SBI, Canara Bank Stocks Crash After RBI Rejects ECL Delay Request

Saheli Majumder Ambwani
3 Min Read

PSU Bank Stocks Tank as RBI Sticks to 2027 Deadline for New Credit Loss Rules

Public sector bank stocks tumbled during Tuesday’s trade, with heavyweights like State Bank of India (SBI), Canara Bank, and Bank of Baroda feeling the heat. The Nifty PSU Bank index dropped over 1.3% as the entire sector traded in the red. This massive sell-off followed the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) final decision on the new Expected Credit Loss (ECL) provisioning rules.

The main trigger for the panic was the RBI’s refusal to delay the transition. Despite lenders asking for more time to fix their data systems, the central bank is moving forward, forcing banks to anticipate losses rather than wait for them to materialize.

Quick Market Glance: Major PSU Losers

  • SBI & Canara Bank: State Bank of India fell 1.43% today, while Canara Bank fell 2.97%.
  • Sector-wide Slide: Union Bank of India led the losses among larger peers, with its share price dropping roughly 3.5% intraday.
  • The 2027 Cutoff: The RBI officially set April 1, 2027, as the hard start date for the new ECL framework.
  • Provisioning Shock: Under the new system, loans overdue by 60 to 90 days (Stage 2) will require a 5% provision—a huge jump from the current 0.40%.
  • Capital Buffer: To prevent a total shock, the RBI is allowing a “glide path,” letting banks spread the impact on their capital until March 31, 2031.

Why the Market is Dumping Bank Stocks

The switch to a “forward-looking” credit loss model means banks have to set aside cash for potential defaults much earlier. While this makes the banking system sturdier in the long run, it is bad news for short-term profits. Analysts at various brokerages noted that lenders with a lot of unsecured personal loans or microfinance books will see their provisioning requirements spike almost immediately.

The RBI emphasized that there won’t be a uniform model for everyone. Since every bank has a different portfolio, each must build its own risk-assessment models. This adds an immediate operational burden and cost that PSU banks were hoping to avoid for a few more years.

Income Recognition and What’s Next

Not just setting aside cash for poorly structured loans, the RBI is also changing how banks record interest. Lenders have been given a three-year window to move toward an interest income recognition model based on the Effective Interest Rate (EIR).

While the five-year window to absorb capital hits offers some relief, the market is fixated on the hit to book values. Investors clearly see the 2027 deadline as a major hurdle for the PSU space, suggesting that many of these banks might need to raise fresh capital or pull back on high-risk lending soon.

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