINION | Acquisition Financing: RBI should keep prudence at the heart of reform 

Allowing Indian banks to fund corporate acquisitions introduces opportunities but also unfamiliar risks - ones most are neither structured nor seasoned to manage. What is framed as financial modernisation must be guided by the same prudence that has long defined India’s banking stability under RBI’s stewardship

October 10, 2025 / 13:23 IST
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It would be prudent for the RBI, in its implementation phase, to introduce tighter exposure norms linked to each bank’s balance sheet capacity and risk appetite.

When the Reserve Bank of India announced allowing banks to finance corporate acquisitions, the move was hailed by some as a sign of confidence in the maturing sophistication of Indian banking. Many have celebrated it as the long-overdue step that would place banks at the centre of India’s corporate growth story - as if the missing ingredient in our economic ambition was merely the ability of banks to underwrite big takeovers.

Why now?

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Yet beneath this chorus of approval lies a deeper unease. Acquisition financing, by its nature, is not ordinary lending. It is a bet on projected synergies, on integration that has not yet happened, and on management execution that may never fully materialise.

One wonders if this regulatory shift also reflects a quiet unease about the rapid expansion of the private credit industry - currently lightly regulated by SEBI. Or is it the persuasive whisper of industrial houses, seeking access to the deep-well of bank liquidity, especially since the central bank has rightly refused to let corporate groups own banks?