IndusInd Bank Swings to Rs 533 Cr Profit vs Rs 2,236 Cr Loss, Dividend Declared | Stock In Focus On Monday
IndusInd Bank share price will remain in focus on Monday as the private lender turned profitable in the fourth quarter of financial year 2025-26. IndusInd Bank reported a net profit of Rs 533 crore in the fourth quarter of financial year 2025-26 against Rs 2235.99 crore loss in the year ago period.
The fifth largest private lender in the country also announced dividend for investors.

IndusInd Bank Dividend
IndusInd Bank's board of directors, on Friday, approved a final dividend of Rs 1.5 per equity share with a face value of Rs 10 each. The bank "recommended a final dividend of Rs. 1.50 per equity share of Rs.10/- each fully paid up (i.e. 15%) out of the net profits for the year ended March 31, 2026," as per the BSE filing released on Friday.
IndusInd Bank Dividend Record Date
The private lender's board has fixed Friday, June 6 as the record date to determine the eligibility of dividend payout. Investors must own the company stock on or before the dividend record date to become eligible for the corporate action.
IndusInd Bank Q4 Result Recap
IndusInd Bank reported a net standalone profit of Rs 532.7 crore in Q4FY26 against a net loss of Rs 2235.99 crore in Q4FY25. Provisions and contingencies fell 38.6% annually to Rs 1,484 crore in Q4 FY26 and were down 29% from the December quarter, easing the drag from legacy issues related to mis-accounting of internal derivative trades flagged in the previous financial year.
IndusInd Bank's asset quality showed mild improvement, with the gross non-performing assets ratio easing to 3.43% of total advances at the end of March 2026, compared with 3.56% three months earlier, helped partly by fewer accounts slipping into default in specific loan segments.
Despite the return to profit, overall business volumes stayed weak, as IndusInd Bank's loan book shrank 8.7 percent year-on-year in the fourth quarter, marking a fourth straight decline, while deposits slipped 2.6 percent over the same period amid ongoing efforts to recalibrate growth.
The bank had come under close scrutiny after disclosing a nearly Rs 2,000-crore impact for the year ended March 2025 from mis-accounted internal derivative trades, which triggered governance concerns and led to the exits of former CEO Sumant Kathpalia and deputy chief Arun Khurana.
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