RBI imposes Rs. 2.5 crore penalty on three banks


The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) imposed a monetary penalty on three private and public sector lenders on Friday. The central bank charged Jammu & Kashmir Bank with 
Rs.2.5 crore penalty, while the Bank of Maharashtra faced a fine of Rs.1.45 crore. Axis Bank received the least amount of penalty among them to the tune of Rs.30 lakh.


Jammu & Kashmir Bank:

RBI imposed a Rs.2.5 crore penalty on J&K Bank for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Creation of a Central Repository of Large Common Exposures-Across Banks’, read with ‘Central Repository of Information on Large Credits (CRILC) – Revision in Reporting’, ‘Loans and Advances – Statutory and other Restrictions’ and ‘Time-bound implementation and strengthening of SWIFT-related operational controls’.

According to RBI's inspection, J&K Bank non-complied in --- (i) failed to ensure integrity and quality of data submitted to CRILC, (ii) extended term loans to a corporation (a) without undertaking due diligence on the viability and bankability of the projects to ensure that revenue streams from the projects are sufficient to take care of the debt servicing obligations and (b) failing to ensure that the repayment/servicing of said term loans were not made out of budgetary resources and (iii) created financial/non-financial messages in SWIFT without first ensuring that the underlying transactions have been duly reflected in the CBS.


Bank of Maharashtra:

This government-owned bank was imposed with Rs.1.45 crore penalty for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Loans and Advances – Statutory and Other Restrictions’ and Advisory on ‘Man in the Middle (MiTM) Attacks in ATMs’ (the Advisory).

BoM committed non-compliance in the extent of --- (1) it sanctioned a term loan to a Corporation (i) in lieu of or to substitute budgetary resources envisaged for certain projects; (ii) without undertaking due diligence on the viability and bankability of the projects to ensure that revenue streams from the projects were sufficient to take care of the debt servicing obligations; and (iii) the repayment/servicing of which was made out of budgetary resources, and (2) it failed to implement required control measures for ATMs relating to end-to-end encryption of communication between the ATM terminal/PC and the ATM Switch, within the prescribed timeline.


Axis Bank:

Axis Bank, one of the leading private sector lenders, was penalised with Rs.30 lakh due to its non-compliance with certain provisions of the RBI directions on ‘Prudential Norms on Income Recognition, Asset Classification and Provisioning pertaining to Advances – Credit Card Accounts’.

As per RBI's inspection, Axis Bank had levied penal charges in certain accounts for late payment of credit card dues though the customers had paid the dues by the due date, through third party platforms.


Notably, before imposing the charges, RBI had sent notices to these three banks --- advising them to show cause as to why a penalty should not be imposed on them for failure to comply with the directions issued.


After considering the banks' reply to the notice, RBI came to the conclusion that the charge of non-compliance with the aforesaid RBI directions was substantiated and warranted the imposition of monetary penalty on these banks.

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Axis Bank Q1 Results: Profit zooms 91% YoY


Axis Bank on Monday reported a 91 per cent year-on-year (YoY) rise in net profit at Rs 4,125.26 crore for the June quarter compared with Rs 2,160.15 crore in the same quarter last year. 
An ET NOW poll of analysts had anticipated the profit figure at Rs 3,400 crore.


Net interest income (NII) for the quarter rose 21 per cent YoY to Rs 9,384 crore, the private lender said in a BSE filing. Net interest margin (NIM) for the quarter came in at 3.6 per cent, up 14 basis points YoY.Fee income for the quarter jumped 34 per cent YoY to Rs 3,576 crore. Retail fees climbed 43 per cent YoY and constituted 66 per cent of the bank’s total fee income.


The bank said it made specific loan loss provisions worth Rs 777 crore compared with Rs 602 crore in the March quarter. The bank, Axis Bank said, has not utilised Covid provisions during the quarter.


Overall, the private lender held cumulative provisions of Rs 11,830 crore at the end of the June quarter. It is pertinent to note that this is over and above the NPA provisioning included in our PCR calculations. These cumulative provisions translate to a standard asset coverage of 1.70 per cent as on 30 June, 2022. On an aggregated basis, our provision coverage ratio stands at 134 per cent of GNPA," the bank said.


The Gross NPA ratio for the quarter stood at 2.76 per cent compared with 2.82 per cent in the March quarter. Credit cost for the quarter stood at 0.41 per cent, down 129 basis points YoY.


The bank said it issued 9.9 lakh credit cards in June quarter, which is incremental share of 17 per cent for the last six months.


Credit card spends were up 96 per cent YoY for the quarter. The bank said it was the second largest player in merchant acquiring with market share of 17 per cent, accounting for the incremental share of 30 per cent for last three months.


MD & CEO Amitabh Chaudhry said, “As an institution, we continue to make good progress despite the macroeconomic headwinds that pose a challenge at multiple levels, both domestically and to the larger global economy."


The bank said its balance sheet was up 14 per cent YoY at Rs 11,52,580 crores as of 30th June 2022. Total deposits grew 14 per cent YoY on a quarterly average balance (QAB) basis and 13 per cent YoY on a period-end basis.


The lender's advances rose 14 per cent YoY to Rs 7,01,130 crore. The bank’s loan-to-deposit ratio stood at 87 per cent. Retail loans grew 25 per cent YoY to Rs 4,12,683 crore and accounted for 59 per cent of the net advances of the bank. The share of secured retail loans was 79 per cent, with home loans comprising 35 per cent of the retail book. Home loans grew 18 per cent YoY, small business banking 74 per cent YoY and the rural loan portfolio grew 42 per cent YoY.


Unsecured personal loans rose 20 per cent YoY. Credit Card advances jumped 42 per cent YoY. "SME book that remains well diversified across geographies and sectors grew 27% YOY to Rs 71,972 crore. The corporate loan book stood at Rs 2,16,475 crore.


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Six Indian banks sue GVK for Rs 12,114 crore: Report


Six Indian banks are reportedly suing the GVK Group for $1.5 billion or Rs 12,114 crore, according to the Times of India. The six banks include Bank of Baroda, Bank of India, Canara Bank , Icici Bank , Indian Overseas Bank, and Axis Bank.


According to the report, GVK defaulted on a $1-billion loan and a $35-million letter of credit facility given by banks in 2011, and a $160-million loan lent in 2014.


GVK Coal Developers (Singapore) and nine other GVK Group companies are being sued in the case which opens Monday.


As per the banks, GVK failed to make repayments as they fell due and failed to obtain a mining lease in the Alpha project in Queensland, Australia by December 31, 2012, which was a project milestone that had to be satisfied. The banks reportedly asked GVK in November 2020 to cancel the agreement and requested repayment. But neither GVK nor its guarantors has paid any of the sums owed, the banks claimed.


On the other hand, GVK argued that "the loans was to provide part funding for the acquisition of the Hancock companies in Australia to develop their assets — including the Alpha project — into working coal mines".


“The deterioration in the market for coal, the lack of third-party investment, legal challenges to the mining projects in the courts of Queensland, meant that very little progress was made to develop the mining assets,” GVK states. GVK states it could not obtain the mining lease owing to litigation by environmental groups but denies this was a “default”.

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Axis Bank Q2 results: Lender posts highest ever quarterly profit, up 86% YoY

Axis Bank on Tuesday reported an 86 per cent year-on-year (YoY) rise in net profit at Rs 3,133 crore for the September quarter compared with Rs 1,683 crore in the same quarter last year. This was the highest ever quarterly profit for the bank, the lender said in a BSE filing.


Net interest income (NII) for the bank rose 8 per cent YoY to Rs 7,900 crore compared with Rs 7,326 crore in the year-ago quarter. Net interest margin (NIM) for the recently concluded quarter came in at 3.39 per cent.


Specific loan loss provisions for the September quarter stood at Rs 927 crore compared with Rs 2,865 crore in the June quarter and Rs 724 crore in the year-ago quarter. Total Provisions & contingencies for the quarter fell to Rs 1,735 crore from Rs 3,302 crore in the preceding quarter and Rs 4,343 crore in the corresponding quarter last fiscal.


Gross NPA ratio fell to the lowest level in 20 quarters to 3.53 per cent for the July-September period. The figure stood at 3.85 per cent in the June quarter and 4.28 per cent in the year-ago quarter.


Gross slippages for the said quarter came in at Rs 5,464 crore, lower than Rs 6,518 crore in the June 2021 quarter but higher than Rs 1,751 crore (as per IRAC norms) in the same quarter last year.


"Slippages in Q2FY21 moderated due to regulatory forbearances that do not exist in the current quarter. Recoveries and upgrades from NPAs during the quarter were Rs 4,757 crore while write-offs were Rs 2,508 crore. Consequently, there were net slippages in NPAs (before write-offs) for the quarter of Rs 707 crore compared to Rs 3,976 crore in Q1FY22. Net slippages in NPAs (before write-offs) for retail loans stood at Rs 697 crore, and for SME there was a Rs 16 crore decrease in NPAs (before write-offs)," the bank said.


Fee income for the quarter rose 17 per cent YoY to Rs 3,231 crore. Retail fees jumped 19 per cent YoY and

constituted 63 per cent of the bank’s total fee income. The corporate & commercial banking fee grew 15 per cent, the bank said.


"The trading profits and miscellaneous income for the quarter stood at Rs 473 crore and Rs 95 crore, respectively. Overall, the non-interest income (comprising of fee, trading profit and miscellaneous income) for Q2FY22 stood at Rs 3,798 crore, up 6 per cent YoY," the bank said.


The bank’s provision coverage, as a proportion of Gross NPAs, stood at 70 per cent against 77 per cent as of September 2020 and 70 per cent as of June 30. Provisions prior to technical write-offs remained stable at 88 per cent.

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Axis Bank Q1 Results: Profit jumps 94%

 


Axis Bank, country's third largest private sector lender, posted a standalone profit of Rs 2,160.15 crore for the quarter ended June 2021 (Q1FY22), thereby rising 94.2 percent year-on-year (YoY) due to low base.The standalone profit in Q1FY21 at Rs 1,112.17 crore was impacted by the higher provisions due to nationwide lockdown to control COVID spread.


Net interest income, the difference between interest earned and interest expended, grew by 11.1 percent to Rs 7,760.27 crore in Q1FY22, from Rs 6,985.31 crore in the corresponding period last fiscal.


"The balance sheet grew 14 percent YoY and stood at Rs 10,12,050 crore as on June 2021. The total deposits grew by 16 percent on period end basis and by 11 percent YoY on quarterly average balance (QAB) basis," said Axis Bank, adding advances grew 12 percent YoY to Rs 6,14,874 crore as on June 2021.


The bank further said retail loans grew 14 percent YoY and were largely flat on a sequential basis to Rs 3,31,242 crore and accounted for 54 percent of the net advances. The share of secured loans was around 80 percent, with home loans comprising 37 percent of the retail book, it added.


Provisions and contingencies remained elevated at Rs 3,532.01 crore in Q1FY22, higher by 7.2 percent compared to Rs 3,294.98 crore in Q4FY21, but have fallen 20 percent compared to Rs 4,416.42 crore in Q1FY21, the period which impacted by COVID-led lockdown.The bank has not utilised COVID provisions during the quarter. It holds cumulative provisions (standard + additional other than NPA) of Rs 12,425 crore at the end of Q1FY22.


Asset quality weakened for the June 2021 quarter. The gross non-performing assets as a percentage of gross advances increased 15 bps sequentially to 3.85 percent and net NPA as a percentage of net advances rose 15 bps QoQ to 1.20 percent in Q1.Gross slippages during the quarter were Rs 6,518 crore, which were higher than Rs 5,285 crore logged during Q4FY21 and Rs 2,218 crore in Q1FY21.


"Slippages in Q1FY21 were moderated due to regulatory forbearances that do not exist in the current quarter. Recoveries and upgrades from NPAs during the quarter were Rs 2,543 crore while write-offs were Rs 3,341 crore. Consequently, there were net slippages in NPAs (before write-offs) for the quarter of Rs 3,976 crore," said Axis Bank.


As of June 2021, the bank's provision coverage, as a proportion of gross NPAs at 70 percent was lower compared to 72 percent as of March 2021.


"The standard restructured loans under resolution framework for COVID-19 related stress as of June 2021 stood at Rs 2,192 crore that translates to 0.33 percent of the gross customer assets. The bank carries a provision of around 23 percent on restructured loans, which is in excess of regulatory limits," said Axis Bank.


Non-interest income (other income) grew by 38.7 percent YoY to Rs 3,588.17 crore in Q1FY22 as the fee income increased 62 percent YoY to Rs 2,668 crore.Pre-provision operating profit at Rs 6,416.04 crore during the quarter ended June 2021 increased by 9.8 percent compared to year-ago period.

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Axis Bank Q3 results: Net profit drops 36% , NII rises 14%

 


Axis Bank on Wednesday reported a 36% year-on-year drop in net profit to Rs.1,116.6 crore for the quarter ended 31 December. The private lender reported a net profit of Rs.1,757 crore for the corresponding quarter last year.

"Reported profits after tax for the quarter are adversely impacted to the extent of around Rs.1,050 crore on account of prudent expenses and provisioning charges during the quarter," the bank said.

The bank’s operating profit for the quarter grew 6% year-on-year to Rs.6,096 crore. The core operating profit for the quarter grew 10% year-on-year to Rs.5,754 crores.

The private lender's net interest income, the difference between interest earned and interest, rose 14% year-on-year to Rs.7,372.7 crore. NII in Q3FY20 was at Rs.6,452.98 crore. NII before interest reversals increased 19% YOY to Rs.7,987 crore, the bank said in the filing. Net interest margin (NIM) for Q3FY21 was 3.59% as against 3.57% for Q3FY20. NIM before interest reversals stood at 3.89%, the bank added.

Provisions in the quarter under review increased 32.7% year-on-year to Rs.4,604.28 crore, the bank said in the filing.

In the December quarter, the bank reported gross NPA and net NPA at 3.44% and 0.74% respectively as against 4.18% and 0.98% during the September quarter. The restructured loans as at 31st December, 2020 stood at Rs.2,709 crore that translates to 0.42% of the gross customer assets, the bank said.

Commenting on the bank's performance in Q3, Amitabh Chaudhry, MD&CEO, Axis Bank said, “As the economy turns around, we see fresh enthusiasm and positivity returning to both retail and corporate business. Digital has been one of our biggest strengths and we have fortified it further. With new collaborations with the best brands in their respective fields, we have rolled out some of the most innovative products and services for our customers, with unique features and benefits."

Loan book (including TLTRO investments) grew by 9% year-on-year to Rs.600,835 crore while retail disbursements in Q3FY21 stood at all-time highs, the lender said. Corporate loans (including TLTRO investments) reported 11% year-on-year increase, the lender said.

Axis Bank’s balance sheet improved 15% YOY and to Rs.9,38,049 crore as on 31st December 2020. The total deposits grew by 11% on period end basis and by 8% YOY on quarterly average balance (QAB) basis. On a QAB basis, savings account deposits jumped 14% YOY, retail savings deposits increased 20% YOY, current Account deposits rose 15% YOY and retail term deposits grew 17% YOY. CASA and Retail Term Deposits on QAB basis put together increased 16%YOY, the lender said.

Last week, the Competition Commission of India approved the acquisition of 19.002% stake in Max Life Insurance Company by Axis Bank and its subsidiaries (Axis Capital and Axis Securities), after revised agreements signed by all entities in October last year.

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WhatsApp Pay goes live in India with four banks


WhatsApp Pay on Wednesday announced it is now live with State Bank of India, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and Axis Bank for its up to 20 million users in India. After two years of waiting, Facebook-owned WhatsApp payment service received approval from the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) in November to go live on Unified Payment Interface (UPI) with over 160 supported banks.

WhatsApp can expand its UPI user base in a graded manner starting with a maximum registered user base of 20 million. "UPI is a transformative service and we jointly have the opportunity to bring the benefits of our digital economy and financial inclusion to a large number of users who have not had full access to them before," Abhijit Bose, Head of WhatsApp, India, said during the Facebook 'Fuel for India' virtual event.

The peer-to-peer (P2P) payment feature is available now in 10 Indian regional language versions of WhatsApp.

"We introduced banking services on WhatsApp in April. Over two million users have adopted banking services on WhatsApp in this short span. Now with WhatsApp Payments, there is a unique opportunity to scale essential financial services to people all over the country with ease," said Bijith Bhaskar, Head - Digital Channels & Partnership, ICICI Bank.

According to a latest report by Bengaluru-based research firm RedSeer, digital payments in India are expected to reach $94 trillion by the financial year 2025.

"We're excited and privileged to partner with State Bank of India, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and AXIS Bank to bring simple and secure digital payments to WhatsApp users across India," Bose said in a statement.

SBI now offers UPI services through the WhatsApp Payments, bringing the convenience of easy and instant mobile based payments.

Parag Rao, Country Head-Payments Business, Consumer Finance, Digital Banking & Marketing, HDFC Bank said that the partnership with WhatsApp Pay is yet another important step toward achieving financial inclusion and making affordable financial services available to Indians.

"Such partnerships will further fuel the economic growth and development of the nation," Rao added.

WhatsApp had said earlier that the payments feature is designed with a strong set of security and privacy principles, including entering a personal UPI PIN for each payment.

In India, the WhatsApp payment service competes against major players like Paytm, Google Pay and PhonePe, among others.

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Axis bank Q1 profit falls 19%


The country's third-largest private sector lender Axis Bank has reported an 18.8 percent year-on-year decline in standalone profit for the June quarter, impacted by lower other income and higher provisions.

Profit during the quarter declined to Rs 1,112.17 crore compared to Rs 1,370.08 crore in the corresponding period last year.

Net interest income (NII) grew by 19.5 percent year-on-year to Rs 6,985.3 crore in the quarter, with a strong loan growth of 17 percent (including TLTRO investments) and deposits growth of 19 percent on quarterly average basis (QAB).

The private lender's savings account deposits grew 15 percent YoY, current account deposits 8 percent and retail term deposits (RTD) were up 27 percent on QAB basis, while including TLTRO (Targeted Long Term Repo Operations) investments, corporate loans grew 26 percent and retail loans 16 percent.

Other income or non-interest income (comprising fee, trading profit and miscellaneous income) for Q1FY21 declined 33.1 percent to Rs 2,587 crore YoY as fee income fell 38 percent YoY to Rs 1,651 crore, the bank said. The bank attributed the decline in fees to lower business volumes and velocity of throughput of transactions.

Pre-provision operating profit (PPoP) declined 0.8 percent to Rs 5,844.4 crore compared to the corresponding quarter of the last fiscal.

"Adjusted for accounting policy changes and NII reserves created during the quarter, NII, operating profit and PAT for the quarter would have been Rs 7,100 crore, Rs 6,151 crore and Rs 1,626 crore, respectively, growing by 22 percent, 4 percent and 19 percent YoY, respectively," Axis Bank said in its BSE filing.

Asset quality has seen improvement on sequential as well as yearly basis. Gross non-performing assets as a percentage of gross advances declined 14 bps QoQ to 4.72 percent and net NPAs dropped 33 bps QoQ to 1.23 percent in June quarter 2020.

Axis Bank said it recognised slippages of Rs 2,218 crore during Q1FY21, compared to Rs 3,920 crore in Q4FY20.

"Slippages from the loan book were at Rs 2,011 crore and that from investment exposures stood at Rs 207 crore. Corporate slippages stood at Rs 1,355 crore. Recoveries and upgrades from NPAs during the quarter were Rs 608 crore while write-offs were Rs 2,284 crore," it added.

Provisions and contingencies were higher by 15.8 percent to Rs 4,416.42 crore at the end of June quarter 2020, but were lower by 42.9 percent compared to the March quarter.

The bank said it had made incremental provisions of Rs 733 crores in Q1 FY21 towards COVID-19. "In June 2020, the bank holds in aggregate additional provisions of Rs 6,898 crore. It is pertinent to note that this is over and above the NPA provisioning included in our PCR calculations, and the 0.4 percent standard asset provisioning requirement on standard assets."
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Axis Bank posts surprise loss in Q4 owing to Covid-19 provisions


Axis Bank Ltd, India's third biggest private-sector lender, on Tuesday reported a surprise ₹1,388 crore loss for the fourth quarter, as it set aside funds to cover potential loan losses due to the coronavirus-driven downturn.

The Mumbai-based Axis booked provisions of ₹7,730 crore for the quarter, or nearly three times higher than last year, including ₹3,000 crore towards COVID-19, the lender said in a regulatory filing.

Analysts had expected a profit of ₹1,556 crore for the three months to March 31, according to Refinitiv data, compared to a reported profit of ₹1,505 crore a year earlier.

However, gross bad loans as a percentage of total loans, a measure of asset quality, eased to 4.86% at March-end from 5% in the previous quarter.

It had reported a profit of ₹1,757 crore in the October to December quarter (Q3FY20).

The net interest income in Q4FY20 grew by 19 per cent year-on-year to ₹6,808 crore while operating profit was up by 17 per cent to ₹5,851 crore.

On the asset quality front, net NPAs declined to 1.56 per cent in the quarter ended March.

Provisions and contingencies during the quarter stood at ₹7,730 crore, increasing significantly from ₹2,711 crore year-on-year and ₹3,471 crore quarter-on-quarter.

For the entire year 2019-20, the net profit was ₹1,627 crore compared to ₹4,677 crore in the year ended March 2019. Adjusted for the one-offs, net profit for FY20 would have been ₹5,182 crore. up 11 per cent year-on-year, the lender said.

The net interest income in FY20 grew by 16 per cent year-on-year to ₹25,206 crore.

As on March 31, the bank's gross NPAs stood at ₹30,234 crore and net NPAs at ₹9,360 crore. The bank's provision coverage as a proportion of gross NPAs stood at 69 per cent.

Managing Director and CEO Amitabh Chaudhry said the COVID-19 crisis is a long drawn one and it will need courage, grit and a fighting spirit to combat it.
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Axis Bank Q3 net profit up 4.5%, misses estimates


Axis Bank Ltd on Wednesday said its net profit rose 4.5% year-on-year to ₹1,680.85 crore on the back of higher net interest income. Net profit was, however, lower than the ₹2,073.4 crore estimated by 22 analysts polled by Bloomberg.

Net interest income, or the difference between interest earned on loans and that paid on deposits, increased 15.16% to ₹6,452.98 crore from ₹5,603.67 crore in the corresponding period last year.

Other income, which includes core fee income, fell 5.35% on year to ₹3,786.57 crore in the three months ended December.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs), as a percentage of total advances, were at 5% in the December quarter compared with 5.03% in the September quarter and 5.75% in the year-ago December quarter.

Provisions during the quarter increased 13.6% to ₹3,470.92 crore as against ₹3,054.51 crore in the year-ago quarter. In the July-September quarter, the bank had set aside ₹3,518.39 crore in provisions.

Post provisions, net NPA ratio was at 2.09% against 1.99% in July-September and 2.36% in the year-ago quarter.

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Axis Bank reports loss in Q2FY20, Asset quality improves

Reporting a net loss of Rs 112.1 crore, Axis Bank posted a below expectation September quarter numbers of the financial year 2020 on October 22.
The bank reported a profit of Rs 789.61 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year whereas, in the June quarter of FY20, the bank's profit was Rs 1,370.08 crore.
The CNBC-TV18 poll estimated a profit of Rs 668.3 crore for the September quarter of FY20.
The bank said it had incurred a loss in Q2 due to a one-time tax impact of Rs 2,138 crore on change in the corporate tax rate. "Excluding of this extraordinary item, PAT would have been Rs 2,026 crores, up 157 percent year-on-year (YoY)," Axis Bank said.
The net interest income (NII) jumped 17 percent YoY at Rs 6,102 crore against the CNBC-TV18 poll of Rs 5,979.8 crore. The net interest margin (NIM) stood at 3.51 percent, the highest in the last nine quarters.
The asset quality remained largely stable; in fact, it improved slightly. The gross NPA stood at 5.03 percent against 5.25 percent quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) while the net NPA came at 1.99 percent against 2.04 percent QoQ.
In monetary terms, the gross NPA came at Rs 29,071 crore against Rs 29,405 crore (QoQ) and net NPA came at Rs 11,138 crore against Rs 11,037 crore (QoQ).
The bank reported total slippages at Rs 4,983 crore against Rs 4,798 crore (QoQ) while net slippages came at Rs 2,770 crore against Rs 2,621 crore (QoQ).
The bank reported provisions at Rs 3,518.4 crore against Rs 3,814.6 crore QoQ and Rs 2,927.4 crore YoY.
The provision coverage ratio improved to 79 percent from 78 percent, the bank claimed.
The loan book grew by Rs 24,318 crore QoQ, the largest growth in the last eight quarters. CASA and retail term deposits together were up 21 percent YoY on a quarterly average basis, the bank said.
The Bank's balance sheet grew 11 percent YoY and stood at Rs 8,09,294 crore as on September 30.
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Axis Bank Q1 net profit jumps 95% YoY


Axis Bank on Tuesday said its net profit climbed 95 per cent YoY to Rs 1,370 crore for the June quarter against Rs 701 crore in the same quarter last year. 

The numbers failed to meet poll ET Now poll projection of Rs 1,850 crore by a wide margin. 

The bank said it downgraded Rs 2,242 crore into the BB pool during the quarter, mostly from groups that have shown new signs of stress in recent months. Post the action, the bank’s BB and below rated book remained largely stable QoQ and stood at Rs 7,504 crore. This is 1.3 per cent of the bank’s gross customer assets, significantly down from 7.3 per cent at peak, the private bank said. 

Net Interest Income (NII) for the quarter rose 13 per cent YOY to Rs 5,844 crore from Rs 5,167 crore in the corresponding quarter last year. Net interest margin for Q1FY20 stood at 3.40 per cent, the private bank said in a BSE filing. Non-interest income, which comprises of fee, trading profit and miscellaneous income, jumped 32 per cent YOY to Rs 3,869 crore against Rs 2,925 crore in the corresponding quarter last year. Fee income rose 26 per cent YOY to Rs 2,663 crore. 

The key driver of fee income growth was retail fee, which grew 28 per cent YOY and constituted 62 per cent of the bank’s total fee income. Card Fees rose 28 per cent YOY. Transaction banking fees rose 7 per cent YoY and constituted 16 per cent of the total fee income of the bank. 

Asset quality remained stable with the bank’s gross NPA and net NPA coming at 5.25 per cent and 2.04 per cent respectively, against 5.26 per cent and 2.06 per cent, respectively as on March 31.  
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Axis Bank back in the black; posts strong profit for Q4 as provisions drop


Axis Bank on Thursday reported a profit of Rs 1,505.06 crore for the quarter ended March 31. The private lender had posted a loss of Rs 2,188.74 crore in the corresponding period last year.




Analysts in an ET NOW poll has projected a net of Rs 1,615 crore. Provisions and contingencies declined 62 per cent YoY and 11.23 per cent QoQ to Rs 2,711.43 crore.


Asset quality improved in Q4FY19 with percentage of gross non-performing assets declining to 5.56 per cent from 5.75 per cent sequentially. The figure stood at 6.77 per cent in the corresponding quarter last year. Net NPA eased to 2.06 per cent against 2.36 per cent on a QoQ basis. It was at 3.40 per cent in the same quarter last year.


The board of the company recommended a dividend of Re 1 per equity share on a face value of Rs 2.The lender’s operating profit advanced 37 per cent YoY to Rs 5,014 crore in Q4FY19. Net interest income increased 21 per cent to Rs 5,706 crore. Net interest margin stood at 3.44 per cent.



For the full financial year, the lender reported a profit of Rs 4,677 crore against Rs 276 crore in FY18. Operating profit for FY19 grew 22 per cent.Gross slippages fell 19 per cent on a sequential basis to Rs 3,012 crore.



The bank’s balance sheet grew by 16 per cent to Rs 8,00,997 crore as on March 31. Advances increased 13 per cent YoY to Rs 4,94,798 crore as on March 31.



The book value of investments portfolio stood at Rs 1,74,969 crore of which Rs 1,20,239 crore were in government securities, while Rs 40,169 crore were invested in corporate bonds and Rs 14,561 crore in other securities such as equities, preference shares and mutual funds among others.



The bank has recognised slippages of Rs 3,012 crore during Q4FY19, compared to Rs 3,746 crore in Q3FY19 and Rs 16,536 crore in Q4FY18.


The bank has made additional provisions of Rs 1,300 crores over and above the normal NPA provisioning during the quarter. These provisions are not included in the standard PCR calculations.
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Axis Bank Q3 result, net profit jumps 131%


Private sector lender Axis Bank on Tuesday reported over two-fold jump in net profit to Rs 1,680.85 crore for the third quarter ended 31 December.

The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 726.44 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal. The net interest income grew 18 percent to 5,604 crore in the third quarter this fiscal.

Total income during the quarter under review rose to Rs 18,130.42 crore as against Rs 14,314.63 crore in the year-ago period, Axis Bank said in a regulatory filing.

Net non-performing assets (NPAs) stood at 2.36 percent of the net advances as on 31 December, 2018, down from 2.56 percent by the end of December 2017. Gross NPAs (or bad loans), however, worsened to 5.75 percent of the gross advances, up from 5.28 percent a year ago.

Axis Bank’s strategy for the next three years would pivot around delivery of three important vectors – growth, profitability and sustainability, said Axis Bank managing director and CEO Amitabh Chaudhry.

Also read- Q3FY19 Results of all Public & Private Sector banks in India 

"I believe that Axis Bank as a franchise is uniquely positioned to leverage this opportunity and regain its past momentum on growth and profitability quickly. Our market share is still only 4% on deposits and 4.7% on loans," he said.


In value terms, the gross NPAs stood at Rs 30,854.67 crore in December quarter as against Rs 25,000.51 crore in the same period previous year. Net bad loans were Rs 12,233.29 crore as against Rs 11,769.49 crore.

The bank said it has witnessed healthy loan growth during the quarter, with domestic loan rising by 18 percent year-on-year; while retail loan book grew by 20 percent. Its retail advances constitute 49 percent of the total advances, Axis bank said.
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Top 10 Banks in India 2018

In India banking sector is one of the most regulated sectors in the economy. When Indian Government allowed private banks to operate in the nation many banks came into existence and gave a tough competition to various nationalized players. Private Banks won over most nationalized banks because of the quality of services they offered to their customers. With years, banks are also adding services to their customers. The Indian banking industry is passing through a phase of customers market. The customers have more choices in choosing their banks. A competition has been established within the banks operating in India. So, which banks provide the best services?
Although Indian banking is known as world’s best banking but we can’t point out any single bank which provides best banking among all. Because i don’t think that even a single person is satisfied with service sector industry. Our expectation is too high and always running on increasing trend. Like; all customers are not same, all banks are not same. The behavior of employees perceive in different manner by different people. Because due to competition there is a huge change can feel in working style of PSU & Private sector banks which covers only limited area & they have too many complaints also. So we can’t point out any single name. Nowadays banking industry is totally changed, I m talking about the service quality of PSU banks. Lots of customer centric approach is applied today, now banks are more concerned about the customer retention. So if we go through the customer service delivery system of bank of Baroda it will now at par with the peer banks. Their services is now become centralized, a new retail loan factory concept is introduced by the bank which will help to improve the quality of loan,it also reduces the delivery time and make it more customer friendly.
In Short, Try to obtain the benefits of monopolistic competition between PSUs and private sector banks. It is good for retail customers because they always have choice to shift their banking.
We are going to give rank to the banks as per belove Individual Parameters
  • Disclosure about charges and interest rates
  • Pro-active communication about new products/services
  • Trustworthiness
  • Complaint Resolution
  • Wide ATM coverage
  • Professionalism of the company
  • Convenient banking hours
  • Well-trained staff
  • Courteous and friendly staff
  • Faster service at branches
  • Knowing the customer and their needs
  • Good Internet banking
  • Efficient processes
  • Effective communication on developments
  • Innovative company
  • Good phone banking
Here’s the list:
1. HDFC Bank

HDFC was established as Housing Development Finance Corporation in the year 1994.The operations of the bank started in 1995 after it was scheduled as a commercial bank.The bank has served well since then and still continues to bring in more and more costumers with its phenomenal services. Bank’s distribution network was at 4,555 branches and 12,087 ATMs across 2,597 cities / towns. HDFC is the largest bank in India in terms of assets.The total assets of the bank are estimated to be around $66.7 Billion.The Current CEO of the bank is Aditya Puri.
2. State Bank Of India
The largest Indian Bank which has the maximum number of branches in the country as well as abroad.The Bank has many sub-branches as well which serve the maximum number of consumers in India.The Bank was nationalized in the year 1955.The total assets of the bank are much more than any other bank.As of 31 March 2018, SBI has more than 22400 branches,including 52 foreign offices spread across 36 countries and 59541 ATMs. 
3. Bank Of Baroda

Bank of Baroda is one of the largest public sector banks in India. The services of the bank have always been satisfying and par excellence. The bank was set up in 1908 and the current CEO of the bank is Mr. P. S. Jayakumar. The total assets of the bank are somewhat closer to $70 Billion. The bank has 5498 branches including  107 overseas branch and over 10441 ATMs including the ones outside India.
4. Axis Bank
The Bank was founded in 1993 and the headquarters resides in Mumbai, Maharashtra. It has more than 3700 branches in India.The bank was an investment of some prominent international companies.The total worth of the bank is $96 Billion.The bank is known for its hassle free services throughout the country. Bank has 3710 branches, 13,857 ATMs, and nine international offices.



5. Punjab National Bank
One of the oldest banks in the country, the establishment of the Punjab National Bank goes back to 1894, more than 100 years from now.This is one of the oldest public sector banks in India.The total assets of the bank are more than $101 Billion. Bank has over 6,983 branches and over 9598 ATMs nationwide. The Chief Executive Officer of the bank is Sunil Mehta.

6. ICICI Bank
ICICI stands for Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India and it was established in 1994.It is one of the best banks in the country with assets worth more than $160 Billion. Sandeep Bakhshi works as the CEO of the bank.The Bank has been operational in 18 countries as of now.The Bank also acquired Bank of Rajasthan in the year 2010. ICICI has adopted a Go Green initiative in which it has started most of its operations in electronic form.Even the bank statements are sent via e-mails. Bank has a network of 4867 Branches and 14,417 ATM's has a presence in 19 countries including India.


7. Kotak Mahindra Bank 

Kotak Mahindra Bank is an Indian private sector bank headquartered in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. In February 2003, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued the licence to Kotak Mahindra Finance Ltd., the group's flagship company, to carry on banking business. Kotak Mahindra Bank has a network of 1425 branches across 689 locations and 2,363 ATMs in the country (as of 31 March 2018). In 2018, it is the second largest private bank in India by market capitalization after HDFC Bank.

8. Canara Bank
Like other major public sector banks, Canara Bank is also state owned and was set up in the year 1906 by Subba Rao.The headquarters of the Bank reside in Bengaluru, Karnataka. The Bank provides hassle free service to its customers . Bank has revolutionized its services and spreads its hands more to cover more areas.As per the data of 2018, the Bank has 6212 branches and 9395 ATMs across the nation.The total assets of the bank $88 Billion which are set to increase in the coming years.
9. Bank Of India
Bank of India is one of the major public sector banks in India.The bank became government owned after the nationalization of Banks in 1969, though the bank was founded much before that in 1906.CEO of Bank of India is Dinbandhu Mohapatra. The total assets of the bank are around $97 Billion .Bank of India has 5127 branches as on 31 May 2018, including 29 offices outside India and more than 7000 ATMs nationwide.
10. IDBI Bank 

IDBI stands for Industrial Development Bank Of India and was established in the year 1964. It is a Public sector bank. The total assets of the bank reach to about $50 Billion. There are 1916 branches including one overseas branch at Dubai and 3276 ATMs across the country. Investment Banking and Agro-Loan facilities are the USP of the bank. Mr. Maheshkumar K. Jain is the Chief Executive Officer of the Bank.
So, guys this was some very basic information about the Top Banks in the Country. We just hope to satisfy you with whatever we write and you can also help us improve by giving the feedback to our written posts.If you loved our writings, do share it with your friends.
(data as on 31st May,2018)
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