Executive Summary
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has consolidated its existing guidelines regarding the Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) and Unique Transaction Identifier (UTI) into a comprehensive Master Direction. Aimed at improving regulatory accessibility and the ease of doing business, this directive reinforces the global standardization of data reporting for Over-The-Counter (OTC) derivative transactions and broader financial market activities.
Part 1: Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) Framework
1. Applicable Entities
- All non-individual counter-parties undertaking transactions in RBI-regulated markets (Government securities, money markets, forex markets, and OTC derivatives).
- Corporate and non-individual borrowers enjoying aggregate fund-based and non-fund-based exposure of ₹5 crore and above from banks and financial institutions.
- Entities initiating or receiving large value RTGS/NEFT transactions (₹50 crore and above).
2. Specific Changes & Consolidations Required
- Centralized Tracking: Regulated entities must maintain a centralized, electronically accessible repository of LEIs for all corporate clients.
- Validity Enforcement: Reporting and transacting systems must inherently block OTC transactions or large-value remittances if the counterparty’s LEI is expired or invalid.
- Cross-Platform Synchronization: LEI data must be systematically populated across KYC, Trade Finance, and Treasury management platforms without manual data entry to avoid discrepancies.
3. Management Action Plan (LEI)
- Audit & Gap Analysis: Conduct an immediate portfolio audit to identify non-individual clients missing LEIs or possessing LEIs expiring within the next 90 days.
- API Integration: Integrate Treasury and Core Banking Systems (CBS) with the Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) or Legal Entity Identifier India Ltd. (LEIL) database for automated real-time validation.
- Client Outreach Program: Set up automated 60-day and 30-day proactive alert mechanisms for clients regarding their LEI renewal obligations.
- Policy Update: Revise the internal Credit and KYC onboarding policies to categorize LEI procurement as a “Pre-disbursement” or “Pre-trading” condition for applicable thresholds.
Part 2: Unique Transaction Identifier (UTI) Framework
1. Applicable Entities
- Banks, Primary Dealers, and designated Financial Institutions regulated by the RBI.
- Any market-maker or participant engaging in Over-The-Counter (OTC) derivative transactions (Interest Rate, Forex, and Credit derivatives).
- Clearing Corporations acting as Trade Repositories (e.g., CCIL).
2. Specific Changes & Consolidations Required
- Standardized Format: Strict adherence to generating a globally recognized UTI format (typically a 52-character alphanumeric string) for every OTC derivative trade.
- Generation Hierarchy: Implementation of definitive tie-breaker logic to determine which counterparty is responsible for generating the UTI to prevent duplication in Trade Repositories.
- Lifecycle Management: The UTI must remain constant throughout the lifecycle of the transaction, and must be included in all subsequent lifecycle event reporting (e.g., novations, terminations, partial tear-ups).
3. Management Action Plan (UTI)
- System Architecture Upgrade: Upgrade Treasury Management Systems (TMS) to automatically generate, capture, and transmit the 52-character UTI string in compliance with the RBI/CCIL formatting guidelines.
- Logic Implementation: Code global UTI generation logic (tie-breaker rules) into the pre-trade or at-trade booking systems so generation responsibilities are instantly resolved between counterparties.
- Reconciliation Engine: Deploy an automated daily reconciliation process comparing internally booked UTIs against Trade Repository (CCIL) acknowledgments to catch reporting exceptions on T+1.
- SOP Development & Training: Establish Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for the back-office and mid-office teams specifically to handle UTI mismatch disputes and post-trade lifecycle reporting.