PNB Housing Finance Ltd – From 8% GNPA to 1% GNPA, but Still Carrying 3.7x Debt-to-Equity
1. At a Glance
PNB Housing Finance is like that relative who was once drowning in credit card debt, sold the family silver, and now flaunts a “debt-free” lifestyle on Instagram. From a GNPA of 8.1% in FY22 to 1.5% in FY24, it has pulled off a turnaround act. But behind the cleaned-up balance sheet lies a ₹62,000 Cr borrowing monster, promoter dilution (Carlyle now bigger than PNB), and the classic housing finance treadmill—grow AUM or die trying.
2. Introduction
PNB Housing Finance (PNBHF) is the third-largest Housing Finance Company (HFC) in India, trailing only HDFC Ltd (pre-merger) and LIC Housing. With a loan book of ₹65,300 Cr in FY24 and deposits worth ₹17,700 Cr, it sits comfortably in the “big league” of HFCs.
Its journey in the past three years looks like a Bollywood redemption arc:
In FY22, corporate loans blew up, GNPA shot to 8%, net NPA >5%.
The company sold bad corporate loans to ARCs, got some relief via SWAMIH fund, and ruthlessly cut exposure.
Today, 97% of loan book is retail, corporate reduced to just 3%.
Carlyle Group now holds ~33%, PNB just 28%. Translation: the “PNB” tag is more nostalgia branding than actual control.
Growth ambition? ₹1 lakh+ Cr loan book by FY27, with affordable housing and emerging markets as the fuel. Basically, aiming to become “LIC Housing with better PR.”
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
PNBHF gives out loans for:
Individual Housing Loans (73%) – Your typical home loan.
Loan Against Property (LAP) & Non-Housing (27%) – For that businessman who “needs working capital” but doesn’t want to tell his banker why.
NRI Housing Loans, Plot Loans, Commercial Space Loans – Side dishes to the main thali.