Business Standard

Axis Bank net profit falls 36% in Dec qtr

Provisioni­ng cost rose 33% YOY; proforma gross NPA stands at 4.55%

- SUBRATA PANDA & HAMSINI KARTHIK Mumbai, 27 January

Private lender Axis Bank reported a 36 per cent decline in net profit at ~1,117 crore in the December quarter (Q3) of financial year 2020-21 (FY21), compared with ~1,757 crore a year ago, due to higher provisions. Reported numbers were below the Street’s estimate of ~1,500 crore. Axis Bank stock was the worst performer among the BSE Sensex components, down 4.05 per cent on Wednesday’s trade.

Net interest income (NII) rose 14 per cent year-on-year (YOY) to ~7,373 crore, compared with ~6,453 crore a year ago. Adjusted for interest reversals, NII would have increased by 19 per cent YOY to ~7,985 crore. Other income — which includes fee income, trading income, and miscellane­ous income — declined marginally by 0.3 per cent to ~3,776 crore in Q3FY21. Net interest margin adjusted for interest reversal stood at 3.59 per cent, similar to the year-ago level.

Axis Bank’s loan book grew by 9 per cent YOY to a little over ~6 trillion, including targeted long-term repo operation investment­s. Retail loan growth came at just about 9 per cent to ~3.17 trillion and accounts for 55 per cent of the bank’s total advances. Deposits grew by 11 per cent YOY to ~6.54 trillion and the share of low-cost current account – savings account at 42 per cent rose by 232 basis points (bps) YOY.

For yet another quarter, the bank refrained from giving any guidance on growth, though it stated that the run rate for December on the retail book might continue. As for corporate loans, “we are cognizant of the fact that lot of banks are chasing some assets, but we don’t want to price lower to chase growth,” said Amitabh Chaudhry, managing director and chief executive officer, Axis Bank. “We are on a certain journey with respect to NIM and if decisions are only to be based on price, we are happy to let go,” he asserted.

This was the fifth straight quarter of higher provisioni­ng cost. At ~4,604.28 crore, provisioni­ng cost for the quarter rose by 33 per cent YOY to ~3,470.92 crore, though it was flat sequential­ly. Loan loss provisioni­ng stood at ~1,053 crore, as against ~2,962 crore a year ago, whereas ~3,899 crore was set aside for accounts that were 90 days past due (DPD), but have not been classified as non-performing assets (NPAS) because of the Supreme Court’s order of a standstill on asset classifica­tion. Consequent­ly, cumulative provisions held by the bank totaled to ~11,856 crore.

Helped by the standstill, the bank’s asset quality improved with gross NPA ratio at 3.44 per cent in Q3, as against 4.18 per cent in Q2, and 5 per cent a year ago. Net NPA ratio declined by 24 bps sequential­ly and by 135 bps YOY to 0.74 per cent.

However, not counting for the SC’S stay, proforma gross NPA ratio and net NPA ratios would have stood at 4.55 per cent and 1.19 per cent, respective­ly. Sequential­ly, they indicate a rise from 4.28 per cent gross NPA ratio and 1.03 per cent net NPA ratio. Axis Bank’s retail portfolio appears to have been hit the hardest as retail proforma gross NPAS rose to 2.4 per cent, compared with the reported 0.5 per cent in Q3. Stress was visible across portfolios, including in mortgages, because of the bank’s inability to force legal action.

Therefore, while gross slippages appeared marginal in Q3, if considered as per Reserve Bank of India’s income recognitio­n and asset classifica­tion (IRAC) norms, slippages would have been ~6,736 crore, almost four times larger than Q2’s ~1,572 crore and 8 per cent higher than a year-ago level. The bank has stated that roughly 83 per cent of Q3 slippages were from its retail portfolio.

The restructur­ed loans in Q3 stood at ~2,709 crore, or just about 0.42 per cent of the gross customer assets, as against the earlier estimate of ~11,000 crore in Q2. Only ~396 crore loans have been restructur­ed so far.

Axis Bank’s provision coverage ratio improved to 79 per cent in Q3, as against 77 per cent in Q2.

The bank’s capital adequacy ratio stood at 19.31 per cent, with common equity tier-1 capital at 15.36 per cent as on December 31.

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