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SBI Shares Hit Record High After Bank Reports Highest-Ever Quarterly Profit

SBI posts record Q3 profit; loans rise ~15%, NPAs fall, shares hit a new high.

Kelvin

State Bank of India (SBI) reported its highest-ever quarterly profit in the December 2025 quarter and the numbers pushed the stock to a fresh record. The results have shifted investor focus toward repeatability, not one-quarter strength, as the bank posts growth alongside improving asset quality.

SBI Q3 FY26 results show record profit and steady core income

SBI said net profit rose to ₹21,028 crore in Q3 FY26, up 24.49% year on year. Net interest income increased 9.04% to ₹45,190 crore, while operating profit climbed to ₹32,862 crore. Whole-bank net interest margin stood at 2.99%, and domestic NIM came in at 3.12%.

The market reacted quickly after the disclosure. SBI shares rose about 6–7% on the next trading session and hit a record high, marking the stock’s strongest single-day move in more than a year. Traders linked the move to the profit record and improved balance-sheet metrics.

SBI loan growth and deposit expansion keep funding costs in focus

SBI reported 15.14% year-on-year growth in gross advances to ₹46.83 lakh crore. Domestic advances increased 15.44%, while foreign offices’ advances grew 13.41%. Within the domestic mix, SME advances rose 21.02% and agriculture advances grew 16.56%, while retail advances increased 16.51%.

Deposits reached ₹57.01 lakh crore, up 9.02% year on year, and domestic CASA deposits grew 8.88%. The CASA ratio stood at 39.13% as of December 31, 2025. Management also pointed to a supportive demand backdrop and said recent policy and trade developments could aid credit growth.

SBI asset quality improves as investors track NIM and slippages

Asset quality improved in the quarter. Gross NPAs fell to 1.57% from 2.07% a year earlier, and net NPAs declined to 0.39% from 0.53%. The bank reported a provision coverage ratio of 75.54% (without AUCA) and 92.37% including AUCA.

SBI reported a Q3 slippage ratio of 0.40% and a credit cost of 0.29%. Investors now monitor whether deposit growth keeps pace with credit demand, since system-wide non-food credit growth ran at 14.4% year on year in December 2025. They also watch margin stability around the 3% level as competition for deposits continues.