State Bank of Hyderabad (SBH) reported a 21% decline in net profit to Rs 379.9 crore for the quarter ended March 31, 2013, under the impact of poor performance amplified by higher expenditure. Net profit for the corresponding quarter last year stood at Rs 481.04 crore.
Net interest income, the difference between the interest earned and the interest paid out on deposits, decreased 4.69% even though the total income for the quarter under review grew 7% to Rs 3,551.25 crore as compared with Rs 3,317.94 crore.
The slippages appears to have hit the bank hard in the fourth quarter as the full year performance ending March, 2013, shows a growth of 16.45% in net interest income that comes on the back of a similar growth in interest income for the year. Net interest margin (NIM) marginally improved at 3.48% from 3.47% in the previous year. However, net profit for the year decreased 3.7% to Rs 1,250.22 crore as compared with Rs 1,298.27 crore in the previous year.
More From This Section
Explaining the causes for decline in net interest income during the quarter, he said the bank had to drop interest rates between 1.75% and 4% on the SME sector while the rates on deposits continued to stay high. For the current year, the bank expects to register an overall growth in business at 16% with deposits and advances growing at 15% and 18% respectively.
Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) shot up to Rs 3,186 crore (3.46%) as at March, 2013, from Rs 2,007 crore (2.56%) in 2012 and net NPAs rose to Rs 1,449 crore (1.61 crore) from Rs 1,002 crore(1.30%) in the same period. Road projects and other sectors like food processing, textiles and metals, contributed to the overall slippage of Rs 2,800 crore, he said.
'Merger with SBI unlikely'
Rao said it was unlikely that SBH would become a part of the proposed merger of associate banks with the SBI. When asked about his response to the statement made by SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhuri yesterday on the merger plans, Rao said there was no such move with regard to SBH on the cards as of now. "We are constructing a corporate office in the financial district. Who will do this if the bank is going to be merged with SBI?" he said.
His comment assumes significance in the light of the demand for separate statehood for the Telangana region. SBH and Andhra Bank are the two Hyderabad-based banks. While the former represents the legacy of the erstwhile Hyderabad state, the latter owes its legacy to an entrepreneur-cum-freedom fighter from the coastal Andhra region. Any move to keep SBH out of the proposed merger will have political considerations, either immediate or in the long-term.