Question

    Read the following passage and answer the following question (Q15 to Q17). Housing Finance Companies (HFCs) and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) have seen significant regulatory changes over the past decade. Following the transfer of HFC regulation from the National Housing Bank (NHB) to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in 2019, the regulatory landscape has focused on aligning HFCs with the broader NBFC regulatory framework. Recent changes include tighter liquidity management rules, new norms for deposit-taking entities, and restrictions on exposure to capital markets. These reforms aim to enhance financial stability and ensure that both HFCs and NBFCs adhere to similar prudential standards. In particular, deposit-taking HFCs are now required to maintain a higher proportion of liquid assets and adhere to stricter credit rating criteria. Additionally, HFCs involved in public deposit acceptance are mandated to implement more stringent controls around asset cover and deposit ceiling limits.

    Under the revised review of regulatory framework for

    Housing finance company (HFCs), by January 2025, what percentage of total public deposits must deposit-taking HFCs maintain in liquid assets?
    A 10% Correct Answer Incorrect Answer
    B 12.5% Correct Answer Incorrect Answer
    C 14% Correct Answer Incorrect Answer
    D 15% Correct Answer Incorrect Answer
    E 17.5% Correct Answer Incorrect Answer

    Solution

    By January 2025, under the revised Master Direction – Non-Banking Financial Company – Housing Finance Company (Reserve Bank) Directions, 2021, deposit-taking HFCs are required to maintain 14% of their total public deposits in liquid assets, as part of the phased regulatory changes. This will increase to 15% by July 2025.

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