MUMBAI: Indian Bank, South Indian Bank, and Karur Vysya Bank have seen improved growth in advances in the second quarter of this year, reflecting the impact of the 100-basis-point cut in policy rates, disclosures by the respective banks show.
Indian Bank's advances rose 13% on a year-on-year basis, the highest quarterly growth since the first quarter of FY24. Its deposits also rose 12%, the highest since the second quarter of FY23.
Its provisional advances stood at Rs 6.22 lakh crore, while deposits were Rs 7.76 lakh crore for the quarter ending September 2025.
South Indian Bank's advances rose 9% to ?92,287 crore, while deposits rose 9.7% to Rs 1.15 lakh crore.
Karur Vysya Bank reported 15.5% growth in advances to Rs 92,719 crore while deposits rose 15.3% to Rs 1.10 lakh crore in the same period.
Indian Bank's advances rose 13% on a year-on-year basis, the highest quarterly growth since the first quarter of FY24. Its deposits also rose 12%, the highest since the second quarter of FY23.
Its provisional advances stood at Rs 6.22 lakh crore, while deposits were Rs 7.76 lakh crore for the quarter ending September 2025.
South Indian Bank's advances rose 9% to ?92,287 crore, while deposits rose 9.7% to Rs 1.15 lakh crore.
Karur Vysya Bank reported 15.5% growth in advances to Rs 92,719 crore while deposits rose 15.3% to Rs 1.10 lakh crore in the same period.
You may also like
I visited the UK's best seaside town that's even better in autumn with cosy cafes and £50 rooms
England stand no chance without Jude Bellingham - this is Thomas Tuchel's defining moment
'Something fishy': Congress again doubts armed forces, govt claims on Op Sindoor
Gautam Adani hails team effort ahead of inauguration of Mumbai's New Airport
Fury as UK's 'double standards' allow Palestine protests 'in response to murder of Jews'