Credit growth to services sector moderated to 13.0 per cent (y-o-y) as on the fortnight ended December 27, 2024 (20.0 per cent for the corresponding fortnight of the previous year), primarily due to decelerated growth in credit to ‘non-banking financial companies’ (NBFCs) and trade segments
FinTech BizNews Service
Mumbai, January 31: Data on sectoral deployment of bank credit for the month of December 20241 is collected by the RBI from 41 select scheduled commercial banks, which accounts for about 95 per cent of the total non-food credit deployed by all scheduled commercial banks.
On a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis, non-food bank credit2 as on the fortnight ended December 27, 20243 grew at 12.4 per cent as compared to 15.8 per cent for the corresponding fortnight of the previous year (December 29, 2023).
Highlights of the sectoral deployment of bank credit3 are given below:
Credit to agriculture and allied activities registered a growth of 12.5 per cent (y-o-y) as on the fortnight ended December 27, 2024 (19.4 per cent for the corresponding fortnight of the previous year).
Credit to industry recorded growth of 7.4 per cent (y-o-y) as on the fortnight ended December 27, 2024, compared with 7.5 per cent for the corresponding fortnight of the previous year. Among major industries, outstanding credit to ‘food processing’, ‘petroleum, coal products and nuclear fuels’, and ‘all engineering’ recorded a higher growth. However, credit growth in the infrastructure segment decelerated.
Credit growth to services sector moderated to 13.0 per cent (y-o-y) as on the fortnight ended December 27, 2024 (20.0 per cent for the corresponding fortnight of the previous year), primarily due to decelerated growth in credit to ‘non-banking financial companies’ (NBFCs) and trade segments. However, credit growth (y-o-y) to ‘computer software’ and ‘professional services’ accelerated.
Credit to personal loans segment moderated to 14.9 per cent growth (y-o-y) as on the fortnight ended December 27, 2024 as compared with 17.6 per cent a year ago, largely due to decline in growth in ‘other personal loans’, ‘vehicle loans’ and ‘credit card outstanding’. However, ‘housing’ – the largest constituent of this segment – recorded accelerated growth on y-o-y basis.