Hey, like this? Why not share it with a buddy?

“PSBs have been told to focus on credit growth across loan sizes, especially in core engineering, manufacturing, agriculture, MSMEs and startups,” the official said. The Finance Ministry has asked public-sector banks (PSBs) to broaden their credit focus beyond large corporations to include mid-market companies, small and medium enterprises, agriculture and startups, a senior Government official said. The direction comes in the wake of the 50% US tariff on Indian exports, which may adversely impact labor intensive sectors. The Finance Ministry on Wednesday reviewed the first-quarter financial performance of PSBs. The meeting, chaired by Financial Services Secretary, M Nagaraju, was attended by the heads of the banks. The Ministry has also asked PSBs to protect their net interest margins (NIMs) through liability-side discipline and asset diversification. NIM measures how much a financial institution earns from its lending activities after paying interest on borrowed funds (like deposits), relative to its total interest-earning assets. “By widening the product portfolio — expanding into higher-yield segments like MSMEs, retail and new-age manufacturing, while maintaining stable corporate and infrastructure lending — we can contain margin compression risks. At the same time, fee-based products and cross-sell opportunities provide a buffer to spreads. This diversified approach cushions NIMs against interest rate cycles and supports sustainable profitability,” a banker said.
Banks have also been instructed to strengthen recovery mechanisms through one-time settlements and the joint lenders’ forum. The push comes against the backdrop of PSBs steadily losing market share in advances to private-sector banks (PVBs) across all major segments over the past five years. In lending to MSMEs, PVBs grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 21.1% between 2019-20 (FY20) and 2024-25 (FY25), far outpacing PSBs at 6.7% during the same period. As a result, the PSB share in MSME advances fell from 55.7% in March 2020 to 40.8% in March 2025. In the industry segment, the PSB share slipped from 59.3% in FY20 to 55% in FY25, as PVBs grew at a 6.8% CAGR compared to 3.2% for PSBs. The sharpest erosion was seen in the retail segment, where PSB share fell from 56.3% in FY20 to 49.5% in FY25, amid faster PVB growth of 21.6% CAGR compared to 14.7% for PSBs. Even in agriculture, traditionally a PSB stronghold, their share slipped to 65.7% in FY25, as PVBs grew at 16.9% CAGR against 12.5% for PSBs.
Source : https://www.business-standard.com/finance/news/finance-ministry-flags-wider-credit-focus-for-psbs-amid-tariff-risk-125082001468_1.html
Related Posts
SEARCH SME E-News
RECENT POST
- Amazing Update: RBI Makes Loans Easier for People with Low CIBIL Scores
- Big PMO meet tomorrow as Trump’s 50% tariffs set to come into force: Sources
- SMEtalks on “BUILDING LEADERS: Transform Ideas into Breakthroughs”
- Coping with 50% tariffs :
- Credit score confusion: Is CIBIL transparent enough in deciding your financial fate?
Categories
- Achievements
- Banking & Finance
- Branding & Marketing
- Business Ethics & Culture
- Business talk
- Business Tycoons
- Capital Market
- Corporate Story
- Davos
- Economy
- Emerging Market
- Entrepreneurial Leadership Dialogue
- events
- Exports
- Grievances
- Growth
- Impact on Business
- Import
- India Growth Story
- Industry
- Innovation and Invention
- Innovative Ideas
- International Affairs
- International Trade
- jobs career
- Manufacturing
- Meeting
- MSME
- Others
- Packaging
- Pharma
- Policies & Schemes
- Regulatory Change
- Skill Development
- SME Talks
- Start-up
- Swot Analysis
- Tax
- Technology & Research
- Textiles
- Travel
- Uncategorized
- Viksit Bharat 2047- Strategies, Contribution, Initiatives and Efforts
- Women Entrepreneurs
- World Economic Forum