Shares of , the country’s largest lender, plunged 6.66% to ₹1,019 in Friday’s trade, 8 May, hitting their lowest level in a month after the bank’s March quarter performance failed to impress Dalal Street investors.
Friday’s decline also marked one of the sharpest intraday falls seen in the stock in recent times, eroding nearly ₹67,040 crore in market capitalisation and dragging the lender’s valuation below the ₹10 lakh crore mark to ₹9.41 lakh crore.
Seema Srivastava, Senior Research Analyst at SMC Global Securities, said that the lender has reported a mixed consolidated performance in Q4 FY26, where healthy business growth, stronger balance sheet metrics, and continued improvement in asset quality were partly offset by margin compression and weaker operating profitability, resulting in earnings coming below market expectations.
She noted that consolidated net profit for the quarter stood at ₹19,684 crore, registering a growth of 5.58% YoY, although it declined 6.39% sequentially due to pressure on margins and lower operating profit.
Operating profit came in at ₹27,704 crore, declining 11.45% YoY and 15.70% QoQ, reflecting moderation in core despite strong loan growth.
On the business front, she said the bank continued to witness broad-based credit growth across segments. Whole bank advances increased 16.87% YoY and 5.32% QoQ, supported by strong domestic and overseas performance. Domestic advances grew 16.33% YoY, while foreign office advances rose 20.01% YoY.
She further highlighted that deposit mobilisation remained stable, with whole bank deposits rising 11.03% YoY and CASA deposits growing 9.53% YoY. The CASA ratio improved by 33 bps QoQ to 39.46%, indicating stable low-cost deposit accretion.
However, she pointed out that margin pressure persisted as net interest income increased only 4.13% YoY and declined 1.35% QoQ. The whole bank NIM for Q4 FY26 stood at 2.81%, down 18 bps QoQ, while domestic NIM declined to 2.93%.
According to the analyst, asset quality continued to improve, with the Gross NPA ratio declining to 1.49% and Net NPA remaining low at 0.39%. Credit cost moderated to 0.27%, although slippages increased slightly to 0.47%.
She added that the provision coverage ratio stood at 74.36%, while capital adequacy improved sharply to 15.40%, strengthening the bank’s growth and risk absorption capacity going forward.
Will SBI shares break ₹1000 level?
Anshul Jain, Head of Research at Lakshmishree, said that SBI remains technically weak after forming a lower high on weekly charts, indicating fading upward momentum within the broader structure. The stock is sustaining itself below key daily moving averages, while the post-result’s negative reaction reflects weakening institutional participation.
“Price action suggests a gradual drift toward the 50-week EMA placed near 972, which now emerges as a critical support zone. Unless SBI reclaims its short-term resistance band with strong volumes, rallies are likely to face selling pressure,” he added.
Anshul noted that a breakdown below 972 could accelerate downside momentum, while only sustained closing strength above recent swing highs would negate the bearish setup.
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