Despite ongoing reforms, the Banking, Financial services, and Insurance (BFSI) sector in India grapples with deep-rooted inefficiencies and trust deficits.
- There is a need for deeper structural corrections, particularly in corporate bond markets, retirement planning instruments, nomination processes across BFSI, and the growing menace of shadow banking.
Key Issues In BFSI Sector
- Nomination Confusion: Across BFSI verticals (banks, mutual funds, insurance), the rules governing nominees are inconsistent.
- There is no harmonised nomination framework, with clarity on nominee rights versus legal heir claims.
- Corporate Bond Market Crisis:
- Shallow, Low Volume and Illiquid: Limited participation restricts market depth and efficient price discovery.
- Opaque Trading: Lack of transparency deters investors and reduces confidence.
- Neglected Secondary Market: RBI’s directive to develop the secondary bond market was ignored by the National Stock Exchange (NSE), as equity trading gives higher margins over bonds.
- High Cost of Capital: Inefficiency in the bond market keeps borrowing costs 2–3% higher, hurting industry and jobs.
- Ownership Transparency and FATF:
- UBO Gaps: India, as an FATF member, is committed to transparency in capital flows, including identification of Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs) but enforcement lags behind.
- Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs) refer to the natural persons who ultimately own or control a legal entity (usually 25% or more), even if the ownership is held indirectly through layers of intermediaries.
- Opaque Foreign Investments: SEBI struggles to extract shareholder data from foreign investors (e.g., Elara, Vespera), hampering oversight and delaying regulatory action.
- Loopholes in Disclosure Thresholds: India’s current UBO disclosure thresholds (10% for companies and 15% for partnerships as against 25% requirement of FATF) create loopholes that allow entities to structure investments just below these limits, thereby avoiding identification.
- Retirement Planning Problems:
- Domination Of Annuities: Most Indian retirement plans rely on annuities, which carry high intermediation fees (often ~2%) from insurance companies.
- Even young professionals in the BFSI sector lack access to efficient retirement tools.
- Zero-Coupon Government Bonds: The better alternative for annuities are Zero Coupon Government Bonds. These long-dated, stripped securities offer low-cost, predictable returns and are ideal for retirement goals.
- Avoiding a 2% fee over 30 years results in substantial savings gains.
- Government has not launched large scale retirement products.
- Shadow Banking Risks:
- Regulatory Blind Spot: Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), margin lenders, repo traders, and brokers are offering bank-like services without being subject to full regulatory oversight.
- High-Risk Lending Practices: Brokers extend margin funding at effective interest rates exceeding 20%, often without investor awareness.
- Opaque Collateral Use: The broker holds the investor’s contribution as collateral, lends it back to them, and charges interest on the full amount — a classic shadow banking trick.
Suggested Measures
- Harmonised Nomination Framework: Create a harmonised nomination framework across banks, mutual funds, and insurance sectors with clarity on nominee rights versus legal heir claims to avoid legal ambiguities and protracted litigation.
- Structural Reform: Implement deeper structural reforms to develop the corporate bond market as a means to reduce the cost of capital and unlock industrial growth.
- Ultimate Beneficial Ownership (UBO) Disclosure: Lower disclosure thresholds and mandate granular shareholder data to plug loopholes and ensure compliance with FATF’s UBO 2022 guidelines on ownership transparency.
- Sovereign Instruments: Promote long-dated zero-coupon government securities as a retirement planning option, avoiding high intermediation margins of annuity-based products.
- Regulation of Shadow Banking: Launch a comprehensive data-gathering initiative to map activities of NBFCs, margin lenders, and brokers offering bank-like services without full oversight.
- Adopt Best Practices: India must follow the European Union’s approach by legislating for gathering comprehensive data on shadow banking activities.
Conclusion
India needs structural financial reforms to ensure transparency, investor trust, and long-term growth.
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