India's Q3 FY26 Loan Growth Surges with Stronger Margins, Lower Slippages

System loan growth in India is expected to show improvement in Q3 FY26, supported by better net interest margins and lower slippages in unsecured and microfinance loans. However, deposit flows remain weak, with high credit-deposit ratios posing a challenge. Leading banks like ICICI, Kotak Mahindra, and SBI are projected to perform well, while mid-sized banks such as Karur Vysya and AU Small Finance Bank are also favored. Looking ahead, FY27 earnings may require reassessment due to potential NIM revisions, though NBFCs continue to show strong growth driven by credit demand and declining interest rates.

Key Points: India Q3 FY26 Loan Growth & NIM Outlook | Banking Report

  • Strong loan growth in Q3 FY26
  • Improved net interest margins
  • Lower unsecured loan slippages
  • Steady recovery trends
2 min read

Loan growth in India to be strong in Q3 FY26 with improved net interest margins

System loan growth in India expected to strengthen in Q3 FY26 with improved net interest margins, lower slippages, and steady recoveries, though deposit pressures remain.

"Even with better Q3 outlook, we expect certain pressure points on deposits and anticipate NIM revisions for FY27. – Elara Capital"

New Delhi, Dec 27

System loan growth has picked up and Q3 FY26 is expected to show better loan growth and improved net interest margins, a report said on Saturday.

The report from Elara Capital said the quarter should also see lower slippages in unsecured and microfinance institutional loans and steady recovery trends that may benefit credit costs.

The report, however, flagged that deposit flows remain weak and incremental credit‑deposit ratios are running very high.

"Even with better Q3 outlook, we expect certain pressure points on deposits and anticipate NIM revisions for FY27, which could lead to earnings revision," the brokerage said.

The report noted that PSU banks are expected to report a steady quarter, with impressive performance from ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and SBI among larger banks. It favoured Karur Vysya Bank and AU Small Finance Bank among mid-sized banks.

"While we expect earnings to be resilient for most frontline private banks, we see softer earnings for a few private and mid-sized banks," it added.

Asset quality is expected to be steady for most banks, except some surge in seasonal agri slippages, the brokerage said, adding, Q3 will likely be characterized by steady recovery trends, which will help cushion credit cost impact.

The firm forecasted H2FY26 to be stronger but cautioned that FY27 earnings expectations may need reassessment. Risk-reward seems to be sharply tilted towards frontline private banks with strong earnings resilience and reasonable valuation.

HSBC Mutual Fund said in a recent report that it is overweight on banks and non‑bank financial companies (NBFCs), arguing net interest margins for banks should improve in FY27. Private banks' asset quality is expected to recover and drive mid‑teens earnings growth in FY27 after a slow FY26, the report said.

NBFCs are delivering strong earnings growth driven by strong credit demand and improving margins on the back of decline in interest rates.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a retail investor, this is encouraging news. SBI and ICICI consistently performing gives confidence. However, the article's caution about FY27 earnings revision is important. Don't put all eggs in one basket. Diversify across sectors too! 💡
R
Rohit P
Lower slippages in unsecured loans is the key takeaway for me. After the RBI's recent warnings, banks seem to be tightening their underwriting. That's responsible lending. Hope this discipline continues.
S
Sarah B
Interesting analysis. The focus on frontline private banks makes sense, but what about the smaller regional banks? They serve rural areas where credit demand is also growing. The report seems very metro-centric.
K
Karthik V
NBFCs delivering strong growth is no surprise. They are more agile than traditional banks in reaching the last mile. With interest rates potentially coming down, the next year could be even better for them. 🚀
M
Michael C
The mention of "seasonal agri slippages" is a reminder of the inherent risks in the agri-portfolio. While credit growth is good, banks must have robust risk models for monsoon-dependent sectors. Overall, a balanced and insightful report.

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