RBI Releases December 2025 Financial Stability Report
Summary
The Reserve Bank of India released the December 2025 Financial Stability Report reflecting the collective assessment of the Sub-Committee of the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) on the resilience of the Indian financial system. The report finds the domestic financial system robust with strong balance sheets, easy financial conditions, and low financial market volatility, though near-term risks from geopolitical and trade-related external uncertainties persist. Scheduled commercial banks show strong capital and liquidity buffers, improved asset quality, and robust profitability, with macro stress tests affirming their resilience under hypothetical adverse scenarios.
“The health of the scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) remains sound with strong capital and liquidity buffers, improved asset quality and robust profitability.”
About this source
GovPing monitors India RBI Financial Stability Reports for new banking & finance regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.
What changed
The Reserve Bank of India released its December 2025 Financial Stability Report, providing a comprehensive assessment of the Indian financial system's resilience. The report highlights that scheduled commercial banks maintain strong capital and liquidity buffers with improved asset quality and robust profitability, while non-banking financial companies and the insurance sector also display balance sheet resilience. Macro stress tests confirm the banking sector can withstand losses under adverse scenarios and maintain capital buffers above regulatory minimums. Financial institutions and investors should note that while the domestic system remains robust, near-term risks from external uncertainties including geopolitical and trade-related factors warrant continued monitoring.
Archived snapshot
Apr 22, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Press Releases
| () | |
| Date : Dec 31, 2025 | |
| RBI releases the Financial Stability Report, December 2025 | |
| | Today, the Reserve Bank released the December 2025 edition of the Financial Stability Report (FSR), which reflects the collective assessment of the Sub-Committee of the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) on the resilience of the Indian financial system and risks to financial stability.
Highlights:
- Global economy has been resilient, supported by fiscal measures, front-loaded trade, and strong AI-related investment. However, downside risks persist due to still elevated uncertainty, high public debt, and the risk of a disorderly market correction.
- Global financial markets appear strong on the surface but show growing underlying vulnerabilities. Sharp rise in equities and other risk assets, the expanding role of non-bank financial intermediaries and their deepening interconnectedness with banks, and the growth of stablecoins all heighten global financial system fragilities.
- Despite an uncertain and challenging global economic backdrop, the Indian economy continues to grow strongly, underpinned by robust domestic demand, benign inflation, and prudent macroeconomic policies.
- The domestic financial system remains robust and resilient, bolstered by strong balance sheets, easy financial conditions, and low financial market volatility. Nonetheless, there are near-term risks from external uncertainties - geopolitical and trade related.
- The health of the scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) remains sound with strong capital and liquidity buffers, improved asset quality and robust profitability.
- Macro stress test results affirm the resilience of SCBs to withstand losses under hypothetical adverse scenarios and maintain capital buffers well above the regulatory minimum. Stress tests also confirm the resilience of mutual funds and clearing corporations.
- Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) remain robust supported by strong capital buffers, solid earnings, and improving asset quality.
- The insurance sector continues to display balance sheet resilience and the consolidated solvency ratio remained above the minimum threshold limit. (Brij Raj) Chief General Manager
Press Release: 2025-2026/1807 | | Today, the Reserve Bank released the December 2025 edition of the Financial Stability Report (FSR), which reflects the collective assessment of the Sub-Committee of the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) on the resilience of the Indian financial system and risks to financial stability.
Highlights:
- Global economy has been resilient, supported by fiscal measures, front-loaded trade, and strong AI-related investment. However, downside risks persist due to still elevated uncertainty, high public debt, and the risk of a disorderly market correction.
- Global financial markets appear strong on the surface but show growing underlying vulnerabilities. Sharp rise in equities and other risk assets, the expanding role of non-bank financial intermediaries and their deepening interconnectedness with banks, and the growth of stablecoins all heighten global financial system fragilities.
- Despite an uncertain and challenging global economic backdrop, the Indian economy continues to grow strongly, underpinned by robust domestic demand, benign inflation, and prudent macroeconomic policies.
- The domestic financial system remains robust and resilient, bolstered by strong balance sheets, easy financial conditions, and low financial market volatility. Nonetheless, there are near-term risks from external uncertainties - geopolitical and trade related.
- The health of the scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) remains sound with strong capital and liquidity buffers, improved asset quality and robust profitability.
- Macro stress test results affirm the resilience of SCBs to withstand losses under hypothetical adverse scenarios and maintain capital buffers well above the regulatory minimum. Stress tests also confirm the resilience of mutual funds and clearing corporations.
- Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) remain robust supported by strong capital buffers, solid earnings, and improving asset quality.
- The insurance sector continues to display balance sheet resilience and the consolidated solvency ratio remained above the minimum threshold limit. (Brij Raj) Chief General Manager
Press Release: 2025-2026/1807 |
| Today, the Reserve Bank released the December 2025 edition of the Financial Stability Report (FSR), which reflects the collective assessment of the Sub-Committee of the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) on the resilience of the Indian financial system and risks to financial stability.
Highlights:
- Global economy has been resilient, supported by fiscal measures, front-loaded trade, and strong AI-related investment. However, downside risks persist due to still elevated uncertainty, high public debt, and the risk of a disorderly market correction.
- Global financial markets appear strong on the surface but show growing underlying vulnerabilities. Sharp rise in equities and other risk assets, the expanding role of non-bank financial intermediaries and their deepening interconnectedness with banks, and the growth of stablecoins all heighten global financial system fragilities.
- Despite an uncertain and challenging global economic backdrop, the Indian economy continues to grow strongly, underpinned by robust domestic demand, benign inflation, and prudent macroeconomic policies.
- The domestic financial system remains robust and resilient, bolstered by strong balance sheets, easy financial conditions, and low financial market volatility. Nonetheless, there are near-term risks from external uncertainties - geopolitical and trade related.
- The health of the scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) remains sound with strong capital and liquidity buffers, improved asset quality and robust profitability.
- Macro stress test results affirm the resilience of SCBs to withstand losses under hypothetical adverse scenarios and maintain capital buffers well above the regulatory minimum. Stress tests also confirm the resilience of mutual funds and clearing corporations.
- Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) remain robust supported by strong capital buffers, solid earnings, and improving asset quality.
- The insurance sector continues to display balance sheet resilience and the consolidated solvency ratio remained above the minimum threshold limit. (Brij Raj) Chief General Manager
Press Release: 2025-2026/1807 | |
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
;)
Related changes
Get daily alerts for India RBI Financial Stability Reports
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from RBI.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when India RBI Financial Stability Reports publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.