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Indian Company Investor Calls

IDFC First Expects FY27 Growth as Deposits Stabilize

April 30, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

IDFC FIRST Bank Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (Quarter ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “on track”, “perfectly on track”, “coming along very nicely”, and expects the “trajectory is back strong”.
  • Forward-looking language is confident: “we are expecting growth”, “Q1… strong growth”, and “watch FY27, FY28, FY29”.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Loan growth broad-based and re-accelerating
  • Loans + credit substitutes up 20% YoY to ~₹2.9 lakh cr; growth traction across mortgages, vehicle, consumer, wholesale; these segments drive ~87% of growth.
  • Microfinance (MFI) stress appears to be stabilizing
  • decline has got arrested”; MFI book ~₹6,662 cr.
  • 89% covered through CGFMU; MFI disbursements +27% sequentially and MFI “starting to contribute to overall growth and P&L”.
  • Deposit franchise improving post-event
  • Deposits +16.8% YoY to ~₹2.94 lakh cr; customer deposits ~₹2.84 lakh cr (+17% YoY).
  • Deposit growth was modest ~1% QoQ due to: SA rate reductions, fraud incident, and tight liquidity / tax outflows / West Asia crisis.
  • Management claims Q1 FY27 deposit traction is strong and expects normalized/better growth.
  • Asset quality improving
  • Gross NPA 1.69% → 1.61%; Net NPA 0.53% → 0.48%.
  • Gross slippages -15% QoQ; net slippages -27% QoQ.
  • Collection efficiency strong: early buckets ~99.6% ex MFI; MFI 99.7%.
  • Profitability supported by normalization + one-offs
  • Reported PAT ₹319 cr includes major one-time items (fraud impact, treasury loss, tax refund).
  • Normalized PAT ~₹746 cr (excluding fraud impact, treasury loss, and tax refund), implying strong YoY growth.
  • NIM guidance outperformance: guided 5.85% (Q4); achieved 5.93% (AUM basis).
  • Cost of funds down; margins expected stable
  • Cost of funds ~6% in Q4; management highlights ~50 bps improvement YoY.
  • Full-year NIM 5.75%, expected stable into next year.
  • Strategic narrative: lending machine + deposit build-out
  • Reiterates the “lending machine makes money; deposit side is loss-making but will scale” thesis.
  • Emphasizes long-run compounding and operating leverage, with deposit-side drag expected to fade over time.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Deposits momentum, CASA stability, and LCR

  • Core questions
  • Post-event (fraud + rate cuts), what is monthly deposit accretion and run-rate?
  • Is CASA stable/steady-state after SA cuts?
  • LCR at 114%: will it constrain loan/deposit growth?
  • Management response
  • Crisis stabilization expected to take ~1 year; Q1 FY27 strong growth expected.
  • March account openings strong; expects growth “right now itself”.
  • CASA: average CASA improved; management says wait and see due to SA cut being recent (“raw, just 3 months”).
  • LCR: 114% is conservative and stable, maintained through crisis.
  • Notable signals
  • Some hedging on CASA steady-state (“wait and see”).
  • Deposit growth guidance is clearer than CASA guidance.

Theme B: Margins & NIM outlook

  • Core questions
  • Why full-year margin guidance 5.75% when Q4 NIM was 5.93%?
  • Is margin range-bound next year?
  • Management response
  • NIM stability expected: “stable around these levels”.
  • Q4 benefited from day convention and cautious investment approach.
  • Growth in wholesale/business banking is margin dilutive, but still “healthy”.
  • Notable signals
  • Strong confidence on stability, but explanation relies on technical factors (day convention, mix).

Theme C: Asset quality drivers, write-offs, and sustainability

  • Core questions
  • What drove asset quality strength this quarter (SMA/NPA improvements, lower write-offs)?
  • Sustainability of write-offs / credit cost levels.
  • West Asia crisis impact on MSME/April trends.
  • Management response
  • Drivers: SMA-1/2 improved, MFI drag down, collection efficiency strong.
  • Credit cost expected stable-to-lower; asset quality trends “stable”.
  • West Asia: comprehensive portfolio review; immediate impact limited, but will monitor escalation; “adopting a cautious approach”.
  • Notable signals
  • expected to remain limited at current levels” is a cautious qualifier (not a hard guarantee).

Theme D: Credit cost guidance for next year

  • Core questions
  • What credit cost should analysts model for FY27?
  • How much of it includes CGFMU/MFI recovery?
  • Management response
  • FY27 credit cost: 170–180 bps (explicit).
  • Includes benefit from CGFMU cover; they avoid disclosing exact recovery amount.
  • Notable signals
  • Clear quantitative guidance (170–180 bps), but with “we don’t want to call out that number” on recovery.

Theme E: ROA/operating leverage and timeline to 1% ROA

  • Core questions
  • Timeline to reach ~1% ROA; is it “kissing distance”?
  • Does operating leverage translate to ROA given NIM and credit cost assumptions?
  • Management response
  • They avoid pinning a strict number: “I don’t want to guide to a particular number”.
  • But they imply improvement and suggest “kissing distance” language.
  • Internal estimate: lending business ROA ~1.5–1.6%, liability drag expected to fall from ~1.2% → 1% and continue down.
  • Notable signals
  • Strong narrative confidence, but guidance is intentionally non-committal on exact ROA timing.

Theme F: Treasury/trading losses clarification

  • Core questions
  • Treasury loss reconciliation vs other items (equity sale in power company).
  • Any remaining TD repricing?
  • Management response
  • Clarified that investor presentation grossed up impacts; actual treasury loss ~₹159 cr.
  • Residual TD repricing may exist in Q1, “largely done”.
  • Notable signals
  • Management corrected analyst confusion; suggests some complexity in reported vs normalized comparisons.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • NIM
  • Full-year FY26 NIM: 5.75%
  • Q4 NIM achieved: 5.93%
  • Next year: “stable around these levels” (no new numeric, but stability is guided qualitatively)
  • Opex
  • Next year opex growth guidance: 13%–14%
  • Caveat: Q1 could be higher due to branches + increments; by Q2/Q3/Q4 it should come down to guidance.
  • Credit cost (FY27)
  • 170–180 bps (includes CGFMU benefit)
  • MFI growth
  • Next year MFI book growth target: 15%–20% (qualitative “want to grow”, with cautious approach)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Deposits
  • Q1 FY27 expected strong traction; deposit growth should normalize or better after flat Q4.
  • CASA
  • Management expects stability but explicitly says wait and see due to recency of SA cuts.
  • Asset quality
  • stable to improving trend”; West Asia impact expected limited at current levels with monitoring.
  • ROA
  • They avoid exact ROA target, but repeatedly reference improvement trajectory and “kissing distance” to 1% ROA.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Trajectory recovery
  • trajectory is back strong in this bank
  • Deposit normalization
  • start of Q1, we are seeing strong traction in deposit growth
  • MFI stabilization
  • after many quarters, we have seen that the decline has got arrested
  • MFI book… again starting to contribute to the overall growth and P&L
  • NIM stability
  • NIM… expected to be stable into the next year
  • Credit cost guidance
  • credit cost… could be in the range of 170 to 180 basis points
  • Long-run ROA narrative
  • liability drag… should become 0… direction should play out properly
  • Deposit competition stance
  • invisible strength… culture and technology” (downplays rate-only competition)

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags

  • CASA steady-state uncertainty
  • wait and see because… SA rate cut is a bit raw, just 3 months
  • ROA guidance intentionally non-committal
  • I don’t want to guide… on a particular number at the moment
  • Macro/geo risk acknowledged
  • West Asia crisis: “if there is any escalation… we will continue to monitor” (no quantified downside)
  • Normalized vs reported complexity
  • Multiple one-offs (fraud, treasury loss, tax refund) require careful reconciliation.

Positive signals

  • Clear quantitative credit cost guidance (FY27)
  • Asset quality improvements across multiple metrics
  • Gross/net NPA down; slippages down; collection efficiency up.
  • Deposit traction claim for Q1
  • MFI disbursements re-accelerating (+27% sequentially)

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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current call (Q4/FY26): more optimistic
  • Stronger “trajectory back strong”, “perfectly on track”, “watch FY27–FY29”.
  • Prior calls
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 31, 2026): optimistic but more focused on “microfinance issue behind us” and gradual normalization; less emphasis on “back strong”.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 18, 2025): optimistic but explicitly framed as “things getting brighter” and “microfinance issue behind us” with caution.
  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 26, 2025): more defensive; repeatedly asked to “look through” short-term pinches.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic
  • Management now speaks as if the cycle is largely resolved (MFI decline arrested), and provides clearer FY27 credit cost guidance.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past statement (Q3 FY26 / Jan 31, 2026): MFI drag improving; expectation that credit cost would normalize and next year improve.
  • What expected: continued improvement in credit cost and asset quality.
  • What happened now: credit cost guidance for FY27 is 170–180 bps; gross/net NPA improved; slippages down.
  • Assessment:Delivered (directionally consistent with normalization).
  • Past statement (Q2 FY26 / Oct 18, 2025): margins bottomed out; expected improvement into Q3/Q4.
  • What expected: margin improvement.
  • What happened now: Q4 NIM 5.93%, full-year NIM 5.75%, expected stable next year.
  • Assessment:Delivered (at least by Q4).
  • Past statement (Q1 FY26 / Jul 26, 2025): “look through” short-term pinches; fixed deposit repricing and MFI bottoming would improve economics.
  • What expected: improvement after 3–4 quarters.
  • What happened now: deposit cost down to ~6%, credit cost down, NIM stable.
  • Assessment:Delivered (though with one major fraud incident now adding complexity).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • MFI narrative moved from “crisis behind us” to “decline arrested + contributing again”
  • Q1/Q2: heavy “look through” and crisis framing.
  • Q4: MFI “starting to contribute to… P&L” and growth target 15–20%.
  • Deposit narrative shifted
  • Earlier: deposit building as structural work.
  • Now: deposit growth “normalized/better going forward” after event-driven flatness.
  • ROA narrative
  • Earlier: avoid numbers, emphasize long-run.
  • Now: more explicit internal ROA decomposition (lending ROA ~1.5–1.6%, liability drag trending down), but still avoids a hard timeline.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium–High
  • Strengths: consistent disclosure of asset quality metrics; credit cost guidance is increasingly specific (FY27 170–180 bps).
  • Weaknesses: reliance on “normalized” profit adjustments and technical NIM factors (day convention, investment book changes) can obscure underlying trend.
  • Fraud incident introduces a new non-credit risk variable; management frames it as one-time but it affects reported PAT and opex.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / macro: West Asia crisis acknowledged now (new explicit risk); earlier calls focused more on repo/credit cycle and GST effects.
  • Margins: moved from “bottoming out” (Q2/Q1) to “stable next year”.
  • Asset quality: steady improvement; MFI is the only major swing factor, now stabilizing.
  • Operating leverage / costs: still guided (opex 13–14%), but management continues to emphasize that income normalization + credit cost improvement will drive ROA.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Management is increasingly comfortable giving FY27 quantitative credit cost guidance, suggesting they believe MFI and macro risks are contained enough to model.
  • CASA confidence is weaker than credit cost confidence: they provide a clear credit cost range but repeatedly hedge CASA steady-state (“wait and see”), implying deposit franchise is improving but not fully de-risked.
  • Fraud incident becomes a new “event risk” layered on top of MFI—management’s speed and customer goodwill narrative may help deposits, but it also signals operational risk can still disrupt reported metrics.