"Our capital requirement this financial year is Rs 3,000 crore. From the government we are expecting Rs 1,500 crore and the rest would be from internal accruals and may be will be go to the market," chairman and managing director Rajeev Rishi said.
Last week, the government had said public sector banks would need to raise Rs 1.10 lakh crore from markets to meet more than half of their capital requirement of Rs 1.80 lakh crore over the next four years to meet the Basel III capital adequacy norms.
Banks would have to raise the balance amount from the markets, the ministry had said.
Rishi said the bank would rather go for a QIP route to meet its capital requirement. "Basically, we don't want to go in for the follow-on public offer. We will be going for a QIP instead," Rishi said.
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The bank has already appointed three merchant bankers - SBI Capital Markets, IDBI Capital and ICICI Securities--for the QIP.
Executive director BK Divakara said though rise in NPA level during the first quarter is likely to affect the timing of the QIP issue, it will be done this fiscal year itself.
"We never expected that our NPAs will go up so much in Q1. We were expecting that it would be contained more or less at same level or marginally will go up. It was a set back for us. Due to rise in NPA we are not sure what would be a response for our QIP. We will again be meeting merchant bankers and take their views," he said.
"NPAs are contingent to many factors. We did hope that the environment will improve but we still see stresses in certain segments like steel, power, infra. We have already seen a majority of these accounts slip into NPAs. So, residual pipeline would not be that bad. I see NPA level at round 6 per cent by March," Rishi said after the announcement of Q1 numbers.