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IDBI stock tanks 15%: buy the dip or brace for more pain?

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IDBI Bank stock (NSE: IDBI) tanked over 15% on Monday after reports indicated that the Indian government is set to scrap the long-running strategic sale of the lender.

The government’s decision came as the financial bids received were below the reserve price fixed for the transaction.

The investors were quick to react to the news as the IDBI Bank stock fell as much as 15.35% to ₹78.05 on the BSE, down from the previous close of ₹92.18.

The development came as the broader market remained relatively steady, highlighting how sharply sentiment turned against the counter once the privatisation narrative weakened.

IDBI Bank stock: Why the selloff deepened

The immediate trigger was the apparent collapse of the stake sale process.

The Government of India and the Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) were seeking to divest a combined 60.7% stake in IDBI Bank, with the Centre planning to sell 30.48% and LIC another 30.24%.

Fairfax Financial Holdings and Emirates NBD submitted financial bids on February 6, but those offers reportedly fell short of the minimum threshold set by the government.

Kotak Mahindra Bank, which showed interest in the bidding process, did not participate in the final financial bidding round.

The mismatch between the bids and the government’s minimum threshold is reportedly arising due to valuation concerns.

The analysts said that the reserve price was seen as too high and not aligned with the bank’s price-to-book valuation.

Moreover, the low free float in the stock also complicated the benchmark used for pricing the deal.

While speaking with Business Standard, former finance secretary Subhash Chandra Garg said the transaction appears to have collapsed because “risk-averse managers fixed the reserve price too high.”

As of Monday, DIPAM had not publicly shared an official statement confirming the fate of the sale, leaving the market to trade on informed reports.

What analysts are watching now

The key question for investors is whether the sharp fall has created value or simply removed a premium that should not have been there in the first place.

On the fundamental numbers, IDBI Bank looks solid.

In its third quarter results for FY26, the bank reported a net profit of ₹1,935 crore, while its gross NPA ratio improved to 2.57% from 3.57% a year earlier.

At the same time, total income in the quarter slipped to ₹8,282 crore from ₹8,565 crore a year ago, suggesting the operating picture is stable but not strong enough.

The current debate will most likely split into two camps.

Value-oriented investors may argue that a large part of the event premium has now been flushed out, but the traders and short-term investors are likely to remain cautious because the failed sale removes the clearest catalyst for rerating.

For now, there is still no official roadmap on whether the government will invite fresh bids, revise the reserve price, or let the process lapse.

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