PSU Banks Correct Amid Reform Buzz, Budget Impact

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AuthorAarav Shah|Published at:
PSU Banks Correct Amid Reform Buzz, Budget Impact
Overview

The Nifty PSU Bank index declined 2.4% on February 2, 2026, and 8% over two days, following profit-booking after a significant rally. Major public sector banks like Indian Bank, Bank of Baroda, and State Bank of India saw substantial drops. Market sentiment is pressured by the Union Budget's increase in securities transaction tax and plans for a high-level committee to review banking sector consolidation and ownership.

### Banking Sector Faces Correction Amid Reform Buzz

Public sector bank stocks experienced a notable downturn on February 2, 2026, with the Nifty PSU Bank index shedding 2.4% and accumulating an 8% decline over the preceding two trading sessions. This pullback follows a strong five-month period where the index had surged 21%, significantly outperforming the broader Nifty 50's 1% gain. The immediate driver for this correction appears to be investor profit-taking after the sector's impressive run.

### Government Committee to Reshape PSU Banking

Adding to market pressure, the Centre has announced the formation of a high-level committee focused on the banking sector as part of the 'Viksit Bharat' initiative. This panel is slated to review the sector's structure, with a mandate to explore consolidation opportunities for smaller public sector banks, examine ownership frameworks, and potentially revise foreign direct investment norms. The objective is to prepare the sector for future growth by creating fewer, larger entities with enhanced balance sheets. Analysts at JM Financial Institutional Securities highlighted this as a forward-looking move, evaluating the banking system's capacity to meet the economy's future demands.

### Ambitious Disinvestment Targets Loom

Alongside structural reforms, the government has set an aggressive disinvestment and asset monetisation target of ₹80,000 crore for FY27, a significant 135% increase over the revised FY26 estimate. This target anticipates substantial stake sales in entities like IDBI Bank and LIC, alongside further dilution in select PSU banks to meet minimum public shareholding requirements. The Budget's announcement of an increased borrowing program also weighed on PSU bank sentiment due to potential yield pressures on their bond holdings.

### Sector-Specific Impact and Outlook

The recent decline has impacted major public sector banks. Indian Bank shares fell 4% on February 2, contributing to an 11% drop over two days, after reaching a record high of ₹923 on January 30, 2026. Bank of Baroda saw a 3% dip on the day and a 10% decline over two days, trading around ₹270.50. State Bank of India's stock was down 3%, part of an 8% two-day slide, having touched an all-time high of ₹1,083.60 on February 1, 2026. While the immediate sentiment is subdued, particularly with the Union Budget's increase in securities transaction tax on derivatives dampening overall market sentiment, analysts suggest the long-term implications of the proposed reforms could foster greater efficiency and stronger balance sheets within the PSU banking sector. ICICI Securities noted that the proposed review could improve capital deployment efficiency and risk oversight.

State Bank of India's market capitalization stood at approximately ₹9.39 trillion with a P/E ratio around 11.2 as of early February 2026. Bank of Baroda's market cap was approximately ₹1.42 trillion with a P/E of about 7.59. Indian Bank had a market cap of around ₹1.13 trillion with a P/E of approximately 9.48.

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