The Free Press Journal

SBI Q2 profit falls 69%, bad loans decline

Bank back in the black helped by Rs 5,436-cr one-time income on unit stake sale

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After three quarters of continuous losses, a massive one-time gain and better asset quality helped the SBI on Monday report a consolidat­ed net profit of Rs 576 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2018, down 69 per cent year-on-year.

The country's largest lender had posted a Rs 4,875.85 crore net loss in the previous quarter.

At the standalone level, net income of the State Bank of India (SBI) fell 40 per cent to Rs 944.9 crore from Rs 1,581.55 crore on the back of better asset quality. A higher tax outgo of Rs 868 crore also led to a lower bottom line. The numbers would have been bad, had it not been for the one-time income of Rs 5,436 crore on part stake sale in SBI Life in the quarter.

For the lender, this comes as a big breather having been in the red for the past three quarters. In the June quarter, the bank made a loss of Rs 4,876 crore and also in the March 2018 quarter when it had reported its biggest-ever net loss of Rs 7,718 crore. Investors lapped up the numbers as they were expecting heavy losses this time around as well. The SBI counter, which remained in the green throughout the day, closed with a gain of 3.45 per cent on the BSE at Rs 295.30, after scaling Rs 299.90 post-results, while on the NSE it was the best performer hitting Rs 300. Against this, the indices closed in the red with marginal loses in a choppy trade.

The management guided towards better days ahead as it expects credit cost or provisioni­ng to continue to improve as the quality of its assets gets better. The bank is also hopeful of clocking better credit sales and further improving the margin.

SBI Chairman Rajnish Kumar said that the bank does not have an issue with its exposure to the troubled IL&FS group, which is only a little over Rs 4,250 crore -- to the group's a dozen or so special purpose vehicles, of which only one account is an NPA and has accordingl­y made a provision of Rs 56 crore. Of the total Rs 4,000 crore are to 12-14 SPVs and Rs 250 crore is the holding company.

Total consolidat­ed income rose to Rs 79,302.72 crore in the quarter from Rs 74,948.51 crore a year ago, and standalone income rose to Rs 66,607.98 crore from Rs 65,429.63 crore.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) rose to 9.95 per

cent from 9.83 per cent a year ago, while net NPAs improved to 4.53 per cent from 4.84 per cent. But, this is better than the June quarter performanc­e when GNPA stood at 10.69 per cent. In absolute terms the lender reported net NPAs of Rs 94,810 crore down from Rs 99,263.3 in June quarter. In absolute, gross NPAs came in at Rs 2.05 trillion down from Rs 2.12 trillion in the previous quarter.

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