Menu

Author Archives: Vikas Solanki

Trump Tariffs Jolt Jewellery Stocks: Titan, Kalyan, Senco See Mixed Trade

Manappuram Q2FY25: solid growth in Gold loan led by higher gold price

Manappuram Q2FY25: solid growth in Gold loan led by higher gold price

Company Name: Manappuram Finance Ltd | NSE Code: MANAPPURAM | BSE Code: 531213 | 52 Week high/low: 230 / 134 | CMP: INR 154 | Mcap: INR 13,048 Cr | P/B- 1.05

About the stock
➡️Manappuram finance Ltd is NBFC engaged in the business of providing gold loan and micro finance loan, vehicle loan etc. Company have strong presence in PAN India with 5,000+ branches.

Solid growth in Gold loan portfolio backed by higher gold prices
➡️Manappuram gold loan portfolio report robust double digit growth of 17% YoY and 3% QoQ to 24,365 Cr led by higher gold prices. While micro finance segment report muted single digit growth of 9% YoY but degrowth 2% QoQ to 10,970 Cr. While other segment such as home loan, vehicle finance and MSME grew 30% YoY, 54% YoY and 13% YoY respectively. The consolidated portfolio grew 17% YoY (+2% QoQ) to 45,716 Cr supported by gold loan with 53% weight in overall AUM portfolio and robust growth.

➡️Consolidated borrowing jump 19% YoY (higher than AUM growth) and remain flat QoQ to 38,476 Cr.

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
AUM (bn) 45,716 38,951 17% 44,932 2%
Borrowings  38,476 32,237 19% 38,463 0%

NII growth backed by stable NIMs; PAT slowdown on higher provision
➡️Interest income grew 24% YoY (+6% QoQ) to 2,541 Cr led by robust growth in overall AUM. NII surged 20% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 1,635 Cr backed by stable net yield. PPOP jump 19% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 1,033 Cr driven by stable operating expenses 2% QoQ. PAT growth slowdown at 2% YoY and 3% QoQ to 572 Cr on higher provision (118% YoY).

Years (In Cr) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry
Interest income  2,541 2,054 24% 2,403 6%
Interest expenses 906 689 31% 848 7%
NII 1,635 1,365 20% 1,555 5% Led by strong AUM growth 
Other income  96 120 -20% 109 -12%
Total Net income 1,731 1,485 17% 1,664 4%
Employee expenses 448 375 20% 446 0%
Other OpEx 251 244 3% 236 6%
Total Opex  698 618 13% 682 2%
PPOP 1,033 866 19% 981 5% grew by lower Opex 
Provision 260 120 118% 229 14%
PBT 773 747 3% 753 3%
Tax expenses  201 186 8% 196 2%
Tax rate  26% 25% 4% 26% 0%
PAT  572 561 2% 557 3% High provision slowdown PAT
PAT% 22% 26% -16% 22% -2%
EPS 6.76 6.62 2% 6.57 3%
No. of equity shares  85 85 0% 85 0%

Asset quality deteriorated – jump in GNPA/NNPA
➡️MFL asset quality deteriorated as GNPA and NNPA jump further in quarter. GNPA jump 80 bps YoY and 40 bps QoQ to stood 2.4% while NNPA rise 70 bps YoY and 40 bps QoQ to 2.1%. MFL capital position remains strong as CAR stood at 29%, decline 200 bps YoY.

Asset Quality (%) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 2.4 1.6 80 2 40
NNPA 2.1 1.4 70 1.7 40

Valuation and key ratios
➡️Currently the stock is trading at 1.05x than its book value Rs 148 per share at current market price Rs 154. CoF jump 30 bps YoY but decline 10 bps to 9.2% while net yield rise 10 bps YoY and 20 bps QoQ to stood at 22%. Return profile disappoint as ROE and ROA down 300 bps YoY and 90 bps YoY to stood at 18.6% and 4.4%.

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Prestige Group Plans ₹42,000 Crore Housing Launches in FY26 Amid Real Estate Boom

Aadhar housing Q2FY25: Solid growth in book driven Retail Home and Mortgage Loans

Aadhar housing Q2FY25: Solid growth in book driven Retail Home and Mortgage Loans

Company Name: Aadhar Housing Finance Ltd | NSE Code: AADHARHFC | BSE Code: 544176 | 52 Week high/low: 517 / 292 | CMP: INR 458 | Mcap: INR 19,661 Cr | P/B- –

About the stock
➡️Aadhar housing finance Ltd is primarily engaged in the business of providing low income housing finance. They focused on low income housing segment with ticket size of <Rs 15 lakh. Company added 9 new branches in Q2FY25 makes total to 545 branches across pan India.

Aadhar loan book shine backed by both segment home loan and mortgage loan
➡️Aadhar housing’s loan book report double digit growth of 21% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 22,818 Cr led by robust growth across both segment retail home loan and mortgage loan. Retail home loan contribute 74% of overall loan book, growing 18% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 16,991 Cr. while Retail mortgage loan constitute 26% of overall loan book, growing 31%YoY (+6% QoQ) to 5,826 Cr.

➡️Disbursement grew 18% YoY while QoQ boom 36% to 2,036 Cr on healthy growth in both segment. Retail home loan disbursement shine 33% QoQ and 19% YoY to 1,466 Cr while mortgage disbursement jump 43% QoQ and 16% YoY to 570 Cr.

Book Growth (in Cr) (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Loan Book 22,818 18,885 21% 21,726 5%
R. home loan  16,991 14,449 18% 16,246 5%
R. mortgage loan 5,826 4,436 31% 5,481 6%
Disbursement  2,036 1,725 18% 1,497 36%
R. home loan  1,466 1,233 19% 1,100 33%
R. mortgage loan 570 492 16% 397 43%

NII supported by book expansion and NIMS (up 32 bps YoY)
➡️Interest income grew 20% YoY (6% QoQ) to 673 Cr driven by robust retail book growth while portfolio yield remain flattish. NII increased 20% YoY (+8% QoQ) to 3,87 Cr attributed to NIMs expansion by 32 bps YoY. PPOP grew 20% YoY (+11% QoQ) to 306 Cr thanks to higher other income and stable other OpEx. Profitability comes in line with topline, grew 15% YoY (+14% QoQ) to 697 Cr due to higher provision expense (up 771% YoY) wile down 29 bps QoQ.

Years (in Cr) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry
Interest income  673 561 20% 634 6%
Interest expenses 285 239 20% 277 3%
NII 387 322 20% 357 8% expand on book growth and NIMs
Other income  78 53 47% 62 25%
Total Net income 466 375 24% 420 11%
Employee expenses 101 78 29% 95 7%
Other OpEx 59 43 39% 49 20%
Total Opex  160 121 32% 144 11%
PPOP 306 255 20% 276 11% No leverage benefit; in line with NII
Provision 13 2 771% 19 -29%
PBT 293 253 16% 257 14%
Tax expenses  65 56 17% 57 14%
Tax rate  22% 22% 1% 22% 0%
PAT  228 197 15% 200 14% PAT growth on book expansion;
leverage muted, provision up 
PAT% 30% 32% -6% 29% 6%
EPS 5.29 5.00 6% 4.69 13%
No. of equity shares  43 39 9% 43 1%

Asset quality remain flattish QoQ
➡️Aadhar’s asset quality has maintain on YoY and QoQ basis. GNPA down 10 bps YoY but remains flat QoQ to 1.3% while NNPA remains flat YoY and QoQ at 0.9%. This is due to the banking’s NPA cycle is already at lowest point at this point of time.

Asset Quality (%) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 1.3 1.4 -10 1.3 0
NNPA 0.9 0.9 0 0.9 0

Valuation and key metrics
➡️Yield on loan remain flat at 14% while CoF jump 40 bps YoY and 10 bps QoQ to 8.1%. This result in expansion in NIMs by 32 bps to 8.94% as of Q2FY25. credit cost remain stable at 2.59% YoY while increased by 22 bps QoQ. This result in decline in spread by 40 bps YoY and 10 bps QoQ to 5.9%. While NIMS jump 32 bps YoY and 20 bps QoQ to 9.1%.

Key metrics  (%) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
Yield 14 14 0 14 0
CoF 8.1 7.7 40 8 10
NIMs 9.1 8.78 32 8.9 20
ROA 4.4 4.6 -20 4.1 30
ROE 15.7 20 -430 15.9 -20
Spread 5.9 6.3 -40 6 -10

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

FPIs Pour Inflows in June, Pull Back in Early July: What’s Driving the Volatility?

Chola fin Q2FY25: Robust NII growth backed by healthy growth in book

Chola fin Q2FY25: Robust NII growth backed by healthy growth in book

Company Name: Cholamandalam Investment & Finance Company Ltd | NSE Code: CHOLAFIN | BSE Code: 511243 | 52 Week high/low: 1,652 / 1,011 | CMP: INR 1,302 | Mcap: INR 1,09,455 Cr | P/B- 5.06

About the stock
➡️Cholamandalam Investment & Finance Company is one of the premier diversified non-banking finance companies in India, engaged in providing vehicle finance, home loans and Loan against property.

Robust double digit growth in book (33% YoY) driven by vehicle loan, LAP and home loan
➡️Chola fin’s book report a strong double digit growth of 335 YoY (+6% QoQ) to 1,64,642 Cr led by robust growth in vehicle loan, LAP and home loan. Vehicle loan constitute 56% of overall loan book, growing 22% YoY (+4% QoQ ) to 92,012 Cr. While LAP and home loan contribute 20%/10%, growing by 41% YoY (+8% QoQ)/47% YoY (+9% QoQ) to 34,824 Cr/15,892 Cr. While other segment report strong growth but have low weight in overall loan book followed by Consumer and small enterprise loan (up 67% YoY), SME (up 47%) YoY), secured business and personal loan (up 123% YoY).

➡️Disbursement grew muted double didgit growth of 13% YoY and remain flat QoQ to 24,314 Cr due to slowdown in vehicle disbursal. Vehicle disbursement have alomost 50% weight of overall disbursement, report muted 5% YoY growth and degrowth on QoQ basis by 3% to 12,336 Cr. While LAP grew 35% YoY (+11% QoQ) to 4,295 Cr and consumer and small enterprise grew 26% YoY (+3% QoQ) to 3,588 Cr. While this robust growth in LAP and CSEL offset by muted growth in vehicle finance.

➡️Borrowing growth in line with loan book growth by 32% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 1,57,794 Cr while majorly funded by bank loan, debentures and Securitisation.

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
AUM 1,64,642 1,24,246 33% 1,55,442 6%
Disbursement  24,314 21,542 13% 24,332 0%
Borrowings  1,57,794 1,19,470 32% 1,49,902 5%

NII and PAT grew on loan book expansion & NIMs expansion; Leverage muted and provision up
➡️Interest income grew 37% YoY (+7% QoQ) to 5,768 Cr driven by robust loan book growth and expansion in yield by 30 bps YoY. NII increased 35% YoY (+5% QoQ) to 2,713 Cr attributed to NIMs expansion by 10 bps YoY. PPOP grew robust at 35% YoY (+4% QoQ) to 1,922 Cr thanks to higher other income and while operating leverage have no impact. PAT grew 26% YoY (+2% QoQ) to 963 Cr due to higher provision expense (up 56% YoY).

Years (in Cr) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry 
Interest income  5,767.96 4,220.52 37% 5,375.27 7%
Interest expenses 3,055.13 2,205.20 39% 2,795.65 9%
NII 2,712.83 2,015.32 35% 2,579.62 5% YoY growth led by AUM growth & NIMs expansion
Other income  524.79 351.37 49% 453.7 16%
Total Net income 3,237.62 2,366.69 37% 3,033.32 7%
Employee expenses 794.65 570.24 39% 683.45 16%
Other OpEx 520.87 375.89 39% 499.95 4%
Total Opex  1315.52 946.13 39% 1183.4 11%
PPOP 1,922.10 1,420.56 35% 1,849.92 4% Solid growth on book growth; OpEx leverage flat
Provision 623.52 399.81 56% 581.43 7%
PBT 1,298.58 1,020.75 27% 1,268.49 2%
Tax expenses  335.53 258.26 30% 326.26 3%
Tax rate  26% 25% 2% 26% 0%
PAT  963.05 762.49 26% 942.23 2% PAT growth on book expansion;
leverage muted, provisions up
PAT% 15% 17% -8% 16% -5%
EPS 11.45 9.27 24% 11.21 2%
No. of equity shares  84.075 82.285 2% 84.06 0%

Asset quality disappoint on QoQ basis (GNPA/NNPA up 21 bps/ 14 bps QoQ)
➡️Chola fin’s asset quality has maintain on YoY basis but decline sequentially. GNPA down 13 bps YoY but jump 21 bps QoQ to 2.83% while NNPA disappoint YoY as well as sequentially by 1 bps/14 bps to 1.59%. Its normal effect due to the lower base on last quarter. Provision coverage ratio decline 280 bps YoY (-100 bps QoQ) to 44.5%.

Asset Quality (%) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 2.83 2.96 -13 2.62 21
NNPA 1.59 1.58 1 1.45 14

Valuation and key metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at multiple of 5.06 Price to book value. Yield on loan jump 30 bps YoY (down 10 bps QoQ) to 14.6% while CoF rise 20 bps YoY (up 10 bps QoQ) to 7.1%. This result in expansion in NIMs by 10 bps YoY to 7.5% but decline on QoQ basis by 10 bps.

Key metrics (%) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
Yield 14.6 14.3 30 14.7 -10
CoF 7.1 6.9 20 7 10
NIMs 7.5 7.4 10 7.6 -10
Credit Cost 1.4 1.3 10 1.5 -10
ROA 2.2 2.4 -20 2.4 -20
ROE 0 0
PCR 44.5 47.3 -280 45.5 -100
CAR 19.5 1950 18.03 147

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

HUDCO Q3FY25 Results Update: Robust Performance Drives Strong Growth

HUDCO Q2FY24: Solid loan book growth driven by urban infra

HUDCO Q2FY24: Solid loan book growth driven by urban infra

Company Name: Housing & Urban Development Corporation Ltd | NSE Code: HUDCO | BSE Code: 540530 | 52 Week high/low: 354 / 74.0 | CMP: INR 216 | Mcap: INR 43,319 Cr | P/BV – 2.53

About the stock
▶️Housing and Urban Development Corporation Ltd (HUDCO) is public sector enterprise primarily engaged in the business of financing housing and urban development projects in India. The company headquartered in national capital, New Delhi and operate through 21 regional offices and 11 development offices across India.
Apart from financing business, it also provides consultancy services for government programmes and advising on urban and regional planning, design and development, environmental engineering and social development.

Healthy expansion in loan book (up 36% YoY), While Sanctions and Disbursement grew multiple fold
➡️HUDCO’s loan book has report a solid growth during quarter, growing 36% YoY (+7% Qoq) to 1,11,068 Cr led by strong growth in urban infra book. Urban infra book jumped 11% YoY (+1% QoQ) to 66,857 Cr while affordable housing segment muted at 3% YoY growth and 1% QoQ to 44,211 Cr. This lead to increased the urban infra weight to 60% in overall loan book while affordable housing reduced by same.

➡️Sanctions jump 9.8x fold YoY (+442% QoQ) to 76,472 Cr driven by pure urban infra growth. Sanction under urban infra grew 929% YoY (+442% QoQ) to 76,472 Cr. while affordable housing contribute 0% during the quarter.

➡️Disbursement report solid expansion grew 5.8x YoY (+ 72% QoQ) to 21,699 Cr supported by urban infra segment. Urban infra segment disbursement jump 538% YoY (+65% QoQ) to 20,583 Cr while Affordable housing disbursement grew 124% YoY (+752% QoQ) to 1,116 Cr.

➡️Borrowing grew higher than the loan book growth, grew 47% YoY (+43% QoQ) to 93,364 Cr. Borrowing is the mix of international and domestic sources to meet business growth and reduce the cost of borrowing.

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Loan 111068 81594 36% 1,03,815 7%
Urban Infra 66,857 38,674 73% 60,047 11%
Affordable housing 44,211 42,920 3% 43,768 1%
Sanction 76,472 7,808 879% 14,097 442%
Urban Infra 76,472 7,435 929% 14,097 442%
Affordable housing 0 373 -100% 0 #DIV/0!
Disbursement  21,699 3,723 483% 12,625 72%
Urban Infra 20,583 3,225 538% 12,494 65%
Affordable housing 1,116 498 124% 131 752%
Borrowings  93,364.67 63,318.46 47% 65,187.48 43%

NII jump 27% YoY driven book expansion; PAT boom on lower provision and higher other income
➡️Interest income grew 33% YoY (+13% QoQ) to 2,459 Cr led by book expansion while yield down 10 bps YoY to 9.24%. NII jump 27% YoY (+12% QoQ) to 797 Cr led by healthy growth in book while NIMs decline 21 bps YoY and stable QoQ to 3.01%. PPOP increased 32% YoY (+15% QoQ) to 767cr on stable OpEx growth. PAT boom 52% YoY (+23% QoQ) to 689 Cr driven by lower provision (down 749% YoY) and higher other income (up 81% YoY).

Years  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Interest income  2,459 1,844 33% 2,175 13%
Interest expenses 1,662 1,217 37% 1,464 14%
NII 797 627 27% 711 12%
Other income  67 37 81% 23 196%
Total Net income 864 664 30% 734 18%
Employee expenses 66 55 19% 40 65%
Other OpEx 31 30 5% 28 14%
Total Opex  97 85 14% 67 44%
PPOP 767 579 32% 666 15%
Provision -233 -27 749% -19 1147%
PBT 1,000 606 65% 685 46%
Tax expenses  311 155 101% 127 145%
Tax rate  31% 26% 22% 19% 68%
PAT  689 452 52% 558 23%
PAT% 27% 24% 14% 25% 7%
EPS 3.44 2.26 52% 2.79 23%
No. of equity shares  200 200 0% 200 0%

Asset quality stood best in the industry – GNPA/NPNPA down 132 bps/18 bps YoY
➡️HUDCO’s asset quality stand best in the industry with GNPA and NNPA at 2.04% and 0.31% respectively. GNPA/NNPA decline 132 bps/18 bps YoY and 38 bps/2 bps QoQ. Further private sector book decline to 1.83% from 2,50% in FY24 while Government backed book increased to 98.17% from 97.50% in FY24. This will lead to decline default of loans as government book is highly secured. Provision coverage ratio decline 28 bps and 101 QoQ to stood at 85.6% as of Q2FY25.

Asset Quality Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 2.04 3.36 -132 2.42 -38
NNPA 0.31 0.49 -18 0.33 -2

Valuations and key metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at 2.53x price to book value. NIMs contract by 21 bps YoY and remain stable QoQ to 3.01% led by the expansion in CoF and decline in yield. ROA jump by 20 bps YoY and 16 bps QoQ to 2.4% while ROE rise 315 bps YoY and 164 bps QoQ to 14.56%. Company capital position CAR down 1614 bps YoY to stood at 57.65% but still above the RBI guidelines.

Key metrics  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
Yield  9.24 9.34 -10 9.06 18
CoF 7.46 7.63 -17 7.36 10
NIMs 3.01 3.22 -21 3 1
ROA 2.4 2.2 20 2.24 16
ROE 14.56 11.41 315 12.92 164
PCR 85.6 85.88 -28 86.61 -101
CAR 57.65 73.79 -1614 5765

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Z47 Launches $400M Fund for India's Tech Boom

Shriram Q2FY25 Loan Book Growth 20% YoY led by CV, PV and MSME segment

Shriram Q2FY25 Loan Book Growth 20% YoY led by CV, PV and MSME segment

Company Name: Shriram Finance Ltd | NSE Code: SHRIRAMFIN | BSE Code: 511218 | 52 Week high/low: 3,652 / 1,851 | CMP: INR 3,093 | Mcap: INR 1,16,286 Cr | P/BV – 2.37

About the stock
➡️Shriram Finance Ltd., a significant entity within the Shriram Group, operates extensively in consumer finance, stock broking, distribution, life insurance, and general insurance. Founded in 1979, the company stands as India’s largest non-bank financial company (NBFC) in retail asset finance. It is a leader in structured financing of used commercial vehicles and two-wheelers, specializing in serving small business owners and road transport operators.

Robust loan book growth backed by healthy growth in CV, PV and MSME
➡️Shriram’s loan book has grew by double digit at 20% YoY (+4% QoQ) to 2,43,043 Cr supported by growth in CV, PV and MSME segment.

➡️Commercial vehicle constitute 46% of the overall loan book, growing by 14% YoY (+2% QoQ) to 1,12,194 Cr. Passenger vehicle segment constitute 20% of overall segment, growing by 23% YoY (+7% QoQ) to 49,000 Cr. While MSME segment constitute 13% of overall segment, growing by healthy growth of 52% YoY (+12% QoQ) to 31,300 Cr. This three segment led the solid growth in overall loan book in Q2FY25.

➡️Rest other segment report good growth but command a low weight in overall loan book. Construction equipment grew at 17% YoY followed by Farm equipment at 28% YoY, 2W at 26% YoY, gold at 12% while personal loan degrow by 6% YoY.

➡️Borrowing overtake the loan growth, increased by 26% YoY (+8% QoQ) to 2,078 bn driven by deposit growth of 23% YoY (+6% QoQ).

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Loan 2,43,043 2,02,641 20% 2,33,444 4%
Borrowings (bn) 2,078.20 1,653.40 26% 1,917.50 8%
Deposit (bn) 502 408 23% 474.9 6%

Double digit growth in NII backed by loan book expansion; while NIMS down
➡️NII report a double digit healthy growth of 19% YoY (+4% QoQ) to 5,464 Cr driven by loan book expansion only while NIMs contract for the quarter. NIMs down by 19 bps YoY (-5 bps QoQ) to 8.74% due to the expansion in CoF.

➡️PPOP jump 15% YoY (+3% QoQ) to 3,986 Cr, Operating efficiency benefit lagged as total OpEx increased 20% due to rise in employee cost and other expense.

➡️PAT boost by 18% YoY (+5% QoQ) same in line with topline growth to 2,071 Cr. This growth is only attributed to book expansion.

Years  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry
Interest income  9,814.50 8,216.56 19% 9,362.79 5% Driven by healthy loan book growth 
Interest expenses 4,350.42 3,621.86 20% 4,128.91 5%
NII 5,464.08 4,594.70 19% 5,233.88 4% Loan book support growth; NIMs down 
Other income  282.18 347.89 -19% 234.28 20%
Total Net income 5,746.26 4,942.59 16% 5,468.16 5%
Employee expenses 906.67 790.38 15% 868.35 4%
Other OpEx 853.07 671.38 27% 745.67 14%
Total Opex  1759.74 1461.76 20% 1614.02 9%
PPOP 3,986.52 3,480.83 15% 3,854.14 3% In line with topline growth; OpEx efficiency lagged
Provision 1,234.99 1,128.55 9% 1,187.55 4%
PBT 2,751.53 2,352.28 17% 2,666.59 3%
Tax expenses  680.27 601.44 13% 686 -1%
Tax rate  25% 26% -3% 26% -4%
PAT  2,071.26 1,750.84 18% 1,980.59 5% PAT boost with topline; no OpEx benefit 
PAT% 21% 20% 0% 21% -1%
EPS 55.10 46.65 18% 52.69 5%
No. of equity shares  37.59 37.53 0% 37.59 0%

Asset quality improved – GNPA/NNPA down (47 bps/16 bps YoY)
➡️Shriram’s asset quality has been improved during the quarter as GNPA and NNPA are in downward trajectory. GNPA/NNPA decline 47 bps/ 16 bps YoY while 7 bps/ 7 bps QoQ to stood at 5.32%/2.64% as of Q2FY25. Provision coverage ratio decline by 140 bps YoY while on QoQ up 55 bps to 51.7% vs 53.1% in Q2FY24.

Asset Quality Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 5.32 5.79 -47 5.39 -7
NNPA 2.64 2.8 -16 2.71 -7

Valuation and Key metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at 2.37x price to book value. NIMs contract by 1 bps YoY and 5 bps QoQ to 8.74% led by the expansion in CoF. ROA disappoint down by 6 bps YoY and QoQ both to 3.06% while ROE rise 69 bps YoY and remain flattish QoQ to 16%. Company capital position CAR down 200 bps YoY to stood at 20.16% but still above the RBI guidelines.

Key metrics  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
NIMs 8.74 8.93 -19 8.79 -5
ROA 3.06 3.12 -6 3.12 -6
ROE 16 15.31 69 16.03 -3
PCR 51.7 53.1 -140 51.15 55
CAR 20.16 22.15 -199 20.29 -13

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Navigating India’s Economic Prospects Amid Challenges

Markets Remain Resilient Amid Rising Economic and Geopolitical Uncertainties: IMF Report

Markets Remain Resilient Amid Rising Economic and Geopolitical Uncertainties: IMF Report

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently issued a report that underscores the disconnect between financial markets and growing global economic and geopolitical risks. Despite the uncertainties, market sentiment remains resilient, reflecting optimism that might not fully account for the mounting challenges ahead.

Underlying Economic Concerns
The IMF highlighted several global economic issues that seem to be flying under the radar for many investors. Inflation, though easing in many regions, continues to be a lingering threat in some economies, particularly in emerging markets. Central banks in major economies, especially the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, have taken a more cautious stance, signaling that they may need to keep interest rates higher for longer to curb inflationary pressures.

The IMF pointed out that while inflation is gradually coming under control, its underlying causes—supply chain disruptions, volatile energy prices, and food security concerns—haven’t entirely dissipated. These factors may once again pressure prices, making inflation less transitory than initially expected. Financial markets, however, seem to be pricing in a more optimistic outlook, expecting economic normalization sooner than what underlying indicators suggest.

Geopolitical Tensions and Their Impact
Another key area of concern is the escalating geopolitical tensions, particularly the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, tensions between China and Taiwan, and the broader West-China rivalry. These conflicts pose risks to global trade and energy security, and their long-term impact on global economic stability remains uncertain.

The war in Ukraine, for instance, has not only disrupted energy supply chains in Europe but also strained global food supply chains, as Ukraine is a significant exporter of wheat and other essential crops. The continued military engagement is leading to higher energy prices, which could spur inflation in energy-dependent economies. Similarly, the tensions in the Taiwan Strait, which plays a crucial role in the global semiconductor supply chain, have the potential to disrupt industries worldwide.

Despite these clear risks, global equity markets, particularly in developed economies, have largely brushed off the potential fallout from these geopolitical risks. Market valuations continue to climb, with investors seemingly confident that these issues will be resolved without substantial economic fallout. However, the IMF warns that this optimism might be premature, and the potential for sudden corrections remains high.

Disconnect Between Markets and Real Economy
One of the most striking insights from the IMF report is the growing disconnect between financial markets and the real economy. While stock markets have performed well, bolstered by strong corporate earnings and liquidity, the underlying economic conditions tell a different story. Global growth remains sluggish, and many economies are still recovering from the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Furthermore, labor market challenges persist, especially in sectors like manufacturing and services, where the recovery has been slower than anticipated. Coupled with tightening credit conditions, consumer and business confidence remain fragile. Yet, market sentiment doesn’t seem to reflect these uncertainties.

This divergence can be attributed, in part, to the abundant liquidity in the financial system, which has led to risk-taking behavior among investors. Low interest rates and quantitative easing measures in recent years have pushed investors toward riskier assets in search of higher returns. As central banks now shift toward tighter monetary policy, the unwinding of this liquidity could lead to more volatility in the financial markets.

Future Outlook: Caution Ahead
The IMF urges caution, advising policymakers and investors not to overlook the rising economic and geopolitical risks. While the immediate outlook for global markets may appear stable, underlying vulnerabilities could trigger a sharp reversal in sentiment if any of these risks materialize.

For investors, this means being more selective and focusing on assets that can withstand short-term volatility. Diversification and a focus on quality investments—especially those in sectors less exposed to geopolitical tensions—will be key to navigating this uncertain environment.

In conclusion, the IMF’s report serves as a timely reminder that while financial markets may seem resilient in the face of rising uncertainties, it’s essential to remain cautious. As an equity research analyst, the need for a careful evaluation of both macroeconomic indicators and geopolitical developments cannot be overstated. Investors should stay vigilant and be prepared for potential shifts in market dynamics, as the current optimism may not be sustainable in the long term.

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Sensex Jumps 450 Points Amid Renewed US-China Trade Hopes and Strong Sectoral Buying

FII Selling Driven by US Interest Rates, Not China

FII Selling Driven by US Interest Rates, Not China

The recent spike in Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) selling in Indian markets has raised concerns among domestic investors, with many speculating that capital is being reallocated to China. However, a deeper analysis suggests that the root cause lies in the sharp rise in U.S. interest rates rather than a direct shift towards China. While China’s re-emergence as a competing investment destination is noteworthy, it is the U.S. Federal Reserve’s tightening monetary policy that is truly driving this trend.

Understanding FII Movements
Foreign institutional investors play a critical role in the Indian equity markets, often driving large movements in stock prices and market sentiment. Historically, periods of FII outflows are associated with global economic uncertainties or significant shifts in risk appetite due to events such as geopolitical tensions, global recessions, or central bank actions.

In the current scenario, the sustained FII selling from India’s equity markets has coincided with a prolonged period of tightening by the U.S. Federal Reserve. This has resulted in a sharp increase in U.S. Treasury yields, making dollar-denominated assets more attractive to global investors. In contrast to India’s relatively stable returns, these higher yields offer an appealing risk-adjusted return, leading FIIs to reallocate their funds towards the U.S. bond market.

The Role of U.S. Interest Rates
The U.S. Federal Reserve’s aggressive stance on interest rate hikes is rooted in its efforts to combat inflation, which reached multi-decade highs in the past two years. While inflation is moderating, the Fed remains vigilant, opting for a hawkish policy to ensure inflationary pressures do not re-emerge. As a result, U.S. 10-year Treasury yields have surged, currently hovering around the 5% mark. These yields provide FIIs with a safer and more stable investment alternative compared to the relatively volatile equity markets in emerging economies like India.

Furthermore, as U.S. interest rates rise, the cost of capital for investors increases. This prompts FIIs to move away from riskier assets such as equities, especially in emerging markets, to fixed-income securities that offer better returns with lower risk.

China: A Competing Destination?
While China has indeed reopened its markets and attempted to attract foreign investments following its prolonged COVID-19 lockdowns, it is not the primary cause of FII outflows from India. China is grappling with several macroeconomic challenges, including a slowdown in its real estate sector, sluggish domestic demand, and regulatory overhauls in key industries such as technology and education.

While these issues are expected to be transitory, China remains a volatile investment destination for FIIs. India’s strong economic fundamentals, including a favorable demographic profile, steady consumption growth, and ongoing structural reforms, continue to offer a compelling long-term investment narrative for foreign investors. As such, while there may be some degree of capital moving toward China, it is not significant enough to explain the recent exodus of foreign money from India’s equity markets.

Impact on Indian Equities
The outflows from Indian equities have put downward pressure on stock prices, particularly in sectors that are more dependent on FII participation, such as technology and financials. This selling pressure has contributed to a sense of unease among domestic investors, exacerbating market volatility. However, this is a global phenomenon affecting emerging markets across the board and is not indicative of fundamental weakness in India’s economic or corporate growth prospects.

Moreover, the long-term trajectory for Indian equities remains intact. Despite the short-term volatility driven by external factors such as U.S. interest rates, India’s structural growth story remains robust. The country’s expanding middle class, rising digital economy, and government-led reforms in infrastructure and manufacturing continue to be major draws for long-term investors.

Conclusion: A Temporary Phenomenon
The recent FII selling in India’s markets is largely driven by the sharp rise in U.S. Treasury yields, which is diverting global capital towards safer assets. While there are concerns about China drawing FII interest, the impact of U.S. interest rates remains the predominant factor behind the current outflows.

For domestic investors, it is important to view this as a temporary adjustment rather than a long-term trend. The structural strengths of the Indian economy remain intact, and once global monetary conditions stabilize, FIIs are likely to return to Indian markets, attracted by the country’s long-term growth potential.

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Can’s Q2FY25: Profitability Boosted by Enhanced Operating Efficiency

Can’s Q2FY25: Profitability Boosted by Enhanced Operating Efficiency

Can’s Q2FY25: Profitability Boosted by Enhanced Operating Efficiency

Company Name: Can Fin Homes Ltd | NSE Code: CANFINHOME | BSE Code: 511196 | 52 Week high/low: 952 / 680 | CMP: INR 885 | Mcap: INR 11,789 Cr | P/BV – 2.54

About the stock
➡️Can fin home is a housing finance company focused in South India, sponsored by Canara Bank. It offered lending product as Housing loan, top-up personal loan, Mortgage caters to both salaried professionals and self-employed individuals. The company’s focus is on medium ticket-size loans, with housing loans constituting a significant portion.

Loan book propelled on healthy disbursement growth
➡️Can Fin homes report a double digit growth in its loan book, growing 10% YoY (+3% QoQ) to 36,591 Cr backed by healthy disbursal during the quarter. This growth is attributed to sound growth in non-salaried segment contribute 29% of overall book, growing at 16% YoY (+6% QoQ) to 10,638 Cr. While salaried segment contribute 71% of overall book, growing at 7% YoY (+2% QoQ) to 25,930 Cr.

➡️Product wise in both segment (salaried & non-salaried) growth supported by home loan growing by 7% and 15% respectively. Home loan influence 79% of total book in Q2FY25 vs 77% of total book in Q2FY24. Remaining 20% allocate to top up loan, Mortgage and loan for site.

➡️Disbursement support the loan growth grew by 18% YoY while on QoQ basis report solid growth of 28% to stood at 2,381 Cr as of Q2FY25.

➡️Borrowing grew in line with the growth of loan book, grew 10% YoY to 33,790 Cr. Funding source followed as bank loan 60%, NHB 14%, NCD 18%, Commercial paper 7% and deposit 1%. Can’s borrowing cost can be lower in coming quarters due to the higher chances of rate cuts from RBI side as banks borrowing has major portion.

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Borrowing  33,790 30,628 10%
Loan Book 36591 33359 10% 35557 3%
Disbursement  2381 2019 18% 1853 28%
Salaried 
HL 23607 22067 7% 23245 2%
Top up PL 1121 1020 10% 1092 3%
Mortgage 950 843 13% 899 6%
Loan for site 213 184 16% 204 4%
Other  39 41 -5% 37 5%
Sub total 25930 24155 7% 25477 2%
As % of total  71% 72% -2% 72% -1%
Non – Salaried 
HL 8786 7656 15% 8357 5%
Top up PL 548 437 25% 507 8%
Mortgage 1144 950 20% 1047 9%
Loan for site 109 87 25% 99 10%
Other  51 52 -2% 47 9%
Sub total 10638 9182 16% 10057 6%
As % of total  29% 28% 6% 28% 3%
Total  36,591 33,359 10% 35,557 3%

Profitability boom on operating leverage and lower provision
➡️NII grew moderate at7% YoY (+6% QoQ) to 340 Cr led by loan book growth yield remain flat. This moderate growth backed by flattish in yield while CoB jump 10 bps YoY result in contraction in NIMs. PPOP grew 25% YoY (+3% QoQ) to 288 Cr fueled by better operating efficiency (down 36% YoY). PAT up 34% YoY (+6% QoQ) to 211 Cr driven by lower provision.

Years (in Cr) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry
Interest income  955 865 10% 924 3% led by strong disbursement; yield flat
Interest expenses 615 548 12% 603 2%
NII 340 317 7% 321 6% backed by book growth; NIMS stable
Other income  7 6 28% 7 7%
Total Net income 347 323 8% 328 6%
Employee expenses 29 25 16% 23 24%
Other OpEx 31 67 -55% 26 20%
Total Opex  59 92 -36% 49 22%
PPOP 288 231 25% 280 3% driven by operating efficiency
Provision 14 33 -58% 24 -44%
PBT 274 198 38% 255 7%
Tax expenses  63 40 57% 55 13%
Tax rate  23% 20% 13% 22% 5%
PAT  211 158 34% 200 6% Healthy PAT fueled by lower provision. 
PAT% 22% 18% 21% 21% 2%
EPS 15.88 11.87 34% 14.99 6%
No. of equity shares  13 13 0% 13 0%

Asset quality show slight increment YoY while flattish QoQ
➡️Can’s asset quality slight degraded as GNPA/NNPA show increment by 12 bps/ 4 bps YoY to 0.88%/0.47%. While on QoQ basis remain flat. Can’s asset quality is lowered as 70% book given to salaried segment where chances of default is low. Provision coverage ratio stood at 46.41% as of Q2FY25.

Asset Quality Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 0.88 0.76 12 0.91 -3
NNPA 0.47 0.43 4 0.49 -2

Valuation and key Metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at multiple of 2.55x BV 353 per share at CMP of 886 Rs. Yield on loan slight up 5 bps YoY and flat QoQ to 10.12% while CoB jump 10 bps YoY (- 2bps QoQ) to 7.56%. This result in decline in NIMs by 5 bps while expand 18 bps QoQ. 

Key metrics  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
Yield 10.12 10.07 5 10.12 0
CoF 7.56 7.46 10 7.58 -2
NIMs 3.75 3.8 -5 3.57 18
ROAA 2.29 1.86 43 2.17 12
ROAE 17.99 15.96 203 17.57 42

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Zomato Q3FY25: Strong GOV Growth Amid Profitability Pressures

Zomato Q2FY25: Food Delivery Leads Profitability; Quick Commerce Expands Rapidly

Zomato Q2FY25: Food Delivery Leads Profitability; Quick Commerce Expands Rapidly

Company Name: Zomato Ltd | NSE Code: ZOMATO| BSE Code: 543320 | 52 Week high/low: 298 / 101 | CMP: INR 510 | Mcap: INR 2,26,469 Cr | P/E – 305

About the Stock
➡️Zomato is engaged in multiple business vertical segment such food delivery, quick commerce (Blinkit), going out and B2B supplies. Company has done rapid expansion in quick commerce segment by adding 152 net new stores in Q2FY25.

GOV shoot up led by all segment (up 55% YoY /14% QoQ)
➡️Zomato’s gross order value grew healthy across all the segment. GOV (B2C business) increased 55% YoY (+14% QoQ) to 17,671 Cr thanks to all segment. This growth is attributed to strong growth in food delivery business (up 21% YoY/ 5% QoQ) followed by Quick commerce (up 122% YoY/ 25% QoQ) and Going out (up 171% YoY/ 46% QoQ including the acquisition of Paytm’s entertainment business).
➡️Key operating metrics of all business segment helps in robust growth. In blinkit business 152 net new stores and 7 warehouse added. This rapid expansion will take time to ramp up the business across all new store.
➡️Average monthly customer surged 13% YoY (+2% QoQ) to 20.7 Mn in Q2FY25 vs 18.4 Mn in Q2FY24 for food delivery business. While Quick commerce customer base nearly double from 4.7 Mn in Q2FY24 to 8.9 Mn in Q2FY25 reflecting the change in buying pattern of consumer and habit for convenience buying.
➡️Quick commerce order value double to 92.9 Mn in Q2FY25 from 45.5 Mn in same quarter previous year led by increase in Average order value and new customer base.

GOV Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Food Delivery 9,690 7,980 21% 9,264 5%
Quick Commerce 6,132 2,760 122% 4,923 25%
Going-Out 1,849 682 171% 1,268 46%
Total  17,671 11,422 55% 15,455 14%
Operating Metrics Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Food Delivery
Avg Monthly Customer (Mn) 20.7 18.4 13% 20.3 2%
Restaurant Partner (000′) 292 238 23% 276 6%
Delivery Partner (000′) 498 410 21% 469 6%
Quick Commerce
Order (Mn) 92.9 45.5 104% 78.8 18%
AOV (INR) 660 607 9% 625 6%
Customer (Mn) 8.9 4.7 89% 7.6 17%

Profitability soar on growth in food delivery business & Margin expansion; Quick commerce near by break even
➡️Zomato’s food delivery business has maintained the overall profitability despite the loss in quick commerce business. Overall EBITDA surged 581% YoY (+28% QoQ) to 226 Cr driven by strong growth in food delivey business and margin expansion (636 bps YoY). While quick commerce adjusted EBITDA come to near by break even at -8 Cr from -125 Cr in Q2FY24. EBITDA margin has expand 636 bps YoY (+50 bps QoQ) to 4.71%. led by all segment.
➡️Despite the robust growth in quick commerce GOV, margins are not improving due to the rapid infrastructure expansion. In Q2FY2, 152 net new store and 7 warehouses added lead to margin dilution for short term as new store and warehouse take few months to ramp-up.
➡️EBIT grew 126% YoY (+64% QoQ) to 46 Cr due to increment in depreciation by 41% YoY to 180 Cr. EBIT margin lead the growth up 710 bps YoY (+29 bps QoQ) to 0.96%.
➡️PAT surged 389% YoY to 176 Cr thanks to higher other income of 221 Cr. PAT margin jump 241 bps YoY to 3.67%. While on QoQ basis PAT down 30% due to higher tax expenses and interest cost.

Years (in Cr) Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry 
Revenue  4,799 2,848 69% 4,206 14% Driven by healthy GOV across all segment
COGS 1,334 674 98% 1099 21%
Employee cost 590 417 41% 529 12%
Advertisement & sales promotion 421 355 19% 396 6%
Delivery & related charges 1,398 919 52% 1,328 5%
Other expenses 830 530 57% 677 23%
Total OpEx 4,573 2,895 58% 4,029 14%
EBITDA  226 -47 581% 177 28% Led by food business & Margin expansion;
Quick commerce near by break-even
EBITDA Margin% 4.71% -1.65% 6.36% 4.21% 0.50%
Depreciation 180 128 41% 149 21%
EBIT 46 -175 126% 28 64%
EBIT Margin% 0.96% -6.14% 7.10% 0.67% 0.29%
Interest expenses 30 16 88% 25 20%
Other income 221 212 4% 236 -6%
PBT 237 21 1029% 239 -1%
Tax expenses 61 -15 507% -14 536%
Tax Rate% 26% -71% 136% -6% 539%
PAT 176 36 389% 253 -30% Pushed higher other income
PAT Margin% 3.67% 1.26% 190.13% 6.02% -39.03%
EPS 0.20 0.04 374% 0.29 -31%
No. of Shares 872 845 3% 870 0%

Fund raise planned via QIP for strong cash postion
➡️Comapny has propsed the plan to board forraising 8,500 Cr by issue of equity shares via QIP. Management aim to enhance cash balance given the competitive landscape and and much larger scale of business currently.

Valuation and Key metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at a multiple of 305x 0.84 EPS at the CMP of 256 Rs. Company trading at 10.6x its book value of 24.1 per share. Trailing twelve months ROE and ROCE stood at 1.12% and 1.14% respectively. Interest coverage ratio stood at 9.18x signify strong solvency.

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation

Microfinance sector recorded surge in NPAs to Rs. 50000 crore

Jana SFB Q2FY25: Secured Growth Drives Advances, Profit Declines Amid MFI Stress

Jana SFB Q2FY25: Secured Growth Drives Advances, Profit Declines Amid MFI Stress

Company Name: Jana Small Finance Bank Ltd | NSE Code: JSFB| BSE Code: 544118 | 52 Week high/low: 761 / 365 | CMP: INR 510 | Mcap: INR 5,352 Cr | P/BV – 1.49

About the stock
➡️Jana SFB is leading small finance bank engaged in providing MSME loan, affordable housing loan, 2W loan, gold loan, Micro LAP etc. Jana SFB has rapidly expanded network with 776 banking outlet including 261 outlet in unbanked rural centres, in 22 states/ 2UTs while serving 4.5 Mn active customers.

Robust Advance growth thanks to secured book; Disbursement slowdown
➡️Jana’s total advance book grew 17.3% YoY (+2.5% QoQ) to 26,411 Cr thanks to the secured book. Secured book at 65% of the Jana total book report a growth of 28.6% YoY (+7.4% QoQ) to 17,063 Cr while Unsecured book moderate at 1% YoY and de-growth 5.4% QoQ to 9,348 Cr. Secured book contribution jump from 56% in Q2FY24 to 65% in Q2FY25 and management further planning to increased its weight in overall book.
➡️Healthy growth of secured book attributed to affordable housing (up 43.3% YoY) and Micro LAP (up 24.2% YoY) segment. This both combines cross the milestone of 10,000 Cr. 2W and gold loan also report a sound growth of 95% and 80% YoY but have low weightage in overall book. MSME and term loans to NBFCs grew 16.5% YoY and 3% YoY respectively.
➡️Disbursement growth modest at 0.3% YoY and 3.3% QoQ to 8,457 Cr due to MFI challenges.
➡️Deposit growth higher than advance growth at 31% YoY to 24,808 Cr while CASA as % of total deposit remains flat.

Book Growth (As on)  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%)
Advance  26,411 21,842 17.30% 25,751 2.50%
Secured  17,063 12,183 28.60% 15,800 7.40%
Unsecured 9,348 9,255 1.00% 9,853 -5.40%
Disbursement  8,457 8,432 0.30% 8,178 3.30%
Deposit 24,808 17,118 31% 23,667 4.60%

NII Soar on solid advance growth while NIMs contract
➡️Interest income grew 19% YoY and remain flat on QoQ to 1,166 Cr led by solid secured book growth while yield down 30 bps YoY (-90 bps QoQ) to 17.2%. NII grew 13% YoY to 594 Cr with support of advance growth while CoF expand and NIMs decline. On QoQ NII down 3% led to modest growth of book on QoQ and NIMs contraction. PPOP report 6% YoY while decline 16 QoQ to 299 Cr due to lower other income. PAT down 21% YoY and sequentially 43% to 97 Cr led by higher provision growth.

All figures are in Cr 

Years  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (%) Q1FY25 QoQ (%) Commentry
Interest income  1,166 979 19% 1,167 0%
Interest expenses 572 453 26% 557 3%
NII 594 526 13% 610 -3% Healthy advance lead growth, NIMs contract
Other income  176 164 7% 189 -7%
Total Net income 770 690 12% 799 -4%
Employee expenses 296 239 24% 278 6%
Other OpEx 175 168 4% 165 6%
Total Opex  471 407 16% 443 6%
PPOP 299 283 6% 356 -16% QoQ decline due to 30 bps decline in NIMs
Provision 210 160 31% 196 7%
PBT 89 123 -28% 160 -44%
Tax expenses  -8 0 -10 -20%
Tax rate  -9% 0% -6% 44%
PAT  97 123 -21% 170 -43% Higher provision degrowth PAT 
PAT% 7% 11% -33% 13% -42%
EPS 9.28 16.73 -45% 16.27 -43%
No. of equity shares  10.45 7.35 42% 10.45 0%

Asset quality tempered on stress in MFI segment
➡️Jana asset quality has been decline due to the stress in the MFI segment. GNPA/NNPA jump 55 bps/13 bps YoY and 35 bps/remain flat QoQ to 2.86%/0.95%. Net NPA has 82% secured loan which signifies higher chances of recovery. Company has already done strong PCR for all business, PCR up 230 bps YoY (+450 bps QoQ) to 67.2%.

Asset Quality Q2FY25 Q2FY24 YoY (bps) Q1FY25 QoQ (bps)
GNPA 2.86 2.31 55 2.51 35
NNPA 0.95 0.82 13 0.95 0

Valuation and key metrics
➡️Currently the stock is trading at multiple of 1.49 price to book value and book value per share stood at 342 Rs. Yield decline 30 bps YoY (-90 bps QoQ) to 17.2% while CoF jump 60 bps YoY and remain flat on QoQ to 8%. Yield contraction is led by competitive environment and challenges in MFI segment while CoF expansion driven by increase in deposit rate for attracting retail deposit. This result in decline in NiMs by 20 bps YoY and 30 bps QoQ to 7.7%. Return ratio disappoint as ROE and ROA down by 500 bps and 40 bps YoY. Company’s capital position remain solid with 20.1% Capital adequacy ratio.

Key metrics  Q2FY25 Q2FY24 bps Q1FY25 bps
Yield 17.2 17.5 -30 18.1 -90
CoF 8 7.4 60 8 0
NIMs 7.7 7.9 -20 8 -30
Credit Cost 1.86 2.33 -47 186
ROA 1.2 1.6 -40 2.1 -90
ROE 14.5 19.5 -500 18.8 -430
PCR 67.2 64.9 230 62.7 450
CAR 18.8 17.5 130 19.3 -50
CASA 20.1 20.5 -40 20.4 -30

Management Guidance for FY25.
➡️Management expect overall 20% growth in AUM and deposit in FY25.
➡️PAT growth of 30%-40% in FY25 will led by advance and disbursal growth.
➡️ROA and ROE maintained at 1.8% -2% and 19%-21% respectively. Company will continue to increase the secured business led to decline in NIMs.

The image added is for representation purposes only

TCS Unveils Pace Studio in Philippines to Boost Digital Innovation