Bank of India Q2 PAT rises 99.9% on lower provisions, higher other income

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On liabilities side, Bank of India’s domestic deposits grew 2.5% on year to Rs 5,45,734 crore.

Bank of India (BoI) on Tuesday reported a nearly 100% year-on-year rise in net profit in the September quarter to Rs.1,051 crore on the back of lower provisions and higher other income.

The lender’s total provisions before tax fell 56.3% year on year (YoY) to Rs 894 crore in the July-September period.

Lower provisions were on account of improving asset quality. As on September 30, the lender’s gross non-performing assets (NPAs) stood at Rs 50,270 crore, lower than Rs 56,232 crore a year ago. The bank saw fresh slippages of Rs 1,307 crore in the reporting quarter — lower than Rs 3,942 crore in the previous quarter.

In a post earnings conference on Tuesday, the bank’s management said it had created 50% provision for its Rs 1,024-crore direct exposure to SREI group companies, whose boards were recently superseded by the Reserve Bank of India.

In percentage terms, BoI’s gross and net bad loan ratios improved to 12% and 2.79%, respectively, as on September-end from 13.51% and 3.35% as on June 30, respectively.

Going forward, the bank aims to lower the gross NPA ratio below 10% and the net NPA ratio by around 2%, said MD and CEO Atanu Kumar Das.

The bank’s net interest income (NII) stood at Rs 3,523 crore in the reporting quarter, lower by 14.3% on year. The domestic net interest margin (NIM) in July-September was 2.65%, lower than 2.88% a year ago. The capital adequacy ratio (CAR), as on September 30, stood at 17.05%, of which Tier I ratio was 13.88% and Tier II ratio stood at 3.17%.

As on September 30, Bank of India’s provision coverage ratio stood at 87.81%, while credit cost was 0.26%. Other income, that includes fees from third-party, rose 37% on a yearly basis to Rs 2136.28 crore.

The lender’s global advances increased 2.7% YoY to Rs 4,18,895 crore. Of these, domestic loans stood at Rs 3,68,573 crore, higher by 1.6% on year. Retail, agriculture and micro, small and medium enterprises loans formed 54% of the lender’s domestic loan book.

“There will be acceleration in advances going forward through a series of outreach campaigns, which we have conducted for the last two months and which we will continue in the coming months. We expect our overall advances to grow by 6-7% during the year,” Das said.

On liabilities side, Bank of India’s domestic deposits grew 2.5% on year to Rs 5,45,734 crore.

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Bank of India Q1 net profit falls 15% on lower NII, higher provisions

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Deposits increased 6.7% y-o-y to Rs 5.52 lakh crore at the end of June 2020. The current account savings account (CASA) ratio stood at 43.22% at the end of Q1FY22, higher than 40.61% a year ago.

Public-sector lender Bank of India (BoI) on Tuesday reported a net profit of Rs 720 crore in the June quarter of FY22, down 14.7% year-on-year (y-o-y), owing to a 9.65% decline in net interest income (NII) on a y-o-y basis to Rs 3,145 crore. The bottomline was also hit by higher provisions, which rose 13% y-o-y to Rs 1,709 crore.

BoI’s domestic net interest margin (NIM), a key measure of profitability, rose 19 basis points (bps) sequentially to 2.35%. This was, nonetheless, lower than the 3%-plus levels seen a year ago.

The bank’s domestic advances as on June 30 were at Rs 3.66 lakh crore, up 1.65% on a y-o-y basis. AK Das, MD & CEO, BoI, said, “We expect a business growth of 6-7% in the current year with reorientation in liability and asset structure.” Along with this, better collection and recovery mechanisms will enable the bank to improve its NIM to about 2.5%, Das added.

Deposits increased 6.7% y-o-y to Rs 5.52 lakh crore at the end of June 2020. The current account savings account (CASA) ratio stood at 43.22% at the end of Q1FY22, higher than 40.61% a year ago.

The bank has restructured 19,077 accounts with an exposure of Rs 401.67 crore under resolution framework 2.0.BoI’s provision coverage ratio (PCR) fell to 86.17% from 86.24% at the end of March. Slippages fell to Rs 3,942 crore from Rs 7,368 crore in the previous quarter. The bank made recoveries worth Rs 851 crore in Q1FY22, down from 975 crore in Q4FY21.

The lender showed an improvement on the asset quality front in Q1, with the gross non performing asset (NPA) ratio falling 26 bps sequentially to 13.51%. The net NPA ratio remained flat sequentially at 3.35%.

The capital adequacy ratio of BoI as per Basel III, stood at 15.07% as on June 30, up from 12.76% a year ago, and its common equity tier-I (CET-I) ratio was at 11.52%, up from 9.46% a year ago. BoI’s shares ended 0.2% higher than their previous close at Rs 74.35 on the BSE on Tuesday.

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