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India’s path to Viksit Bharat: The patient, strategic capital imperative for banks

During this transformative shift, the banking system shall continue to to be the primary conduit for credit transmission and liquidity support

December 24, 2025 / 11:32 IST
Even as market-based financing expands—across bonds, private credit, AIFs and securitisation—banks are expected to retain nearly ~58% of total lending market share over the next seven years.
Snapshot AI
  • India's banks need Rs 15 trillion by FY32 for credit growth.
  • Strategic and financial investors are key to strengthening and scaling banks
  • Stable ownership boosts governance and global competitiveness.

India’s advance toward a $7-8 trillion economy by FY32 — and the $30-trillion aspiration under the Viksit Bharat vision — marks the beginning of a decisive, investment-led phase of growth. India’s investment cycle, which was stagnant for nearly a decade after 2012, is showing a clear and broad-based revival.

During this transformative shift, the banking system shall continue to to be the primary conduit for credit transmission and liquidity support. Even as market-based financing expands — across bonds, private credit, AIFs and securitisation — banks are expected to retain nearly around 58 percent of total lending market share over the next seven years. A resilient, well-capitalised banking system is, therefore, fundamental to India’s next stage of expansion.

The capital imperative: A structural build-out

A bottom-up assessment suggests that India’s banking system will need to support more than Rs 250 trillion (around $3 trillion) in incremental credit by FY32. Enabling this expansion while maintaining prudent capital buffers will require nearly Rs 15 trillion ($170–200 billion) of additional CET1 — after adjusting for retained earnings and additional capital buffer releases.

This scale of capital mobilisation mirrors global precedents—China post-2009, the US after the 2008 crisis and Europe under CRD-IV. India is now entering its own structural capital cycle, one in which the quality and alignment of incoming capital will matter as much as its quantum.

Playbook for capital: strategic investors, financial sponsors and consolidation pathways

A distinct playbook is emerging, one that blends strategic participation, financial sponsorship and consolidation into a unified architecture for scale. Strategic investors — from global banks and insurers to sovereign wealth funds and diversified financial groups — now view India’s banking system not only as a high-growth opportunity but also as an institutional platform capable of absorbing and scaling global capabilities.

Alongside this, financial investors such as private equity, private credit and alternative asset platforms continue to provide the agility, structuring innovation and medium-term capital that fuel balance-sheet expansion and support new adjacencies in payments, MSME, supply-chain finance, wealth and digital ecosystems.

Running alongside these trends is the renewed focus on consolidation as a strategic tool. The government’s sustained push for PSU bank consolidation reflects a clear policy vision: to build a smaller set of stronger, globally competitive public-sector banks capable of financing India’s investment-led growth ambitions.

Strategic capital — a force multiplier: multi-cycle stability and capability depth

Strategic investors bring a long-horizon perspective for banks that aligns naturally with India’s long credit cycle. Further, their steady ownership base reduces the frequency of stake changes, lowers exit-related volatility, and bolsters the confidence of depositors, markets, and regulators. The LIC–IDBI Bank partnership is a case in point: it brought stable, long-horizon ownership, and ensured continuity in governance — critical factors that helped IDBI bank maintain stability and market trust through a period of transition.

Strategic investors will bring far more than balance-sheet capital, they will inject operational depth and advanced product capabilities that can transform a bank’s core engine. Global banks, insurers and diversified financial institutions entering India will shape underwriting discipline, strengthen treasury and balance-sheet management, and embed cross-border banking and AI-led operating models. They will expand product portfolios, opening significant cross-sell and fee-income potential. Emirates NBD’s investment in RBL Bank will drive global risk-management standards, treasury sophistication and international banking capabilities, strengthening RBL’s position in corporate banking. Likewise, SMBC’s partnership with Yes Bank will bring Japanese excellence in corporate banking, structured supply-chain finance and world-class treasury practices.

Strategic investors will also enforce governance discipline that elevates institutional resilience. They shall instil regulatory coherence, cultural stability and long-term stewardship. This governance reinforcement will become a meaningful competitive advantage as banks scale into new products, digital ecosystems and customer segments.

Financial investors: critical bridge between vision and execution

Private equity’s role in transactions like Carlyle–PNB Housing, TPG–Shriram and ChrysCapital–SBI Cards shows how institutional capital is actively reshaping credit architecture and business models. Meanwhile, private credit platforms are becoming an important bridge for mid-cycle capital needs, providing structured solutions that shall support refinance, portfolio expansion and new origination engines. Financial capital shall continue to inject competitive urgency and innovation into NBFCs, banks and fintechs, complementing strategic investors.

A decisive decade for India’s financial services sector

While both strategic and financial capital will shape India’s banking evolution, regulators are increasingly favouring strategic investors because they bring long-term alignment, governance continuity and operational capability. This is visible in the RBI’s emphasis on stable ownership, credible promoters and responsible growth, especially in retail-heavy and systemically important banks. India’s next growth phase demands a banking system that is well-capitalised, digital-first and globally benchmarked.

Pratik Shah
first published: Dec 24, 2025 11:32 am

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