After record loss in Q4, PNB now eyes India’s biggest bank profit


                              
The Indian bank that saw its earnings wiped out by an unprecedented fraud aims to report the nation’s biggest bank profit by selling some assets, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Punjab National Bank is targeting net income of more than Rs 5,000 crore ($730 million) for the three months through Sept. 30, boosted by asset sales and bad-loan recoveries, the people said. Much of the record earnings will come from a planned sale of PNB’s stake in its housing finance unit, they added, asking not to be identified as the information is private. 


The 124-year-old PNB is trying to regain its financial health and credibility following the uncovering of a $2 billion fraud this year. The scam caused it to slip one spot to become India’s third-largest state-run bank by assets and analysts, including those at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., cut profit estimates for the lender. 

PNB had reported India’s biggest ever bank loss of Rs 13,420 crore in the quarter ended March 31 as it had to account for the fraud. It has already provided for half of the roughly Rs 14,400 crore it owes other banks to make good for the scam, and said the rest will be paid over three quarters -- approximately Rs 2,400 crore each quarter if spread equally. 

PNB will probably report a loss of Rs 2,400 crore for the three months ended June 30, according to the average of 11 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. This narrowing is expected to be led by a drop in bad loans following the sale of bankrupt Bhushan Steel. 

For the current quarter, the lender expects profit will be further boosted by more than Rs 8000 crore it estimates to get by selling so-called non-core assets, the people said. This includes its stake in PNB Housing Finance Ltd., they added. If PNB does report net income of 50 billion rupees, it would be the biggest quarterly profit in India’s banking sector. 


A PNB spokesperson didn’t immediately answer two phone calls and an email. 

PNB and Carlyle Group plan to jointly sell at least 51 percent of PNB Housing Finance, the bank told the stock exchange on Wednesday, without sharing more details. Together, these two investors hold more than 60 per cent of PNB Housing Finance, data compiled by Bloomberg show, and PNB’s roughly 33 percent holding is worth about 68 billion rupees based on Friday’s share price. 

“It is reasonable to assume that the stake sale in PNB Housing could happen around the prevailing market prices,” said Gaurang Shah, chief investment strategist at Geojit Financial Services Ltd. in Mumbai. “However, this one-off gain would not change the outlook for Punjab National Bank much.” 

The New Delhi-based bank also aims to cut its risk-weighted assets by more than Rs 20,000 crore and halve its net bad-loan ratio from 11.2 per cent over the year through March 2019, the people said. 


By Siddhartha Singh

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Quarterly Results of Private sector banks for Q4 2018

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Quarterly Results of Public sector banks for Q4 2018

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Jammu & Kashmir(J&K) Bank reports Q4 net profit

Jammu & Kashmir(J&K) Bank while showing resilience during turbulent times in banking industry, has registered a profit of Rs 202.72 crore for the financial year 2017-18. The Board of the Bank adopted the audited financial results for the Q4 & FY 2017-18 here today.

The audited results revealed that the bank registered a total business of Rs 140304.78 cr comprising deposits of Rs 80006.50 cr and advances of Rs 60298.28 cr as on March 31,2018 depicting a growth of 11.3% over the previous fiscal. Within the State, the bank reported a robust credit growth of 20% in line with the State focused lending strategy of the current leadership of the bank.



Commenting on the numbers for the fourth quarter, Chairman & CEO Parvez Ahmed said “The banking industry has seen a very difficult and challenging 4th quarter with RBI coming out with revised guidelines on NPA identification and treatment besides quashing the restructuring schemes leading to some major slippages across the industry. “Then there was the Nirav Modi effect which lead to one of our accounts M/s Gitanjali Gems getting downgraded. In J&K State rehabilitated portfolio, RBI notified some divergence in classification. All this resulted in enhanced provisioning and interest reversals which precipitated in muted bottom-line for the quarter, he added.


“On the brighter side,” he said “we were able to complete the cleanup and consolidation act. In the current fiscal though there will still be pressure on the balance sheet but we do not anticipate any major downgrade in the pipeline. We have concomitantly completed the succession planning exercise along with revamping of the organization structure with the aim of improving the systems and procedures to strengthen the culture of compliance. The focus has been on the risk management and capital planning too for regulatory compliance and growth over a longer period of time”, Parvez Ahmed said.


“Our promoters, the State Government and the regulator Reserve Bank of India supported us well during the tough preceding year with their guidance and support particularly in the management of rehabilitated portfolio of J&K State, the former supporting the business community with Chief Minister business interest relief scheme and the latter by allowing us the staggering provisioning for interest capitalized in rehabilitated accounts.”, acknowledged the Chairman.



Commending the concerted efforts of the staff of the bank in the challenging environment in the banking industry, he added, “the biggest anchor has been the human capital of the bank who have worked tirelessly for the last one and a half  years to execute the multi-pronged strategy devised to tide over the difficult times in the bank. We could manage to keep ourselves in the green zone riding on NPA recovery of Rs 2200 cr which included timely asset sale of some distressed assets, credit growth of 12.5% and better liability management by deprioritizing high cost bulk deposits. All this will not have been possible but for the synergistic efforts by the dedicated team at all levels.


“During the current fiscal, our focus will still be on conservation & augmentation of capital, NPA recovery, containing the slippages especially in the restructured portfolio and strengthening of the compliance framework in the Bank. On the business front, we are targeting a balance sheet growth of 20% which shall be mainly driven by credit growth of 30% in J&K state where we see huge opportunity lying untapped in the retail credit.”


Notably the Bank has reported a digital transaction percentage of 48%, CASA ratio of 50.89%, NIIM of 3.65%, NPA coverage ratio of 65.83% net NPA of 4.90% and profit FY 17-18 at 202.72 Cr. The bank is continuously introducing new customized products in the J&K state besides driving the push to sourcing of new retail loans to digital channels by targeting strategic tie up with Government departments and institutional customers to drive its retail credit growth in the J&K State.
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Indian Overseas Bank(IOB) Q4 net loss widens on bad loans

Public sector lender Indian Overseas Bank’s net loss widened to Rs.3,606.73 crore in the March quarter due to higher provisioning for mounting bad loans.
The bank had registered a net loss of Rs. 646.66 crore in the same quarter of previous fiscal.
Its net income stood at Rs.5,814.42 crore during the fourth quarter of 2017-18 from Rs.5,661.70 crore in same period a year-ago, the bank said in a BSE filing.
The bank’s provisions for bad loans and contingencies increased sharply to Rs.6,774.55 crore during the March quarter from Rs.1,789.74 crore a year earlier.

Asset quality worsened with gross non-performing assets (NPAs) at 25.28 % of gross advances at the end of March from 22.39 % in the year-ago period.
Net NPAs were at 15.33 % of net loans, up from 13.99 % in the last quarter of 2016-17.
For the full financial year 2017-18, the bank’s net loss rose to Rs.6,299.49 crore from Rs.3,416.74 crore in 2016-17.
Its net income remained lower at Rs.21,661.65 crore as against Rs.23,091.25 crore in the said period.


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United Bank of india reports Q4 net loss


                                  
State-owned United Bank of India today reported a net loss of Rs 260.62 crore for the fourth quarter ended March 2018 due to high non-performing assets (NPAs). The Kolkata-headquartered bank had reported a profit of Rs 73.56 crore in the January-March quarter of 2016-17.

The bank's total income was Rs 2,635.69 crore in the fourth quarter of the last fiscal, a marginal decline from Rs 2,672.88 crore in the similar quarter in the year-ago period, it said in a regulatory filing.

The gross NPAs of the bank stood at 24.1 percent of the assets at end-March 2018, up from 15.53 percent at end-March 2017.
Similarly, the net NPA jumped to 16.49 percent of loans compared to 10.02 percent at the end of March 2017.
The bank set aside Rs 1,384.95 crore towards provisions and contingencies in the fourth quarter of the last fiscal, significantly higher than Rs 1,059.36 crore in the year-ago period.


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Bank of India(BoI) Q4 loss widens due to bad loans

Bank of India today reported widening of its net loss to Rs 3,969.27 crore in the March quarter due to higher provisioning for mounting bad loans. It had reported a net loss of Rs 1,045.54 crore for the January-March period of the preceding fiscal, 2016-17. In the previous quarter, October-December, of 2017-18 the loss was at Rs 2,341.20 crore.
The bank’s asset quality worsened as on March 31, 2018. The gross non-performing assets (NPAs) hit 16.58 per cent of the gross advances, as against 13.22 per cent by end March 2017, the bank said in a regulatory filing. Net NPAs rose to 8.26 per cent, as against 6.90 per cent.


In absolute terms, the gross NPAs or bad loans reached Rs 62,328.46 crore as on March 31, 2018, sharply up from Rs 52,044.52 crore a year ago. Net NPAs were Rs 28,207.27 crore, compared with Rs 25,305.05 crore. Income in the March quarter of 2017-18 also fell to Rs 10,722.07 crore, from Rs 12,335.71 crore a year ago.
Provisions for bad loans for January-March, 2017-18 were increased to Rs 6,699.23 crore from Rs 4,483.53 crore year ago same period. BoI said: “Due to non availability of profit, no dividend is proposed.”
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Lakshmi Vilas Bank posts loss in Q4 as NPA provisions rise


Private lender Lakshmi Vilas Bank today reported a net loss of Rs 622.25 crore for the last quarter of 2017-18 due to multi-fold jump in provisioning for bad loans. The bank had registered a net profit of Rs 52.16 crore in the January-March period of 2016-17.

Income during the quarter ended March 2018 also fell by 14.3 percent to Rs 740.90 crore as against Rs 864.99 crore in year ago period, the bank said in a release.

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies were raised to Rs 921.41 crore in the quarter, a jump of almost nine-time from Rs 108.19 crore kept aside in the same period of preceding fiscal.

For the full year, the bank posted a net loss of Rs 584.87 crore against a net profit of Rs 256.07 crore in 2016-17, it said.

Income stood at Rs 3,388.43 crore in 2017-18 against Rs 3,349.43 crore in 2016-17.

Gross non-performing assets (NPA) as a percentage of gross loans rose to 9.98 percent as on March 31, 2018, from 2.67 percent by end-March 2017.

Net NPAs rose to 5.66 percent from 1.76 percent. In absolute-terms, gross NPAs were at Rs 2,694.21 crore by the end of March 2018 against Rs 640.19 crore at end-March 2017. Net NPAs were Rs 1,457.89 crore from Rs 418.42 crore.

The provision coverage ratio stood at 55.07 by end of March 2018.
The bank said slippages partially increased due to shifting of some of the restructure accounts to NPA as per the RBI direction. NCLT cases were about Rs 584.33 crore and gems and jewellery account exposure was about Rs 30 crore.


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Corporation Bank posts massive Q4 loss as provisions surge

State-owned lender Corporation Bank on Saturday reported a net loss of Rs1,838 crore for the March quarter of last fiscal, mainly on account of increased provisioning.
The bank had reported a net profit of Rs159 crore in the corresponding period of the 2016-17 fiscal.

Corporation Bank is among the 11 lenders which have been placed under the RBI’s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework on account of high bad loans.
Provisions for non-performing assets (NPAs) or bad loans increased to Rs4,441 crore during fourth quarter of 2017-18 as against Rs853 crore during the January-March period of the previous fiscal, the bank said in a filing to the BSE.
The gross NPAs of the bank soared to 16.21% in March quarter, from 11.70% in the same period of 2016-17.
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Bank of Baroda(BoB) slumps to loss in Q4 on higher NPA provisioning

Bank of Baroda on Friday reported Q4 loss of Rs3,102 crore on the back of lower other income and higher provisioning against non-performing assets (NPAs).
The bank posted a net loss of Rs3,102.34 crore for the March quarter compared to a profit Rs154.72 crore in the year-ago period. The loss was higher than the Rs28.03 crore estimated by a Bloomberg poll of 18 analysts.

Net interest income, or the difference between interest earned on loans and that paid on deposits, increased 11.74% to Rs4,002.26 crore from Rs3,581.86 crore in the corresponding period last year. Other income, which includes core fee income, lost 14.23% to Rs1,695.90 crore in the three months from Rs1,977.28 crore a year ago.
Gross NPAs, as a percentage of total advances, were at 12.26% in Q4 compared with 11.31% in the December quarter and 10.46% in the year-ago March quarter.

Provisions during the quarter increased two-and-a-half fold to Rs6,672.38 crore as against Rs2,262.97 crore in the year-ago quarter. In the October-December quarter, the bank had set aside Rs3,426.51 crore in provisions.
Post-provision, the net NPA ratio was at 5.49% against 4.97% in the October-December quarter and 4.72% in the year-ago quarter.
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IDBI Bank posts huge Q4FY18 loss

State-owned bank IDBI Bank on Friday reported huge losses at the end of the March quarter after setting aside funds to cover rising bad loans.

The IDBI Bank reported a net loss of Rs8,157.11 crore for the fiscal third quarter after its provisions doubled to Rs10,773.30 crore from Rs3,637.49 crore at the end of December 1.
The bank reported a net loss of Rs5,662.76 crore in the March quarter compared to Rs1,524.31 crore during the same quarter in the previous year.
The bank’s gross non performing assets rose to 27.95% compared to 24.72% at the end of December quarter.
In a post results press conference. MK Jain, managing director & chief executive officer, said that the bank has identified Rs21,397 crore worth of bad loans to be put up for sale, which includes 30 large corporate accounts. He also said that the bank has added fresh bad loans worth Rs12,823 crore in the fourth quarter.
“Most of the legacy issues on asset quality has been recognised. We hope to turnaround by the end of the financial year, on the back of IBC resolutions,” Jain said.The rise in bad loans was because of a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) review which revealed a divergence in reporting of gross NPAs based on fiscal 2017 results. Such divergence—the difference between RBI’s assessment and that reported by the lender—was around Rs10,281 crore at the end of March 2017.

The bank’s net interest income (difference between interest earned and paid) declined by 43.9% to Rs915.47 crore in the January to March quarter 2018, as compared to Rs1,633.3 crore in the same quarter in 2017.

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Karur Vysya Bank Q4 result, profit tanks 77%

Private sector lender Karur Vysya Bank has reported a sharp 76.8 percent decline year-on-year in profit at Rs 50.6 crore for the quarter ended March 2018, dented by massive jump in bad loans provisions.

Profit the corresponding quarter of previous fiscal was at Rs 217.6 crore, the banks said in its filing.
Net interest income, the difference between interest earned and interest expended, grew by 10.8 percent to Rs 643 crore compared to year-ago period.
Provisions for bad loans shot up 81 percent year-on-year (up 21 percent sequentially) to Rs 394.2 crore in Q4FY18.
Asset quality weakened further as gross non-performing assets (NPA) for the quarter inched up to 6.56 percent against 5.94 percent in previous quarter. Net NPAs were also higher at 4.16 percent against 3.88 percent in December quarter.
Other income or non-interest income fell 10 percent year-on-year to Rs 208.65 crore and operating profit declined 5.4 percent to Rs 480 crore for March quarter.
Karur Vysya Bank said its gross NPA divergence for the financial year 2016-17 stood at Rs 651 crore and net NPA divergence at Rs 202 crore while the provision divergence for the same year was also at Rs 202 crore.

Net profit after adjusting provision divergence was at Rs 474 crore for FY17 against reported profit at Rs 606 crore.
FY17 gross NPA divergence of Rs 650.9 crore was 1.59 percent of the loan book.
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City Union Bank Q4 profit rises 18%

Private sector lender City Union Bank Ltd has reported an 18.04% rise in net profit at Rs152.12 crore for the quarter ended 31 March, compared to a net profit of Rs128.87 crore in the year-ago period.

Total income for the quarter rose 6.99% to Rs990.48 crore, as against Rs925.75 crore in the same quarter last year.
Net interest income increased by 18% to Rs368 crore from Rs311 crore last year. Net interest margin was at 4.36% in the last quarter.
Gross NPA stood at 3.03% as on 31 March, as against 2.83% a year ago. Net NPA was at 1.70% in the last quarter of the last fiscal compared with 1.71% in the same period in 2016-17.
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Andhra Bank posts big loss for Q4FY18


Public sector lender Andhra Bank today said it suffered Rs 2,636 crore loss for the quarter ended March 31 2018 due to higher provisioning for bad loans. The bank made a profit of Rs 35 crore during the same quarter in FY 17, it said in a press release.
The total income was down by six per cent to Rs 5,093 crore against Rs 5,425 crore in January-March quarter of FY17. The PSU made Rs 3,902 crore towards Contingencies and Provisions during the quarter under discussion against Rs 1,399 crore in Q4 of Fy17.

For the full year of 2017-18 Andhra Bank suffered Rs 3,413 crore loss against Rs 174 crore profit for FY 17, it said. The gross NPAs stood at Rs 28,124.36 crore at the end of FY 18 against Rs 17,669.98 crore at the end of FY17.
Total business grew by 9.70 per cent to Rs 3,72,605 crore in the last fiscal. It was Rs 3,37,693 crore in FY 17, Andhra Bank said.
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26 banks pile up NPAs worth Rs 7.31 lakh crore in Q4


Non-performing assets of 26 banks that have declared their earnings so far have risen to Rs 7.31 lakh crore, a rise of Rs 2.5 lakh crore this year compared to March 2017, CARE Ratings said in a report.

The total provisions during the year (of which the most would be for NPAs) increased to Rs 105,150 crore from Rs 43,611 crore, an increase of 141 percent, the report further stated.

Gross NPAs, it said, has risen to its peak at 10.14 percent in March 2018.


On a segmental basis, for public sector banks, NPA rates rose to 13.41 percent after being stable in the range of 11-12 percent in the first quarter of last fiscal.

“For private banks too, NPAs have spiked in March 2018 after moderating in December 2017 relative to September 2017,” analysts at the firm wrote in their report.

Results are awaited for other banks, which include Bank of Baroda, Bank of India, IDBI Bank, Corporation Bank, IOB, United Bank, Andhra Bank in the PSB group and City Union, Dhanlaxmi Bank, Karur Vysya, Laxmi Vilas and J&K in the private sector.

Source - Moneycontrol
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State bank of India(SBI) posts huge loss in Q4,misses estimates

                            
India’s largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) on Tuesday reported a net loss for the second consecutive quarter as bad loans continued to mount and provisions soared.
SBI reported a loss of Rs7,718.17 crore in the March quarter, or Q4 FY18, compared to a profit of Rs2,814.82 crore a year ago. The bank had posted a net loss of Rs2,416 crore in the fiscal third quarter.
According to a poll of 14 analysts by Bloomberg, the bank was expected to post a Rs1,728 crore loss in the March quarter.

Provisions and contingencies surged 139.32% to Rs28,096.07 crore in the quarter from Rs11,740.09 crore a year ago. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, they rose 48.8% from Rs18,876.21 crore.
SBI’s bad loan divergence, the difference between Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) assessment and that reported by the lender, stood at around Rs23,239.13 crore, while divergence in provisions was at Rs5,720.66 crore.
SBI’s gross non-performing assets (NPAs) as assessed by RBI stood at Rs1.36 trillion as on 31 March 2017, the bank said. It had reported gross NPAs of Rs1.12 trillion as on March 2017. However, the bank said the net impact of divergences has reflected in the current earnings.

Gross NPAs advanced 99% to Rs2.23 trillion at the end of the March quarter from Rs1.12 trillion in the same quarter last year. As a percentage of total loans, gross NPAs stood at 10.91% in Q4 as compared to 10.35% in the previous quarter and 6.9% in the year-ago quarter. Net NPAs were at 5.73% in the March quarter compared to 5.61% in the previous quarter and 3.71% in the same quarter last year.
Net interest income (NII), or the core income a bank earns by giving loans, increased 10.5% to Rs19,974.28 crore versus Rs18,070.72 crore last year. Other income stood at Rs12,494.78 crore, up 21% from Rs10,327.50 crore a year ago.
Advances for the quarter rose 23.16% from a year ago to Rs19.35 trillion, while deposits grew 32.36% to Rs27.06 trillion.
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