By Devidutta Tripathy
MUMBAI (Reuters) - ICICI Bank Ltd
The lender, which is also listed in New York
The profit was helped by tax adjustments.
Indian banks have seen a surge in their bad and restructured loans in the past three years as an economic slowdown squeezed companies' profitability and their ability to service debt.
As the regulator, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), embarks on a drive to clean up bank balance sheets by March 2017, it has asked lenders to treat some stressed borrowers as non-performing even if they have not defaulted yet.
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The RBI has yet to talk specifically about the direction, but bankers say they have been asked to downgrade the accounts by March.
About 60 percent of ICICI Bank's bad loan additions of 65.44 billion rupees in the December quarter were due to the RBI directive on asset reclassification, Chief Executive Chanda Kochhar said on a conference call after the results.
"You could assume a similar trend overall as this quarter," she said when asked about the quantum of bad loans and provisioning in the fourth quarter to March.
Kochhar cited steel and power as troubled sectors, without naming any companies.
ICICI Bank's bad loans as a percentage of total loans widened to 4.72 percent in the December quarter, from 3.77 percent in the previous three months. Provisions, including for loan losses, tripled to 28.44 billion rupees.
Third-biggest private sector lender Axis Bank
The dominant state-run lenders, led by State Bank of India
ICICI Bank's domestic loans at end-December grew 20 percent from a year earlier, helped by a faster 24 percent increase in retail loans. Net interest income in the quarter rose 13 percent from a year earlier, while non-interest income grew 36 percent.
($1 = 68.1100 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu and Katharine Houreld)