The year-on-year credit growth as of September 15 stood lower at 7.5 per cent as against a deposit growth of 10 per cent. As a result, the CD outstanding declined to Rs 82,400 crore from Rs 2.04 trillion as of September 16, 2016, domestic rating agency Icra said in a note today.
The agency also warned that a pick-up is unlikely as there is more liquidity with system after the Reserve Bank lowered the SLR to 19.5 per cent in the October policy.
"With recent reduction in statutory liquidity ratio from 20 to 19.5 per cent and expectations of 7-8 per cent bank credit growth, the CD volumes are expected to remain subdued," said Karthik Srinivasan, group head--financial sector ratings at Icra.
The certificate of deposit volumes had peaked at around Rs 4.5 trillion during the period between March 2011 and September 2012 since then it has been falling gradually.
More From This Section
Due to the twin balancesheet crisis in the economy - of overleveraged companies and bleeding banks due to non- payment of dues by the corporate borrowers - banks since the past few years were shying away from lending to debt-laden corporate.
As a result bank credit for fiscal 2017 declined to a six decades low of 5.08 per cent, which was the lowest since fiscal 1953 when it had stood at 1.8 per cent.