HomeNewsOpinionVault Matters: Who should own banks and non-banks?

Vault Matters: Who should own banks and non-banks?

The RBI governor in his MPC speech mentioned that non-banks to satisfy the expectations of their investors end up chasing high returns which in turn leads to high growth, not necessarily reflective of the real demand. The subtext is PE-led lenders can pose financial stability issues in pursuit of eye-popping returns. The way out may be to harmonise rules of ownership structures between banks and top-tier NBFCs

October 11, 2024 / 11:39 IST
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Banks
Non-banks have become much larger than some of the mid-sized private banks

It is not so often that the central bank comments on the ownership styles and structures of banks and non-banks. Possibly for the first time on Wednesday, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das in his monetary policy speech briefly dipped into the topic of ownership. The context was with reference to protecting the interest of borrowers.

“Driven by the significant accretion to their capital from both domestic and overseas sources, and sometimes under pressure from their investors, some NBFCs – including microfinance institutions (MFIs) and housing finance companies (HFCs) – are chasing excessive returns on their equity. While such pursuits are in the domain of the Boards and Managements of NBFCs, concerns arise when the interest rates charged by them become usurious and get combined with unreasonably high processing fees and frivolous penalties. These practices are sometimes further accentuated by what appears to be a ‘push effect’, as business targets drive retail credit growth rather than its actual demand. The consequent high-cost and high indebtedness could pose financial stability risks, if not addressed by these NBFCs,” the governor elaborated in his speech on Wednesday.

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PE firms dominate ownership in private sector

Sample this: 70 percent of private banks and a little less than 40 percent of non-banks are private-equity owned. No private equity player can hold more than 10 percent stake in a bank. By virtue of this regulatory restriction, the ownership of banks is widespread; there is not much of an apparent concentration issue.