"We have reviewed the terms and conditions that have come along with the proposal but we have to look at it from our business model perspective. Considering all these, we have decided not to go ahead with it at this point," Anand Selvakesari, head of consumer banking for Asean and India at the US bank, told reporters here today.
He did not elaborate on any particular issue with the guidelines, and said the bank's feedback has been given to the Reserve Bank.
The RBI in November released a framework for large foreign banks with more than 20 branches to convert into wholly owned subsidiaries. It said banks entering the country after August 2010 would have to become subsidiaries and not operate through branches.
The RBI said all foreign banks that become wholly owned subsidiaries will be given near-national treatment, apart from capital gains tax and stamp duty benefits.
While talking to reporters last week after the monetary policy review meeting, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan had asked banks to be responsive to the local regulations.
"And, therefore at some point in time, if the carrot does not work, we may need to push a little harder, as some of the jurisdictions across the world have done," he had said.
