To hold, or not to hold?

Explore Business Standard
Associate Sponsors
Co-sponsor

| The paper, however, cautions that the benefits from this transition are not unambiguous. In order to contain risks, the holding company cannot own businesses outside the financial realm; nor should it be allowed to own businesses which are unregulated. It also goes into some detail about the dangers of multi-tiered holding structures in which the parent holding company owns other holding companies, which eventually own the actual businesses. This, the paper argues, can lead to great difficulties in measuring and monitoring the overall risk levels within the portfolio of businesses. Broadly, it favours movement towards the holding company model, but within certain boundaries dictated by transparency and the imperatives of managing system risks. |
| So, what is the RBI's view on the ICICI proposal? The paper addresses the issue of foreign ownership in one paragraph. It indicates that, while in the current structure the back-door increase in the cap is permissible, it would not be so in a holding company framework. In a rather ambiguously worded statement, it says that the exemption would not be allowed, or at least the regulator's approval of such a proposal would be open to legal challenge. Given the paper's overall advocacy of the holding company structure and the view that the proposal would not fly were that structure in place, it would be reasonable to infer that the RBI is not in favour of it. If so, the paper is a somewhat round-about way of saying this. It would be good to have some clarity and consensus on what exactly constitutes the foreign investment cap in the insurance and, perhaps, several other businesses as well. |
First Published: Aug 30 2007 | 12:00 AM IST