If it is so , then clearly Milibhagat only.
Shah D J
On Sunday, 24 May 2015 11:11 AM, "rk_agg@yahoo.com [company_secretary]" <company_secretary@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Yes, they can sale.RegardsRohit AggarwalAdvocateWww.nkumarandaggarwal.comPh 9810016791Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
From: PAWAN LADDHA pawan19792003@yahoo.com [company_secretary]Sent: Sunday 24 May 2015 5:20 PMTo: Company_secretaryReply To: company_secretary@yahoogroups.comSubject: [CS_yahoogroups) Fw: Sale of Performing assets by BanksHi Friends,Can anyone help me in understanding if a Bank can sale any line of business (which is not an NPA or distressed assets) to another bank/NBFC?Is the following notification relevant or any other is also there?4.2.20 Transactions Involving Transfer of Assets through Direct Assignment of Cash Flows and the Underlying Securities
Originating Bank: The asset classification and provisioning rules in respect of the exposure representing the Minimum Retention Requirement (MRR) of the Originator of the asset would be as under:
a) The originating bank may maintain a consolidated account of the amount representing MRR if the loans transferred are retail loans. In such a case, the consolidated amount receivable in amortisation of the MRR and its periodicity should be clearly established and the overdue status of the MRR should be determined with reference to repayment of such amount. Alternatively, the originating bank may continue to maintain borrower-wise accounts for the proportionate amounts retained in respect of those accounts. In such a case, the overdue status of the individual loan accounts should be determined with reference to repayment received in each account.
b) In the case of transfer of a pool of loans other than retail loans, the originator should maintain borrower-wise accounts for the proportionate amounts retained in respect of each loan. In such a case, the overdue status of the individual loan accounts should be determined with reference to repayment received in each account.
c) If the originating bank acts as a servicing agent of the assignee bank for the loans transferred, it would know the overdue status of loans transferred which should form the basis of classification of the entire MRR/individual loans representing MRR as NPA in the books of the originating bank, depending upon the method of accounting followed as explained in para (a) and (b) above. Purchasing Bank: In purchase of pools of both retail and non-retail loans, income recognition, asset classification and provisioning norms for the purchasing bank will be applicable based on individual obligors and not based on portfolio. Banks should not apply the asset classification, income recognition and provisioning norms at portfolio level, as such treatment is likely to weaken the credit supervision due to its inability to detect and address weaknesses in individual accounts in a timely manner. If the purchasing bank is not maintaining the individual obligor-wise accounts for the portfolio of loans purchased, it should have an alternative mechanism to ensure application of prudential norms on individual obligor basis, especially the classification of the amounts corresponding to the obligors which need to be treated as NPAs as per existing prudential norms. One such mechanism could be to seek monthly statements containing account-wise details from the servicing agent to facilitate classification of the portfolio into different asset classification categories. Such details should be certified by the authorized officials of the servicing agent. Bank's concurrent auditors, internal auditors and statutory auditors should also conduct checks of these portfolios with reference to the basic records maintained by the servicing agent. The servicing agreement should provide for such verifications by the auditors of the purchasing bank. All relevant information and audit reports should be available for verification by the Inspecting Officials of RBI during the Annual Financial Inspections of the purchasing banks. The guidelines prescribed above at 4.2.20 (i) & (ii) do not apply to(a) Transfer of loan accounts of borrowers by a bank to other bank/FIs/NBFCs and vice versa, at the request/instance of borrower;(b) Inter-bank participations;(c) Trading in bonds;(d) Sale of entire portfolio of assets consequent upon a decision to exit the line of business completely. Such a decision should have the approval of Board of Directors of the bank;(e) Consortium and syndication arrangements and arrangement under Corporate Debt Restructuring mechanism;(f) Any other arrangement/transactions, specifically exempted by the Reserve Bank of India.Regards,
Pawan
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Posted by: Dipak Shah <djshah1944@yahoo.com>
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