November post-Diwali was sluggish for banks, says Kotak Institutional Equities

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The share price of lenders (banks) saw a decline in November, while non-lenders (insurance and capital markets) saw only a minor decline, Kotak Institutional Equities said in its report. Kotak further said that payment activity saw marginal month-on-month (m-o-m) decline after the festive (Diwali) season and the loan growth too continued to be sluggish with no sharp recovery in any specific segment barring SME despite a low interest rate environment.

Kotak believes that with the asset quality issues gradually receding, they see spreads decline but loan demand issues remain.

“November was a sluggish month for the BFSI sector as the Bank Nifty registered a decline of 9 per cent. Non-frontline private banks saw the sharpest decline of 14 per cent, while non-lenders (capital market players and insurance companies) resisted the downward momentum. Frontline private banks also saw a drawdown, with HDFC Bank performing relatively better. NBFCs outperformed the bank index. On a 12-month horizon, PSU banks have outperformed the Bank Nifty quite meaningfully. The emergence of a new Covid strain has put pressure on the market, but we wait to see if the spread could result in another set of mobility restrictions in India,” Kotak Institutional Equities said in its report.

Highlights from the report

Payments data continues to be strong, albeit with marginal m-o-m decline

Daily payments data for November from RBI indicates that strong trends in payments continued across payment systems, with marginal mom decline on the back of the festive season in October. In particular, a representative subset of card spends data indicates that spends in November were robust, although marginally lower mom. UPI transactions also saw a similar trend. Bank credit growth stood at ~7% levels with negligible growth from the corporate segment and a marginally better performance on the retail side. Loan growth has been sluggish, but seems to have bottomed out and we expect to see some strengthening in the trend.

NIM expansion unlikely

As per the latest data from RBI, deposit rates were flat m-o-m at around 5.1%. Both private and PSU banks have reduced their TD rates by around50 bps over the past 12 months. Wholesale deposit cost (as measured by CD rates) has seen a much sharper decline. It has been broadly stable in FY2022. The gap between repo and 1-year TD rate for SBI stands at 100 bps after declining from peak levels of around 130 bps. The premium of SBI TD rates over G-Sec yields has narrowed from its peak level.

Lending rates on fresh loans were flat m-o-m for banks overall, but declined nearly 30 bps m-o-m for private banks and increased 30 bps m-o-m for PSU banks. These rates have been volatile in recent months. The gap between fresh lending rates of private and PSU banks has declined to around 120 bps, which is in line with the average over the past 12 months. The gap between outstanding and fresh lending rates has been in the range of 110-140 bps since the onset of Covid. Steep decline in bond market rates till July 2020 had led to a narrowing of the spread between bank funding and bond rates, but bond yields seem to be trending upwards now. The lenders have been slow in passing the lower cost of funds. In recent months, the spreads are beginning to peak out and decline marginally suggesting that expansion of NIM on corporate books is a low probability event.

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Banks face pressure on NIM as they lower rates to outsmart rivals, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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An intense price war in retail loans ahead of the festive season has led to a pronounced fall in interest income for banks, putting pressure on their key profitability parameter: Net interest margins (NIM).

Five of the seven state-owned banks that have announced their quarterly earnings so far have reported lower NIM for the September quarter. These banks, however, managed to report a rise in net profit largely on account of bad loan recovery and write-back of provision made in earlier quarters.

Captains in the banking industry said that they would rely on credit growth to boost NIM in the next two quarters since lending rates would likely remain soft until the monetary policy authority continues its accommodative stance to support economic recovery.

The banking sector’s weighted average lending rates dropped 31 basis points in September to 7.20%, the biggest monthly fall since November 2016. Public-sector banks led the race in slashing loan costs. Lending rates were already low as banks followed regulatory signal on softer interest rate regime over the past two years.

Room for further deposit rate cuts is not available for lenders as real interest rate is already negative, keeping the NIM sticky below 3% for most of them.

Punjab National Bank reported the steepest 25% drop in net interest income among state-owned lenders that have announced their quarterly earnings so far. Canara Bank and Indian Bank have lower NII and NIM for the quarter under review.

The market became too competitive with all large banks lowering interest rates, leading to a fall in NIM, said Indian Overseas Bank chief executive Partha Pratim Sengupta last week. IOB, however, clocked 4.6% higher net interest income even as its NIM fell to 2.51% for the quarter ending September 30 from 2.57% in the year-ago period.

Punjab & Sind Bank has had a marginal rise in NII while its NIM dropped. Bank of Maharashtra and Uco Bank, on the other hand, reported a rise in both NII and NIM.

Indian Bank chief executive Shanti Lal Jain expects interest income to rise in the next two quarters with higher credit off-take, in line with expected economic recovery. Uco Bank’s AK Goel shared a similar view.

Public sector banks, however, would likely face a challenge in terms of credit growth from their private sector peers, which are typically more aggressive in retail lending.

Over the last five years, public sector banks’ market share has dropped by around 10% in both deposits and advances. “Clearly, asset quality and the resultant profitability, as well as capital challenges, have been the key factor in the slowdown of the public sector banks,” Acuite Ratings & Research said in a note.



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IDBI Bank Q2 profit surges 75% to Rs 567 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, IDBI Bank on Thursday reported a 75 per cent jump in net profit to Rs 567 crore for the second quarter ended September 30. The LIC-controlled bank had earned a net profit of Rs 324 crore in the same period (July-September) of the last fiscal.

The net interest income grew 9 per cent to Rs 1,854 crore during the reported quarter against Rs 1,695 crore a year ago. Net Interest Margin (NIM) improved by 32 basis points to 3.02 per cent, compared to 2.70 per cent in the second quarter last fiscal, IDBI Bank said.

The lender’s stressed assets ratio also improved, with gross non-performing assets (NPAs) declining to 20.92 per cent of gross loans as of September 30, 2021, against 25.08 per cent a year ago. Net NPAs improved to 1.62 per cent from 2.67 per cent.
Provisions for bad loans and contingencies rose to Rs 434.47 crore for the September quarter from Rs 389.44 crore in the year-ago period.

Staff costs fell 12 per cent to Rs 698 crore in September 2021 from Rs 789 crore a year earlier while tax expenses fell 39 per cent to Rs 208 crore from Rs 341 crore a year earlier.

“As of September 30, 2021, the bank had COVID-19 related provisions of Rs 863 crore (other than provisions held for restructuring under COVID-19 norms). The provision made by the bank is more than minimum required as per the RBI guidelines,” the lender said.

The provision coverage ratio, including technical write-offs, stood at 97.27 per cent as of September 30, 2021.



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CS Ghosh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We are provisioning for net NPA in this quarter also. It has come down and so a very small amount has come. This is a conscious call because we have not written off NPAs in this quarter, says CS Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank.

It has been a kind of mixed performance for Bandhan Bank. While the bank has reported the highest ever quarterly operating profits, NPA stress has also risen. Can you tell us about the quarter?
This quarter was more severe than any other quarter in the pandemic situation. The second wave affected lots of lives and people were more scared about it. That prevented a good number of business owners from properly running their business. It started in the first month of the quarter from central India, Delhi and Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh and it has gradually gone to the north east. Till now, it is happening in the north east.

Secondly, micro credit is nearly 60% of Bandhan Bank’s advanced book. The staff go to customers’ doorsteps to collect instalments. It was not easy to do because of the lockdowns and also because of risk to staff health. The number of cases affected came down in July and lockdowns were also lifted and a couple of rating organisations and the government also declared their GDP growth rate will come to 9-10%. I hope the future turns very good.

The total collection efficiency stood at 86% in Q1. Talk to us about collection efficiency for the overall book and collection efficiency in states like West Bengal and Assam. Are you seeing any improvement versus the last quarter?
There has been improvement in collection efficiency. In March, micro credit collection efficiency was 95%. In April, May, June it was hit in a big way by the Second Covid Wave. For that region, it has come down a little bit.

In case of the micro credit portfolio, in the first quarter our demand was Rs 13,000 crore and we collected nearly Rs 13,000 crore including arrears. That means our customers are paying the instalment. The total collection efficiency including arrear is 98% in micro credit and in case of total bank, it is 101% which shows that after the bad situation in the first quarter, it recovered a lot in this month. I hope next quarter onwards it will improve further.

Has micro finance loan book slowed versus last quarter? Is that a conscious call to slow down the growth as collections and demand may be impacted?
No. There are three factors here; one factor is that in the first quarter of any financial year, demand for credit always comes down. Secondly, there was the impact of Covid 2.0 in first quarter and that also impacted demand. Thirdly, we are disbursing credit conservatively and on a very selected basis.

Credit cost has come down versus the last quarter but it is still pretty high at 4.9. Will operating profits be enough to take care of the provisioning or the credit cost needs?
The provisioning is in two parts. One, it has helped me to increase PCR. The other side, it has helped us to strengthen our balance sheet. We can continue this provision continuously and accordingly the business growth will absorb it.

Gross NPAs stood at 8.2% and the net at 3.3%. At a net-net level, will gross and net NPA for FY22 be higher?
No. We have not written off this quarter. We have a Rs 700 crore account for NPA. If we write off this NPA, it will not be in place. Again, when one calculates the gross NPA percentage, because my advance book size has come down, percentage wise also, it has come down. Otherwise, percentage wise gross NPA has increased by 0.5% from last quarter to this quarter. We are tracking that. We are provisioning for net NPA in this quarter also. It has come down and so a very small amount has come. This is a conscious call because we have not written off NPAs in this quarter.

Overall the loan book has declined by about 8% quarter-on-quarter. What kind of loan growth do you expect this year?
In this type of a situation, the bank will be cautious and very selective. The credit growth will come from the last month of the second quarter before the Puja and Dussehra to the fourth quarter. That has been the case in normal times and even last year. So it depends on whether the Third Covid Wave comes in the Puja season or not.

Over the next one-two years, which segments do you think will lead to growth — microfinance, mortgage or commercial banking?
Microfinance is a very standard model and India is a big country. There is no growth driver needed for that. But we are likely to drive the growth of the housing loan vertical. It accounts for 24% now and in future we would like this segment to account for 30% of the total book.
The second vertical we are focussing on is MSME which caters to less than Rs 5 crore type of MSME. There is a huge market which is secure and we would like to grow it in future. Gold loan is another we would like to grow because like housing loans, it is also secured. These are the three sectors we would like to focus on in future and which we expect to account for 30:30:30 by 2025.

What led to margin improvement during the quarter, at what level do you see margins stabilising going ahead?
I have always predicted that around 8 or 8 plus will be NIM but this quarter, it is a little bit higher compared to the last quarter. That is because of last quarter we have reversed the interest of Rs 500 crore. Otherwise, 8 to 8.4 is what we would like to maintain.

You seem to have sufficient capital, how long will the current capital last considering your growth?
The growth of the bank was a little bit on conservative side last year and this year we expect normal growth. Upto 2025, we do not need the extra capital.

Is the structure of the financial industry changing with competition from fintech players?
The banks are focussing on digital transaction mode for the customers. At Bandhan Bank, in the last quarter, 87% of the transactions happened digitally. 11% of the bank accounts were opened digitally. We are also invested in digital transformation of the bank. We are also focussing on how we can give digital service to the customer.

Won’t you need additional capital to expand in digital space?
We have enough funds and we are already working on that from last year. Whatever is needed, will be invested from our own funds.



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IDFC First Bank logs Rs 630 crore loss in Q1 on Covid provisioning, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private lender IDFC First Bank on Saturday reported a net loss of Rs 630 crore in the April-June quarter due to provisioning measures for cushioning the impact of the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 93.55 crore in the year-ago quarter ended in June 2020 and that of Rs 127.81 crore in the previous quarter ended in March 2021.

“Net loss of Rs 630 crore for Q1FY22 is because of prudent provisions for Covid wave 2.0. Covid provision pool increased from Rs 375 crore to Rs 725 crore during the current quarter on a prudent basis to act as a cushion for Covid impact,” IDFC First Bank said in a release.

The bank expects to collect a reasonable proportion of these dues in due course, it added.

Total income (net of interest expense) grew by 36 per cent year-on-year to Rs 3,034 crore in Q1FY22, driven by the growth in NII and fee income, the bank said. Its total income during Q1FY21 stood at Rs 2,229 crore in June 2020 quarter.

The bank said its net interest margin (NIM) — the difference of interest earned and expended — was the highest ever at 5.51 per cent during the reported quarter. The NIM was 4.86 per cent in year ago quarter.

The net interest income (NII) rose by 25 per cent year-on-year to Rs 2,185 crore.

On the asset front, bank’s gross and net non-performing assets (NPAs) were at 4.61 per cent and 2.32 per cent respectively as of June 30, 2021.

The NPA ratios were up from 1.99 per cent and 0.51 per cent respectively, from year ago period.

“The GNPA and NNPA include impact of 84 bps (basis points, which is one hundredth of a percentage) and 71 bps respectively on account of one Mumbai based infra toll account which slipped during the quarter. The bank expects no material economic loss in this account eventually as this is an operating toll road and is only delayed.”

Bank deposits were up by 36 per cent to Rs 84,893 crore. The retail loan book of the lender increased to Rs 72,766 crore as on June 30, 2021 from Rs 56,043 crore.

The year-on-year growth of the retail loan book was 27 per cent excluding Emergency Credit Guarantee Line loan book of Rs 1,645 crore. However, it declined by 1.2 per cent on a sequential basis. The wholesale loan book fell by 15 per cent to Rs 34,232 crore from Rs 40,275 crore.

Capital adequacy ratio stood at 15.56 per cent with CET-1 (common equity tier-1) ratio at 14.86 per cent. Average liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) was at 166 per cent for Q1FY22.

“Within just two years we have made tremendous progress at the bank. Our CASA (current account savings account) ratio is high at 50.86 per cent despite reducing savings account interest rates by 200 bps recently, which points to the trust customers have in our bank and service levels.

“Because of our low cost CASA, we can now participate in prime home loans business, which is a large business opportunity,” V Vaidyanathan, Managing Director and CEO, IDFC First Bank, said. Regarding the loss during the quarter, he said the bank has made prudent provisions for Covid second wave.

“We expect provisions to reduce for the rest of the three quarters in FY22. We guide for achieving pre-Covid level gross and net NPA, with targeted credit loss of only 2 per cent on our retail book by Q4FY 22 and onwards, assuming no further lockdowns,” he said further.



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Net profit zooms to Rs 1,181 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Union Bank of India on Thursday reported over three-fold jump in standalone net profit at Rs 1,181 crore for June quarter 2021-22, helped by higher net interest income and improvement in asset quality.

The lender had reported a standalone profit after tax of Rs 333 crore in the year-ago period.

The consolidated profit in the quarter jumped over three folds to Rs 1,120.15 crore.

“The bank’s performance has stabilised and we have seen substantial improvement. After almost three to four quarters, we have seen a normal quarter on the business side.

“Even though we have lost the first two months (of Q1), by June it stabilised. If you look at the numbers, they are very stable except for some heightened NPAs, particularly coming from the MSME side,” bank’s Managing Director and CEO Rajkiran Rai G told reporters.

Net interest income grew 9.53 per cent to Rs 7,013 crore from Rs 6,403 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Net interest margins (NIM) improved by 30 basis points (bps) to 3.08 per cent as against 2.78 per cent.

Gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) of the lender reduced by 135 bps to 13.60 per cent from 14.95 per cent and net NPA was down 28 bps to 4.69 per cent from 4.97 per cent.

Fresh slippages during the quarter stood at Rs 7,049 crore. Around 45 per cent of slippages came in from the MSME sector as it was mostly affected during COVID wave, Rai said.

He said with restructuring and the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) facilities, the stress is likely to reduce going ahead.

Under RBI’s Resolution Framework 1.0, the bank restructured Rs 11,965 crore and under Resolution Framework 2.0, total recast during the first quarter was Rs 3,962 crore till June 30.

“We expect another Rs 2,000 crore of restructuring in retail and MSME segments put together in the second quarter,” Rai said.

During the quarter, recovery and upgradation stood at Rs 4,341 crore. It recovered Rs 250 crore of dues related to Kingfisher Airlines. The bank has a recovery target of Rs 13,000 crore for the full year.

Capital to risky asset ratio (CRAR) improved to 13.32 per cent from 11.62 per cent. Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio improved to 9.77 per cent from 8.40 per cent.

The bank’s deposits grew 1.79 per cent to Rs 9,08,528 crore as of June 30, 2021. Domestic advances rose 0.16 per cent to Rs 6,30,237 crore as at end-June.

It registered 10.61 per cent growth in retail, 12.70 per cent growth in agriculture and 3.33 per cent growth in MSME advances on year-on-year basis. Rai attributed flat growth in advances to large corporate book not growing. He, however, said the bank has a large sanction pipeline and unutilized working capital limits.

“We hope by second and third quarter, the utilisation of limits will go up and expect a credit growth of 8 to 10 per cent by the end of the year,” he said.

On the amalgamation of Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank, Rai said the bank expects a synergy benefit of Rs 3,600 crore over a period of three years. The amalgamation came into effect from April 1, 2020.

In 2020-21, the bank got a synergy benefit of Rs 2,400 crore and it expects Rs 900 crore of benefits in this fiscal year, he said.

The bank’s scrip closed at Rs 37.95, up 6.90 per cent on BSE.



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Pick up in disbursements, fall in provisions & more, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: ICICI Bank‘s 78 per cent profit growth YoY largely met Street expectations. The 18 per cent growth in net interest income was higher than 14-16 per cent growth anticipated by an ETMarkets.com poll. Provisions fell 63 per cent against expectations of an up to 70 per cent drop. Net interest margin (NIM) rose to 3.89 per cent while asset quality, as suggested by gross non-performing assets (NPAs), deteriorated marginally. Here are the key takeaways from the quarterly results:

Profit in line, NII beats expectations
ICICI Bank’s 78 per cent rise in June quarter was largely in line with an ETMarkets.com poll estimate of 77 per cent growth.

The bottonline growth was lower than 260.47 per cent growth in profit the bank reported in March quarter, but higher than 36 per cent profit growth it reported in the year-ago quarter.

NII growth for the quarter at 15-16 per cent beat expectations. Analysts at an ET NOW poll had expected NII growth at 14 per cent.

Disbursements pick up
ICICI Bank said retail disbursements have picked up in June and July after moderating in April and May due to Covid containment measures in place across various parts of the country.

The disbursement levels, it said, recovered to March levels in June, driven by spending in categories like consumer durables, utilities, education, and insurance. Credits received in the overdraft accounts of business banking and SME customers also picked up in June and July after declining in April and May, it said.

Provisions fall, NPA rises marginally
ICICI Bank said it has changed its policy on non-performing loans during the June quarter to make it more conservative. Provisions for the quarter fell 63 per cent to Rs 2,852 crore from Rs 7,594 crore against expectations of up to 70 per cent fall. This could be due to the bank’s policy change, which the bank said resulted in higher provision on non-performing advances amounting to Rs 1,127 crore for aligning provisions on outstanding loans to the revised policy.

Gross non-performing assets, meanwhile, rose to 5.15 per cent against 4.96 per cent in the March quarter and 5.46 per cent in the year-ago quarter.

Recoveries and upgrades of NPAs, excluding write-offs and sale, stood at Rs 3,627 crore. The bank wrote off Rs 1,589 crore worth gross NPAs in June quarter. Excluding NPAs, the total fund-based outstanding to all borrowers under resolution as per the various extant regulations was Rs 4,864 crore or 0.7 per cent of the total loan portfolio.

Uncertainty still looms
In the absence of regulatory dispensations like moratorium on loan repayments and standstill on asset classification, the impact on the quality of the loan portfolio would likely be sharper and earlier during FY22, the bank said.

“The impact, including with respect to credit quality and provisions, of the Covid-19 pandemic on the bank and the group, is uncertain and will depend on the trajectory of the pandemic, progress and effectiveness of the vaccination programme, the effectiveness of current and future steps taken by the government and central bank to mitigate the economic impact,” it said.

Retail loan growth up 20%, SME 43%
Retail loan portfolio comprised 61.4 per cent of the total loan portfolio as of June 30. Including non-fund outstanding, retail accounted for 50.4 per cent of the total portfolio as on June 30.

For the quarter, the credit growth for the retail segment stood at 20 per cent. The business banking portfolio climbed 53 per cent YoY and was 5.4 per cent of total loans on June 30. The SME business, comprising borrowers with a turnover of less than Rs 250 crore, advanced 43 per cent year-on-year and accounted for 4 per cent of total loans as on June 30.

“Growth in the domestic corporate portfolio was about 11 per cent year-on-year, driven by disbursements to higher-rated corporates and public sector undertakings across various sectors. The growth in performing domestic corporate portfolio, excluding the builder portfolio, was 15 per cent year-on-year on June 30, 2021,” it said. Overall, the credit growth was up 20 per cent, while deposit growth rose 16 per cent.

Subsidiaries reported mixed growth
Subsidiaries reported mixed growth. ICICI Securities, on a consolidated basis, saw 61 per cent YoY jump in profit at Rs 311 crore from Rs 193 crore YoY. ICICI Prudential Asset Management Company clocked 48 per cent year-on-year jump in profit at Rs 380 crore compared Rs 257 crore YoY. The profit after tax at ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company fell to Rs 152 crore from Rs 398 crore. Overall, ICICI Bank’s consolidated profit after tax came in at Rs 4,747 crore compared with Rs 4,886 in the March quarter and Rs 3,118 crore in the year-ago quarter.



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SBI, ICICI, Axis are UBS’ top banking picks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: UBS expects banks to report muted loan growth and a 25-50 basis point increase in non-performing loans in the first quarter.

Ahead of the start of the earnings season, the brokerage said unsecured loans and loans against property are the most important segments for the private sector players.

The brokerage prefers banks with greater provision buffers and has a buy rating on SBI, ICICI Bank, and Axis Bank.

Kotak Mahindra Bank and Punjab National Bank are the least preferred names. UBS has a sell rating on both the banks and has a neutral stance on Federal Bank, IndusInd , HDFC Bank and Bank of Baroda.

“While we expect a gradual recovery in economic growth, a sustained economic slowdown could impact the banking and finance sector on several fronts – this may lead to a slowdown in credit, increase NPL risk, impact fee income and exert pressure on NIM,” said UBS.

The brokerage said competition from other financial savings products such as mutual funds, insurance, could slow deposit accretion for banks, leading to intense competition for deposits, which, in turn, could put pressure on margins of banks growing loans faster than the industry.

“Provisions could be higher than expected if the economic slowdown due to Covid-19 is extended further or the NPL resolution process is extended and haircuts are higher than our current estimates,” said the UBS report.



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Bank of Baroda posts net loss of Rs 1,047 cr in Q4, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-run Bank of Baroda reported a standalone net loss of Rs 1,047 crore in the quarter ended March 2021, as it shifted to a new tax regime.

The lender had reported a standalone profit-after-tax of Rs 507 crore in the year-ago period.

For the full year, net profit grew 52 per cent to Rs 829 crore from Rs 546 crore in FY20.

The bank booked a profit before tax (PBT) of Rs 2,680 crore during the quarter against a loss of Rs 1,723 crore in the year-ago period. PBT stood at Rs 5,556 crore for FY21 against a loss of Rs 1,802 crore in FY20.

“Given the fact that we had a PBT of Rs 5,556 crore (in FY21), we thought this is the right time to transit to a lower tax rate regime. But the movement to the new tax regime means we have to make a DTA (Deferred Tax Assets) adjustment, which was of the order of Rs 3,500 crore for the full year. Because of that, we are reporting an accounting loss of around Rs 1,000 crore in Q4 FY21.

“But for the DTA impact, we would have a profit after tax of Rs 2,200 crore in the last quarter,” the bank’s managing director and CEO, Sanjiv Chadha, told reporters.

Net interest income (NII) rose by 4.54 per cent to Rs 7,107 crore compared to Rs 6,798 crore a year ago.

Global net interest margin (NIM) improved to 2.72 per cent from 2.63 per cent in Q4 FY20 led by margin expansion in international business to 1.57 per cent in Q4 FY21.

Domestic NIM declined to 2.73 per cent as against 2.76 per cent in the fourth quarter of FY20.

Gross NPA ratio fell to 8.87 per cent as against 9.40 per cent and net NPA ratio to 3.09 per cent from 3.13 per cent.

Fresh slippages during the quarter stood at Rs 11,656 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21.

The lender’s slippage ratio declined to 2.71 per cent in FY21 from 2.97 per cent in FY20. Credit cost decreased to 1.68 per cent in FY21 from 2.35 per cent in FY20.

“Slippages will come down very significantly during the current year (FY22) despite the second wave. I would believe that we should be trending towards 2 per cent or lower in FY22,” Chadha said.

He expects credit costs to be in the range of 1.5-2 per cent in FY22.

Total provisions and contingencies declined 46.03 per cent to Rs 3,586 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21 from Rs 6,645 crore in the year-ago period.

Domestic advances increased by 4.91 per cent year-on-year led by domestic organic retail and agriculture loans which grew by 14.35 per cent and 13.22 per cent respectively.

Within retail loans, auto loans increased by 27.79 per cent year-on-year and personal loans grew at 27.21 per cent year-on-year.

Chadha said collection efficiency of the bank improved to 93 per cent during the March quarter. He expects some impact on collections during the April-June quarter of FY22.

He said despite the impact of the second wave, the bank’s corporate book is likely to remain strong.

“Last year, we were not confident about what would happen to the corporate sector. This time we can say with confidence that the second wave has largely left the large corporate businesses untouched. Even in terms of accounts which were relatively weaker and had got restructured, I do not believe we would need to revisit restructuring in most cases,” Chadha noted.

He, however, said the area of concern for the bank remains the MSME sector and to a lesser extent, the retail sector.

“What we have experienced is people, particularly in the retail segment, may fall back on some instalments but ultimately they pull through. Our assessment is that a very large percentage of our retail borrowers will pull through and, for a minority, we may need to do some kind of restructuring. But when it comes to MSME, the impact is larger and restructuring will also be larger,” he added.

Chadha expects a credit growth of 7-10 per cent in FY22 for the bank, if the economy witnesses a double-digit growth.

On capital raising plans for the current fiscal, he said a major portion of the funding requirement will get done through internal accruals.

The bank’s capital to risk (weighted) assets ratio (CRAR) stood at 14.99 per cent in FY21 against 13.30 per cent.

Speaking about the RBI’s announcement on an on-tap liquidity window of Rs 50,000 crore to support healthcare infrastructure, he said the lender has received a board approval on this and it is engaging with the companies.

The bank is targeting a 50 per cent growth in its loans to the healthcare sector.

“Our current exposure to the sector is Rs 7,000-8,000 crore. I would believe we should be looking at targeting a growth between Rs 3,000-5,000 crore there,” Chadha said.



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Key metrics bank depositors should track now

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Not only did the pandemic raise the business risks of banks but it also added more terms to the jargon used to express the financial conditions of banks. Depositors trying to gauge the non-performing assets (NPA) of a lender had to also keep an eye on collection efficiency and proforma NPAs. This stemmed from the Supreme Court’s stay on recognising bad loans until the legality of the loan moratorium’s extension was finalised. Thankfully, the apex court cleared the air through its ruling on March 23. While banks will now revert to the old format of reporting GNPAs or gross Stage 3 assets (Ind AS) in the upcoming quarters, the ruling can have immediate implications on the financials of banks, particularly for the quarter ended March 31, 2021. Depositors will now need to see the strength of the following financial metrics before boiling down on the investment decision.

Bad loans and provisioning

With the Supreme Court having imposed a standstill, the official NPA numbers reported by banks, up till the recent December quarter, didn’t reveal the accurate picture of bad loans. Hence, most lenders disclosed individual proforma NPA. This figure showed what the NPA situation would have looked like if a bank had continued to recognise bad loans without applying the court concessions.

Take a look at the December quarter financials of RBL Bank. The bank reported a drop in GNPA to 1.84 per cent from 3.33 per cent in corresponding quarter last year. However, the bank also disclosed that about 2.62 per cent of the loan book, which was also under moratorium, could have slipped into bad loans during the quarter. Put together, the bank’s proforma NPAs stood at 4.57 per cent in the December 2020 quarter.

Now with the SC having passed the judgement, new terms such as collection efficiency and proforma NPA number will be a thing of the past and banks will express these numbers under the GNPA figure. Banks might hence be required to bump up their provisions accordingly. In the upcoming results, depositors need to be cautious about any sudden NPA spike reported by banks.

That said, the situation is not alarming for all banks for two main reasons. One, many banks have carefully extrapolated the likely slippages on the moratorium book and have adequately provided for it in the first nine months of FY21. In the above mentioned example, RBL Bank has provided for 70.7 per cent of its proforma GNPAs as of December 2020.

Two, many defaulting borrowers may repay the loans before the end of March 31, 2021, fearing downgrade in their credit rating (with the SC ruling having cleared the air around this).

Besides, the higher incidence of defaults, particularly in retail loans could have been on account of the cash crunch led by job losses and pay cuts. It is expected that the RBI measures to improve systemic liquidity could have led to improving collection efficiencies of banks. Another likely succour comes from the legal recourse now available for banks ( SARFAESI Act can now be invoked post the SC ruling).

Capital adequacy

Not only will the surge in provisioning costs dent the profits of the bank, but it might also lead to a heavy charge on the bank’s capital. Banks are required to report Capital Adequacy Ratio (CRAR), which shows the bank’s capital as a ratio to its risk-weighted assets (higher bad loans imply higher risk adjustment). The CRAR describes the bank’s ability to absorb losses without diluting capital, and hence its ability to lend further.

As of December 2020, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Bandhan Bank reported healthy CRAR ratios of over 21 per cent, leaving them with ample room to absorb any shock and maintain growth at a steady rate. Other leading private banks such as HDFC Bank, Axis Bank and ICICI Bank have CRAR in the range of 18-19 per cent.

As per the regulatory requirement, a bank has to maintain a minimum CRAR of 9 per cent, failing which it can be subject to strict actions from RBI, such as curbs on business operations, branch expansion, etc. In extreme cases the RBI may even put the bank under PCA (Prompt Corrective Action).

The RBI in its financial stability report had estimated that about 3 to 5 banks (varying from baseline to severe stress case scenarios) may fail to meet the minimum capital requirements by end of March 2021 out of the 53 scheduled commercial banks.

A few banks have been raising capital to make good the anticipated deficit. For instance, Bank of Baroda, that reported a CRAR of 12.93 per cent as at the end of the third quarter of FY21, has raised capital through the QIP route to the tune of ₹4,500 crore in the first week of March.

Depositors need to be wary of banks that have not prepared themselves of such steep decline in their capital adequacy ratio in the coming quarters.

Margins

Higher NPAs have a two-fold effect on profits; on one hand while additional provisioning can dent profits, interest reversals for loan accounts that have now turned bad, on the other hand, impacts interest income. This can dent their net interest margins.

Besides, the SC ruling on compound interest during moratorium warrants more interest reversals on part of banks. As per the judgement, banks cannot charge any interest on interest (compound interest) during the moratorium period and any amount so collected must be refunded or adjusted from subsequent instalments due. While the Centre had already relieved small borrowers (those with outstanding loans of up to Rs 2 crore) of such compound interest, banks have now requested the Centre to foot the bill for the remaining borrowers as well. This is a bid to avoid a dent their bottom-line.

However, the effect of these interest reversals can likely be set off with good credit growth in the March quarter. According to consolidated bank data from RBI, the scheduled commercial banks reported a credit growth of 6.5 per cent (yoy) in February 2021. While this is lower than 7.3 per cent in February 2020, credit in the country is gradually improving from the lows of 5.8 per cent witnessed in September 2020.

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