Central Bank of India Q1 Net profit rises 21%

Public sector Central Bank of India on Tuesday reported a 21 per cent rise in its consolidated net profit at Rs 147.21 crore in the quarter ending June. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 121.61 crore during the same quarter a year ago.

Total income of the bank (consolidated) rose to Rs 6,751.86 crore during April-June quarter of 2020-21 as against Rs 6,518.37 crore in the same period of 2019-20, Central Bank of India said in a regulatory filing.

On a standalone basis, the net profit of the bank was up 14.5 per cent at Rs 135.43 crore during the first quarter of FY 2021 as against Rs 118.33 crore a year ago. Income increased to Rs 6,726.68 crore from Rs 6,493.55 crore.

The bank showed improvement in its asset quality as the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) or bad loans, as a percentage of gross advances as on June 30, 2020, fell to 18.10 per cent from 19.93 per cent as on June 30, 2019.
Likewise, the net NPA ratio came down to 6.76 per cent from 7.98 per cent.

This helped the bank cut down on its provisions for bad loans and contingencies, which stood at Rs 974.64 crore for June quarter FY 2021 as against Rs 1,034.78 crore a year-earlier period.
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Central Bank of India net loss narrows to ₹1,529 crore in Q4


Public sector lender Central Bank of India's net loss narrowed in the March quarter to ₹1,529 crore owing to a substantial decrease in provisioning and higher net interest income (NII).

The bank had posted a net loss of ₹2,477.41 crore in the same period a year ago. In the December quarter, the bank had made a profit of ₹155.32 crore.

The bank had set aside provisions of ₹2,178.33 crore during the quarter under review, of which provisions for bad loans stood at ₹1,583.25 crore. Its total provisions were down 53.98% from ₹4,733.82 crore parked aside for the year-ago period.

Total income during the quarter under review was at ₹6,723.73 crore as against ₹6,620.51 crore in the year-ago period, Central Bank of India said in a regulatory filing.

The bank's net interest income (NII) was at ₹1,925.81 crore, up 20.18% from ₹1,602.46 crore in Q4 of FY19. Other income fell 30.52% to ₹794.68 crore for the quarter ended 31 March, against ₹1,143.69 crore for the same quarter last year.

Its gross non-performing assets (NPAs) of the bank stood at 18.92% of gross advances as at March-end, down from 19.29% in the year-ago period. The bank's net NPAs were at 7.63%, down from 7.73%.

Central Bank of India's total deposits were up 4.64% to ₹3.14 trillion for the year ended 31 March against ₹3 trillion a year ago. Its advances grew 3.12% to ₹1.51 trillion as on 31 March 2020, over ₹1.47 trillion for the same period last year.
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Top Public Sector Banks In India 2020

These banks have emerged to be trusted brands where people deposit and invest money without thinking twice. Some of these banks stand out when it comes to offering services and are thus a preferred choice of greater number of people.


Here is a look at some of the best public sector banks in India.

1] State Bank of India 


Commonly known as SBI, this bank was set up in the year 1955. It is one of the oldest and the most trusted public sector banks in India. SBI is owned by the Indian government. It offers all kinds of banking services and is known for maintaining transparency in its dealings. It boasts of more than 40 crore satisfied customers.

After receiving an overwhelming response from people in India, the bank went on to open its branches worldwide. Today, it has nearly 200 offices in 36 different countries.  The headquarters of SBI are located in Mumbai.

2] Bank of India

This bank was established in the year 1906 as a privately owned entity. However, after the nationalization of banks, it became a public sector bank. This change took place back in 1969. The bank has 5,500 branches operating across the country. 

It has been serving millions of Indians by catering to their banking requirements.The bank also has its branches outside the country. It operates in 22 other countries with around 60 branches. New York, Paris, London and Singapore are among the countries where Bank of India has its branches.

3] Punjab National Bank

This bank came into being in the year 1895. It was founded under the guidance of one of the greatest Indian leaders of all times, Lala Lajpat Rai. The bank was established as a part of the Swadeshi movement. PNB was managed solely by Indians.

It became extremely popular in the pre-independence era and is still trusted as much. It offers several banking services and is known for providing quality banking products. The bank has around 7000 branches and has its presence in every nook and corner of the country.

4] Bank of Baroda

Bank of Baroda was opened in Vadodara, Gujrat in the year 1908. The bank is known to offer quality banking and finance services to its customers ever since its inception.

It is known to be the second largest nationalized bank in the country. The bank does not only operate in India but has its presence around the world. It operates in as many as 25 countries across the globe with more than 75 million happy customers. Dena bank and Vijaya bank merged with Bank of Baroda recently thereby making it an even bigger entity.

5] Central Bank of India

Central Bank came into being in the year 1911. It has been serving the customers happily ever since the beginning. The bank is known to offer numerous banking products.

It has a team of qualified and experienced bankers who have the answer to all your banking related queries and are always happy to help their customers. The bank has nearly 5,000 branches operating pan India. It also has offices in Hong Kong and Nairobi.

The headquarters of this bank is set up in Mumbai.

6] Canara Bank

Established in the year, 1906, Canara bank has its headquarters in Bengaluru. The bank has more than 6000 branches and nearly 9500 ATMs operating across the country. It offers several banking products and is known to offer impeccable service. It has more than 8 crore happy customers.

The bank does not only operate in India but has its branches in many other countries too. It has been serving people in New York, Hong Kong, Shanghai, London, Manama, Leicester, Johannesburg and Dubai.

7] Union Bank of India


Union Bank of India started as a limited company in the year 1919. It became a full-fledged bank in the year 1969 after nationalisation. The bank offers numerous banking products. By providing quality banking services consistently for years it has managed to acquire more than 5 crore customers.
Its customer base is increasing with every passing year. It is the proud owner of over 4500 branches spread across India. It also has branches in 4 other countries including Hong Kong, Sydney, Dubai and Antwerp.

8] UCO Bank


UCO Bank was established back in the year, 1943. It has its headquarters in Kolkatta, West Bengal. The bank has around 50 branches across the country and nearly 4000 plus service units. It has also made its presence overseas with branches in Singapore and Hong Kong.



9] Bank of Maharashtra

Bank of Maharashtra came into being in the year, 1935. The bank has been offering excellent service to its customers ever since its inception. It provides all kinds of banking and finance services. It has its headquarters in Pune. 87.74% of the total shares of the bank are held by the Government of India.

10] Indian Overseas Bank

Indian Overseas Bank was established back in the year, 1937. It has more than 3,400 branches across the country. The bank offers a host of banking services to meet the requirement of different segments of customers. After its success in the country, the bank went on to open branches in foreign land. It has 6 foreign branches.

You can safely open account and acquire other banking services from any of these banks!

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Central Bank of India reports higher loss for FY19 due to NPA divergence


Central Bank of India has reported an increased net loss of Rs 6,430.48 crore for 2018-19 due to NPA divergence after assessment of higher bad loans by the Reserve Bank. The net NPA divergence -- the difference between the NPAs reported by the bank and that assessed by the RBI -- was at Rs 2,565 crore for 2018-19. Central Bank of India had reported a net loss of Rs 5,641.48 crore in 2018-19 earlier. "The adjusted (notional) net profit after tax for the year ended March 31, 2019 after taking into account the divergence in provisioning is (-) Rs 6,430.48 crore," the bank said in a regulatory filing. Banks are required to report divergences in their asset classification and provisioning as per Sebi guidelines issued on October 31, 2019.

The bank had reported Rs 11,333.24 crore net NPAs during the year while the RBI assessed it at Rs 13,898.24 crore, leaving a gap of Rs 2,565 crore. The divergence in provisioning also increased by Rs 788 crore for the fiscal ended March 2019. Market regulator Sebi has put in place tighter disclosure norms, directing all listed banks to disclose any divergence in bad loan provisioning within 24 hours of receiving RBI's risk assessment report, rather than waiting to publish the details in their annual financial statements.

Banks, including Indian Bank, Union Bank of India, Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank and Lakshmi Vilas Bank, have already reported their NPA divergences for the last fiscal. The disclosures need to be made in case the banks' additional provisioning for non-performing assets (NPAs) assessed by the RBI exceeds 10 per cent of the reported profit before provisions and contingencies, and if the additional gross NPAs identified by the RBI exceed 15 per cent of the published incremental gross NPAs.
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Central Bank of India back into profit in Q2


Central Bank of India was back in the black, logging a consolidated net profit of Rs 138.58 crore for the September quarter of the current fiscal as bad loans came down. The state-owned lender had posted a loss of Rs 935.54 crore in the year-ago period. In April-June period of this fiscal, the lender clocked a profit of Rs 121.61 crore.

Income during the period under review rose to Rs 6,728.17 crore as against Rs 6,224.05 crore in the year-ago same period, the bank said in regulatory filing.

On standalone basis, the net profit stood at Rs 134.07 crore. In September quarter of the previous fiscal, there was a loss of Rs 923.60 crore.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) came down to 19.89 per cent (Rs 33,497.22 crore) of gross advances at the end of September 2019 from 21.48 per cent (Rs 37,410.76 crore) by the same period a year ago.

Net NPAs or bad loans also came down to 7.90 per cent (Rs 11,551.91 crore) from 10.36 per cent (Rs 15,794.15 crore).

Thus, provision for bad loans and contingencies (consolidated basis) for the September quarter of 2019-20 fell to Rs 794.28 crore from Rs 1,983.18 crore parked aside during the year-ago period.
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Central Bank of India back into profit in Q1


Central Bank of India returned to profit in the first quarter ended June 2019 aided by lower provisioning. The bank posted a net profit ₹118.33 crore for the three months ended 30 June, against a net loss of₹1,522.24 crore in the year-ago period.

Provisions during the quarter decreased 62.62% to ₹1,034.78 crore, from ₹2,768.22 crore in the year-ago quarter. During the January-March quarter, the bank had set aside ₹4,733.82 crore in provisions.

Net interest income, or the difference between interest earned on loans and that paid on deposits, increased 6.67% to₹1,790.19 crore during the first quarter, against ₹1678.18 crore in the corresponding period last year.

Other income, including core fee income, rose more than three times to ₹7,79.11 crore in the first three months of the current financial year, from ₹212.95 crore a year ago.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs), as a percentage of total advances, were at 19.93% in the June quarter, compared with 19.29% in the March quarter, and 22.17% a year ago.

Post-provision, the net NPA ratio was at 7.98%, against 7.73% during the January-March quarter and 10.58% in the year-ago quarter.
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Central bank of India Q4 result, net loss widens

Public sector lender Central Bank of IndiaWednesday reported widening in its losses to Rs 2,477.41 crore in the last quarter of 2018-19 due to a spike in provisioning of bad loans. 

The bank had reported a loss of Rs 2,113.51 crore in the January-March period of 2017-18. The bank had reported a loss of Rs 718.23 crore for the third quarter ended December 2018. 

Total income grew to Rs 6,620.51 crore in the three months to March from Rs 6,301.50 crore in the year-ago period, Central Bank said in a regulatory filing. 

For the full fiscal, the bank's loss widened to Rs 5,641.48 crore, as against Rs 5,104.91 crore in the preceding fiscal. Income during the year also fell to Rs 25,051.51 crore from Rs 26,657.86 crore year earlier. 

Gross non-performing assets stood at 19.29 per cent of gross advances at end-March 2019, against 21.48 per cent in the year-ago period. Net NPAs or bad loans stood at 7.73 per cent from 11.10 per cent a year ago. 

A substantial amount of Rs 4,523.57 crore was set aside as provisions for bad loans during the March quarter of 2018-19. The provisioning was Rs 4,832.47 crore in the year-ago period. 

Central Bank of India said it raised up to Rs 212.54 crore by allotting shares to staff under the Employees Stock Purchase Scheme, pending allotment of shares. 

"The Compensation Committee of the board of directors of the bank at its meeting held today approved the proposal for allotment of 78,716,224 equity shares to 26,071 eligible employees under Employee Stock Purchase Scheme," it said. 


Disclosing divergence in asset classification and provisioning for NPAs during 2017-18, the bank said there was a gap of Rs 636.20 crore in gross NPAs; Rs 452.80 crore in net NPAs and Rs 1,142 crore with respect to divergence in provisioning. 
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Central Bank of India narrows loss in Q3FY19

Central Bank of India on Friday reported a loss of Rs.718.23 crore for the third quarter ended December 2018 against that of Rs.1,664.22 crore in the October-December quarter of previous fiscal.
Its total income decreased to Rs.6,329.17 crore during the quarter under review, as against Rs.6,589.32 crore in the year-ago period, the bank said in a regulatory filing.
Also read- Q3FY19 Results of all Public & Private Sector banks in India 
Asset quality of the bank further deteriorated as gross non-performing assets (NPAs) grew to 20.64 per cent of gross advances during the December quarter, as against 18.08 per cent in the year-ago period. Net NPAs also increased at 10.32 of advances from 9.45 per cent a year ago.

However, the provisioning for bad loans and contingencies on net basis was at Rs.1,818.85 crore during the quarter, down from Rs.3,427.03 crore a year ago.
The provision for bad loans also declined to Rs.2,039.19 crore against Rs.3,081.56 crore in the same period a year ago.
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Central Bank of India Q2 net loss widens; gross non-performing assets spike to 21.48%


State-owned Central Bank of India on Wednesday reported widening of net loss to Rs 923.60 crore in the second quarter ended 30 September, due to mounting bad loans and falling core income.


The bank had posted a net loss of Rs 750.41 crore in the year-ago period, it said in a regulatory filing.

However, the loss narrowed from Rs 1,522.24 crore reported in the June quarter.
Total income also fell to Rs 6,197 crore in the quarter, from Rs 6,896.26 crore a year ago.

The bank's interest income fell to Rs 5,685.05 crore in July-September, from Rs 6,166.06 crore in the year-ago period.

The lender's asset quality worsened year-on-year, as gross non-performing assets (NPAs) spiked to 21.48 percent of the gross advances as at September-end as compared with 17.27 percent by the end of the same month in 2017.

Net NPAs also ballooned to 10.36 percent of the net advances, against 9.53 percent a year ago.

However, NPAs or bad loans (both net and gross) corrected sequentially.

In absolute value, gross NPAs stood at Rs 37,410.76 crore as on 30 September, 2018, against Rs 31,641.15 crore by September 2017.

Net NPAs were Rs 15,794.15 crore, compared with Rs 15,899.74 crore a year ago.

Even as bad loans spiked, the bank cut down on its NPA provisions to Rs 1,649.25 crore for the second quarter, against Rs 1,791.98 crore parked aside in the year-ago period.


The overall provisions and contingencies, however, moved up to Rs 1,982.82 crore, while it was at Rs 1,961.66 crore in year-ago September quarter.

The provisioning coverage ratio (PCR) of the bank is 67.74 percent (previous corresponding period 58.58 percent), the lender said.
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Central Bank of India net loss widens in Q1


State-owned Central Bank of India’s net loss widened by 74% to Rs. 1,522.54 crore in the quarter ended June 30, 2018 due to a more than two-fold spike in provisions for bad loans.

The bank had registered a net loss of Rs. 576.76 crore in the April-June quarter of 2017-18, according to a regulatory filing by the bank. In preceding quarter ending March 2018, the bank had reported a net loss of Rs. 2,113.51 crore.

The bank’s income fell to Rs. 5,904.82 crore in the first quarter of 2018-19 from Rs. 6,870.78 crore in the same period of 2017-18 as core income dropped. The bank earned an interest income of Rs. 5,691.87 crore during the quarter through June, a fall of 8.4% from Rs. 6,210.91 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) jumped to 22.17% of gross advances by the end of June from 18.23% as on June 30, 2017. In value terms, gross NPAs or bad loans stood at Rs. 38,777.66 crore as against Rs. 31,398.47 crore.

Net NPAs, however, fell to 10.58% (Rs. 16,086.25 crore) by the end of June quarter, from 11.4% (Rs. 17,407.43 crore) year earlier same period. The provisioning for bad loans were raised by over two-times to Rs. 2,538.14 crore at June-end this year from Rs. 1,028.93 crore set aside for the same period of 2017-18.


Overall provisions and contingencies too increased to Rs. 2,768.22 crore against Rs. 1,269.02 crore. The return on assets further worsened at (-) 1.85% from (-)0.71% year ago. However, it improved from (-)2.75% in March quarter.

Central Bank of India said for the accounts covered under the provisions of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, it is holding an additional provision of ₹ 690.20 crore as on June 30, 2018, in respect of 21 borrower accounts.

“During the quarter, the bank has appropriated the amount recovered in accordance with the resolution plan approved vide order National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). The Bank has appropriated an amount of Rs. 76.29 crore recovered in one of the cases, where appeal is pending before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT),” it said. Provisioning coverage ratio stood at 66.42as on June 30, 2018 against 54.48% year ago.
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Govt. plans to make 2nd largest bank after SBI

The government is considering merging at least four state-run banks, including Bank of Baroda, IDBI Bank Ltd, Oriental Bank of Commerce and Central Bank of India, two people aware of the matter said. If the plan goes through, the merged entity will become the second-largest bank in the country after State Bank of India, with combined assets of ₹16.58 trillion.

With the merger, the government hopes to help stem the rise in bad loans in their books at a time when poor asset quality has crippled the lending ability of some of them. The merger will also allow the weak banks to sell assets, reduce overheads and shut money-losing branches.
The four banks that are being proposed to be merged are under pressure with combined losses of ₹21,646.38 crore in the year ended 31 March.
The department of financial services, under the finance ministry, is also simultaneously considering a 51% stake sale in IDBI Bank to a strategic partner, for ₹9,000-10,000 crore, the people said on condition of anonymity.
“Dilution of (government) stake in IDBI Bank could also be achieved through stake sale to private equity investors,” said one of the two people cited above. Queries emailed to IDBI Bank, Bank of Baroda, Oriental Bank of Commerce and Central Bank of India did not elicit any response.
On 21 May, IDBI Bank told the exchanges in a regulatory filling that a special resolution will be placed for further issue of capital at its board meeting of 25 May.

On the following day, IDBI Bank informed the exchanges about a scrutinizer report for an increase in the bank’s authorized capital from the existing ₹4,500 crore to ₹8,000 crore.
The increase in authorized capital could facilitate the sale of a stake of 51% or more, in the form of a preferential issue to investors.
Government officials declined to comment, saying the matter is highly market sensitive. In his 2016 budget speech, finance minister Arun Jaitley said that the government was considering reducing its stake in IDBI Bank to less than 50%.

Source- Livemint
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New Chairpersons appointed for three PSU banks

The Narendra Modi government today appointed non-executive chairpersons for three state-run banks.
Charan Singh, the RBI chair professor at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, has been appointed as the non-executive chairman of Punjab & Sind Bank, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar tweeted.
Anjali Bansal, the former managing director of TPG Private Equity, has been appointed at Dena Bank, while Tapan Ray, the former corporate affairs secretary, will take charge at Central Bank of India. The three appointees will be part-time non-official directors on the boards of the three public sector banks.

The appointments have been made based on the suggestions of Banks Board Bureau headed by Bhanu Pratap Sharma, Kumar tweeted.

The government has been experimenting with appointing experts from a variety of fields as chairpersons of public sector banks. In 2015, Ravi Venkatesan had been appointed as the non-executive chairperson of Bank of Baroda. In the same year, G Padmanabhan, former executive director of the RBI had been appointed as chairperson of Bank of India.
This is a move towards separating the responsibility between chairman and managing directors for better functioning of public sector banks, Kumar said while announcing the fresh appointments on Thursday.
Each of the three banks where new chairpersons have been appointed are grappling with stress.
Dena Bank, for instance, was recently told to stop fresh lending by the RBI. The bank reported a gross non performing assets ratio of 22 percent as of March 2018. Central Bank of India, too, had a bad loan ratio close to that of 21 percent. Punjab and Sind Bank is in a marginally better position with a bad loan ratio of 11 percent.
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Central Bank of India Q4 loss widens on higher provisioning

Due to huge loan-loss provisioning, Central Bank of India’s net loss widened to Rs.2113 crore in the fourth quarter ended March 31, 2018, against Rs. 592 crore in the year-ago quarter.
For the financial year ended March 31, 2018, the public sector bank’s net loss widened to Rs.5105 crore, against Rs. 2,439 crore in the previous financial year.
Loan-loss provisions during the reporting quarter amounted to Rs.4832 crore. This includes Rs.725 crore in additional provisions made in respect of non-performing assets covered under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.
 As of March-end 2018, deposits were almost flat at Rs. 2,94,839 crore. Advances were up 12 per cent year-on-year at Rs. 1,56,542 crore.
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Central Bank of India Q3 loss widens, bad loans rising

Central Bank of India on Friday reported widening of loss to a staggering Rs1,664.22 crore for the third quarter ended 31 December 2017-18, on persisting bad loans.
The state-owned bank had posted Rs605.70 crore loss in the October-December quarter of 2016-17. Its total income decreased to Rs6,589.32 crore during the quarter under review, as against Rs6,787.87 crore in the year-ago period, the bank said in a regulatory filing.
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Central Bank of India Office Assistants (RSETI) Recruitment 2018-19



Central Bank of India (CBI) has published Advertisement for below mentioned Posts 2018. Other details like age limit, educational qualification, selection process, application fee and how to apply are given below.


Posts: Office Assistants (RSETI)
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Central Bank of India (CBI) Recruitment 2017-18


Central Bank of India (CBI) has published Advertisement for below mentioned Posts 2017-18. Other details like age limit, educational qualification, selection process, application fee and how to apply are given below.

PostsSecurity Officer

Total No. of Posts: 17 Posts
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Central Bank of India (CBI) Recruitment for Specialist Officers 2018


Central Bank of India has published Advertisement for below mentioned Posts 2017. Other details like age limit, educational qualification, selection process, application fee and how to apply are given below.



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Central Bank of India Q2 loss widens, net NPAs jump to 9%

Public sector Central Bank of India today reported widening of its net loss at Rs. 750.41 crore for the July-September quarter of this fiscal due to higher provisioning for the bad loans.

The bank had reported a net loss of Rs. 641.82 crore in the corresponding quarter of the 2016 -17 fiscal.

The bank’s gross non-performing assets (NPAs) jumped to 17.27 per cent of gross loans by September 30, 2017.The gross NPAs were 13.70 per cent of the gross loans at the end of the same quarter a year earlier.
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Dena Bank, OBC, IOB and Central Bank of India could be the initial targets for Merger

The government’s decision to set up an ‘alternative mechanism’ to fast-track consolidation among public sector banks (PSBs) to create strong lenders will help the PSBs streamline costs and improve governance, but a continuous focus on risk management and capital infusion from the government are crucial for a turnaround, industry experts said.
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