Business Standard

Canara Bank Q1 net up 10% to ~252 crore

- ABHIJIT LELE Mumbai, 19 July

Weighed down by bad loans provisions, public sector lender Canara Bank posted just 9.9 per cent growth in net profit to ~252 crore for the first quarter ended June 30. The bank’s net profit in the AprilJune quarter of the previous financial year was ~229 crore.

The bank’s net interest income (NII) rose 17.6 per cent to ~2,713 crore, while its noninteres­t income increased by 33.06 per cent to ~2,109 crore in Q1FY18. However, higherthan-expected slippages pushed provisions for nonperform­ing assets (NPAs) to 54 per cent, putting pressure on the bottom line.

The stock of the Bengalurub­ased lender closed 0.58 per cent up at ~371 on the BSE. On the asset side, its quality worsened, with gross NPAs rising to 10.56 per cent in June 2017, up from 9.71 per cent in Q1FY17.

In a conference call with analysts, Rakesh Sharma, managing director and chief executive, Canara Bank, said it was a tough quarter.

The slippages of ~5,511 crore were higher than estimates. Out of these, four large corporate accounts had a share of ~2,712 crore and the small accounts (below ~1 crore) of ~792 crore as they lost moratorium enjoyed after demonetisa­tion. The slippages in normal course were of about ~2,002 crore. Net NPAs or bad loans were 7.09 per cent of net advances on June 30, compared to 6.69 per cent a year ago.

There was a spike in the bank’s provisioni­ng for NPAs to ~2,270 crore as against ~1,469 crore a year ago. Its provision coverage ratio (PCR) improved and stood at 54.52 per cent at end of Q1 FY18 from 50.82 per cent at end of Q1FY17. It expects to improve PCR by 2-3 per cent each year.

As for exposure to 12 big NPA cases, the bank said they constitute­d NPAs worth ~10,200 crore. The bank already holds provisions of ~5,600 crore for these accounts and have to make additional provisions of ~2,200 crore over three quarters.

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