Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released a draft circular to bring more clarity on how banks and financial institutions should handle certain non-financial assets taken as collateral when borrowers default.
This move is aimed at improving transparency and ensuring better risk management across regulated entities.
What Are These Assets?
The RBI calls these assets Specified Non-Financial Assets (SNFA).
In simple terms, these are physical or immovable assets (like property) that a bank takes over when a borrower fails to repay a loan.
These assets are not part of regular banking operations, which is why the RBI wants clear rules on how they should be handled.
When Can Banks Acquire SNFA?
According to the draft guidelines, banks can acquire these assets only in specific situations.
The loan must be a non-performing asset (NPA)
All other recovery options must have already been tried and failed
This means banks cannot directly take over assets without first attempting other recovery methods.
How Should These Assets Be Recorded?
Once acquired, these assets must be recorded carefully in the financial statements.
The RBI has said that banks should value them at the lower of two values:
Net book value
Distress sale value
This ensures that banks do not overstate the value of such assets on their balance sheets.
Rules for Disposal
The RBI has clearly emphasized that these assets should not be held for long.
Banks should sell them as early as possible
The preferred method is through public auction
These assets cannot be sold back to the same borrower or related parties
This is meant to prevent misuse and ensure fair recovery practices.
Disclosure and Reporting Requirements
Banks will also need to maintain proper transparency.
SNFA must be shown separately in the balance sheet
They should not be mixed with regular loan exposures
Proper internal policies must be created for handling these assets
The RBI has asked institutions to define clear rules for acquisition, holding limits, and disposal timelines.
Feedback Window Open
The central bank has invited feedback from stakeholders on this draft.
Suggestions can be submitted until May 26, after which the final guidelines may be issued.
Why This Matters
This step by the RBI is important because it brings clarity, consistency, and discipline in handling default-related assets.
For banks, it means better risk control. For the financial system, it improves transparency and trust.




