HomeNewsOpinionEvergreening of loans – Is RBI justified in its actions? 

Evergreening of loans – Is RBI justified in its actions? 

Companies often seek to retire higher interest loans with lower interest ones. Banning banks and NBFCs from investing in Alternative Investment Funds on suspicion, often baseless, of evergreening of loans is creating artificial funds crunch. Instead pursue proactive disclosures of loans from AIFs  and audit committee scrutiny of investments in AIFs  

January 09, 2024 / 15:07 IST
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Evergreening loan
Many companies have been raising funds through external commercial borrowings (although rates abroad have also risen) to retire more expensive Indian loans.

Recently, the Reserve Bank of India (the “RBI”) issued a circular restricting Regulated Entities (“REs”), including banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (“NBFCs”), from making investments in Alternative Investment Funds (“AIFs”) that, in turn, have investments in debtor companies. A debtor company is one in which the RE currently has or, during the preceding 12 months, had a loan or investment exposure. The circular aims to address concerns relating to the possible evergreening of loans to borrowers through AIFs.

Evergreen loans simply refer to endless loans.  In some cases, REs have been taking minority stakes in AIFs, and AIFs have used the invested capital to subscribe to debentures or other instruments of debtor companies. The funds so received by the debtor companies are used to repay the earlier unpaid loans of REs. This helps REs show a lower percentage of Non-Performing Assets in their books.

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Some of the key and onerous aspects of the circular are:

1] REs must not make an investment in any scheme of an AIF, which plans to make or has made downstream investments either, directly or indirectly, in a debtor company of the RE.