“Most banks have their lending linked to external benchmarks. Therefore, after the repo cuts since February, their assets (advances) have repriced faster than liabilities (deposits),” Kaitav Shah, lead BFSI analyst, Anand Rathi Institutional Equities, told ET.
AgenciesHe expects the pressure on the margins to stay in the September quarter as well since a significant portion of the rate cut impact was not fully passed through in the June quarter.
According to India Ratings and Research, nearly 61% of loans are linked to external benchmarks. As a result, lending rates reset immediately after a repo cut while deposits are repriced with a lag.
Analysts expect an uptick in NIMs in the second half of FY26. “Once deposit rates fall, we should be able to see sequential improvement in NIMs, provided the RBI does not cut rates further,” said Shah.
The decline in NIM is seen across the banking sector banks in both categories-public and private sector-witnessing a sharp decline in NIMs over the past three years.