RBI Chooses FIDC as Self-Regulatory Organisation(SRO) for NBFCs

Highlights

  • RBI has recognised the Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) as the official Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) for the NBFC sector.
  • Move follows RBIโ€™s Omnibus SRO Framework (March 21, 2024) and invite for applications (June 19, 2024).
  • Two other applications were not considered as they were incomplete by the deadline.

News Update

The Reserve Bank of India has recognised FIDC as the SRO for Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs). As an SRO, FIDC will work under RBI oversight to promote industry standards, strengthen compliance, facilitate early-warning mechanisms, and act as a structured bridge between NBFCs and the regulator.

What are NBFCs?

NBFCs (Non-Banking Financial Companies) are financial institutions that provide banking-like services such as loans, leasing, housing finance, micro-credit and investment services, but they are not banks. They cannot accept demand deposits, issue cheques on themselves, or run payment/settlement systems. NBFCs are vital to credit access for consumers, MSMEs and under-served regions.

About FIDC (Finance Industry Development Council)

  • Who they are: A representative body of asset and loan financing NBFCs registered with RBI, widely regarded as a collective voice of the sector.
  • What they do: Engage with RBI and Government on policy, publish guidance, and drive best practices and member conduct standards.
  • As an SRO: Will draft and enforce codes of conduct, facilitate member supervision, promote compliance culture, support smaller NBFCs, and share sectoral insights with RBI for better policymaking.
  • Why it matters: A recognised SRO can improve transparency, consumer protection, and systemic stability while enabling faster industry coordination.

What changes for NBFCs now?

  • Clear standards: FIDC will publish sector-wide standards and model codes that members are expected to adopt.
  • Better compliance and oversight: Peer-monitoring and thematic reviews to detect gaps early and escalate material issues to RBI.
  • Grievance handling: Frameworks for customer grievance redress and member-discipline, complementing RBI regulations.
  • Capacity building: Training, advisories, and templates to help especially small and mid-sized NBFCs comply efficiently.

Timeline and Context

  • March 21, 2024: RBI issues the Omnibus Framework for recognising SROs across RBI-regulated entities.
  • June 19, 2024: RBI invites applications for NBFC SRO recognition.
  • October 3, 2025: RBI recognises FIDC as the SRO for NBFCs; two incomplete applications not considered.

What to watch next

  • Membership onboarding: How quickly NBFCs enroll and adopt FIDCโ€™s codes.
  • SRO rulebook: Publication of conduct standards, compliance checklists, reporting formats, and disciplinary procedures.
  • Consumer outcomes: Impact on complaint resolution times, disclosures, and fair-practices adherence.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *