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It said the strong loan growth should benefit net revenue, particularly as it will be coupled with wider net interest margins.
”We see bank credit expanding by around 13 percent in FY23, up from 11.5 percent in FY22. The acceleration will be driven by the normalisation of economic activity after the COVID-19 pandemic, and high nominal GDP growth, which we expect to boost demand for retail and working-capital loans,” Fitch said in a statement.
Fitch forecasts India’s real GDP growth at 7 percent in 2022-23. It said Indian banks generally remain open to additional capital-raising to fund growth, despite the rise in rates.
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The rating agency expects greater competition for deposits over time, for example through higher rates on deposit accounts, as banks’ liquidity buffers fall in their pursuit of loan growth.
Fitch expects system deposits to grow 11 percent in the current and next fiscal years, slower than loan growth.
”Increased deposit rates may put some pressure on banks’ margins, but we expect declining credit costs to offset pressures on profitability – including the valuation impact of higher rates on investments – in FY23,” it added.