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Fedfina Q1 scorecard: gold AUM vaults past ₹11,000 crore, cost-to-income drops

Fedbank Financial Services (Fedfina) is a collateral-backed lender that gives small businesses and shopkeepers in tier-2 and tier-3 towns loans against their property or gold jewellery. On 15 July 2026 the company filed its Q1 FY27 (April–June 2026) investor presentation: assets under management jumped 34.7% year-on-year to ₹21,136 crore, net profit rose 52.5% to ₹114.4 crore, and the fraction of every revenue rupee consumed by operating costs fell sharply to 52.8% from 58.2% a year ago. The takeaway is that the "twin‑engine" strategy — gold loans delivering raw growth while mortgages grind out stable yields — is now visibly throwing off operating leverage, carrying return on average assets to 2.6%, the equal‑highest in the five-quarter series the company reports.

The remix: gold loans now 53% of the book — and still accelerating

A year ago gold loans were 40% of AUM; today they are the majority partner. The disaggregated quarterly series shows the shift is not a one‑quarter pop but a steady acceleration:

Gold AUM added ₹838 crore in the June quarter alone — the third‑strongest net addition in the five‑quarter stretch, after the record ₹2,447 crore in Q4 FY26 that was helped by a seasonally heavy March. Tonnage rose 13.5% year-on-year, which means about four‑fifths of the gold AUM jump reflects heavier gold in the vaults; the rest is the tailwind from gold prices. The number of gold‑loan branches held steady at 632.

Mortgage AUM — which lumps together medium‑ticket and small‑ticket loans against property — grew at a steadier 14.5%. Within the quarter, medium‑ticket disbursements were ₹529 crore and small‑ticket disbursements ₹144 crore, both a shade below the March quarter but consistent with the bands seen across FY26. More than three‑quarters of the mortgage book carries a borrower credit score above 700, the presentation notes. [announcement]

The lever: leaner cost engine lifts RoA to 2.6%

The metric that shifts the profitability story into a higher gear is the cost-to-income ratio. Across the five quarters now available, it has traced a clear downward slope:

The 52.8% print is not just the lowest in the series — it breaks decisively below the 56.9%–58.2% band that held for four straight quarters. Operating expenses actually dipped quarter-on-quarter (₹210 crore vs ₹215 crore) while net total income expanded 5.2%, a combination that signals genuine operating leverage, not merely a lucky low‑cost quarter.

That leverage flowed straight to the bottom: return on average total assets printed 2.6%, matching the Q4 FY26 level that was then the highest in the series, and return on average equity reached 15.4%, up from 11.6% a year ago and 14.0% in March. In the FY26 earnings call in May, managing director Parvez Mulla had guided that FY27 would deliver a 20–30 bps improvement in RoA over FY26’s average of 2.4%, driven by lower credit cost and operating-expense discipline. With the first‑quarter RoA already at 2.6%, the company has landed at the top of that band right out of the gate.

Asset quality: gold near‑flawless, mortgages steady

A fully collateralised book shows its character in the credit numbers. Gross Stage III — the pool of loans overdue enough to be classed as non‑performing — fell to 1.6% from 2.0% a year ago, with the gold‑loan portion barely visible at 0.1%. The mortgage Stage III ratio held at 3.4%, exactly where it was in Q1 FY26 after a brief rise to 3.8% in Q4. Credit cost for the quarter was 0.8% of average assets, unchanged from the FY26 full‑year level and inside management’s previously stated comfort band of 1% ±10 bps. [announcement]

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Sources

  1. 1 Earnings-call transcript, May 2026