Besides, the RBI has also raised threshold for reporting of frauds from Rs 25 lakh to Rs 1 crore for NBFC.
"Factoring services should be extended in respect of invoices which represent genuine trade transactions," RBI said in a notification.
Factoring business is a type of financial service wherein a firm sells its accounts receivable to a factoring company, which then pay discounted value to seller against receivable receipts.
"Since under without recourse factoring transactions, the factor is underwriting the credit risk on the debtor, there should be a clearly laid down board-approved limit for all such underwriting commitments," RBI said in a notification.
With regard to NPA classification, it added, in case of factoring on 'with-recourse' basis, the exposure would be reckoned on the assignor.
In case of factoring on 'without-recourse' basis, the exposure would be reckoned on the debtor, irrespective of credit risk cover or protection provided, except in cases of international factoring where the entire credit risk has been assumed by the import factor, it said.
In a separate notification, RBI said it has been decided to revise the threshold for reporting of frauds and submission of quarterly progress reports on frauds to Central Fraud Monitoring Cell, from Rs 25 lakh as on date to Rs 1 crore with immediate effect.
