CSB Bank posts 72pc rise in Q2 net profit at Rs 118 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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CSB Bank on Monday reported a 72 per cent jump in net profit at Rs 118.57 crore in the second quarter ended September. The Kerala-based private sector lender had reported a net profit of Rs 68.90 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal.

Total income during July-September in FY22 rose to Rs 555.64 crore, as against Rs 513.77 crore in the year-ago quarter, CSB Bank said in a regulatory filing.

On the asset front, the bank’s non-performing assets (NPAs) rose to 4.11 per cent of the gross advances as of September 2021, as against 3.04 per cent a year ago.

In absolute terms, gross NPAs stood at Rs 586.83 crore, higher than Rs 387.42 crore.

Net NPAs or bad loans stood at 2.63 per cent (Rs 370 crore) as against 1.30 per cent (Rs 163.52 crore).

Stock of CSB Bank traded 1.41 per cent up at Rs 310.10 apiece on BSE. PTI KPM RUJ RUJ

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Know how banks, financials performed this week, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indian equity market witnessed volatility during the week, with domestic benchmark indices ending in the red in four out of five sessions. The Nifty50 on Friday closed at 18,114, with more than 1% weekly loss, but investors were prompt to take corrections as a buying opportunity.

The Nifty Bank remained the star performer, crossing the 40,000-mark, with more upside to come in banks. Banks, including PSU banks, were the main sectoral gainers while FMCG, Metals, Realty, Pharma and Auto were the largest losers.

According to experts, immediate support for Nifty50 is coming near the 18,000-mark. If the index manages to hold above the mark, the market can expect a swift pullback. Meanwhile, resistance is seen near 18,250-18,350.

Festival demand outlook, Jul-Sep earnings data backed by recovery in economic activity, vaccination numbers crossing 1 bln mark, developments around Asian markets, healthy FPIs and exports data, strong industrial production data, developments around the US economy, inflation fears, global energy crisis, were key driving factors this week.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Monday Closing bell: Market closes higher for seventh session, Nifty PSU Bank gaining nearly 4%

Extending their winning streak into seventh straight session, Indian indices ended with record gains on Monday, led by banks and financial stocks. The Sensex hit a record high of 61,963, while Nifty touched an all-time high of 18,525 intraday.

At the end of the day’s trade, the Sensex settled 0.75% higher at 61,765, while Nifty50 added 0.76% to close at 18,477. The broader market was positive, with midcap and smallcap stocks also clocking stellar gains.

The Nifty PSU Bank outperformed with nearly 4% gains to close at 2,824. The Nifty Bank index also ended the day with strong gains and ended 0.87% higher at 39,864, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.46% higher at 19,034. Most of the banking stocks had a good run on Monday after strong numbers posted by HDFC Bank.

Tuesday Closing bell: Dalal Street closes in red, snaps seven-day winning streak

Sensex, Nifty witnessed a volatile session on Tuesday, ending in the red after having touched fresh all-time highs earlier in the day. At the closing bell, S&P BSE Sensex finished 0.08% lower at 61,716, while NSE Nifty 50 ended the day at 18,418, down from an intraday high of 18,604.

Broader markets fared worse than the benchmark indices to end deep in the red as Nifty Midcap 50 closed 2.22% lower, while the Smallcap 50 was down 1.47%

The Nifty Bank index touched 40,000 intraday but closed 0.36% lower at 39,540, while Nifty Financial Services ended flat with positive bias to close 0.18% higher at 19,068. After gaining nearly 4% in the previous session, Nifty PSU Bank Index ended 3.74% lower on Tuesday.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

Wednesday Closing bell: Bears pull down benchmark indices, Bank Nifty close flat with marginal losses

Domestic equity indices continued to fall for the second consecutive session on Wednesday amid heightened volatility. S&P BSE Sensex 0.74% lower at 61,259, while the NSE Nifty 50 index fell 0.83% to settle at 18,266.

In broader markets, the BSE Midcap index shed 1.9% to close at 25,915, and the Smallcap index tumbled 2.3% to end at 28,879.

The trend remained largely negative, with only PSU bank indices closing in the green, up 1.54%. Bank Nifty closed flat with marginal loss of 0.6% at 39,518, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.58% lower at 18,957. SBI, IndusInd Bank, and Bajaj Finance were the top gainers on the Nifty50 index while Bajaj Finserv was among the top laggards.

Thursday Closing bell: Market ends flat with negative bias, banks and financials outperform

A flat recovery, led by select financial shares, helped key benchmark indices recoup some of their losses. BSE Sensex fell over from the day’s high to end below the 61,000-mark at 60,923. The Nifty50 also oscillated between 18,384 and 18,048 during the day before signing off at 18,178.

The broader markets moved in tandem, with the BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices falling 0.4% and 0.7%, respectively.

The Nifty Bank index, meanwhile, ended 1.3% higher at 40,030 after hitting a new record high of 40,200 intra day, while Nifty Financial Services gained 1.22%, closing at 19,188. Kotak Mahindra Bank rallied 6.5% to close as the top Sensex gainer, followed by HDFC, ICICI Bank and SBI.

Stealing the show, Nifty PSU Bank index added nearly 3%, led by Union Bank of India, Indian Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, UCO Bank, and PNB.

Friday Closing bell: Markets end in red for fourth session, banks and financials fare well

Bulls attempted to make a comeback during the early trade on Friday but failed to hold their ground, forcing Dalal Street to close in the red for the fourth day running.

At close, S&P BSE Sensex fell 0.17% to close at 60,821 while NSE Nifty 50 dropped 0.35% to end at 18,114. Midcap and small-cap indices fared worse than largecap peers, lossing more than 1% each.

Bank Nifty index continued to outperform , closing at 40,323, up 0.73%, while Nifty Financial Services closed 0.59% higher at 19,302. Nifty PSU Bank ended the day with a loss of 0.47%.

HDFC was the top Sensex gainer, jumping 2.25%, followed by IndusInd Bank, and Kotak Mahindra Bank. PNB, Power Finance and Chola Invest were among top drags.

Banks and financial services- September quarter results

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

HDFC Bank: the bank on Saturday reported a standalone net profit of Rs 8,834 crore, up 18% from Rs 7,513 in the year-ago period. Core operating profits came at Rs 15,131.8 crore, up 18.24% YoY and 4.1% Q-o-Q.

HDFC Bank’s net interest income (NII) plus other incomes increased by 14.7% to Rs 25,085.2 crore. GNPAs were at 1.35% of gross advances as on September 30, 2021, as against 1.47% as on June 30, 2021.

Provisions came down 18.8% at Rs 3924.7 crore. The bank’s loans grew 15.5% from a year ago, about three times the banking sector’s rate.

Federal Bank: Private sector lender reported a near 50% jump in net profit for the September quarter on lower provisions and improvement in asset quality even as its total income shrunk.

The net profit stood at Rs 460 crore compared with Rs 308 crore in the year-ago period. Total income fell about 3 per cent at Rs 3,824 crore from Rs 3,937 crore.

Operating profit fell by about 9% at Rs 865 crore from Rs 947 crore over the same period. However, a 54% lower provisions at Rs 245 crore helped the net profit surge.

YES Bank: The bank today reported a 74.3% y-o-y growth in net profit to Rs 225 crore for the said quarter against analysts’ expectations of a Rs 31 crore net loss.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

The NII fell 23.4% y-o-y to Rs 1,512 crore. The healthy bottomline performance of the lender was thanks to a sharp decline in provisions. YES Bank’s provisions for bad loans declined 65% to Rs 377 crore.

GNPAs ratio fell to 15% from 15.6% in the previous quarter. Similarly, net NPA ratio came in at 5.5% as against 5.8% in the previous quarter.

Bank of Maharashtra: Net profit jumps 103 % to Rs 264 cr. The bank’s recovery from written-off accounts stood at Rs 340 crore, including Rs 258 from the DHFL resolution. Net interest margin (NIM) improved to 3.27%, GNPA declined 5.56% and Provision coverage ratio improved to 92.38%.

Banks’ recovery and up-gradation stood at Rs 645 crore from Rs 556 crore last year around the same time.

IDBI Bank: The bank on Thursday reported a 75% jump in net profit to Rs 567 crore from Rs 324 crore in the same period of the last fiscal. The NII grew 9% to Rs 1,854 crore, NIM improved to 3.02%, compared to 2.70% in the second quarter last fiscal.

Bank’s GNPAs declined to 20.92% against 25.08% a year ago. Net NPAs improved 1.62% from 2.67%. Provisions for bad loans and contingencies also rose to Rs 434 crore.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

HDFC Life Insurance: The life insurer on Friday announced a 15.9% fall in its consolidated net profit to Rs 274.16 crore in Jul-Sep, as against Rs 326.09 crore a year ago.

Total income, however, rose to Rs 20,478 crore against Rs 16,426 crore a year ago, while the net premium income increased by 52% to Rs 11,445 crore from Rs 10,056 crore, the insurer said in a regulatory filing.

Value of new business (VNB) recorded a robust 30% growth to Rs 1,086 crore over last year. Profit after tax on the other hand stood at Rs 577 crore for H1, 26% lower than H1 FY21.

LIC Housing Finance:
Net profit for the said quarter fell 69% at Rs 248 crore as compared with Rs 791 crore in the year-ago period. NIM for the quarter dipped to 2 per cent as against 2.20% in the June quarter.

The company’s total income for the quarter was lower at Rs 4,715 crore as compared to Rs 4,982 crore during the year-ago period. The NII was Rs 1,173 crore as against Rs 1,238 crore.

Its total loan portfolio stood at Rs 2.38 lakh crore registering an 1% y-o-y growth. During the quarter, total disbursements grew 29%. Retail home loan disbursements grew 38%.

Weekly Market wrap up: Know how banks, financials performed this week

L&T Finance Holdings: The company on Wednesday reported a 10% decline in its consolidated net profit to Rs 223 crore. Total income fell to Rs 3,134.46 crore as against Rs 3,508.91 crore during the year-ago period.

Rural finance business saw the highest-ever Q2 disbursement at Rs 4,987 crore, a jump of 51% quarter-on-quarter. The total disbursements in the quarter stood at Rs 7,339 crore.

GNPAs stood at 5.74% during the quarter, amounting to Rs 4,796 crore. Debt-to-equity ratio stood at 4.40 in Q2FY22. Capital adequacy improved to 25.16%.



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Federal Bank Q2 consolidated net profit jumps 55 pc to Rs 488 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Private sector lender Federal Bank on Friday reported nearly 55 per cent jump in its consolidated net profit at Rs 488 crore for the second quarter of this fiscal ended September 30. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 315.70 crore in the year-ago period.

Total income (consolidated) during the July-September period of 2021-22, however, was down at Rs 4,013.46 crore, as against Rs 4,071.35 crore in the same period of 2020-21, Federal Bank said in a regulatory filing.

The bank’s asset quality showed an impairment with the gross non-performing assets (NPAs or bad loans) rising to 3.22 per cent of the gross advances as of September 30, 2021 from 2.80 per cent in the year-ago period.

Likewise, the net NPAs were also higher at 1.15 per cent as against 0.99 per cent.

In absolute value, the gross NPAs stood at Rs 4,558.19 crore by the end of September 2021 quarter, up from Rs 3,591.72 crore in the corresponding period a year ago.

Value of net NPAs were at Rs 1,595.78 crore, up from Rs 1,249.85 crore.

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies for the reported quarter came down to Rs 264.53 crore, from Rs 565.46 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Shares of Federal Bank were trading at Rs 100.80 apiece on BSE, up 4.40 per cent from the previous close.



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IDBI Bank Q2 net profit jumps 75% to ₹ 567 cr on NII growth

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IDBI Bank on Thursday reported a 75 per cent jump in its standalone profit after tax to ₹ 567 crore in the second quarter ended September 30, on higher interest income.

The LIC-owned bank had reported a standalone profit after tax of ₹ 324 crore in the year-ago quarter.

“Overall, there has been improvement in the bank’s performance parameters. The cost of deposits has come down to 3.60 per cent as of September 30, 2021, from 4.41 per cent last year. Similarly, cost of funds has also declined from 4.73 per cent to 3.88 per cent,” the bank’s Managing Director and CEO Rakesh Sharma told reporters.

The bank has managed to contain its operating expenses and maintain yield on advances almost at the same level, he added.

The lender’s Chief Financial Officer P Sitaram further said the rise in profit during the quarter was on account of higher net interest income, lower tax provisions and reduction in the employee cost.

Net interest income (NII) improved by 9 per cent to ₹ 1,854 crore against ₹ 1,694 crore.

Net interest margin (NIM) improved by 32 bps to 3.02 per cent compared to 2.70 per cent in the year-ago quarter.

NPAs and slippages

The lender also witnessed improvement in its asset quality, with the gross NPA ratio reducing to 20.92 per cent from 25.08 per cent.

Net NPAs improved to 1.62 per cent as of September 30, 2021, against 2.67 per cent a year ago.

Provision coverage ratio (including technical write-offs) improved to 97.27 per cent as of September 30, 2021, from 95.96 per cent in the same quarter of the previous fiscal.

Fresh slippages during the quarter stood at ₹ 1,438 crore.

Recovery during the quarter stood at ₹ 1,788 crore, which includes ₹ 1,436 crore of recovery in normal accounts.

Sharma said the lender recovered ₹ 200 crore from the resolution of DHFL.

The bank has an exposure of less than ₹ 400 crore to Srei Group, which has turned into NPA. It has made 100 per cent provision on the account, he said.

Capital to Risk (Weighted) Assets Ratio (CRAR) improved to 16.59 per cent as of September 30, 2021, compared to 13.67 per cent as of September 30 last year.

The lender is targeting its credit cost and net slippages ratio to be below 1.75 per cent and 3 per cent, respectively, during this fiscal.

Sharma said the bank has been able to meet its guidance on various financial parameters, except on growth, which it has targeted to be at eight to 10 per cent this year.

“Although we have started showing some increase, we are falling short of our eight to 10 per cent (growth) target. In the mid-corporate and large corporate, enough sanctions have been given, but the disbursements have not taken place so far,” he said.

Sharma, however, said he is quite hopeful that by the year-end, the bank will be able to achieve all the guidance it has given in the past.

The bank’s scrip closed at ₹ 55.60 apiece on BSE, down 2.03 per cent from the previous close.

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Net profit drops but disbursements improve, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: L&T Finance Holdings (L&T Finance) the non-banking finance company of the engineering to IT group reported a 10 per cent fall in net profit year on year as its loan book shrunk even as collections and disbursements improved in the second quarter ended September 2021.

Net profit dropped to Rs 223 crore in the quarter ended September 2021 from Rs 248 crore a year ago largely due to a 12 per cent fall in interest income to Rs 2903 crore from Rs 3282 crore a year ago.

Interest income fell as the company’s loan book shrunk an identical 12 per cent to Rs 86,936 crore from Rs 98,823 crore led by a 21 per cent fall in real estate finance and a 19 per cent fall in infrastructure finance. Compared to the first quarter ended June 2021, the loan book fell 2 per cent. To be sure, the company is refocussing its business towards rural and retail housing away from infrastructure and real estate finance.

CEO Dinanath Dubhashi said the second wave of the Covid pandemic as well as skewed monsoon have had an impact on the business environment in the second quarter, though some businesses have seen a strong pick up in the quarter.

“L&T Finance’s rural finance business had its best-ever Q2 disbursement and witnessed normalisation in collections and disbursements,” Dubhashi said adding that he expects disbursements to further pick up in the rest of the fiscal.

In the second quarter, rural finance saw the highest ever disbursement at Rs. 4,987 crore, up 51 per cent from June 2021 leading total disbursements of Rs 7,339 crore in the quarter, led by financing for farm equipment, two-wheeler loans and microfinance.

In real estate finance, the company is now focussing on projects at an advanced stage of construction and disbursements in new proposals undertaken only for pre-approved top developers, while in infrastructure finance the focus is refinancing operational solar projects and funding of greenfield projects.

Collections too normalised across businesses to pre-pandemic levels led by data analytics, concerted field efforts and gradual unlocking of the economy, L&T Finance said.

The company is carrying additional provisions and one-time restructuring provisions of Rs. 1,747 crore which is 2.22 per cent of the standard book which is over and above its gross NPA provision.

The total gross NPA in absolute terms stood at Rs. 4,796 Cr or 5.74 per cent of loans up from 5.19 per cent a year ago but unchanged from 5.75 per cent reported in the quarter ended June 2021.

The company had liquid assets in the form of cash, fixed deposits and other liquid investments of Rs. 13,122 crore at the end of September 2021.



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