Personal Loan Growth contracted to 13.7 percent in the third quarter of FY25
Overview
Personal loan growth has slowed to 13.7% by December 2024, down from 15.2% in September, due to regulatory warnings. Total bank credit growth also slowed, despite the fact that all population categories continued to rise by double digits. Lending for commerce, finance, and professional services increased, while credit for agriculture and manufacturing remained stable. Aggregate deposits increased by 11%, with term deposits showing significant growth.
Personal Loan Growth slowed down
Personal loan growth slowed in the December quarter due to regulatory concerns about potential overheating. According to quarterly data from the Reserve Bank of India, the annual growth rate for the personal loan segment was 13.7% in December 2024, down from 15.2% in September. Total bank credit growth also slowed to 11.8% in December 2024, down from 12.6% in September.
Further, at the end of January this year, RBI released key data according to which, bank lending to the personal loan segment moderated in December to 14.9% year on year, owing mostly to a reduction in growth in other personal loans, vehicle loans, and credit card outstanding. The RBI has issued statistics on sectoral bank credit deployment for December 2024, which was collected from 41 select commercial banks and accounts for approximately 95% of total non-food credit deployed by commercial banks.
The banking regulator stated that all population categories in rural, semi-urban, urban, and metropolitan branches of banks experienced double-digit credit growth, albeit with some slowdown which was true for both public and private sector banks.
Credit distribution
Previously, the RBI had presented that the growth in non-food bank credit as of the fortnight ending December 27, 2024, slowed to 12.4% on a year-over-year (y-o-y) basis from 15.8% in the same fortnight the year before. The data showed that bank lending to agricultural and related businesses increased by 12.5% year over year as of the fortnight ending December 27, 2024, compared to 19.4% for the same fortnight the year before.
Additionally, industry credit growth stayed relatively constant at 7.4% annually. Out of all the major industries, food processing, petroleum, coal products and nuclear fuels, and all engineering had the highest growth rates. Nonetheless, the infrastructure segment’s credit growth slowed.
Further, credit growth in the services sector also slowed to 13.0% year-over-year as of the fortnight ending December 27, 2024. For the equivalent two weeks of the prior year, the growth was 20%. The primary trigger of the moderation was the slower expansion of lending to trade segments and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs). However, credit growth for professional services and computer software increased year over year.
Recently, RBI stated that the credit to agriculture and industry sectors also saw some slowing in growth, while lending to commerce, finance, and professional/other services increased in the third quarter. About half of the loans granted by banks had interest rates ranging from 8% to 10%, while approximately 16% had interest rates less than 8%. According to the RBI, the remaining loans carried interest rates of 10% or above.
Deposits saw an uptick
Meanwhile, aggregate deposits increased by 11% in December 2024, compared to an 11.7% rise a quarter earlier. Granular data revealed that approximately 80% of incremental term deposits mobilized between April and December 2024 were held in the one to three-year maturity bucket, indicating a potential lag in the softening of banks’ deposit costs. The proportion of total term deposits with an interest rate of 7% or more climbed from 61.4% to 70.8% by December 2024.
Term deposits increased 14.3% year on year, while savings deposits increased by 5.1%. This resulted in a further increase in term deposits’ percentage of total deposits to 62.1% at the end of December, up from 60.3% the previous year.
Q3FY25 Banking Sector Performance
The banking industry reported a mixed quarter, with modest business momentum, high credit costs, and moderate margins. As observed in both public and private sector banks, the growing cost of deposits and heightened competition for funds contributed to the ongoing reduction in net interest margins (NIMs). All segments saw a slowdown in credit growth, with corporate lending recovering slowly as a result of a muted capital expenditure cycle and pressure on large-ticket loan prices. Risks associated with asset quality are still a major worry, especially in unsecured lending, where personal loan and microfinance portfolio slippages are still common.
Systemic credit offtake as of December 31, 2024, was INR 175.9 trillion, representing an 11.3% YoY growth rate that is lower than the 12.6% growth rate from the previous year (excluding merger impact). Our coverage’s overall credit growth stayed modest at about 10.3% year over year. Secured lending, such as home, auto, and SME loans, drove expansion in retail credit, which continued to grow albeit at a slower rate. A slowdown in unsecured lending, which includes credit cards, personal loans, and microlending, was brought on by tighter regulations, increased risk perception, and an increase in delinquencies. HDF Commercial Bank continues to show a modest gain of 3.0% YoY (+0.9% QoQ), while Bandhan bank led the growth with 15.6% YoY (+1.1% QoQ).
Conclusion
To sum up, legal measures led to a decrease in the growth rate of personal loans in December 2024. The expansion of bank credit also moderated. The lending development to professional services, finance, and commerce grew while Manufacturing and agriculture remained stable. Investor’s shifts in their preferences resulted in deposit growth, especially term deposits. The banking industry had mixed results during Q3FY25 so far with concerns regarding asset quality, most notably in unsecured lending, loan growth has slowed with a shift toward an emphasis on secured lending, which is a more positive quality for the industry.
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