The Reserve Bank of India has cleared Kotak Mahindra Bank to raise its shareholding in two mid-tier lenders, AU Small Finance Bank and Federal Bank, up to 9.99% in each. The approvals came through regulatory filings and mark a notable shift in Kotak's investment posture toward peers in the banking sector.
What the approval means
A stake below 10% in a bank is classified as a passive or minority financial investment under RBI's ownership guidelines. By staying just under the 9.99% threshold, Kotak avoids triggering the stricter regulatory scrutiny that applies to stakes of 10% and above, which require additional RBI approvals and come with more stringent fit-and-proper assessments.
This matters because RBI tightly controls who can hold significant stakes in Indian banks. Getting explicit clearance to go up to 9.99% in two separate lenders simultaneously signals that Kotak has cleared the central bank's ownership and governance checks for both investments.
Why this is strategically significant
Near-10% stakes are the largest minority positions a bank can hold in another bank without crossing into heightened regulatory territory. For Kotak, these holdings could serve multiple purposes: building financial exposure to faster-growing smaller lenders, creating optionality for deeper commercial relationships, or simply deploying capital into well-regulated peers at attractive valuations.
AU Small Finance Bank operates in retail and small business lending, a segment with strong growth but also higher credit risk than large corporate banking. Federal Bank is a established Kerala-headquartered private lender with a growing retail and NRI deposit franchise. Both are meaningfully smaller than Kotak in asset size, giving Kotak an influential minority position without operational control.
Markets showed a mild reaction to the news, suggesting investors are treating this as a financial portfolio move rather than a precursor to a merger or acquisition attempt. That said, a near-10% stake in a listed bank is not a routine treasury investment, it positions Kotak as a significant enough shareholder to have a voice in governance conversations.
What to watch: whether Kotak actually builds up to the permitted limit in either bank, any disclosures about the commercial rationale for these stakes, and whether RBI's approval signals broader comfort with cross-bank equity holdings as the sector consolidates.