The bank had to recognise over Rs 1,000 crore of assets as bad loans due to action recommended by the RBI, and had to dip into a specially created buffer to show profit, the lender said. It warned that it foresees another Rs 1,300 crore loans turning bad in the ongoing March quarter alone.
"The RBI has done a thorough review of the performance of these accounts across all lenders and they have identified a select list of accounts and said even though these accounts might not be irregular, please go ahead and recognise them as NPAs," he said, adding though the bank was given two quarters to recognise the stress, it did so in a single quarter.
"There is a list of accounts which you need to recognise as NPAs on the books even though on payments, they are not 90 days behind on the due dates.
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Axis is the first major bank to report third-quarter numbers after the RBI review. According to reports, the RBI has identified 150 select accounts as stressed ones and asked banks to recognise them as NPAs upfront.
Some estimates say banks will have to provide a whopping Rs 70,000 crore due to this exercise, which might result in an erosion of their networth.
It reported slippages of Rs 2,082 crore, with over half of it coming due to the new RBI directives. Higher slippages will result in bank overshooting its NPA accretion guidance of Rs 6,500 crore for 2015-16 and also the guidance on containing credit costs at 0.85-0.90 per cent, Sridharan said.
Stating that there is more stress beyond the RBI's recommendation which it can foresee, he said he is expecting another Rs 1,300 crore of assets slipping into NPAs in Q4 and it will end the fiscal with credit cost of 1.25 per cent.
Sridharan warned the bank will have to dip into the
reserve again before times turn good.
Overall provisioning stood at Rs 712 crore in Q3, up from Rs 507 crore a year ago, of which loan loss provisioning was Rs 626 crore as against Rs 352 crore, he said, adding that half of this was due to the RBI review.
Painting a gloomy picture on asset quality, Sridharan said he expects NPAs to rise in mid-term.
The bank seems to be very cautious on the narrative of a resurgence in the economy from a short term perspective.
"While the overall macro picture is strong, at a micro level, the fundamentals have not improved very much. At an operating level for different firms, we are not seeing any pick-up in demand, or in revenue and new investments.
"While we are optimistic in the medium term about the initiatives that RBI and Government are making, and are hopeful that some of the green shoots will bloom, Q4 seems too early to call for the end of turbulent times. We are cautious about what is going to happen in the short term," he said.
The Axis counter ended 1.13 per cent down at Rs 388.65 on the BSE, whose benchmark Sensex tanked 1.71 per cent.
Its core net interest income expanded 16 per cent to Rs 4,162 crore, driven by a 21 per cent growth in advances and net interest margins (NIM) came at 3.79 per cent, while non-interest income rose 15 per cent to Rs 2,338 crore.
To protect the quality of its book, the lender is giving loans to better rated corporates which compresses the spread, he said.
The bank is confident of attaining a loan growth of 18-20 per cent for 2015-16 and attributed a lot of the growth to retail loans which grew at a faster clip of 27 per cent in Q3 to inch up to 40 per cent of the book from 38 per cent last year.