.png)

Kembai Srinivasa Rao is a former banker who teaches and usually writes on Macroeconomy, Monetary policy developments, Risk Management, Corporate Governance, and the BFSI sector.
May 25, 2026 at 6:43 AM IST
The ongoing crisis in West Asia has introduced a new layer of uncertainty for India’s banking system, with risks likely to transmit through inflation, currency weakness, supply-chain disruptions and slowing economic activity. While the eventual magnitude of the stress remains difficult to quantify, the broad contours of the challenge are already visible.
In such an environment, banks become the principal transmission channel for economic stability. The uninterrupted flow of credit to productive sectors will be essential to prevent a sharper slowdown, even as banks themselves confront rising risks across liquidity, asset quality and profitability.
Importantly, the banking system is not entering this phase from a position of weakness. Asset quality, capital adequacy, provision coverage, profitability and return ratios have improved significantly over the past few years, placing banks in a stronger position to absorb shocks than during earlier crises. Yet, that strength could be tested if growth slows materially, repayment capacity deteriorates, and deposit mobilisation weakens amid rising inflationary pressures.
While liquidity pressures may emerge first, the more enduring challenge is likely to be credit risk. Liquidity coverage ratios remain comfortably above regulatory thresholds, and the RBI’s liquidity adjustment framework offers a near-term backstop. Structural asset-liability mismatches, however, cannot be corrected overnight.
The government’s introduction of the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme 5.0 could provide an important buffer. The scheme offers full guarantee coverage for MSMEs and 90% coverage for certain larger borrowers and airlines, with total support of up to ₹2.55 trillion until March 2027. Proper deployment of the scheme could help banks prevent a broader migration of stressed accounts into SMA and NPA categories.
Retail lending represents another area of vulnerability.
The rapid growth in unsecured personal loans and credit-card exposures could become problematic if inflation rises further and employment conditions weaken. Gig economy workers, digital-platform employees and borrowers dependent on small-ticket consumption loans may face disproportionate stress if wage growth slows or layoffs emerge in sectors such as IT-enabled services.
Banks may, therefore, have to balance recovery efforts with regulatory expectations on fair recovery practices and borrower treatment.
Looking ahead, monetary policy may remain constrained by inflation risks stemming from commodity price volatility and supply disruptions. While the RBI may shift the stance of the monetary policy from present ‘neutral’ to ‘accommodative' to support market sentiment during periods of stress, inflationary pressures could limit room for aggressive easing. Banks will therefore have to navigate a difficult operating environment in which elevated risks coexist with the need to maintain credit flow and economic stability.
The broader message is that the present environment requires a recalibration of credit administration and risk management practices within the regulatory framework. Banks may have to empower frontline risk-management systems, improve responsiveness and adopt a more flexible approach to borrower engagement if they are to preserve asset quality while continuing to support economic activity through a potentially prolonged period of stress.