"Public sector banks have not done well this time. But other sectors like steel and pharma have done comparatively better in the quarter ending June 15," principal chief commissioner of Income Tax and head of the Mumbai zone of the Income Tax department D S Saksena told PTI.
"However, we do hope that the collections would be better in the forthcoming quarters," he added.
Specific figures for bank-wise payments were not immediately available.
PSBs of late have registered hefty reverses as a result of the RBI-mandated asset quality review.
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"Late last year, RBI did an asset quality review for the banks, asking them to declare all the stressed 130 large corporate accounts as NPAs. As a result, the banks had to go for higher provisioning against those accounts," a senior banker said.
"Hence, the banks had become clueless in the first quarter of the current fiscal and they continue to make higher provisioning against such accounts which resulted in payment of less advance tax," he added.
For the country's largest mortgage lender HDFC, the advance tax payment remained unchanged at Rs 465 crore for the first quarter ending June 15, sources said.
Country's largest non-life insurer, New India Assurance, has paid an advance tax of Rs 19.21 crore as of June 15 from Rs 20.49 crore in the year-ago period.
Despite the massive losses reported in the first quarter, state-owned lender Bank of Baroda is learnt to have paid 25 per cent more in advance tax at Rs 625 crore during the second quarter, against Rs 500 crore a year ago.
Auto major M&M paid Rs 200 crore, up 11 per cent over Rs 180 crore in the same period last fiscal year.
Among oil majors, IOC's payment was up by around 62 per cent at Rs 1,275 crore from Rs 785 crore a year ago, while BPCL paid Rs 540 crore, down around 2 per cent.
FMCG major HUL paid Rs 500 crore of advance tax, up 9 per cent a year-ago. Bajaj Auto's payout was down by around 13 per cent at Rs 390 crore.