
Indian Bank Stocks' Stock Prices Plunge by $95 Billion, Analysts Warn of Potential Further Declines
India's Bank Stocks Face Further Losses Amid Tightening Monetary Policy and Rising Energy Prices
India's bank stocks are likely to face further losses as the central bank tightens its grip on rupee trading and rising energy prices weigh on profit outlooks, analysts say. The Reserve Bank of India's defense of a record-low rupee has constrained its ability to inject liquidity, tightening financial conditions that are likely to weigh on banks over the coming quarters.
According to Jefferies, banks may face up to 50 billion rupees ($537 million) in losses from the unwinding of currency trades due to central bank directives. This estimate comes as global investors withdrew a record 327 billion rupees from the shares of financial services companies in the first two weeks of March, according to National Securities Depository Ltd. data. The Nifty Bank Index has lost $95 billion in market value since the start of March, narrowly avoiding a bear market — defined as a 20% drop from a recent high.
Fitch Ratings sees net interest margins of lenders shrinking 20 to 30 basis points in the year ending March 2027 — potentially undershooting the credit rating agency's 3.1% forecast — as tighter financial conditions weigh. At stake is the outlook for India's $4.5 trillion stock market, given banks account for nearly a third of the benchmark index. A sustained weakness in shares of lenders risks undermining a broader market that is already among the worst performers in the region, down 13% for the year.
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Comparison of Nifty Bank Index Losses
| Quarter | Losses |
|---|---|
| March 2023 | $95 billion |
| Previous Quarter | Not Available |
To be sure, valuations are becoming attractive after the correction. Bulls also point to India's long-term economic growth, which remains among the fastest globally. The Nifty Bank Index trades at 1.5 times one-year forward price-to-book, its cheapest level since 2020, signaling an attractive risk-reward profile. Citibank Inc. is already prioritizing private-sector banks over state-run lenders, betting that the former can better absorb the macroeconomic stress that is now the prime concern for investors.
Banks will definitely take some hit on their investment book, said Rajat Agarwal, an Asia strategist at Societe Generale SA. "We recently saw a pickup in credit growth — what remains to be seen is how much of that gets pushed back" by the war, he said.
Investor Takeaway
Investors should be cautious of potential further losses in Indian bank stocks due to central bank directives and rising energy prices.
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