India’s banking sector is gearing up for another transformative phase as the State Bank of India (SBI) advocates for fresh consolidation among public sector banks (PSBs). With India aiming to become a $30 trillion economy by 2047, large and resilient banking institutions are seen as essential for funding the nation’s ambitious infrastructure and industrial development goals.
SBI’s Call for Consolidation
SBI Chairman Challa Sreenivasulu Setty recently voiced support for merging smaller, under-scaled state-backed banks into larger entities. He stated that “some further rationalisation might make sense,” acknowledging that several public sector banks remain sub-scale despite earlier rounds of consolidation.
This perspective reflects a broader strategic intent: to create banks with the financial muscle and operational scale needed to support India’s economic transformation.
The Need for Bigger Banks
India currently requires a banking system capable of financing large-scale national projects. Key reasons for fresh PSB mergers include,
- Increased Credit Demand: India’s bank credit must rise from around 56% to 130% of GDP to meet future economic targets.
- Infrastructure Financing: Building roads, ports, smart cities, and clean energy hubs needs strong institutional lenders.
- Global Competitiveness: Larger banks are better positioned to handle foreign capital flows, global partnerships, and large corporate loans.
- Operational Efficiency: Consolidation leads to cost optimization, unified technology platforms, and better governance.
Current Banking Landscape
SBI controls about 25% of India’s ₹194 trillion loan market, with total assets nearing ₹69 trillion.
- Over the past decade, PSBs were reduced from 27 to 12 through merger waves, improving balance sheets and scale.
- Only SBI and HDFC Bank currently rank among the top 100 global banks by total assets.
- India still lags behind countries like China and the US, which have multiple globally dominant banking institutions.
Key Growth Areas for SBI
SBI is aggressively pursuing expansion in areas such as,
- Wealth Management: Over 1,000 new wealth managers hired and more than 110 micro-markets identified for high-net-worth services.
- Loan Growth: SBI revised its FY26 credit growth forecast upward to 12%–14%, driven by corporate spending and infrastructure lending.
- Market Share: The bank is actively targeting acquisition of new business rather than just defending its dominant position.
Static Facts
- Chairman of SBI: Challa Sreenivasulu Setty
- Loan Market Share of SBI: ~25%
- Target GDP by 2047: $30 trillion
- Current PSBs Count: 12 (down from 27)
- Required Bank Credit Growth: From 56% to 130% of GDP
- SBI Assets: Nearly ₹69 trillion


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