Net profit rises 24% to Rs 2,088 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Bank of Baroda reported a 24 per cent growth in standalone net profit mainly due to a 23 per cent increase in other income which includes fees and bad loan recoveries and helped by a fall in provisions as bad loans decreased year on year.

Net Profit of Rs 2,088 crore in the quarter ended September 2021 from Rs 1,679 crore a year earlier. Other income increased to Rs 3,579 crore from Rs 2910 crore last year.

The rise in other income made up for the tepid growth in net interest income (NII) which is the main income the bank earns by giving loans. NII increased 2 per cent to Rs 7566 crore largely as the cost of deposits fell to 3.52 per cent in September 2021 from 3.99 per cent a year ago and covered up for a 6 per cent fall in total interest earned.

A 2 per cent year-on-year fall in provisions also helped the bank’s bottom line. Provisions fell to Rs 2754 crore from Rs 2811 crore a year ago and was lower than the Rs 4005 crore reported in June 2021.

Gross NPA ratio improved to 8.11 per cent in September 2021 from 9.14 per cent a year ago.

CEO Sanjiv Chadha said the worst of slippages was over and asset quality trends will only become better.

“We had guided for credit costs of 1.5% to 2% with likely trends on the lower of the range as we are sticking to our guidance this year … credit costs have come down, recoveries have improved and margins have been steady,” Chadha said.

Recoveries increased to 3,246 crore including 1,246 crore from written-off accounts and higher than the total recoveries of 1,981 crore reported in the same quarter last year. As with other major banks, BoB was helped by a 877-crore recovery from DHFL.

Total loan book increased 2% to 7.34 lakh crore from 7.19 lakh crore a year earlier mainly due to a 10% rise in retail loans led by a 33% growth in personal loans and a 23% growth in auto loans. Corporate loan book remained flat after a 10% drop in the first quarter ended June.

Chadha said though the corporate growth has been tepid for more than a year, he expects some demand to come in the second half of the fiscal as sectors like cement, steel, green energy and electric vehicles expand capacities.

Retail mortgages make up 64% of the bank’s 1.35 lakh total retail loans with high growth businesses like personal loans making less than 5% of the book.

Chadha expects the bank’s loan growth to be close to double digits this year led by growth in retail loans and the bank will continue to grow the high-risk auto and personal loan businesses with caution using credit appraisals, and will have a preference for its own customers than outsiders.



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Analysts suddenly gung ho on this PSU bank, see up to 50% upside, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Bank of Baroda (BoB) impressed Dalal Street with its June quarter operating performance. A double-digit growth in retail loans and an expansion net interest margin (NIM) in the challenging June quarter were noteworthy. Gross non-performing assets fell marginally, but the impact of the second wave of Covid on its retail and MSME books was visible on slippages and credit cost.

Analysts said the situation was still under control and the management commentary was strong.

They said a rebalancing of the portfolio in favour of retail and a gradual decline in the international book would support NIM for the PSU bank. This, along with a moderation in credit cost will improve the return on asset (RoA) trajectory for the bank, analysts said and suggested up to 50 per cent upside for the stock.

“BOB recently raised capital via QIP, leading to a reasonable CET 1 of 11.3 per cent. With the merger (Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank) and asset quality pain now largely over, we expect BoB’s return on equity (RoE) to gradually improve to 10-12 per cent over FY23-24 from a low of 1 per cent in FY21,” it said and suggested a price target of Rs 122.

At Monday’s close of Rs 81.15, that target suggested a 50 per cent upside.

Motilal Oswal Securities has hiked its earnings estimates by 47 per cent for FY22 and 22 per cent for FY23 post the bank’s Q1 numbers. Estimating an RoA of 0.7 per cent and an RoE of 10.3 per cent by FY23, it has upgraded the stock to ‘buy’, with a revised price target of Rs 100.

ICICIdirect also sees the stock at Rs 100. It listed four factors that would prove key to its performance. First is the shedding of the bank’s low yield exposure and its focus on retail segment. Secondly, a shift to the new tax regime, which is set to aid profitability. The third is the comfortable capital to risky asset ratio at 15.4 per cent, which may keep earnings dilution risk away. Lastly, the decent asset quality amid the tough situation would help.

The bank reported a net profit of Rs 1,209 crore compared with a loss of Rs 864 crore a year ago. Net interest income (NII) rose 16 per cent to Rs 7,892 crore. Net interest margin (NIM) came in at 3.04 per cent against 2.52 per cent YoY and 2.73 per cent QoQ.

Retail loans rose 12 per cent YoY, led by a 25 per cent growth in auto loans, 20 per cent growth in personal loans, and a 38 per cent growth in gold loans.

The loan book, however, declined 2 per cent due to a 10 per cent fall in corporate loans as the bank shed low-yielding loans.

The gross NPA ratio declined marginally to 8.86 per cent from 8.87 per cent in the March quarter and 9.39 per cent the year-ago period, as recovery and upgrades increased to Rs 4,435 crore from Rs 818 crore YoY. The bank management is targeting Rs 14,000 crore in recoveries in FY22 and has guided for 1.5-2 per cent credit cost and net slippages of less than 2 per cent.

“It was a relatively steady performance but uncertainty over subsequent Covid waves and relatively elevated stress pool still temper our enthusiasm on earnings stability. The bank’s recent capital raise was dilutive, which is a persistent challenge for PSBs. We are rolling overestimates to December FY22, revising our target to Rs 98 from Rs 95 earlier,” Edelweiss said.

Edelweiss said the demonstration of the merger value add and, indeed, getting through the current crisis without deep earnings erosion will be key to the stock performance.

The promised post-merger rationalisation benefits are not a foregone conclusion, given the complexity of the task at hand, it said and suggested that the valuation at 0.5 times FY22E P/BV lends some comfort.

JM Financial is building in a credit cost of 1.2 per cent and RoA of 0.7 per cent for FY23. It has a price target of Rs 95 on the stock.



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Analysts suddenly gung ho on this PSU bank, see up to 50% upside, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Bank of Baroda (BoB) impressed Dalal Street with its June quarter operating performance. A double-digit growth in retail loans and an expansion net interest margin (NIM) in the challenging June quarter were noteworthy. Gross non-performing assets fell marginally, but the impact of the second wave of Covid on its retail and MSME books was visible on slippages and credit cost.

Analysts said the situation was still under control and the management commentary was strong.

They said a rebalancing of the portfolio in favour of retail and a gradual decline in the international book would support NIM for the PSU bank. This, along with a moderation in credit cost will improve the return on asset (RoA) trajectory for the bank, analysts said and suggested up to 50 per cent upside for the stock.

“BOB recently raised capital via QIP, leading to a reasonable CET 1 of 11.3 per cent. With the merger (Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank) and asset quality pain now largely over, we expect BoB’s return on equity (RoE) to gradually improve to 10-12 per cent over FY23-24 from a low of 1 per cent in FY21,” it said and suggested a price target of Rs 122.

At Monday’s close of Rs 81.15, that target suggested a 50 per cent upside.

Motilal Oswal Securities has hiked its earnings estimates by 47 per cent for FY22 and 22 per cent for FY23 post the bank’s Q1 numbers. Estimating an RoA of 0.7 per cent and an RoE of 10.3 per cent by FY23, it has upgraded the stock to ‘buy’, with a revised price target of Rs 100.

ICICIdirect also sees the stock at Rs 100. It listed four factors that would prove key to its performance. First is the shedding of the bank’s low yield exposure and its focus on retail segment. Secondly, a shift to the new tax regime, which is set to aid profitability. The third is the comfortable capital to risky asset ratio at 15.4 per cent, which may keep earnings dilution risk away. Lastly, the decent asset quality amid the tough situation would help.

The bank reported a net profit of Rs 1,209 crore compared with a loss of Rs 864 crore a year ago. Net interest income (NII) rose 16 per cent to Rs 7,892 crore. Net interest margin (NIM) came in at 3.04 per cent against 2.52 per cent YoY and 2.73 per cent QoQ.

Retail loans rose 12 per cent YoY, led by a 25 per cent growth in auto loans, 20 per cent growth in personal loans, and a 38 per cent growth in gold loans.

The loan book, however, declined 2 per cent due to a 10 per cent fall in corporate loans as the bank shed low-yielding loans.

The gross NPA ratio declined marginally to 8.86 per cent from 8.87 per cent in the March quarter and 9.39 per cent the year-ago period, as recovery and upgrades increased to Rs 4,435 crore from Rs 818 crore YoY. The bank management is targeting Rs 14,000 crore in recoveries in FY22 and has guided for 1.5-2 per cent credit cost and net slippages of less than 2 per cent.

“It was a relatively steady performance but uncertainty over subsequent Covid waves and relatively elevated stress pool still temper our enthusiasm on earnings stability. The bank’s recent capital raise was dilutive, which is a persistent challenge for PSBs. We are rolling overestimates to December FY22, revising our target to Rs 98 from Rs 95 earlier,” Edelweiss said.

Edelweiss said the demonstration of the merger value add and, indeed, getting through the current crisis without deep earnings erosion will be key to the stock performance.

The promised post-merger rationalisation benefits are not a foregone conclusion, given the complexity of the task at hand, it said and suggested that the valuation at 0.5 times FY22E P/BV lends some comfort.

JM Financial is building in a credit cost of 1.2 per cent and RoA of 0.7 per cent for FY23. It has a price target of Rs 95 on the stock.



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Bank of Baroda cuts MCLR for various tenors, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: State-owned Bank of Baroda on Thursday said it has slashed the benchmark one-year marginal cost of funds based lending rate (MCLR) by 0.05 per cent.

The bank has approved the revision in MCLR with effect from June 12, 2021, the lender said in a regulatory filing.

The MCLR for one-year tenor stands revised to 7.35 per cent.

Among others, the six-month and three-month tenor MCLRs have also been slashed by 0.05 per cent each to 7.20 per cent and 7.10 per cent, respectively.

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Bank of Baroda to sell 46 NPA accounts to recover Rs 597 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: State-owned Bank of Baroda will conduct an e-auction of as many as 46 NPA accounts later this month to recover dues of Rs 597.41 crore.

The lender, in a notification, said it intends to sell these NPA accounts to asset reconstruction companies (ARCs) / banks / NBFCs or other financial institutions (FIs) on 100 per cent cash basis, for which the e-auction will take place on June 21, 2021.

The major NPA accounts put up for sale include Meena Jewels Export & Meena Jewellers Export (Rs 60.76 crore); Crystal Cable Industries (Rs 57.49 crore); J R Foods Ltd (Rs 41.60 crore); Shree Raghuvanshi Fibres (Rs 27.38 crore); Kaneri Agro Industries (Rs 24.69 crore); Man Tubinox (Rs 24.28 crore) and Aryans Educational and Charitable Trust (Rs 20.79 crore).

The last date for submission of expression of interest is June 19, the bank said, adding the completion of due diligence will take place on the same day.

“E-bidding timings will be from 11.30 AM to 12.30 PM with unlimited extension of 5 minutes in case the amount is increased by the bidders. The incremental amount shall be in multiple of Rs 10 lakh,” Bank of Baroda said.

With respect to Chennai-based Rahima Leather Exports against which there is an outstanding of Rs 9.13 crore, Bank of Baroda said it has received an ECGC claim of Rs 1.18 crore.

This account will be retained by the bank and not be passed on to ARC/NBFC/bank/FIs, it said.

Bidder will also have to give an affidavit that they are “in no way connected to or acting on behalf of or in concert or on behalf of any of the accounts or its promoters, including promoter’s family”, as per the provisions of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016, it said.

The bank said any ECGC/CGTMSE claim received or to be received in any of the accounts under the sale will be retained by it and will not be passed on to ARCs/ banks/ NBFCs/ FIs.

The Export Credit Guarantee Corporation (ECGC) is a government owned body which provides export credit insurance support to Indian exporters.

Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE) is a government owned trust which offers credit guarantee to financial institutions which give loans to the MSME sector.



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