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India’s PNB hikes cybersecurity spend as AI models including Anthropic’s Mythos raise risks

By Thomson Reuters May 5, 2026 | 9:37 AM

By Nishit Navin and Ashwin Manikandan

BENGALURU/MUMBAI, May 5 (Reuters) – India’s Punjab National Bank is stepping up investments in cybersecurity and accelerating procurement of technology to guard against rising ​digital threats including those from advanced AI models, a ‌senior executive said on Tuesday.

The country’s third largest state-run lender by market capitalisation has earmarked about 20% of its technology budget for cybersecurity, or roughly 7 billion to 8 billion rupees ($73.5 million – $84 million) for the current financial ‌year, ​executive director D Surendran told Reuters in ⁠an interview, adding that ⁠this allocation is more than 50% higher than the previous year.

“We don’t want to compromise on this kind of expenditure,” Surendran said, adding the bank will increase the spending further if ​required.

PNB’s move comes amid heightened regulatory focus on risks emerging from advanced AI models including Anthropic’s Mythos.

Last month India’s finance ⁠minister Nirmala Sitharaman met with heads ⁠of top banks to gauge preparedness against AI-related ​cybersecurity risks. India’s central bank has also been in talks with ​global regulators, lenders and government officials to understand the potential ‌risks, Reuters has reported.

PNB is also fast-tracking purchases of security tools, including firewalls and other systems to address vulnerabilities, Surendran said.

“We have increased our frequency of audit… now we have made our ⁠audit process 24/7 so that the criticality will be identified fast,” Surendran said.

PNB SEES SUSTAINED LOAN GROWTH

The New-Delhi based lender, earlier in the ⁠day, posteda more ‌than 14% rise in net profit to 52.25 ⁠billion rupees, helped by healthy loan growth and ​improving ‌asset quality.

Loans grew 12.7% year-on-year while deposits rose ​9.2%.

The bank ⁠will target 12-13% loan growth in financial year 2026/27, Surendran said, driven by credit to small and medium-sized enterprises and retail loans, he said.

The bank expects deposits to grow around 9-10% for the year.

($1 = 95.2800 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Nishit Navin and Ashwin Manikandan; Editing ​by Ronojoy Mazumdar)