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Fitch Says Strong Oversight Will Help Indian Banks Reduce Risks

Fitch Says Strong Oversight Will Help Indian Banks Reduce Risks

Fitch Ratings believes Indian banks are in a stronger position today because of better oversight from the Reserve Bank of India and improved supervisory tools.

These steps are expected to lower systemic risks and support a healthier banking environment. Stronger growth prospects and easing inflation also add to the positive outlook.

Better Regulation and Stronger Risk Controls

Over recent years, regulators have improved how they respond to stress events, track risks, and recover problem loans. Weak areas that once led to high bad loans have been significantly addressed. Important reforms include tougher capital rules, stricter large exposure limits, and stronger enforcement.

The RBI plan to move toward a forward looking expected credit loss system from April 2027 should help banks build provisions more effectively and smooth earnings across the economic cycle.

Cleaner Balance Sheets and Strong Metrics

Indian banks have also gained from the insolvency and bankruptcy system, which has resolved a large volume of stressed loans. Corporate borrowers have reduced debt and overall banking indicators are the strongest seen in many years.

The sector bad loan ratio has fallen sharply while capital levels have improved. Returns are now comparable with many banking systems across the Asia Pacific region.

Growth Outlook Supports Lending Opportunities

Fitch expects India to maintain solid economic growth above six percent over the next two years. This creates room for banks to grow lending profitably without major risks, as long as underwriting remains disciplined.

Inflation is expected to remain stable and strong foreign exchange reserves help protect the economy from external shocks.

Possible Rating Benefits Ahead

If Fitch upgrades the operating environment for banks, private sector banks could see rating upgrades. State owned banks may also see stronger standalone scores, although their issuer ratings would likely remain linked to government support.

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