mumbai, June 4 -- India's public sector lenders saw a sharp decline in bad assets in 2024-25, outpacing their private sector peers, which continued to add to their non-performing assets (NPA) pile amid rising stress in unsecured credit. Data from Capitaline showed that public sector undertaking (PSU) banks reported a drop in total bad assets- loans where repayments are overdue by over 90 days-in FY25 and FY24. Bad loans of public sector banks decreased 16% year-on-year (y-o-y) to Rs.2.84 lakh crore in FY25, from Rs.3.4 lakh crore in FY24 and Rs.4.3 lakh crore in FY23. In comparison, private banks saw an increase in bad loans by around 2.9% to Rs.1.29 lakh crore in FY25, up from Rs.1.26 lakh crore in FY24 and Rs.1.22 lakh crore in FY23. The analysis covered 19 private sector banks and 12 public sector banks. "The PSU banks not only saw a decline in absolute fresh slippages but also continued to witness healthy recoveries and upgrades," said Sachin Sachdeva, vice-president and sector head of financial sector ratings at Icra Ltd. Given their healthy operating profitability, public sector banks were able to maintain higher write-offs, according to Sachdeva. Consequently, PSU banks reported negative net slippages and, hence, a reduction in gross non-performing assets both in absolute terms and in percentage terms. Mint reported on May 9 that 10 leading banks wrote off loans worth Rs.80,568 crore in FY25, up from Rs.74,931 crore in FY24. These higher write-offs helped banks report lower gross and net NPA ratios, despite continued stress in unsecured and microfinance portfolios. Sachdeva added that the increasing stress in the personal unsecured loans, including microfinance loans, led to a relatively higher fresh NPA generation rate in the case of private sector banks than public sector banks. Interestingly, public sector banks have also been able to shed some share in the aggregate sectoral bad loan pool. In FY25, these banks had a share of 68.6%, down from 72.9% in FY24 and 77.8% in FY23. This does not include bad loans of small finance banks. However, when seen as a percentage of their loans, even private sector banks saw a decline in bad loan numbers. The bad loan ratio-gross NPAs as a percentage of total loans-shrunk 14 basis points (bps) between FY24 and FY25 to 2.24% for private sector banks. For public sector banks, the contraction was relatively more pronounced. In the same period, India's 12 public sector banks saw their bad loan ratio decline 90 bps to 2.6%. Stress among India's small borrowers hurt private banks in FY25. In fact, bankers said that delinquencies in the micro loan business have impacted them. Ashok Vaswani, chief executive officer of Kotak Mahindra Bank, told analysts on 3 May that the microfinance industry has seen significant credit strains and the bank expects credit costs to stay at an elevated level for the next two quarters. Credit cost is provisions and write-offs expressed as a percentage of average total assets.....