
Why Shriram Finance’s FY27 growth ambitions face headwinds
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Shriram Finance’s March quarter (Q4FY26) results are steady, but it is treading with caution amid macro-economic concerns, such as elevated crude prices and expectations of a dull monsoon this year, which could hurt rural demand.Shriram reported in-line net interest income (NII), but operating expenses came in lower than expected, leading pre-provisioning operating profit (PPoP) to beat consensus by 5%, said a report by Nuvama Research.NII increased by 21% year-on-year to ₹6,751 crore. Assets under management (AUM) rose by 15% year-on-year to ₹3 trillion, aided by an uptick in commercial vehicles (CVs), passenger vehicles (PVs), farm equipment and gold.Shriram still has a heavy dependence on CVs, which contributed 46.9% of its total AUM versus 45% last year, and grew by 19.5%.
PVs were the second-largest contributors, accounting for 21.3% of total AUM and rising by 19%. On the other hand, construction equipment was a pain point, falling 25%, due to slow state-level/local spending on infrastructure projects.Disbursement grew 14.9% in Q4.
Shriram managed to capture demand across both new and used vehicles. As costs of funds fell, its net interest margin (NIM) improved slightly sequentially to 8.61% in Q4FY26 from 8.58% in Q3.Borrowing costs have started to decline and could drop further over time, especially after the MUFG investment, which has led to various credit rating upgrades.
However, it may pass on some benefit to customers, so margin improvement could be limited.The management aims to clock 17-18% AUM growth in FY27. But uncertainty on retail fuel price hikes poses a risk for vehicle sales growth ahead.
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