PSU Banks Set to Outpace System Credit Growth, Says HSBC Report

HSBC Global Investment Research projects that Public Sector Banks (PSBs) will achieve loan growth exceeding the broader system by 100-300 basis points over the medium term. This outperformance is driven by strengthened balance sheets, improved capital positions, and healthier asset quality following a prolonged clean-up cycle. The report notes that credit growth will be broad-based across corporate, MSME, and retail segments, supported by better pricing discipline and a favorable loan mix. With comfortable capital buffers and improving return ratios, PSU banks are positioned as key beneficiaries of India's ongoing credit cycle, trading at a discount to private peers despite their enhanced fundamentals.

Key Points: PSU Banks to Outperform Credit Growth: HSBC Report

  • Stronger balance sheets & capital
  • Improved asset quality & underwriting
  • Broad-based corporate & retail demand
  • Operating leverage to boost earnings
  • Trading at discount to private peers
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PSU banks to outperform system credit growth over medium term: HSBC Report

HSBC report forecasts PSU banks will grow loans 100-300bp faster than system, driven by strong balance sheets and broad-based demand.

"PSBs should achieve loan growth that is 100-300bp higher than system credit growth - HSBC Report"

New Delhi, January 13

Public sector banks are expected to outperform broader system credit growth over the medium term, noted HSBC Global Investment Research report. The report says that, "PSBs should achieve loan growth that is 100-300bp higher than system credit growth," driven by balance sheet strength, improved underwriting standards and sustained momentum in corporate and retail demand.

In its latest outlook on Indian PSU banks, HSBC said the sector is entering a phase of structurally stronger growth following a prolonged clean-up cycle. "PSBs are well placed to gain market share given improved capital positions, healthier balance sheets and competitive pricing," the report noted, adding that credit growth is likely to remain broad-based across corporate, MSME and retail segments.

HSBC highlighted that asset quality has materially improved across the PSU banking system, with legacy stress largely resolved. According to the report, "Gross NPL ratios for PSBs have declined to multi-year lows, supported by recoveries, write-offs and tighter credit underwriting," This, coupled with lower incremental slippages, is expected to support profitability and risk appetite.

On margins, the brokerage said that while net interest margins (NIMs) may moderate from peak levels, they should remain structurally stronger than historical averages. "We expect margins to normalise but remain well above pre-Covid levels, supported by better loan mix and improved pricing discipline," the report said.

The report also pointed to operating leverage as a key earnings driver over FY26-27. "Cost-to-income ratios should trend lower as revenue growth outpaces operating expense growth, aided by digitisation and branch productivity gains," it said. This is expected to translate into sustained improvement in return ratios.

HSBC further noted that capital adequacy across PSU banks is no longer a binding constraint. "Most PSBs now operate with comfortable capital buffers, reducing dependence on frequent equity dilution, " the report said, adding that internal accruals should be sufficient to fund medium-term growth plans.

On valuations, the brokerage maintained a constructive stance, stating that "PSU banks continue to trade at a discount to private peers despite improved returns, asset quality and governance." HSBC believes this creates scope for re-rating, particularly if return on equity sustains in the mid-teens.

Overall, the report concluded that the sector offers "mid- to high-teens return potential over the medium term," underpinned by faster-than-system loan growth, stable asset quality and improving profitability metrics, positioning PSU banks as a key beneficiary of India's ongoing credit cycle.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
Good analysis, but I hope this growth is inclusive. MSME and retail segments are mentioned, which is positive. PSU banks have a huge network in rural and semi-urban areas. Their strength should translate to better credit access for small businesses and farmers, not just large corporates.
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Rahul R
Finally some positive outlook for PSU banks! The report mentions improved governance and pricing discipline. As a customer of both private and public sector banks, I've felt service at PSU banks is getting better. If they maintain this, they can truly compete.
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Sarah B
Respectfully, reports like this often sound optimistic. The key will be execution on the ground. Can the old bureaucratic culture in some PSU banks keep up with the agile, tech-driven models of private banks? Improved numbers are one thing, sustained cultural change is another.
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Aman W
The point about capital adequacy is crucial. No more frequent FPOs diluting shareholder value. If internal accruals can fund growth, it shows real financial strength. This could be a multi-year story for the sector. Time to review my portfolio allocation.
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Kavya N
Digitisation and branch productivity gains leading to lower cost ratios is the silent hero here. As more Indians go digital, PSU banks that modernise their operations can become much more efficient. This isn't just about loans, it's about a fundamental operational upgrade.

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