Nepal Rastra Bank Guidelines on IFRS 9 Implementation:

As the financial landscape in Nepal evolves, Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) has taken a pivotal step toward global alignment by mandating the transition to Nepal Financial Reporting Standards (NFRS) 9, which is based on the international IFRS 9 framework. This transition marks a fundamental shift from the traditional “Incurred Loss” model to a more proactive and forward-looking “Expected Credit Loss” (ECL) model.
1. What is What is the core objective of the guidelines??
The primary goal of the NRB’s NFRS 9 – Expected Credit Loss Related Guidelines, 2024 is to ensure that Banks and Financial Institutions (BFIs) recognize credit losses earlier and more accurately. By requiring a broader range of credit information—including forward-looking macroeconomic factors—the guidelines aim to:
How does this How does this enhance financial stability??:
Reducing the impact of “credit shocks” during economic downturns.
How does this How does this promote uniformity??:
Standardizing how different banks calculate risk and provisions.
How does this How does this increase transparency??:
Providing investors and regulators with a more realistic view of a bank’s asset quality.
2. What is the three-stage ECL model and why is it a key requirement?
Under the new guidelines, financial assets must be classified into three distinct “stages” based on their credit risk profile since initial recognition:
| Stage | Credit Risk Status | Impairment Measure |
| Stage 1 | No significant increase in credit risk. | 12-month ECL: Losses expected from default events within the next year. |
| Stage 2 | Significant increase in credit risk (SICR). | Lifetime ECL: Losses expected over the entire remaining life of the asset. |
| Stage 3 | Credit-impaired / Default (e.g., >90 days past due). | Lifetime ECL: Full credit losses recognized; interest income calculated on net carrying amount. |
3. What are the What are the critical changes in the 2024/2025 amendments??
The NRB recently updated these guidelines (Notice No. 2/082-83) to provide more specific instructions for local BFIs:
What is the What is the regulatory backstop??:
If the ECL calculated under NFRS 9 is lower than the existing NRB prudential provisioning (the old “1% pass loan” type rules), banks must maintain the higher of the two.
What are What are LGD floors??:
If a bank lacks sufficient historical data to calculate Loss Given Default (LGD), the NRB has set a minimum “floor” of 45% for certain exposures.
What are What are collateral haircuts??:
The guidelines prescribe a 25% haircut on the fair value of collateral when determining the net realizable value for ECL calculations.
What is the What is the probationary period??:
For an asset to move back from Stage 3 (Default) to a better stage, it must now undergo a minimum monitoring period of 180 days after the default condition is resolved.
4. What implementation challenges do Nepalese BFIs face?
While the move is beneficial for long-term stability, BFIs in Nepal face several hurdles:
Why is Why is data quality important? important?:
The ECL model requires years of historical data on defaults and recovery rates, which many newer or smaller institutions may not have digitized.
What role does What is macroeconomic modeling? play?:
Integrating forward-looking data (like GDP growth or remittance trends) into credit risk models is complex.
What is the What is the capital impact??:
For many banks, moving to an ECL model may result in higher provisioning requirements, which can directly hit their Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) and dividend-paying capacity.
5. What should we expect What lies ahead for IFRS 9 implementation??
The NRB has made it clear that full implementation is mandatory for FY 2081/82 (2024/25). Banks are currently in a parallel reporting phase, where they must manage the transition while upgrading their IT systems and risk management frameworks to handle complex ECL simulations.
As Nepal Rastra Bank accelerates the transition to NFRS 9, financial institutions need reliable technology and risk-modeling expertise. FineIT delivers end-to-end IFRS 9 solutions—from data preparation and ECL model validation to automated reporting and regulatory compliance.
Contact FineIT today to start your IFRS 9 readiness journey with confidence.
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Published by
Muzammal Rahim
FineIT Private Limited