The central bank’s statement on subsidiarisation has failed to do away with the uncertainty on the new structure; foreign lenders continue to wait for the guidelines before deciding on the mode of their presence.
“There was nothing new said yesterday (Tuesday). Earlier, RBI had already clarified subsidiarisation wouldn’t be made mandatory.
The promise of near-national treatment has also been made in the past. We will need to see the final guidelines to decide if subsidiarisation makes sense,” said a senior executive at a mid-sized foreign bank in India, requesting anonymity.
The guidelines are expected in a couple of weeks, more than two years after RBI released its discussion paper on the presence of foreign banks in India.
The new norms would be guided by the two cardinal principles of reciprocity and a single mode of presence, the central bank said.
While it wouldn’t be mandatory for existing foreign banks -- those that entered India before August 2010 -- to convert into wholly-owned subsidiaries, RBI aims to incentivise these to opt for this model, with near-national treatment, including in the opening of branches.
In the second quarter review of the monetary policy, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan stressed the subsidiary route for foreign banks.
“The idea is to move all systematically-important foreign banks into wholly-owned subsidiary.
"That is very important because if you don’t do that, transactions with the parent is not at an arm’s length.
"We have decided to give some incentive, near-national treatment, to foreign banks that convert these into wholly-owned subsidiaries,” Rajan said.
Foreign lenders are present in India only through branches or representative offices. As of March, 43 foreign banks were operating in the country through a network of 333 branches; 47 were present through representative offices.
According to its commitment to the World Trade Organization, India has to allow 12 new foreign bank branches in a year.
A couple of months ago, the central bank had said it expected foreign banks that were systemically important by the virtue
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