The core net interest income rose 24 per cent to Rs 7,068.5 crore in the October-December quarter, helped by asset growth of 28.2 per cent and an almost 0.10 per cent expansion in the net interest margin to 4.3 per cent, the bank said.
Other income rose at lower pace of 13.3 per cent to Rs 2,872.2 crore, with the core fee and commission incomes rising to Rs 2,004.8 crore from Rs 1,806.5 crore a year ago.
"We have not had any non-performing loans recognition issues (from the RBI's new list of top defaulters)," Deputy Managing Director Paresh Sukthankar told reporters.
It may be recalled that HDFC Bank was the first to declare Essar Steel account as an NPA in the first quarter of this fiscal itself and make full provisions for the same.
However, Sukthankar did not name the company, saying as a policy it does not disclose client specific details.
Sukthankar said there has been an increase of 0.06 per cent in the gross non-performing assets ratio to 0.97 per cent. He attributed this to slippages from the agri-banking and small businesses fronts, apart from a regulatory change in computation of credit card outstanding.
In a post-results statement, analysts at the domestic
brokerage Kotak Securities said the numbers meet expectations and pointed out to the overall stressed portfolio of 0.40 per cent as a plus point which makes it retain the positive outlook on the stock.
The proportion of the low-cost current and saving accounts stood at 40 per cent and the split between retail to wholesale in the advances mix stood at 53:47.
The cost to income ratio was stable at 43.7 per cent, but Sukthankar attributed this to the seasonal factors, saying from a long-term perspective, the bank wishes to keep it under 45 per cent and will have to work harder.
The bank added 626 branches in the 12 months period to December, taking the total to 4,281, putting pressure on the cost to income ratio.
Sukthankar said he does not see any scope for a cut in either the deposit or the lending rate during the current quarter and also expected a status quo on rates at the next month's policy announcement.
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