Punjab National Bank, once the punchline of every Indian banking joke, has quietly walked back into the room wearing a clean balance sheet and a smug grin. Market cap stands at ₹1,47,178 crore, stock price hovering around ₹128, and returns of ~9% in three months and ~28% over one year. For a PSU bank, that’s not jogging — that’s borderline sprinting in government-issued shoes.
Q3 FY26 net profit came in at ₹5,577 crore, up meaningfully YoY, while GNPA has collapsed to nearly one-third of its FY22 levels. PCR is flirting with 97%, CRAR is a comfortable 16%+, and ROE has finally crossed the psychological 15% mark — the number PSU banks dream about but rarely see without PowerPoint optimism.
Price-to-book sits around 1x. Dividend yield above 2%. CASA still chunky. And yes, contingent liabilities are large enough to scare interns, but provisions are already done for most known sins.
So the obvious question: is this a genuine turnaround or just a well-dressed PSU pretending it’s private for one cycle? Let’s open the files like a mildly sarcastic auditor.
2. Introduction – From “PNB Scam” to “PNB Damn”
If Indian banking had a multiverse, there’s one universe where Punjab National Bank never recovered from the Nirav Modi era and became a case study in MBA textbooks titled “How Not to Run a Bank.”
But in this universe, PNB did the unthinkable: it cleaned up.
Between FY23 and 9M FY25, the bank recovered over ₹30,500 crore from NPAs. Add write-offs of ₹42,800+ crore, and suddenly the balance sheet stopped screaming. GNPA fell from a terrifying 11.78% in FY22 to ~3.19% by Q3 FY26. NNPA is almost irrelevant at ~0.4%.
This isn’t just accounting jugaad. This is aggressive recovery, upgrades, and provisioning discipline — the boring stuff that actually fixes banks.
Meanwhile, business momentum hasn’t died. Advances crossed ₹11.1 lakh crore, deposits crossed ₹15.3 lakh crore, and digital transactions now account for over 90% of activity.
PNB didn’t become cool. It became competent. And in PSU banking, competence itself is alpha.
But before we clap too hard — let’s see what exactly this bank does today.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Punjab National Bank is not trying to be a fintech. It’s trying to be a very large, very boring, very profitable government bank. And honestly, that’s fine.
Core Segments
Corporate & Wholesale Banking (42%) – Large corporates, infra, PSU-linked lending. Lower yields, lower drama (mostly).
Treasury (29%) – G-Secs, bonds, liquidity parking. Boring, but stabilising.
Retail Banking (27%) – Housing loans, personal loans, agri, MSME. This is where margin improvement comes from.
Others (2%) – Ignore.
The key change versus FY22? Retail and MSME are gaining relevance, while reckless corporate exposure is no longer the centre of the universe.
PNB also runs one of the largest branch networks in India:
10,168 branches
32,000+ business correspondents
Rural-heavy footprint (39%) — which explains stable CASA but slower glamour growth
This is not HDFC Bank. This is financial plumbing for India. And plumbing businesses don’t look sexy — until they stop leaking.
So the big question: are the numbers backing this narrative, or is this another PSU honeymoon quarter?
4. Financials Overview – The Numbers Speak (Reluctantly, But Honestly)
Q3 FY26 Performance Table (₹ crore)
Metric
Latest Qtr
YoY Qtr
Prev Qtr
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
32,889
31,895
32,513
3.1%
1.2%
PBT
6,440
7,055
6,527
-8.7%
-1.3%
PAT
5,577
4,811
5,121
15.9%
8.9%
EPS (₹)
4.83
4.18
4.46
15.6%
8.3%
Annualised EPS (Q3 method): Average of Q1, Q2, Q3 EPS × 4 ≈ ~₹15–16 range (matches TTM ₹15.47).
Translation for non-finance folks:
Revenue growth is boring (banking reality).
Profit growth is coming from lower credit costs and cleaner books, not risky loan bingeing.
Margins are stable, not euphoric — which is good.
If this were a private bank, analysts would call it “steady execution.” Because it’s PNB, people still ask, “But what if…?”