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BackRBI Report: Indian Banks' Bad Loans Expected to Rise Marginally by 2028
RBI Report: Indian Banks' Bad Loans Expected to Rise Marginally by 2028
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Times of India6/30/2026Business1 min readIndia

RBI Report: Indian Banks' Bad Loans Expected to Rise Marginally by 2028

Quick Look

  • RBI's Financial Stability Report projects Indian banks' bad loans to rise slightly to 1.9% by March 2028 under a baseline scenario, from 1.8% in March 2026.
  • Capital ratios are expected to moderate, but remain above regulatory norms even under adverse scenarios, with no bank projected to breach the minimum CRAR requirement.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

RBI's bi-annual Financial Stability Report analyzes the capital and asset quality positions of select scheduled commercial banks over a two-year horizon. The report uses macro stress tests and sensitivity analysis.

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Banks’ bad loans, which are at a multi-decadal low, are expected to rise marginally to 1.9% by March 2028 under a baseline scenario from 1.8% in March 2026, even as capital ratios are projected to moderate over the same period according to RBI’s bi-annual Financial Stability Report.

According to the macro stress test results and sensitivity analysis by RBI, the capital and asset quality positions of 46 select scheduled commercial banks over a two-year horizon up to March 2028 are expected to remain stable. Under adverse scenario 1, the aggregate gross NPA (non-performing asset) ratio is projected to rise to 3.8% by March 2028, while under adverse scenario 2, it is projected to rise to 4.1%.

Capital buffers remain above norms even under adverse scenarios. Aggregate CRAR fell from 17.5% in March 2026 to 15.6% by March 2028 under the baseline and dropped to 13.3% and 13.0% under adverse scenario 1 and 2 respectively. CET1 slid from 15.2% to 13.9% under baseline and further to 11.6% and 11.4% under the two adverse stress scenarios.

The report said no bank would breach the minimum regulatory CRAR requirement of 9% under baseline projections by March 2028. “Strong growth, low inflation, healthy balance sheets of financial and non-financial firms, and ample buffers have helped preserve macro-financial stability,” RBI governor Sanjay Malhotra said in a foreword to the report.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Aggregate gross NPA ratio to rise to 1.9% by March 2028 (baseline).

    Likely · Medium term

  • No bank to breach minimum regulatory CRAR of 9% by March 2028.

    Very likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • What specific factors contribute to the projected rise in NPAs?
  • What measures are banks taking to manage moderating capital ratios?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Times of India.

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