Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Indian banks resilient despite rising NPAS, pressure on margins: Care

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Mumbai: Despite pressure on margins and concerns over asset quality, the banking sector as a whole will continue to display resilience, says a report by Care Rating based on the performanc­e of 39 banks during the first nine months of this fiscal. “Though pressure on margins coupled with higher provisioni­ng have impacted the profitabil­ity parameters of the banks during the first nine months of the fiscal, we believe that banks can weather the pressures as they are well capitalise­d,” says the report.

This optimism comes against the backdrop of a slowing economy and the resultant moderation in credit offtake and deposit mobilisati­on during the reporting period. However, it notes that the asset quality has seen some pressure on account of migration of public sector banks to system based bad assets recognitio­n as well as the overall slowdown.

The study covers 39 banks of which 26 were public sector banks and 13 private lenders. For these 39 banks, total income grew a robust 31.8 percent during the period. However, with tight interest rates, net interest income slowed to 15.45 percent with private banks faring better than their public sector peers. Net interest margin ratio also moderated marginally from around 3.02 percent to 2.94 percent.

On an overall basis, other income remained stagnant on the back of decline in treasury gains with firming up of yields. While PSBS saw a marginal rise of around 4 percent, private lenders fared better with a 15 percent rise. The disparity is mainly on account of relatively higher proportion of fee-based income in the income profile of private sector banks, says the report.

Rise in provisioni­ng coupled with pressure on margins have resulted in a near flat net profit growth of 5 percent for banks. In fact, PSU banks recorded a marginal dip in profits, despite the fact that their overall cost of funds remained almost flat.

The overall cost-to-income ratio remained at near the same level at 44.53 percent as against 44.23 percent. While PSUS banks saw their cost-to-income ratio almost flat at 44 percent against 44.03 percent, private banks saw a marginal rise from 44.86 to 46.15 percent.

(PTI)

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