HDFC Bank: Board yet to recommend CEO, chairman names; process ongoing

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The lender reported strong deposit growth and profit growth for the full year; asset quality improves.

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HDFC Bank
HDFC Bank | Credits: Fortune India

HDFC Bank’s top management on Saturday clarified that the process to suggest the name of current CEO Sashidhar Jagdishan for a third term and alternatives to part-time chairman Keki Mistry is still on.

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HDFC Bank reported a strong set of financial numbers led by 14.4% deposit growth in FY26, where it outpaced advances, which grew 10.2% for the year. Net profit came in at ₹19,221 crore for the quarter ended March 31 and ₹74,671 crore for FY26, showing a year-on-year growth of 9% for the quarter and 10.9% for the full fiscal.

“On Jagdishan’s candidature, the NRC (Nomination and Remuneration Committee) and the board is seized of the matter. It will be taken up in due course as the process requires,” HDFC Bank’s board member and deputy managing director Kaizad M. Bharucha told the media. The Bank said there is a timeline and disclosures needed to be made, which will be done soon.

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Jagdishan’s second term ends on October 26, 2026, while Mistry’s term as part-time chairman ends on June 18.

Legal review reports awaited

The two regulators, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Securities and Exchange Board of India have come out in support of the bank. RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra at the last policy meeting on April 8 said that minute meetings and supervisory data of HDFC Bank had been reviewed and it found nothing of material concern.

The legal review reports from Wadia Ghandy and Trilegal are in progress. “The data is voluminous. It takes time, the bank will come out in the open and share it,” Jagdishan told the media.

This was one of the rare appearances of Jagdishan for a virtual media interaction and the first earnings announcement since—what the bank called an “unprecedented event”—the sudden exit former part-time chairman Atanu Chakraborty. In his resignation letter in March, Chakraborty had cited certain “happenings and practices” at the bank over the past two years, were not in congruence with his “personal values and ethics”.

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Net interest income (interest earned less interest expended) for the March quarter grew by 3.2% YoY to ₹33,080 crore. Net interest margin was at 3.38% of total assets, and 3.53% based on interest-earning assets.

Gross non-performing loans as a share of total advances eased to 1.15% at end-March from 1.24% in the previous quarter.

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HDFC Bank now has 9,700 branches and in excess of 100 million customers.

A month after the sudden exit of Chakraborty, several questions remain unanswered.

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Investors remain wary of leadership succession. In recent weeks, data shows that foreign investor sell-off in the HDFC Bank stock was high; the shareholding is now down to 44.05% in the March quarter from 47.67% in the December quarter.

The stock is almost flat at ₹800 on the BSE on April 17 (Friday) from ₹798 on March 18 when the announcement of Chakraborty’s exit took place.

The mega-merger of mortgage lender HDFC Ltd with the parent bank, effective July 2023, continues to weigh in on the bank. HDFC Bank had an elevated loan-to-deposit (LDR) ratio which is near 100% levels, but it has been coming down. A high LDR means that a bank has let out most of its deposits, which can signal liquidity risks.

The Board of Directors have now recommended a final dividend of ₹13.00 per equity share of ₹1 for the year ended March 31, 2026.

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