The Letter That Shook Dalal Street
On March 18, 2026, Atanu Chakraborthy — the part-time chairman of HDFC Bank — sat down
and wrote a resignation letter. It was short and deliberately vague. He said that certain
"happenings and practices" within the bank, observed over
two years, were "not in congruence with his personal values and ethics."
No specifics. No names. No examples. Just that.
A resignation from the chairman of India's second-largest bank would always make headlines.
But it was the phrasing — values, ethics, practices — that set off alarm bells across the
financial world. Markets despise ambiguity, and this letter was nothing but ambiguity dressed
in formal letterhead.
"Certain happenings and practices within the bank that I have observed over the last
two years are not in congruence with my personal values and ethics."
— Atanu Chakraborthy, Resignation Letter, March 18, 2026
The very next day — March 19 — HDFC Bank's stock plunged 8.7%
in a single session, dragging the broader Indian market down by more than 3%, its worst
day since June 2024. Because HDFC Bank carries roughly 12% weight in the Nifty 50, the
fallout didn't stay contained. It pulled the entire index with it.
Then came the contradiction that made everything worse. Speaking exclusively to NDTV Profit,
Chakraborthy clarified that his letter did not point to any wrongdoing — only
ideological differences. He expressed clear respect for the organisation and the board.
Wait — values and ethics in one breath, and "just ideological differences" in the next?
Markets were unsure what to believe, and the stock kept sliding. By March 23, HDFC Bank
hit a 52-week low of ₹750 and by March 30 it had dropped further to ₹731. Over
₹70,000 crore of investor wealth had been erased.
But the resignation, while the catalyst, was only the surface. Beneath it lay three
structural fault lines.
The AT1 Bond Trap: When "Safe" Wasn't Safe
To understand what happened next, you first need to understand what an AT1 bond actually is
— and why it's nothing like what HDFC Bank's executives allegedly told their clients.
Start with a normal bond. If you lend an airline ₹10 lakh for five years at 5% interest,
the airline is legally obligated to pay you ₹50,000 every year and return your principal
at the end of year five. If the airline goes bankrupt, you're at the front of the
repayment queue — above even the shareholders.
Traditional Bond
Fixed maturity date. Guaranteed return of principal. Low interest rate (~5%).
Priority payout in bankruptcy. Investor is a creditor.
AT1 Bond
No maturity date — ever. High interest (~9–13%). Bonds can be written to zero
if capital falls below a threshold. In failure, treated almost like a shareholder.
AT1 bonds — Additional Tier 1 bonds — are perpetual instruments designed to absorb losses
and bolster a bank's capital base during stress. They offer high yields precisely because
they carry extreme risk: no end date, no guaranteed repayment, and the possibility of
being completely wiped out if regulators deem it necessary.
In May 2021, HDFC Bank's Dubai branch began selling Credit Suisse AT1 bonds to NRI clients.
According to reporting by Business Standard and Deccan Herald, the bank's executives marketed
these high-risk perpetual bonds as "safe, high-yield investments"
promising returns of 10–13%. NRI clients were reportedly convinced to transfer their Foreign
Currency Non-Resident (FCNR) deposits from India to HDFC Bank's Dubai branch — and those
funds were used to purchase Credit Suisse AT1 bonds. The material risks, including the absence
of a maturity date and the write-down clause, were allegedly not adequately disclosed.
Then came March 2023. Credit Suisse collapsed. UBS took it over in an emergency government-brokered
rescue. Swiss regulators ordered a complete write-off of approximately
$17 billion in AT1 bonds — making every single investor in those instruments lose
everything overnight.
The Human Cost
Consider an NRI living in Dubai who had accumulated ₹1 crore in FCNR deposits earning a
steady 5–6%. An HDFC Bank relationship manager calls with an offer: 13% returns on Credit
Suisse bonds — safe, blue-chip, prestigious. The name alone inspired trust. So the
transfer is made.
In March 2023, that ₹1 crore becomes zero. The Swiss regulators didn't need to ask
permission. That was the contract all along. The saving grace — a Swiss court later
annulled the write-off, restoring these bonds to roughly 30% of face value — but the
damage to trust was permanent, and potentially several NRI investors are still in legal
limbo.
The 2023 Merger: A Profitable Marriage With Hidden Costs
Even as the AT1 bond story was unfolding, a second, slower-burning crisis was taking shape
inside HDFC Bank's balance sheet — one born not of misconduct but of structural arithmetic.
To understand it, you need to understand how a bank makes money. A bank takes deposits from
customers and pays them 2–7% interest. It then lends that money out at 9–12%. The difference
— the Net Interest Margin or NIM — is where profit lives.
There are two kinds of deposits. CASA accounts (Current and
Savings Accounts) are the bank's cheapest source of funds — savings accounts pay around 2–3%,
and current accounts pay nothing. Fixed Deposits, on the other
hand, are expensive — banks must offer 6–7% to attract them, squeezing the margin on every
rupee lent out.
In 2023, HDFC Bank (the bank) merged with HDFC Limited (a housing finance NBFC). The logic
was compelling: HDFC Limited had a massive ₹6.25 lakh crore home loan book with a loyal
customer base. But it was an NBFC — it raised money through bond markets, not bank deposits.
It brought enormous loan assets into the merged entity but almost no cheap deposits.
Overnight, the bank inherited 6 lakh crores in loans to fund, but its deposit base hadn't
grown proportionally. To cover the gap, it had to aggressively court fixed deposit investors
— expensive money. Meanwhile, home loans carry much lower interest rates than the personal
and business loans HDFC Bank traditionally focused on. When you blend a large pool of 8.2%
home loans with higher-yielding personal loans, your average lending rate drops.
The result was a textbook margin compression — and it showed up starkly in the numbers.
4.1%
NIM Pre-Merger (FY23)
→
Merger Shock
Expensive FDs · Lower Yields
→
3.35%
NIM in Q3 FY26
Three forces drove this compression. First, the average lending rate fell because HDFC
Limited's home loans (priced around 8.2%) diluted the portfolio of higher-margin personal
and business loans (typically 12–18%). Second, deposit costs rose sharply — unable to wait
for organic CASA growth, the bank had to offer competitive fixed deposit rates of 6–7.5%.
Third — and this is the part that almost nobody discusses — there was a hidden regulatory
cost unique to banks.
The CRR & SLR Penalty
Every bank in India must keep approximately 21% of its deposits locked up — 3% in cash
with the RBI (Cash Reserve Ratio, or CRR) and 18% in government bonds (Statutory Liquidity
Ratio, or SLR). This money earns little to nothing.
HDFC Limited, as an NBFC, was exempt from these rules. It could lend nearly 100% of
every rupee it raised. But once absorbed into the bank, its entire ₹6.25 lakh crore
loan book became subject to these requirements. The merged bank now needed to park roughly
₹1.3 lakh crore idle — capital that could otherwise have been lent out at 9%, generating
thousands of crores in additional income.
Loans Outrunning Deposits: The Third Fault Line
The third layer of pressure comes from HDFC Bank's loan-to-deposit ratio. Before the merger,
this figure sat at a comfortable 87–88%. The RBI's recommended comfort range is 60–80%, so
the bank was operating in reasonably safe territory. After the merger, however, that ratio
spiked to 110% — meaning the bank had lent out
more money than it held in deposits. That is not a sustainable position.
By Q3 of FY26, the ratio had been walked back down to 98.5% — a meaningful improvement,
but still well above the RBI's comfort ceiling. Loans are continuing to grow faster than
deposits, which means the bank remains under pressure to either slow its lending growth
or aggressively attract new depositors — both of which carry their own costs.
When Trust Becomes the Liability
In isolation, each of these three problems — the AT1 bond mis-selling allegations, the
merger-induced NIM compression, and the elevated loan-to-deposit ratio — is manageable.
Banks navigate structural challenges all the time. But three fault lines converging
simultaneously, at a moment when global markets are already rattled by geopolitical tensions,
is a different proposition entirely.
And it all became explosive because of trust. HDFC Bank was never just a bank — it was
considered India's most dependable banking compounder. A stock that long-term investors held
with the same quiet confidence they might reserve for government bonds. The chairman's
resignation letter, whatever its intent, struck at exactly that confidence.
In banking, trust is not a soft asset. It is the asset. It determines whether depositors
keep their money with you, whether the market values your stock at a premium, and whether
the regulatory relationship remains cooperative. When a bank has a trust problem, it is not
facing an ordinary business challenge — it is facing an existential one.
HDFC Bank isn't just a stock that fell. It's a case study in how ambiguity,
structural stress, and eroded credibility can compound faster than any single problem
ever could on its own.
The path forward requires HDFC Bank to address all three layers — rebuild CASA ratios
organically, resolve the NRI investor grievances transparently, and demonstrate that
its NIM compression is bottoming out rather than continuing to deteriorate. The numbers
suggest the bank remains fundamentally sound. But fundamentals alone cannot restore
what a trust deficit destroys.
Key Takeaways
-
HDFC Bank chairman Atanu Chakraborthy's March 2026 resignation — citing values and
ethics but then softening to "ideological differences" — created a contradiction that
the market found more alarming than clarity would have.
-
AT1 bonds are high-risk perpetual instruments. HDFC Bank's Dubai branch allegedly sold
Credit Suisse AT1 bonds to NRI clients as "safe" investments; when Credit Suisse
collapsed in 2023, those investors faced a complete write-off.
-
The 2023 merger with HDFC Limited compressed the bank's Net Interest Margin from ~4.1%
to 3.35% through three channels: lower average lending rates, higher deposit costs, and
a new CRR/SLR burden on ₹6.25 lakh crore in inherited loans.
-
The loan-to-deposit ratio spiked to 110% post-merger and has been reduced to 98.5%
by Q3 FY26 — still above the RBI's recommended comfort ceiling of 80%.
-
In banking, a trust deficit is not a soft problem. It is a structural one that
accelerates and amplifies every other challenge. HDFC Bank's path to recovery
depends as much on restored credibility as on improving its balance sheet metrics.