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Moneycontrol Pro Panorama | Dancing elephants and awkward valuations

In today’s edition of Moneycontrol Pro Panorama: Tata Motors dominates electric car segment, new AI-based supervision model for ‘shadow banks’, term premium on government bond shrinks considerably, China's slow recovery and its impact on India, and more

May 19, 2023 / 14:44 IST
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SBI reported its highest ever quarterly profit for January-March period of FY23 and a whopping Rs 50,000 crore bottomline for the whole year.

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A cynic knows the price of everything and the value of nothing, goes a line Oscar Wilde’s play Lady Windermere’s Fan. Wilde wouldn’t have known that the line could perhaps resonate with the beef India’s largest lender has with the stock market.

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On Thursday, State Bank of India (SBI) reported its highest ever quarterly profit for January-March period of FY23 and a whopping Rs 50,000 crore bottomline for the whole year.  Its overall quarterly earnings performance was nothing short of a stunner. As my colleague Neha Dave notes in her piece here SBI’s net profit jumped 83 percent year-on-year, its net interest income surged 29 percent and loan growth was a strong 16 percent. Assets that earn no money or bad loans as they are called were the lowest in at least a decade.

True, SBI’s private sector peers such as HDFC Bank Ltd and ICICI Bank Ltd can give these numbers the required counter but here is where size matters. At Rs 55.16 lakh crore, SBI’s balance sheet is twice as big as HDFC Bank's and multiple times that of ICICI Bank. At Rs 32.69 lakh crore loan book, SBI dwarfs every other bank and a 16 percent growth on such a size only proves that elephants can dance (incidentally a remark made by an HDFC Bank executive in its earnings call earlier this month).