The new Directions lay down a unified risk-management framework for financial and IT outsourcing by NBFCs. Boards remain fully accountable, with mandatory due diligence, contractual safeguards, and RBI oversight.
RBI issues 2025 directions defining board structure, risk management, and executive compensation for Small Finance Banks to strengthen governance and regulatory compliance.
Covers RBI’s 2025 Directions detailing governance, investment caps, and operational rules for SFBs. Highlights stricter controls on AIF exposure, factoring, and insurance distribution.
The RBI has issued new Directions for NBFC securitisation transactions, tightening asset eligibility, retention norms, and disclosures. The move aims to improve transparency, align incentives, and safeguard financial stability.
The 2025 Directions mandate stronger Board oversight, professional directors, and clear separation between governance and management. The key takeaway is enhanced accountability and ethical conduct across rural co-operative banks.
Outlines the new authorisation framework requiring eligibility checks, cybersecurity compliance, and RBI approval for transactional services. Key takeaway: banks must meet strict technical and regulatory standards before offering digital channels.
Explains RBI’s 2025 Directions governing branch opening, digital banking units, business correspondents, and rural outreach. Highlights mandatory 25% URC coverage and strengthened Board oversight.
The Directions held that rural co-operative banks may offer specified financial services only within a structured framework of board oversight, capital strength, and regulatory compliance. The key takeaway is tighter governance while allowing calibrated business expansion.
Fresh directions overhaul how NBFCs can declare dividends, linking payouts to capital adequacy, asset quality, and regulatory compliance to safeguard financial stability.
New directions overhaul how rural cooperative banks classify, value, and manage investments. The key takeaway is stronger board oversight and tighter risk controls across SLR and non-SLR portfolios.