India’s banking sector has crossed a major milestone and a potential warning threshold with the credit-to-deposit (C-D) ratio for commercial banks touching 80.21% for the fortnight ended 31 October. This marks the first time in history that the C-D ratio has moved beyond the 80% level, a figure widely regarded as the upper limit of the regulatory comfort zone. The ratio had breached 80% in the two previous reporting fortnights as well, signaling a sustained structural shift where credit growth is consistently outpacing deposit mobilization.
The spike in lending activity has been supported by comfortable liquidity in the banking system. A 100 basis-points cut in the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR), implemented in phases from 6 September, injected additional lendable funds into banks, enabling faster growth in advances. This liquidity tailwind has partly fueled the rise in the C-D ratio, allowing banks to deploy more resources toward credit even as deposit inflows remain comparatively muted.
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