Analysts say, the concern has grown because several separate developments have been clubbed together to create a larger perception of governance failure, despite court relief, regulatory reassurance and ‘s willingness for independent reviews offering comfort to the general public.
However, key facts counter this narrative. and independent legal firms appointed to review the governance concerns, have found no material adverse findings against Bank or its management. This reinforces the bank’s position that there is no established governance failure, despite repeated attempts to create a contrary perception.
The first major flashpoint was the Lilavati Trust matter, in which bribery allegations were levelled directly against HDFC Bank MD and CEO .
On May 6, 2026 the Bombay High Court quashed the bribery and cheating FIR Jagdishan, observing the complaint by the Lilavati Trust was a counter to the bank’s efforts to recover dues exceeding Rs 65 crore. The court called the case a gross abuse of the criminal process driven by ‘personal vendetta’.
The second flashpoint came when part-time chairman Atanu Chakraborty resigned abruptly on March 18, 2026 citing values, ethics and governance concerns. Reports in the media use the word ‘crisis’ to describe the bank’s situation and this caused panic.
However, on March 19, 2026 Chakraborty himself, in an interview to described the development as a routine matter.
Speaking to ANI, Chakraborty said, “That’s (resignation) on the exchange website. Nothing worth discussion. It’s quite routine,” indicating that the details of his resignation have already been disclosed through official channels.
Chakraborty’s subsequent remarks to other sections of the press pointed not to institutional collapse but to board-level disagreements. This showed that framing the exit as a crisis was perhaps an overreach.
On the same day, the , India’s central banker, said it had approved a transition arrangement for the position of part-time Chairman, as requested by the bank. It also reassured markets that it had found no material concerns around ‘s conduct or governance.
In a statement on March 19 2026, RBI emphasised that HDFC Bank, classified as a Domestic Systemically Important Bank (D-SIB), continues to have “sound financials, a professionally run board, and a competent management team.”
The RBI further stated that, based on its periodic assessments, there are no material concerns regarding the bank’s governance or conduct. It added that the lender remains well-capitalised, with sufficient liquidity and a satisfactory financial position, and that the regulator will continue to engage with the bank’s board and management going forward.
On March 19, 2026 Interim Chairman Keki Mistry underlined that the development has no bearing on the bank’s operational strength or future growth trajectory.
Addressing analysts in a post-resignation conference call, Mistry emphasised that the institution’s core framework remains intact, stating, “The bank operates with strong governance standards, controls, and risk management. Direction, business priorities, and executive abilities continue to remain as always at the bank.”
He reiterated confidence in the bank’s institutional resilience, adding, “We are committed to institutional resilience and investor confidence… We continue to build on the shared values and the potential of the institution.”
Post this, HDFC Bank proactively invited external legal review, showing its willingness to undergo independent scrutiny, which further reinforced that there was no major governance concern.
Another recent media report on the Rs 45 crore “differential interest” payment further intensified the debate. HDFC Bank rejected assumptions of wrongdoing after an internal probe examined the matter.
However, questions were raised when internal review proceedings repeatedly surfaced in public discourse through selective, targeted leaks, each generating a fresh panic cycle.
Experts say taken together these episodes could point to something more deliberate. Every development around HDFC Bank has been rapidly repackaged in the language of catastrophe, scam, fraud, collapse, governance failure, erasing the critical distinction between allegation, investigation and established fact. The result has been a single, rolling panic narrative that self-reinforces with each new leak.
The questions this timeline raises are uncomfortable but unavoidable. Who benefits from sustained trust erosion in India’s most systemically important private bank? Are internal whistleblower and review mechanisms being selectively weaponised to cause reputational damage?
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