Bank of Maharashtra Q3 Net profit rises 34%


Bank of Maharashtra on January 16 reported a 33.61 percent on-year rise in its October-December quarter net profit to Rs 1,036 crore, on the back of rising net interest income and better asset quality.


Operating Profit has shown a growth of 27.32 percent on-year to Rs 2,012 crore for the third quarter of the current financial year as against Rs 1,580 crore in a similar period last year. The same has improved by 4.77 percent on-quarter.


In the reporting quarter, net Interest Income (NII) grew by 24.56 percent on-year to Rs 2,466 crore, as against Rs 1,980 crore in a similar period last year, Bank of Maharashtra said in an exchange filing. The same was up by 1.39 percent on a sequential basis.


Gross non-performing assets (NPA) of the bank declined to 2.04 percent as on December 31, 2023, against 2.94 percent as on December 31, 2022. Net NPA declined to 0.22 percent as on December 31, 2023, as against 0.47 percent as on December 31, 2022.


Provision Coverage ratio of the bank improved to 98.40 percent as on December 31,2023, as against 97.18 percent as on December 31, 2022.


Bank holds cumulative Covid-19 provision as contingency provision of Rs 1,200 crore as on December 31, 2023, release said.


In the reporting quarter, total business of the bank grew by 18.89 percent on-year to Rs 4.34 lakh crore.


Total Deposits rose 17.89 percent on-year in October-December to Rs 2.46 lakh crore. Gross Advances grew by 20.20 percent on-year Rs 1.89 lakh crore. Net Advances grew by 21.01 percent on-year to Rs 1.85 lakh crore.


RAM (Retail, Agri. & MSME) Business grew by 27.25 percent on-year basis. Retail advances grew by 21.91  percent to Rs  49,144 crore on-year basis. MSME advances grew by 29.14  percent on Y-o-Y basis to Rs 39,410 crore.


Total Basel III Capital adequacy ratio stood at 16.85 percent with Common Equity Tier 1 ratio of 11.56 percent.

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Latest Bank merger news of PSU banks and PSU Insurance Company

 


A government document shared on social media has triggered speculation about possible PSU bank mergers between Union Bank and UCO Bank, and Bank of India and Bank of Maharashtra. The document, whose source couldn't be verified, said that a Parliamentary committee will hold discussions with four PSU banks in the first week of January under banking laws, which govern mergers and acquisitions, among other things.

However, the government has not yet provided official information regarding the merger. Neither of the four PSU banks mentioned have made any stock exchange filings in this regard.


The document being circulated on X (formerly Twitter) is a government PDF issued in the name of Ramesh Yadav, Under Secretary of the Government of India. The letter is issued to the Governor, Reserve Bank of India, Chairman of LIC, IRDAI, and NABARD, along with MD and CEOs of UCO Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, Bank of India, and Union Bank of India.

The PDF is also addressed to CMDs of New India Assurance Company, United India Insurance Company, Oriental Insurance Company, National Insurance Company, and MD & CEO of SBI Life Insurance Company. The subject of the alleged government PDF states 'Study Visit programme of the Committee on Subordinate Legislation, Lok Sabha to Mumbai and Goa from 2 to 6 January 2024'.

The 2-day programme includes informal discussions with the representatives of Union Bank of India and UCO Bank on January 2, and with representatives of Bank of Maharashtra and Bank of India on January 4, 2024, on rules/regulations framed under Banking Regulations Act 1949 and other relevant Acts as applicable to them and the regulatory mechanism in post-merger scenario.

The Finance Ministry has reportedly issued a clarification, saying that this is a parliamentary committee on subordinate legislation, and it has no connection whatsoever with the policies of bank mergers, according to CNBC-Awaaz. Amid the merger buzz, the ministry reportedly changed the agenda of its meeting. According to the new agenda, there is no mention of the word “Merger”, which simply means that there is no proposal for a merger between Union Bank of India and UCO Bank, Bank of India, and Bank of Maharashtra, said CNBC Awaaz in its report.

Meanwhile, No proposal to merge the public sector banks is being considered by the government and the discussions were part of a ‘routine exercise, Reuters also reported citing two sources from the Ministry of Finance.










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Bank of Maharashtra Q2 Net profit surges 72% on year

 


State-owned Bank of Maharashtra (BoM) has announced a profit of 71.8 per cent at Rs 919 crore year on year (Y-o-Y) at the end of the July-September quarter (Q2) for the financial year 2023-24 (FY24) in its consolidated results. The announcement came through a regulatory filing on BSE on Monday.


Last year, the bank recorded a profit of Rs 4,317 crore for the same period. The total income for this quarter also went up 32.8 per cent Y-o-Y at Rs 5,735 crore from Rs 4,317 crore.


Compared to the previous quarter that ended in March, profits rose by 4.2 per cent from Rs 882 crore, and income rose by 5.86 per cent from Rs 5,417 crore.


Net Interest Income (NII) went up 28.9 per cent to Rs 2,432 crore from Rs1,887 crore, Y-o-Y.


Gross non-performing assets (NPA) are down to 2.19 per cent in Q2FY24. Last year, during the same period, it was 3.40 per cent. Net NPA declined to 0.23 per cent at the end of the latest quarter compared to Q2FY23, when it stood at 0.68 per cent. In Q1FY24, gross NPA stood at 2.28 per cent and net NPA at 0.24 per cent.


Operating costs have gone up by 27 per cent compared to the same period last year at Rs 1,179 crore from Rs 927 crore. Quarter-on-quarter, it was a marginal growth of 6.67 per cent from Rs 1,105 crore.

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Bank of Maharashtra(BoM) Q1 Results: Net profit surges 95%, maintains healthy asset quality

 


Public sector lender Bank of Maharashtra on July 19 reported a 95 percent jump in net profit at Rs 882 crore for the April-June FY24 quarter, compared to Rs 451 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.


Net interest income (NII) of the bank stood at Rs 2340 crores, compared to Rs 1686 crores last year. The bank recorded steady improvement in its net interest margin (NIM). For the April-June FY24 quarter, the lender's NIM stood at 3.86 percent, compared to 3.28 percent last year.


The bank's gross non-performing asset (NPA) stood at 2.28 percent, down from 3.74 percent recorded in the same quarter last year. For the June quarter, total GNPA stood at Rs 4006 crores compared Rs 5259 crores a year ago. On the other hand, net NPA of the lender for the quarter stood at 0.24 percent, improving from 0.88 percent on a year-on-year basis. The lender's total NNPA stood at Rs 413 crores, compared to 1206 crores in the corresponding period last year.


On deposits front, the bank recorded a 25 percent growth taking the total deposits to Rs 2.44 lakh crores from Rs 1.96 lakh crores in the previous year. Current account and savings account (CASA) deposits improved to Rs 1.24 lakh crores from Rs 1.09 lakh crores with current account deposits recording 30 percent growth and savings account deposits recording 9 percent growth.


Gross advances of the bank grew by 25 percent on a year-on-year basis and stood at Rs 1.75 lakh crores compared to Rs 1.40 lakh crores in the year ago quarter.


Looking at the bank's segment wise advances growth, retail sector recorded advances of Rs 44, 952 crores compared to Rs 36,117 crores in the April-June FY23 quarter. Advances to agriculture sector stood at Rs 23,637 crores compared to Rs 19,336 crores last year. Micro small and medium enterprises recorded advances of Rs 33,740 crores for the April-June FY24 quarter compared to Rs 26,121 crores in the corresponding period last year.


The revenue for the bank's treasury operations stood at Rs 1169 crores, growing from Rs 938 crores last year.


Corporate and wholesale operations recorded a revenue of Rs 2028 crores in the April-June FY24 quarter compared to Rs 1217 crores in the same period last year.


Whereas the revenue of the lender's retail operations stood at Rs 2174 crores compared to Rs 1557 crores.


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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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Bank of Maharashtra Q1 result: profit more than doubles


 Bank of Maharashtra's net profit more than doubled to Rs 451.90 crore in the April-June quarter compared to Rs 208.01 crore in the year-ago quarter, the lender said on Monday. Total income during April-June 2022-23 fell to Rs 3,774.32 crore from Rs 3,790.72 crore in the same quarter of 2021-22, the state-owned bank said in a regulatory filing.


The bank's asset quality improved with the gross non-performing assets falling to 3.74 per cent of the gross advances as of June 30, 2022, as against 6.35 per cent in the year-ago period.


In value terms, gross NPAs stood at Rs 5,259.62 crore by Q1FY23, down from Rs 7,021.63 crore by Q1FY22.


The net NPAs came down to 0.88 per cent (Rs 1,206.43 crore) from 2.22 per cent (Rs 2,352.75 crore).


Provisions for bad loans and contingencies for the quarter fell to Rs 548.41 crore from Rs 753.10 crore in the same quarter of FY22.


The Pune-based lender said there was an impact due to change in accounting policy, resulting in decrease in other income and net profit after tax by Rs 22.03 crore during the quarter ended June 30, 2022.


Provision coverage ratio (PCR) as of June 30, 2022 is 95.04 per cent, Bank of Maharashtra said.

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Privatisation Of Bank: Two banks to be sold in the country, centre to speed up law change process

 


The Centre speed up the process of privatising two State-owned banks. News agency PTI quoted a source from the Centre as saying on Wednesday. The Modi government at the Centre had earlier amended the 'Banking Regulation Act' to pave the way for private investment in State-owned banks. According to sources, the Centre wants to pass a bill in this regard in the upcoming monsoon session of Parliament.

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had said last year that the Centre wants to start the process of privatising some state-owned banks. Therefore, the Bank Nationalization Acts of 1970 and 1980 will be amended and the Bank Control Act of 1949 will be amended. According to finance ministry sources, the process has begun. The government has also started preparing the draft of the 'Banking Regulation Act'. If all goes well, the amendment will be passed in the monsoon session. Of course, there is a good chance of the opposition being hindered. However, due to the majority, the government should not have any problem in passing this law.

The amendment has been passed in parliament and there will be no bar on the privatization of State-owned banks. Only then will the process of privatization of state-owned banks begin. Initially, two state-owned banks have also been listed for disinvestment. The name of which two banks will be privatised is yet to be announced by the Centre. According to sources, the Modi government initially chose four medium-sized banks for privatisation. The four banks that were placed in the initial list for privatisation are Bank of Maharashtra (BoM), Bank of India (BoI), Indian Overseas Bank(IOB) and Central Bank of India. Later, niti aayog proposed that most of the shares of Indian Overseas Bank and Central Bank of India be sold. The Modi government can go ahead with the NITI Aayog's proposal.

This is not the end of it, the government also wants to complete the privatization process of the tate-owned company BPCL quickly. Sources claim that only 52.3 per cent stake in BPCL held by the Centre will be sold. Earlier, the Modi government had taken the initiative to sell the shares of BPCL. Initially three companies showed interest in buying bpcl shares. But in the end, only one company survives in the race, the sources claim.


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Bank of Maharashtra Q4 profit increase two fold

 



 Bank of Maharashtra on Thursday reported an over two-fold increase in its consolidated net profit at Rs 355 crore in the quarter ended March, helped by a fall in the bad loan proportions, thus requiring lesser provisioning.


The Pune-based lender had posted a net profit of Rs 165.23 crore in the year-ago period.


Total income of the bank, however, was down at Rs 3,948.48 crore in the January-March quarter of 2021-22, as against Rs 4,334.98 crore in the same quarter of 2020-21, Bank of Maharashtra said in a regulatory filing.


For the full year 2021-22, the bank's consolidated net profit doubled to Rs 1,151.64 crore, as against Rs 551.41 crore in 2020-21.

Total income was higher at Rs 15,672.17 crore during the year, from Rs 14,497.56 crore in the previous fiscal 2020-21.

Bank's provisioning for bad loans and contingencies for Q4FY22 came down to Rs 365.38 crore, from Rs 1,341.26 crore parked aside in the year-ago period.

On the asset quality, there was a significant improvement with Gross Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) falling to 3.94 per cent of the gross advances as of March 31, 2022 from 7.23 per cent by March end 2021.

Net NPAs or bad loans shrank to 0.97 per cent as against 2.48 per cent.

In value terms, the gross NPAs were worth Rs 5,327.21 crore, down from Rs 7,779.68 crore. Net NPAs were of the value of Rs 1,276.57 crore, down from Rs 2,544.32 crore.

The consolidated financial results of the bank include results of the holding company --Bank of Maharashtra, subsidiary company The Maharashtra Executor and Trustee Company Pvt Ltd and the associate company Maharashtra Gramin Bank.

Provision coverage ratio of the bank stood at 94.79 per cent as of March 31, 2022.

The lender said that with effect from assessment year 2021-22, it has opted for the new regime of tax under Income Tax Act, 1961.

"Consequently, during the current year, the bank has remeasured its deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities as on December 31, 2021 and reversed the amount of Rs 716.87 crore by debiting from profit and loss account," it said.

The board members of the bank also approved raising of Rs 5,000 crore capital through follow-on public offer, rights issue, qualified institutional placement, preferential issue or any other mode or combination thereof or through issue of Basel III compliant bonds or any other such securities.


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