
New Delhi, Feb 24 (IANS) India’s retail lending portfolio grew to Rs 162.7 lakh crore in Q3 FY26, up 18.1 per cent year‑on‑year, with 690 million active loan accounts and improved asset quality, a report said on Tuesday.
The report from Credit bureau CRIF High Mark said Portfolio at Risk (PAR) with repayments overdue by 31 to 180 days declined to 3.1 per cent from 3.6 per cent a year earlier. Quarterly originations rose 41 per cent YoY to Rs 25.3 lakh crore, the report said.
Gold loan originations jumped 90.3 per cent YoY driven by the gold price rally. GST rate rationalisation triggered a 46.7 per cent quarter‑on‑quarter surge in two‑wheeler originations and 22.1 per cent QoQ growth in auto loans, while festive demand boosted consumer durables by 14.7 per cent sequentially, the report further said.
The report also highlighted premiumisation across categories, with home loan average ticket size up 6.4 per cent QoQ to Rs 33 lakh and loans above Rs 75 lakh accounting for 40 per cent of originations versus 35 per cent in the previous year.
A similar premiumisation trend was visible in gold loans, where loans above Rs 5 lakh contributed 36.5 per cent of total value, up from 24 per cent in Q3 FY25, the report said.
NBFCs strengthened their position in high-velocity segments, accounting for 30.7 per cent of gold loan origination value in Q3 FY26 and 91.1 per cent of personal loan volumes, the report further said.
PSU banks continued to expand their strategic presence in secured lending and private banks in home loan originations value. PSU banks accounted for 50.3 per cent of originations versus 23.3 per cent share of private banks. PSU banks also maintained a strong presence in gold loan originations value (45.8 per cent), supported by enhanced digital capabilities and competitive pricing, the firm said.
Growth in non metro cities continued to gain traction, particularly in mass-market products such as personal loans, two-wheelers, and consumer durables, indicating deeper penetration into semi-urban and rural geographies.
This trend reflects expanding access to formal credit and increasing borrower participation outside metropolitan centres, the report noted.
—IANS
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