RBI Rejects Jana Small Finance Bank’s Universal Bank Licence Bid
The Reserve Bank of India has returned Jana Small Finance Bank’s application to transition into a universal bank, citing failure to meet certain eligibility criteria.
Key Takeaways
- RBI returned Jana SFB’s universal bank licence application
- Bank met NPA requirements but failed other criteria
- Stock fell 2.14% following the announcement
Application Details
Jana Small Finance Bank submitted its application earlier in FY26 after successfully maintaining gross NPAs below 3% and net NPAs under 1% for two consecutive years – one of RBI’s key requirements.
However, the central bank identified that other unspecified eligibility conditions remained unfulfilled, leading to the application’s return.
“In continuation to our letter dated June 9, we wish to convey that the RBI has returned the application made for Voluntary Transition to Universal Bank due to non-fulfilment of the criteria mentioned in the RBI circular in this regard,” the Bengaluru-headquartered lender said in its stock exchange filing.
Market Reaction
Following the announcement, Jana SFB shares declined 2.14% to Rs 446.4 on the BSE. The stock has shown mixed performance across different timeframes, falling 13.35% over six months but maintaining a 10.87% gain year-to-date.
Bank Profile
Established in 2018, Jana Small Finance Bank ranks as India’s fourth-largest small finance bank with over 12 million customers across 23 states and two Union Territories through 802 branches.
In Q2 FY26, the bank reported a net profit of Rs 75 crore, bringing its first-half profit to Rs 177 crore. The bank maintained healthy metrics with net interest margin at 6.6%, gross NPAs at 2.8%, and net NPAs at 0.9%.



