Banks Bullish on Credit Growth, Eye AI & Green Finance as Top Strategic Shifts

India's banking sector maintains a broadly constructive outlook on credit growth, supported by strong retail and SME lending and early signs of a private capex revival. Services and retail sectors are expected to remain the primary engines for lending, while industrial credit recovers at a measured pace. Strategically, banks are prioritizing the management of climate risk and financial inclusion, with renewable energy financing seen as a high-growth segment. The survey identifies Artificial Intelligence as the most disruptive operational force and cybersecurity as the most pressing risk challenge.

Key Points: Banks See Strong Credit Growth Ahead, AI & Cybersecurity Top Priorities

  • Constructive credit growth outlook
  • AI seen as most disruptive force
  • Cybersecurity is top risk challenge
  • Green finance has strong growth potential
3 min read

FICCI-IBA survey: Banks see constructive credit growth ahead; AI, cybersecurity, green finance top strategic shifts

FICCI-IBA survey reveals banks' constructive outlook on credit growth, driven by retail, SME lending, and a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and green finance.

"Public Sector Banks appear particularly confident in the outlook, reflecting improved asset quality, stronger capital positions..."

New Delhi, April 19

India's banking sector maintains a "broadly constructive outlook" on credit growth over the near term, backed by improved asset quality, stronger capital buffers, robust retail and SME lending, and early signs of a revival in private capex, according to a survey

The 21st round of the FICCI (Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry)-IBA Bankers' Survey conducted during January-February 2026 captures sentiment for the outlook period January to June 2026 and includes 24 banks across public, private, foreign, small finance, and cooperative segments.

The findings of the survey suggest banks expect the current monetary policy stance to remain broadly stable in the coming months, viewing the policy framework as appropriately calibrated to balance growth and inflation considerations. Non-food credit momentum is expected to continue.

"Public Sector Banks appear particularly confident in the outlook, reflecting improved asset quality, stronger capital positions, and increasing traction in corporate lending," the survey findings said. Private banks are taking a balanced and selective approach, while foreign banks show moderate optimism consistent with their focused exposure to corporate and institutional segments."

Sectorally, services and retail are set to remain the main engines of lending. The services outlook reflects strong expectations of expansion, supported by activity in real estate, financial services, logistics, and tourism-related industries. Retail lending is also projected to stay robust, reinforcing its role as a central pillar of banking sector growth. SME credit demand is expected to be "particularly strong," driven by improving activity among smaller enterprises, greater formalization, and policy support for MSMEs.

Industrial credit growth, however, is likely to expand at a more measured pace, pointing to gradual recovery. Term loan demand is seen led by infrastructure, real estate, auto and auto components, pharmaceuticals, and emerging sectors such as data centres and defence-related industries. Working capital demand tracks trade and operational cycles, with textiles, automobiles, pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, and food processing leading on the industrial side, while wholesale and retail trade, transport operators, tourism, and hospitality drive services working capital needs.

The survey flags structural shifts reshaping banking. Artificial Intelligence is perceived as the most disruptive development likely to reshape banking operations, especially in credit underwriting, risk assessment, and collections. Competition and collaboration with fintech and big tech platforms are also "significant forces influencing the future banking business model."

Strategically, banks are prioritising climate risk management and financial inclusion for the coming year, alongside traditional goals like credit growth, asset quality, and digital transformation. The findings "underscore the growing prominence of sustainable finance opportunities, with renewable energy financing emerging as the segment perceived to have the strongest growth potential."

On risks, cybersecurity risk is cited as the most pressing challenge confronting banks today," reflecting rapid digitalization and the need for stronger tech resilience.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see the confidence in SME lending. As a small business owner, access to timely credit without excessive paperwork is a game-changer. The mention of green finance is also promising – we need more support for sustainable business practices.
R
Rohit P
While the outlook is positive, I hope banks don't become over-reliant on retail lending again. We saw what happened with unsecured loans. A balanced growth across sectors, especially the revival in industrial capex, is what will create lasting jobs and real wealth.
S
Sarah B
The focus on cybersecurity as the top risk is spot on. With UPI and digital payments being so ubiquitous in India now, a single major breach could shake public trust immensely. Banks must invest heavily in this area, not just treat it as a compliance checkbox.
V
Vikram M
Public sector banks showing confidence is a big shift from a decade ago! The cleanup of NPAs and stronger capital buffers seem to be paying off. Now, the challenge is to maintain this discipline while embracing AI and fintech collaborations. Jai Hind!
K
Kavya N
Renewable energy financing as a top growth segment is excellent news for our climate goals. Hope banks create simple, attractive green loan products for individuals too – for solar rooftops, EVs, etc. This survey gives a very holistic picture. 👍
M
Michael

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