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SBI Q4 net rises 23%, bad loan ratio down

MUMBAI: The State Bank of India, the nation’s top lender by assets, reported a better-than-expected 23% rise in quarterly profit on Friday and said its bad loan ratio declined sharply, sending its shares up by more than 5%.

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Mumbai, May 22

The State Bank of India, the nation’s top lender by assets, reported a better-than-expected 23% rise in quarterly profit on Friday and said its bad loan ratio declined sharply, sending its shares up by more than 5%.

The bank’s gross bad loans ratio stood at 4.25% in its fourth quarter ended March, compared with 4.9% in the December quarter. The net non-performing loan ratio fell to 2.12% in the March quarter from 2.8% a quarter earlier.

Two straight years of weaker economic expansion and stretched corporate balance sheets have led to a surge in banks’ bad loans. The government-owned lenders led by the SBI, which dominate the banking sector with more than 70% share of loans, have amassed bad loans at a faster pace than their private sector rivals.

The bank said earlier that it had increased scrutiny and improved monitoring systems to contain bad loans.

The SBI, which accounts for about a quarter of loans and deposits in the country, said net profit in the quarter rose to Rs 37.42 billion from Rs 30.41 billion rupees a year earlier. Analysts on average had expected a net profit of Rs 37.23 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data.

The weaker economic activity has also taken a toll on loan growth for banks. The SBI reported a 7.25% rise in total loans for the year to March compared with the overall banking sector’s loan growth of 12.6%. Retail loans grew almost 15%, faster than corporate loans.

The local net interest margin for the bank rose 5 basis points for the fiscal year to 3.54%. SBI shares closed 2.7% lower at Rs 282.45 in a Mumbai market that ended up 0.5%. The stock rose as much as 5.1% after the results. — Reuters

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