The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has implemented a major regulatory easing for top-tier infrastructure lenders. Non-Banking Financial Company-Infrastructure Finance Companies (NBFC-IFCs) categorized within the RBI’s prestigious “Upper Layer” are now permitted to expand their large exposure limit to 45% of their eligible capital base for a single group of connected borrowers, up significantly from the previous 35% ceiling.
The strategic shift is designed to eliminate financing bottlenecks, ensuring that massive, multi-year core infrastructure projects do not face sudden credit freezes due to legacy regulatory limits.
Key Regulatory Changes at a Glance
The central bank’s amendment directions introduce three sweeping structural overhauls to its Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) framework:
1. Relaxed Exposure Ceiling
The maximum credit extension to a group of connected entities is hiked by 10 percentage points (from 35% to 45%). Given the highly specialized, capital-heavy nature of infrastructure lending, this allows top-tier NBFCs to continue backrolling massive national highways, green energy grids, and port developments without exceeding single-borrower risk guardrails.
2. Simplified “Upper Layer” Sorting
The RBI has completely discarded its complex, multi-parameter scoring methodology for identifying systemically vital Upper Layer NBFCs (which face the strictest central bank oversight). Going forward, classification is anchored entirely to a clean, transparent asset size rule:
The New Standard: Any NBFC possessing an aggregate asset size of ₹1 Lakh Crore and above will automatically be considered for inclusion into the Upper Layer regulatory pool.
3. State-Owned NBFC Neutrality
In line with the RBI’s long-standing push toward an ownership-neutral regulatory landscape, eligible government-owned NBFCs (such as PFC and REC) will now be brought directly under the Upper Layer framework. However, the central bank carved out an exemption: fully state-controlled NBFCs in this bracket will not be mandated to list on public stock exchanges.
The Big Picture: Supporting India’s Infrastructure Capex
The decision follows extensive evaluation of public and industry feedback submitted on the draft proposals floating since April. By freeing up massive loan capacities for top-tier players, the policy cushion coordinates neatly with the country’s accelerating private manufacturing sales and broader macroeconomic growth trajectory.
The reform essentially guarantees that India’s largest infrastructure project groups can keep accessing massive pools of domestic capital via specialized lenders, insulating them from external macro stresses.
