IOB nets Rs 213 crore profit; says it’s matter of time it comes out of PCA

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IOB, which was under Prompt Corrective Action (PCA), said it has been posting profits for four consecutive quarters and almost fulfilled all the requirements to come out of the PCA.

Chennai-based public sector lender Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) on Tuesday reported a net profit of Rs 212.87 crore for the third quarter of FY21 as compared to a net loss of Rs 6,075 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

The bank has recorded an increase of 11.3% in its total income to Rs 5,786.54 crore as against Rs 5,197.94 crore. IOB, which was under Prompt Corrective Action (PCA), said it has been posting profits for four consecutive quarters and almost fulfilled all the requirements to come out of the PCA.

Speaking to media persons after releasing the earning performance, through virtual mode, Partha Pratim Sengupta, MD & CEO, IOB, said the bank plans to come out of PCA by focusing on recovery, low-cost deposits and less capital consuming advances.

“For the last four quarters, we have been making profit consistently. When compared with Q3 performance of FY20, there was a marked improvement in all key parameters. It is a matter of time for us to exit PCA and is up to the regulator to decide,” he said.

IOB had received a capital infusion of over Rs 8,000 crore in two tranches during the last two quarters of the last financial year, which helped the loss-making bank restart the business with a clean slate. Coupled with recovery and asset-light advances, the bank could achieve profits during the last four quarters.

The MD said there has been perceptible change in NPA levels achieved through recovery measures.

“Currently, the bank has a carry forward loss of Rs 17,500 crore. Our aim is to recover at least Rs 1,000 crore per quarter. In the first quarter of FY21, we recovered about Rs 200 crore due to lockdown, followed by Rs.760 crore and Rs 1,055 crore, respectively. Going forward, the focus will be on recovery in excess of Rs 1,000 crore and it will add to our bottom line,” he said.

According to him, IOB has evolved a policy of not taking fresh exposures in stressed sectors while the bank had exited from accounts in the stressed sectors, wherever feasible.

During the quarter, gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) reduced to Rs 16,753 crore from Rs 23734 crore and stood at 12.19% as against 17.12% and net NPA was contained at Rs 3,905 crore, as compared to 7,087 crore, which was 3.13% as against 5.81%. The provision coverage ratio improved to 91.91% from 86.20%.

While interest income contracted to Rs 4,244 crore from Rs 4,352 crore, other income rose 82.36 % to Rs 1,542.82 crore. Net interest margin stood at 2.45%.

He said around Rs 18,000 crore worth NPAs are awaiting NCLT’s resolution, while Rs 3,000 crore assets was expected to be restructured.

IOB had board’s approval to raise up to Rs 5,500 crore capital. He said the bank needed only Rs3,000 crore and the timing of the issue will be decided at a later date.

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Concerns ahead despite good Q3 results

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Third quarter results of banks have indicated banks show a rise in net profit but concerns are evident ahead. Bank of Baroda reported a standalone net profit of ₹1,061 crore in the third quarter against a net loss of ₹1,407 crore in the year-ago quarter. Private sector lender ICICI Bank reported a 19.1 per cent increase in its standalone net profit in the third quarter of the fiscal at ₹4,939.59 crore.

The bank had a net profit of ₹4,146.46 crore in the same period last fiscal. However, Axis Bank reported a 36.4 per cent drop in its net profit in the third quarter this fiscal despite a robust rise in net interest income as provisions rose sharply. For the quarter ended December 31, 2020, Axis Bank’s standalone net profit stood at ₹1,116.60 crore as against ₹1,757 crore in the same period a year ago.

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Union Bank of India Q3 net up 41% QoQ at ₹727 crore

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Union Bank of India (UBI) reported a 41 per cent quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) jump in standalone net profit at ₹727 crore in the quarter ended December 31, 2020 against ₹517 crore in the quarter ended September 30, 2020.

The public sector bank said its results for the current quarter/nine-month are not comparable with the corresponding year-ago period as the amalgamation of Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank with UBI was effective from April 1, 2020.

The third quarter’s bottom line was supported by a ₹672 crore write-back in tax expenses and 31 per cent QoQ increase in other income.

Net interest income (the difference between interest earned and interest expended) was up 5 per cent QoQ at ₹6,590 crore (₹6,293 crore in the preceding quarter).

Other income, comprising total fee income, dividend income, trading gains, recovery from technically written-off accounts, was at ₹3,016crore (₹2,308 crore).

Non-performing asset loan provisions were down 18 per cent QoQ at ₹3,036 crore (₹3,721 crore).

GNPAs declined to 13.49 per cent of gross advances as at December-end 2020 against 14.71 per cent at September-end 2020.

Net NPAs declined to 3.27 per cent of net advances as at December-end 2020 against 4.13 per cent at September-end 2020.

With proforma slippages (adjusted for the Supreme Court’s interim order), Gross and Net NPA ratio would have been 15.28 per cent and 5.02 per cent, respectively.

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M&M Financial Services reports Q3 net loss of ₹223 crore

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Mahindra and Mahindra Financial Services reported a consolidated net loss of ₹223.18 crore in the third quarter of the fiscal year as against a net profit of ₹474.86 crore in the same period last fiscal.

Total income declined by three per cent to ₹2,993 crore during the quarter ended December 31, 2020, as against ₹3,081 crore during the corresponding quarter last year.

“During the quarter, there were certain segments of customers who did not participate in asset acquisition, and there was also non-availability of certain models leading to a drop in business. While the overall cash flows of the customer showed an improvement, the earnings have not yet returned to pre-Covid situation,” Mahindra Finance said in a statement on Thursday, adding that rural sentiments remain positive and it expects to benefit from the same during the fourth quarter.

The Gross Stage 3 levels stood at 9.99 per cent as at December 31, 2020, against 8.49 per cent as at corresponding reporting date last year. The Net Stage 3 levels stood at 6.57 per cent at the end of the third quarter this fiscal as against 6.67 per cent as at corresponding reporting date last year.

The Stage 3 provisioning coverage ratio stood at 36.6 per cent as at December 31, 2020, against 22.9 per cent as at corresponding reporting date last year.

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AU Small Finance Bank Q3 net profit up ₹479 crore

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AU Small Finance Bank’s net profit for the third quarter of the fiscal jumped up to ₹479.02 crore as against ₹190.19 crore a year ago.

For the quarter ended December 31, 2020, its net interest income surged by 25 per cent to ₹633 crore versus ₹507 crore a year ago.

Other income rose by 14 per cent to ₹184 crore in the quarter under review.

The bank’s provisions rose to ₹283.62 crore in the third quarter this fiscal from ₹40.1 crore a year ago.

Gross non-performing assets stood at one per cent of gross advances as on December 31, 2020 compared to 1.9 per cent as on December 31, 2019. Net NPAs stood at 0.2 per cent at the end of the third quarter this fiscal compared to one per cent a year ago.

“In the third quarter of the fiscal, AU Small Finance Bank restructured ₹ 251Cr (0.8 per cent of gross advances), mainly in the bus, taxi (within wheels) and schools, apparels. Overall restructured advances should stabilize at about 1.5 per cent of gross advances including a fresh restructuring that the bank may undertake in the fourth quarter this fiscal,” it said in a statement on Thursday.

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RBL Bank Q3 net profit surges to ₹147 crore

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RBL Bank’s net profit more than doubled in the third quarter of the fiscal year to ₹147.06 crore as against ₹69.95 crore in the same period last fiscal.

For the quarter ended December 31, 2020, its net interest income fell by two per cent to ₹908 crore against ₹923 crore a year ago.

Net interest margin also fell to 4.19 per cent at the end of the third quarter this fiscal from 4.57 per cent a year ago.

Other income surged by 19 per cent to ₹580 crore in the October to December 2020 quarter versus ₹487 crore a year ago.

“Our capital and liquidity levels continue to be robust. It has been heartening to see the growth in the deposit franchise and we continue to grow granular deposits and reducing our funding and operating costs this financial year, making us more competitive as an institution,” said Vishwavir Ahuja, Managing Director and CEO, RBL Bank.

Provisions fell by two per cent to ₹609.76 crore in the third quarter this fiscal from ₹622.84 crore a year ago.

Gross non-performing assets eased to ₹1,050.21 crore or 1.84 per cent as on December 31, 2020 as against 3.33 per cent a year ago. Net NPAs stood at 0.71 per cent of net advances at the end of the third quarter this fiscal from 2.07 per cent a year ago.

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PNB Housing Finance Q3 net profit dips to ₹232 crore

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PNB Housing Finance Limited (PNBHFL) reported a net profit of ₹232 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, 2020.

This was marginally lower to the net profit of ₹237 crore recorded in the same quarter last fiscal. The latest bottom line was also lower than the net profit of ₹313 crore recorded in the second quarter ended September 30, 2020.

Total income for the quarter under review declined to ₹1896 crore, down 9 per cent over total revenue of ₹2075 crore in the same quarter last fiscal. In the previous September quarter, this home loan lender had recorded total revenue of ₹2022 crore.

For the nine months ended December 31, PNBHFL reported a 10 per cent decline in net profit at ₹803 crore (₹888 crore). Total Revenue declined 11 per cent to ₹5,790 crore (₹6,538 crore )

Commenting on the financial performance, Hardayal Prasad, Managing Director & CEO, PNBHFL said in a statement ”Post RBI moratorium, the Company witnessed an impact on collection efficiency. However, the situation is improving and with various measures under taken, we expect to reach pre-Covid efficiency levels in near term. The Company has set out its new agenda with focus upon Strengthening the core, Driving efficiency and Accelerating Growth. These are built upon 7 core pillars viz Management, Capital Position, Risk Management, Cost Management, Digital Drive, Retail Focused Lending and Grow Affordable Housing”.

PNBHFL’s Net Interest Margin increased 20 basis points to 3.2 per cent in the third quarter this fiscal from a level of 3 per cent in the same quarter last fiscal.

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Bank of Baroda reports ₹1,061 cr profit in Q3

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Bank of Baroda (BoB) reported a standalone net profit of ₹1,061 crore in the third quarter against a net loss of ₹1,407 crore in the year-ago quarter.

A 69 per cent decline in provision towards bad loans and diminution value of all restructured accounts and a 55 per cent increase in trading gains helped boost the bottom line.

Provision towards bad loans and diminution value of all restructured accounts was at ₹2,080 crore, and trading gains were at ₹925 crore.

However, the net profit in the reporting quarter was down 37 per cent compared with the preceding quarter’s ₹1679 crore.

Net interest income (the difference between interest earned and interest expended) was up 9 per cent year-on-year (YoY) to ₹7749 crore (₹7,132 crore in the year-ago quarter).

Other income, comprising brokerage, commission, fees, income from foreign exchange fluctuation. Profit/ loss on the sale of investments, recovery from written-off accounts etc., increased 6 per cent YoY to ₹2,896 crore (₹2,738 crore).

Decline in NPAs

Gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) declined ₹2,516 crore during the reporting quarter.

GNPAs declined to 8.48 per cent of gross advances as at December-end 2020 against 9.14 per cent at September-end 2020.

Net NPAs declined to 2.39 per cent of net advances as at December-end 2020 against 2.51 per cent at September-end 2020.

With proforma slippages, Gross and Net NPA ratio would have been 9.63 per cent and 3.36 per cent, respectively.

Net interest margin improved to 3.07 per cent as at December-end 2020 against 2.96 per cent as at September-end 2020.

Global advances increased by 6.30 per cent YoY to ₹7,45,420 crore. Global deposits rose 6.52 per cent YoY to ₹9,54,561 core.

 

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CanFin Homes Q3 profits up 24%

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With improved Net Interest Margin (NIM) and collections, CanFin Homes Limited has posted 23.74 per cent higher profits at ₹131.91 crore on a standalone basis for the third-quarter of FY21 against a profit of ₹106.60 crore recorded in the same period last year.

The company’s Q3 total income from operations is lower by 2.71 per cent at ₹502.76 crore against ₹516.79 crore in the same period last year. EPS for the quarter stood at ₹9.91 compared with ₹8.01 last year.

Commenting on the company’s Q3 performance, Girish Kousgi, Managing Director & CEO, CanFin Homes, said: “Under tough times, the company has managed good growth, profitability and maintained its asset quality.”

As on December 31, 2020, the company holds a provision of ₹72.89 crore, which is more than the requirement as per the RBI circular on Covid-19 regulatory package.

The company further said that the Supreme Court, in a writ petition by Gajendra Sharma versus Union of India and vide its Interim Order dated September 3, 2020, has directed that the accounts that were not declared non-performing asset (NPA) till August 31, 2020, shall not be declared NPA till further orders. Pending disposal of the case by the Supreme Court.

Pursuant to the Interim Order, the company has not declared any account as NPA, which was not NPA as on August 31, 2020, in accordance with the extant NHB prudential norms on income recognition, asset classification, and provisioning pertaining to to advance. Further, in light of the interim order, even accounts that would have otherwise been classified as NPA post August 31, 2020, have not been and will not be classified as NPA till such time that the Supreme Court rules finally on the matter. However, the company, as a prudent measure, holds an adequate contingent provision amounting to ₹13 crore in respect of these advances.

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Net profit rises 16% to Rs 1,853.5 crore; NII up 17%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMABI: Kotak Mahindra Bank today reported a net profit of Rs 1,853.5 crore as against Rs 1,595.90 crore, reflecting a growth of 16 per cent on a year-on-year basis.

The lender reported a gross non-performing assets ratio of 2.26 per cent for the reported quarter as against 2.55 per cent in the previous quarter.

Notwithstanding the Supreme Court’s standstill on bad loan recognition, the lender said that the gross NPA ratio would have stood at 3.27 per cent in the December quarter and net NPA ratio would have been at 1.24 per cent.

The lender’s net interest income rose 17 per cent on year to Rs 4,007 crore, while the net interest margin was largely stable on year at 4.51 per cent.

The private sector bank reported a 4.5 per cent sequential growth in advances in the quarter to Rs 2.14 lakh crore, which fared better than most peers who have reported earnings so far. However, on a year-on-year basis the lender’s loan book fell 1.2 per cent reflecting the conservative strategy adopted by the bank since onset COVID-19 pandemic.

Kotak Bank said that its Covid-related provisions stood at Rs 1,279 crore as on December 31, while it has approved restructure of loans under the special recast window provided by the Reserve Bank of India to the tune 0.28 per cent of net advances.

The bank said that proforma net non-performing assets at the end of the December quarter stood at Rs 2,646 crore with provisions worth Rs 2,262 crore held against them.

The lender reported strong operating performance in the quarter as the operating profit jumped 29 per cent year-on-year to Rs 3,083 crore.



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