Business Standard

BoB puts ~28 bn non-fund exposures under watch

- ABHIJIT LELE

Besides having direct loans worth ~68 billion under its watch list, Bank of Baroda has also put non-fund exposures worth ~28 billion on “watch”, which could turn into stressed assets.

The bank has also started making provisions for nonfund-based limits such as guarantees and letters of credit. The non-fund-based exposure is about ~28 billion and has a provision of 35 per cent of the amount — about ~9.8 billion.

P S Jayakumar, managing director and chief executive, BoB, said that not all of nonfund-based exposure is going to devolve and some of the guarantees are going to fade out. “The provisions taken so far are an adequate reflection of the risk that we see on portfolio,” he said.

The watch list — loans which show high risks of slippages of ~86 billion (direct loans) — mostly comprise of loans to power, iron and steel textiles and road sector.

It has already sold bad loans worth ~8 billion, and are expecting another ~18-19 billion get resolved. The bank is expecting slippages to be about ~40 billion in the current financial year.

Jayakumar said its Gross Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) at 12.46 per cent as on June 30, 2018 against 12.26 per cent last quarter (March 2018), indicating stabilisat­ion in NPA levels. They were at 11.40 per cent at the end of June 2017. Its net NPA ratio declined to 5.40 per cent from 5.49 per cent last quarter (March, 2018). The net NPAs were at 5.17 per cent at end of June, 2017. The provisions for NPAs declined on year-on-year (YoY) basis and sequential basis (Quarter-onQuarter). They fell by 18.41 per cent on Y-o-Y basis to ~17.59 billion. The fall was sharper sequential­ly of 75.05 per cent.

Provision Coverage Ratio (PCR) continues to be high. PCR, including that for the written-off (TWO) accounts increased to 69.11 per cent. PCR, excluding TWO, increased to 59.94 per cent as on June 30, 2018, from 58.42 per cent as on March 31, 2018.

Stress on internatio­nal book

Provision coverage ratio for NPAs in internatio­nal book is about 75 per cent. There are certain External Commercial

Borrowings of Indian corporatio­ns, some trading assets for which we are heading towards 100 per cent provisioni­ng and some coal assets, which we feel will have some realisable value, although their resolution has been postponed. Given the fact that there is market pick up on coal, one should hope that recoveries on them should come through, he said.

Its advances rose by 9.8 per cent to ~4.14 trillion, while deposits rose by 1.9 per cent to ~5.81 trillion at end of June 2018.

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