State-owned Bank of India Friday reported a nearly three-fold surge in net profit at Rs 1,551 crore in the June 2023 quarter, due to a decline in bad loans and higher margins following repricing of existing assets.The city-based lender said its total income rose to Rs 15,821 crore against Rs 11,124 crore in the same period a year ago. Of this, the key profitability metric net interest income rose 45 per cent to Rs 5,915 crore and non-interest income increased 27 per cent to Rs 1,462 crore.The yield on advances rose by 157 bps, boosting its net profit by 176 per cent to Rs 1,551 cr in the reporting period.
The bottom line was also buoyed by a 49 bps increase in global NIM to 3.03 per cent, while domestic NIM improved 51 bps to 3.37 per cent, chief executive and managing director Rajneesh Karnatak told reporters in post-earnings a con call this later afternoon.The bank saw major improvement in asset quality with gross NPAs falling by 22.14 per cent to Rs 34,583 crore from Rs 44,415 crore and net NPAs declined by 16.96 per cent to Rs 8,119 crore from Rs 9,775 crore.
In percentage terms, the gross NPA ratio improved 263 bps to 6.67 from 9.30 and the net NPA ratio improved by 56 bps to 1.65 in June 2023 from 2.21 in June 2022. The provision coverage ratio improved by 156 bps to 89.52 from 87.96, Karnatak said, adding the bank’s core capital ratio stood at 15.60 with CET-1 ratio at 13.02.Karnatak said its global business crossed Rs 12 lakh crore mark, increased by 8.61 per cent to Rs 5,18,264 crore and global deposits increased 8.71 per cent to Rs 6,96,544 crore.
But gross advances inched up by 8.48 per cent and the management said this is planned as better-rated borrowers were demanding loans at repo rate. Domestic deposits increased by 7.98 per cent to Rs 5,89,517 crore, of which Casa rose 7.56 per cent to Rs 2,60,615 crore. Domestic advances increased 7.98 per cent to Rs 4,33,246 crore.”We’ve decided that we will not increase our asset base at the cost of the bottom line. Accordingly, we’ve been saying now to low-priced loans,” Karnatak told PTI. But for the full year, he expects 12-13 per cent credit growth and 7-8 per cent deposit growth.
Retail, agri and MSME advances, which constitute 55.4 per cent of the loan book, grew by 11.75 per cent with retail growing 15.05 per cent, agriculture 10.10 per cent and MSME 9.19 per cent.The slippage ratio improved to 0.53 per cent from 0.69 per cent. In absolute terms, the bank saw Rs 2,379 crore of fresh slippages, but this was almost cushioned by cash recovery of Rs 1,120 crore, and upgrades of Rs 700 crore. It wrote off Rs 3,800 crore in the quarter.The bank has set a target of Rs 2,000 crore quarterly recoveries and is hopeful of yanking down gross NPAs under-6 per cent for the full year.