Myriad Asset Management US LP disclosed in a July 10, 2025, SEC filing that it fully divested from HDFC Bank Limited (HDB -0.76%) in Q2 2025. The fund sold all 49,580 shares previously held, realizing a transaction value of $3.29 million. As of June 30, the position was no longer listed among the firm’s reportable U.S. equity holdings.
The firm sold out of HDFC Bank Limited. Myriad Asset Management's top five holdings after the filing (as of June 30, 2025):
Other facts to know about HDFC Bank:
Metric | Value |
---|---|
Market capitalization | $178 billion |
Revenue (TTM) | $54.85 billion |
Net income (TTM) | $8.25 billion |
Dividend yield | 1.02% |
Note: TTM data as of March 31, 2025.
HDFC Bank Limited is a leading private sector bank in India operating at significant scale, with over 9,400 branches and more than 21,000 ATMs across the nation as of March 31, 2025. The bank's strategy centers on diversified financial services, robust risk management, and digital innovation to drive sustainable growth. Its extensive reach and comprehensive product suite provide a strong competitive edge in the rapidly evolving Indian financial sector.
Shares of HDFC Bank are on fire, rallying 18.4% so far in 2025 and 25% over the past year. With the bank stock recently hitting a 52-week high of $78.14 per share and trading at levels last seen in 2021, investors appear to be taking some profits off the table.
A solid macroeconomic environment and business growth are buoying HDFC Bank stock. For its fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, the bank reported 10% growth in net interest income. Its average deposits surged 15.8% while gross advances rose 5.4% year over year, driven by strong growth in retail, commercial, and rural banking loans.
Notably, except for its brokerage firm, all of HDFC Bank’s other subsidiaries also reported strong growth in Q4. They include a non-banking financial arm, life and general insurance businesses, and an asset management company.
The Reserve Bank of India slashed the repo rate for the third consecutive time in June, and it was an unexpectedly high cut of 50 basis points. That drove Indian banking stocks even higher, especially shares of large lenders like HDFC Bank that can make the most of the rate cuts to grow their loan books.
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