20 Apr , 2026 By : Debdeep Gupta
HDFC Bank stock edged lower in early trade on Monday following its January-March quarter earnings, with investors reacting to soft core income metrics despite a profit beat. Shares of HDFC Bank Ltd were trading at Rs 794.25, down 0.7 percent in the morning session.
The lender reported a 9.1 percent year-on-year rise in net profit at Rs 19,221 crore for Q4FY26, supported by lower provisions and operating costs. However, net interest income (NII) growth remained modest and came in below Street expectations, while margins were impacted by competitive pressures and product mix.
Brokerages largely described the quarter as steady, noting that the earnings beat was driven more by lower credit costs than strong core operating performance. While NII and margins lagged estimates, improving asset quality and easing provisions provided support to overall profitability.
On the balance sheet front, trends remained encouraging. Deposit growth improved sequentially, helping reduce the loan-to-deposit ratio, while asset quality strengthened with a decline in both gross and net NPAs. Management also indicated that funding and the LDR are no longer constraints, signalling improved flexibility for growth.
Brokerages also highlighted that margins remained broadly resilient on a sequential basis despite funding cost pressures, while slippages have moderated over recent quarters, indicating improving credit trends. Loan growth remained steady, and the improvement in deposit traction is seen as a key positive for sustaining growth momentum.
Despite the near-term pressure on core income, brokerages continue to maintain a constructive view on the stock, citing strong earnings resilience, improving balance sheet metrics and reasonable valuations. They expect growth to improve over the next two years, supported by better credit growth and easing funding costs.
However, the stock has seen a weak run in recent months, declining 5 percent over the past month and nearly 19 percent so far this year, reflecting lingering concerns around margin pressures and the pace of recovery in core earnings. Brokerages see this underperformance as largely priced in, with current valuations seen as supportive for medium-term upside.
0 Comment