Title: External Commercial Borrowings Policy
1ECB POLICY - AN OVERVIEW
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2- As a part of the development policy, India has
always promoted capital inflows. In other words
to make domestically investment foreign capital
is obtained from foreign countries. There are
some reasons which compelled our government to go
after foreign capital such as Lack of domestic
capital and deficit in the current account. There
are different types of foreign capital and the
major category is foreign investment including
FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) and FPI (Foreign
Portfolio Investment). There are following types
of foreign capital such as trade credit, NRI
deposits and ECBs (External Commercial
Borrowings).
3ECB Policy- An Overview
- External Commercial Borrowings (ECB) is a
commercial loan availed from nonresident lenders
by an Indian entity with a minimum average
maturity of 3 years. These types of loans are
provided by foreign commercial banks and other
institutions. ECBs are defined as money borrowed
from foreign resources in the form of - Commercial bank loans
- Buyers credit/ suppliers credit
- Securitized instruments such as floating rate
notes and fixed rate bonds - Credit from official export credit agencies and
commercial borrowings from Multilateral Financial
Institutions. - ECBs have emerged a major form of foreign
capital like FDI and FII in the post reform
period. In Country from several years
contribution of ECBs was between 20 to 35 percent
of the total capital flows. In large number
Indian corporate and PSUs have used the ECBs as
sources of investment. Private sector corporates
have obtained bulk of the overseas loans or ECBs.
ECB is easy to obtain fund for the corporates and
it also helps them to make business/investment
expansion. For expansion of existing capacity as
well as for fresh investment, ECBs are being
permitted by the Government as a source of
finance for Indian Corporates.
4Objectives
- For expanding the existing capacity as well as
for fresh investments government permits the ECBs
as an additional source of financing. - ECB policy seeks to emphasize the priority of
investing in the infrastructure and core sectors
such as Power, telecom, Railways, Roads, Urban
infrastructure etc. and also emphasis on the need
of capital for Small and Medium scale
enterprises.
Benefits to Borrowers
- ECB funding helps corporates in paying to
suppliers in other countries that may not be
available in India. - In comparison to domestic funds, cost of funds
borrowed from external sources is cheaper. - Borrower can diversify the investor base.
- It provides international market to borrowers. In
ECB there are internationally recognised sources
such as banks, export credit agencies, suppliers
of Equipment, foreign collaborators, foreign
equity holders, international capital markets
etc.
5Advantages
- With the help of ECBs it provide an opportunity
to borrow large volume of funds - Funds are relatively available for long term
- In comparison to domestic funds interest rate are
also lower - Since ECBs are in the form of foreign currencies,
they enable the corporate to have foreign
currency to meet the import of machineries etc. - ECBs can be raised by corporates from
internationally recognized sources such as banks,
export credit agencies, international capital
markets etc. - India has a vibrant corporate sector unlike many
other emerging market economies and many of them
have overseas operations as well. In India, to
the corporates, domestic financial market is not
often able to provide big sized loans at
competitive rate of interests. For domestic
companies ECBs have emerged as a valuable source
of investable resource of funds. Under ECB Policy
government put restrictions on amount of loan
that can be obtained by a company, end user
restrictions, interest rate ceiling for ECBs,
maturity period etc. Government put ceiling for
the total amount of ECBs that can be obtained
through the ECB route during a year by all Indian
firms.
6External Commercial Borrowings Commercial
Loans, buyer / suppliers credit, securitized
instruments (Bonds, Preference shares etc.) with
a minimum average maturity of 3 years.
Routes to access ECB
External Commercial Borrowing (ECB)
Automatic Route
Approval Route
USD 750 M-Maximum USD 200 M- Hotel, Hospital,
S/W and Miscellaneous Service USD 10 M- NGO in
MF MFI Specified NBFC and SIDBI as per
conditions
Approval route applicable - Not covered in
Automatic route
Minimum average maturity 3 or 5 years depending
on the quantum of ECB
Short term debt not encouraged
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7Automatic Route
Eligible Borrowers
- Corporates including those in the hotel,
hospital, software sectors - Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) engaged in
micro finance activities are eligible to avail of
ECB. - Units in Special Economic Zones (SEZ) Units
(except financial intermediaries, individuals,
Trusts) - NBFC-IFC, NBFC-AFC
- Companies in Miscellaneous Services i.e. Training
Activities, RD and Infra Support (except
Educational Inst., Trading business, Logistic
Services, Financial Services, and Consultancy
Services) only from its Direct/Indirect Equity
Holder/Group Cos - Small Industries Development Bank of India
(SIDBI) can avail of ECB for on lending to MSME
Sector) - Other specified
8Recognized Lenders
- International Banks
- International Capital Markets
- Multilateral Financial Institutions such as IFC,
ADB, CDC etc. - Export credit agencies
- Suppliers of equipment
- Foreign collaborators
- Foreign Equity Holders (min. 25)
- For ECB beyond USD 5M ECB Liability- Equity
Ratio 41 - Indirect Equity Holder- Only if indirect Holding
in IC is 51 - Group Co.- ECB from a group company is permitted
provided both the borrower and the foreign lender
are subsidiaries of the same parent
9Maturity
- The maximum amount of ECB which can be raised by
a corporate is USD 750 million or its equivalent
during a financial year other than hotel,
hospital and software sectors, and corporate in
miscellaneous services sector. - USD 200 M- Hotel, Hospital, S/W and Miscellaneous
Service - U 10 M- NGO in MF MFI
- Specified NBFC and SIDBI as per conditions
- Minimum average maturity 3 or 5 years depending
on the quantum of ECB - Minimum avg. maturity period
- USD 20 M 3 years
- Beyond USD 20 up to 750 M 5 years
- All in Cost Ceiling
- 3-5 years LIBOR 350 bps
- Beyond 5 years LIBOR 500 bps
- (Fixed rate loans swap
- cost margin)
10End Use
- Real/ Industrial sector (SME)
- Import of capital goods,
- New Projects, Expansion/ modernization of
existing units - Overseas Direct Investment in Joint Ventures
(JV)/ Wholly Owned Subsidiaries (WOS) Payment of
Interest During Construction (IDC) - First stage acquisition of shares in the
disinvestment process and also in the mandatory
second stage offer under GOIs disinvestment
program - Payment for obtaining License/ permit for 3G
spectrum. - For lending to self-help groups or for micro
credit by NGOs - Repayment of rupee loans by companies in
infrastructure sector manufacturing and hotel
sector (with project cost of NR 250 or more) - General corporate purpose from foreign direct
equity holder
11End Use (Not Permitted)
- On lending, Investment in capital market or
acquiring a company in India - Real Estate Sector
- General corporate purposes
- Repayment of existing INR Loan
12Other permitted end uses
- Import of capital goods New projects
- Modernization/expansion of existing projects in
real sector (industrial sector including SME and
infrastructure sector) - Hotel Sector (fixed capital investment of Rs.
200 Crore) - Convention Centers (fixed capital investment of
Rs. 300 Crore) - Common infrastructure for Industrial Parks, SEZ,
Tourism Facilities - Capital investment for fertilizers
- Post harvest infrastructure for agricultural and
horticultural produce including cold storage - Soil testing laboratories Cold chain for farm
level pre-cooling, preservation, storage or
agricultural and allied produce, marine produce
and meat - ODI in JV/WOS abroad
- Acquisition of shares in disinvestment process of
PSU shares - IDC for Indian Infrastructure sector
- Capital expenditure in maintenance and operations
of toll system - Refinancing of Bridge finance availed for import
of capital goods in infrastructure sector - Import of services, technical know-how, payment
of license fee etc. - General corporate purposes from FDEH in
manufacturing, infrastructure, hotels, hospitals
and IT sector (minimum average maturity 7 years) - Payment of spectrum allocation
13- Guarantee
- Issuance of guarantee, standby letter of credit,
letter of undertaking or letter of comfort by
banks, Financial Institutions and Non-Banking
Financial Companies (NBFCs) from India relating
to ECB is not permitted. - Pledge of shares by promoters, domestic associate
companies of the borrower - Corporate Guarantee, Personal Guarantee ,
- Creation of Charge over immoveable assets and
financial securities is Possible only after
obtaining no objection from AD bank. - Incase of enforcement of charge property will
be transferred only to person resident in India
ECB Policy
- Authorized Dealer can permit
- Change in Name Change in Lender Change in End
Use, Change in All-in-Cost - Transfer of ECB, Currency Reschedulement,
Reduction in amount of ECB - Cancellation of LRN
14Conversion of ECB into Equity
- Conditions
- Activities to be under Automatic Route / FIPB
approval obtained - Sectoral Cap not breached
- Pricing Listed as per SEBI Unlisted At a Fair
Value arrived by CA/MB based on IAP on ALP on
the date of conversion - Conversion Rate Maximum at exchange rate
prevailing on the date of the agreement between
the parties. - Reporting structure
- Full conversion of outstanding ECB into equity
Form FC-GPR to AD Form ECB-2 to DSIM within 7
working days from the close of the month - Partial conversion of outstanding ECB into equity
Form FC-GPR for converted portion Form ECB-2
to DSIM mentioning converted and unconverted
portion
15Procedure
- Execution of Loan Agreement(filing is not
compulsory)
Filing of Form 83 duly certified by CA/CS to AD
AD to process the request and send to RBI for LRN
Drawn should take place post allotment of LRN
Filing of Monthly Return in ECB 2 by 7th of next
month
16of Cont
Compounding of Contraventions
Compounding of contraventions means settle an
offence committed by the contravener through
imposition of a monetary penalty without going in
for litigation after the contravener acknowledges
having committed the contravention.
Objective
- To provide comfort by minimizing transaction
costs, while taking severe view of willful,
malafide and fraudulent transactions but it is
not equal to withdrawal of a charge or a
complaint but an agreement not to pursue the
legal battle and spare the accused from further
consequences.
17Filling Application
- Application Form
- Nature of the contravention
- Provisions of FEMA under which the transaction
would be handled - While undertaking the transaction which of the
FEMA provisions were contravened - Transaction- Parties involved, Date of the
transaction and Amount involved - DD in favor of RESERVE BANK OF INDIA Payable
at RO/MUMBAI - RBI Office Jurisdiction
- Regional Offices Central
Offices
-
- - Delay in AR,FC-GPR
- Non Allotment/Refund in 180 days
- Violation of Pricing Guidelines
- Issue of Ineligible Instruments
- Issue of securities without RBI/FIPB approval
- Delay in Filing of FC-TRS-NR/R-R/NR
- Recording of Transfer by Company without FC-TRS
-
- New Delhi
- Acquisition of IMP in/outside India
- LO, BO and PO
- Deposits
- Mumbai
- ECB
- ODI
- Export, Import and Others
18Features of Compounding
- Voluntary
- No suo-motto investigation
- Time Bound completion (Within 180 days)
- No further proceedings for contravention so
compounded - Payment of sum of contravention (within 15 days)
- Once the order is passed, no contravener seek to
withdraw the order or to hold it as void or
request a review of the order - No appeal against the Order
- Non payment shall be deemed as no application is
made - No compounding before expiry of 3 years of
previous order for similar contravention - No Compounding of cases where approval of any
statutory authority/Govt. etc. was required
unless such approvals has been sought
19Ascertainment of Nature of Contravention by RBI
- Depends on whether the contravention is
- Technical/ Minor in nature and needs only
Cautionary Advice. - Serious in nature and warrant Compounding
- Prima facie, involves Money-Laundering, National
and Security concerns involving serious
infringement of the regulatory framework - However, RBI reserves the right to classify the
contraventions and no body else has any right to
classify any contravention as technical suo moto. - Decision of Sum of contravention by RBI depends
on - Amount of Gain of unfair advantage made from
contravention - Amount of Loss to any agency/authority/exchequer
from contravention - Economic benefits accruing to the contravener
from delayed compliance or compliance avoided - Repetitive nature of the contravention, Track
Record, History of non-compliance of the
Contravener - Contraveners conduct in undertaking the
transaction, Disclosure of full facts in the
application and submissions made during the
personal hearing - Any other factor considered relevant and
appropriate
20Contraventions Penalties
- Application for Condonation
- Application for compounding
- Adjudication proceedings
- Penalty/ Confiscation in case of quantifiable
offence Up to 3 times, in case of non
-quantifiable offence Up to Rs. 200,000, in
case of continuing penalty - Rs. 5000 per day - Imprisonment if penalty not paid within
prescribed time