RBI and NBFCs
Issue of debentures on private placement basis by NBFCs
NBFCs raise money by issuing capital/debt securities including
debentures by way of public issue or private placement. In the case of
public issue of such securities, institutions and retail investors can
participate. Private placement, on the other hand, may involve
institutional investors. The RBI has observed that NBFCs have
lately been raising resources from the retail public on a large scale,
through private placement, especially by issue of debentures. Hence, the RBI has issued guidelines in this regard, which require NBFCs to space out such issuances and also
aim to bring NBFCs at par with other financial entities as far as
private placement is concerned by restricting the maximum number of
subscribers to forty nine (currently the ceiling of investors stipulated
by the Companies Act 1956 for private placement is not applicable for
NBFCs). In addition, certain clarifications are also made with
regard to security cover for any debenture issue and the treatment of
unsecured debentures as public deposits.
Upon further representations by industry, the RBI has revised the above guidelines as follows:
(a) The instruction with regard to minimum gap between two successive
issuances of privately placed NCDs will not be operationalized
immediately. A decision on the appropriate minimum time gap would be
taken by the RBI in due course. NBFCs, in the meantime, are advised to
put in place before the close of business on September 30, 2013, a
Board approved policy for resource planning which, inter-alia, should
cover the planning horizon and the periodicity of private placement.
(b) Keeping in view the Primary Dealers’ obligations with regard
to G-Sec market, it has been decided that the provisions of the said guidelines shall not be applicable to Primary Dealers.
(c) The restrictions contained in paragraph 2.iii (viz., that an NBFC shall only issue debentures for deployment of funds on its own
balance sheet and not to facilitate resource requests of group
entities/ parent company / associates) shall not be applicable to Core Investment Companies.
(d) The provisions of paragraph B of the Annex to the said
circular (i.e. NBFCs shall ensure that at all points of time the debentures issued,
including short term NCDs, are fully secured. Therefore in case, at the
stage of issue, the security cover is insufficient /not created, the
issue proceeds shall be placed under escrow until creation of security,
which in any case should be within one month from the date of issue) shall not apply to subordinated debt, as defined under
paragraph 2(1)(xvii) of the Non-Banking Financial (Non-Deposit
Accepting or Holding Companies Prudential Norms (Reserve Bank)
Directions, 2007.
(e) Further, paragraph 1.i may be read as follows: “private placement means non-public offering of NCDs
by NBFCs to such number of select subscribers and such subscription
amounts, as may be specified by the Reserve Bank from time to time”.
RBI Master Circulars
As usual, the RBI has come out with revised master circulars on July 1, 2013. The master circulars pertaining to NBFCs are linked here.
RBI Notices
My learned colleague, Mr. Jayant Thakur, CA has pointed out in the Indian Corporate Law blog that RBI has recently sent notices to thousands of companies asking them whether they are NBFCs.
And, if yes, why they have not registered. This is worrying because if a Company is an NBFC and has not registered,
it entails serious consequences for the Company and its concerned
directors/officers. For example, the law provides for minimum and mandatory
punishment of one year for non-registration as NBFC.
Labels: CIC, Debentures, Registration
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home