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Earnings of Indian banks will get a boost from easing non-performing loans and the nation’s economic recovery that will drive demand for credit.

Many large banks saw their nonperforming loan ratios decline “as new NPA formation was more than offset by recoveries on retail loans,” said Nikita Anand, an analyst at S&P Global Ratings, after both private-sector and government-owned banks reported an improvement in overall asset quality in the fiscal second quarter that ended Sept. 30. “[The banks’] earnings have improved with credit costs moderating,” he said.

As on September 30, the weak loan ratio peaked close to 10 per cent. Credit costs, which reflect provisioning on bad loans, will also likely hit their lowest level in 7 years. This in turn should boost earnings, according to S&P.

State Bank of India, the country’s largest bank by assets, reported total NPAs of Rs 1.25 lakh crore for the quarter ended September 30, down from Rs 1.36 lakh crore in the previous quarter and Rs 1.27 lakh crore in the same period a year ago. Bank of Baroda and Punjab National Bank also saw quarter-over-quarter falls in NPAs.

Meanwhile, the ratings agency said that it is sceptical of allowing corporate ownership in banks, given India’s weak corporate governance. Corporate ownership of banks raises risks of intergroup lending, diversion of funds and reputational exposure, it said. Currently, the Reserve Bank of India refrained from allowing corporate ownership in banks.

Better asset quality, economic rebound brighten Indian banks' earnings outlook: S&P

Economy on mend

India’s economy grew 20.1% year over year in the April-to-June quarter, recovering from a 24.4% contraction in the same period of 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic forced a strict lockdown across the country. The Reserve Bank of India expects the economy to grow about 9.5% in the fiscal year to March 2022, and Governor Shaktikanta Das on November 16 underscored the “need for sustained impetus so that growth could return to, or better still, exceed the pre-pandemic trend.”

The rating agency said that the economy’s expansion is expected to outpace that of developing market peers in the coming few years. “In comparison, some tourism-dependent countries, such as Thailand, are likely to see long-term scarring as we expect only a gradual resumption of travel-related industries,” they agency said.

Ahead of the Diwali festive season, gross bank credit grew 6.7% year over year in both August and September, reversing a contraction earlier in the year, central bank data show.

“With cash flows improving for underlying borrowers due to easing of the pandemic and lockdowns, most banks have reported an improvement in asset quality and reduction in nonperforming assets,” said Krishnan Sitaraman, senior director at Crisil, a unit of S&P Global Inc.

“It is also a reflection of the clear improvement in economic fundamentals for the country” after the economy contracted 7.3% in the year that ended March 31, 2021, Sitaraman said.

Banks are likely to sustain their earnings improvement in 2022 if credit costs continue to moderate, though Sitaraman flagged the risk of a possible fresh wave of Covid infections and its potential impact on economic activity.

Better asset quality, economic rebound brighten Indian banks' earnings outlook: S&P

Better earnings

The net profit of State Bank of India in the second quarter rose to Rs 8,890 crore from Rs 5,246 crore in the prior-year period. ICICI Bank Ltd’s net profit increased to Rs 6,092 crore from Rs 4,882 crore in the prior-year period.

SBI’s credit cost and net interest margin profile were better than expectations, ICICI Securities said in a note after the lender reported its earnings. SBI’s management expects an opportunity to grow its corporate and small business portfolios as economic activity picks up, the merchant banking and retail broking arm of India’s second-biggest private-sector lender by assets said in a note. “SBI also has sufficient capital and liquidity on balance sheet to support growth.”

HDFC Bank, the country’s largest private-sector bank, saw its NPLs ease to Rs 21,000 crore from Rs 23,000 crore in the first quarter. The lender said its bad loans from small-and-medium scale businesses declined over the previous quarter and the corporate book is resilient, suggesting that a bigger part of incremental delinquency is flowing from the retail and agriculture segments, ICICI Securities said in a note after HDFC reported its earnings.

“Further curtailment of slippages, better recoveries and improved collections will support asset quality trends in coming quarters [for HDFC Bank],” according to ICICI Securities.



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KKR India appoints KV Kamath as senior advisor, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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KKR, a global investment firm, announced today the appointment of KV Kamath as a senior advisor. His appointment is effective immediately.

“KKR has consistently demonstrated its strong commitment to India, and the firm today stands out as one of the highest-caliber investors in innovative, market-leading companies in the country and worldwide. I am excited by the opportunity to work alongside Gaurav and the broader KKR team and welcome the chance to leverage my experience to help Indian businesses elevate and meet their full potential,” said KV Kamath.

KV Kamath brings more than five decades of experience leading large Indian businesses. He has served as the first President of the New Development Bank, established by the BRICS nations, from its founding in 2015 until 2020.

“We are pleased to welcome K.V. as a senior advisor to our team in India, and are excited to learn from his terrific insights as we continue to invest in the growth of India. KV has a truly outstanding track record of working with different stakeholders while building world-class businesses. He joins at an exciting time for KKR in India, and I am confident of the value that he will bring to our franchise and businesses,” says Gaurav Trehan, Partner & CEO of KKR India.

Kamath has also served as the chairman of ICICI Bank and Infosys Ltd. In October, he was appointed as the chairperson of National Bank for Financing Infrastructure and Development, which was created to support the development of long-term infrastructure financing in the country.



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SBI expects uptick in capacity utilisation; steel and Iron to contribute more, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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SBI Chairman Dinesh Kumar Khara sees significant improvement in India Inc’s capacity utilisation by the next quarter saying that major additions are expected in sectors like iron, steel, oil and metals.

“There is a clear availability of demand. Demand (is) coming in and capacity augmentation is happening. And I hope by the end of the current quarter or next quarter, there should be significant improvement in capacity utilisation…The major (capacity addition) is in the iron and steel sector. Oil companies might also start availing working capital limits, and the metal sector is also seeing an uptick, so capacity addition is expected in that sector,” said Dinesh Khara, Chairman SBI in a virtual press conference following SBI’s Q2 financial results.

Khara shared that the lender has currently unutilised term loans to the corporate to the extent of 27 per cent,and while working capital limits in large corporates is unutilised to the extent of 50 per cent. Khara said it is not possible to articulate when corporate book growth will come back but he added he expects unutilised capacity to reduce to roughly 30 per cent in the subsequent quarters.

SBI Chairman also said the lender is not losing any such business to mutual funds due to prevailing excess liquidity in the system, indicating corporates in the present low interest rate environment would prefer banks when scaling up their investments.



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