Canara Bank Q3 FY26 – ₹5,155 Cr Profit, GNPA at 2.08%, and PSU Bank Re-rating Drama in Full HD
1. At a Glance – PSU Bank, But Make It Profitable
Once upon a time, Canara Bank was that PSU bank investors held only because they forgot the demat password. Fast forward to FY25–FY26, and suddenly this grand-old banker is flashing ₹5,155 crore quarterly profit, GNPA down to 2.08%, and a stock that’s already delivered 63% returns in one year.
Market cap sits around ₹1.36 lakh crore, the stock trades near ₹150, and the valuation is still a suspiciously cheap ~6.7x earnings. CARA is a comfortable 16.28%, PCR is a juicy 89%, and ROE is flexing at ~18%.
For a PSU bank, this is less “sarkari lethargy” and more “private bank energy, but with better chai”. The big question: is this peak-cycle sugar rush or the beginning of a structurally healthier Canara?
2. Introduction – From Syndicate Hangover to Balance Sheet Gym Bro
Canara Bank’s story is basically Indian banking history with a glow-up filter. Founded in 1906, nationalised in 1969, and then handed the Syndicate Bank merger in 2020 like a complicated arranged marriage.
The early years post-merger were messy. NPAs sulked, credit costs screamed, and investors rolled their eyes. But somewhere between FY22 and FY25, Canara quietly went to the gym:
Cleaned up bad loans
Stuffed provisions like winter jackets
Let credit growth compound without blowing up asset quality
Now, with Net NPA at 0.45% (Q3 FY26) and profits compounding hard, the narrative has flipped. PSU banks are no longer about survival—they’re about valuation re-rating.
But can Canara keep this discipline when credit cycles turn moody again?
3. Business Model – WTF Does Canara Actually Do?
At its core, Canara Bank does exactly what a bank should do—take deposits, lend money, don’t screw it up. Recently, it’s doing that third part unusually well.
Loan Book Mix (FY24):
Corporate: 45%
Agriculture: 25%
Retail: 16%
MSME: 14%
Retail loans are dominated by housing (~60%), which is banker-speak for “relatively boring but safe”. Personal, vehicle, and education loans fill the rest.
Corporate exposure leans towards NBFCs (~32%) and infrastructure (~31%), which is both exciting and mildly anxiety-inducing. The difference now? Better underwriting and less YOLO lending.
If banks are diet plans, Canara has moved from roadside samosa to protein salad—with occasional cheat days.
4. Financials Overview – The Numbers That Changed the Mood
Key Quarterly Comparison (₹ crore):
Metric
Latest Q3 FY26
YoY Q3 FY25
QoQ Q2 FY26
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
30,938
30,751
32,072
~0.6%
-3.5%
PAT
5,174
4,256
4,896
~21.5%
~5.7%
EPS (₹)
5.79
4.65
5.35
~24%
~8%
Annualised EPS (Q3 rule): Average of Q1–Q3 EPS × 4 ≈ ₹20+, which neatly matches trailing numbers.
Commentary: Revenue growth is boring, but profit growth is doing bhangra. This is classic PSU-bank cleanup phase: margins stabilise, credit costs collapse, profits explode.
Do you prefer flashy revenue growth or boring profits that actually show up in PAT?
5. Valuation Discussion – Cheap or Just PSU Cheap?
Let’s do this calmly, without WhatsApp forward optimism.