Karur Vysya Bank does not make headlines the way HDFC Bank or Kotak do. It does not have a billionaire founder-promoter or a story that trends on financial Twitter. What it has is something considerably rarer in Indian banking right now — a 108-year-old institution that has spent the last four years systematically fixing everything that was wrong with it, and is now delivering the best financial results in its history with the kind of quiet consistency that compounds into exceptional shareholder returns over time.

FY26 was the year the transformation became undeniable.

THE NUMBERS: RECORD EVERYTHING

For FY26, net profit rose 29.25% year-on-year to ₹2,510 crore — the highest annual profit in the bank's history. Net Interest Income increased 15.94% to ₹4,939 crore. Pre-Provision Operating Profit surged 26.87% to ₹4,075 crore. Return on Assets stood at 2.10% and Return on Equity at 20.55%.

Total business crossed ₹2.14 lakh crore — growing 14.92% year-on-year. Asset quality remained among the best in its history with Gross NPA improving to 0.75% and Net NPA at a remarkably clean 0.19%.

Capital ratios improved during the year with CRAR at 18.76% in March 2026, against 18.17% a year earlier. The bank also conducted a bonus issue during FY26, raising paid-up capital from ₹161 crore to ₹193 crore.

The Q4 numbers were the strongest of the year. Q4 FY26 net profit surged 41% year-on-year, with NIM recovering to 4.25% on an adjusted basis — a sharp bounce from the compression that had characterised the middle quarters of the year. GNPA held at a near-decadal best of 0.75%.

THE FOUR-PRONGED PLAN: WHERE RAMESH BABU IS TAKING THE BANK

MD and CEO B. Ramesh Babu has now been reappointed for a fresh two-year term — and his strategic vision for the bank's next phase is built around four interconnected pillars.

1. RAM Segment Deepening

Retail, Agriculture, and MSME — the RAM segments — are the growth engine that KVB has consistently prioritised. The RAM loan book grew at 19.52% year-on-year in Q1 FY26. These segments carry better margins than large corporate lending, build deeper community banking relationships, and are where the bank's Tamil Nadu and South India roots give it a genuine competitive edge over large national banks that are structurally less equipped for relationship-intensive MSME lending.

2. NIM Stabilisation and Recovery

NIM compression was KVB's most visible challenge through the first half of FY26, falling to 3.86% in Q1 before recovering to 4.25% by Q4. The slight compression in Q3 at 3.99% reflected industry-wide repricing pressures rather than any structural deterioration in the bank's portfolio. The recovery to 4.25% in Q4 — and management's guidance to sustain NIMs above 4% going forward — is the most watched metric for FY27.

3. Geographic Expansion Beyond the South

KVB opened its 35th branch in Uttar Pradesh, with Ramesh Babu personally attending the inauguration — a signal that the bank's historically Southern-focused footprint is being deliberately extended into Northern and Central India. As of March 31, 2026, the bank operates 901 branches, one Digital Banking Unit, and 2,213 ATMs across India, with over 54% of branches in semi-urban and rural centres. This geographic mix gives KVB significant exposure to India's underpenetrated semi-urban credit market — where competition from large private banks is lower and yields are structurally better.

4. Digital Transformation

KVB has been investing in its technology stack and digital banking capabilities — a necessary investment for a bank that needs to compete for younger customers in its existing geographies while expanding into new ones without proportional branch cost increases. The Digital Banking Unit adds a new channel for serving the technology-comfortable segment of its customer base.

THE VALUATION: CHEAP FOR ITS QUALITY

Here is the most interesting part of the KVB story for investors: despite delivering record profits, best-in-class asset quality, and 20%+ ROE, the stock is trading at a significant discount to comparable private sector banks.

KVB shares slipped approximately 3% on results day despite the record profit announcement — a reaction that reflects either market indifference to smaller private sector banks or a broader rotation away from banking stocks rather than any company-specific concern.

At approximately 1.3–1.5x Price-to-Book on FY26 estimates, KVB trades well below the 2.5–3x multiples commanded by Federal Bank and IDFC FIRST Bank — peers with comparable or lower quality metrics on most parameters. The GNPA of 0.75% and ROE of 20% would justify a significantly higher multiple at any other private bank with similar scale.

The discount reflects two structural factors: KVB's smaller size limits its institutional ownership appetite, and its historically Southern-concentrated franchise lacks the national brand recognition that commands premium valuations. Both of these are improving — the geographic expansion and the consistent delivery of industry-leading profitability will eventually attract the institutional attention that re-rates the stock.

THE BIGGER PICTURE

What Ramesh Babu has done at KVB over the past four years is a masterclass in disciplined banking. GNPA was 3.41% in March 2021. It is 0.75% now. Net profit was ₹673 crore in FY22. It is ₹2,510 crore now. The bank has compounded its profit at approximately 40% annually for four years without taking excessive credit risk, without expanding recklessly, and without compromising the asset quality that underpins everything.

That is not a lucky run. It is the product of a credit culture, a collections discipline, and a management philosophy that has been consistent and patient in equal measure.

India's mid-sized private sector banks are — collectively — one of the most overlooked segments in the Indian equity market. Among them, KVB is arguably the most overlooked of all. The question for FY27 is not whether the bank continues to compound — the operational evidence strongly suggests it will. The question is when the market decides to stop undervaluing the compounding.