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India mulls 49% foreign limit in state banks to fund growth

Siddhartha Singh, Shruti Srivastava & Siddhi Nayak / Bloomberg
Siddhartha Singh, Shruti Srivastava & Siddhi Nayak / Bloomberg • 3 min read
India mulls 49% foreign limit in state banks to fund growth
Foreign ownership in State Bank of India — the country’s largest lender — and 11 other state-owned banks is capped at 20%, a legacy restriction rooted in the government’s desire to retain strategic control of the financial system.
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(Feb 2): India is considering allowing foreigners to own up to a 49% stake in its state-run banks as policymakers seek to bolster capital at these lenders to fund growth, without fully giving up control.

“We need credit-to-GDP ratio to increase to 150% from 56% currently,” Federal Banking Secretary M Nagaraju told reporters on Monday. “We need to see if we should have additional capital or deploy existing capital more effectively or whether we should take a look at capital adequacy ratio. All of this require a calibrated approach.”

Foreign ownership in State Bank of India — the country’s largest lender — and 11 other state-owned banks is capped at 20%, a legacy restriction rooted in the government’s desire to retain strategic control of the financial system. The limit is far lower than the 74% foreign investment allowed in private-sector banks and the 100% foreign direct investment allowed in local insurers.

A spate of billion-dollar deals for Indian banks has thrust the country’s financial sector into the global spotlight. International investors are scouring for opportunities in India, building on momentum from prior years to invest in lenders, insurance and fintech players.

The government is keen for banks to finance large-scale private investments to help drive the rapid growth that is needed to transform India into a developed economy by 2047, a target set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

India aims to have three to four big banks capable of financing growth in the world’s fastest-growing major economy, Nagaraju said. Currently, only SBI and HDFC Bank Ltd rank in the world’s top 100 lenders by total assets.

See also: Central bank governor says India not selling US Treasury holdings

The Nifty PSU Bank index — a gauge tracking state-run banks — pared a decline of as much as 2.4% to trade 0.3% lower on Monday.

A higher foreign limit could potentially drive up operational efficiency in public sector banks, given that increased foreign capital leads to investor activism that helps increase overall competitiveness of the organisation, said Vivek Ramji Iyer, a partner at Grant Thornton Bharat.

The ownership cap applies to all overseas holdings combined, including foreign institutional investors, pension funds and other non-resident shareholders. While portfolio investors can buy SBI shares freely within the cap, any breach would require regulatory intervention, effectively constraining demand from global funds even as India’s equities gain weight in international benchmarks.

See also: India holds rate, signals longer pause after US trade deal

In practice, foreign shareholding in state-run banks has remained well below the threshold, leaving untapped room for overseas capital. The government owns more than a 51% stake in each of India’s 12 state-owned lenders.

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