About 60 per cent of the loan book has migrated to the MCLR (marginal cost of funds-based lending rate), which explains the NII weakness. SBI has passed on 200 basis points of interest rate reduction to customers, as required under MCLR regime. While NII fell, operating expenses increased 3.7 per cent year-on-year to Rs 13,738 crore. Thus, profit before provisioning of bad loans fell 13.7 per cent to Rs 11,874 crore as little support came from NII. Year-ago numbers, however, were padded by Rs 907 crore of gains from stake sale in the National Stock Exchange. Change in accounting policy of certain non-fund instruments also hampered non-interest income. Some relief came from reduction in provisioning, down 26.3 per cent year-on-year, which helped net profit to zoom from Rs 374 crore a year-ago to Rs 2,006 crore in Q1. However, bad loan provision increased 7.6 per cent y-o-y to Rs 12,125 crore. Provision write-back in a few standard assets helped the provisions look better. On a consolidated basis, asset quality remained weak again, with gross non-performing assets (NPA) at Rs 1,88,068 crore, up 37 per cent y-o-y, to 9.97 per cent of loan book versus 7.4 per cent a year ago and 9.11 per cent in March 2017 quarter.
Factors such as farm loan waiver in some states and absence of RBI dispensation (relaxation in NPA recognition) for loans less than Rs 1 crore announced after demonetisation also contributed to the spike. With SBI expecting total non-corporate slippages at Rs 30,432 crore in FY18, investors should brace for two or three quarters of pain from this portfolio. For now, the confident management guidance – reduction of slippages ratio to 3.3 per cent and credit cost to 2.25 per cent in FY18 from 5.38 per cent and 2.48 per cent, respectively, in Q1 was the only assuring takeaway. Asutosh Mishra of Reliance Securities said this perhaps was the first time SBI has come out with such string guidance.
“So, while the asset quality pressures may not go away, I expect an incremental reduction given the guidance.”
Will SBI keep up its promise is something the Street would closely watch.
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