RBI’s NBFC rule poses a hurdle for Tata Sons’ plans to remain unlisted
The latest RBI directions also provide a deregistration route for non-banking financial companies that do not access public funds and have no customer interface, as long as their assets are below Rs 1,000 crore.

- Apr 30, 2026,
- Updated Apr 30, 2026 11:26 AM IST
A new Reserve Bank of India norm has reportedly emerged as a hurdle for Tata Sons’ efforts to avoid going public, after the central bank rejected an interpretation that could have allowed the Tata group’s holding company to surrender its financial licence and avoid a mandatory stock exchange listing. In directions published on Wednesday, the RBI said equity received from group companies and associates that have access to debt markets would count as indirect access to public funds. The rules will take effect on July 1.
According to a report in Times of India, the clarification goes to the centre of Tata Sons’ March 2024 application to deregister as a core investment company, a category of non-banking financial company through which large conglomerates hold stakes in group firms. Tata Sons had argued that it did not access public funds because it had prepaid its standalone debt, the report added. But Tata Sons received funds from operating companies such as Tata Steel, Tata Motors, Tata Power, Indian Hotels and Tata Chemicals, all of which have accessed debt markets.
DON'T MISS | New details in TCS case: Burqa and hijab lessons, name change, job in Malaysia
The RBI also rejected a narrower interpretation sought by unnamed market participants. They had argued that equity infused by a group company into a non-banking financial company should not automatically be treated as indirect public funds if the investing company certified that the capital came from its own resources and not from borrowings.
The RBI turned down that proposal, saying companies often use leverage alongside their own capital, funds move through multiple corporate layers, and money is fungible, making it impossible to establish whether an equity investment is entirely free of borrowed funds, the report said.
MUST READ | TCS Nashik case: 'He called me to his desk and...' - Victim shares ordeal at BPO
The latest RBI directions also provide a deregistration route for non-banking financial companies that do not access public funds and have no customer interface, as long as their assets are below Rs 1,000 crore. Tata Sons, with estimated standalone assets of Rs 1.75 lakh crore, is far above that level. The RBI had separately proposed an asset threshold of more than Rs 1 lakh crore for classification as an upper-layer non-banking financial company, a category in which Tata Sons already figures.
Tata Sons remains the only company on the RBI’s upper-layer list, first published in September 2022, that has not met the mandatory listing requirement.
A new Reserve Bank of India norm has reportedly emerged as a hurdle for Tata Sons’ efforts to avoid going public, after the central bank rejected an interpretation that could have allowed the Tata group’s holding company to surrender its financial licence and avoid a mandatory stock exchange listing. In directions published on Wednesday, the RBI said equity received from group companies and associates that have access to debt markets would count as indirect access to public funds. The rules will take effect on July 1.
According to a report in Times of India, the clarification goes to the centre of Tata Sons’ March 2024 application to deregister as a core investment company, a category of non-banking financial company through which large conglomerates hold stakes in group firms. Tata Sons had argued that it did not access public funds because it had prepaid its standalone debt, the report added. But Tata Sons received funds from operating companies such as Tata Steel, Tata Motors, Tata Power, Indian Hotels and Tata Chemicals, all of which have accessed debt markets.
DON'T MISS | New details in TCS case: Burqa and hijab lessons, name change, job in Malaysia
The RBI also rejected a narrower interpretation sought by unnamed market participants. They had argued that equity infused by a group company into a non-banking financial company should not automatically be treated as indirect public funds if the investing company certified that the capital came from its own resources and not from borrowings.
The RBI turned down that proposal, saying companies often use leverage alongside their own capital, funds move through multiple corporate layers, and money is fungible, making it impossible to establish whether an equity investment is entirely free of borrowed funds, the report said.
MUST READ | TCS Nashik case: 'He called me to his desk and...' - Victim shares ordeal at BPO
The latest RBI directions also provide a deregistration route for non-banking financial companies that do not access public funds and have no customer interface, as long as their assets are below Rs 1,000 crore. Tata Sons, with estimated standalone assets of Rs 1.75 lakh crore, is far above that level. The RBI had separately proposed an asset threshold of more than Rs 1 lakh crore for classification as an upper-layer non-banking financial company, a category in which Tata Sons already figures.
Tata Sons remains the only company on the RBI’s upper-layer list, first published in September 2022, that has not met the mandatory listing requirement.
