BoB reports net loss of Rs 1,047 crore due to one-time tax reversal of Rs 3,837 crore

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Advances grew 2% y-o-y and 1% q-o-q to Rs 7.51 lakh crore. Retail lending portfolio increased 14% y-o-y to Rs 1.2 lakh crore.

The third-largest public sector lender, Bank of Baroda, on Saturday reported a net loss of Rs 1,047 crore in the March quarter (Q4FY21) due to one-time hit of Rs 3,837 crore taken by the lender on account of deferred tax asset (DTA) reversal. Excluding the impact of one- time hit, the bank would have reported profit after tax of Rs 2,267 crore in the March quarter, compared to Rs 507 crore net profit in Q4FY20.The profit before tax (PBT) of the lender remained at Rs 2,680 crore for the March quarter, compared to a loss of Rs 1,723 crore in the same period last year. Its operating profit increased 27% year-on-year (y-o-y) and 12% sequentially to Rs 5,591 crore. The bottom-line also got support from lower provisioning for stressed assets. Total provisions other than tax and contingencies declined 46% y-o-y to Rs 3,586 crore, but increased 4% sequentially. Overall, the net profit for the whole financial year (FY21) increased 52% to Rs 829 crore, compared to Rs 546 crore in FY20.

MD and CEO Sanjiv Chadha said there would be some stress on micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME), but it will be addressed by the restructuring window given by the regulator. The lender acknowledged that second Covid wave has further added to uncertainties and its impact will depend on various regulatory measures.

The bank’s net interest income (NII) increased 5% y-o-y to Rs 7,107 crore, but declined 8% sequentially on account of the waiver of compound interest in moratorium accounts. Last year, RBI had announced a six-month moratorium for all term-loan borrowers in the wake of Covid impact on borrowers. Supreme Court had directed lenders to waive compound interest of the borrowers during the moratorium period.

The domestic net interest margin (NIM) of the lender declined 23 basis points (bps) quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) and 3 bps y-o-y to 2.73%.

The asset quality improved during the March quarter. Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) ratio of the lender improved 76 bps to 8.87%, compared to reported proforma gross NPAs of 9.63% in the previous quarter. Similarly, net NPAs ratio improved 27 bps to 3.09% from 3.36% in the December quarter. Lenders had reported NPAs on a proforma basis during the December quarter due to a standstill order from the apex court on declaring NPAs.

Advances grew 2% y-o-y and 1% q-o-q to Rs 7.51 lakh crore. Retail lending portfolio increased 14% y-o-y to Rs 1.2 lakh crore.

Deposits grew 2% y-o-y and 1% q-o-q to Rs 9.67 lakh crore. Domestic current account savings account (CASA) grew 16% y-o-y to Rs 3.68 lakh crore. The capital adequacy ratio (CAR) remained at 14.99% with CET1 ratio of 10.94% at the end of March 2021. The bank is planning to raise additional capital of Rs 5,000 crore. “ The board has approved raising of additional capital up to Rs. 5,000 crore comprising Rs 2000 cr of common equity capital by various modes including QIP, in suitable stages and Rs 3000 cr by way of additional tier I capital/tier II capital instruments,” the lender said.

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Bank of Baroda posts Rs 1,061-crore profit on lower provisions

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At the same time, BoB is not too worried about major retail slippages because unsecured retail loans constitute less than 1% of its loan book. More than 70% of the retail book is made up of home loans.

Bank of Baroda (BoB) on Wednesday reported a Rs 1,061-crore profit for the quarter ended December, against a net loss of Rs 1,407 crore a year ago, as provisions fell 45% year-on-year (y-o-y) to Rs 3,957 crore.

Net interest income (NII) – the difference between interest earned and interest expended – stood at Rs 7,749 crore, was up 9% y-o-y. The net interest margin (NIM) rose 11 basis points (bps) sequentially to 3.07%. The operating profit rose 12.8% y-o-y to Rs 5,591 crore.

The gross NPA ratio at the end of December stood at 8.48%, down 66 bps sequentially. Net NPAs were at 2.39%, 12 bps lower than 2.51% at the end of the September quarter.

BoB has made contingent provisions of Rs 1,522 crore as a prudent measure. Total additional provisions as on December 31 stood at Rs 1,891.5 crore. The provision coverage ratio (PCR) improved to 85.46% from 77.77% a year ago.

The management said any worsening in the asset quality is likely to be led by the retail and MSME segments. Sanjiv Chadha, MD and CEO, said over the last two-three months, there has been a sharp recovery and the main beneficiary of this recovery has been the corporate piece. The return of demand, profits and pricing power have accrued mainly to companies and that adds resilience to the corporate book. Also, companies have already been through a phase of stress in recent years. So, the ones that remain standing are more resilient and offer comfort to the bank.

“There will be stress in some parts of the book, but we have fair handle in terms of how much is there and what are the likely implications. But, in terms of the known-unknowns, things which have not fully played out yet that is where the MSME and retail are,” Chadha said, adding, “Particularly, retail is the kind of book which was not being stress-tested. The kind of stress we are seeing now is something which is unprecedented, and therefore, it is likely that there may be some slippages which you cannot anticipate.”

It has become harder to foresee or address retail stress, Chadha said, because a glance at the bank’s restructured book shows that 80% of it has come from corporates and the retail accounts for a very small figure. “Therefore, we have not been able to address whatever stress might be there at least through the restructuring mode – which means that either people will actually start paying up on time [or] there is a fair possibility that some stress will come through NPAs.”

At the same time, BoB is not too worried about major retail slippages because unsecured retail loans constitute less than 1% of its loan book. More than 70% of the retail book is made up of home loans.

Domestic advances grew 8.31% y-o-y to Rs 6.33 lakh crore at the end of December. The current and savings account (CASA) ratio improved 240 bps y-o-y to 41.2% in Q3FY21. Domestic deposits rose 6.74% y-o-y to Rs 8.35 lakh crore. The bank expects to clock a loan growth of 7-8% in FY21 and raise Rs 2,000-4,000 crore through a qualified institutional placement (QIP) in the current quarter.

BoB’s shares ended up 0.07% at Rs 73.85 on the BSE.

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