City
Epaper

Next stage of reforms should allow lending against shares for land allocation: Report

By IANS | Updated: June 10, 2025 18:13 IST

New Delhi, June 10 The next stage of reforms in India demands a gradual withdrawal of lending restrictions ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 10 The next stage of reforms in India demands a gradual withdrawal of lending restrictions to corporates for land, against shares and such, a report said on Tuesday.

Real estate, in aggregate, accounts for one-third of investment activity in the country, without access to low-cost funds for most developers.

"After RERA implementation, builders’ consolidation, and timely and transparent data availability, etc, the underwriting risk is no longer systemic or disproportionately higher than that for any other industrial project finance,” said the report by Emkay Global Financial Services.

Likewise, lending against shares is a critical need – especially as new-age companies have more intangible assets than hard physical collateral.

"It is about time that we start respecting market assessment of equity value as much as the due consideration we give to replacement cost of physical assets," the report noted.

"After a long time, we have in Sanjay Malhotra — current RBI Governor — an intellectual with a flair for data, and one who comes with a firm pro-growth ideology. And this is what sets him apart," the report noted.

The RBI monetary policy, through its actions and communication, marks a seismic shift – aimed at nudging the potential growth rate of the economy higher.

The actions taken last Friday should be viewed in the context of the current economic landscape, said the report.

Historically, policy rate moves in increments of 50bps reflect economic duress.

"The recent surprise cut in our opinion is a catch-up on an unusually restrictive policy in the last fiscal and resets the trajectory of economic growth higher. This action also reflects confidence in conducting the monetary policy to align with the domestic economic reality – a decoupling of monetary policy is a precursor to a decoupled economic growth," it noted.

The aggressive moves on the policy front have been calibrated with a change in stance, back to ‘neutral’ mode. The earlier switch to an accommodative stance was done only in the prior policy meeting.

While the official version is that under the present circumstances, there is limited space to lower rates further, a more practical reasoning is simply to wait out the usual 6-9 months of the transmission impact to play out, remain data-dependent, as well as firmly communicate the RBI's inflation fighting credentials – dovish actions completed with a mildly hawkish signalling, the report said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyComet 3I/ATLAS rocketing through solar system at 61 km per second poses no threat to Earth: NASA

EntertainmentJanhvi Kapoor, Shikhar Pahariya’s romantic gestures steal attention at Anshula Kapoor's “Gor Dhana” ceremony

Other Sports"Have pain in my leg, a little headache": Kenyan coach Dennis after dog bite at ongoing World Para Athletics C'ships

AurangabadDeath after consuming unknown substance

CricketAustralia Women vs Sri Lanka Women ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 Match Abandoned Due to Rain; Both Teams Share Points

Business Realted Stories

BusinessShubham Chaudhary Joins the Big League: New Vice President of India Para Powerlifting (Paralympic Committee of India)

BusinessIndia, Bhutan hold talks on bolstering connectivity, hydropower ties

BusinessSitharaman hails regional rural banks for strengthening link between citizens, formal financial system

BusinessBihar emerges as world’s leading centre for makhana production: Shivraj Singh Chouhan

BusinessMarks & Spencer Unveils Autumn '25 Collection at BTFW with the gorgeous OTT Ba***ds of Bollywood fame star Sahher Bambba