RBI's tighter capital market norms kick in from today; Ashvin Parekh on why the timing matters

New Reserve Bank of India regulations, now effective from July 1, aim to bolster financial stability by limiting bank exposure to real estate and securities. These rules, following a deadline extension, restrict the use of third-party collateral a...

ETMarkets.com
New Reserve Bank of India rules restricting how banks can be exposed to real estate and securities markets officially came into force from July 1, after being pushed back from an original April deadline. According to Ashvin Parekh of Ashvin Parekh Advisory, the delay wasn't a retreat, it was a recalibration, and one that plays directly into the RBI's core objective of protecting financial stability.

Not a new worry, just a sharper rulebook


Parekh notes that the draft norms first surfaced in February, originally slated for an April 1 rollout before banks lobbied the regulator for more time. The underlying concern, he explains, is far from new: the RBI has long treated bank exposure to real estate and securities markets as inherently speculative, keeping a close watch on how large these portfolios grow within the banking system. The latest norms formalize that caution by placing explicit limits on how much banks can lend against, or use as collateral, exposure tied to security markets.


Third-party collateral faces a crackdown

One of the most consequential changes is a restriction on third-party collateral — a practice Parekh says is fairly common in proprietary trading, where leveraging is built on assets that don't directly belong to the borrower. Under the new framework, banks will no longer be able to accept such third-party assets as collateral.

Parekh acknowledges that hard numbers on the scale of this exposure aren't yet public, but suggests that the industry's earlier pushback for a deadline extension likely gave the RBI a clearer picture of how deep the practice runs before finalizing the rules.

Why July beats April

The postponement, in Parekh's view, works in everyone's favor. With markets typically turning more optimistic through July and into August, implementing the curbs now, rather than in April, reduces the risk of the norms clashing with a period of heightened, leverage-driven market activity. If the RBI's goal was to prevent brokers from over-leveraging into a rally, he says, the timing couldn't be better.

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No universal "global standard"; just local dialogue

Asked whether the changes align India with international best practices, Parekh pushes back on the framing itself, arguing that no single global standard exists since every market operates under its own dynamics. What stands out to him instead is the RBI's willingness to engage directly with the banking industry — as seen in its decision to grant the deadline extension after banks made their case.

He describes the RBI's ongoing, real-time monitoring of the banking system as unusually thorough given the sheer scale of its role in the economy, adding that guidelines of this nature typically follow extensive back-and-forth study between banks and the regulator before they're finalized.

What it means going forward

With the norms now live, banks will need to unwind or restructure any lending arrangements that lean on third-party collateral, while also operating within tighter caps on real estate and securities-linked exposure. For the broader market, the timing suggests the RBI is trying to thread a needle — reining in systemic risk without derailing a seasonally optimistic run-up in equities.
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