Sunday, April 5, 2026

Ch 3A - Starter Problems For Newbies

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Prompt to ChatGPT 5.3 Instant

I am teaching my sister Python coding. She is a complete novice to Python and programming. I asked her to do some very-very simple problems that can be solved in 1-2 lines of code like: - Print first ten numbers starting from 0 - Print first ten even numbers - Print table of 3 - Print characters in your full name - Print characters at even indices of your full name (note: indexing starts from 0) Can you give 25-30 more problems that are this simple?



That’s a great way to teach—tiny problems with immediate feedback work really well for beginners 👍
Since she’s just starting, I’ll keep these 1–3 line solvable, focused on loops, strings, and basic Python built-ins.


🧩 30 Simple Python Practice Problems

🔢 Numbers & Loops (Very Basic)

  1. Print numbers from 5 to 15

  2. Print numbers from 10 to 1 (reverse order)

  3. Print all odd numbers from 1 to 20

  4. Print squares of numbers from 1 to 10

  5. Print cubes of numbers from 1 to 5

  6. Print numbers divisible by 3 between 1 and 30

  7. Print the sum of first 10 natural numbers

  8. Print multiplication table of 7

  9. Print numbers from 1 to 20, but skip multiples of 4

  10. Print numbers from 1 to 20, stop when number is 13


🔤 Strings (Very Important for Beginners)

  1. Print each character of the word "Python"

  2. Print characters of your name in reverse

  3. Print only vowels in your name

  4. Count number of characters in your name

  5. Print first and last character of your name

  6. Convert your name to uppercase

  7. Convert your name to lowercase

  8. Print characters at odd indices of your name

  9. Replace all 'a' in your name with '*'

  10. Check if a given word is in uppercase


🔄 Built-in Functions Practice

  1. Find maximum of these numbers: [3, 7, 2, 9, 5]

  2. Find minimum of these numbers

  3. Find sum of numbers in a list

  4. Find length of a list

  5. Sort a list of numbers

  6. Convert a number to string

  7. Convert string "123" to integer

  8. Find absolute value of -25

  9. Round off 3.7

  10. Generate a list of numbers from 1 to 10 using range()


🎯 Slightly Fun / Thinking (Still Easy)

  1. Print "Hello" 5 times

  2. Print "Hi" 3 times using a loop

  3. Print numbers from 1 to 10 with "Number:" before each (e.g., Number: 1)

  4. Print all characters except spaces in "My Name Is"

  5. Count how many times 'a' appears in "banana"


💡 Teaching Tip (Important)

Once she solves a few, ask:

  • “Can you do this in a different way?”

  • “Can you make it shorter?”

  • “Can you use a built-in function instead?”

This builds real understanding instead of memorization.

Diversification is not disloyalty


Lessons in Investing    Other Articles by Ankur Warikoo    <<< Previously


Personal Finance & Investing

Why Putting All Your Money in India Is a Patriotic Mistake

The case for global diversification — and why loving your country doesn't mean betting everything on it.

Investment & Strategy 12 min read 2025

People often ask me why I invest in the US, why I put money into startups, and why — despite everything I say about Indian markets — I haven't parked all my money there. This is my answer. And it begins not in Mumbai, not in New York, but in Tokyo, in 1989.

§ 01 — The Japan Warning

The Ghost of the Nikkei

In 1989, Japan was at the absolute apex of its power. Of the fifty largest companies in the world, thirty-two were Japanese. Harvard professors were authoring breathless books proclaiming Japan as the inevitable dominant force of the twenty-first century. The land beneath the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was, by some estimates, worth more than the entire state of California. Every serious investor knew — or thought they knew — that Japan was the future.

39,000 Nikkei 225 peak, December 1989
–82% Decline from peak over the following years
34 yrs Time to recover back to 39,000
1.1% Annualised return for a 1989 investor

The Nikkei 225 index peaked at over 39,000. Then it collapsed — by eighty-two percent. It took thirty-four full years for the index to claw its way back to that same number. If you had invested in Japan's index in December 1989 and held on, your annualised return over those three-and-a-half decades would have been a humbling 1.1 percent per year. Barely above zero. Less than a savings account.

The countries that looked like certain winners almost never remained on top. Confidence is not a moat. Dominance is not permanent.

And by 2024, of the fifty largest companies in the world, Japan had not a single entry in the top thirty. The companies that defined global capitalism in 1989 had, for the most part, faded into irrelevance or stagnation. The lesson isn't that Japan failed — it's that no nation's economic dominance is permanent, and yet investors behave as if it is.

§ 02 — Cautionary Tales

China, Brazil, and the Inevitability Trap

Japan is the clearest example, but it is far from the only one. History offers a pattern: the countries that look like certain winners almost never remain on top for long. Two more recent stories illustrate this sharply.

Case Study — China The "Inevitable Superpower" That Peaked

In 2020, the Centre for Economics and Business Research predicted that China would overtake the United States as the world's largest economy. The prior two decades seemed to confirm this trajectory — unparalleled infrastructure buildout, hundreds of millions lifted from poverty, relentless GDP growth. But by February 2024, China's stock market index was sharply off its highs. Evergrande, once the country's largest real estate developer, collapsed spectacularly under a mountain of debt. Demographic trouble followed: China's birth rate fell to just 7.92 million in 2025, a record low. The story of China's "inevitable" rise had, quietly, begun to stall.

Case Study — Brazil The BRIC Dream That Dissolved

Brazil led the famous BRIC acronym — Brazil, Russia, India, China — the quartet of emerging economies that investment banks in the 2000s declared would reshape the world order. Brazil was first alphabetically, and it felt first in many other ways too. It hosted the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics. In 2011, Brazil's GDP per capita stood at approximately $13,300. By 2020, it had nearly halved, falling to around $6,900. The Brazilian real collapsed against the dollar — from roughly 1.7 to the dollar in 2011 to nearly 5.4 by 2020. The BRIC dream, for Brazil at least, became a cautionary tale of overconfidence.

These aren't stories designed to frighten you. They are illustrations of a structural truth: in the last twenty-five years, no single country has consistently topped global stock market performance across consecutive years. The leader rotates. Sometimes it is the US. Sometimes India. Sometimes a smaller emerging market you barely track. No one can predict it reliably. That uncertainty is precisely the argument for diversification.

§ 03 — The India Concentration Problem

How Much of the World Are You Actually Invested In?

India's stock market represents roughly four percent of global market capitalisation. That means, if all your financial assets are in Indian markets, you are exposed to just four percent of the world's investable opportunity — and entirely cut off from the remaining ninety-six percent.

But look closer at where Indian household wealth actually sits. According to data from the Reserve Bank of India, the typical Indian household's assets break down roughly as follows:

77% Real estate
11% Gold
7% Durables (phones, appliances, etc.)
5% All financial investments combined

Everything — your fixed deposits, your Provident Fund, your mutual funds, your equity portfolio — fits inside that final five percent. And all of it is concentrated in a single country's economic future. Not because India is a bad bet. But because concentration is a risk, regardless of how good the underlying asset is.

Think about that for a moment. A Japanese investor in 1988 felt equally certain about his country's future. The fundamentals looked strong. The growth story was compelling. And yet.

§ 04 — Open Questions About India

Five Things That Keep Me Thinking

None of this is a prediction of doom for India. I am personally optimistic about this country's trajectory. But intellectual honesty demands acknowledging the open questions — the variables that could significantly alter the growth story.

The demographic dividend or demographic trap? India has an enormous youth population. The narrative is that as these young people enter the workforce, they will earn, spend, and drive consumption. That story is powerful — but it depends entirely on whether enough jobs are created. If artificial intelligence continues displacing white-collar work, if manufacturing doesn't scale fast enough, if unemployment climbs, that demographic dividend can quickly become social pressure: frustrated young people, civil unrest, and a consumption economy that never ignites.

Valuation risk. Indian markets are not cheap. For every rupee of earnings generated by a listed Indian company, investors are currently paying around twenty-three to twenty-four rupees — a Price-to-Earnings ratio that makes India among the more expensive emerging markets. By comparison, Brazil trades at roughly nine times, South Korea at eleven, and China at around fifteen. The premium is explainable, but it is real. And when markets are expensive, the margin of safety shrinks.

Foreign investor behaviour. Over the past eighteen months or so, foreign institutional investors have been consistently selling Indian equities — and domestic retail investors have been absorbing those outflows, buying steadily. This dynamic keeps markets supported, but it also raises a question: what happens if domestic retail sentiment turns? Markets need both domestic and foreign participants to stay balanced.

Regional inequality. India is not a monolith. Karnataka's GDP per capita sits around four times that of states like Uttar Pradesh. Five states contribute nearly fifty percent of national GDP. Roughly 350 million people — about 35 crore — remain in environments where economic participation is still severely constrained. Until that changes, the consumption story has a meaningful structural ceiling.

Currency erosion. The rupee has roughly halved against the dollar over the last twenty years — from around 45 to approaching 90. This is not a surprise; it reflects structural inflation differentials. But for a domestic investor, it means that even a flat return on a dollar-denominated asset would have doubled in rupee terms simply due to currency movement. Every year you keep wealth entirely in rupees, you forgo this hedge.

§ 05 — The Case for Geographic Diversification

Independent Markets, Uncorrelated Returns

Here is a fact that surprises most people: the correlation between India's Nifty 50 and the US S&P 500 is approximately 0.34. In plain English — these two indices are largely independent of each other. When the S&P 500 rises, the Nifty 50 does not necessarily follow. When Indian markets correct, American markets may be indifferent. Sixty-six percent of the time, they behave as distinct, unrelated systems.

A portfolio that owns only one country's markets is not a diversified portfolio. It is a concentrated bet dressed up as investing.

This independence is the mathematical foundation of diversification. If your Indian portfolio and your global portfolio don't move in lockstep, owning both reduces the volatility of your total wealth without proportionally reducing your expected returns. That's the core of modern portfolio theory — and it applies just as powerfully to geography as it does to sectors.

No country has dominated global stock market performance for twenty-five consecutive years. The leader rotates. In the years that India underperforms — and there will be such years — a portion of your portfolio in the US, or in other markets, will compensate. The reverse is equally true.

§ 06 — How to Actually Do It

Practical Paths to Global Exposure

The good news is that accessing global markets has never been simpler for an Indian investor. There are two broad routes.

Direct international investing. You can open an account with platforms that allow you to invest directly in US equities and funds under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), which permits remitting up to $250,000 per year abroad. This gives you direct dollar exposure and ownership of foreign assets.

International ETFs listed in India. For those who prefer to stay within the domestic market framework, several fund houses now offer internationally-focused funds. Motilal Oswal's NASDAQ 100 Fund of Fund, for instance, has delivered annualised returns in the range of thirty to thirty-five percent over a five-year window. Their NASDAQ Q50 ETF and other international ETFs allow you to tap specific segments of global markets — US technology, international mid-caps, and so on — without remitting money abroad. These are still rupee-denominated products, but they give you economic exposure to foreign earnings and assets.

Neither path is a silver bullet. Both carry their own tax treatment, costs, and risks. But the point is that the tools exist. Geographic diversification is no longer a privilege reserved for the wealthy or the sophisticated.

§ 07 — Patriotism and Portfolio Management

Smart Money Is Patriotic Money

Here is where I want to be direct, because this is the part that gets muddled in a lot of conversations about investing in India.

Investing exclusively in India is not patriotism. It is concentration risk wearing a flag. True love for your country — if we are going to use that language — is expressed not by where you invest, but by how much you contribute to the economy. Pay your taxes. Spend your money here. Build businesses here. Employ people here.

My definition of patriotism in finance is simple: how much can I earn, sitting in this country, so that I spend more here, pay more in taxes here, and grow with this country? The goal is to accumulate enough wealth — globally diversified, intelligently managed — that the bulk of my consumption happens right here, in India. That is a more meaningful contribution to national prosperity than putting a hundred percent of my savings into domestic mutual funds and calling it deshbhakti.

You don't have to choose between smart investing and loving India. The two are not in conflict. What is in conflict is the instinct to confuse loyalty with concentration — and to mistake a limited financial worldview for virtue.

Summary

Conclusion

  • Japan's Nikkei 225 took 34 years to recover from its 1989 peak — investors who entered at the top earned just 1.1% annually. No country's dominance is permanent, no matter how inevitable it looks.
  • China's growth story has materially slowed — Evergrande's collapse, demographic decline, and falling birth rates all signal that the "inevitable superpower" narrative was premature.
  • Brazil's BRIC promise evaporated within a decade — GDP per capita nearly halved between 2011 and 2020, and the currency lost more than half its value against the dollar.
  • Indian household wealth is dangerously concentrated: 77% in real estate, 11% in gold, and only 5% in all financial instruments combined — almost all of it tied to a single country's future.
  • India is just 4% of global market capitalisation. Investing only domestically means ignoring 96% of the world's opportunity set.
  • The Nifty 50 and S&P 500 have a correlation of only 0.34 — they largely move independently, which means owning both genuinely reduces portfolio risk.
  • The rupee has depreciated from ~₹45 to ~₹90 per dollar over 20 years. Dollar-denominated assets have structurally outperformed in rupee terms, even at flat nominal returns.
  • Indian markets trade at a P/E of roughly 23–24x, making them significantly more expensive than Brazil (~9x), South Korea (~11x), or China (~15x). Higher valuations compress future return potential.
  • International ETFs (e.g., Motilal Oswal NASDAQ 100, NASDAQ Q50) offer a practical, India-domiciled route to global diversification, with five-year annualised returns of 30–35%.
  • True financial patriotism is earning well, paying taxes honestly, and spending in India — not concentrating all your savings in domestic assets and calling it loyalty.

Citations & References

  1. Nikkei 225 historical data: Japan Exchange Group (JPX), Nikkei Inc. — Peak of 38,915 recorded on 29 December 1989; subsequent 82% drawdown and 34-year recovery to 2024.
  2. World's largest companies by market capitalisation (1989 vs. 2024): Fortune Global 500 historical archives; Visual Capitalist, "The Biggest Companies in the World" (2024).
  3. Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR): "World Economic League Table 2021" — predicted China to surpass the US as the world's largest economy by 2028.
  4. Evergrande collapse: Reuters; Bloomberg News — China Evergrande Group filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection in the United States in August 2023, following its 2021 default.
  5. China birth rate data: National Bureau of Statistics of China (NBS) — 2024 birth report; 7.92 million births recorded for 2025 projection based on NBS trend data.
  6. Brazil GDP per capita: World Bank Open Data — GDP per capita (current USD): Brazil, 2011–2020 series. USD/BRL exchange rate: Banco Central do Brasil.
  7. India household asset allocation: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — Household Finance Committee Report; RBI Annual Report, Financial Assets and Liabilities of Indian Households.
  8. India share of global market cap (~4%): World Federation of Exchanges (WFE); NSE India Market Statistics, 2024.
  9. Nifty 50 / S&P 500 correlation: Computed from monthly return data; cited in SEBI research papers on cross-market linkages and in Mirae Asset India research notes (2023–2024).
  10. INR/USD depreciation (₹45 → ₹90): Reserve Bank of India reference rate historical series, 2004–2024.
  11. India P/E ratio vs. peers: NSE Nifty 50 P/E data; MSCI Emerging Markets Index valuations; Bloomberg Terminal, as of Q1 2025.
  12. Motilal Oswal NASDAQ 100 FoF and NASDAQ Q50 ETF performance: Motilal Oswal Asset Management Company (MOAMC) — fund factsheets, five-year returns as of March 2025.
  13. Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS): Reserve Bank of India, Master Direction — Liberalised Remittance Scheme (Updated 2024). Annual limit: USD 250,000 per individual.
  14. India's regional GDP inequality: NITI Aayog State Statistics; MoSPI State Domestic Product data, 2023–24.
Investing · Global Markets · India

Saturday, April 4, 2026

What Exactly is Happening With HDFC Bank?


Lessons in Investing    Other Articles on Banking    <<< Previously


Banking & Finance · India

HDFC Bank:
Inside the Storm

A chairman's cryptic resignation, a billion-dollar AT1 bond scandal, and a landmark merger that quietly compressed the bank's profitability — three fault lines converging at the worst possible moment.

📅 March–April 2026 ⏱ 10 min read 🏦 Indian Banking · Markets
−8.7% Single-day stock fall
₹1L Cr+ Market cap wiped out
₹731 52-week low (Mar 30)
3.35% NIM in Q3 FY26

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.

Citations & References

  • Business Standard — "HDFC Bank Chairman Atanu Chakraborthy Resigns, Cites Values and Ethics," March 18, 2026.
  • NDTV Profit — Exclusive interview with Atanu Chakraborthy post-resignation, March 19, 2026. Chakraborthy clarified no wrongdoing, only ideological differences.
  • Business Standard & Deccan Herald — Reporting on HDFC Bank Dubai branch marketing of Credit Suisse AT1 bonds to NRI clients (2021–2023).
  • Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) — Ordered write-off of ~$17 billion in Credit Suisse AT1 bonds during the UBS emergency rescue, March 2023.
  • Swiss Federal Administrative Court — Ruling annulling the complete AT1 write-off; bonds restored to approximately 30% of face value.
  • RBI Circular — Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) at 4%; Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) at 18%; combined statutory lock-up requirement of ~21% of deposits for all scheduled commercial banks.
  • HDFC Bank Q3 FY26 Earnings — Net Interest Margin of 3.35%; Loan-to-Deposit Ratio of 98.5%; reported January 2026.
  • Equentist Analysis — Loan growth outpacing deposit growth at HDFC Bank post-merger; cited in context of LDR trajectory, 2024–2026.
  • NSE/BSE Market Data — HDFC Bank 52-week low of ₹750 on March 23, 2026; further drop to ₹731 on March 30, 2026.

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