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Indian Company Investor Calls

Bank of Baroda Upsizes Loan Growth to 12–14%

May 14, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Bank of Baroda — Q4 & FY25-26 (Quarter ended 31 Mar 2026; call held 8 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly highlights “strongest” growth and “one of the highest ever” quarterly profits, with consistent emphasis on “robust/best asset quality.”
  • They upsized guidance (loan growth 11–13% → 12–14%, deposits 9–11% → 10–12%) and framed geopolitical risk as not yet visible in numbers (“as of today, I don’t see in terms of number any impact”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Balance sheet growth & RAM focus
  • Global business volume crossed Rs. 30 lakh crores (to Rs. 30.78 lakh crores, +13.9% YoY).
  • Advances +16.2% YoY; domestic +14.5%, international +24.4%.
  • Portfolio mix: RAM focus; organic retail +17.9%, agriculture +20.7%, organic MSME +15.6%; RAM % stated at 61%.
  • Deposit momentum improving
  • Deposits +12% YoY; CASA 38.9% (+45 bps QoQ).
  • Management stresses earlier quarters where deposits lagged advances; March quarter “deposit growth… has come back.”
  • Profitability supported by NII/NIM and one-offs
  • Q4 net profit Rs. 5,616 cr (+11.2% YoY); “highest ever quarterly net profit.”
  • NIM 2.89% (sequential improvement +10 bps).
  • Management attributes some margin/NIM volatility to IT refund and uses conservative guidance to absorb it.
  • Asset quality: “robust” but credit cost elevated due to prudential actions
  • GNPA 1.89%, Net NPA 0.45%, PCR 93.94%.
  • Slippage 0.89% (Q4); FY slippage 0.72%.
  • Credit cost Q4 rose to 0.76% mainly due to floating provision Rs. 1,500 cr (excluding floating provision, credit cost would be 0.32%).
  • Geopolitical risk management (West Asia)
  • They claim no immediate impact in collections/asset quality, but emphasize monitoring and use of ECLGS for MSMEs.
  • Capital & funding strategy
  • CET1 13.16%, CRAR 15.82%, LCR ~127%.
  • Dividend declared Rs. 8.5/share (subject to approvals).
  • FY27 fundraising: Rs. 6,000 cr via AT-1/Tier 2; equity enabling provision Rs. 8,500 cr up to FY28.
  • Business expansion beyond banking
  • Primary dealer entity operational from 1 Apr 2026; pension fund sponsor approval; tech subsidiary (Baroda Sun Technology) referenced.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: NIM / NII drivers, IT refund impact, and deposit cost outlook

  • Core questions
  • Why NIM improved despite deposit cost/yield on advances softening?
  • How sticky is deposit cost going forward?
  • Can IT refund be quantified; is NIM guidance “core”?
  • Management response
  • NIM movement explained via asset-liability repricing timing and guidance range (2.75–2.95%) to absorb IT refund volatility.
  • Deposit cost expected sticky: “I don’t see a cost of deposit further going down” if liquidity remains tight; also “likely to remain at the same levels… for the next 3 months.”
  • Quantification: management did not provide a number on the spot in multiple places; later they said Rs. 100 cr of TWO recovery went to interest income (not IT refund). For IT refund, they offered to share offline / declined to quantify.
  • Evasive / partial
  • IT refund quantification was repeatedly avoided (“I do not have a number… you can offline”).
  • Reliance on “core NIM” framing without transparent bridge to reported NIM.

Theme B: ECL / ECLGS and floating provision Rs. 1,500 cr

  • Core questions
  • What is the floating provision for? Is it for ECL transition or West Asia?
  • How much additional ECL provisioning is planned?
  • ECLGS disbursement amount?
  • Management response
  • Floating provision is a balance-sheet buffer, not directly usable for ECL without regulatory approval; created to improve PCR and keep net NPA strong.
  • ECL: final guidelines issued; they are computing transaction-level impact and won’t give a number yet (“do not have a number”).
  • ECLGS: estimated dispersal ~Rs. 12,000+ cr (based on MSME book and working capital share).
  • Notable
  • They explicitly separate floating provision vs ECL provision and emphasize regulatory constraints.

Theme C: Geopolitical (West Asia) impact on overseas book, collections, MSME stress

  • Core questions
  • Impact on foreign loan portfolio/remittances; any offshore subsidiaries impacted?
  • Any stress in MSME in April as war prolonged?
  • Risk of overseas NPA rising over 2–3 quarters?
  • Management response
  • As of today, no visible impact in numbers; collection efficiency improved vs December; CRILC SMA improved.
  • Overseas book described as diversified; US ~37–38%; other geographies include UAE, Australia, UK, Singapore, Gift City.
  • Middle East retail exposure: Rs. 50,000–60,000 cr, spread across countries; “need to be slightly watchful for a couple of quarters.”
  • MSME stress: SMA1/2 (and SMA0) “better than last quarter”; March over December no stress seen; ECLGS expected to boost resilience.
  • Strength
  • Clear admission that Middle East needs monitoring, but they repeatedly anchor on “no immediate impact.”

Theme D: NARCL/NCLT transfers, ARC strategy, and recoveries

  • Core questions
  • How much transferred to NARCL vs NCLT/other ARCs?
  • Preference for NARCL over NCLT; any other ARC usage?
  • Management response
  • NARCL transfers: “a couple of thousand crores” total; for this year three accounts ~Rs. 300 cr to NARCL.
  • Other ARCs: sold/resolved on 100% case basis; 4–5 accounts resolved.
  • NCLT book: “almost 99% provided.”
  • Partial
  • They offered to share some data later (“can give data at a later date”) and did not provide a full reconciliation in-call.

Theme E: Agriculture asset quality, monsoon risk, and BC transaction decline

  • Core questions
  • Agriculture NPA/slippages rising QoQ; impact of weak monsoon?
  • Why business correspondent (BC) transactions declining QoQ?
  • Management response
  • Agriculture: slippage is “normalized”; GNPA down overall; absolute uptick marginal with recovery offset.
  • Weak monsoon: “I don’t think that’s going to impact” due to long-standing seasonality and farmer/bank management.
  • BC transactions: BCs now support multiple transactions; digital apps (e.g., bob e-Pay) growing; payout to BCs increasing due to productivity.
  • Credibility
  • Reasoning is coherent; no obvious hedging beyond “at this stage.”

Theme F: Deposits/CASA dynamics, bulk deposit management

  • Core questions
  • CASA YoY dip: how manage low-cost deposits?
  • Bulk deposit shedding vs re-adding; target bulk %.
  • Management response
  • CASA 38.9% described as top quartile; improved QoQ.
  • Bulk deposit dependency reduced from 23–24% to ~17%, slightly increased to ~19% for March due to liquidity needs while loan growth outpaced deposits.
  • No fixed “ideal %” but target to keep below 20%; “comfortable… within… 20%.”
  • Positive
  • Provides a clear historical trajectory and a numeric operating threshold.

Theme G: Capital raising, SLR/LCR buffer, technology spend

  • Core questions
  • FY27 capital raising timing and amounts; overseas borrowing plans.
  • SLR size and excess SLR optimization; comfort range.
  • Technology spend and cyber/AI threat response.
  • Management response
  • AT-1/Tier 2: Rs. 6,000 cr “throughout the year… any time… depending on price.”
  • Equity enabling: Rs. 8,500 cr up to FY28.
  • SLR: reduced from 26–27% to 22.5–23%; excess SLR buffer ~4.5%; comfort threshold 3–3.5%; churn via buying/selling/OMO rather than one-time liquidation.
  • Tech spend: ~10% of operating profit; FY tech spend ~Rs. 4,500 cr (Opex+Capex); may upsize if cyber/AI threats intensify.
  • Strong
  • Specific SLR comfort framing and explicit “price-dependent” capital timing.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Loan growth (advances): upsized to 12–14% (from 11–13%).
  • Deposit growth: upsized to 10–12% (from 9–11%).
  • NIM (full year): 2.75–2.95% (reported Q4 NIM 2.89%).
  • ROA:more than 1%” (unchanged).
  • Slippage ratio: maintained at 1.0–1.25% (geopolitical risk acknowledged).
  • Credit cost: <0.60% for FY (FY26 credit cost 0.46%).
  • Dividend: Rs. 8.5/share (subject to approvals).
  • FY27 capital raising: Rs. 6,000 cr via AT-1/Tier 2.
  • FY27 hiring: 4,000–5,000 headcount addition (implied from “6–7k planned; 4–5k added”).
  • ECLGS disbursement estimate: ~Rs. 12,000+ cr (qualitative “expectation” but numeric).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Deposit cost “sticky” near-term due to liquidity conditions; repricing benefit expected mainly via asset side.
  • Geopolitical impact not yet showing in collections/asset quality; monitoring continues for “a couple of quarters.”
  • Floating provision indicates management is proactively buffering for “extraordinary scenarios,” even while claiming current asset quality is strong.
  • Treasury income and IT refund are treated as volatile supports, hence conservative NIM guidance.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • Upsized growth guidance:loan growth… now… 12 to 14%” and “deposit growth… improving to 10 to 12%.”
  • Geopolitical impact stance:as of today, I don’t see in terms of number any impact” (West Asia).
  • Floating provision purpose:floating provision is just to buffer the balance sheet… not directly linked” to ECL.
  • Deposit cost outlook:cost of deposit… is going to be sticky” / “likely to remain at the same levels… for the next 3 months.”
  • Asset quality confidence:asset quality… continues to remain robust” with Net NPA “0.45%.”
  • NIM guidance rationale:IT refund… can go up and down… precisely for that reason… guidance” set conservatively.
  • SLR optimization philosophy:It’s always an optimization game… churn… 1–2% continuous churn.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Low transparency on IT refund bridge: management repeatedly declined to quantify IT refund impact on NIM in-call.
Reliance on “as of today” for geopolitical risk—could mask delayed effects (they acknowledge monitoring for “a couple of quarters”).
Credit cost volatility explained by floating provision: while clarified, it still signals management is actively managing earnings optics via provisioning timing.

Positive signals
Clear separation of buffers vs regulatory ECL (floating provision vs ECL provisioning).
Strong capital and liquidity: CET1 13.16%, LCR ~127%.
Consistent asset quality metrics: GNPA 1.89%, Net NPA 0.45%, PCR 93.94%.
Deposit strategy discipline: bulk dependency target <20% and CASA top quartile.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior calls provided)

Prior transcript provided: Q1 FY26 (quarter ended 30 Jun 2025; call 25 Jul 2025). (No additional earlier calls were included beyond this one in your materials.)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Shift: More Optimistic
  • Q1 FY26 tone: acknowledged NII/margin pressure due to repo cuts and deposit lag; NIM 2.91% but framed as managing transition.
  • Q4/FY26 tone: emphasizes “strongest” growth, “highest ever quarterly net profit,” and upsized guidance.
  • What changed
  • Management now highlights deposit catch-up and NIM sequential improvement.
  • Geopolitical risk is discussed, but management claims no immediate numerical impact, unlike earlier macro-driven margin pressure framing.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • RAM/retailization trajectory
  • Q1 FY26: RAM % 62.7%; guidance/plan to reach 65% in 2–3 years.
  • Q4 FY26: RAM % stated at 61% (slightly lower than Q1 FY26 figure), while retail book milestone crossed (Rs. 3 lakh cr business; retail growth strong).
  • Assessment: ✅/⏳ Mixed—retail growth is strong, but RAM % narrative shows numerical inconsistency (61% vs 62.7% earlier).
  • Margin guidance conservatism
  • Q1 FY26: NIM under pressure; guidance range around 2.85–3% (full year).
  • Q4 FY26: NIM guidance 2.75–2.95% (lower floor), explicitly to absorb IT refund volatility.
  • Assessment: ⏳ Delivered partially—management maintained guidance discipline but lowered floor, implying less confidence in sustaining higher NIM without volatility supports.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From transition-driven margin pressure → to growth + provisioning buffer
  • Earlier: margin/NII transition from repo cuts and deposit repricing lag was central.
  • Now: central narrative is growth outperformance + asset quality + provisioning buffers (floating provision).
  • Geopolitical risk now integrated into guidance
  • Slippage guidance maintained with explicit mention of geopolitical issue; ECLGS framed as mitigation.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: consistent asset quality metrics and clear guidance ranges.
  • Weakness: recurring non-quantification of IT refund impact and some mix inconsistencies (RAM % changed from 62.7% to 61% while claiming consistent business model).
  • Management uses “core NIM” framing but does not provide a full reconciliation in-call.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/growth: Improving/stable (advances growth accelerated to 16.2%; guidance upsized).
  • Margins: Mixed—NIM improved sequentially, but guidance floor lowered and deposit cost “sticky” acknowledged.
  • Asset quality: Stable/strong (Net NPA 0.45%; slippage down).
  • Risk management: Increased emphasis on buffers (floating provision) and geopolitical monitoring.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • The company’s earnings strength increasingly depends on non-core/volatile items (IT refunds, treasury gains) while simultaneously using conservative NIM guidance—suggesting management is aware that reported profitability may not be purely structural.
  • The floating provision (Rs. 1,500 cr) appears to be a deliberate tool to keep credit cost and asset quality optics strong despite elevated credit cost in Q4.