L&T Finance Holdings net profit up 20 per cent in Q1

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L&T Finance Holdings reported a 20 per cent increase in its net profit for the quarter ended June 30, 2021 at ₹178 crore as against ₹148 crore in the first quarter of last fiscal.

Total income fell 5.8 per cent to ₹3,201.49 crore in the April to June 2021 quarter as against ₹3,397.53 crore a year ago.

Total revenue from operations also fell 7.3 per cent to ₹3,140.12 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal as against ₹3,387.06 crore a year ago.

Its total lending book fell by 11 per cent to ₹88,440 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal.

“The Covid second wave did impact business on account of restrictions and closures of dealerships. Despite this, the company’s collection led disbursement strategy backed by concerted on-field efforts as well as data analytics led prioritisation and resource allocation led to responsible growth in the first quarter of the fiscal,” it said in a statement.

It also made additional provisions of ₹369 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal with this carrying total macro-prudential provisions of ₹1,403 crore.

Dinanath Dubhashi, Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance Holdings said, “The month-on-month uptick in collection efficiencies post unlock in the last quarter is a result of our concerted efforts and in recent past we have shown our ability to quickly turn around the disbursement volumes as macro factors open up.”

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LIC Housing Finance Q4 profit falls 5% to ₹399 crore

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LIC Housing Finance Ltd (LICHFL) reported a 5 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) decline in fourth quarter standalone net profit at ₹399 crore against ₹421 crore in the year ago quarter as provision towards impairment on financial instruments jumped.

The board of directors recommended a dividend of ₹8.50 per equity share (425 per cent) of ₹2 each, subject to approval of the members of the company at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.

Net interest income rose 33 yoy to ₹1,505 crore (₹1,134 crore in the year ago quarter).

Provision towards impairment on financial instruments shot up to ₹977 crore (₹27 crore).

Employee benefit expenses came down 33 per cent yoy to ₹59 crore (₹88 crore).

Loan portfolio increased about 10 per cent yoy to ₹2,28,114 crore as at March-end.

Preferential allotment

Meanwhile, LICHFL’s board approved offer of 4.54 crore equity shares to the promoter — Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) — through preferential allotment on private placement basis. This is subject to shareholders approval at their extraordinary general meeting.

Post-issue, the shareholding of LIC in LICHFL will go up from 40.31 per cent now to 48.49 per cent.

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SVC Co-operative Bank net up 6 per cent at ₹150 cr in FY’21

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SVC Co-operative Bank’s net profit increased by 6 per cent year-on-year (yoy) to ₹150 crore in the financial year ended March 31, 2021 against ₹142 crore in the previous financial year (FY20).

The Board of directors of the Mumbai-headquartered multi-state urban co-operative bank recommended a dividend of 12 per cent for the year, subject to approval from the Members during the Annual General Meeting.

Deposits and advances

SVC Bank’s total deposits grew about 5 per cent to stand at ₹17,332 crore as at March-end 2021 against ₹16,501 crore as at March-end 2020, according to the Bank’s statement.

Within total deposits, the proportion of low-cost CASA (current account, savings account) deposits rose to 27 per cent from 24 per cent.

Total advances were up about 6 per cent to ₹12,328 crore as against ₹11,608 crore.

Within total advances, retail advances rose 14.51 per cent to Rs 2,077 crore and corporate advances were up by 4.66 per cent to Rs 10,251 crore.

Gross non-performing assets (NPA) showed a marginal uptick to 3.96 per cent of gross advances as at March 31, 2021 against 3.74 per cent as at March-end 2020, the statement said. Net NPA was unchanged at 1.81 per cent of net advances.

The Bank’s capital to risk-weighted assets ratio increased to 13.89 per cent as at March-end 2021 against 12.96 per cent as at March-end 2020.

The 115-year-old Bank has a presence across 11 states through 198 branches and 213 ATMs

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Net profit doubles to Rs 5 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Private sector Dhanlaxmi Bank reported a net profit of Rs 5.28 crore in the fourth quarter of FY2020-21, up by over two-folds from a year ago. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 2.60 crore in the year-ago same quarter.

However, the net profit during the reported quarter of FY21 was down sequentially by 55.3 per cent from Rs 11.81 crore in the December 2020-21 quarter.

Income during Q4FY21 fell to Rs 242.18 crore from Rs 280.98 crore in the same quarter of FY2019-20, Dhanlaxmi Bank said in a regulatory filing on Saturday.

For the entire fiscal year 2020-21, the bank reported a net profit of Rs 37.19 crore, which fell by 43.5 per cent from year ago’s Rs 65.78 crore.

Total income during the year was also down at Rs 1,072.23 crore from Rs 1,100.44 crore in FY20.

Bank’s asset quality showed deterioration with the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) spiking to 9.23 per cent of the gross advances by end of March 2021 as against 5.90 per cent by end of March 2020.

In value terms, the gross NPAs of the lender rose to Rs 657.21 crore from Rs 401.22 crore.

Net NPAs also soared to 4.76 per cent (Rs 322.92 crore) from 1.55 per cent (Rs 100.94 crore).



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Sundaram Finance Q4 net profit rises to ₹209 crore

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Sundaram Finance has managed to post an impressive result despite a challenging year 2020-21 which not only tested but also re-enforced its core belief of customer centricity.

For the fourth quarter of FY21, the non-banking financial company (NBFC) registered a net profit of ₹209 crore compared to ₹131 crore in the same period previous year. Its disbursements in Q4 saw an increase of 13 per cent to ₹3,305 crore.

Despite a washout in the first quarter and sluggish business in the second, the NBFC posted a 21 per cent growth in its net profit in FY21. Its profit stood at ₹809 crore (₹724 crore in FY20 which also included a one-time income of ₹53 crore). This performance came amidst lower disbursement which fell to ₹11,742 crore from ₹15,175 crore in FY20.

“We tightened our belt and focussed on our GQP (growth, quality and profitability) philosophy,” said Rajiv Lochan, MD, Sundaram Finance, explaining the performance. The overall asset under management in FY21 was ₹30,882 crore (₹29,936 crore), an increase of 3 per cent.

In spite of the Covid-related challenges, the company reduced its net NPAs to 1.35 per cent compared to 1.92 per cent in March’20. The capital adequacy ratio stood at 22.10 per cent (18.4 per cent).

Covid wave

But the second wave of coronavirus with its higher intensity and broader impact is creating fresh challenges to the company in FY22. “We are seeing slippages (in recovery) of 4-5 per cent,” says Lochan. But the company is working closely with its customers to address their pain points. In FY21, it took advantage of RBI’s moratorium and restructuring sops to restructure loans worth ₹1,307 crore accounting of 4.4 per cent of outstanding principle. “We will deploy the learnings from last wave and overcome the challenge,” he added.

Recovery to be delayed

Before the second wave struck, the NBFC was hoping for a recovery in demand by the second half of FY22. Now that will be delayed. It expects the demand for the tipper segment to remain strong thanks to government’s strong infrastructure focus. But the haulage segment, it believes, will not see a recovery before the fourth quarter of FY22. “A lot will depend on vaccination, recovery in rural economy and how we handle the Covid variants,” said Lochan.

Despite a washout in the first quarter and sluggish business in the second, the NBFC posted a 21 per cent growth in its net profit in FY21.

 

 

 

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Lender reports net profit at Rs 111 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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CHENNAI: Private sector City Union Bank has reported net profit at Rs 111.18 crore for the quarter ending March 31, 2021. The Tamil Nadu-based bank had reported a net loss at Rs 95.29 crore during corresponding quarter previous year, the City Union Bank said in a BSE filing.

For the year ending March 31, 2021, net profits of the bank grew to Rs 592.82 crore from Rs 476.31 crore.

Total income for the quarter ending March 31, 2021 was at Rs 1,121.43 crore as compared to Rs 1,220.98 crore registered in the same quarter last year.

For the year ending March 31, 2021, total income stood at Rs 4,839.45 crore as against Rs 4,848.54 crore during corresponding period last year.

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Manappuram Finance Q4 PAT up 18% at ₹468 crore

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Manappuram Finance Ltd has posted an 18 per cent growth in its consolidated profit after tax in Q4 of FY21 at ₹468.35 crore against ₹398.20 crore in the year-ago quarter. As a result, the consolidated PAT for the full year was ₹1,724.95 crore, an increase of 16.53 per cent over the previous year’s figure of ₹1,480.30 crore.

The operating income for the year stood at ₹6,330.55 crore, up by 15.83 per cent over ₹5,465.32 crore. The Board of Directors approved payment of an interim dividend of ₹0.75 per share of the face value of ₹2.

V.P. Nandakumar, MD & CEO, said: “Our performance is particularly satisfactory given the multiple challenges faced throughout this pandemic affected year. Despite all the disruptions due to lockdowns, the consequent slowdown in economic activity and consumption, and volatility in gold prices, we have succeeded in posting our best ever full-year results, with significant growth in business and profitability.”

The consolidated Assets under Management (AUM) stood at ₹27,224.22 crore, up by 7.92 per cent compared to ₹25,225.20 crore. Growth was led by gold loans, which grew by 12.44 per cent to reach ₹19,077.05 crore. During the year, aggregate gold loan disbursements went up to ₹263,833.15 crore from ₹168,909.23 crore in the previous year. As of March 31, the number of live gold loan customers stood at 25.9 lakh.

Besides gold loans, the company’s microfinance subsidiary, Asirvad Microfinance Ltd, also reported meaningful growth in business closing the year with an AUM of ₹5,984.63 crore, an increase of 8.76 per cent over ₹5,502.64 crore reported in the previous fiscal. On the other hand, the Vehicle and Equipment Finance division reported an AUM of ₹1,052.56 crore, a decline of 21.70 per cent over the year being the fallout of the pandemic induced slowdown. The home finance subsidiary contributed ₹666.27 crore to the total AUM, against ₹629.61 crore in the previous year. Overall, the non-gold businesses contributed a share of 30 per cent to the total portfolio.

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SBI’s asset quality improves, but Covid may intensify pain in agri, corporate and SME portfolios

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The stock of SBI rallied more than 4 per cent on Friday, following stellar numbers posted by the PSU bank in the March 2021 quarter. The bank’s net profit for the quarter jumped 80 per cent (yoy), led largely by growth in other income and lower credit costs.

Investors also loaded on the stock following the bettering trends in the bank’s asset quality.

Lower than proforma

For the first nine months of FY21, the six-month moratorium on loan repayments, and the ensuing asset classification standstill kept bad loans at bay. This resulted in a chunk of slippages being recognised by the bank in the March quarter (₹21,934 crore) – more than double the slippages recognised in the corresponding quarter last year. However, this still constitutes just about 0.9 per cent of the bank’s gross advances. Besides, the bank’s prudent provisioning in the last quarters helped keep the credit costs in check — it ended FY21 with a credit cost of just 1.12 per cent.

SBI’s gross non-performing assets (GNPA) were at 4.98 per cent. The GNPAs were lower in the quarter compared to both the year ago period (6.15 per cent) and the proforma numbers reported in December 2020 quarter (5.44 per cent).

The slippages during the quarter largely stemmed from the corporate (constituting 30 per cent of the total slippages) and SME (22 per cent) loans. The agri loan portfolio, which has been under stress for the last two years, contributed to another 33 per cent of the slippages.

Further, requests for restructuring amounted to ₹17,852 crore (0.7 per cent of the gross advances). About 77 per cent of the restructuring requests too flowed from the corporate and SME book combined.

Worst may not be over

Despite bulky slippages been recognised in the March quarter, the worst is not yet over for SBI, on the asset quality front. This is because just when the economy was recovering from the after effects of the lockdown in the last year, the pandemic’s second wave came as a bummer. With looming uncertainty, the management refused to give out any guidance at the moment. However, it indicated that the collection efficiencies in April 2021 (calculated on a 7 to 89 days past due) were 20 basis points lower than in March 2021. This may worsen in the coming months, following the on-going partial lockdowns in many parts of the country.

Besides, the bank has also increased its exposure in the risky corporate and SME segments. While much of the growth in gross advances (up 4.8 per cent to ₹25.4 lakh crore) came from the retail personal advances, the bank has also been growing its exposure towards corporates and SMEs, albeit at a moderate pace.

Over the last couple of years, the bank has been redirecting its focus on retail personal loans — with 16.5 per cent (yoy) growth during the quarter, retail personal loans now constitute about 39.9 per cent of the gross advances of the bank, compared to 36 per cent in FY20.

While the share of corporate loans has come down to 37.5 per cent (from 40.9 per cent in the year ago period), the bank’s corporate exposure has grown by 6.5 per cent yoy, including the corporate bonds and commercial papers worth ₹51,811 crore issued during the quarter. Besides, much of the loan growth in corporate segment came from the roads and ports (up 47.6 per cent yoy) and aviation (up 76.6 per cent yoy) industries. However, this might not be very alarming since most of these loans were towards Government agencies and PSUs in this space. Besides, these industries still constitute only about 3.8 and 0.5 per cent of the domestic advances of the bank.

About 25 per cent of the bank’s corporate loan book comprises of companies rated BBB or below — up from 23 per cent in March 2020.

The SME and agri loan portfolios also saw a moderate growth of 4.24 and 3.92 per cent, respectively, in the March quarter.

Any significant rise in slippages or restructuring from current levels can lead to rise in provisioning eating into earnings of the bank. However, existing provision cover (PCR of 77 per cent plus special Covid related provisions) and healthy capital ratio (13.74 per cent) can provide a buffer to absorb losses going ahead.

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Shriram Life Insurance FY21 net profit at ₹106 crore

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Private insurer Shriram Life Insurance reported a three fold increase in its net profit to ₹106 crore in 2020-21.

Gross premium increased by 23 per cent to ₹2,019 crore last fiscal while the number of policies increased by eight per cent to 2,95,838.

“This growth was supported by a 25 per cent growth on total new business premium and 24 per cent growth on retail renewals,” it said in a statement on Friday, adding that approximately 47 per cent of its new business came from the rural segment.

As much as 54 per cent of the insurer’s claims came in from the rural segment. Income from investments more than doubled to ₹541 crore in 2020-21.

Casparus Kromhout, MD and CEO, Shriram Life Insurance said, “Shriram Life has been focused on serving the protection needs of the rural segment and lower income segments. These segments are most affected by the crisis due to the dual impact of the health emergency and loss of income. We remain committed in reaching our customer segment during this difficult time to ensure that financial protection is extended to more customers and that life cover continues for existing customers.”

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