Robust Q1 earnings could brighten growth picture, says Axis Bank chief economist, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: The million-dollar question on every Indian economist’s mind is when the country shall return on a path of sustainable growth after the deep scars left by the COVID-19 crisis.

Saugata Bhattacharya, chief economist at Axis Bank, and a veteran when it comes to analysing the vicissitudes of economic cycles, believes that the proverbial glass is half full rather than half empty when it comes to India’s GDP growth.

“There are a few developments which could lend some upside to the forecast. First is the way the NSO estimates growth in the initial rounds. The Advance Estimates are constructed with significant inputs from corporate results,” Bhattacharya said in an interview with ETMarkets.com

“The financial results of manufacturing and services companies are adjusted with GDP deflators to arrive at real growth estimates. Obviously there are other quantity based indicators like IIP, freight, etc. which are also inputs. But a large contribution to the estimates comes from the corporate results. And corporate results in Q1 seem to be quite robust .Based on this, our sense is there might be an upside to this estimate of growth.”

The RBI has projected GDP growth of 9.5 per cent for the financial year 2021-22.

As the experience of the last year (and the myriad of growth downgrades emanating from entities like the RBI to the IMF) has shown, forecasting India’s growth amid a Black Swan event like COVID is no easy task.

Bhattacharya, however, bases his view on an analysis of certain high-frequency indicators.

“… signs from high-frequency indicators we track suggest that recovery has been better and deeper than what we had initially estimated,” he said.

“Automobile sales and numbers on the consumer durables – suggest demand resilience.”

The veteran economist did, however, flag concerns about the revival prospects of a large grouping of smaller companies.

“We are grappling with how much the degree of economic scarring due to the pandemic might have been, including a potential drawdown of savings, permanent reduction in incomes, etc.,” he said.

Bhattacharya maintained that at the current juncture, the most that policymakers – who are admittedly in a bind – can do is deal with the problems at hand at present, while prioritising the public health situation.

“The other economic variables are more exogenous. Be it inflation, funds flows, etc, much of those things are relatively exogenous to their control, the only thing really that policymakers, public health policy particularly, can control is vaccination.”



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Net profit rises 94% YoY, misses estimate; NII rises 11%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Axis Bank today reported a 94 per cent year-on-year rise in net profit to Rs. 2,160 crore for the quarter ended June, which was above analysts’ estimate.

The lender reported a 11 per cent on-year growth in net interest income to Rs. 7,760 crore in the reported quarter, which was also below Street’s estimate.

The lender saw a marked deterioration in its asset quality in the quarter likely due to the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic. The gross non-performing assets ratio stood at 3.85 per cent in the June quarter as against 3.7 per cent in the previous quarter.

Similarly, the net NPA ratio rose to 1.2 per cent in the quarter from 1.05 per cent in the previous quarter. The lender’s gross slippages in the quarter jumped 23 per cent sequentially to Rs. 6,518 crore and was nearly three times from the year-ago quarter.

As on June 30, the bank’s provision coverage, as a proportion of gross NPAs stood at 70 per cent, as compared to 75 per cent in the year-ago quarter and 72 per cent in the previous quarter.



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ICICI Bank shares hit 52-week high post Q1 earnings

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New Delhi, July 26 Shares of ICICI Bank on Monday gained over 1 per cent and touched 52-week high on the bourses after the company’s June quarter net profit zoomed 52 per cent. The stock rose by 1.29 per cent to ₹685.40 — its 52-week high — on the BSE. At the NSE, it gained 1.30 per cent to ₹685.45 — its 52-week high.

Profits driven by lower provisions

ICICI Bank’s June quarter net profit zoomed 52 per cent to ₹4,747.42 crore, driven majorly by lower provisions but reported an increase in stress from the retail loans segment.

On a standalone basis, the second-largest private sector lender by assets posted a net profit of ₹4,616.02 crore for the reporting quarter, up by 77 per cent when compared with the national lockdown-hit April-June period of FY21. The earnings were announced on Saturday.

The gross NPAs came at 5.15 per cent against 4.96 per cent in the quarter-ago period and 5.46 per cent in the year-ago period.

Also read: ICICI Bank Q1 net profit zooms 78% to ₹4,616 crore

The provision line saw some activity in the reporting quarter, including a change in accounting norms to be more conservative which led to ₹1,127 crore additional impact and a write-back of ₹1,050 crore from Covid provisions as the bank grew more confident of the overall asset quality situation exiting the quarter with a ₹6,425 crore buffer.

The overall provisions came at ₹2,852 crore, nearly a third of the ₹7,594 crore set aside for the year-ago period despite an increase in the gross non-performing assets (NPA) ratio.

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PAT surges 355% YoY to Rs 207 cr, highest in 10 quarters, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: YES Bank today reported a 355.2 per cent year-on-year rise in its net profit to Rs 207 crore for the quarter ended June, the highest quarterly profit since December 2018. Analysts had expected the lender to report a net loss.

The strong bottomline performance of the lender was aided by a 41 per cent on-year fall in provisions during the reported quarter.

The lender’s net interest income in the quarter slumped 26.5 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1,402 crore, which was below Street’s expectations.

YES Bank’s gross non-performing loans ratio rose to 15.6 per cent in the June quarter from 15.41 per cent in the previous quarter. However, net NPA ratio declined sequentially to 5.78 per cent. YES Bank’s provision coverage ratio also saw a sequential improvement to 79.3 per cent in the quarter.

Gross non-performing loans in the quarter stood at Rs 28,506 crore, which was slightly lower than the previous quarter. Cash recoveries continued to show positive momentum at Rs 602 crore in the quarter.

While the overall advances fell 1 per cent in the June quarter, the lender reported 23 per cent growth in its retail and small businesses loan book that was above its full-year guidance of 20 per cent. The current account-savings account ratio improved to 27.4 per cent and remained on-track to meet the lender’s guidance of more than 30 per cent in 2021-22.

YES Bank’s operating performance in the quarter was disappointing as operating profit sank 20 per cent on-year to Rs 920 crore, which was the highest in several quarters. The net interest margin in the quarter was at 2.1 per cent as against 3 per cent in the year-ago quarter.

Shares of YES Bank ended 0.8 per cent higher at Rs 13.1 on the National Stock Exchange.



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CSB Bank Q1 net rises 14%; asset quality deteriorates

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Net interest income of the lender is seen higher by 44.5% y-o-y at Rs 267.8 crore for Q1. (Picture courtesy: IE)

CSB Bank on Thursday reported a 14% year-on-year increase in its first quarter net profit to Rs 61 crore, even as bad loans surged in the gold loan portfolio. The Thrissur-based lender had reported a net profit of Rs 53.56 crore in Q1 of FY21 and a net profit of Rs 42.89 crore in the fourth quarter of the previous fiscal.

The asset quality of the lender deteriorated, with gross non-performing assets (NPA) as a percentage of gross advances standing at 4.88% for Q1FY22, from 2.68% in the preceding quarter and 3.51% in the year-ago period. Net NPA as a percentage of gross advances was at 3.21%, against 1.17 % in the preceding quarter and 1.74% in the first quarter of FY21.

CVR Rajendran, managing director and CEO, said the bank is confident of managing NPAs as the challenges are mainly from the gold segment where recovery is only a matter of time.

Fresh slippages in the quarter under review was seen at Rs 435 crore, of which Rs 337 crore was from gold loans. The gross NPA at the end of Q1 stood at Rs 686 crore, against Rs 401 crore in the year-ago period.

“COVID second wave, coupled with the LTV management of gold loans, did pose some challenges in the first quarter of FY 22. Lockdowns, alternate holidays, slowing down of the economic activity, controlled movements due to strict social distancing norms, lack of transport, etc restricted the customer access to branches, which in turn impacted both fresh pledges and releases. Thankfully, the worse seems to be over now and recoveries are happening in full swing,” he added.

Net interest income of the lender is seen higher by 44.5% y-o-y at Rs 267.8 crore for Q1. Provision coverage is seen lower at 70.20% as on June 31, 2021, compared with 81.73% in the year-ago period.

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