Anindya Banerjee
Analyst · Mahrukh Adajania from Nuvama
Thank you, Sandeep. I will talk about loan growth, credit quality, P&L details and the performance of subsidiaries. On loan growth, Sandeep covered the loan growth across various segments. Coming to the growth across retail products. The mortgage portfolio grew by 9.9% year-on-year and 2.8% sequentially. Auto loans grew by 1.4% year-on-year and were flat sequentially. The commercial vehicles and equipment portfolio grew by 6.4% year-on-year and 0.5% sequentially. Personal loans declined by 0.7% year-on-year and grew by 1.4% sequentially. The credit card portfolio grew by 6.4% year-on-year and 8.4% sequentially. Within the corporate portfolio, the total outstanding to NBFCs and HFCs was INR 794.33 billion at September 30, 2025, compared to INR 874.17 billion at June 30, 2025. The total outstanding loans to NBFCs and HFCs were about 4.4% of our advances at September 30, 2025. The builder portfolio, including construction finance, lease rental discounting, term loans and working capital was INR 635.83 billion at September 30, 2025, compared to INR 628.33 billion at June 30, 2025. The builder loan portfolio was 4.1% of our total loan portfolio. Our portfolio largely comprises well-established builders, and this is also reflected in the sequential increase in the portfolio. About 1.3% of the builder portfolio at September 30, 2025, was either rated BB and below internally or was classified as nonperforming. Moving on to credit quality. The gross NPA additions were INR 50.34 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 62.45 billion in the previous quarter and INR 50.73 billion in Q2 of last year. Recoveries and upgrades from gross NPAs, including write-off -- excluding write-offs and sale were INR 36.48 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 32.11 billion in the previous quarter and INR 33.19 billion in Q2 of last year. The net additions to gross NPAs were INR 13.86 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 30.34 billion in the previous quarter and INR 17.54 billion in Q2 of last year. The gross NPA additions from the retail and rural portfolios were INR 40.49 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 51.93 billion in the previous quarter and INR 43.41 billion in Q2 of last year. We typically see higher NPA additions from the Kisan credit card portfolio in the first and third quarter of the fiscal year. Recoveries and upgrades from the retail and rural portfolios were INR 26.1 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 25.25 billion in the previous quarter and INR 25.92 billion in Q2 of last year. The net additions to gross NPAs in the retail and rural portfolios were INR 14.39 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 26.68 billion in the previous quarter and INR 17.49 billion in Q2 of last year. The gross NPA additions from the corporate and business banking portfolios were INR 9.85 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 10.52 billion in the previous quarter and INR 7.32 billion in Q2 of last year. Recoveries and upgrades from the corporate and business banking portfolios were INR 10.38 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 6.86 billion in the previous quarter and INR 7.27 billion in Q2 of last year. There were thus net deletion of gross NPAs of INR 0.53 billion in the current quarter in the corporate and business banking portfolio compared to net addition of INR 3.66 billion in the previous quarter and INR 0.05 billion in Q2 of last year. The gross NPAs written-off during the quarter were INR 22.63 billion. Further, there was a sale of NPA of INR 0.06 billion, mainly for cash in the current quarter. The nonfund based outstanding to borrowers classified as nonperforming declined to INR 23.22 billion as of September 30, 2025, from INR 32.98 billion as of June 30, 2025, and INR 33.82 billion as of September 30, 2024. The loans and nonfund-based outstanding to performing corporate borrowers rated BB and below increased to INR 36.61 billion at September 30, 2025, from INR 29.95 billion at June 30, 2025, and INR 33.86 billion at September 30, 2024. This portfolio was about 0.3% of our advances at September 30, 2025. The increase during the quarter was due to the upgrade of certain borrowers having nonfund outstanding from nonperforming to performing status. The total fund base outstanding towards standard borrowers under the resolution as per various guidelines declined to INR 16.24 billion or about 0.1% of the total loan portfolio at September 30, 2025, from INR 17.88 billion at June 30, 2025, and INR 25.46 billion at September 30, 2024. Of the total fund-based outstanding under resolution at September 30, 2025, INR 14.84 billion was from the retail and rural portfolios and INR 1.4 billion was from the corporate and business banking portfolio. At the end of September, the total provisions other than specific provisions on fund-based outstanding to borrowers classified as nonperforming were INR 26.2 billion (sic) [ INR 226.2 billion ] or 1.6% of loans. This includes the contingency provisions of INR 131 billion as well as general provision on standard assets, provisions held for nonfund-based outstanding to borrowers classified as nonperforming, fund and nonfund-based outstanding to standard borrowers under resolution and the BB and below portfolio. Moving on to the P&L details. Net interest income increased by 7.4% year-on-year to INR 215.29 billion in this quarter. The net interest income was INR 216.35 billion in the previous quarter, which included interest on tax refund of INR 3.61 billion. The net interest margin was 4.30% in this quarter compared to 4.34% in the previous quarter and 4.27% in Q2 of last year. The benefit of interest on tax refund was 0 in the current quarter compared to 7 basis points in the previous quarter and 0 in Q2 of last year. The margins for the quarter reflect the benefit from the reduction in deposit rates and cost of borrowings as well as the impact of repricing of external benchmark-linked loans and investments. Of the total domestic loans, interest rates on about 55% of the loans are linked to the repo rate and other external benchmarks, 14% to MCLR and other older benchmarks and the remaining 31% of loans have fixed interest rates. The domestic NIM was 4.37% in this quarter compared to 4.40% in the previous quarter and 4.34% in Q2 of last year. The cost of deposits was 4.64% in this quarter compared to 4.85% in the previous quarter and 4.88% in Q2 of last year. Noninterest income, excluding treasury, grew by 13.2% year-on-year and 1.3% sequentially to INR 73.56 billion in Q2 of FY 2026. Fee income increased by 10.1% year-on-year and 10% sequentially to INR 64.91 billion in this quarter. Fees from retail, rural and business banking customers constituted about 78% of the total fees in this quarter. Dividend income from subsidiaries was INR 8.1 billion in this quarter compared to INR 13.36 billion in the previous quarter and INR 5.41 billion in Q2 of last year. The timing of receipt of final dividend depends on the annual general meeting of the respective subsidiaries, which are generally held in the first quarter of a fiscal year. The year-on-year increase in dividend income was primarily due to the receipt of interim dividend from ICICI Securities and ICICI Venture. On costs, the bank's operating expenses increased by 12.4% year-on-year and 3.6% sequentially in this quarter. Employee expenses increased by 5% year-on-year and declined by 8.5% sequentially in this quarter, mainly due to lower provisioning requirements for retiral benefits. Nonemployee expenses increased by 17.3% year-on-year and 12.2% sequentially in this quarter. The year-on-year and sequential increase in nonemployee expenses reflects retail business-related expenses and festive season-related marketing spends. Our branch count has increased by 263 in H1 of the current year. We had 7,246 branches as of September 30, 2025. The technology expenses were about 11% of our operating expenses in H1 of the current year. The total provisions during the quarter were INR 9.14 billion or 5.4% of core operating profit and 0.26% of average advances compared to the provisions of INR 18.15 billion in Q1 of 2026 and INR 12.33 billion in Q2 of last year. The sequential decline in provisions reflects the impact of KCC seasonality and healthy asset quality across segments. The annualized credit cost was about 40 basis points in H1 of the current year, similar to that in H1 of last year. The profit before tax, excluding treasury, grew by 9.1% year-on-year and 3% sequentially to INR 161.64 billion in this quarter. Treasury income was INR 2.20 billion in Q2 of the current year as compared to INR 12.41 billion in Q1 and INR 6.80 billion in Q2 of the previous year. The lower treasury income during this quarter primarily reflects the increase in yield on fixed income securities. The tax expense was INR 40.25 billion in this quarter compared to INR 37.44 billion in the corresponding quarter last year. The profit after tax grew by 5.2% year-on-year to INR 123.59 billion in this quarter. Moving on to the consolidated results. The consolidated profit after tax grew by 3.2% year-on-year to INR 133.57 billion in this quarter. The details of the financial performance of key subsidiaries are covered in Slides 33 to 34 and 53 to 58 in the investor presentation. The annualized premium equivalent of ICICI Life was INR 42.86 billion in H1 of this year compared to INR 44.67 billion in H1 of last year. The value of new business was INR 10.49 billion in H1 of this year compared to INR 10.58 billion in H1 of last year. The value of new business margin was 24.5% in H1 of this year compared to 22.8% in FY 2025 and 23.7% in H1 of last year. The profit after tax of ICICI Life was INR 6.01 billion in H1 of this year compared to INR 4.77 billion in H1 of last year and INR 2.99 billion in this quarter compared to INR 2.52 billion in Q2 of last year. Gross direct premium income of ICICI General was INR 65.96 billion in this quarter compared to INR 67.21 billion in Q2 of last year. The combined ratio stood at 105.1% in this quarter compared to 104.5% in Q2 of last year. Excluding the impact of CAT losses of INR 0.3 billion in this quarter and -- INR 0.73 billion, pardon me, in this quarter and INR 0.94 billion in Q2 of last year, the combined ratio was 103.8% and 102.6%, respectively. The profit after tax increased to INR 8.2 billion in this quarter compared to INR 6.94 billion in Q2 of last year. With effect from October 1, 2024, long-term products are accounted on a 1/n basis as mandated by IRDAI, hence Q2 numbers are not fully comparable with prior periods. The profit after tax of ICICI AMC as per Ind AS was INR 8.35 billion in this quarter. The profit after tax of ICICI Securities as per Ind AS on a consolidated basis was INR 4.25 billion in this quarter compared to INR 5.29 billion in Q2 of last year. ICICI Bank Canada had a profit after tax of CAD 6.3 million in this quarter compared to CAD 19.1 million in Q2 of last year. ICICI Bank U.K. had a profit after tax of USD 6.4 million in this quarter compared to USD 8 million in Q2 of last year. As per Ind AS, ICICI Home Finance had a profit after tax of INR 2.03 billion in the current quarter compared to INR 1.83 billion in Q2 of last year. With this, we conclude our opening remarks, and we will now be happy to take your questions.