Context:
The June 2025 FSR presents the RBI’s biannual assessment of systemic risks and financial sector resilience in India. Released against a backdrop of rising global economic and geopolitical uncertainty, the report strikes a cautiously optimistic tone on India’s macro-financial stability but flags key vulnerabilities.
Key Takeaways
Global Risks and India’s Exposure
- External headwinds from trade policy conflicts, geopolitical tensions (e.g., Middle East), and volatile capital flows have intensified.
- A 100 bps slowdown in global growth could shave off 30 bps from India’s GDP growth.
- Financial markets remain highly sensitive to interest rate signals and debt sustainability concerns, especially in advanced economies.
Macroeconomic Fundamentals Remain Strong
- India’s GDP is projected to grow steadily at 6.5% in FY26, supported by rural consumption, infrastructure spending, and corporate deleveraging.
- Inflation is well-contained, with food prices softening and imported inflation risks minimal due to stable crude prices.
- Current Account Deficit (CAD) remains manageable and forex reserves are robust, providing external sector stability.
Banking Sector: Strong but Watchful
Capital and Profitability
- Banks are well-capitalised: CRAR remains comfortably above regulatory norms, even under severe stress scenarios.
- Profitability metrics like Return on Assets (RoA) and Return on Equity (RoE) have improved, aided by higher operating efficiency and lower provisioning needs.
Asset Quality
- GNPA and NNPA are at multi-decade lows.
- However, RBI’s stress tests show potential rise in GNPA to 5–6% by 2027 under adverse scenarios.
- The most vulnerable segments are:
- Unsecured personal loans
- Retail credit in Tier-III cities and youth borrowers
- Private sector banks with higher exposure to risky segments
Credit Growth Deceleration
- Bank credit growth has slowed sharply, driven by:
- Tighter risk-weight norms on personal loans and NBFC exposure.
- Cautious lending approach amid rising delinquency signals.
Liquidity and Cost of Funds
- Banks face pressure on Net Interest Margins (NIMs) due to:
- A higher share of EBLR-linked loans which reprice rapidly.
- Increasing reliance on high-cost term deposits and CDs, eroding margins.
- The CRR cut by 100 bps has helped offset some of this pressure.
NBFCs, Mutual Funds, and Insurance: Mixed Signals
NBFCs
- Continue to show capital adequacy and profitability.
- Stress is emerging in personal loan portfolios, especially fintech-driven, low-ticket lending.
Mutual Funds and Clearing Corporations
- Stress tests show resilience, though market volatility remains a concern.
- Regulatory tightening includes stricter disclosure, monitoring, and cyber resilience measures.
Insurance Sector
- Maintains solvency well above the regulatory minimum.
- Digitisation of premium payments and growing penetration of NPS/APY has strengthened long-term sectoral depth.
Corporate Bond Market
- India’s bond market saw a record ₹9.9 trillion in fresh issuances in FY25.
- However, secondary market activity remains subdued, limiting market depth.
- Credit spreads widened marginally due to liquidity constraints and global risk sentiment, despite softening yields.
Regulatory & Institutional Developments
- RBI and other regulators are aligning with global standards:
- Digital Lending Norms to improve borrower protection and app transparency.
- Cybersecurity frameworks like FIRE and MNRL for robust threat monitoring.
- SEBI reforms in derivatives, investor grievance redressal, and FPI regulation.
- Deposit insurance coverage now spans 97.6% of accounts.
- Significant activity in GIFT City, enhancing India’s offshore finance capacity.
Risks and Outlook
Emerging Concerns
- Rising delinquency in unsecured retail loans.
- Shift in bank deposit profiles from CASA to term deposits.
- Credit growth slowdown due to risk aversion and regulatory tightening.
- Rising global instability, commodity shocks, and market corrections.
Positive Anchors
- Strong capital buffers across institutions.
- Regulatory agility and forward-looking policy reforms.
- Improved corporate balance sheets and private investment sentiment.