Closely monitor asset quality, RBI tells NBFCs
RBI Tells NBFCs: Closely Monitor Asset Quality — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- NBFCs (Non-Banking Financial Companies) are RBI-regulated financial intermediaries that perform bank-like lending/investment functions but cannot accept demand deposits; they are systemically critical, constituting a substantial share of India's credit ecosystem. [S1]
- The RBI periodically convenes meetings with NBFC leadership to issue supervisory guidance — this is a macro-prudential tool distinct from formal circulars or penalties.
- Asset quality (measured via GNPA ratio, SMA buckets, NPA trends) is the sentinel indicator of NBFC financial health; deterioration cascades into credit risk, financial contagion, and consumer harm.
- This topic cuts across GS-III (Indian economy, financial sector regulation) and GS-II (statutory bodies, governance). [S1]
2. Why in the News
- January 5–6, 2026: RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra chaired a meeting with MDs and CEOs of select NBFCs, Housing Finance Companies (HFCs), and Microfinance Institutions (MFIs) in Mumbai. [S1][S2]
- Key concern flagged: rising Special Mention Accounts (SMA-30 and SMA-60) signalling early-stage stress, particularly acute in NBFC-MFI segment. [S2]
- Simultaneously (same day), the first meeting of the Payments Regulatory Board (PRB) was held under Governor Malhotra's chairmanship — signalling a broader regulatory assertiveness posture. [S1][S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1934: RBI Act passed; RBI given powers over financial institutions.
- 1997–98: Post-Chit Fund scam reforms — RBI tightened NBFC registration and capital adequacy norms; NBFCs with deposits now required to register mandatorily.
- 2008 (Global Financial Crisis): RBI enhanced NBFC oversight; liquidity support to systematically important NBFCs.
- 2018 (IL&FS Crisis): Collapse of IL&FS (an NBFC) triggered systemic contagion; exposed gaps in asset-liability management (ALM) and governance — watershed moment for NBFC regulation.
- 2019–20: RBI introduced Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) framework (finalised 2021, effective Oct 2022) — categorised NBFCs into Base Layer (NBFC-BL), Middle Layer (NBFC-ML), Upper Layer (NBFC-UL), and Top Layer, with graduated regulatory intensity.
- 2022–23: RBI issued guidelines on prompt corrective action (PCA) for NBFCs, aligned with bank-like PCA norms.
- 2023–24: RBI flagged concerns over exuberant retail and MFI lending growth; issued circular cautioning over-leveraging of borrowers. [S2]
- May 9, 2025: Amendment to Payment and Settlement Systems (PSS) Act, 2007 came into effect, constituting the Payments Regulatory Board under RBI Governor. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Regulator | Reserve Bank of India (RBI) |
| Governing Act | RBI Act, 1934 (Chapters III-B, III-C); Companies Act, 2013 |
| NBFC Definition | Financial institution (company) doing financial activity as principal business; cannot accept demand deposits |
| Principal Business Criteria | ≥50% of assets AND ≥50% of income from financial activities |
| SBR Framework layers | Base Layer → Middle Layer → Upper Layer → Top Layer |
| NBFC-UL trigger | Top 10 NBFCs by asset size + others identified by RBI |
| GNPA ratio (NBFCs, Mar 2025) | 2.9% (improved from 3.5% in Mar 2024) [S2] |
| GNPA ratio (NBFC-MFIs, Mar 2025) | 4.1% (deteriorated sharply from 2.0% in Mar 2024) [S2] |
| Meeting participants (Jan 2026) | MDs/CEOs of select NBFCs, Govt NBFCs, HFCs, MFIs |
| Asset share of participants | ~53% of total NBFC sector assets [S1] |
| SMA-30 | Overdue between 31–60 days |
| SMA-60 | Overdue between 61–90 days |
| NPA trigger | Overdue > 90 days |
| Key concern sectors | NBFC-MFI (microfinance), unsecured retail lending |
| Payments Regulatory Board | Constituted under PSS Act, 2007 amendment; effective May 9, 2025; chaired by RBI Governor [S3] |
| Draft Payments Vision | Payments Vision 2028 discussed at first PRB meeting [S3] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- NBFC sector is critical for credit intermediation — particularly to segments underserved by banks (MSMEs, rural borrowers, informal sector). [S2]
- NBFC-MFI GNPA doubling (2% → 4.1% in one year) signals over-indebtedness in the microfinance segment, threatening credit flow to low-income borrowers. [S2]
- Broader NBFC GNPA improvement (3.5% → 2.9%) is positive but masks segment-specific stress (MFI, unsecured personal loans). [S2]
- Loan growth moderation expected (~18% in FY25 vs higher prior years) as NBFCs tighten underwriting standards in response to regulatory pressure. [S2]
Legal / Constitutional
- RBI's supervisory powers over NBFCs derive from Chapter III-B of the RBI Act, 1934 (Sections 45-I to 45-NB).
- Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) framework (Oct 2022) brings upper-layer NBFCs under near-bank-equivalent prudential norms — including leverage limits, CRR equivalents, and enhanced disclosure.
- The Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) framework for NBFCs (effective Oct 1, 2022) empowers RBI to impose restrictions on dividend, branch expansion, management compensation upon breach of capital, leverage, or asset-quality thresholds.
- PSS Act, 2007 (amended 2025) is the statutory basis for the newly constituted Payments Regulatory Board. [S3]
Governance / Ethical
- RBI Governor's emphasis on customer centricity, ethical conduct, and responsible lending signals concern that growth pursuit is compromising borrower protection. [S1]
- Prompt grievance redressal highlighted — connects to RBI's Integrated Ombudsman Scheme (2021) applicable to NBFCs above a threshold.
- Sound underwriting standards warning implies regulatory intelligence suggesting lax due-diligence, multiple lending to same borrower, income over-estimation — classic precursors to NPA cycles. [S1]
Administrative
- RBI's use of direct CEO meetings (rather than circulars alone) reflects a supervisory engagement model — informal guidance carrying regulatory weight.
- Government NBFCs (e.g., PFC, REC, NaBFID) also participated — unusual, signalling systemic concern transcending private-sector NBFCs alone.
- Dual regulation risk: Some NBFCs (e.g., housing finance companies) previously regulated by NHB, now under RBI (post-2019 amendment) — integration of supervisory data remains a challenge.
Social
- NBFC-MFI stress directly impacts women borrowers in rural/semi-urban areas (MFI clientele is predominantly women SHG/JLG members). [S2]
- Over-leveraging in microfinance — multiple loans from different MFIs to the same borrower — is a financial inclusion paradox: credit access without credit sustainability.
- HFC asset quality matters for affordable housing and PM Awas Yojana beneficiaries serviced via HFCs.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Oct 2022 (continuing impact): SBR framework fully operational; Upper Layer NBFCs (identified list published annually by RBI) now subject to bank-equivalent governance norms.
- May 2024: RBI issued circular cautioning NBFCs and banks against exuberant growth in unsecured personal loans and credit cards; imposed higher risk weights (125%) on consumer credit.
- Sep 2024: S&P Global Ratings projected NBFC loan growth to moderate to ~18% in FY25. [S2]
- Nov–Dec 2024: RBI's Trends and Progress of Banking in India 2023-24 report warned about rising SMA accounts in NBFC sector. [S2]
- May 9, 2025: Payments Regulatory Board constituted via PSS Act amendment. [S3]
- Jan 5–6, 2026: Governor Malhotra's meeting with NBFC MDs/CEOs — emphasis on asset quality, underwriting, customer centricity. First PRB meeting held. [S1][S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- GNPA ratio of NBFCs stood at 2.9% as of March 2025, improved from 3.5% in March 2024. [S2]
- NBFC-MFI GNPA deteriorated sharply — rose from 2.0% to 4.1% between March 2024 and March 2025. [S2]
- Participating entities at the January 2026 RBI-NBFC meeting represented ~53% of total NBFC sector assets. [S1]
- SMA-30 = account overdue between 31–60 days; SMA-60 = overdue 61–90 days; NPA = overdue beyond 90 days.
- Payments Regulatory Board (PRB) constituted under an amendment to the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007, effective May 9, 2025. [S3]
- PRB is chaired by the RBI Governor (currently Sanjay Malhotra). [S3]
- Draft Payments Vision 2028 was discussed at the first-ever PRB meeting held in January 2026. [S3]
- RBI's Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) framework for NBFCs became effective in October 2022, creating four layers: Base, Middle, Upper, Top.
- Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) for NBFCs became effective October 1, 2022 — first time bank-like PCA applied to NBFCs.
- NBFCs are defined under Chapter III-B of the RBI Act, 1934 (Section 45-I defines "Non-banking financial company").
- An NBFC cannot accept demand deposits — key distinction from commercial banks.
- Principal Business Criteria: ≥50% assets AND ≥50% income must be from financial activity for a company to qualify as NBFC.
- RBI imposed higher risk weights of 125% on consumer credit exposures of banks and NBFCs in November 2023 to curb unsecured lending growth.
- The IL&FS crisis (2018) was the triggering event for most post-crisis NBFC regulatory reforms, including SBR.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — financial sector regulation, banking) Syllabus headings: "Mobilization of resources"; "Role of banking and financial institutions in development"; "Inclusive growth"
Also tangential to GS-II: Statutory bodies, regulatory architecture (RBI as regulator)
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The IL&FS crisis exposed critical regulatory gaps in India's NBFC sector. Critically examine the reforms undertaken since 2018 and assess whether the Scale-Based Regulation framework is adequate to prevent a systemic failure." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Rising GNPA in NBFC-MFIs poses both a financial stability risk and a financial inclusion setback. Analyse the causes and suggest a policy framework to balance growth with prudence." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "The constitution of the Payments Regulatory Board marks a new chapter in India's payments regulation. Examine its mandate, composition, and significance for India's digital payment ecosystem." (GS-III/GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| IL&FS Crisis (2018) | Root cause of modern NBFC regulation reforms; SBR, PCA, ALM guidelines all trace back here |
| RBI Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) Framework | The current overarching regulatory architecture for NBFCs |
| Microfinance Sector in India | NBFC-MFI stress is the most acute current concern; connects to financial inclusion, SHGs, JLG lending |
| Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 | Statutory basis for Payments Regulatory Board; foundational payments law |
| India's Financial Stability Report (RBI) | Published bi-annually; primary source for systemic risk data on NBFCs/banks |
| RBI Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021 | Grievance redressal mechanism for NBFCs; mentioned in Governor's remarks |
| Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) Framework | Tool RBI uses for stressed NBFCs; structurally similar to bank PCA |
| NaBFID (National Bank for Financing Infrastructure and Development) | Govt NBFC — participated in Jan 2026 meeting; significant for infra financing |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- "NBFCs can accept all types of deposits" — WRONG. NBFCs cannot accept demand deposits; some can accept term deposits only if specifically permitted (e.g., NBFC-D category), but most cannot.
- Confusing SMA-30, SMA-60, NPA buckets: SMA-0 = overdue up to 30 days; SMA-1 = 31–60 days; SMA-2 = 61–90 days; NPA = beyond 90 days. Many aspirants mis-map these.
- NHB vs. RBI for HFC regulation: Post-2019 amendment to National Housing Bank Act, RBI regulates HFCs, not NHB (NHB retains refinancing role only). A common exam trap.
- Payments Regulatory Board under Finance Ministry — WRONG. It is constituted under the RBI Governor's chairmanship, enabled by PSS Act, 2007 amendment. [S3]
- GNPA improvement = all is well: The sector-wide GNPA improvement (3.5% → 2.9%) masks sharp deterioration in NBFC-MFI (2% → 4.1%). Aspirants must disaggregate; Prelims/Mains both test this nuance. [S2]
11. Sources
- [S1] "Closely monitor asset quality, RBI tells NBFCs" — The Hindu, January 6, 2026 (Article content provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "RBI Governor flags asset quality risks, urges sound underwriting at NBFC meet" — Business Standard, January 6, 2026 — https://www.business-standard.com/finance/news/rbi-guv-flags-asset-quality-risks-urges-sound-underwriting-at-nbfc-meet-126010501125_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "Payments Regulatory Board — First Meeting held under RBI Governor Malhotra" (search snippet, Business Standard / The Week, Jan 2026) — https://www.theweek.in/wire-updates/business/2026/01/05/rbi-guv-urges-nbfcs-to-maintain-sound-underwriting-standards-close-monitoring-of-asset-quality.html — (Tier 4)