According to the study, private sector lender HDFC Bank and PSU lender State Bank of India top the list of local banks which are used by three-quarter of large Indian companies.
The
public sector banks, weighed down with huge non-performing assets
(NPAs), are losing their lead banking relationships with Indian
corporates to their private counterparts, said a study conducted by
Greenwich Associates, a banking consultant group.
“As
of 2016, 20 per cent of large Indian corporates participating in the
Greenwich Associates annual Corporate Banking Study said they used at
least one public sector bank as a lead corporate bank. By 2018, that
share had fallen to just 15 per cent. The bulk of those relationships
went to private sector banks”, the study pointed out.
According
to the study, private sector lender HDFC
Bank and PSU lender State Bank of India top the list of local
banks which are used by three-quarter of large Indian companies for
corporate banking services. Private lender ICICI Bank is the third
most preferred bank for the Indian corporates.
“These
three banks also secure the top spots among middle market banking
companies, with HDFC in first place and ICICI and SBI statistically
tied at the second spot”, the study further said.
Among
foreign banks, Standard Chartered Bank and Citi are tied
statistically with a market penetration of 51–54 per cent among
large Indian corporates, followed by HSBC at 50 per cent. In the
middle market space, among foreign banks, HSBC ranks first and
Standard Chartered in second and Citi a close third.
The
result of the Greenwich study points out that even when PSU
banks retain their status as a company’s lead credit provider,
they are being cited less often as leading providers in non-credit
products such as foreign exchange and cash management—roles that
are being filled most often by private sector banks.
The
one outlier to this trend is State Bank of India. SBI, which has
moved faster and made more progress than other PSU banks to address
the NPA issue, actually increased its share of lead corporate banking
relationships to 6 per cent of large companies in 2018 from 4 per
cent in 2016, the study added.
The
study also estimates that 92 per cent of Indian companies will make a
change in their corporate banking roster in 2019.
No comments:
Post a Comment