The Singaporean lender DBS on Tuesday became the first
foreign bank to seek the Reserve Bank's permission to set up a local
subsidiary.
"We have applied for Reserve Bank permission to bring
our branches under a locally registered subsidiary," DBS group chief
executive and managing director Piyush Gupta said here.
Last year, RBI had made it mandatory for all foreign lenders
with over 20 branches to gradually go the wholly-owned subsidiary route, and
those coming after August last year to do so immediately.
Since the new rules were issued, only Doha Bank entered the
country last month and the existing rule applies only to three overseas lenders
like StanChart, HSBC and Citi, which have over 50 branches each now.
At present DBS has 12 branches.
The central bank has been goading overseas lenders to adopt
the subsidiarisation route as it believes that such a model can give it better
control over them, as in the branch model, anything happening to the parent can
also cripple the system back here.
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