Federal Bank said on Friday that Blackstone will acquire the stake through a Singapore-based affiliate, which will also have the right to nominate a non-executive director to the bank’s board.
The investment — to be executed via preferential equity shares and warrants — is subject to shareholder and regulatory approvals, including from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Competition Commission of India (CCI). The bank’s shareholders will vote on the proposal at an extraordinary general meeting on November 19.
Federal Bank, which has a loan book of Rs 2.44 trillion, reported a 9.6% year-on-year decline in net profit to Rs 955 crore for the September quarter, hurt by weaker treasury income and higher provisioning for bad loans.
Dealmaking wave in Indian banking
Blackstone’s entry adds to a string of big-ticket deals reshaping India’s private banking space. Earlier this month, Emirates NBD unveiled plans for a Rs 26,853 crore investment in RBL Bank for up to 60% ownership, including an open offer — the largest-ever foreign investment in India’s financial services sector.
Earlier this year, Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation acquired a 24.2% stake in Yes Bank across two tranches totaling nearly Rs 15,000 crore, while IDFC First Bank raised Rs 7,500 crore from Warburg Pincus and Rs 2,624 crore from the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.
In the non-banking space, Abu Dhabi’s International Holding Company agreed to infuse $1 billion (Rs 8,850 crore) into Sammaan Capital for up to a 41% stake, while Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group is in advanced talks to acquire up to 20% of Shriram Finance for as much as $2.6 billion, according to a recent Economic Times report.
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Reforms loading?
Gurmeet Chadha, Managing Partner and CIO at Complete Circle Consultants, described Blackstone’s investment in Federal Bank as “an endorsement of new leadership and a positive rate of change in the bank.” In a post on X, Chadha added, “RBI is pivoting on ownership and more banking reforms are loading.”
In an earlier post dated October 19, Chadha wrote, “BIG bank reforms are getting loaded. The Emirates NBD–RBL Bank deal signals a big shift in the RBI’s thought process. Largest FDI in banks and equity infusion ever. This and the Sumitomo–Yes Bank deal can open global fundraising options for Indian banks, which are currently very limited. Eventually, more reforms — even on voting rights capped at 26% and 9.99% stake for corporate investors — will also be relooked.”
Chadha noted that the recent record inflows could “open global fundraising options for Indian banks, which are currently very limited,” while indicating that the RBI’s long-standing ownership restrictions — “capped at 26% and 9.99%” — may soon be reexamined.
Veteran banker Uday Kotak also welcomed the shifting regulatory tide. “I welcome the opening up of the banking sector to global financial institutions for majority stake,” he said in a post on X. “This, along with ensuring guardrails to manage conflict of interest and providing a level playing field to all players, will unleash capacity to serve India’s aspirations. Exciting times.”
Kotak’s comments reflect a broader optimism that India’s banking system is entering a new phase of liberalization, paving the way for deeper global participation under a more flexible regulatory framework.
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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)