Global brokerage Citi upgraded AU Small Finance Bank to ‘Buy’ and raised its price target to ₹990. The brokerage said that earnings surpassed expectations, with the bank reporting return on assets (RoA) of 1.37%, led by a 5 basis point (bps) expansion in NIMs, 24% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) growth in fee income, and contained credit costs at 1.7% (vs 1.97% QoQ).
Microfinance SMA levels improved to 2.9% (vs 4.3% QoQ), while forward flows across cards, mortgages, and commercial banking also declined.The management indicated a neutral-to-positive impact from the ECL transition and reaffirmed its growth agenda, leveraging its pan-India distribution to capture market share from a low base.
Citi expects NIMs to improve further, aided by yield repricing and lower savings and term deposit rates, and raised FY26E-FY28E earnings estimates by 4%.Nomura also upgraded the stock to ‘Neutral’ with a price target of ₹750, citing strong all-round Q2 performance and raising its FY26-FY28F EPS estimates by 8-12%.
The brokerage mentioned robust delivery on NIMs, fee income, and credit costs, alongside continued asset quality improvement. Nomura expects AU Small Finance Bank to deliver average RoA/RoE of 1.6%/16% and EPS CAGR of 29% over FY26-28F.
Jefferies, which maintains a ‘Buy’ rating, raised its price target to ₹940. The bank reported Q2 profit of ₹560 crore, down 2% year-on-year but ahead of estimates due to higher margins and lower credit costs.
AUM grew 17% YoY and could accelerate to 20% as unsecured loan growth picks up. Jefferies said the improvement in credit quality provides room for higher growth and that the transition to a universal banking platform presents a medium-term opportunity. It expects RoA to improve to 1.7% in FY27E.
Morgan Stanley retained its ‘Overweight’ rating and raised its price target to ₹1,175. It said Q2FY26 results surprised positively on both NIMs and asset quality, increasing conviction in EPS growth estimates of 40% for FY27 and 23% for FY28.
The brokerage cited strong improvement in microfinance asset quality, a better NIM starting point with expected rate cuts, 28% YoY growth in secured loans, and reduced drag from unsecured loans as key positives.

