The lender had reported a net loss of Rs 1,506 crore in the same period last year. In the second quarter of FY17, it reported a profit of Rs 127 crore.
"After four quarters of losses, the bank became profitable in second and third quarters of this financial year. This has been done by the implementation of our three- pronged strategy - NPA management, augmentation of CASA (current account savings account) and re-balancing of advances in favour of retail portfolio," Managing Director and CEO Melywn Rego told reporters here.
The treasury operating income stood at Rs 3610 crore in the quarter. Total provisions reduced by 36 per cent to Rs 2,303 crore from Rs 3,604 crore.
Net interest margin (NIM) on domestic operation improved to 2.65 per cent from 2.23 per cent. NIM on overseas operation also improved from 1.17 per cent to 2.21 per cent.
Gross NPA stood at 13.38 per cent from 9.18 per cent a year ago, while net NPA was at 7.09 per cent as against 5.25 per cent. Provision coverage ratio was at 58.71 per cent.
Recovery, upgradation and write off combined together stood at Rs 3,691 crore, up from Rs 3,181 crore last year.
"During the fourth quarter what we see is the slippages, recovery and upgradation would balance out and there would be no incremental addition to NPAs," Rego said.
He expects recovery and slippages to be at Rs 3,500 crore in the fourth quarter.
In Q3, the bank invoked scheme for sustainable structuring of stressed accounts (S4A) in four accounts with outstanding of Rs 502 crore.
It had set a target to raise Rs 1,000 crore by monetising it non-core asset during the current fiscal.
In the fourth quarter, the bank is planning to raise
1,000 crore-1,500 crore from additional tier I (AT1) bonds and an equal amount through tier II bonds, Rego said.
CASA deposits grew 38 per cent while its share in domestic deposits improved to 41 per cent in the quarter under review.
Gross advances stood at Rs 387,028 crore, down marginally by 0.43 per cent from the second quarter of FY17.
The bank expects a credit growth of 5-6 per cent in the current financial year, Rego said.
