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Big Banks or More Agile Banks?

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Source: BS

Context:

India’s banking sector is witnessing a major shift driven by digital innovation, competition from fintechs, evolving customer needs, and heightened regulatory expectations. This has sparked an important policy and market question: Are large banks better suited for future challenges, or are smaller, more agile banks the real drivers of innovation?

Big Banks: Strengths and Limitations

Big Banks in India include institutions such as SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and Bank of Baroda, known for their nationwide presence and large balance sheets.

Strengths
  • High Capital Strength & Systemic Stability: Ability to absorb shocks due to diversified loan books and strong capital buffers.
  • Trust & Brand Equity: Long-standing customer relationships and high public confidence.
  • Comprehensive Product Suite: Retail, corporate, international banking, treasury, insurance, and wealth management.
  • Risk Diversification: Exposure across geographies and sectors minimises concentration risk.
Limitations
  • Slower Decision-Making due to layers of hierarchy.
  • Legacy Technology Systems that make modernization expensive and time-consuming.
  • High Operating Costs due to branches, staff, and compliance requirements.
  • Limited Flexibility to adopt niche, experimental business models.

More Agile Banks: Strengths and Limitations

Agile banks include small finance banks (SFBs), payments banks, digital-first banks, and tech-driven NBFCs/neo-banks.

Strengths
  • Rapid Innovation with digital-native operations, AI-based underwriting, and customer-centric products.
  • Lower Operational Costs due to limited branch presence and automated systems.
  • Niche Focus on underserved segments like MSMEs, gig workers, rural markets, and young consumers.
  • Faster Credit Delivery using alternative data and real-time analytics.
Limitations
  • Smaller Capital Buffers, making them vulnerable to credit shocks.
  • Limited Product Range compared to universal banks.
  • Lower Trust Levels, especially during financial stress episodes.
  • Compliance Burden, as smaller institutions have less capacity for regulatory complexity.

RBI Norms for Bank Mergers in India

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) plays a central role in approving, regulating, and supervising all bank mergers. RBI ensures that mergers strengthen systemic stability, protect depositors, and maintain financial discipline.

Key RBI Norms & Requirements for Bank Mergers
  • Prior Approval Under the Banking Regulation Act
    • RBI approval is mandatory under Sections 44A, 45, and related provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.
    • Both boards must approve the proposal before seeking RBI’s consent.
  • Fit-and-Proper Criteria for Management
    • Post-merger boards and senior management must meet RBI’s “fit and proper” standards concerning integrity, experience, and financial soundness.
  • Financial Health Assessment
    RBI evaluates:
    • Capital adequacy (CRAR),
    • Asset quality (NPA ratios),
    • Liquidity profile,
    • Exposure concentration,
    • Governance track record, and
    • Compliance history.
  • Customer & Branch Integration Guidelines
    • The merged entity must ensure seamless transition of:
      • Accounts
      • IFSC codes
      • Loan servicing
      • Digital platforms
    • No disruption to essential banking services is permitted.
  • Compliance With Prudential Norms
    • The merged bank must meet regulatory requirements on:
      • Capital adequacy
      • Priority sector lending
      • Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR)
      • Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR)
      • Exposure norms
      • Corporate governance standards
  • Special Cases: RBI-Directed Mergers
    • Under Section 45 of the BR Act, RBI may force mergers to protect depositors (e.g., Global Trust Bank with Oriental Bank of Commerce, 2004).
    • In such cases, the acquiring bank gets regulatory flexibility for a transition period.

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