1. At a Glance — A Lender That Survived a Scare and Came Back Louder
There are lenders that grow quietly.
Then there are lenders that grow through chaos.
And then there is IIFL Finance, which seems to prefer growing because of chaos.
In FY26, while many NBFCs spent the year explaining why growth slowed, why asset quality slipped, why funding costs hurt spreads, or why unsecured books suddenly looked radioactive, IIFL came out with something rather odd — Revenue at ₹13,351 crore, PAT at ₹1,817 crore, Q4 PAT up 183% YoY, AUM crossing ₹1.08 lakh crore, and the stock still trades around 11.4 times earnings, below several slower-growing peers.
That raises a question.
Is the market missing something?
Or seeing something others ignore?
Because this is not a clean fairy-tale lender.
This is a balance sheet with ₹69,698 crore borrowings, debt/equity of 5.01x, negative operating cash flows typical of expanding lenders, regulatory history, tax-search overhang, an RBI penalty headline, and periodic rumours about acquisitions.
A boring bank this is not.
Yet look beneath the noise.
Gold loans exploded to 44% of AUM, versus just 21% a year ago. Home loans remain substantial. Microfinance exposure has been reduced. Discontinued and riskier books have been deliberately shrunk. Gross NPA has fallen from 2.2% to 1.6%. Net NPA down to 0.8%. Consolidated capital adequacy around 28%.
That does not look like a lender asleep at the wheel.
It looks like one de-risking in public.
Management even said openly they are exiting higher-risk pools and shifting toward “more resilient portfolios.” For once, management said something… and numbers appear to support it.
Rare species.
Even stranger?
Gold loans — usually dismissed as low-multiple utility lending — may be becoming the hidden engine.
Gold AUM rose to ₹43,432 crore, up 189% YoY, with GNPA at 0.36%. That is not a side business anymore. That is almost a second company hiding inside the first.
And if average branch productivity in gold is only half the industry leader, as management admitted, what happens if productivity catches up?
Interesting question.
The market seems focused on leverage. Maybe it should.
But what if it is ignoring operating optionality?
Because when a lender compounds AUM at scale, improves asset quality, holds capital buffers, grows assigned/co-lending books to 35% of AUM, and trades cheaper than peers — sometimes the market is prudent.
And sometimes the market is just suspicious because of old memories.
Finance rewards those who know the difference.
Which is this?
That is the puzzle.
And puzzles are where returns often hide.
2. Introduction — This Story Is Really About Reinvention
Most people still think of IIFL Finance as a diversified NBFC.
That description is outdated.
It is becoming a portfolio of lending engines.
Standalone book at ₹49,027 crore. Home finance subsidiary ₹39,628 crore. Samasta microfinance ₹9,681 crore. Consolidated ₹98,336 crore in 9M FY26, now ₹1.08 lakh crore after Q4 announcement.
That scale matters.
At that size, growth is no longer accidental. It is designed.
And design changed.
Look at portfolio migration:
Home loans: 43% to 32%
Gold loans: 21% to 44%
Microfinance: 15% to 9%
Riskier discontinued books shrinking
That is not drift. That is strategy.
The market often treats this as instability. But sometimes changing the mix is precisely what risk control looks like.
Management’s Jan 2026 concall gave away the playbook. De-risk. Scale secured lending. Use co-lending. Protect capital. Push gold. Repair housing. Normalize microfinance.