Axis Bank posts steady growth in advances, deposits in Q4 FY26

Axis Bank posts steady growth in advances, deposits in Q4 FY26


Axis Bank reported steady growth in key business metrics for the quarter ended 31 March 2026, driven by continued traction in advances and deposits.

Gross advances stood at Rs 12,44,200 crore as of 31 March 2026, registering a 6.3% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) rise and an 18.4% year-on-year (YoY) increase, reflecting sustained credit demand.

Total deposits rose to Rs 13,35,800 crore, up 6.0% QoQ and 13.9% YoY. Within this, CASA deposits grew 7.3% QoQ and 10.6% YoY to Rs 5,28,900 crore, while term deposits increased 5.1% sequentially and 16.1% annually to Rs 8,06,900 crore.

On a quarterly average basis, total deposits stood at Rs 12,26,500 crore, marking a 2.4% QoQ growth and a 13.1% YoY rise. Average CASA deposits were at Rs 4,58,300 crore, up 2.3% QoQ and 10.4% YoY, while average term deposits rose 2.5% sequentially and 14.8% YoY to Rs 7,68,200 crore.

 

Axis Bank is a private sector bank. It has the third-largest network of branches among private sector banks and an international presence through branches in DIFC (Dubai) and Singapore along with representative offices in Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Dhaka and Dubai and an offshore banking unit in GIFT City.

The bank reported a 2.94% increase in standalone net profit to Rs 6,489.57 crore in Q3 FY26 compared with Rs 6,303.77 crore in Q3 FY25. Total income increased 4.26% year on year (YoY) to Rs 38,500.06 crore in Q3 FY26.

Shares of Axis Bank rose 0.17% to Rs 1200.20 on the BSE.



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Om Power Transmission IPO opens April 9; sets price band at ₹166-175

Om Power Transmission IPO opens April 9; sets price band at ₹166-175


Om Power Transmission IPO: The initial public offering (IPO) of Om Power Transmission, a power transmission infrastructure company, is slated to open for public subscription on Thursday, April 9, 2026. The company has set the price band in the range of ₹ ₹166 to ₹175 per share.

 


The ₹150 crore public issue comprises a fresh issue of 7.6 million shares worth up to ₹132.56 crore and an offer for sale (OFS) of 1 million shares worth up to ₹17.50 crore. Under the OFS, Kalpesh Dhanjibhai Patel, Kanubhai Patel, Vasantkumar Narayanbhai Patel are the promoter selling shareholders. 

 


Incorporated in 2011, Om Power Transmission is a power transmission infrastructure engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) company. It specialises in the execution of high-voltage (HV) and extra-high voltage (EHV) transmission lines, substations and underground cabling projects. As of December 31, 2025, its unexecuted order book comprised 58 projects amounting to ₹744.60 crore, including 51 EPC projects and 7 O&M contracts. As of December 31, 2025, it was operating and maintaining 124 substations. 
READ | IPO pipeline strengthens as 38 companies file draft papers in March

 


Here are the key details of Om Power Transmission IPO:


Om Power Transmission IPO key dates


According to the RHP, Om Power’s IPO will open for public subscription on April 6 and close on Monday, April 13, 2026. The basis of allotment of shares will be finalised on Wednesday, April 15, 2026. Om Power will make its debut on the exchanges, NSE and BSE, tentatively on Friday, April 17, 2026. 


Om Power Transmission IPO lot size 


The company has set the lot size for an application at 85 shares. Accordingly, retail investors would require a minimum investment amount of ₹14,875 to bid for one lot of 85 shares at the upper end price. 


Om Power Transmission IPO registrar, lead manager


MUFG Intime India is the registrar for the issue. Beeline Capital Advisors is the sole book-running lead manager. 


Om Power Transmission IPO objective


According to the RHP, the company plans to utlise ₹11.21 crore from the net fresh issue proceeds for capital expenditure requirements, ₹25 crore for prepayment or repayment of certain borrowings, and ₹55 crore for funding long-term working capital requirements. The remaining funds will be used for general corporate purposes. 



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India evolving into core AI-play; SMIDs to drive innovation: Prateek Indwar

India evolving into core AI-play; SMIDs to drive innovation: Prateek Indwar



Most market participants overlook the current structural shift taking place in India’s digital economy when they refer to India as a ‘reverse-AI’ trade, said Prateek Indwar, managing director and head, capital markets, Incred Capital. He believes that India is moving away from consuming global intelligence to building domestic infrastructure to process its own data in an email interview with Ananya Chaudhuri. Here’s the edited excerpt:

 


Markets view India as a reverse-AI bet, even as India is accelerating AI-centric partnerships and projects. Do you think that India will gradually evolve into an AI-play? 

 


The “Reverse-AI” narrative overlooks the structural transformation currently taking place within the Indian digital economy. India is rapidly evolving into a core AI-play by moving from consuming global intelligence to building the domestic “refineries” required to process its own data. By integrating proprietary orchestration platforms with large-scale infrastructure execution, the industry is moving beyond hardware rental to owning the sophisticated software layers required for enterprise AI. This shift, supported by sovereign mandates, ensures that high-performance computing remains at the centre stage in India. 

 


There is an imbalance between the data India generates and its computing power. Does this present an investment opportunity in India?  

 


The gap between generating a significant portion of global data and possessing minimal global compute is a major structural arbitrage and opportunity. This imbalance creates a requirement for domestic infrastructure to ensure data is processed locally rather than exported for refining abroad. For investors, this represents a transition from a service-led economy to an infrastructure-led one, where the priority is building localised high-performance computing clusters to turn raw data into actionable intelligence. 


Street has written off traditional IT companies due to a lack of AI, but the companies are still partnering with global AI players to evolve. Do you think this, along with their cooled-off valuations, makes them worth investing? 

 


The market can sometimes overreact to disruptive threat perception, but long-term investment merit depends on a fundamental shift in business models rather than just attractive valuations. Success will be determined by whether these firms can move beyond labor arbitrage toward high-margin, platform-led services. While strategic global partnerships are a starting point, the long-term winners will be those who control their own specialised software and infrastructure stacks rather than simply reselling foreign technology.

 


How is AI impacting IT companies’ revenue growth? Is Street overestimating its impact? 

 


 In the near term, technology-driven automation creates a risk of cannibalising legacy maintenance revenue, but it serves as a force multiplier for high-value consulting and workload intelligence. While the market may overestimate immediate revenue gains, it often underestimates the potential operating leverage as revenue growth decouples from headcount. Investors should favor firms demonstrating strong operational leverage and high utilisation of advanced computing resources.

 


Are there any AI plays in the SMID space? 

 


The Small and Mid-Cap (SMID) segment is currently a hub for specialised innovation because these firms are agile enough to build around an AI-native stack from the ground up. In this space, investors are prioritising “stack owners”—companies that develop their own proprietary orchestration and deployment platforms—over traditional service providers. These agile players are better positioned to capture niche markets and scale efficiently by focusing on specialised high-performance computing and GPU cloud infrastructure.

 


What are the key risks to the emerging AI story in India? 

 


The primary risks involve high capital intensity and global supply chain dependencies for critical hardware. AI infrastructure requires continuous, heavy reinvestment in rapidly evolving computing capacity, which puts pressure on long-term cash flows. Additionally, the success of the sector is tied to consistent policy frameworks and the timely execution of large-scale infrastructure projects. Mitigating these risks requires deep integration between infrastructure providers and specialised software platforms to ensure predictable performance and efficient capital use.



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Gold imports rise nearly 29% to  billion in April-February FY26

Gold imports rise nearly 29% to $69 billion in April-February FY26



The country’s gold imports rose 28.73 per cent to $69 billion during April-February 2025-26 on account of high prices of the precious metal, according to the Commerce Ministry data.


Gold imports stood at $53.52 billion in April-February 2024-25.


The rise in gold imports pushed the country’s trade deficit (difference between imports and exports) to $310.60 billion during the 11-months of the last fiscal as compared to $261.80 billion during April-February 2024-25, the data showed.


Prices of the yellow metal are hovering at around Rs 1,51,500 per 10 grams (inclusive of all taxes) in the national capital.


Switzerland is the largest source of gold imports, with about 40 per cent share, followed by the UAE (over 16 per cent) and South Africa (about 10 per cent).

 


The precious metal accounts for over 5 per cent of the country’s total imports.


The country’s total imports from Switzerland were up 11.57 per cent to $23.5 billion during April-February 2025-26. In February, gold imports from that country surged 719.30 per cent year-on-year to $2.71 billion.


India is the world’s second-biggest gold consumer after China. The imports mainly take care of the demand by the jewellery industry. The imports have implications for India’s current account deficit (CAD).


CAD inched up to $13.2 billion, or 1.3 per cent of GDP, in the December quarter from $11.3 billion (1.1 per cent of GDP) in the year-ago period, mainly due to a higher trade deficit, according to RBI data.


However, the current account deficit moderated to $30.1 billion (1 per cent of GDP) in April-December 2025, from $36.6 billion (1.3 per cent of GDP) in the same period a year ago.


A CAD occurs when the value of goods and services imported and other payments exceeds the value of export of goods and services and other receipts by a country in a particular period.


Silver imports during the 11-month period jumped 142.87 per cent to $11.43 billion. Silver has industrial applications. It is used in sectors like electronics, auto and pharma.


To discourage imports, the government last week imposed import curbs on all forms of articles of gold, silver and platinum.



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Stocks brace for volatility amid RBI policy, West Asia conflict: Analysts

Stocks brace for volatility amid RBI policy, West Asia conflict: Analysts



The domestic stock market is expected to remain volatile this week as investors track the Reserve Bank’s monetary policy decision, key global macroeconomic data and the impact of the West Asia conflict, analysts said.


Movements in crude oil prices and foreign fund flows will also influence domestic equities, they added.


Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Ltd, said the RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting will command centre stage domestically, with investors closely watching the central bank’s stance on inflation and growth.


“A rate pause is near-certain consensus, the central bank walks a tightrope between crude-driven inflation risks and a four-year low Manufacturing PMI signalling a softening growth impulse. The governor’s commentary on the rate cycle trajectory and FY27 projections will be closely monitored.

 


“Globally, the US March CPI reading will carry significant importance, as it buries residual Fed rate-cut hopes, strengthens the dollar and tightens financial conditions for emerging markets, including India,” Nair said.


He noted that geopolitical developments in West Asia will remain the overarching factor influencing market sentiment.


“Indian markets return after a three-day gap and remain acutely vulnerable to weekend war developments, with crude trajectory and any credible ceasefire signal being the decisive variable that could either trigger a sharp relief rally or extend the current sell-on-rise mode,” Nair added.


In a holiday-shortened last week, the BSE benchmark Sensex declined 263.67 points, or 0.35 per cent, and the NSE Nifty fell 106.5 points, or 0.46 per cent.


Siddhartha Khemka – Head of Research, Wealth Management, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd, said Indian equities are likely to remain volatile this week, with investor sentiment closely tied to evolving developments in the ongoing West Asia conflict.


Brent crude prices have remained elevated near USD 107 per barrel, sustaining concerns around imported inflation. Currency pressures have also intensified, with the rupee weakening sharply before recovering towards Rs 93 against the US dollar, aided by RBI intervention, he added.


Foreign institutional investor (FII) selling remains another key overhang, with March witnessing intense outflows of Rs 1.2 lakh crore, among the highest monthly outflows in the last several years.


“Investors will monitor the US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting minutes, GDP data, and initial jobless claims for further cues on growth and the policy trajectory.


“Overall, markets are expected to remain volatile as geopolitical developments, crude price movements, FII flows and global macro data continue to drive sentiment,” Khemka said.


According to analysts, any signs of de-escalation in the West Asia conflict may provide relief through softer crude prices and currency stability, while further escalation could prolong risk aversion and sustain pressure on foreign flows.



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