Bank stocks came under selling pressure today, falling by up to 2 per cent, after Standard & Poor’s said their asset quality and capitalisation are likely to remain under pressure in the next 12 months.

Shares of Bank of Baroda fell 2 per cent, Punjab National Bank lost 1.92 per cent, ICICI Bank (1.19 per cent), HDFC Bank (1.17 per cent), State Bank of India (1.11 per cent) and Axis Bank (1 per cent) on the BSE.

The BSE bank index was trading lower by 0.48 per cent to 18,065.47.

Indian banks’ asset quality and capitalisation are likely to remain under pressure in the next 12 months mainly because of tepid industrial activity and high leverage by some corporates, Standard & Poor’s had said yesterday.

“We expect profitability of Indian banks to decline over the next two to three quarters because banks recently cut base lending rates, and their credit costs are likely to remain high,” S&P credit analyst Amit Pandey said.

He said the non-performing loans of banks with high exposure to troubled sectors will continue to rise, and the credit costs of banks with a backlog of provisions will increase.

“The asset quality and capitalisation of India’s banking sector is likely to remain under pressure in the next 12 months because of tepid domestic industrial activity, and subdued profitability and high leverage in some corporate sectors,” S&P said in its report — Indian Banks Face An Uphill Road This Year.

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