Axis Bank could be among the few outperformers. The FY24 had the full impact of Citi’s acquisition, and high NIM and low credit costs drove return on equity (RoE) to a decade high at 18 per cent. NIM expanded by 15 bps Y-o-Y to 3.6 per cent and net interest income (NII) growth of 16 per cent Y-o-Y was led by 14 per cent Y-o-Y loan growth. The provisions grew 22 per cent Y-o-Y, largely led by the retail segment. PBT (profit before tax) hit highs, as all business units have fully recovered from the corporate non-performing loans (NPLs) and Covid-related cycles. The net NPL to net worth (2 per cent) and net NPL to operating profit (less than 10 per cent) ratios are close to best in history and subsidiaries had a strong year. Axis Bank may be capable of growing faster than peers and it may see a decline in operating expenses ratio from current levels as the full impact of Citi’s integration costs could be completed by H1FY25.
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