Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the L&T Finance Limited Q3 FY26 earnings conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the call, please signal the operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. We have with us today Mr. Sudipta Roy, Managing Director and CEO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, CFO, and Mr. Raju Dodti, COO, and other members of the senior management team. Before we proceed, as a standard disclaimer, no unpublished price-sensitive information will be shared during the call. Only publicly available documents will be referred to for discussion during interaction in the call.
While all efforts would be made to ensure that no unpublished price-sensitive information will be shared, in case of any inadvertent disclosure, the same would, in any case, form part of the recording of the call. Further, some of the statements made on today's call may be forward-looking in nature. A note to this effect is provided in the Q3 results presentation uploaded. I would now like to invite Mr. Sudipta Roy to share his thoughts on the company's performance and the strategy of the company going forward. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you. A very good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'd like to wish you all a very happy and prosperous New Year on behalf of the entire leadership team at LTF. Joining me today on the call are our CFO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, our Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Raju Dodti, and other members of the senior management team of L&T Finance. Similar to our previous calls, today's call is divided into two sections, taken up sequentially by myself, followed by our CFO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, who will be talking about the overall business metrics and financial performance. Our last interaction during the Investor Digital Day on the 6th of November 2025 was well received, when we outlined in detail our business and technology transformation roadmap for the next few years. We also had a chance to share with you the headline business updates.
In today's call, we will focus on the performance update for Q3 FY26, alongside sharing our outlook for the rest of the year. At the outset, I'm happy to state that our core retail franchise continues to be resilient, and we are confident that the momentum we have created for the business during the recent quarters will sustain through the remainder of the fiscal year and would continue into FY27. Post our opening commentary, we'll be happy to take questions on the call. Before we delve into the highlights of the quarter, I would like to give you some flavor of the current macroeconomic scenario and sectoral outlook. Global uncertainties persist at a highly elevated level. The Indian economy, though not fully immune to the external headwinds, has demonstrated remarkable resilience on the back of coordinated fiscal, monetary, and regulatory policies, and bolstered by a strong domestic demand.
Real GDP registered a strong growth of 8.2% in the second quarter of FY26. NSO's first advance estimates project that India is set to deliver a 7.4% year-on-year real growth of GDP in FY26, fueled by robust private consumption and capital investments. The growth in private consumption is being sustained by robust rural demand and easing inflationary pressures. Headline inflation has remained below RBI's low tolerance level for four consecutive months and is projected to remain benign well into FY27. Overall demand condition has remained robust, building up on the festival season pickup. First advance estimates for Kharif 2025-26 project a record food grain production. Mandi arrival started late due to delayed monsoon and harvest cycle and lower crop prices. However, it is catching up fast in the last three weeks as government agencies have begun direct procurement at various APMC Mandis.
Rabi sowing is near complete as well and stands 2.8% higher on year till date. This bodes well for rural cash flows. Urban consumption demonstrated strong acceleration in Q3 FY26 owing to the GTM 2.0 reforms, and supply-side debottlenecking was able to cater to the increased demand. As food inflation remains benign and consumption's indicator remains robust, we are confident that the growth momentum of the Indian economy will sustain well into FY27. To start up this quarter's highlights, I am pleased to inform you that we have achieved the highest-ever quarterly core PAT, or ₹760 crores, up 21% year-on-year, before a one-time exceptional impact of the new labor code amounting to ₹29 crore. PAT, even after the one-time impact, stood at a highest ever of ₹739 crore, up by 18% year-on-year.
This profitability has been recorded on the back of highest-ever quarterly retail disbursements of INR 22,701 crore, up 49% year-on-year. This has led to the retail growth growing to INR 111,990 crore at the end of this quarter, reflecting a growth of 21% year-on-year and an ROA of 2.37%, 2.31% for Q3 FY26 after the impact of exceptional items, reflecting a growth of 10 basis points year-on-year. This quarter showed a strong growth in total income, up 18% on a year-on-year basis and 8.4% on a QOQ basis, and a stable operating cost trajectory with increase only 7% on a year-on-year basis, including the one-time labor code impact, leading to a PPOP growth of 25%. This was aided by a 19 basis point sequential improvement in net interest margin plus fees at 10.41%, driven by a continuous focus on yield and fee improvement and efficient liability management strategy.
We are pleased to share that in line with our guidance, we have not used any macroprudential provisions during this quarter, indicating the return of our Rural Business Finance vertical to a near-normal credit cost trajectory. The positive dividends from the early implementation of Cyclops in two-wheeler, SME, and farm business continue to accrue well and will show up in meaningful reduction in credit costs through FY27. The credit cost this quarter has moderated from 2.98%, that is, that was before macroprudential provision utilization last quarter in Q2 FY26, to 2.83% in Q3 FY26, a reduction of 15 basis points QOQ and 8 basis points year-on-year. It is to be noted that this includes a one-time charge of INR 22 crores on certain co- borrower provisions. Excluding this one-time impact, the core credit cost from operations came in at 2.74%, a 24 basis points reduction on a QOQ basis.
Our core credit cost in the prior three quarters has been 3.8%, 3.43%, and 2.98% respectively, followed by 2.74% this quarter. This trajectory of paring of credit cost will culminate in the achievement of the guided 2%-2.2% corridor by Q4 FY27. In my previous call, I had mentioned that the microfinance sector had shown green shoots of recovery this quarter, and in this quarter, I'm pleased to inform you that we have seen sustained resilience and uptake in both disbursement volumes and collection efficiencies in our microfinance portfolio. The quarter saw 38 basis points improvement in Karnataka monthly collection efficiency, which increased from 99.18% in September 2025 to 99.56% in December 2025. The pan-India zero DPD collection efficiency improved 20 basis points to 99.7% from 99.5% during the previous quarter.
The abatement of the specific event risk has resulted in near neutralization of the macroprudential provisions during the period. Please refer to slide 34 of the investor presentation for a detailed flavor of the rural business. I would now like to share an update on the newly acquired gold loan business, which has gained significant momentum with quarterly disbursements of INR 1,408 crores, up 42% QOQ. We continue to expand our geographical footprints and have added 64 new gold loan branches this quarter, focused on areas with high cross-sell potential. By the end of FY26, we plan on establishing a distribution strength of 330-plus gold loan branches. In line with our earlier guidance, Cyclops is now implemented in our personal loans business and will complete a full rollout by the end of Q4 FY26.
The engine continues to perform exceedingly well in our two-wheeler business and is exhibiting the first green shoots in the farm and the SME business. The net non-starter of the two-wheeler portfolio went down from 2.36% in December 2024 to 0.41% in December 2025, and in the farm business, the net non-starter reduced from 1.5% in December 2024 to 0.42% in December 2025. We are confident that as disbursements through this engine scales up across businesses, our portfolio quality will get enhanced with lower bounce rate and non-starter, leading to lower roll-forwards and thereby reducing the overall cost of credit administration for the organization.
Our next digital initiative, Project Nostradamus, an industry-first AI-driven automated real-time portfolio management engine, went live in beta mode in two-wheeler finance in August 2025, and the engine has started delivering real-time actionable insights for proactive portfolio management to monitor performance down to our individual micro-market cluster. We also initiated two primary AI initiatives, Project Helios and Project Orion. Project Helios serves as an agentic AI platform that enables underwriters to make faster, consistent, and accurate decisions. This has already processed 5,000-plus cases, resulting in a 30% reduction in turnaround time and saving 1.5 hours case in our SME business. This will slowly be extended to all our other lines of business as well. Project Orion is a conversational Nostradamus copilot designed for automated portfolio monitoring, allowing credit teams to query complex delinquency and vintage data in real time, which is currently live in the two-wheeler business.
I would like to add that adherence to the RBI's guidance regarding provisioning for co- borrower exposures has contributed to an increase in provision coverage ratio this quarter from 70% in Q2 FY26 to 72% in Q3 FY26. Now, I would like to share an update on our quarterly performance against the Lakshya 2026 goals. The first milestone was to achieve retailization of greater than 95% by FY26. We have achieved a retailization of 98% in Q1 FY26, which has remained at the same level during Q3 FY26. The second milestone of retail book growth, we had set ourselves a retail book growth target of 25% CAGR, against which we achieved a CAGR growth of 28% between FY22 and FY25.
The third milestone, which is on asset quality front, we maintained the retail GS3 and NS3 levels closer through the threshold levels of 3% and 1% respectively, and our consolidated GS3 and NS3 stood at 3.19% and 0.92% respectively. On the fourth and last milestone of ROA, we achieved an ROA of 2.31% in Q1 FY26. This includes a one-time exceptional item impact of the new labor code of INR 29 crores. An ROA before exceptional items is 2.37%, which has been achieved without the use of any macroprudential provisions. I would like to reiterate that we continue to work towards achieving our Lakshya 2026 target of 2.8% to 3% ROA in Q4 FY27. As mentioned earlier, I would now like to give a brief update on the five pillars of execution that we had enumerated in October 2023 and continue to be in implementation mode against the same.
Customer acquisition. The focus continued to be on expanding our customer base both by deepening our reach in existing segments and broadening our geographical and digital footprint through partnerships. The implementation of GST 2.0, coupled with a favorable monsoon, served as a catalyst for robust festive demand this quarter. Leveraging these tailwinds, we successfully onboarded 7 lakh new customers, up from 5.9 lakh last quarter. For a deeper dive into our acquisition metrics and repeat customer share, please refer to slides 14 and 15 of our investor presentation. Sharpening credit underwriting. We have given extensive details on the design and performance of our new age underwriting tools in our investor digital day deck on slides 6 to 7, and our focus remains on implementing Cyclops in our mortgage and our Rural Business Finance verticals in FY27.
The model re-deployment framework and team has been significantly boosted to guard against any unforeseen pockets of execution risk arising from the plethora of machine and deep learning models running across our state-of-the-art AI-based credit tools. Futuristic digital architecture. We continue to work on upgrading our technical capabilities, and our focus on continuously strengthening our IT framework remains unabated. I've already spoken about Project Cyclops and Project Nostradamus. Full-stack Nostradamus implementation will be completed in the two-wheeler business by March 2026, and we implemented in personal loan and the Rural Business Finance vertical in H1 FY27. Under the Planet 3.0 initiative, the company has achieved significant digital penetration with over 2.2 crore app downloads, which now features a multilingual conversational voice agent for real-time loan servicing. This quarter, we also launched Partner Planet mobile app with a complete service suite for our dealer partners.
To strengthen the cross-sale engine, a new digital tool called Loan Offer Pod was operationalized in Q3 FY26, and it would be scaled up in the coming quarters. These operational efficiencies are further bolstered by KAI Voice and Chat, an agentic AI solution currently handling automated collection calls in 11 languages across multiple lines of business. Please refer to slide number 59 and 60 in the investor presentation for operating matrix on the app. Brand visibility, we continue to focus on our targeted customer engagement, leveraging our brand ambassador, Jasprit Bumrah. During the quarter, we also ran campaigns for our two-wheeler and farmer finance business while participating in major agricultural expos in Gujarat and Indore. We successfully concluded the second edition of our flagship BFSI AI event RAISE, which attended 4,500 attendees and 40 speakers.
A key highlight of the event was launch of Pitch Point, an AI startup pitch platform to cultivate the fintech AI entrepreneur ecosystem. Capability building. On the capability front, to strengthen our presence and to be a pan-India player, we are expanding our gold loan branches to over 330-plus new branches in FY26. Central to this strategy is the integration of some gold finance branches into multi-product Sampoorna branch network, where we inaugurated our first Sampoorna branch in Ujjain, thereby creating a more comprehensive service ecosystem for our customers. To date, out of the new gold loan branches, we have opened 11 in the Sampoorna branch format. I will now request Mr. Sachinn Joshi, our CFO, to take you through the financial updates.
Thank you, Sudipta. As always, I will be walking you through the financial performance of the company for the quarter.
Consolidated NIM plus fee for the third quarter improves 19 basis points QOQ to 10.41% from 10.22% in Q2 FY26. This has been contributed by stable yields and cost of borrowing reduction due to treasury efficiencies, which resulted in lowest ever weighted average cost of borrowing at 7.25%. Consolidated PAT, after one-time exceptional item for the quarter, is at INR 739 crores. This is up 18% year-on-year. Quarterly retail disbursements stood at INR 22,701 crores. This is up 49% year-on-year and 20% quarter-on-quarter. Retail books stand at INR 111,990 crores, up 21% year-on-year and 7% quarter-on-quarter. Our consolidated books stand at INR 114,285 crores, up 20% year-on-year and 7% quarter-on-quarter. Consolidated ROA, after one-time exceptional items, stands at 2.31%, up 4 basis points year-on-year and down 10 basis points quarter-on-quarter. Consolidated ROE at 11.07%, up 86 basis points quarter-on-quarter YOY and down 26 basis points quarter-on-quarter.
Talking about overall businesses, let me start with Rural Business Finance. This business registered quarterly disbursements of INR 6,740 crores, delivering a strong momentum with a growth of 47% year-on-year and 7% quarter-on-quarter. This growth was driven by improved collection efficiency and sectoral trends. The book size, in turn, reached INR 28,976 crores. This was up 10% year-on-year and 6% quarter-on-quarter, respectively, in the third quarter. In the Farmer Finance vertical, quarterly disbursements stood at INR 2,783 crores in the third quarter. This was up 12% year-on-year and 68% quarter-on-quarter. The book size reached INR 16,671 crores, reflecting a growth of 11% year-on-year and 5% quarter-on-quarter. GST 2.0, along with favorable monsoon periods, and robust festival demand. This resulted in all-time high disbursements for the farm trade. The Urban Finance business, you know, the segment comprises two-wheeler, personal loan, and home loan LAP. Let me begin with two-wheeler.
The business registered quarterly disbursements of 3,217 crores in the quarter. This was up 33% year-on-year and 28% quarter-on-quarter. GST 2.0 and robust festival demand resulted in all-time high disbursements. Notably, 87% plus of two-wheeler disbursements in December 2025 were to customers from the prime segment, as against 53% for the month of March 2024. This reflects our focus on quality growth and risk-adjusted return. The book size reached 13,913 crores, an increase of 10% year-on-year and 7% quarter-on-quarter. In the personal loan business, we achieved a quarterly disbursement of 3,574 crores. This translated into a growth of 118% year-on-year and 23% quarter-on-quarter, with the book size reaching 12,810 crores, an increase of 64% year-on-year and 18% quarter-on-quarter, attributed to the successful scale-up of big tech partnerships.
Moving on to housing, we achieved quarterly disbursements of 2,879 crores, up 16% year-on-year and a growth of 6% quarter-on-quarter, with the book size at 28,682 crores, an increase of 22% YOY and 5% QOQ. Growth in the segment was supported by new partnerships and a strong network of distribution channels. In the SME business, quarterly disbursements stood at 1,550 crores, up 24% YOY and 6% quarter-on-quarter. The book stood at 7,946 crores, up 37% YOY and 6% QOQ. In the gold loan business, the quarterly disbursement stood at 1,408 crores, up by 43% quarter-on-quarter, and the closing book stood at 1,738 crores at the end of the third quarter, up by almost 18% quarter-on-quarter. Let me now hand over the call back to Sudipta to make his closing statements. Thank you, Sachinn.
In closing, I'd like to state that Q3 FY26 was a robust quarter driven by macro trade events, and I expect the structural momentum to continue into Q4 FY26. The normalization of the RBF business augurs well for our business momentum, and we expect to make gains in the same. All our businesses have been primed for execution over the last couple of quarters, and we can expect the positive outcomes to continue through FY27. Our asset quality will continue to improve through FY27 as Cyclops' underwritten portfolios take center stage and their share continues to increase. The improved business momentum, reduced credit costs, and continuous focus on operating efficiency should lead to a continuous improvement in ROA and improving ROE trajectory as the leverage increases. We thank you for your support throughout our transformation journey thus far and look forward to the continuation of the same.
The floor is now open to questions. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use their handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, in the interest of time, we request you to respect one question per participant and rejoin the question queue. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. We take the first question from the line of Prafulla Kumar from Dymon Asia Capital. Please go ahead. Praful, if you can please unmute your line and proceed with your question. Since there is no response, we will move on to the next question, which is from the line of Mahrukh Adajania from Nuvama Wealth Management.
Please go ahead. Yeah, hello. I just have a couple of questions. Firstly, on credit costs, so you have explained that the incremental portfolio is doing well, and you've given detailed explanations on the credit costs, but your annual reset would happen every year in the fourth quarter. So how would it pan out in FY27 fourth quarter? I mean, what will be the pull and push factors because there'll be a reset even then next year? So that's my key question.
Yeah, thanks, Mahrukh. Sachinn here. Let me take this question. So yeah, you are right. Every year, end of the year in fourth quarter, we revisit the ECL models. And if I recall, you mentioned how will it pan out in FY27 Q4, right? Yes. So FY27 quarter four, we believe will be a much better revisit.
We are, in fact, waiting for that day and that quarter because by then, most of our book would have been seasoned through using the Cyclops underwriting tool, which would mean that directionally, the overall models would start taking into account the benefit slowing down of slippages, which are quite evident. If you look at the slippages between first and the second quarter, the slippages were lower by about 160 crores. Between Q2 and Q3, the slippages have come down further by about 190 to 200 crores. So clearly, it's evident that as more and more newer portfolio is getting created using Cyclops, the flow forward has been slowing down. And it's not just Cyclops. There are lots of other tweaks done to various underwriting models, which are now leading to improvements being seen across, whether it's two-wheeler, whether it's farm, personal loan.
On the Rural Business Finance, although Cyclops is not yet implemented, we have already showcased to the world how we have been better than the other industry players. So we believe that come quarter four FY27, we will be in a far more comfortable position compared to where we are today. I hope I have answered your question.
Yes, that's good enough. Thank you. Thanks a lot.
Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Kunal Shah from Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. So again, getting onto the credit cost trajectory, given that MFI collection efficiency has improved, plus when you look at it in terms of two-wheeler as well as farm equipment, the non-starter rate has also improved from, say, compared to that of September.
But still, in terms of credit cost, maybe it was like 15-odd basis points and even adjusting for that 25 basis points. So was it equally satisfactory from your end, and would this be the run rate of improvement, or there was anything specific during the quarter end, the run rate of improvement should actually accelerate from here on to get towards your guidance of 2.21% by Q4 of FY27?
Thanks, Kunal, for the question. So if you see, and I'd like to point out the overall credit cost rate because of the last three quarters, right? So at the peak of the macro finance crisis, we had actually, and these numbers are without factoring in the macros, right? At peak, we had gone up to 3.82%. 3.8%. From 3.8%, we came down to 3.43%, right? From 3.43%, we came down to 2.98%.
Now, obviously, in unsecured, especially when the pool which is there, which is the unsecured pool, the speed at which it goes up, and it flows quickly. So when you see an improving trajectory, normally, the pace of improvement will be very rapid in the first few quarters as the portfolio normalizes, and then the slope will slowly tend to flatten out, right? And so that is what you see. If I take away that INR 23 crore one-time impact that we have got because of the co-borrower prudential provision that we have taken this quarter, the degrowth is around 25 basis points degrowth, right, in credit costs. So if you see, directionally, the trajectory of paring of credit costs remains unabated. Now, for example, next quarter and over the next couple of quarters, right, we will see improvements, and we are very, very confident.
See, when we guide to 2-2.2, see, our Net NPAs, as I said in my, okay, Net NPAs in two-wheeler is down to 40 basis points levels. Net non-starter in farm is basically down to 40 basis points levels. Sachinn spoke about the slippages coming down, right? The slippages, the gross slippages this quarter between last quarter is lower by almost INR 200 crores, right? So the slippages also have been coming down with every passing quarter. So I do believe that the credit cost trajectory will continue to improve. Now, some quarter, it might be a significant improvement. Some quarter, it might be a less than significant improvement because this also depends upon the collections efficiencies in that particular quarter and the efficacy of the entire how the collections team have been able to do it during that quarter.
So the only thing is that credit cost, if your expectation is that the credit cost will actually move in a metronomic regularity in a straight line fashion, that sometimes in real life does not happen, right? But what we are very, very confident is that 2%-2.2% reaching that 2%-2.5% guided trajectory by Q4 FY27, right? If the tailwinds are with us, we might reach it before Q4 FY27 also, right? But the fact is that on a conservative basis, I would like to say that we are very, very confident of reaching the trajectory by Q4 FY27.
Sure. And just a related one, why this 23?
Kunal, I would request you to please rejoin the question queue for follow-up questions.
Yeah, just on the same one, just wanted to check why this 23 crores is a one-time, given that the co-borrower exposure prudent provisioning would be business as usual every quarter. This is a little different from that. Sachinn, would like to say?
Yeah, it is an issue. Yeah, if you can just highlight that, yeah. Yeah, so Kunal, the co-borrower piece, at industry level, there were different ways of either taking it into account or not. The example I can give you is that if there is a husband and wife who have taken exposure in one particular business, the wife has taken exposure to another business loan, completely different, and that loan was standard. We did not consider that because that was a co-borrower taking a fresh loan.
Those loans, because they were standard, were continued to be shown as standard, and hence the provisioning was as per the normal Stage 1 provision. At this quarter, post-RBI interactions at the time of inspection, we were advised that we should take into account all such accounts as well. So the cumulative effect of this has been about 23-odd crores. And because it's cumulative, the going forward on a quarter-on-quarter basis, these will be very minimal. I mean, you can also understand these are all retail loans. So the overall impact will be very minimal and which will get subsumed within the normal costs that we take into account.
Got it. Perfect. Yeah, thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Prafulla Kumar from Dymon Asia. Please go ahead.
Hi, am I audible now?
Yeah, Prafulla, you're audible.
Yeah, so many congratulations on a great transformation and turnaround. Just a couple of questions. One, very strong delivery on NIM and fees. And as the structurally lower credit cost regime starts to play out, do you think that there is a trade-off between NIM and fees and credit cost as a business model?
Thanks, Prafulla, for the question. I'd go back to what I had said during our analyst call, that we had a risk-first, tech-first diversified financial services player. So obviously, many of our decisions on customer segment choices have been driven by this tech-first risk-first philosophy. Having said that, we are also very, very cognizant of the fact that we need to balance our NIM and fees and give a predictability to our NIM and fees trajectory.
That is why our continuous guidance has been that we will put the NIM; we will try to deliver the NIM in the corridor of 10%-10.5%. Now, you can see that there has been an improvement of NIM by about 18 basis points this quarter, which is primarily driven by two things. First thing, our core lending businesses have improved their NIM trajectory, primarily because the Rural Business Finance vertical has seen a resurgence after sort of resolution of the microfinance industry issues. Plus, also, all our businesses have been pushing their yields northwards. Also, because the flows have been lower, the NPA reversals that we normally get, right, which is sort of a negative drag on the NIM, also has been lower this quarter, right, which also shows the improving resilience of our book.
And last but not the least, on a QOQ basis, there has been a 7 basis points improvement in our funding costs, right? And we do believe that the full transmission of the current round of rate cut has still not even been transferred. So there remains possibility of some more rate transmission this particular quarter, right? So given the fact that the businesses are on a sort of upward trajectory across most of our lines of businesses, we are very, very hopeful that we should be able to maintain the trajectory that we have sort of been on this particular quarter. And I'm hopeful that it should be able to sustain over the next couple of quarters. However, in terms of guidance, our guidance is that we will maintain it between the corridor of 10%-10.5%. Fair. Fair.
And so Prafulla, would you please rejoin the question queue for follow-up questions?
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Kaitav Shah from Anand Rathi. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Am I audible?
Yes, please go ahead.
Yes, so congratulations. Good set of numbers. So just one question. If you can break up also your credit cost into a couple of other components like standard asset provisioning, and what is the M2M loss you have on the treasury book, that would be helpful.
Actually, if you look at in the presentation itself, we give Stage 1, Stage 2, Stage 3 full details on the retail credit cost data. You can look at that. Right? So that already has the breakup in the slide.
No, so in terms of standard asset provisioning, if you are doing, has that number now moved up?
And also, if there is any investment book loss that you are looking at? Yeah, yeah. So standard asset provision, the amount will go up based on the increase in the fresh book, right? As our book starts growing, it will first reflect the increase in stage one. And depending on the quality of asset, it will lead to change. It is on slide 39. 39.
Sure. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Avinash Singh from Emkay Global Financial Services Limited. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thanks for the opportunity. So on your NIM plus fees, I mean, currently, if I understand broadly, INR 6,000-odd crores of receipts that will be there, and this is the consolidated NIM plus fees that you are disclosing.
Is it fair to assume, I mean, once, say, in FY27, once your INR 6,000 crore SRs got resolved, broadly, that would lead to close to a 40 basis point improvement in NIM plus fee or 30 basis point improvement in ROA? So that's particularly. And how is sort of visibility around the resolution of these SRs? And secondly, on credit cost, if I look at your book, I mean, the 30% is like now nearly 30% is going into very, very low credit cost, like mortgages, LAP, and incrementally in gold. Then annual steady-state guidance is coming close to, say, 200-220 basis points. Is it fair to assume, I mean, in a steady-state, you are assuming certain businesses to be somewhere close to, say, 3%-4% credit cost? T
hanks. Okay. One second. Sure. So thanks, Avinash.
So talking about the NIM plus fees first, NIM plus fees have different components, the first being the yield, which depends on the kind of mix. Because initially, it was retail wholesale. Now we are in 98% retail, so that impact is gone. The second impact now is in terms of the overall mix, Rural B usiness Finance being the highest yielding. In percentage terms, it will keep coming down, but a bit slowly because as you fire up the other businesses. But we also have similar high-yielding businesses that we have started off. Micro LAP is one such business, followed by personal loans, SME. All these businesses are and gold loans, which we recently took over the business. So all these are equally or maybe at a slightly lower level, but high-yielding businesses.
Because these businesses have started growing, you have seen that the yields also have gone up by a few basis points. The second component, of course, is the weighted average cost of borrowing. In a low-interest regime, we are now actually reaping the benefits of the overall weighted average cost of borrowing going down. Our businesses are such that we really don't tweak the yields. In fact, when the interest rates were going up, when the RBI repo rate had gone up by 250 basis points, we did not increase the yields on most of our businesses except for mortgages. Same thing is happening as we are seeing the interest rates coming down. Only the mortgages business is where the benefit of interest going down is being passed on.
So at the NIM level, I think there is a fair play between yields and cost of borrowing. We may have something more coming up because the repo rate reduction has still not been completely. I don't think the banks have started or fully passed on the benefit. And if there is any further reduction also in repo rate, that also will be available. But it also depends on what is your treasury strategy. So we have wherewithal to utilize the short-term paper, which comes in slightly at a lower cost compared to medium to long-term instruments that we use to raise funds from the market, like term loans or NCDs. So our CP exposures right now are in the 8% range overall of the borrowings. We can go as per our ALM. We can go right up to 14%-15%.
Although we have kept it range bound in that 8%-9%, we can surely take advantage of that. PSL is one big advantage that a company like L&T Finance has, especially because of PSL qualifying assets with Farm as well as microfinance assets. The third component is, of course, the fees where right now fee depends on two things. One is the disbursement, which leads to increase in processing fee. And number two, the cross-selling in terms of the CLI income that we have, the credit-linked insurance. As and when we start off some other fee-related businesses, we will surely see some prop upon the fee part as well. So I think the NIM plus fee, at least because of so many moving parts, we conservatively give a guidance of a range to be met, which is 10%-10.5%.
When things are favorable, we will be more tending towards 10.5%. And when things turn unfavorable, maybe we'll move towards 10%. I think we will be able to successfully be within this range going forward. The second question I will take.
Second question, I think your question was that if you have mortgage at a much lower credit cost, then if your overall credit cost is at a particular level, whether other businesses are at higher credit cost. Obviously, if you look at the microfinance business, for example, the steady-state is short credit cost that you should expect about the microfinance business. You have a 99.7% collection efficiency. 0.3% is flowing every month, right? Across the 12-month period, that's 3.6%, right? So that naturally gives you a credit cost threshold of about 3% in that particular line of business.
Now, the fact is that if suddenly your collection efficiencies go northwards from there, you will have a much lower drag. But for modeling purposes, etc., it is fair to assume that in that business, you can expect a steady-state 3% credit cost. In a two-wheeler business industry, it operates at a much higher credit cost level, right? But the fact is that for us, Cyclops, with Cyclops, we are very, very confident that over a period of time, and when I over a period of time, I mean in the next couple of quarters, next three to four quarters, the headline credit cost trajectory of this business for us will drop below 3%, but will it go below 2%? We'll have to wait and watch, right?
So when we do our modeling and when we do our predictions, obviously, there are certain businesses we have at a higher credit cost trajectory. There are certain businesses at a lower cost trajectory, and the weighted average will obviously come between that 2%-2.2% level.
Yeah. Can you touch on any sort of a timeline of security receipt resolutions? And what is the amount currently sitting on your balance sheet?
About INR 5,000 crores is sitting on our balance sheet right now. And the way we have guided is that it will take us anywhere between the next two to three years for a full resolution of that, right? So we are seeing good amounts of resolution. Typically, we give details on our security receipts in our Q4 annual results. So please wait for next quarter to get a full update on that.
But it will be reasonably sort of satisfied to see that there has been good amount of progress on resolutions this year or this year. And we expect that resolution trajectory to continue, and we are hopeful that this thing will be a thing of the past post the next three years, not next three years. But yes, it will take between two to three years to fully resolve.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Jix uan Gao from Schonfeld. Please go ahead.
Hey, thank you for the opportunity. Just want to understand why did our Stage 2 and Stage 3 coverage increase quarter on quarter this quarter? Is it because of some ECR refresh, or is it because of the mix of the LGD on the slippages? Yeah.
So the PCR increase is more to do with the higher provisions done for the Stage 3 assets. As I mentioned, the co-borrower issue basically meant that if there were some Stage 3 assets and related borrower or a co-borrower had taken an exposure to some other business, we have made those provisions, the incremental provision. And that incremental provision has led to increase in the overall provision on Stage 3 assets. So whatever assets moved to Stage 3, the provision made was slightly higher than the incremental GS3, which happened and leading to the PCR being high.
Got it. Thanks. And sorry, just one of the we talked about the fourth quarter 2027 ECL refresh. How should we think about the fourth quarter 2026 ECL refresh? Is it likely to be a negative impact or positive impact on the overall credit cost?
No, like I mentioned in the earlier when I was explaining, what we believe is that as we move from quarter to quarter, the benefits of Cyclops will start flowing in. And once the benefits start flowing in, the models also will look at a lower PD LGD coming into play because of a better performing book. And naturally, that would ideally, if that happens over the next four quarters, naturally, when we do the similar exercise in quarter four of FY27, we should see the numbers actually turning much more favorable than they are today.
Got it. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in the interest of time, we request you to restrict to one question per participant and rejoin the question queue for follow-up questions. We take the next question from the line of Abhishek M from HSBC. Please go ahead. Yeah. Hi.
Good morning, everyone. So a couple of questions. So Sudipta, can you speak about the asset quality trends and general leverage, etc., in the digital PL book, especially for the disbursements that are coming from your digital tie-ups?
We've seen some of the other peers in the industry backtrack on this, so I just wanted to get an update of how that is going. The second question I wanted to throw in there is, if I back-calculate your write-offs, it's about INR 600 crores for the quarter. How much of that was MFI? And I'm guessing some of the write-offs in MFI would be from the legacy book. So if that goes away next quarter, then what happens to the MFI write-off number? How much can it co
me back? So two questions over to you. Yeah. So the first question, our digital partnerships continue to do very well.
With every passing quarter, passing actually month, the credit metrics continue to improve, including the Gross NPA s and the net non-starters. And the disbursements continue to increase. So for example, if I were to talk about the gross non-starter for our portfolio in the month of December, especially in the personal loans business, it was a low of 2.69%, right? So and the same number, probably in the month of August, was about 3%. So you can see that the quality of the portfolio continues to improve with every passing month. And we are extremely confident of the quality of the book that we're building because, contrary to maybe many other players, we do not play in the BNPL space or the near prime or the subprime space.
Most of our sort of offers to on the digital partnership is basically in the prime PL space with good ticket sizes.
That is why our portfolio continues to remain stable in that particular sort of cohort. So overall, we have had very, very encouraging results on the personal loans credit quality, and we remain quite stable in that particular line of business. The next one was Sachinn on the. I just saw a write-off number. Yeah. So Sudipta, if I can just check on this. So on a 6 MOB, 9 MOB basis also, it's good because your portfolio growth is quite high. So the denominator. Yeah. On a 6 MOB and a 9 MOB basis, so a couple of things, Abhishek, we look at. We look at overall portfolio bounce rate. That means whether you're on a 6 MOB and a 9 MOB basis, we remain stable, right?
The fact is that the portfolio bounce rates, which means the number of people who bounce their payments at the end of the month, has been actually falling with every passing quarter, right? To be specific, the partner book bounce rate, right, is sub 2%, right? That means out of 100 checks that we present in the partnership book in the month of December, less than 2% of people bounce their checks, right? Now, if I were to look at the industry average for a pure salary prime personal loans book, this number ranges between 3%-4%, right? In a way, we are very, very happy with the leading metrics of this business. As I have said, we are not chasing numbers here. We are chasing quality across all our lines of business.
And if you find that if there is a little sort of bubble of risk at any point in time, we will ruthlessly shut it down, right? And one of the important things is that we implemented Cyclops in the personal loans business this quarter. Obviously, on a small portion of the business we have initially implemented, we'll finish full implementation by at the end of the Q4 FY26. So we are very confident that the quality credit origination that we are seeing already in the personal loan business will continue to improve. So in a way, we are reasonably confident that our personal loans business will not go any shocks or any upheavals, which might have been prevalent elsewhere in the industry. Sachinn on the. Yeah. Abhishek on the write-offs, I think I'm happy to state that you have gone wrong on your assumption.
The slippages, as I mentioned earlier, the slippages have been much lower. And the write-off book accordingly is also much lower than what you have mentioned. It's about 470 odd crores. So that's where we are.
Okay. And bulk of it would be MFI?
Yeah. I would say so. Because that was the legacy book. Yeah. Question is that if this is from the legacy, does this come off significantly in 4Q as well? That's what I was trying to get. So see, like we mentioned, 99.7% collection efficiency would mean that only going forward between January to March, it's only the 30 basis point which is moving forward. So yeah, the book which is going to get into 90 plus is going to naturally become trickles.
We have also shared in the presentation that only 2.5% of our total exposure of 28,000 is L&T Finance loan plus three or more, which means four exposures of that customer. Those are the risky ones, but that's just 2.5% of the overall thing.
See, Abhishek, just to add to what Sachinn says, our MFI book continues to be actually stabilized reasonably well right now, right? And frankly, we are very, very confident of the go-forward trajectory of this business. Extremely confident if I were to say sort of stick my neck out, right? So you have seen the collection efficiency improve secularly as we had guided. And we are happy with 99.7%, right? But obviously, we will try to push northwards.
Perfect. Perfect. Thank you for all the clarification and all the best.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Bhavik Dave from Nippon Mutual Fund.
Please go ahead. Yeah. Hi. Hi, sir. Good morning. Sir, just quickly on your operating expenses, right? It has trended quite well. The cost to income ratios are coming off the 40% to 38-odd%. Just wanted to understand where are we? How do we understand we see this directionally going down? But what is your view on this one? And second, just on this is when I look at your slide which talks about the cross-sell, right, and cross-sell upsell. When I look at your farm and personal loan cohorts, there the repeat customer percentage in terms of value that you're giving out is reducing. Anything that's happening out there, if you could just talk about that as well, that would be helpful. Thank you. The first question is on the OpEx. Sachinn, you want to take the OpEx question?
So, on the operating expenses, earlier also we have guided that looking at quarterly numbers, all ups and downs that are there should not really you should not get too much meaning out of it. Very clearly, we are in investment mode. We are investing in technology. We are investing in setting up new branches. Gold Loans, we are setting up one branch a day. We also are setting up branches to do Rural LAP. We have some Sampoorna branches coming into play. So the investments will continue to happen. This quarter, the cost income ratios are below 39%, but I would still suggest that we should assume that it will be somewhere in the range of 40% odd. We are now going to focus on the top line. As the top line starts growing, the collection, the cost income ratios will continue to decrease.
I think traditionally, medium term, our target would be to go below 40%, but I think that will be there when we are carrying with the Lakshya 31 targets that we will be taking up for achievement. Yeah. On the personal loans, value to existing customers, you can see that it has gone down primarily because the origination to fresh customers has increased. So the proportion of the value of personal loans cross-sell in the overall personal loans pie obviously has reduced, right? But though the volume more or less remains similar, right? The actual value more or less remains similar because personal loans right now we are doing about 1,300 crores a month, right? The amount of cross-sell, roughly, I'm giving you a rough number, right? We were doing about 300 crores, right? So that number remains more or less constant, right?
Because one of the things is that our primary personal loans cross-sell is to our seasoned two-wheeler customers, right? So because that will depend on the ingress of the velocity of ingress of the two-wheeler customers. Of late, the velocity of ingress for two-wheeler customers has gone up primarily because our two-wheeler volumes have gone up. So you will see probably a quarter or two from right now, that number might tick upwards. That means as more and more two-wheeler customers get seasoned, the two-wheeler cross-sell number might increase as a percentage of the total personal loans. But as personal loans overall disbursement continue to increase, I do believe that this percentage will remain more or less stable at around this 25%-30% level. So my question was more on farm equipment, which is the most seasoned portfolio.
There, the number is 16% versus like 27%, 22%. So farm, one of the things, yeah. So farm, one of the things is that we also have a farm variant which we call Kisan Suvidha, which means for a customer who has sort of finished off paying a large proportion of the farm loan, we normally tend to give an unsecured line of credit to that particular customer, which he can take as a loan. Now, the Kisan Suvidha part, the Kisan Suvidha, because see, the focus on fresh origination because of GST 2.0 was very, very high during this quarter, right? The focus on converting Kisan Suvidha slipped a bit, right?
Because demand on fresh tractors was so large, that we are really focused on that, right? That is why the Kisan Suvidha slipped a bit this quarter. That has shown up in that particular. Perfect. That is very useful.
Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Abhijit Tibrewal from Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited. Please go ahead.
Yes. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for taking my questions. Just two clarifications on what we have already discussed until now. So first thing on provision cover, you explained earlier that this time the increase in the cover was more to do with certain higher provisioning that we did on the core borrower exposures. Just trying to understand at the end of this quarter, when you revisit your ECL models, are you expecting a further increase in the provision cover given what we have seen, especially in MFI in the last one and a half years? And then, I mean, when is it that you plan to start creating macroprudential provisions?
I remember you had shared with us earlier that you look to start creating these macro provisions only when you see some benefits flowing through from SR resolutions. And then the second question I had was more on the NIM plus fee, which we have discussed extensively, your guidance of 10%-10.5%. We are already at the higher end of that guidance range. So new expansion in the coming quarters that you spoke about earlier, is it going to be more a function of an improvement in the product mix? Because like you mentioned, Micro LAP, PL, SME, Gold Loans, they all continue to become a higher proportion of your loan mix. So is that how we should think about it?
Yeah. Yeah. Abhijit, let me take the first question first.
On the overall PCRs, in fact, what you mentioned on the micro loans actually does not apply to us because micro loans, the moment it goes to 90 plus, we have been providing 100%, okay? We used to have the macroprudential, which was at some point of time 975 crores, and that used to sit against the Stage 1 and Stage 2 assets, overall portfolio. Because 90 plus is already being provided for, and if there is a technical write-off required, we used to do that. It was more of a finance decision with regard to the tax benefit but going forward, which means that the PCR increase will not be required for Stage 3. I am anyway providing 100% on that portfolio.
Going forward, we will have to revisit each and every business to figure out how the businesses have performed and what is the future track which these businesses would take, and as I was mentioning earlier, the Cyclops delivery, which is the early signs of which are very good, will frankly decide on the PCR build-up phase. Because if you look at the past, we had challenges starting off with the IL&FS debacle, COVID, and last about a year, year and a half, or maybe around five quarters, we have seen challenges on the micro loan piece. So we have actually come out of various crises, which actually going forward, we can safely assume that all these crises are not going to come up on an immediate basis.
And if our portfolio starts showing improvement over the next few quarters, I was mentioning that next financial year, Q4 FY27, we will be in a much better position to really relook at the EAD, PD, LGD coming slightly down. Even if you take a decent future into account, we possibly may, if at all we have to bring it down, the PCR may only come down because at industry level, you would see that there are various players having PCR in the range of 50%-55%. So we are yet to really look at because we will start the work now that we have closed the third quarter. We will start the work on revisiting the ECL models. And thankfully, even RBI has prescribed the ECL to be made applicable to banks. Now everyone will be on the same level playing field.
And we will also perhaps get some clarity from the regulatory side how things are applying to banks. And so there will be various inputs which will be taken into account to really finally conclude whether these PCRs are really required, they need to go up or down. But as I speak, I think that we are anyway slightly higher on the PCR side. So if at all we have to take a call, it will be on slightly lowering it rather than increasing it from here. On the macroprudential.
On the macroprudential, I'll just like to add, obviously, it is our objective to build back the macroprudential as fast as possible.
What we are also doing is that in the micro finance business, especially in the markets where we feel that there is a risk overhang or there is a historical track record of event crisis, we have also started taking a CGFMU guarantee as well on those portfolios, right? So that even before we start building back the macroprudential provisions, there is a secondary protection that is put in. Obviously, as we have said, as our SR portfolios move towards realization, we expect some over-realization from that as we move. And whatever we get from that, we will put that towards the macroprudential provision pool. That is always what we have maintained. So our objective is to build back this macroprudential provision coverage as fast as possible.
Though this time, as a matter of strategy, we might do it at an unsecured assets level rather than a single line of business level, right? Last time, the INR 975 crores of macroprudential provisions that we had was specifically targeted towards microfinance business or the RBF business. This time, when we build it, we will build it for the overall unsecured assets business of L&T Finance, right? So that will be our strategy. So as and when we get that window of opportunity to build those provisions, we will definitely build those provisions, and we are committed towards the same. Good. Thank you. And then the last question that I asked was on how should we think about margins and yields? Will the expansion in yields be more a function of the improvement in product mix? Yeah, absolutely.
The product mix will ultimately decide which way it would move. I think we will be doing significant work on this when we work on the five-year plan. And we'll be better off talking about this maybe after the end of next quarter when we unveil the Lakshya 31 fresh set of goals.
Got it. So that's very useful. Thank you, and I wish you and your team the very best.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Nitesh Jain from Investec. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the opportunity. So my question is on unsecured loans. The share of unsecured loans is around 45% of AUM. How do you see this share moving over next two- to three-year perspective?
Also, I see that there is a very strong growth in personal loan portfolio around 17%-18% Q1Q and acquired portfolio growth on a Q1Q basis. So what is driving that, and how should we see growth in these two portfolios? Sorry. Personal loans and acquired portfolio, you said? Yeah. Yes. Yes. Yeah. Okay. So what was the first question? First question was the unsecured share.
Okay. So unsecured share, yeah, currently it's about 44%. Our stated objective is to have the secured-unsecured ratio at 60-40. So that is our stated objective. So obviously, if you see some of our business lines like the micro finance business, the personal loans business, the unsecured business loans origination, they are of the unsecured nature. But we are trying to balance it by secured gold loans, right?
You see the speed at which gold loans have been growing, and that is why we are focusing on rolling out more and more branches of gold loans. 200-plus gold loan branches, we will roll out this year. New branches, 330-plus new gold loan branches next year. The focus will be on growing that business. We are also starting the process of semi-secured as well as secured business loans as well. This is to bring down the proportion of unsecured in the business loans and the SME segment as well. That is what we are also starting. Over a period of time, we would want to move it closer to about 40% in terms of unsecured. Even in SME business loans also, even if they are unsecured, we are looking at taking the CGFMU, sorry, CGTMSE guarantee to partially secure some of those loans.
So structurally, within the tools available at our disposal, we are also trying to secure some of the downside risk of some of the unsecured loan portfolios by subscribing to some of the government credit guarantee schemes. So that is what is being done. But to cut the long story short, obviously, guidance growth and final sort of share is 60-40 between secured and unsecured, and we will work towards achieving the same. That might take a couple of years to get to there, but that is what our management has guided. Was that the end of the question? And PL, decent from where? Yeah. So PL, we have grown quite well. But the fact is that you have to understand that the high growth is PL is on a low base. The PL business is on a low base.
So when you go from 1,000 crores per month to 1,300 crores per month, the growth seems high. And also, one of the reasons our personal loans business has been growing very high is that when we put in the digital partnerships, like when you do a partnership with Google Pay or Amazon or for that matter, SuperMoney, what happens is that initially, you take a couple of months to stabilize the systems and processes, and then that businesses start delivering the numbers. So that is why there is a rapid scale-up in the initial phase, which will settle down to a sort of a much more sedate pace over a six- to nine-month period. So sort of the near vertical trajectory that you see in growth in personal loans will attenuate over the next couple of quarters as volumes tend to stabilize, right?
And all of these channels tend to reach their sort of funnel maturity. So that is what will happen. And in terms of the acquired portfolio, obviously, acquired portfolio is primarily portfolios purchased from the market. And we normally do this as a process, right? And just to we obviously have a good amount of surplus capital available. So we want to deploy that capital into productive assets. For example, at times, it might make sense for us to acquire a mortgage portfolio or an affordable housing portfolio primarily because the cost of origination is not part of the business, right? So we have previously done acquisition of portfolios, and that continues. This quarter, we focused on it. So that is why you see a sharp growth. The previous quarter, if you see, there was a big growth, right? So this does not form a normal sort of steady-state trajectory.
It depends upon the portfolio pools which are available in the market, which portfolio pool meets our income as well as risk thresholds and benchmarks. So you can consider this business which will be there, but the trajectory of this business will be sinusoidal. There is no particular. We do not chase any number target for the acquired portfolio. Whenever we get a portfolio which meets our benchmark, we buy it, right? So just to make sure that our capital is deployed more efficiently and our leverage continues improving.
Sure. So thank you. That's it from my side. Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Chintan Shah from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. So one thing, firstly on the Rural Business Finance portfolio.
Given that there are no guardrails on the JLG lending piece, are we looking to resort to individual lending in MFI? That's the first question. And secondly, sir, on the average yield, if you could just share the average disbursement yield for gold loans for the current quarter. That would be helpful.
Yeah. First question, individual loans, not in terms of individual consumption loans. We are not looking at individual consumption loans. Though we might work on micro business loans somewhat in the lines of Micro LAP that we do. But it will be a very slow start. This is something that we will sort of very carefully tread on. To answer your question, right now, we are not doing it, right? But the fact is that in our plan for FY27, we might look at some pilots.
In FY27, we might look at some pilots because we want to trade very cautiously on this. And we want to sort of do very small pilots, see the efficacy, see the top-line credit parameters that are building before we build it up. But we'll be very, very clear. We will not be giving individual loans for consumption. We'll be very, very focused on linking it to a business outcome or a sort of micro business loan, if I may have to term it, right? So that is why a good amount of pilot and seasoning is necessary. So this might not be a relevant item for FY27, but if you are successful, this might be a relevant item for FY28. Okay. Sure. So just one thing or follow-up on that.
In terms of steady-state growth for the MFI business, would we be looking at the 20%-25% growth for MFI or lower than that? And if lower, given that MFI okay. Sorry.
No, we will not be looking at a 20%-25% growth rate for the MFI business. We will be happy if we hit somewhere between 15%-20%.
Sure. Sure. So given that this is almost 25% of our portfolio and a high-yielding business for us as well, so how are we looking to compensate the yields from the MFI lower growth in the MFI business?
Yeah. So again, gold is obviously a compensating block, and that is why we made the acquisition of the gold loans business. And then we are trying to optimize our yields upwards for all our lines of business. We are trying to optimize yields upwards for our two-wheeler business.
We are trying to optimize yield upwards for our SME business. We are trying to optimize yield upwards for our personal loans business. So because also, if you see our Micro Loan Against Property business is also been growing very well, right? We crossed 1,000 crores of book size this quarter, right? And we are improving our branch presence on Micro Loan Against Property as well. So overall, whatever the question on that is that whatever sort of growth, sort of missing part of the jigsaw that we might get from our MFI business, we will try to cover it up by our high-yield secured businesses as well. Just to add, Chintan, earlier also we mentioned about the kind of mix that we tend to see over a period of time. It will be having three components, right? The yield, cost of funds, as well as fee.
The yield part we are already working on, and it's already started showing results. The reduction in book of rural business loans is not going to be at a significant pace. It will continue to grow standalone, but it's only because of the other businesses growing in percentage terms, it may come down, and that will be more than compensated by the growth of other high-yielding businesses like gold loan, Micro LAP, SME, and one more thing which one should not miss out is that we are not going to focus only on the NIM plus fee because directionally, you may find NIM plus fee slightly lower over a medium to long term, but which will be more than compensated by reduction in operating expenses, which is the collection cost and the credit cost, so we will still have the ROAs intact in spite of this coming down a bit.
I'm not saying that it will, but if at all in your models, if you're trying to factor in, you should also factor in that if the yield goes down a bit because we have moved more towards prime, you should factor in a reduction in credit cost and collection cost accordingly. Sure. That is very helpful. Just one last thing on the gold loan. If you could please rejoin the question queue.
Okay. Okay. Sure. Thanks. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, with that, we conclude the question and answer session. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Sudipta Roy for his closing comments.
Thank you, everyone, for giving us the opportunity and patiently hearing us out. As always, we remain focused on execution. We remain focused on, as I've said in a recent press item, relentless execution.
Our focus is to make sure that the initiatives on the credit side that we are crrently running, especially Cyclops and Nostradamus, actually are completely pushed out across all our business lines. And we will be focused on disbursement growth. Q4 FY26 will be also a focused quarter for disbursements. And we are very hopeful that the growth trajectory that you have seen in Q3 FY26 will continue unabated in Q4 FY26. We will announce our Lakshya 31 plans in the April quarter. So as part of our April quarterly results, we will also announce the Lakshya 31 plans. And I'm looking forward to discussions on the Lakshya 31 plans in our next analyst call. I wish all of you a very happy New Year once again. And with that, we will bring this call to a close. Thank you.
On behalf of L&T Finance Limited, that concludes this conference call. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.