The third largest private sector lender said the overall fund-based exposure to these eight accounts is Rs 5,071 crore and the non-fund based one is only Rs 212 crore.
Around 80 per cent of this outstanding loan is secured, it said in an exchange filing made before the start of the trading today.
The bank, which is amongst one of the hardest hit after a regulatory crackdown on non-performing assets, said it has a provision of Rs 2,497 crore against the outstanding loans to these eight companies.
Investors cheered the disclosure made by Axis Bank and its stock climbed 3.48 per cent up to Rs 511.70 a piece on the BSE, whose benchmark index gained 0.08 per cent.
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Banking scrips have been witnessing some selling after the RBI's reported direction on additional provisioning and estimates of banks having to set aside up to Rs 40,000 crore during the current fiscal came out.
"The increased provisioning requirements, more or less, in all of these accounts we have pretty large provisions. But yes, we have to make a little more but it should not very badly impact our earnings going forward," the SBI chief had said after the AGM yesterday.
It can be noted that domestic ratings agency Crisil had earlier in the week estimated that led by public sector banks, lenders will have to take a huge haircut towards these bad loans.
It has pegged an additional burden of Rs 40,000 crore, or 25 per cent more towards provisioning for these 12 accounts which have been sent for insolvency by RBI.
These 12 large accounts had become NPAs by end-March 2016 and Crisil estimates show the banks had already provisioned 40 per cent for these NPAs worth Rs 2 trillion or about Rs 80,000 crore.
The largest 12 accounts named by RBI are Bhushan Steel, Lanco Infra, Essar Steel 37,284, Bhushan Power, Alok Industries, Amtek Auto, Monnet Ispat, Electrosteel Steels, Era Infra, Jypaee Infratech, ABG Shipyard and Jyoti Structures.
Of these six accounts have already been sent to NCLT by banks -- Bhushan Steel, Essar Steel and Electrosteel Steels by SBI; Bhushan Power by PNB; Lanco Infratech by IDBI and Amtek Auto by Corporation Bank -- for possible liquidation.