Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) occupy a unique space in the Indian financial ecosystem. While they are incorporated under the Companies Act, 2013, their operations as financial intermediaries subject them to rigorous oversight by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Secretarial compliance for an NBFC is therefore a dual responsibility, requiring adherence to both corporate law and specialized financial regulations.
This guide provides an in-depth exploration of the compliance landscape for NBFCs, covering statutory registers, filing requirements, and the critical process of secretarial due diligence.
Under the Companies Act, 2013, maintaining statutory registers is not optional; it is a mandatory requirement to ensure transparency and accountability. There are approximately 15 registers prescribed under the Act, some applicable to all companies and others triggered by specific events.
General Corporate Registers
Financial and Transactional Registers
Given the nature of NBFCs, registers related to loans and investments are critical:
Registers for Charges and Liabilities
NBFCs must maintain a rigorous filing schedule. Failure to meet these timelines can lead to penalties and regulatory scrutiny from both the MCA and the RBI.
Annual Financial Reporting
An NBFC must prepare its Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss account as of March 31st every year.
RBI Returns (The DNBS Series)
The RBI requires various returns categorized under the DNBS (Department of Non-Banking Supervision) series to monitor the health of the sector.
Return name | Description | Period & timeline |
DNBS01 | Important Financial Parameters: Assets, liabilities, P&L, and exposure to sensitive sectors | Quarterly; within 21 days |
DNBS02 | Important Financial Parameters for NBFCs-BL: Covers prudential norm compliance | Quarterly; within 21 days |
DNBS03 | Important Prudential Parameters: Capital adequacy and provisioning details. | Quarterly; within 21 days |
DNBS04A | ALM Return: Focuses on short-term dynamic liquidity. | Quarterly; within 21 days |
DNBS04B | ALM Return: Focuses on structural liquidity and interest rate sensitivity. | Monthly; within 15 days. |
DNBS08 | CRILC Main: Credit information on borrowers with aggregate exposure of ₹5 Crore+ | Monthly; within 15 days. |
DNBS09 | CRILC Weekly: Report on defaulted borrowers with exposure of ₹5 Crore+ | Weekly; by the following Wednesday. |
DNBS10 | Statutory Auditor’s Certificate (SAC): An annual certificate based on audited books | Yearly; within 5 days of signing audit report. |
DNBS13 | Overseas Investment Return: Details of all overseas investments (even if NIL). | Quarterly; within 21 days |
NBFCs are subject to several other specialized reporting requirements:
Secretarial due diligence is a systematic evaluation of an NBFC’s corporate governance and legal documentation. It ensures that the company is not just checking boxes but is operating within a robust compliance culture.
Key Areas of Diligence:
For an NBFC, compliance is not merely a legal obligation, it is a business necessity. The interplay between statutory registers, regular DNBS filings, and periodic due diligence creates a safety net for the organization. By maintaining “accurate and complete data” and adhering strictly to timelines, NBFCs can maintain their regulatory standing and foster trust with investors and the public.
Secretarial compliance is the foundation upon which a stable and successful financial institution is built. In an environment of increasing regulatory scrutiny, being proactive is the only way to ensure long-term sustainability.
It simply means following all the legal rules an NBFC must obey like maintaining proper records, filing forms on time, and following RBI and company law requirements.
Because it keeps the NBFC legally safe. Proper compliance avoids penalties, builds trust with regulators and investors, and ensures the company runs smoothly.
No. An NBFC must follow both:
Statutory registers are official records that store key company information, like shareholders, directors, loans, and investments. They act as the company’s permanent legal record.
Some returns are filed monthly, some quarterly, and some annually. These filings help RBI monitor the financial health of the NBFC.
Missing deadlines can lead to penalties, fines, regulatory scrutiny, and in serious cases, restrictions on business operations.
It is a legal health check of the NBFC. It reviews documents, records, approvals, and governance practices to ensure everything is legally in order.
It is commonly done during:
Yes. Good compliance increases confidence. Customers feel safer, and investors trust that the NBFC is well-managed and legally sound.
No. It’s about good governance, transparency, and accountability. Proper compliance helps an NBFC grow sustainably without legal or regulatory trouble.