Business Standard

PNB posts pre-tax loss of ~969-crore in Q4

- SOMESH JHA

State-owned Punjab National Bank posted a net loss of ~697 crore in the fourth quarter of 2019-20 (Q4FY20) before completing the amalgamati­on process, as it posted a second continuous quarterly loss. The bank’s loss before tax stood at ~969 crore in Q4FY20, compared to a loss of ~7,209 crore in the same period last year.

State-owned Punjab National Bank posted a pre-tax loss of ~969 crore in the fourth quarter (Q4FY20), compared to a loss of ~7,209 crore in the correspond­ing period last year.

The lender reported a net loss of ~697 crore in Q4FY20 before completing the amalgamati­on process, as it posted a second continuous quarterly loss.

The net loss of the bank was significan­tly lower than a loss of ~4,750 crore in Q4FY19. In the third quarter of 2019-20, PNB’S net loss stood at ~492 crore.

The bank made a provisioni­ng of ~4,518 crore towards bad loans in Q4FY20, almost half of the ~9,153 crore it had made in the same quarter of the previous financial year. The bank’s net interest income (difference between interest earned through lending and interest paid to depositors) rose 11 per cent to ~4,678 crore from the year-ago period.

For the entire FY20, PNB’S net profit stood at ~336 crore, compared to a loss of ~9,975 crore in the previous year. Significan­tly, the bank’s gross non-performing assets (NPAS) reduced to 14.21 per cent in Q4, compared to 16.3 per cent in the previous quarter.

The bank’s capital adequacy ratio, considered to be one of the key indicators for its health, inched up to 14.14 per cent in this quarter, compared to 14.04 per cent in the previous one.

The RBI requires banks to maintain the capital adequacy ratio at 11.5 per cent. Banks are required to maintain a minimum capital to ensure they do not lend all the money they receive as deposits and keep a buffer to meet future risks.

The bank said that the situation related to the Covid-19 pandemic continues to remain uncertain and it is “evaluating the situation on an ongoing basis.”

“The major identified challenges for the bank would arise from eroding cash flows and extended working capital cycles,” the bank said in its balance sheet. However, it added that the bank wasn’t required to make any adjustment­s to its financial year in FY20 because of it.

The bank said it extended moratorium to its loan accounts, a dispensati­on given by the RBI to help borrowers tide over the impact of the pandemic, to the tune of ~51,773 crore. As a result, the bank had to make a provision of ~142 crore during the fourth quarter.

Beginning April 1, Oriental Bank of Commerce and United Bank of India have amalgamate­d into PNB.

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