BS Reporters / Mumbai/bangalorenew Delhi/kolkata November 1, 2011, 0:24 IST
Asharp rise in provisioning for bad loans lowered the net profits of
public sector banks in the second quarter of this financial year. Most
banks saw an increase in non-performing assets (NPAs) on back of rising
interest rates and migration to an automated recognition system.
Mumbai-based Bank of Baroda (BoB) posted an increase of 14.4 per cent
in net profit at Rs 1,166 crore in the quarter ended September,
provisioning for bad loans more than doubled to Rs 298 crore as compared
to same quarter, last year. “Increase in NPAs was seen from all sectors
and geographies,” said M D Mallya, chairman and managing director. He
said Rs 663 crore worth of assets were restructured quarter and 10-11
per cent of the total restructured portfolio slipped into NPAs in
July-September.
All government banks were mandated to shift to an automatic NPA
recognition system by the end of September. Also, adding to the pressure
on banks’ asset quality was the monetary tightening by Reserve Bank of
India as it raised policy rates 13 times since March, 2010.
Higher provisioning dragged Bangalore-based Canara Bank’s net profit
15.4 per cent, to Rs 852.2 crore during the reporting period. The higher
provisioning was because the bank has migrated all accounts to the
automated NPA recognition system. “We have taken a hit on our net profit
mainly because of higher provisions towards NPAs to the tune of Rs 553
crore, higher by 3.5 times over the corresponding quarter,” S Raman,
chairman and managing director, said.
New Delhi-based Oriental Bank of Commerce which has seen provisioning
for bad loans and writeoffs more than double to Rs 485 crore in
July-September this year, reported 58 per cent decline in net profit to
Rs 167 crore.
An increase in bad loans also weighed on Corporation Bank which
reported 14 per cent rise in net profit at Rs 401.11 crore. The gross
NPAs of the bank rose 1.32 per cent at end-September from 1.05 per cent
in the same period of the previous year. According to the management,
the major source of addition to bad loans were small and medium
enterprises and the agriculture sector.
Led by a higher yield on advances and lower provisioning,
Kolkata-based UCO Bank posted a 94 per cent rise in net profit to Rs 231
crore for the quarter ended September 30, against Rs 119 crore in the
same period last year.
Dena Bank reported 20.8 per cent rise in net profit at Rs 193.58
crore for the quarter ended September 2011. Its net interest income was
up 16.43 per cent at Rs 514.9 crore.
United Bank of India posted a 13.7 per cent rise in net profit to Rs
124.77 crore for the quarter ended September against Rs 109.7 crore in
the same period last year. The bank’s slippages more than doubled at Rs
623 crore in the last quarter, against Rs 203 crore in the same period
last year. “More than 50 per cent of the slippages are on account of
mid-corporate accounts; the rest is contributed by small ticket
advances,” said Bhaskar Sen, MD and chairman.
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