The lender's Canadian banking subsidiary, sitting on a capital adequacy ratio of 29.3 per cent, is witnessing a decline in its return on equity.
The bank has already initiated talks with the Canadian regulator on the issue, according to sources familiar with the development.
The private sector lender has decided to send home a part of the capital of ICICI Bank Canada as the subsidiary is finding it difficult to grow its loan portfolio after the regulator said it must lend money within the country if it raised deposits locally.
"It has become a challenge to grow the portfolio of the Canadian subsidiary.
"The bank is not able to generate a reasonable return on equity because there is idle capital. One of the ways to improve the return on equity is to reduce the level of capital," said a source, requesting anonymity.
He did not quantify the amount ICICI Bank was planning to repatriate from Canada. Sources said the bank was still awaiting a response from the Canadian regulator on the issue.
ICICI Bank confirmed this development.
"As we have communicated in the past, following the global financial crisis, the regulatory environment has been becoming tighter and regulators are increasingly requiring deposits raised in a particular geography to be deployed in local assets," the bank's spokesperson said in an emailed response.
"Given our international strategy, which is primarily India-linked, we are not growing our balance sheet in Canada and will
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