
India’s largest lender, the State Bank of India (SBI), has crossed two major milestones: its total business has surpassed ₹100 trillion, and its market capitalisation has breached the US $100 billion mark for the first time. This achievement places SBI among the world’s formidable banking institutions and signals its strengthened position in global banking.
Milestone 1: ₹100 Trillion Business
SBI has scaled its combined business, comprising deposits + advances + other banking activities, beyond the ₹100 trillion range. This reflects the bank’s expanding footprint in India’s financial ecosystem and its role in driving credit growth.
In its recently reported quarter, the bank posted a net profit of around ₹20,160 crore, aided by core income growth and better asset quality.
Milestone 2: Joining the $100 Billion Market-Cap Club
SBI’s market capitalisation surged past US $100 billion (approximately ₹8.9–9 lakh crore, depending on exchange rates) after the stock hit record highs. This marked the first time the PSU bank entered the elite “$100 billion club” among Indian and global banks.
Chairman C. S. Setty said the bank’s next target is joining the top-10 global banks by market cap by 2030.
What Drove the Growth:
- Improved Asset Quality & NII: The bank reported sequential improvement in its net interest margin (NIM) and core income, boosting investor confidence.
- Capital Strengthening: SBI raised significant equity capital (₹25,000 crore) in Q2 FY26 to bolster its Common Equity Tier-1 (CET1) and overall Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR), ensuring it meets global banking benchmarks.
- Macro Tailwinds: Rising credit demand, increasing financial inclusion and digital banking adoption have improved SBI’s scale and relevance in India’s growth story.
- Market Sentiment & Scale: As India’s largest bank (by assets and deposits), SBI leveraged scale to benefit from operating leverage and investor attention. Breaking ₹100 trillion business added credibility.
Strategic Implications:
- For India’s banking sector, SBI’s dual milestone underscores the increasing competitiveness of Indian banks and their potential to play on the global stage.
- For investors, SBI’s ascent into the $100 billion club signals stronger earnings power, improved governance, and scaled operations.
- For other banks, the push becomes a benchmark: meeting capital norms, scaling business and improving margins will be crucial.
- For SBI itself, the challenge will now shift from scale to profitability, asset‐quality resilience and global positioning as it aims for the top-10 global banks by value.
What to Watch Next:
- Credit Growth & Margins: Monitoring SBI’s full-year FY26 credit growth (target 12-14%) and margin trends will be key.
- Capital Ratios: Whether SBI maintains CET1 and CAR levels (12% and 15% respectively) while expanding business.
- Global Expansion & Recognition: How SBI progresses in globalisation, whether through partnerships, overseas offices or inclusion in global banking league tables.
- Sustainable Profitability: Ensuring that scale does not come at cost of safety, asset quality, digital risk management and cost efficiency will be important.

