Total provisions soared by a whopping 70 per cent to Rs 2,212.54 crore in the second quarter ended September 30 from Rs 1,298.71 crore a year ago, while provisions for NPAs and bad debts shot up 215.58 per cent to Rs 1,843.80 crore.
"This is not some kind of kitchen sinking exercise. We all know the PSU banks are going through tough phase in terms of NPAs. We have at least two quarters that is going to be tough," newly-appointed Managing Director and Chief Executive P S Jayakumar told reporters.
In the period under review, the domestic NIM was at 2.69 per cent while in international operations it was at 0.85 per cent. Net interest income marginally fell by 4.61 per cent to Rs 3,244 crore from Rs 3,401 crore a year ago.
Fresh slippages during the quarter were higher at Rs 6,816 crore, reflecting continued stress in corporate portfolio both in domestic and overseas loan book.
Recovery in the period stood at Rs 334 crore, while it upgraded Rs 79.33 crore worth of loans. The lender wrote off Rs 108.37 crore worth of loans in the quarter.
The CRAR (capital to risk weighted assets ratio) was at 12.51 per cent as on September 30. Of this, the share of Tier 1 capital was 9.9296 per cent and that of CET 1 Capital 9.42 per cent. The public lender's total business grew by 7.84 per cent to Rs 10,27,358 crore in the period under review.
Domestic CASA share held steady at 31.95 per cent.
The bank also detected a fraud in its Ashok Vihar branch in Delhi. It has estimated a loss of Rs 11 crore which has been fully provided for. In the wake of frauds, the bank is now centralising all its processes, Jayakumar said.
