UCO Bank Q4 Profit jumps 23%


For the fourth quarter that concluded on March 31, public sector lender UCO Bank reported a 23% increase in net profit to ₹801 crore on Saturday.


During the January–March quarter of FY25, the lender with its headquarters in Kolkata made a net profit of ₹653 crore.


However, according to a regulatory filing from UCO Bank, the income for the March quarter fell to ₹7,365 crore from ₹8,137 crore during the same period of the previous fiscal year.


During the reviewed period, interest income was ₹6,656 crore, compared to ₹6,142 crore in the same quarter last year.


From the net profits for the year ending March 31, 2026, the bank's board has recommended a dividend of ₹0.44 per share of ₹10 face value.


Besides, the board approved equity capital raising plan by way of issue of 270 crore equity shares of face value of ₹10 aggregating to ₹2,700 crore (at face value) through various modes viz, QIP, FPO, etc. in one or more tranches at an appropriate time and premium during the 2026-27 subject to approval of the shareholders at the ensuing Annual General Meeting, it said.


In addition, it said, the board cleared proposal for raising of capital upto ₹5000 crore through issuance of BASEL III Additional Tier I Bonds/Tier II Bonds/Long term Infra bonds, in one or more tranches, during the 2026-27.


On the asset quality side, the bank's Gross Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) were reduced to 2.17 per cent of gross advances as of March 31, 2026, from 2.69 per cent by the end of March 2025.


Net NPAs also came down to 0.27 per cent of the advances from 0.5 per cent at the end of 2025.Provision Coverage Ratio improved to 97.79 per cent as on March 31, 2026.


Capital adequacy ratio of the bank increased to 18.61 per cent from 18.49 per cent in the same quarter of FY'25.

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LIC HFL Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 for 180 Posts


The official announcement for the Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 has been released by LIC Housing Finance Limited (LIC HFL), and qualified Indian candidates are encouraged to apply online. On April 16, 2026, the LIC HFL Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 announcement was made public. Interested parties may apply online between April 16 and April 30, 2026.


LIC HFL Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 Important Dates

Important EventsDates
Commencement of online registration of application16/04/2026
Closure of registration of application30/04/2026
Closure for editing application details30/04/2026
Last date for printing your application15/05/2026
Online Fee Payment16/04/2026 to 30/04/2026


LIC HFL Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 Vacancy Details

Post NameVacancies
Junior Assistant180


LIC HFL Junior Assistant Recruitment 2026 Notification PDF & Apply Online

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Axis Bank Q4 results: Net profit flat, beats estimate; provisions surge, asset quality improves


Even though higher provisions and lower non-interest income hurt profitability, Axis Bank's March quarter (Q4 FY26) earnings were released on Saturday. Net profit came in marginally above Street estimates. 


In contrast to the CNBC-TV18 poll prediction of Rs 6,989 crore, the private sector lender reported a net profit of Rs 7,071 crore for the quarter. But from Rs 7,117 crore, profit fell 0.6% year over year. Sequentially, it increased by 9%. A crucial indicator of the bank's fundamental profits, net interest income (NII), increased 5% year over year to Rs 14,457 crore.


"While we enter the new financial year with confidence and optimism, focusing on building a more resilient franchise, we are conscious of the global macro and geopolitical situation shaping up and are closely watching it," Amitabh Chaudhry, managing director and chief executive officer said.


Axis Bank's provisions and contingencies rose sharply to Rs 3,522 crore during the fiscal fourth quarter, compared with Rs 2,245 crore in the previous quarter, and Rs 1,359 crore a year ago.


The bank said it created an additional one-time provision of Rs 2,001 crore to strengthen its balance sheet amid “evolving and unpredictable macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties”. It added that the move was precautionary and does not reflect any deterioration in asset quality.


Asset quality metrics improved sequentially, with gross non-performing assets (GNPA) ratio declining to 1.23 percent from 1.40 percent in the previous quarter. Net NPA ratio eased to 0.37 percent from 0.42 percent.


Axis Bank's net credit cost stood at 0.37 percent for the quarter, declining both sequentially and year-on-year. The lender's provision coverage ratio remained healthy at 70 percent.


Core operating revenue remained broadly stable, while fee income grew 8 percent quarter-on-quarter and 4 percent year-on-year to Rs 6,561 crore, supported by retail fee growth and granular fee mix. However, overall non-interest income was impacted by a trading loss of Rs 606 crore during the quarter.


Operating profit declined 7 percent year-on-year to Rs 10,013 crore, while operating expenses rose 6 percent on-year.


Advances grew 19 percent year-on-year and 6 percent sequentially to Rs 12.34 lakh crore, led by strong growth in corporate and SME segments. Deposits rose 14 percent on-year, with CASA ratio at 40 percent.


The bank maintained a strong capital position, with capital adequacy ratio at 16.42 percent and CET-1 ratio at 14.38 percent.

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PSU Bank GM Charge-Sheeted on Retirement Day; Funds Put on Hold


On the day of his retirement, Bhupinder Singh Passi, the former general manager (GM) of Punjab National Bank, received a chargesheet and his retirement benefits were withheld. He was assigned to the position of Managing Director at Punjab National Bank (International) Limited in London, United Kingdom, in or around September 2011. 


In or around May 2015, his deputation came to an end. After that, he went back to India. In December 2016, it was noted that Punjab National Bank (International) Limited has an unusually high amount of non-performing assets. It was observed that they were opened when the petitioner was in office. According to the Staff Accountability Policy, which was published in a circular dated October 29, 2013, certain procedures must be fulfilled before disciplinary action is taken.


Examining employee accountability in those NPA accounts was decided. The five-member committee was established. A report detailing the anomalies and shortcomings in the accounts and the officials accountable for them was filed. There were 31 such examples found. 


Based on the findings, the petitioner's explanation was requested in multiple letters dated December 26, 2016, January 7, 2017, and February 3, 2017. Bhupinder Singh Passi responded to them in letters dated February 8 and February 20, 2017 (the affidavit-in-reply claims that the petitioner purposefully postponed responding to those letters due to his impending superannuation date). The Inspection and Audit division received the notice.


Involvement of the Petitioner was found in 17 out of 31 cases. The note was placed before disciplinary authority and decision was taken to initiate the major penalty proceedings after seeking 1st stage advice from the vigilance department.


First stage reference was sent to the Vigilance department on 27th February 2017. However, vigilance advice was not received till 28 th February 2017. As petitioner was about to retire on that date, notice was issued to him along with annexures-I giving the necessary details to show cause why disciplinary action should not be initiated against him in terms of Punjab National Bank Officers Employees (Discipline and Appeal) Regulations, 1977.


Retirement order was passed on 28 th February 2017 and it was made clear that disciplinary proceeding will continue as if he was in service until the proceedings are concluded.


He was granted provisional pension as he has opted to be governed by Punjab National Bank (Employees) Pension Regulation 1995. He was disqualified from getting other retirement benefits.


On 1st March 2017, he was served with charge-sheet as per Regulation 6 of Punjab National Bank Officer Employees’ (Discipline and Appeal) Regulations, 1977.


He was also served with statement of Article of Charge and statement of imputation of lapses.


The All India PNB Officers’ Association vide letter dated 28th September 2017 addressed to the Managing director and protested the action of the Bank to invoke the provisions of Regulation 20 (3) (iii) of PNB (Officers’) Service Regulation 1979.


The Petitioner approached court to quash the order of the Bank.


Punjab National Bank replied in Court that:

Show cause notice cannot be challenged because it does not cause any prejudice to the Petitioner.


Though the Petitioner claims to have unblemished record, there are two penalties of reduction by one stage for three years and giving a note of caution to the Petitioner.


As disputed question of facts are involved, it cannot be enquired in a Writ Petition. Though the Show cause notice and charge-sheet were issued on 28th February 2017 and 1st March 2017 respectively, this petition was filed belatedly in November 2017.


The allegation in the disciplinary enquiry involves misappropriation of money of the public sector bank and hence enquiry is required to be conducted in the interest of the public at large.


The Court said that there is no dispute about the documents which are referred by both the sides. The dispute is whether the provisions of Regulation 20 (3)(iii) of Punjab National Bank (Officers) Service Regulations, 1979 can be invoked after the officer is superannuated.


The aforementioned Regulation, however, could be invoked only when the disciplinary proceedings had clearly been initiated prior to the respondent’s ceasing to be in service.

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IndusInd Bank posts Rs 533 crore profit for Q4 FY26


IndusInd Bank on April 24 announced a profit of Rs 533 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 as against a loss of Rs 2,236 crore in the year-ago period, helped by a drop in provisions for potential bad loans and a sequential improvement in asset quality.


The country's fifth-largest private lender by market capitalisation beat analysts' expectation of Rs 389-crore net profit, per data compiled by LSEG. In the year-ago quarter, the bank had reported its biggest-ever quarterly loss due to years of mis-accounting of internal derivative trades.


The lender declared a final dividend of Rs 1.5 per share for FY26. The record date for determining the eligibility of members entitled to receive the dividend shall be Friday, June 26, 2026, the bank said.


IndusInd's provisions and contingencies declined 38.6% year-on-year and 29% from the previous quarter to Rs 1,484 crore.


Asset quality improved, with gross bad loans as a percentage of total loans dropping to 3.43% at the end of March from 3.56% three months earlier.


The bank came under scrutiny last year after disclosing a nearly Rs 2,000-crore hit in the year ended March 2025 due to mis-accounting of internal derivative trades, which raised concerns over governance and led to the resignations of former CEO Sumant Kathpalia and deputy chief Arun Khurana.


The bank's loan and deposit growth have remained under pressure over the last year. During the fourth quarter, IndusInd Bank's loans declined 8.7% year-on-year, the fourth straight decline, while deposits fell 2.6%.


Net interest income, the difference between interest earned on loans and paid on deposits, climbed 43% year-on-year to Rs 4,371 crore.


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RBI cancels banking licence of Paytm Payments Bank


The banking license granted to Paytm Payments Bank Limited under Section 22(4) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (the "BR Act") was revoked by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday, April 24, 2026, with effect from the end of business on that day.


As a result, Paytm Payments Bank Limited is immediately barred from engaging in "banking" as that term is defined in Section 5(b) or any other activity listed under Section 6 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, according to an RBI circular.


The regulatory agency said it will make an application for winding up of the bank before the High Court.


It said Paytm Payments Bank Limited has enough liquidity to repay its entire deposit liability upon winding up of the bank.


The Reserve Bank said it cancelled the licence of the Paytm Payments Bank Limited because the affairs of the bank were “conducted in a manner detrimental to the interest of the bank and its depositors.”


“Thus, the bank is not complying with Section 22 (3) (b) of the BR Act,” it said.


Besides the “general character of the management of the bank is prejudicial to the interest of depositors as also the public interest. Thus, the bank is not complying with provisions of Section 22 (3) (c) of the BR Act,” it said. 


It said no useful purpose or public interest would be served by allowing the bank to continue as envisaged in Section 22 (3) (e) of the BR Act.


The action was taken because the bank failed to comply with the conditions stipulated in the Payments Bank license issued to it, thereby violating the provisions of Section 22 (3)(g) of the BR Act, the central agency said.



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Big Gold loan scam in SBI, Staff Arrested


An SBI employee from Bhubaneswar was detained by the Crime Branch's Economic Offences Wing (EOW) for allegedly embezzling Rs 5.21 crore by approving 105 gold loans without the required paperwork or obtaining authentic gold ornaments. 


Prashant Kumar Mallick, the accused, was employed at the SBI Balichandrapur branch in Jajpur as a senior associate and cash-in-charge. According to EOW, Mallick began working at the SBI branch in Balichandrapur in June 2022. For the previous few months following the discovery of the deception, he had been running away. Peeyus Ranjan Swain, Regional Manager of SBI Jagatsinghpur, filed a complaint that led to the case's registration on February 10, 2026.


The suit states that Mallick, who had been the branch's senior associate-cum-cash in-charge since June 2022, approved and disbursed 105 gold loans totaling Rs 5,21,42,000 between October 2024 and July 2025 without the required paperwork or real gold ornaments as collateral. 


Mallick's responsibilities included recommending loan sanctioning, confirming eligibility and compliance with the necessary documentation, and checking gold ornaments with the assistance of goldsmiths. In addition, he was responsible for keeping track of the pledged gold ornaments and the completed loan agreements.When Mallick failed to present the gold loan files to senior officials during their normal visit to the bank in 2025, the scam was discovered.


In 2025, Chief Manager Manorama Rout of SBI Balasore discovered the fraud on a routine check. Mallick fled without warning and neglected to present the necessary gold loan documents.


Rout ordered an urgent spot audit and a thorough internal investigation because he suspected irregularities. According to the inquiry, 74 loans were approved without any gold security at all, and 31 of the 105 accounts contained the pledge of phony or counterfeit gold ornaments.


It was discovered that a number of loan files contained fraudulent borrower signatures and were missing important papers including jeweler valuation assessments.


The bank personnel carried out a thorough internal inquiry and audited the gold loan accounts. They discovered that Mallick had processed 105 gold loan accounts unlawfully.


Of them, 74 accounts were approved without receiving any gold ornaments, and 31 accounts involved the pledge of counterfeit gold ornaments.In this regard, the bank executives then filed a complaint with the EOW. The major scam was found when the EOW began its inquiry.

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Union Bank of India Q4 Net profit rises 6.6%


State-owned Union Bank of India on Thursday reported a 6.6 per cent increase in net profit year-on-year to ₹5,316 crore for the fourth quarter of FY26, compared with ₹4,985 crore in the year-ago period, aided by lower provisions and operating expenses. Sequentially, net profit rose 6 per cent from ₹5,017 crore in Q3FY26.

 

Provisions declined 2.76 per cent year-on-year to ₹2,640 crore from ₹2,715 crore in Q4FY25. However, on a sequential basis, provisions rose sharply by 37.1 per cent from ₹1,925 crore in Q3FY26, mainly due to a one-time increase in standard asset provision of ₹700 crore.


Operating expenses declined 6.9 per cent year-on-year and 0.9 per cent sequentially to ₹6,863 crore in Q4FY26.

 

Net interest income (NII) for the quarter stood at ₹9,406 crore, marginally lower by 1.1 per cent year-on-year, but up 0.8 per cent sequentially. Interest earned declined 4.5 per cent year-on-year to ₹26,439 crore, while interest expenses fell 6.3 per cent to ₹17,033 crore.

 

Net interest margin (NIM) moderated to 2.64 per cent in Q4FY26, from 2.76 per cent in the previous quarter. NIM in Q4FY25 was 2.87 per cent.


“We have seen a cumulative repo rate reduction of 125 basis points, of which about 53–54 per cent has been transmitted. Despite this, our margins have remained relatively stable, with NIM moderating only from 2.91 per cent (FY25) to 2.70 per cent (FY26), a decline of just 21 basis points,” said Asheesh Pandey, MD & CEO, Union Bank of India.


Other income declined 2.6 per cent year-on-year to ₹5,412 crore in Q4 but rose 19.2 per cent sequentially. Treasury income declined sharply to ₹636 crore in Q4FY26, down 61.4 per cent year-on-year and 29.4 per cent sequentially.

 

“Treasury income has declined during the period due to market conditions. As far as regulatory limits are concerned, including the RBI’s cap on overnight positions, our exposure remained well within limits at around $30 million. We maintained a cautious stance and avoided taking large positions during a volatile phase, which ensured there was no material impact on earnings,” Pandey said.

 

Operating profit before provisions and contingencies increased 3.3 per cent year-on-year to ₹7,955 crore and rose 14.6 per cent sequentially.


“Other income in the previous year included a one-off recovery of ₹787 crore from the sale of two NARCL-backed accounts, which had sovereign guarantee support. Adjusting for that, other income declined by about 1.9 per cent year-on-year,” Pandey added.

 

On the asset quality front, gross non-performing assets (GNPA) declined 14 per cent year-on-year to ₹30,401 crore, while net NPAs fell 15.1 per cent to ₹5,067 crore during the same period. In percentage terms, the GNPA ratio improved to 2.82 per cent from 3.60 per cent a year ago, while the net NPA ratio eased to 0.48 per cent from 0.63 per cent.


On the business front, total advances grew 9.7 per cent year-on-year to ₹10.79 trillion and 6.1 per cent sequentially, indicating steady credit demand. Deposits, however, were largely flat on a yearly basis at ₹13.07 trillion, though they rose 6.9 per cent quarter-on-quarter.

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Bank Ignored Credit Card Closure Request, Ended Up Paying ₹3.21 Lakh – Know Reserve Bank of India Rules”


After a private bank neglected to promptly close a credit card, a credit card user was compensated with a substantial sum of Rs 3.21 lakh.


The user described how he attempted to close two credit cards in May of last year after the bank lowered the credit limit from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 10,000 in a widely shared Reddit post titled "Got Rs 3.21 lakh compensation from Kotak Mahindra Bank for not closing my credit card." The bank charged an annual fee rather than canceling the cards.


The user then filed a complaint with higher authorities. After bringing up the matter, the bank claimed that the cards had never been closed, which led to another round of unanswered emails. The user complained to the Banking Ombudsman because they were frustrated.


The bank’s officer called customer and said: “It’s your mistake. Closure requests are not accepted via email, you should have called”. But I had already submitted a written closure request. Sent follow-ups. Received no response from the bank.”


The user said the bank finally paid a compensation of Rs 3,21,000. But what are RBI guidelines regarding credit card closure? Let’s understand.


According to RBI guidelines, if a bank fails to close a credit card within 7 working days of a customer’s request (provided all dues are cleared), the issuer must pay a penalty of ₹500 per day of delay to the customer.


If a bank fails to follow the guidelines, customers can raise a complaint. The first step is to complain to the bank’s nodal officer. If no resolution is provided within 30 days, customers can approach the RBI Ombudsman.

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₹1.15 Crore Worth of Jewelry Missing from Indian Bank in Gujarat: Petition in High Court



In a case that has raised public concern regarding the safety of assets pledged in public sector banks, the Gujarat High Court has issued notices to the State Government and the Rajkot Police. The court is seeking a response following a petition filed regarding the mysterious disappearance of gold jewelry worth approximately ₹1.15 crore from a branch of Indian Bank. This dispute originally began in 2023.


 Incident

A couple from Rajkot had taken an MSME Jewel Loan from the Rajkot branch of Indian Bank.

 They had pledged over 1,000 grams of 22-carat gold jewelry, which included necklaces and pieces studded with precious stones.

 Despite the petitioners regularly fulfilling their interest obligations, they were informed on October 29, 2025, that their pledged jewelry had gone missing from the bank’s locker (secure storage).

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