ADVERTISEMENT

Crisil Says India Loan Growth Could Hit Zero This Financial Year

Indian banks’ loan growth will slow to nil to 1% in the year started April 1, according to the Indian unit of S&P Global Ratings.

Crisil Says India Loan Growth Could Hit Zero This Financial Year
An empty banking hall of the State Bank of India is seen in New Delhi. (Photographer: Sondeep Shankar/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Indian banks’ loan growth will slow to nil to 1% in the year started April 1, according to the Indian unit of S&P Global Ratings.

That’s lower than 6.1% the previous fiscal year, which was already a multi-decade low. Corporate borrowings, which account for half of total credit, will be worst-hit and loans to individuals will decelerate to “low single digits” from “mid teens” in the past few years, Crisil Ltd. said in a report Monday.

Reeling under the worst bad-loan ratio in the world, Indian banks have turned risk-averse as the strict shelter-at-home rules have shuttered businesses and left millions jobless. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is counting on fresh credit to spur an economy hurtling toward a rare contraction.

“This crisis is unprecedented and so will its economic fallout be,” said Crisil’s Senior Director Krishnan Sitaraman.

Crisil Says India Loan Growth Could Hit Zero This Financial Year

Even before the pandemic, India’s $1.7 trillion financial sector had been weakened by a festering shadow banking crisis that surfaced in 2018 and spilled over into banks and mutual funds, pushing up bad loans and eventually leading to the bailout of a private sector bank in March.

Crisil predicts loan growth will pick up to high single digits in the next financial year.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.