City
Epaper

Infra spending, private consumption keep India's financial institutions resilient

By IANS | Updated: November 13, 2025 15:30 IST

New Delhi, Nov 13 Global banks have a steady outlook in 2026 amid increasing political uncertainties, a report ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 13 Global banks have a steady outlook in 2026 amid increasing political uncertainties, a report said on Thursday, adding that structural improvements and good economic prospects keep India's financial institutions resilient.

"India's infrastructure spending and private consumption will support robust economic growth. We see good prospects for the economy over the next couple of years. India's low US trade exposure reduces tariff risks," according to the report from S&P Global Ratings.

"Banks are operating in volatile times when significant policy decisions and regional conflicts could disrupt financial markets and rapidly change the economic environment," said S&P Global Ratings credit analyst, Emmanuel Volland, regarding the global banking landscape.

Regarding the Indian financial landscape, the firm said that even though stress pockets have emerged in unsecured personal loans and microfinance loans, the underwriting standards for secured retail loans are healthy, and delinquencies in this segment remain manageable.

It forecasted global banks’ credit losses to increase to $655 billion in 2026, up 7.5 per cent on-year, before the rise in losses slowing in 2027.

The bulk of the incremental loss is expected in Asia‑Pacific, driven by tariff-related uncertainties on lending to China’s micro and small enterprises and its unsecured consumer credit segment.

“We see these losses as manageable for banks, thanks to generally solid profitability and strengthened prudential rules implemented over the past years,” the report said.

S&P Global Ratings identified four downside risks to global bank ratings, such as escalation of geopolitical risks, stronger‑than‑anticipated spillovers from tariff shocks, weakening regulatory environments and evolving risks linked to digitalisation, Gen AI and climate change.

"We expect credit divergence to increase eventually," Volland said, adding that solid bank financial metrics -- including asset quality, profitability and favourable market conditions remain consistent tailwinds.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessIndia’s capital market likely to witness Rs 4 lakh crore capital formation in 2026

NationalSecurity forces neutralise 10-kg IED planted by Maoists in Chhattisgarh

NationalMNS announces first nominee for BMC polls; Yashwant Killedar to contest from Dadar

InternationalPakistan: PTI will not hold talks without street protests, says KP Chief Minister Sohail Afridi

NationalLoan goons: ED seizes 5 luxury cars, Rs 17 lakh of UAE-based kingpin

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSensex, Nifty extend losses for 4th day

BusinessCost Comparison of Renting Vs Buying Commercial Vehicles

BusinessWith offering of 50 new E&P blocks, India's energy sector reaches "transformative milestone": Hardeep Singh Puri

BusinessIndia’s hospital sector revenue to grow up to 20 pc in FY2027 from 18 pc in FY2026: Report

BusinessGovt gives nod for buying military hardware worth Rs 79,000 crore to beef up armed forces