The Shikha Sharma-led bank had posted a net profit of Rs 2,175 crore in the year-ago period.
Even though down 48 per cent from the preceding September quarter, the fresh slippages came at Rs 4,560 crore, with over Rs 1,600 crore coming from accounts which were not in a 'watchlist' of stressed assets.
The bank's deputy managing director and chief financial officer Jairam Sridharan said the non-watchlist stress emanated from over five year-old loans in the iron and steel, infrastructure and construction sectors.
He said accounts in the retail and SME segments totalling Rs 650 crore also contributed to the slippages in the reporting period, but refused to fully attribute it to the demonetisation exercise.
The impact of the demonetisation on its asset quality can be felt only in the next fiscal.
Sridharan, however, said that the peak of asset quality stress is behind the bank, which has been reporting a jump in bad loans since the RBI-imposed asset quality review.
The provisions rose over five times to Rs 3,795 crore during the quarter primarily on the new slippages and also a four percentage point increase in provision coverage ratio to 64 per cent.
Sridharan said increasing the PCR by one percentage point requires a provision of Rs 230 crore.
There were two accounts with an outstanding of Rs 501 crore that went to strategic debt restructuring, while there were no 5/25 or S4A accounts.
Sridharan attributed the contraction to a 0.10 per
cent hit from a change in the balance sheet structure, where the rise in deposits coupled with a slowdown in credit demand resulted in more investments in low-yielding g-secs, and a 0.23 per cent impact on interest reversals in SDR and S4A proposals that did not go through.
The net advances grew by only 10 per cent led by retail's 19 per cent surge, but Sridharan acknowledged that this is lower than expected and the bank may have to review its FY17 target of an advances growth in higher teens.
The bank said a report on the probable misdeeds by a section of its employees during the demonetisation exercise, which has seen quite a few arrests and some suspensions, is expected in the next few days.
It, however, refused to give details of the amount of scrapped currency notes which were received as deposits or exchanged over the counter.
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