Business Standard

▶ The Compass: Despite record losses, more pain ahead for PNB

Bank has to carry forward ~100 billion provisioni­ng in FY19

- SHREEPAD S AUTE

Punjab National Bank (PNB) posted record losses at ~134 billion in the March 2018 quarter (Q4) which was way higher than the ~26-27 billion analysts had estimated. Moreover, for the first time, PNB posted ~4.5 billion of operating losses. With higher slippages of ~310 billion (extrapolat­ed from the difference between the 9months December 2017 and FY18 slippages) resulting in interest reversal, the bank’s net interest income (difference between interest earned and expensed) declined sharply by 16.8 per cent year-on-year in Q4. This, along with a sharp rise in cost-to-income ratio (61.5 per Fraud-related provision Investment-related provision Provisioni­ng on IBC* reduced by the bank Gratuity-related liability 71.8 10.9 16.8 1.9 cent from 43 per cent in the year-ago period), impacted the operating performanc­e. But it’s not over yet. The bank will have to carry forward some pain — to the tune of ~100 billion — in FY19 as it uses various relief options given by the RBI to spread the provisioni­ng pain over some quarters, instead of taking a one-time hit.

This could be in terms of mark-to-market losses (due to high yields impacting the market value of investment book), fraud-related provisions, provision on insolvency and bankruptcy code, among others (see table). This makes the FY19 earnings picture gloomy as this amount (~100 billion) is over 80 per cent of PNB's average operating profit in the past two fiscals. “Despite the bank having used multiple options, we believe a tail end of provisioni­ng burden will be present in FY19 as well, which will keep the earnings under pressure,” says Lalitabh Shrivastaw­a, assistant vice presidentr­esearch at Sharekhan.

Besides, advances are also expected to get hurt owing to the slumped capital base of the bank due to the higher provisioni­ng/slippages.

As of March 2018, tier-1 capital and total capital adequacy ratio were at 7.1 per cent and 9.2 per cent, respective­ly.

The bank’s net NPAs were 119 per cent of its net worth as of March 2018, leaving nothing on the desk for the bank.

Although, analysts/experts expect additional capital infusion by the government during FY19 to protect the bank.

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