HomeBankingSlowing personal, farm lending drags bank credit growth by 6 percentage points

Slowing personal, farm lending drags bank credit growth by 6 percentage points

Banks reported a credit growth of 13.7 percent in July 2024, compared to 19.5 percent in July 2023. This was due to the banks’ focus on managing the credit-deposit (CD) ratio and slow growth in personal and agriculture loans, research reports said.

September 17, 2024 / 18:35 IST
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bank credit growth
After reporting robust growth in FY24, credit offtake is anticipated to moderate in FY25, led by continued temperance in unsecured retail and slower corporate credit off-take

Bank credit growth fell by nearly 6 percentage points in July from a year earlier, driven by a slowdown in personal, agriculture, and small business segments, research reports and bankers said. A September 10 CareEdge report showed banks' lending growth slowed to 13.7 percent in July from 19.5 percent in the year-ago period.

Lending growth slowed across all major sectors except industry in the period, with growth in personal loans slowing to 14.4 percent from 31.2 percent. The decline was driven by a slowdown in vehicle and unsecured loans, impacted by the HDFC-HDFC Bank merger, though partially offset by an increase in gold loans, according to the CareEdge report.

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Similarly, lending to agriculture slowed to 4.1 percent in July 2024 from 5.8 percent. Bankers attributed the slowdown to seasonal pressures in the early months of FY25. “There was pressure seen in some areas of north India and in the first few months of the year in agri space. Hence, we are looking at some pressure going ahead too,” the banker said.

The services segment witnessed a decrease in credit growth to 14 percent on a year-on-year basis in July 2024 from 23.4 percent in July 2023. This decline in growth, according to analysts, can be attributed to reduced credit expansion in the non-banking financial companies’ (NBFCs) and trade sectors which was partially offset by a rise in commercial real estate. The industry segment saw credit growth at 10.1 percent y-o-y from 5.2 percent.