rbi: Indian lenders strong enough to counter worst of macro stress: RBI

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India’s banks and non-bank lenders are in a position to withstand even the worst of macro-economic stress emanating from global spillovers and the central bank will focus on management of shocks and building buffers in the financial system.

The central bank’s latest Financial Stability Report (FSR) indicates that in a baseline scenario, the gross non-performing assets in the banking system will improve to 4.9% by September 2023. The total bad loan ratio of the banking system is steadily trending down to a seven-year low of 5.0% in September 2022, while net non-performing assets have dropped to ten-year low of 1.3% of total assets.

The financial system stress indicator came in at 0.41%. The central bank noted that while the onset of the Russia-Ukraine war triggered a spurt in systemic financial stress, it was at a level milder than what was witnessed during the first wave of the pandemic.

“Amidst global shocks and challenges, the Indian economy presents a picture of resilience,” Shaktikanta Das, Governor, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) noted in the foreword to the FSR. “Financial stability has been maintained. Domestic financial markets have remained stable and fully functional… Stress test results presented in this issue of the FSR indicate that banks would be able to withstand even severe stress conditions, should they materialise.”

The tests also indicate that under a severe stress scenario, bad loans for state-run banks could swell from 6.5% in September 2022 to 9.4% in September 2023. For private sector banks bad loans could go up from 3.3% to 5.8% during the same period.

In terms of capital position of banks, the stress tests indicate that the Capital to Risk Weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR) of 46 major banks is projected to slip from 15.8% in September 2022 to 14.9% by September 2023.

It may go down to 14.0% in the medium stress scenario and to 13.1% under the severe stress scenario by September 2023, but it will stay above the minimum capital requirement.
None of the 46 banks would breach the regulatory minimum capital requirement of 9% in the next one year, even in a severely stressed situation, RBI tests show.

“Macro-stress tests for credit risk reveal that banks are well-capitalised and would be able to comply with the minimum capital requirements even under adverse stress scenarios,” the central bank noted in its report. “Banks are capable of absorbing macroeconomic shocks even in the absence of any further capital infusion by stakeholders.”

The Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 46 banks may decline from 12.8% in September 2022 to 12.1% by September 2023 under the baseline scenario. Even in a severely stressed macroeconomic environment, the aggregate CET1 capital ratio would deplete only by 210 basis points, which would not breach the minimum regulatory norms.

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