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Summary: The article explains the legal framework, classification, regulatory structure, and compliance requirements applicable to Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) under the RBI Act, 1934. An NBFC is a company engaged in financial activities such as loans, investments, hire-purchase, insurance, or chit business, but without a banking licence. To qualify as an NBFC, both conditions of the Principal Business Test must be satisfied: more than 50% of total assets must be financial assets and more than 50% of gross income must arise from financial activities. The article distinguishes NBFCs from commercial banks on aspects such as deposit acceptance, payment systems, regulatory framework, and deposit insurance. It also outlines various categories of NBFCs including Investment & Credit Companies, Housing Finance Companies, Micro Finance Institutions, Peer-to-Peer Lending Platforms, and Core Investment Companies. Further, the article discusses RBI’s Scale-Based Regulation framework, Net Owned Fund requirements, NPA norms, registration obligations, governance standards, reporting requirements, Companies Act applicability, and practical compliance scenarios relating to public funds, related party loans, asset classification, and RBI approval for shareholding changes.

SECTION 01  —  What is an NBFC?

Definition · Legal Framework · Principal Business Test · Exclusions

Meaning of NBFC — Sec. 45I(f), RBI Act, 1934

A Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) is a company registered under the Companies Act and engaged in the business of loans/advances, acquisition of shares/stocks/bonds, hire-purchase, insurance, or chit business — but is NOT a banking company.

Key criteria:

  • Registered as a company under the Companies Act, 2013
  • Engaged in financial activity: Loans, investments, hire-purchase, chit business
  • Not a banking company — Does not hold a banking licence under Banking Regulation Act
  • Principal business criteria: >50% assets AND >50% income must be from financial activities

Source: Section 45I(f) of the RBI Act, 1934

The Principal Business Test

Condition Requirement Detail
Condition 1 >50% Financial Assets More than half of total assets must be financial assets (loans, investments, etc.)
Condition 2 >50% Financial Income More than half of gross income must arise from financial activities

BOTH conditions must be satisfied simultaneously — failing either means the entity is NOT an NBFC.

Activities EXCLUDED from Financial Activities:

  • Agriculture
  • Industrial Activity
  • Trading of Goods/Services
  • Non-financing Real Estate
  • Insurance (regulated separately)

SECTION 02  —  NBFC vs. Bank

Key Differences · Regulatory Framework · Functions

NBFC vs. Commercial Bank — Key Differences

Parameter Commercial Bank NBFC
Governing Law Banking Regulation Act, 1949 RBI Act, 1934 + Companies Act
Demand Deposits Allowed Not allowed
Payment System Full access (cheques/NEFT) No cheque facility
Deposit Insurance DICGC coverage Not covered
CRR / SLR Mandatory Limited / Not applicable (BL)
SARFAESI Rights Full rights Selective eligibility
FDI Limit 74% 100% (automatic route)
Capital Requirement Higher (min Rs.500 Cr – SFB) Rs.10 Cr NOF (ICC)
Licence Difficulty Very stringent (RBI licence) Easier (CoR-based)

Note: SFB = Small Finance Bank | CoR = Certificate of Registration | NOF = Net Owned Fund | BL = Base Layer

SECTION 03  —  Classification of NBFCs

Types · Activity-Based Categories · Regulatory Intent

Types of NBFCs (Activity-Based Classification)

Abbreviation Full Name Description
ICC Investment & Credit Company Loans, investments, asset finance — the most common type
MFI Micro Finance Institution Small loans to low-income borrowers; priority sector
CIC Core Investment Company 90%+ assets in group company securities; limited public funds
HFC Housing Finance Company Home loans; regulated jointly by RBI and NHB
P2P Peer-to-Peer Lending Platform Online marketplace connecting borrowers and lenders
IFC Infrastructure Finance Company Long-term infra financing; 75%+ assets in infra loans
AA Account Aggregator Consent-based financial data aggregation platform
IDF Infrastructure Debt Fund Refinances infra projects via bonds/units

SECTION 04  —  Scale-Based Regulation (SBR)

4-Layer Framework · Risk-Based Supervision · RBI Circular (Oct 2021)

Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) — 4-Layer Framework

Layer Full Name Criteria Regulatory Intensity
TL Top Layer Extreme systemic risk — RBI discretion Highest (RBI discretion)
UL Upper Layer Top 10 NBFCs + risk-selected entities Bank-like norms; mandatory listing within 3 years
ML Middle Layer Assets over Rs.1,000 Cr + deposit-taking NBFCs Stricter norms; board-level risk committee mandatory
BL Base Layer All others (assets below Rs.1,000 Cr), incl. P2P, AA Lighter regulations; no mandatory risk-based audit

Regulatory Intensity Increases Upward (BL → ML → UL → TL)

SBR — Layer-Wise Regulatory Requirements

Layer Criteria Key Requirements
Base Layer (BL) Assets below Rs.1,000 Cr Lighter compliance burden; Includes P2P, AA platforms; No mandatory risk-based audit
Middle Layer (ML) Assets Rs.1,000 Cr and above; Deposit-taking NBFCs (NBFC-D); IFC, IDF, CIC (systemically relevant) Stricter norms; Board-level risk committee mandatory
Upper Layer (UL) Top 10 NBFCs by RBI list + others Bank-like capital/NPA regulations; Mandatory listing within 3 years; Differential standard asset provisioning
Top Layer (TL) Extreme systemic risk — RBI identified Conversion to bank may be required; Highest regulatory scrutiny; Rarely populated layer

SECTION 05  —  Compliance & Governance

NOF · NPA Norms · Registration · Reporting Requirements

Net Owned Fund (NOF)

NOF = Owned Funds (Equity + Reserves minus Losses) minus Investments in subsidiaries / group companies

NBFC Category Minimum NOF Remark
ICC (Investment & Credit Company) Rs.10 Cr Minimum entry requirement
NBFC-MFI Rs.10 Cr For Tier 1; Rs.7 Cr for NE/hilly states
P2P Lending Platform Rs.2 Cr Lighter threshold for tech-focused platform
Account Aggregator (AA) Rs.2 Cr Lighter threshold
Core Investment Company (CIC) Rs.100 Cr If accessing public funds
Housing Finance Company (HFC) Rs.20 Cr Post-revised NHB/RBI norms

Registration & Reporting Requirements

Requirement Description
CoR (Certificate of Registration) RBI — mandatory before commencing business
FIU-IND Registration Financial Intelligence Unit — AML/CFT compliance
CKYC Registration Central KYC Registry for customer onboarding
CIC Registration Credit Information Companies (CIBIL, Equifax, etc.)
CERSAI Central Registry — security interest on immovable property
RBI Approval Required for >26% shareholding or >30% director change
CRILC Central Repository on Large Credits — quarterly submission
CIMS Centralised Information Management System — periodic returns
Fraud Reporting Report fraud to RBI within prescribed timelines
Auditor Certificate Annual certificate from statutory auditor on asset classification
NPA Declaration 90 DPD norm — uniform asset classification applies
Companies Act Returns Annual returns, financial statements, board reports

Companies Act Applicability & Small Company Concept

Exemptions Under Companies Act:

  • Sections 185 & 186 (inter-corporate loans) — not applicable to NBFCs
  • Deposit rules under Companies Act — not applicable (RBI directions prevail)
  • RBI Master Directions override Companies Act on financial matters
  • Governance, audit and CSR provisions still fully apply

Small Company Concept for NBFCs:

  • Criteria: Paid-up capital up to Rs.4 Cr AND Turnover up to Rs.40 Cr
  • NBFCs are NOT excluded from small-company status by Companies Act or RBI
  • Benefits: No mandatory cash flow, fewer board meetings, CARO exemption
  • Conclusion: An NBFC CAN qualify as a small company if criteria are met

SECTION 06  —  Case Studies & Practical Scenarios

Exam-Style Problems with Detailed Analysis

Practical Scenarios — Part 1

Q1: Principal Business Test — NBFC Qualification

Company X: 55% of assets are financial assets, but only 45% of income is from financial activities. Is it an NBFC?

Answer: NOT an NBFC

Analysis: The Principal Business Test requires BOTH conditions simultaneously. Since the income criterion (above 50%) is not met, the entity does NOT qualify as an NBFC.

Q2: SBR Layer Classification

NBFC-Y has total assets of Rs.1,200 Cr and does not accept public deposits. Which SBR layer applies?

Answer: Middle Layer (ML)

Analysis: Any NBFC with assets of Rs.1,000 Cr or more is placed in the Middle Layer under Scale-Based Regulation, regardless of deposit-taking status.

Q3: Loans to Directors

An NBFC proposes to grant a Rs.6 Cr loan to one of its directors. What approval is required?

Answer: Board Approval Required

Analysis: Loans to directors/related parties require Board-level approval and mandatory disclosure. RBI norms on related party transactions apply strictly.

Practical Scenarios — Part 2

Q4: Public Funds Classification

An NBFC borrows Rs.50 Cr from a commercial bank. Does this constitute ‘public funds’?

Answer: Yes — Public Funds

Analysis: Public funds include bank borrowings, NCDs, and debentures. Only owned share capital is excluded. This determines NBFC classification and additional RBI obligations.

Q5: NPA Classification

A loan account of NBFC-Z has been overdue for 95 days. What is its NPA classification?

Answer: Non-Performing Asset (NPA)

Analysis: Under harmonised NPA norms (90 DPD), an account overdue for more than 90 days is classified as NPA. 95 days clearly breaches the threshold.

Q6: Shareholding Change — RBI Approval

A promoter holds 20% in an NBFC and proposes to acquire additional shares taking his stake to 30%. Is RBI approval needed?

Answer: Yes — Prior RBI Approval Required

Analysis: Change in shareholding exceeding 26% requires prior RBI approval. Moving from 20% to 30% constitutes a material acquisition triggering the approval requirement.

Author Bio

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