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ICICI net plunges 87% to over 11-yr low; NPA provision soars

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Press Trust of India Mumbai
In its worst performance in over a decade, ICICI Bank today posted a massive 87 per cent plunge in consolidated net profit to Rs 406.71 crore for the March quarter on spike in provisioning for bad loans and creation of a contingency reserve.

While provisioning for NPAs has more than doubled in view of the Reserve Bank's asset quality review (AQR) directive, the country's largest private sector lender has set aside a large amount of Rs 3,600 crore as reserves for any potential shocks in the future.

It had posted a post-tax net of Rs 3,084 crore on a consolidated basis in the January-March quarter of last fiscal, and Rs 3,122 crore in the preceding quarter, when it started recognising the effects of bad loans following AQR.
 

On a standalone basis, the bank's net profit tanked 76 per cent to Rs 701.89 crore from Rs 2,922 crore a year ago.

Profit for the reporting quarter eroded on setting aside of Rs 3,600 crore towards "collective contingency and related reserves", above the RBI-mandated provisions in view of the stress it expects from the iron & steel, mining, rigs, power and cement sectors in the future, the bank said.

As of the December quarter, ICICI Bank, which is one of the two systemically important lenders (the other being SBI), did not have a counter-cyclical buffer unlike its private sector peers.

"The weak global economic environment, downturn in the commodity cycle and the gradual nature of the domestic economic recovery has adversely impacted borrowers. It may take some more time for the resolutions to be worked out," Chanda Kochhar, managing director and chief executive, told reporters in a concall.

The bank saw loans worth Rs 7,000 crore slipping into NPAs during the March quarter, taking the gross NPA ratio to 5.82 per cent, from 3.78 per cent a year-ago and from 4.72 per cent at the end of the preceding quarter.

This led to spike in provisioning as per the norms to Rs 3,326.21 crore from Rs 1,344.73 crore in the year-ago period.

The bank said as much as 60 per cent of the Rs 7,000 crore fresh slippages came in from the AQR, while Rs 2,700 crore came in from restructured assets slipping into NPAs. It continues to carry Rs 8,573 crore of restructured loans.

The first set of numbers from a large private sector underscore the fact that bad loan issues are not just limited to state-run banks, which had reported massive drop in profits due to AQR in the December quarter, when the private players were better off.

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First Published: Apr 29 2016 | 5:08 PM IST

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