It also said that NPAs are set to inch down to 5-5.5 per cent by March from its earlier projection of 5.3-5.9 per cent.
"Considering the trend in refinancing/restructuring done so far, we are revising our projected gross NPA percentage to 5-5.5 by March 2016," Icra senior VP Vibha Batra told after releasing a report on the bad loan scenario in the banking system.
It sees total stressed advances (NPAs plus standard restructured) at 10.3-10.8 per cent by March compared to 10.7 per cent as of September 2015.
As the case with asset quality, SBI Group fares much better on profitability as against nationalised banks. The report is based on 33 banks' earnings which the agency rates (24 state-run banks and nine private banks).
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Reported gross NPA may have been lower on account of implementation of strategic debt restructuring (SDR) in few accounts which allows banks to maintain existing asset classification of the account, as on the reference date for a period of 18 months from the reference date.
The report said the effective implementation of Uday scheme will improve the financial health of discoms and could reduce vulnerability of banks' exposure to power sector.
The government has approved the Uday scheme earlier this month with an objective of financial turnaround of state-owned distribution companies.
"If all states participate in the scheme discom revival
scheme, PSBs' reported restructured advances could come down by 0.8-1 per cent from the levels of around 7.2 per cent as of September 2015," the report said.
The report projects credit growth of 11.5-12.5 per cent for FY16 for banks' total credit portfolio in light of better visibility on capital infusion at PSBs.
"Deposit growth in the foreseeable future will mainly be guided by level of economic activity, deposit rates offered by banks and the relative attractiveness of other asset classes," it said.
"Considering the credit mix of PSBs, risk aversion and change in leadership at some large banks, credit offtake for PSBs is likely to remain lower than that of private sector banks," it said.
The report said PSBs need Rs 10,000-20,000 crore tier I capital in FY16 from external sources. "If they are unable to raise this, seven PSBs would need more equity from government, over and above the existing allocation, else will have to curtail credit growth," it said.