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Bad loans rise at three mid-sized state lenders

Gross NPA at Indian Overseas Bank rises to 8.12%, shares drop 10%

Reuters Mumbai

Indian Overseas Bank, a state-run lender, reported its second straight quarterly loss on Thursday as bad loans surged, sending its shares down as much as 10%.

UCO Bank and Allahabad Bank, two other state-run lenders that reported quarterly results on Thursday, also saw their bad loan ratios widening, leading to a fall in their share prices.

Chennai-based Indian Overseas Bank reported a net loss of Rs 516 crore ($83.45 million) for its fiscal third quarter to Dec. 31. Gross non-performing loans as a percentage of advances rose to 8.12% from 7.35% a quarter earlier. Provisions rose nearly a third from the September quarter.

 

Kolkata-based UCO Bank said net profit fell 3.5% to Rs 304 crore for the three months to December. Its gross bad loans ratio widened to 6.5% from 5.2% in the September quarter.

Allahabad Bank saw its net profit almost halving to Rs 164 crore in the December quarter. Gross bad loans were 5.46% compared with 5.36% in the previous quarter.

Bigger state-run banks such as Bank of Baroda, Punjab National Bank and Union Bank have also seen their bad loans rising in the December quarter.

At 2.50 p.m., Indian Overseas was trading 8.6% lower, UCO was down 4.6%, while Allahabad Bank fell 1.7%.

($1 = 61.8350 rupees)

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First Published: Feb 05 2015 | 3:08 PM IST

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