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Secondary Market for Corporate Loans - Manoharan Committee

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September 09, 2019

Why in news?

The task force set up by the RBI to examine the possibilities of a secondary market for corporate loans in India submitted its report recently.

What is a secondary market?

  • When a company issues its securities for the first time, it does it in the primary market.
  • After the IPO (Initial Public Offering), those securities get available for trade in the secondary market.
  • A secondary market is thus a marketplace where already issued securities (both shares and debt) can be bought and sold by the investors.
  • It is a market where investors buy securities from other investors, and not from the issuing company.
  • Equity shares, bonds, preference shares, treasury bills, debentures, etc. are some of the key products available in a secondary market.
  • SEBI functions as the regulator for the secondary market.

What are the key suggestions?

  • The task force was led by Canara Bank Chairman T N Manoharan.
  • It suggested creating a self-regulatory body (SRB) to manage the secondary market.
  • This would develop appropriate benchmark rates for secondary market purchase and sale of corporate loans.
  • The SRB is expected to also finalise detailed modalities and formulate guidelines.
  • It would -
    1. standardise the paperwork associated with loans, making them easier to trade
    2. maintain the standards and examine documentation
    3. maintain a central registry, and so on
  • Aside from the creation of this quasi-regulator, the committee also suggested that existing requirements be changed.
  • It said the secondary market for corporate loans, currently dominated by banks, be thrown open to mutual funds, pension funds, and insurance companies.
  • To start with, it was recommended that term loans be prioritized for sale in the secondary market.
  • Subsequently, depending upon the experience gained, other categories of loans like revolving credit facilities should follow suit.
  • These include cash credit, credit card receivables, assets with bullet repayment and non-fund based facilities.

What is the committee’s rationale?

  • The secondary loan market in India is largely restricted to sale to Asset Reconstruction Companies and ad-hoc sale to other lenders, including banks.
  • Notably, no formalised mechanism has been developed to deepen the market.
  • Banks and NBFCs are currently the only participants in the primary and secondary loan markets.
  • So, the taskforce felt that it was essential to widen the spectrum of participants to boost the secondary market.
  • Besides, the secondary market in corporate debt is so illiquid.
  • In the absence of sufficient liquidity, the market is not properly passing the price information about companies.
  • So, a more structured form of price discovery would be far more efficient.

What is the way forward?

  • Greater innovation and regulatory cohesion are needed across the board for debt and loan markets.
  • This must be the priority for growing long-term finance and better pricing of debt.
  • This is crucial to avoid investment crises such as those India is enduring.

 

Source: Economic Times, Business Standard

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