The Reserve Bank of India has issued the finalized Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) Directions, 2026, superseding previous operational frameworks. The amendments aim to accelerate MSME liquidity by removing onboarding frictions, harmonizing operational guidelines, and fortifying the capital structure of platform operators. Immediate strategic and operational realignments are required by platform participants to remain compliant and leverage the improved framework.
1. Applicable Entities
The revised directions have direct implications for the following stakeholders within the TReDS ecosystem:
- TReDS Operators: Directly regulated entities (e.g., RXIL, Invoicemart, M1xchange) that must overhaul their operational engines, compliance protocols, and capital structures.
- MSME Sellers: The primary beneficiaries, experiencing drastically reduced compliance burdens and faster time-to-liquidity.
- Financiers & Buyers: Required to update their API integrations and internal risk-assessment models as TReDS operators transition to the harmonized framework.
2. Analysis of Key Amendments
Amendment A: Rationalisation and Harmonisation of the Regulatory Framework
Specific Changes Required: The RBI has eliminated fragmented, platform-specific operational rules in favor of a standardized, harmonized framework. While granting authorized entities flexibility in framing internal procedural guidelines, core metrics such as settlement timelines, dispute resolution mechanisms, and data reporting formats to the RBI must now strictly align with a unified national standard.
Management Action Plan
- Gap Analysis: Legal and Compliance teams must immediately map existing Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) against the new Master Directions to identify procedural deviations.
- SLA Revisions: Update Service Level Agreements (SLAs) with Financiers and Buyers to reflect standardized settlement cycles.
- IT/System Upgrades: IT operations must update reporting modules to generate standardized compliance data in the exact formats newly prescribed by the RBI.
Amendment B: Removal of Due Diligence Requirement for MSME Sellers
Specific Changes Required: This is a landmark shift. TReDS operators are no longer mandated to conduct extensive KYC (Know Your Customer) or financial due diligence on MSME sellers. Because the credit risk in factoring is primarily absorbed by the Buyer’s credit profile, the RBI has shifted the compliance burden away from the vulnerable small business. Udyam Registration and basic identity verification are now sufficient.
Management Action Plan
- Process Re-engineering: Product managers must redesign the platform onboarding UI/UX to remove mandatory uploads of historical financial statements, tax returns, or extensive KYC forms for MSMEs.
- Risk Policy Update: Chief Risk Officers (CRO) must amend internal risk policies to explicitly exempt MSME sellers from credit-score gating, shifting the weight entirely to Buyer and Financier risk profiling.
- Resource Reallocation: Reallocate operations staff previously dedicated to MSME document verification toward buyer acquisition and financier relationship management.
Amendment C: Revision of Capital Requirements for Operators
Specific Changes Required: To ensure systemic stability and the ability to handle increased transaction volumes securely, the RBI has revised the capital requirements (Net Owned Fund – NOF) for entities operating TReDS platforms. This is to safeguard against operational risks, cyber threats, and to ensure operators have the “skin in the game” to maintain robust tech infrastructure.
Management Action Plan
- Capital Assessment: The CFO must immediately calculate the current NOF strictly as per the RBI’s prescribed accounting standards and compare it against the newly revised threshold.
- Board Resolution & Capital Raise: If there is a shortfall, immediately convene a Board of Directors meeting to authorize the raising of additional equity capital or restructuring of retained earnings.
- Timeline Management: Draft a formal transition roadmap to meet the new capital adequacy buffer within the RBI’s permitted grandfathering period (if applicable) and submit this roadmap to the Department of Payment and Settlement Systems (DPSS), RBI.
The RBI’s June 2026 TReDS Directions represent a shift towards scale and velocity. By removing the friction of MSME due diligence, transaction volumes are expected to surge. Consequently, the harmonized rules and increased capital requirements ensure the ecosystem doesn’t fracture under this new scale.
Immediate Action: A cross-functional task force comprising Legal, IT, Risk, and Finance heads should be formed immediately to track the implementation of the Action Plans detailed above within a 30-day compliance window.