IDBI Bank Q2 results: Net profit up 75%

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IDBI Bank reported a 75 per cent year-on-year (yoy) increase in second quarter standalone net profit at ₹567crore, supported by a huge write-back in provisions for non-performing assets (NPAs) and lower tax expense.

The Bank had posted a net profit of ₹324 crore in the year ago quarter.

Net interest income increased 9 per cent yoy in the reporting quarter to ₹1,854 crore (₹1,694 crore in the year ago quarter).

Other income, including income from non-fund based banking activities such as commission, fees, earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, and profit and loss from sale of investment, declined about 4 per cent yoy at ₹846 crore (₹881 crore).

The received a write-back of ₹1,426 crore in provisions for NPAs against ₹165 crore in the year ago quarter. Tax expense burden was lower at ₹215 crore (₹347 crore).

As at September-end 2021, gross advances barely nudged up to ₹1,64,506 crore (₹1,63,841 crore as at September-end 2020).

Rakesh Sharma, MD & CEO, said the Bank has built up a sanctions pipeline in the mid and large corporate segments and disbursals are expected to pick up from year-end onwards.

The Bank expects to grow its corporate loan book by about ₹6,000 crore in the current financial year.

Samuel Joseph, Deputy Managing Director, said the Bank has an exposure of about ₹400 crore to the SREI group, which is undergoing corporate insolvency resolution process, and has made 100 per cent provision towards this exposure. IDBI Bank recovered ₹196 crore from DHFL.

P Sitaram, CFO, emphasised that the Bank will grow the corporate loan book even as the emphasis will continue to be on structured retail loans.

Gross NPAs declined about ₹1,186 crore during the reporting quarter to ₹34,408 crore.

Gross NPAs as a percentage of gross advances declined to 20.92 per cent against 21.48 per cent in the preceding quarter. Net NPAs, however, nudged up to 1.62 per cent of net advances against 1.56 per cent.

Fresh slippages rose by ₹1,438 crore (₹1,332 crore in the first quarter). The Bank settled NPAs aggregating ₹1,436 crore (₹587 crore).

ends

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Bank of Maharashtra net profit jumps 103 % to Rs 264 cr in Sept quarter, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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(Eds: Adding details) Mumbai, State-owned Bank of Maharashtra on Thursday reported a 103 per cent jump in its standalone net profit to Rs 264 crore in the September 2021 quarter, helped by healthy growth in net interest income.

The lender had reported a standalone profit after tax of Rs 130 crore in the same quarter of the previous fiscal.

The bank’s performance in the July-September 2021 period was good despite the pandemic, the bank’s Managing Director and CEO A S Rajeev said.

“One major reason for higher profit is growth of 34 per cent in NII (net interest income). Our core performance has improved,” he told reporters.

The bank’s recovery from written-off accounts stood at Rs 340 crore, including Rs 258 from the DHFL resolution, in the quarter, and this also resulted in higher profit.

During the April-September period of this fiscal, the bank reported a 104.11 per cent jump in the net profit at Rs 472 crore as against Rs 231 crore for HYFY21.

In Q2 FY2022, NII grew 33.84 per cent on a year-on-year basis to Rs 1,500 crore as against Rs 1,120 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Non-interest income rose 22.61 per cent to Rs 493 crore.

Net interest margin (NIM) improved to 3.27 per cent as on September 30, 2021.

Gross non-performing accounts (NPA) declined to 5.56 per cent from 8.81 per cent in the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal. Net NPA also reduced to 1.73 per cent as against 3.30 per cent.

Provision coverage ratio improved to 92.38 per cent as against 87.15 per cent. It holds a cumulative COVID-19 provision of Rs 973 crore as of September-end.

Banks‘ recovery and up-gradation stood at Rs 645 crore from Rs 556 crore in the year-ago period.

Fresh slippages in the quarter were Rs 553 crore.

The lender said Srei Infrastructure, where it has an exposure of Rs 550 crore, was identified as an NPA in the quarter and the account is fully provided for.

Total basel-III capital adequacy ratio improved to 14.67 per cent with common equity tier-1 ratio of 11.38 per cent for Q2 FY22.

Gross advances increased 11.44 per cent to Rs 115,235 crore and total deposits were up by 14.47 per cent to Rs 181,572 crore.

Rajeev said the bank expects 14-15 per cent credit growth during the current fiscal.

The bank’s scrip was trading at Rs 21.90 apiece, up 4.53 per cent on the BSE. PTI HV HRS hrs



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City Union Bank posts Q1 net of ₹173 crore

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City Union Bank, on Friday, posted 12 per cent growth in year-on-year net profit to ₹173 crore for the quarter ended June 30. The bank posted a net profit of ₹154 crore in the corresponding quarter a year ago.

The bank’s operating profit grew 8 per cent to ₹383.02 crore in Q1FY22 from ₹356.04 crore for the same quarter last year.

Total income dropped marginally to ₹1,193.08 crore (against ₹1,209.95 crore) during the April-June quarter while interest income fell to ₹997.43 (from ₹1,049.36 crore).

An asset quality evaluation of the bank showed some strain with the gross non-performing asset (GNPA) ratio increasing to 5.59 per cent in the June quarter from 3.90 per cent a year ago. NPA ratio also went up to 3.49 per cent (from 2.11 per cent).

The total business of the bank grew by 7 per cent to ₹81,001 crore (from ₹75,562 crore) while deposits grew by 9 per cent to ₹44,606 crore and advances increased by 5 per cent to ₹36,395 crore.

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PNB eyes ₹4,000-6,000 cr net profit in FY’21-22: CEO

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Punjab National Bank (PNB) expects its net profit for the current fiscal to be around ₹ 4,000-6,000 crore, S.S.Mallikarjuna Rao, Managing Director & CEO, said on Tuesday. This guidance is significant as the bank had closed fiscal 2020-21 with a net profit of ₹ 2,022 crore.

Rao said that he expects over 50 per cent of this guided net profit for 2021-22 to be contributed by write-back of provisions made on NPAs (bank has over 80 per cent provision coverage ratio).

The bottomline will also be bolstered by cost optimisation and branch rationalisation exercise the bank will continue to undertake this fiscal. PNB, which had rationalised (merged) over 380 branches in Q1, is looking to rationalise about 1000 branches by March end this fiscal and go in for setting up new smaller sized branches that are more digitally driven and expand in regions like South and Western India where PNB is not that strong in terms of branch distribution and needs to be strengthened, Rao said at a virtual press conference post the declaration of Q1 results of the bank.

This rationalisation is expected to give huge reduction in operational expenditure for PNB and thereby gain synergies out of the three-way amalgamation with United Bank of India and Oriental Bank of Commerce that comes into force from April 1 next year, he said.

75% hike in profit

PNB on Monday evening reported a 75 per cent increase in standalone net profit for the first quarter ended June 30 at ₹1,023.46 crore as against net profit of ₹586.33 crore in the March quarter. On a year-on-year basis, net profit grew 232 per cent when compared to net profit of ₹ 308.45 crore net profit recorded in the June quarter last year.

Going forward, Rao said that PNB expects to make cash recovery of ₹5,000 crore from NCLT itself this fiscal and reduce debt of ₹12,000 crore. “Apart from that, we get normal recovery ₹ 3,000 crore every quarter as normal recovery. So I am expecting cash recovery of ₹14,000 crore and much higher debt reduction of ₹ 20,000- 22,000 crore”, he said.

Also read: PNB Q1 net up 75% sequentially to ₹1,023 crore

For the quarter under review, PNB made recoveries of about ₹8,000 crore including realisation of ₹1,000 crore from the grounded Kingfisher Airlines.

Rao said that he expects credit growth to pick up from second quarter. The credit growth is expected to improve in the next three quarters compared to what has been so far this year and the bank expects overall credit growth to be 8-10 per cent this fiscal. PNB is looking to bring down its net NPA below 5 per cent by end March 2022.

Valuation controversy

Asked on the recent valuation controversy on PNB Housing Finance, a company in which PNB holds about 32 per cent stake, Rao said that he would wait for the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) to come out with its order and then on the basis of that order the housing finance lender as well as PNB will look at various options. “This issue is a matter of interpretation of law. This can be put to conclusion decisively only by judiciary, non-judiciary and regulator. We are awaiting judgement of SAT and we are bound to follow the judgement given by SAT. I do not want to presuppose what kind of order will come and we will take a call only after the SAT order comes. We will go by the SAT order both in letter and spirit”, Rao said.

He made it clear that PNB had not asked PNB Housing to reconsider the Carlyle deal, but only asked the housing finance lender to follow the directions specified in SEBI’s letter to PNB Housing. “ It’s not a question of going diametrically opposite of what has been done in the deal. We (PNB) have only told them (PNB Housing) that SEBI’s communication to PNB Housing may be looked into in terms of reconstruction of the entire process. This is now in the domain of SAT and we will wait for the SAT order”, he said.

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Tamil Nadu Grama Bank reports ₹185 cr profit in FY21

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Salem-headquartered Tamil Nadu Grama Bank, regional rural bank sponsored by Indian Bank, has reported a net profit of ₹185 crore for the year ended March 31, 2021 when compared with ₹150 crore in FY20, registering a growth of 23 per cent.

Interest income of the bank, which is now an amalgamated entity of Pallavan Grama Bank and Pandyan Grama Bank, was higher at ₹1,544.88 crore when compared with ₹1,434.30 crore in FY20. Total income of the bank stood at ₹1,824.37 crore (₹1,713.33 crore). Provisions and contingencies were lower at ₹278.25 crore (₹288.80 crore). Total expenditure stood at ₹1,639.86 crore (₹1,563.71 crore).

“Even in this adverse pandemic situation, the bank booked an operating profit of ₹462.76 crore, which is an increase of 5.55% over previous year, according to a statement.

Total business of the bank grew by ₹5,829.36 crore to ₹30,578.05 crore for FY21. Deposits stood at ₹14,858.82 crore and gross advances were at ₹15,719.23 crore when compared with ₹12,463,38 and ₹11,749.18 crore respectively in FY20.

CRAR of the bank stood at 12.21% as of March 31, 2021. Priority sector advances stood at ₹15,033.11 crore, constituting 95.64% of the total advances.

Net NPA fell to 0.57 % to the total loan outstanding in FY21 from 0.87% of previous year.

“TNGB undertakes various measures for delivering the benefit of various government schemes to the rural population of Tamil Nadu in addition to normal banking services,” S Selvaraj, Chairman of the bank said in the statement.

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Equitas Small Finance Bank’s Q1 net profit drops 79%

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Equitas Small Finance Bank has reported a 79 per cent drop in net profit to ₹11.93 crore in the first quarter as against a net of ₹57.67 crore for the same quarter last year. The bank said the Profit After Tax was affected due to provisions made on restructured accounts.

The Bank has restructured loans amounting to ₹400.48 crore as of June 30, 2021; ₹496.52 crore in July 2021 and has made a provision of ₹110.51 crore against these restructuring under Resolution Framework 2.0

“The Bank primarily caters to small retailers and transporters engaged in daily use products. During the quarter due to lockdowns and other Covid related restrictions, cash flows of these small retailers had been significantly impacted,” said PN Vasudevan, MD and CEO of Equitas Small Finance Bank.

Net Interest Income for Q1FY22 stood at ₹461 crore (₹404 crore) while net interest margin stood at 7.87 per cent. Total income of the bank grew by 23 per cent to ₹922.59 crore ( ₹750.96 crore).

Total advances as of Q1FY22 stood at ₹17,837 crore, growing at 15 per cent Y-o-Y while deposits (excluding CDs) stood at ₹17,021 crore with a Y-o-Y growth rate of 48 per cent.

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UBI net profit soars by 255% at ₹1,181 cr

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Union Bank of India (UBI) soared 255 per cent year-on-year (yoy) in the first quarter standalone net profit at ₹1,181 crore on the back of robust growth in other income.

The Bank had reported a net profit of ₹333 crore in the year ago quarter.

In the first quarter ended June 30, 2021, net interest income (NII) was up about 9.50 per cent yoy to ₹7,013 crore (₹6,403 crore in the year ago quarter). 

Other income, comprising income from activities such as commission, fees, earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, profit and loss from sale of investment and recoveries from written off accounts, jumped 98 per cent yoy to  ₹2,901 crore (₹1,462 crore). 

Slippages in the reporting quarter were higher at  ₹7,049 crore (₹1,750 crore in the year ago quarter). MSMEs accounted for 45 per cent of the total slippages, followed by ”large corporate & others” and agriculture (about 20 per cent) and retail loans account (15 per cent).  

Loan loss provisions nudged up a tad to ₹2,492 crore (₹2,451 crore). Standard assets provisions soared 167 per cent to ₹1,096 crore (₹410 crore).

Rajkiran Rai G, MD & CEO, said the Bank expects reduction in gross non-performing assets (NPAs) through recovery & upgradation at ₹13,000 crore, including ₹5,600 crore via the National Company Law Tribunal route, in FY22. In the reporting quarter, the recovery & upgradation was at ₹4,341 crore.

The Bank identified 17 accounts aggregating about ₹7,700 crore so far to transfer to the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd.

Gross NPAs declined to 13.60 per cent of gross advances as at June-end 2021 against 14.95 per cent as at June-end 2020.

Net NPA position, however, improved to 4.69 per cent of net advances as at June-end 2021 against 4.97 per cent as at June-end 2020.

Total deposits increased by 1.79 per cent yoy to ₹9,08,528 crore, with low-cost current account, savings account (CASA) deposits proportion in domestic deposits rising to 36.39 per cent from 33.30 per cent as on June-end 2020. 

Gross advances declined 0.77 per cent yoy to ₹6,45,091 crore. Within this, domestic advances edged up 0.16 per cent yoy to ₹6,30,237 crore and overseas advances declining 29 per cent yoy to ₹14,854 crore.

Global net interest margin rose to 3.08 per cent from 2.78 per cent in the year ago quarter.

 

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Dhanlaxmi Bank posts 11% rise in net profit at ₹6.79 cr in Q1 of FY21

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Dhanlaxmi Bank has registered 11.5 per cent increase in its net profit at ₹6.79 crore in Q1 of current fiscal.

The operating profit for the quarter stood at ₹8.89 crore. The total business reached ₹18,575 crore as on June 30 from ₹17,847 crore as on June 30, 2020, registering growth of 4.08 per cent.

A press statement here said that total deposits recorded growth of 4.94 per cent to ₹11,658 crore as on June 30, from ₹11,109 crore. CASA grew by 15.61 per cent to ₹3,859 crore from ₹3,338 crore.

Gross advance improved to ₹6,917 crore from ₹6,738 crore. Retail advance grew by 14 per cent and reached ₹3,560 crore. Gold loans improved by 37 per cent and reached ₹1,822 crore.

CRAR improved to 14.57 per cent as on June 30, against 13.94 per cent as on June 30, 2020.

Return on Assets improved to 0.21 per cent against 0.20 per cent. Return on Equity improved to 3.13 per cent against 2.93 per cent. Book Value of shares as on June 30 was ₹34.42.

The bank will continue the focus on retail advances including gold loans and SME advances, NPA recovery, CASA deposit growth and non- interest income would be the thrust areas, the statement added.

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Canara Bank reports 190% net profit jump in Q1

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Canara Bank reported a 190 per cent jump in first quarter net profit at ₹1,177 crore on the back of a robust non-interest income and decline in loan loss provisions.

The Bengaluru-headquartered public sector bank had reported a net profit of ₹406 crore in the year ago period.

Net interest income (the difference between interest earned and interest expended) was a tad higher at ₹6,147 crore ( ₹6,096 crore in the year ago quarter) as the decline in interest expenses was much more than the reduction in interest earned.

Non-interest income, comprising fee-based income, trading income and recovery in written-off accounts rose 67 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) to ₹4,438 crore ( ₹2,650 crore).

Fee-based income was boosted due to the sale of 1,20 lakh units under Priority Sector Lending Certificates (PSLCs), and earned the bank a commission income of ₹699 crore. Recovery in written-off accounts soared 132 per cent y-o-y to ₹600 crore ( ₹259 crore).

Fresh slippages in the reporting quarter were higher at ₹4,253 crore against ₹1,422 crore in the year ago quarter. However, slippages were lower vis-a-vis January-March 2021 quarter at ₹14,495 crore.

Net interest margin (net interest income/ average interest earning assets) was lower at 2.71 per cent as at June-end 2021 against 2.84 per cent as at June-end 2020.

Gross non-performing assets (GNPA) position improved to 8.50 per cent of gross advances against 8.84 per cent. Net NPA level also improved to 3.46 per cent of net advances against 3.95 per cent.

As at June-end 2021, global deposits increased by about 12 per cent y-o-y to ₹10,21,837 crore. Global advances were up 5 per cent y-o-y to ₹6,84,585 crore, with domestic advances growing but overseas advances shrinking.

For FY22, the bank has given a guidance of 8.20 per cent growth in global deposits and 7.50 per cent growth in global advances. It has guided for a GNPA (global) of 7.90 per cent, net NPA (global) of 2.80 per cent and NIM of 2.75 per cent.

The bank expects to raise ₹9,000 crore via qualified institutions placement ( ₹2,500 crore), Additional Tier-I Bonds ( ₹4,000 crore) and Tier-II Bonds ( ₹2,500 crore).

Canara Bank’s shares closed at ₹148.80 apiece, up 1.47 per cent over the previous close on BSE.

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Kotak Mahindra Bank Q1 net profit up 32%

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Kotak Mahindra Bank reported a 31.9 per cent jump in standalone net profit for the quarter ended June 30 at ₹1,641.92 crore compared to ₹1,244.45 crore in the same period last fiscal.

Total income grew 4.9 per cent to ₹8,062.81 crore (₹7,685.4 crore).

Net interest income increased 5.8 per cent to ₹3,942 crore (₹3,724 crore).

Net interest margin for the first quarter was at 4.6 per cent versus 4.4 per cent a year ago.

Other income more than doubled to ₹1,583.03 crore (₹773.54 crore). Of this, fee income surged 50.6 per cent to ₹1,169 crore on an annual basis.

Provisions declined marginally to ₹934.77 crore in the first quarter from ₹962.01 crore a year ago.

“Covid related provisions as of June 30 were maintained at ₹1,279 crore,” the bank said in a statement on Monday.

Total restructuring

In accordance with the Resolution Framework for Covid-19 and MSME announced by RBI, the bank implemented total restructuring of ₹552 crore as of June 30against ₹435 crore as on March 31, .

Covid related restructuring in the first round was about ₹226 crore while it was very less in the second round.

The lender faced headwinds in terms of asset quality deterioration amidst the second wave of the pandemic. Gross non-performing assets rose to ₹7,931.77 crore or 3.56 per cent of gross advances as on June 30, 2021 compared to 2.7 per cent a year ago.

Dipak Gupta, Joint Managing Director, Kotak Mahindra Bank, said there were challenges in terms of the ability of customers to pay as well as customers who could not be reached in time and moved into NPAs.

“Collections have normalised in June and July. We expect a reasonable number of customers, who couldn’t be reached for collections, to start payments,” he said.

Net NPAs were also elevated at 1.28 per cent of net advances as against 0.87 per cent as on June 30, 2020.

Capital adequacy ratio of the bank as per Basel III norms as of June 30, was 23.1 per cent and Tier-I ratio was 22.2 per cent.

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