Tata Capital’s Rs 15,500-crore IPO entered its second day of bidding on Tuesday, having drawn an overall subscription of 0.39 times on day one. The initial public offering -- the largest since Hyundai Motor India’s 2024 listing -- has attracted strong institutional interest. But brokerages caution that beneath the group’s brand comfort lie tightening margins, elevated funding costs and thinner provisioning cover that could curb near-term profitability.
Tata Capital’s return on equity and return on assets dipped through FY25 and 1QFY26 because of losses from the recently merged Tata Motors Finance Ltd (TMFL), said SBI Securities. The brokerage expects this to reverse once TMFL turns profitable.
Metric | FY25 Value/ Trend |
Average Cost of Funds | 7.8% (up from 6.6% in FY23) |
Net Interest Margin (NIM) | ~5.1% |
Return on Assets (RoA) | ~1.8% |
Return on Equity (RoE) | ~12.6% |
Gross stage-3 loans | 2.1% |
Provisioning Coverage Ratio (PCR) | 58.5% (down from 77.1% in FY23) |
Unsecured Loan Share | 20% (Rs 46,076 crore) |
Loan book growth (FY23-25 CAGR) | 37% |
The brokerage warned that a weaker PCR “heightens vulnerability to earnings volatility and capital strain in the event of slippages,” particularly within the retail and SME book that forms nearly 88 percent of loans. Anand Rathi, too, cited the PCR trend -- ranging from 53.9 to 77.1 percent across FY23-FY25 -- as a key risk, adding that inadequate provisioning could adversely affect financial stability.
Analysts say the reduction does not yet signal asset-quality deterioration: gross stage-3 loans stand at 2.1 percent and are still better than sector averages. However, the thinner provisioning cover leaves the lender more exposed should delinquencies rise in a slowing consumption cycle.
The rise in funding expenses, coupled with merger-related integration and provisioning, has compressed the company’s net-interest margin, which remains around 5 percent -- well below Bajaj Finance’s 9.9 percent and Cholamandalam Investment’s 6.9 percent.
Tata Capital enters the market while navigating a phase of margin compression. While analysts expect profitability to recover, for investors, the IPO is essentially a play on the Tata group’s long-term resilience rather than short-term margin expansion.
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