The city-headquartered lender, which had made a name for itself by consistently delivering 30 per cent profit growth for more than 32 quarters without a break till about two years ago, and then slipped to the 20 per cent levels with sluggish economic growth, saw its margins narrowing by 10 bps to 4.10 per cent during the third quarter ended December 31.
The Aditya Puri-headed bank also saw redemptions of USD 3 billion worth of NRI deposits raised under a special window opened by the RBI in 2013 which led to a USD 2-billion reduction in the foreign currency loan book. HDFC Bank had raised the largest amount through this window.
Deputy Managing Director Paresh Sukthankar acknowledged this is the slowest profit growth ever for over two decade-old bank but defended it, saying this is because of the external environment, and declined to give any guidance on how it sees the next few quarters.
He said the bank lost out on "fairly meaningful" quantum of fees from point of sale terminals and ATM usage during the demonetisation exercise (Nov 9-Dec 30), but said this is for the benefit of larger good in the long-term.
Sukthankar made a plea for a "balance" to be achieved on the merchant discount rates so that those investing in the infrastructure also benefit.
But the market lapped the bank counter as they believe the lender did well in a challenging time.
The bank's domestic credit growth of over 17 per cent was split almost evenly between the retail and wholesale lines and the momentum remains healthy, Sukthankar said.
Sukthankar said the bank has been piling up liquidity
since the June quarter with an eye on the FCNR redemptions and had collected over Rs 20,000 crore which earned low returns for the bank.
The bank's core net interest income grew 17.6 per cent to Rs 8,309 crore in Q3, while other income inched up 9.4 per cent to Rs 2,872.2 crore. Despite the huge spurt in electronic transactions, the core fees and commission grew only 10 per cent to Rs 2,206 crore.
The gross non-performing assets ratio was stable at 1.05 per cent, while total provisions moved up to Rs 715.8 crore from 653.9 crore.
The bank bought Rs 3,355 crore home loans originated by it from parent HDFC, he said, adding the policy of buying- back 70 per cent of the originated loans is still in work. Its total capital adequacy stood at 15.9 per cent with the core tier-I at 13.8 per cent.
The HDFC Bank counter closed 1.84 per cent up at 1,267.75 on the BSE as against a 0.95 per cent surge in the benchmark.
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