Monetary and Credit Information Review - ಆರ್ಬಿಐ - Reserve Bank of India
Monetary and Credit Information Review
Resolution Framework for COVID-19 related Stress The Reserve Bank on September 07, 2020 advised all lending institutions to mandatorily consider the following key ratios while finalising the resolution plans in respect of eligible borrowers under the Resolution Framework:
The Resolution Framework envisaged constitution of an Expert Committee by the Reserve Bank to make recommendations on the required financial parameters with sector specific benchmark ranges for such parameters. The Expert Committee has since submitted its recommendations to the Reserve Bank on September 4, 2020, which have been broadly accepted by the Reserve Bank. The Reserve Bank on September 07, 2020 issued a follow up circular to the Resolution Framework guidelines announced in August 6, 2020 by specifying five specific financial ratios and the sector-specific thresholds for each ratio in respect of 26 sectors to be taken into account while finalising the resolution plans. To read more, please click here. SLR holdings in HTM category The Reserve Bank on September 01, 2020 allowed banks to hold under Held to Maturity (HTM) category, SLR securities acquired on or after September 1, 2020 up to an overall limit of 22 per cent of NDTL, up to March 31, 2021, which shall be reviewed thereafter. Currently, banks are permitted to exceed the limit of 25 per cent of the total investments under HTM category, provided the excess comprises only of SLR securities and total SLR securities held under HTM category is not more than 19.5 per cent of NDTL. To read more, please click here Draft Variation Margin Directions, 2020 The Reserve Bank on September 7, 2020 placed on its website the Draft Variation Margin (Reserve Bank) Directions, 2020 for comments from banks, market participants and other interested parties. The Reserve Bank in its Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies dated February 6, 2020 announced that RBI will issue the directions regarding exchange of variation margin for non-centrally cleared derivatives (NCCDs), following the G-20 recommendations, and with a view to improve safety of settlement of over-the-counter derivatives that are not centrally cleared. To read more, please click here. Compliance Functions in Banks The Reserve Bank on September 11, 2020 advised the following guidelines meant to bring uniformity in the approach followed by banks, as also to align the supervisory expectations on Chief Compliance Officer (CCOs) with best practices: i) Policy A bank shall lay down a board-approved compliance policy clearly spelling out its compliance philosophy, expectations on compliance culture covering tone from the top, accountability, incentive structure and effective communication and challenges thereof, structure and role of the compliance function, role of CCO, processes for identifying, assessing, monitoring, managing and reporting on compliance risk throughout the bank. ii) Tenor for appointment of CCO The CCO shall be appointed for a minimum fixed tenure of not less than 3 years. iii) Transfer/Removal of CCO The CCO may be transferred / removed before completion of the tenure only in exceptional circumstances. iv) Eligibility Criteria for appointment as CCO The CCO shall be a senior executive of the bank, not more than 55 years, shall have an overall experience of at least 15 years in the banking or financial services, good understanding of industry and risk management, knowledge of regulations, legal framework and sensitivity to supervisors‟ expectations; v) Selection Process Selection of the candidate for the post of the CCO shall be done on the basis of a well-defined selection process and recommendations made by the senior executive level selection committee constituted by the Board for the purpose. vi) Reporting Requirements A prior intimation to the Department of Supervision, Reserve Bank of India, Central Office, Mumbai, shall be provided before appointment, premature transfer/removal of the CCO. vii) Reporting Line The CCO shall have direct reporting lines to the MD & CEO and/or Board/Board Committee (ACB) of the bank. viii) Authority The CCO and compliance function shall have the authority to communicate with any staff member and have access to all records or files that are necessary to enable him/her to carry out entrusted responsibilities in respect of compliance issues. ix) The duties and responsibilities of the compliance function To apprise the Board and senior management on regulations, rules and standards and any further developments, to provide clarification on any compliance related issues, to conduct assessment of the compliance risk (at least once a year) and to develop a risk-oriented activity plan for compliance assessment. The activity plan should be submitted to the ACB for approval and be made available to the internal audit. x) Internal Audit The compliance function shall be subject to internal audit. Other guidelines pertaining to dual halting, membership to committees and core elements of the mandate of CCO were also covered in the guidelines. To read more, please click here. Long Form Audit Report The Reserve Bank on September 05, 2020 revised the Long Form Audit Report (LFAR) formats of statutory central auditors, branch auditors, specialised branches and large/irregular/critical accounts for branch auditors. The revised LFAR formats are required to be put into operation for the period covering FY 2020-21 and onwards. To read more, please click here. Income Recognition, Asset Classification and Provisioning Processes The Reserve Bank on September 14, 2020 advised banks to put in place/upgrade their systems to conform to the guidelines in order to ensure the completeness and integrity of the automated asset classification (classification of advances/investments as NPA/NPI and their upgradation), provisioning calculation and income recognition processes. To read more please click here
Extension of Relaxation of MSF The Reserve Bank on September 28, 2020 decided to continue with the Marginal Standing Facility(MSF) relaxation for a further period of six months, i.e., up to March 31, 2021 to participant banks under the MSF by dipping into the statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) by up to an additional one per cent of net demand and time liabilities (NDTL), i.e., cumulatively up to 3 per cent of NDTL. To read more, please click here. Extension of Relaxation in WMA limits The Reserve Bank on September 29, 2020 decided to extend the increase in WMA limit of the States/UTs by 60 per cent over and above the level as on March 31, 2020. To read more, please click here. MD on Priority Sector Lending The Reserve Bank on September 04, 2020 reviewed the Priority Sector Lending (PSL) guidelines based on recommendations made by the 'Expert Committee on Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises' under the chairmanship of Shri U.K. Sinha and the 'Internal Working Group to Review Agriculture Credit' chaired by Shri M.K. Jain. The objective was to align the guidelines with emerging national priorities and bring sharper focus on inclusive development, after having wide ranging discussions with all stakeholders. Some of the salient features of revised PSL guidelines are: i) Addresses regional disparities in the flow of priority sector credit; ii) The targets prescribed for small and marginal farmers and weaker sections are being increased in a phased manner; iii) Higher credit limit has been specified for Farmers/ Producers/Organisations/Companies; iv) Loan limits for renewable energy have been increased; v) For improvement of health infrastructure, credit limit for health infrastructure (including those under 'Ayushman Bharat') has been doubled. To read more, please click here. V. Payment & Settlement System Positive Pay System for CTS The Reserve Bank on September 25, 2020 advised banks to create adequate awareness among their customers on features of Positive Pay System through SMS alerts, display in branches, ATMs as well as through their web-site and internet banking. National Payments Corporation of India shall develop the facility of Positive Pay in Cheque Truncation System (CTS) and make it available to participant banks. Banks, in turn, shall enable it for all account holders issuing cheques for amounts of ₹50,000 and above. Positive Pay System shall be implemented from January 01, 2021. To read more, please click here. The India KLEMS Database The Reserve Bank on September 10, 2020 placed on its website the update on “Measuring Productivity at the Industry Level – The India KLEMS Database” - Data Manual 2019 along with time-series data on productivity for 27 industries covering the period 1980-81 to 2017-18, prepared under the India KLEMS [capital (K), labour (L), energy (E), material (M) and services (S)] research project. The database is part of a research project supported by the Reserve Bank to analyse productivity performance in the Indian economy at disaggregated industry level. To read more, please click here. Handbook of Statistics on the Indian Economy 2019-20 The Reserve Bank on September 18, 2020 released the annual publication titled “Handbook of Statistics on the Indian Economy, 2019-20” (HBS). This publication, the 22nd in the series, disseminates time series data on various economic and financial indicators relating to the Indian economy. The current volume contains 240 statistical tables covering national income aggregates, output, prices, money, banking, financial markets, public finances, foreign trade and balance of payments and select socio-economic indicators. To read the full document, please click here Other important Data Releases by the Reserve Bank in the month of September 2020: Working Papers The Reserve Bank published three publications under its working paper series in the month of September 2020. The first working paper titled “Measuring Financial Stress in India” authored by Manjusha Senapati and Rajesh Kavediya focuses on the construction of financial stress indices for the Indian financial system using market-based indicators and three different aggregation methods. To read the full paper, please click here. The second working paper titled “Are Food Prices Really Flexible? Evidence from India” authored by GV Nadhanael looks at the price setting behaviour in food sector in India using a novel micro level dataset To read the full paper, please click here. The third working paper titled “Inflation Forecast Combinations – The Indian Experience” authored by Joice John, Sanjay Singh and Muneesh Kapur examines empirically the forecasting performance of different combination approaches in the Indian context relative to wide range of forecasts generated from different modelling frameworks and the benchmark random walk model. To read the full paper, please click here. Award Scheme for Writing Books in Hindi The Reserve Bank on September 09, 2020 launched an 'Award scheme for writing books originally in Hindi on Economics/Banking/Financial subjects' with a view to encourage original writings and research in Hindi. Working/retired Professors (including Assistants and Associates, etc.) of Indian Universities (UGC recognised) may be awarded three prizes of ₹1,25,000/- each for writing books originally in Hindi on Economics/Banking/Financial subjects. To read more, please click here.
Edited and published by Yogesh Dayal for Reserve Bank of India, Department of Communication, Central Office, Shahid Bhagat Singh Marg, Mumbai - 400 001. MCIR can be also accessed at /en/web/rbi/publications/articles?category=24928098 |