Competition
Competition — Yes Bank Ltd
Figures converted from INR at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
Competitive Bottom Line
Yes Bank's moat is partial and segment-specific, not franchise-wide. On the core spread business — taking cheap deposits and lending them out — it sits 170–300 bps of NIM behind the leaders, a gap that reflects a 25-year CASA franchise advantage at HDFC and Kotak that money cannot shortcut. On the digital payments rails (UPI Payee PSP #1 at 57% share, AePS #1, NACH #2 at 16%) and post-clean-up asset quality (NNPA 0.2%, the best number in the peer set), the bank has built credible local advantages worth a separate valuation. Net effect: a structurally below-average ROE franchise with a few sharp wins. The one competitor that matters most is ICICI Bank — same retail + corporate template, 170 bps higher NIM, 5.7× the deposit franchise, and the same digital and fee-income playbook executed three years ahead. If anyone is eating Yes Bank's lunch in the segments it most needs to grow — urban retail CASA, mid-corporate transaction banking, and credit cards — it is ICICI, not the public-sector banks and not the fintechs.
Framing for the rest of this tab. Warren's tab explains how a deposit-funded bank earns its keep. This tab asks one question: who can hurt Yes Bank, who can it beat, and what evidence proves the difference? Every advantage and threat below is measurable in quarterly disclosures — there are no soft moats in banking, only spread and scale.
The Right Peer Set
The peer set is six listed Indian private-sector banks — the same six that appear in every IndiaInfoline, Groww and Screener peer screen for Yes Bank, and the same six named as benchmarks inside Yes Bank's own FY2025 annual report. Three groups: the premium duo (HDFC, ICICI) — 13–16% ROE, 2.0–2.5× book; the solid #3 (Axis) — 13% ROE, 1.8× book; and the rebuilders (Yes Bank, IDFC First, IndusInd, with Kotak as an asymmetric outlier) — sub-12% ROE, 1.1–2.1× book. Public-sector banks (SBI, BoB, PNB) are deliberately excluded because government ownership, capital structure, and policy mandates make them a different business; NBFCs (Bajaj Finance, Shriram) are excluded because they cannot take demand deposits and the funding economics do not map; fintechs (Paytm, PB Fintech) are excluded because they do not carry a universal banking licence.
On enterprise value for banks. Enterprise value is not standardly defined for deposit-funded banks — deposits are operating liabilities, not financing debt, so EV converges to market cap in the way industrial-company analysts would compute it. The relevant balance-sheet scale metric is total deposits (shown above). For an explicit reconciliation: Yes Bank market cap $7.3B + borrowings $7.0B − cash and equivalents ≈ ~$10.7B "industrial-style EV"; the peer-comparable signal is captured in the deposit column. All names in this tab are public equities on NSE/BSE; market cap, currency, and price are sourced from Screener.in as of 14-May-2026 with high confidence (see data/competition/peer_valuations.json).
The bubble chart compresses the entire investment debate. A line through HDFC, ICICI and Axis traces a rough rule of P/B ≈ 0.10 × ROE + 0.7; on that line a 7% ROE bank prints near ~1.4× book, vs Yes Bank's 1.36×. The market is correctly capitalising today's 7% ROE — the bull thesis depends on migration up the line. Kotak is the asymmetric outlier — 11% ROE but a 4.96% NIM franchise priced at 2.1× book; the read-across is that NIM quality, not just ROE level, sets the multiple, which is exactly the lever Yes Bank's funding-cost gap blocks.
Where The Company Wins
Yes Bank has four real, measurable advantages over at least some of its peers — and one that is unique in the cohort. None is the deep spread-engine moat that HDFC/Kotak own, but each is large enough to value separately.
The asset-quality win is the most under-appreciated number on this page. Six years ago Yes Bank's GNPA peaked above 16%; today it sits below ICICI, Axis and IDFC First, and its NNPA at 0.2% is the lowest of the seven names. This was not won by financial engineering — the slippage ratio fell to 1.6% in Q4FY26 (multi-quarter low), retail slippages to 2.8% (a 9-quarter low), and the legacy stress book is essentially gone. The trade is that this clean book sets the bank up for a credit-cost normalisation lower than the rebuilders (IndusInd at 3.5% GNPA is in fresh stress; IDFC First's 1.9% is acceptable but trending wider on the unsecured book). Asset quality is the one place Yes Bank can claim a credible level advantage, not a closing gap.
The payments-rails win is structural infrastructure, not advertising. A 57% Payee PSP share on UPI is not a moat in the Buffett sense, but it is a real network position: banks that aggregate the most merchant pull also accrete CASA from those merchants' working-capital balances and earn float income on the rails. The same logic holds for AePS (where Yes Bank powers ~26.9% of all AePS transactions via 682K+ business correspondent outlets) and NACH (the rails behind mutual-fund SIPs and recurring corporate debits). None of these earn meaningful per-transaction fees, but the deposit and CASA gathering downstream of them is exactly the structural problem Yes Bank is solving.
The fee-mix win is a deliberate hedge against the NIM gap. Yes Bank's non-interest income is 42% of total revenue (FY26), versus an industry average closer to 25–30%; this is the bank's strategic answer to "we cannot win the cost-of-funds war." Branch-banking fees grew 21% YoY, retail disbursement-led fees grew 41%, and the explicit Q4FY26 strategy slide describes "uptiering positioning and multi-product cross-sell" as the value driver. The risk is that fee income is more contestable than spread income — peers can replicate fee strategies faster than they can replicate cheap deposits — but the current mix is real.
Where Competitors Are Better
The deeper truth about Yes Bank's competitive position: its competitors are better at the core spread business along almost every measurable dimension. The four below are the ones that matter for valuation.
Read the chart top-to-bottom. IDFC First's 5.7% NIM is the aggressive turnaround version of the model — it bought NIM with riskier unsecured loans (microfinance, personal loans, two-wheeler) at the cost of a 3.78% ROE and rising slippage tail. Kotak's 4.96% is the premium-franchise version — built by patient HNI deposit gathering. ICICI's 4.3% is the scale-and-mix version — its deposit base is so large that even at 39% CASA the absolute funding cost stays low. Yes Bank's 2.6% sits below them all because (a) PSL-shortfall RIDF deposits of $2,977M earn ~3% on ~6% of total assets, (b) the CASA gap to Kotak is 800 bps, and (c) it cannot price up unsecured retail aggressively without re-introducing the 2020 risk profile that just got cleaned up. Closing 50–100 bps of this gap over three years is plausible; closing 200 bps is not.
On scale economics. The cost-to-income disadvantage versus HDFC/Kotak (66.7% vs ~40%) is not a management failure — it is geometry. Yes Bank operates a 1,250-branch network spending an absolute opex of $1,300M; HDFC operates ~9,200 branches at roughly $7,462M opex, but on a deposit base 10× larger. The fixed-cost wedge means Yes Bank earns far less per rupee of asset, and the only way to close it is volume growth — exactly why the 13–15% advance-growth guidance matters as much as the NIM target.
Threat Map
Where the next 12–24 months of competitive damage could come from. The severity rating reflects combined probability and impact on Yes Bank's earnings trajectory.
The threat ladder is mostly upward gravity, not catastrophe. Two threats are high severity and continuous: HDFC/ICICI compounding deposit share at a pace Yes Bank cannot match, and ICICI eating the fee-income upside Yes Bank is leaning into for the NIM hedge. The medium-severity threats (IDFC First as turnaround peer, NBFCs in unsecured retail, sector contagion from IndusInd-style shocks) are time-bound and manageable through execution. The low-severity threats (PSU cap reform, SBI exit overhang) are real but unlikely to be the marginal driver. What is conspicuously not on this list: structural disruption from fintech or neobanks. The regulatory moat — RBI-issued universal banking licences, deposit-insurance scheme, balance-sheet underwriting — protects the category even where it does not protect Yes Bank's specific position.
Moat Watchpoints
Five measurable signals to know whether Yes Bank's competitive position is improving or weakening. All disclosed quarterly in the investor presentation; no private-channel research required.
One-sentence summary of the competitive view. Yes Bank has a measurable but partial moat — best-in-class asset quality + payment-rails infrastructure + an SMBC strategic anchor that no peer has — sitting on top of a structurally below-average core spread business that will not catch HDFC/ICICI/Kotak in three years. The trade is whether the combination of partial wins compounds faster than the NIM gap compresses returns. Watching CASA and retail slippages quarterly tells you the answer before earnings do.