IOB Q4 Results: What Chennai's Biggest Public Sector Bank Got Right This Quarter
Indian Overseas Bank posts 43.2% profit rise in Q4 FY26 at ₹1,505 crore. NII up 11.1% to ₹3,470 crore. GNPA improves to 1.42%. Full breakdown here.
By Srajan Agarwal | 2026-04-29T16:28:29.622552+05:30

Three years ago, Indian Overseas Bank was still under the Reserve Bank of India's Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) framework. That meant it couldn't open new branches, hire freely, or grow its loan book without regulatory permission. It was, in plain terms, a bank on a watchlist.
Today, IOB's Q4 FY26 numbers tell a different story.
The bank reported a net profit of Rs 1,505.45 crore for the quarter ended March 2026 — a 43.2 per cent rise compared to the same period last year. Net Interest Income grew 11.1 per cent year-on-year to Rs 3,470 crore, up from Rs 3,123 crore in Q4 FY25. Gross NPA improved to 1.42 per cent from 1.54 per cent in the December quarter. Net NPA came down to 0.21 per cent from 0.24 per cent.
For a public sector bank that was in regulatory trouble not long ago, this is a credible and sustained improvement.
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The Provisions Story
Provisions — the money a bank sets aside to cover potential loan losses — declined to Rs 1,005 crore in Q4 from Rs 1,235 crore in Q3 FY26. This drop in provisions is partly why the profit number jumped so sharply.
When a bank's bad loans are coming under control, it needs to set aside less money each quarter. That saved money flows directly into profits. So the 43 per cent profit growth isn't just from business expansion — it's also from cleaner books requiring fewer write-offs.
This is not a trick. It's a genuine signal: if the NPA cycle has turned, provisioning requirements will continue to ease, and profits will continue to build.
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How IOB Got Here
Indian Overseas Bank has one of the more interesting recovery stories among India's public sector banks. The PCA framework, though painful, forced operational discipline. The bank couldn't take undue risks. It had to focus on recoveries, not new lending. That forced conservatism — combined with significant capital infusions from the government — helped clean up the book.
IOB was removed from the PCA framework, and since then it has been carefully re-expanding its operations. The government holds 92.4 percent of IOB's equity — which means there's always an implicit safety net, but also means the government calls the shots on strategy and capital allocation.
The bank also cut its MCLR (Marginal Cost of Funds Based Lending Rate) by 5 basis points for overnight, 1-year, and 2-year tenors in April 2026. This is a signal that IOB is trying to stay competitive on loan pricing as the broader interest rate environment shifts.
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The Numbers in Context
IOB's full-year revenue stands at approximately Rs 31,040 crore, with full-year profit at Rs 4,754 crore. The bank has a market cap of around Rs 68,000 crore on BSE.
Here's the one detail that stands out: IOB is profitable but is not paying a dividend. For a bank making over Rs 4,700 crore in annual profit and carrying 92 percent government ownership, the absence of dividends will be a point of discussion among analysts and the minority shareholders.
The explanation is likely linked to capital conservation — the bank may be retaining earnings to build up its capital buffers as it re-enters growth mode. But it's a detail worth watching.
Asset Quality: The Headline That Matters Most
For any PSU bank, asset quality is the most watched metric. IOB's numbers here are genuinely impressive:
- GNPA at 1.42 percent (down from 1.54 percent QoQ)
- Net NPA at 0.21 percent (down from 0.24 percent QoQ)
A Net NPA of 0.21 percent is among the cleanest in the Indian public sector banking space. For reference, many private banks report Net NPAs in the 0.3-0.5 percent range. IOB's recovery effort — through legal action, one-time settlements, and debt resolution mechanisms — has been one of the more effective in the PSU bank universe.
What It Means for Depositors and Borrowers
IOB has around 3,400 branches and serves millions of customers across India, with a particularly strong presence in Tamil Nadu and across South India. For these customers, a financially healthier IOB means:
- More stable deposit rates
- Better loan processing speed as the bank gains regulatory confidence to grow
- Reduced risk of branch closures or service restrictions
The bank's NR deposit operations also give it a link to the Tamil diaspora — particularly in Singapore, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka — though this corridor is smaller than Federal Bank's Gulf-linked NR book.
The Broader PSU Bank Story
Indian Overseas Bank's results sit within a broader trend: India's public sector banks have largely cleaned up their balance sheets over the past four years. The bad loan crisis that peaked around 2018-2019 has been resolved through a combination of IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code) proceedings, write-offs, and recoveries.
What matters now is whether these banks can grow their loan books responsibly — chasing credit demand without slipping back into the governance failures that caused the original NPA crisis.
IOB's management faces that test directly. With its books clean and capital ratios improving, the next few quarters will show whether the growth engine can fire without the old problems returning.
The Government's Oversight Role
The government's 92.4 percent stake in IOB isn't just a number. It shapes everything — board appointments, expansion strategy, priority sector lending targets, and whether the bank participates in big-ticket government schemes. IOB is one of the lenders that channels agricultural credit, MSME loans, and priority sector advances as part of national financial inclusion mandates.
That role doesn't disappear when quarterly profits improve. It just becomes slightly easier to fund.
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