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Reserve Bank Of India (RBI) Declares Loan Moratorium For Small Borrowers, Relaxes KYC Norms, Liquidity For Healthcare: What Experts Say

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RBI re-opened its one-time loan restructuring plan for individuals, small businesses, MSMEs

In an unscheduled address on Wednesday, May 5, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das announced several set of measures to tackle the economic disruptions amid the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country. The central bank will provide term-liquidity support of Rs 50,000 crore to ease the access of funds for emergency medical services. This comes at a time when the healthcare system is overburdened with surging coronavirus cases. (Also Read: RBI Announces Term Liquidity Facility Of ₹ 50,000 Crore For Healthcare )

The RBI also re-opened its one-time loan restructuring plan for individuals, small businesses, and micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) currently affected by the state-wise lockdown restrictions. The small borrowers having exposure up to Rs 25 crore, who did not avail of the restructuring earlier and where loans were classified as standard as of March 31, 2021, will now be eligible for loan restructuring in the second round. (Also Read: RBI Says Loan Moratorium For Small Borrowers – See Who Qualifies )

The Reserve Bank also relaxed KYC norms for customers and directed the regulated entities or banks not to impose any restrictions in case the account holders fail to update their KYC till the end of the year. The RBI also extended the scope of the video KYC or V-CIP for the new categories of customers including proprietorship firms, authorised signatories, and beneficial owners of legal entities. (AlsoRead: RBI Relaxes KYC Norms Till End Of Year: Here’s What Customers Should Know )
 

Here’s what analysts and experts have to say on the RBI’s announcements today, as part of its measures to tackle the economic disruption:

Omkar Shirhatti – Co-Founder and CEO – Karza Technologies:

“The rationalization of KYC compliance norms announced by RBI today was a much-needed move and is likely to impact the banking ecosystem in multiple ways. The most significant impact we foresee is a relatively substantial reduction not just in customer acquisition costs but also in operations and compliance costs. A large chunk of operational and compliance costs came from the regular updation of KYC information, something which may now be possible via mobile and internet banking by customers themselves, thus reducing those costs.

From the customer perspective, businesses and commercial entities have had to go through paper-based account opening thus far. With the change in norms, current account openings and MSME Lending can now be completely digital, giving small businesses easier access to banking facilities. We also foresee an increase in Neo Banks and Digital SME Banks. On the whole, the new norms are a move in the right direction, enabling more thorough digitization and a secure banking ecosystem.”

Ms. Bekxy Kuriakose, Head – Fixed Income, Principal Asset Management Company:

”Considering the big bang measures undertaken by RBI since March 2020, today’s measures are more of incremental specific targeted measures designed to provide relief where required.

 For the debt market, the announcement of Rs 35,000 cr of OMO purchases under Gsap 1.0 (Government Securities Acquisition Programme) was a key positive which led to the 10 yr benchmark gilt closing below six per cent today. While totally quantum under Gsap 1.0 has already been announced for the quarter April to June 2021, considering RBI’s reiteration today that Policy would be channeled to targeting growth impulses market has taken announcements positively.

We expect in the near term gilt prices to remain supported given RBI measures in the backdrop of banking system liquidity and benign short term money market rates.”

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