11 Mar, 16:14 - Indian

Nifty IT 29651.7 (-1.24)

Nifty 50 23866.85 (-1.63)

Nifty Smallcap 100 16414.85 (-0.36)

Nifty Pharma 23348.05 (0.41)

SENSEX 76863.71 (-1.72)

Nifty Next 50 66498.65 (-1.08)

Nifty Bank 55735.75 (-2.13)

Nifty Midcap 100 56461.1 (-1.25)

11 Mar, 16:14 - Global

NIKKEI 225 55025.37 (1.43)

HANG SENG 25898.77 (-0.24)

S&P 6813.25 (0.21)


Economy News

You are Here : Home > News > Economy News >

(11 Mar 2026, 11:51)

RBI issues Amendment Directions on Counterparty Credit Risk - Add-on factors for computation of Potential Future Exposure


The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has amended its capital adequacy framework for commercial banks, introducing clearer rules on how lenders must calculate and maintain capital against counterparty credit risk (CCR) exposures. The changes, issued under the RBI (Commercial Banks – Prudential Norms on Capital Adequacy) Third Amendment Directions, 2026, take effect immediately.

RBI announced a significant operational change in the form of revision of a table that specifies add-on factors for market-related off-balance sheet items. The central bank noted that equity contracts now carry add-on factors of 6%, 8%, and 10% for maturities of up to one year, one to five years, and over five years respectively. Precious metals, excluding gold, attract 7%, 7%, and 8% across the aforementioned maturity bands, while other commodities are pegged at 10%, 12%, and 15%.

The RBI also noted that banks acting as clearing members of SEBI-recognised stock exchanges in equity and commodity derivatives segments must compute and maintain a capital charge for CCR. The add-on factors for equities, precious metals, and other commodities apply exclusively in such cases. On consolidated capital computation, banks must now include CCR exposures of all entities consolidated under the capital adequacy framework’s scope of application.

RBI stated that for contracts reset periodically to zero market value, the residual maturity will be counted from the next reset date. Interest rate contracts with residual maturities exceeding one year will be subject to a minimum add-on floor of 0.50%. Regarding Qualifying Central Counterparties (QCCPs), a 2% risk weight applies to a bank’s trade exposure. However, a clearing member bank is exempt from maintaining capital against QCCP trade exposure if it is not obligated to reimburse clients for losses, provided it holds a written legal opinion confirming this protection.


More News

Capital Market Publishers India Pvt. Ltd

401, Swastik Chambers, Sion Trombay Road, Chembur, Mumbai - 400 071, India.

Formed in 1986, Capital Market Publishers India Pvt Ltd pioneered corporate databases and stock market magazine in India. Today Capitaline corporate database cover more than 35,000 listed and unlisted Indian companies. Latest technologies and standards are constantly being adopted to keep the database user-friendly, comprehensive and up-to-date.

Over the years the scope of the databases has enlarged to cover economy, sectors, mutual funds, commodities and news. Many innovative online and offline applications of these databases have been developed to meet various common as well as customized requirements.

While all the leading institutional investors use Capitaline databases, Capital Market magazine gives access to the databases to individual investors through Corporate Scoreboard. Besides stock market and company-related articles, the magazine’s independent and insightful coverage includes mutual funds, taxation, commodities and personal finance.

Copyright @ Capital Market Publishers India Pvt.Ltd

Designed, Developed and Content powered by CMOTS InfoTech (ISO 9001:2015 & ISO/IEC 27001:2022 Certified)

Site best viewed in Internet Explorer Edge ,   Google Chrome 115.0.5790.111 + ,   Mozilla Firefox 115.0.3 + ,   Opera 30.0+, Safari 16.4.1 +