State Bank of India posted a 6% rise in net profit for the fourth quarter, capping a full year in which the country's largest lender recorded its second-highest annual corporate profit ever at ₹83,299 crore. The numbers are solid on the surface, but investors reacted cautiously, and the reasons are worth unpacking.
What Held Back the Cheer
Two forces offset the headline strength. First, margin pressure: when a bank's cost of deposits rises faster than what it earns on loans, the spread it pockets on each rupee lent shrinks. That appears to be squeezing SBI's net interest margin. Second, treasury losses weighed on results. Banks hold large portfolios of government bonds, and when bond yields rise, those bond prices fall, forcing mark-to-market losses through the income statement. Both effects combined to temper what would otherwise have been a stronger earnings story.
Loan growth remained robust, which is the more durable signal for SBI's core business. Strong credit demand means the book is expanding, and if margin pressure eases as interest rate cycles turn, earnings leverage could improve quickly. Chairman CS Setty said he expects credit growth to continue through the current fiscal year, signalling the bank sees no sharp slowdown in borrower demand.
Why the Market Is Watching Yields
The bond yield question matters beyond one quarter. SBI, as the largest holder of government securities among Indian banks, is more exposed than most to yield-driven swings in its investment portfolio. If yields stay elevated or rise further, treasury drag could persist. If the Reserve Bank of India moves toward rate cuts, which some market participants are anticipating, bond prices would recover and that headwind could reverse into a tailwind.
For investors, the tension is between a fundamentally healthy lending franchise growing its book, and near-term earnings noise from rates and treasury positions. The ₹83,299 crore annual profit confirms SBI's scale and consistency, but the margin trajectory and yield environment will drive how the stock is re-rated from here.
Watch for RBI's rate signalling in coming policy meetings, SBI's reported net interest margin in the next quarterly disclosure, and whether loan growth guidance from Setty holds as the fiscal year progresses.