Bank of Baroda: CARE Ratings Affirms Strong Credit Ratings

CARE Ratings has reaffirmed Bank of Baroda’s credit ratings, assigning CARE A1+ to the bank’s Certificate of Deposit and confirming CARE AAA; Stable for its Tier-II Bonds. These ratings reflect Bank of Baroda’s systemic importance as a leading public sector bank, supported by the Indian Government. The ratings consider its extensive branch network and international presence, as well as comfortable capitalization levels.

Ratings Reaffirmed

Bank of Baroda’s credit ratings have been affirmed by CARE Ratings. The agency has assigned a CARE A1+ rating to the bank’s Certificate of Deposit and reaffirmed the CARE AAA; Stable rating for its Tier-II Bonds, indicating a stable outlook for the bank.

Key Rating Drivers

The ratings are supported by several factors:

  • Government Support: Continued and expected support from the Government of India (GoI) due to Bank of Baroda’s systemic importance as one of the largest public sector banks (PSB).
  • Established Franchise: A pan-India branch network that helps garner deposits at competitive rates, along with a sizeable international presence, providing diversification in the advances profile. Approximately 17% of total advances are international as of March 31, 2025.
  • Capitalization: Comfortable capitalization levels that support the bank’s credit growth.
  • Financial Performance

    In FY25, Bank of Baroda showed improvement in asset quality parameters with lower incremental slippages, leading to lower credit costs, and this, alongside strong credit growth, has improved profitability. The bank’s ability to maintain asset quality remains a monitorable. Total deposits grew by ~11% in FY25.

    The bank’s capital adequacy ratio (CAR) stood at 17.19% as of March 31, 2025, with a Tier-I CAR of 14.79% and a Common Equity Tier-I (CET I) of 13.78%.

    Rating Sensitivities

    Factors that could lead to a negative rating action/downgrade include:

  • Reduction in Government of India (GOI) support and ownership below 51%.
  • Deterioration in asset quality, with a net non-performing assets (NNPA) ratio of over 3% on a sustained basis.
  • Decline in profitability, with return on total assets (ROTA) below 0.50% on a sustained basis.
  • Moderation in capitalization cushion levels of less than 2.5% over and above the minimum regulatory requirement.
  • Source: BSE

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