Thursday, June 25


By Gopika Gopakumar

India’s RBI to allow domestic banks to extend loans against overseas FX deposits

MUMBAI, – India’s central bank has allowed domestic lenders to extend loans to non-residents against foreign currency deposits, including via their offshore branches, the Reserve Bank of India said in a notice on Tuesday.

The move is expected to boost the overall ‌amount of ⁠FX deposits ⁠garnered via the route, which was announced earlier this month as part of a broader measures to bolster dollar inflows into the country.

Here are the details from the RBI’s notice:

Under the scheme to raise FX deposits, Indian banks will be allowed to extend loans to non-residents from ⁠their overseas ‌branches, including via those in India’s tax-neutral GIFT City, using deposits garnered as collateral

Domestic lenders ⁠will also be allowed to issue a standby letter of credit against such FX deposits

Banks will be able to extend loans to foreign currency deposit holders and place a lien on such accounts

RBI’s swap will cover only the principal amount of the deposits and not the interest component

Banks will ‌be allowed to undertake swaps for tenors of less than three years for foreign currency deposits, provided they have mobilised eligible ⁠foreign-exchange deposits for a minimum period of three years

Earlier this month, the RBI offered to subsidise hedging costs for foreign currency non-resident (FCNR) deposits as a way to encourage banks to bring in dollar flows from the Indian diaspora

Brokerage Nomura estimates the scheme could attract $55 billion, with the bulk expected in August and September

(Reporting by Gopika Gopakumar and Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Eileen Soreng)

  • Published On Jun 23, 2026 at 11:41 PM IST

Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.

Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.

All about ETLegalWorld industry right on your smartphone!




Source link

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version