Yes Bank Reports 34% Net Profit Rise in Q1 FY27 on Loan Growth and Interest Income
Yes Bank reported a 33.7-34% year-on-year rise in standalone net profit to around Rs 1,071 crore for Q1 FY27, driven by an 18% increase in net interest income to approximately Rs 2,786 crore. Loan growth and improved asset quality supported performance, with gross NPAs at 1.3% and net NPAs at 0.2%. Provisions rose compared to last year. The bank's net interest margin held steady at 2.7%, and deposits grew 14%. CEO Vinay M Tonse highlighted strengthening core earnings and recent credit rating upgrades.
First-hand measurement across 6 sources
We measured how 6 outlets covered this story. Coverage leans balanced overall (Left 0%, Centre 100%, Right 0%). Overall sentiment is positive (72/100). Lens Score 29/100 — low public interest.
Outlets analysed (first-hand measurement by TBN's Bias Engine):
- thefinancialexpress— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- businessstandard— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- republicworld— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- mint— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- economictimes— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- freepressjournal— balanced framing, positive sentiment
AI Analysis
The article group primarily presents financial and operational data from Yes Bank's quarterly results without political framing. Coverage focuses on corporate performance, market reactions, and expert commentary from the bank's CEO. There is no evident political perspective or partisan interpretation, reflecting a business and economic viewpoint consistent across sources.
The overall tone across the articles is positive, emphasizing profit growth, improved asset quality, and credit rating upgrades. While some mention increased provisions and slight sequential deposit declines, the sentiment remains optimistic about the bank's financial health and operational momentum, with no significant negative or critical language detected.
How 6 sources covered this story
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
