Private sector lender Kotak Mahindra Bank on Saturday reported a 26 per cent rise in net income at Rs 2,071.15 crore in the June quarter, buoyed by record margins and a decline in bad loans.
On a consolidated basis, the city-headquartered financial services group, which is also into life and non-life insurance, share broking, asset reconstruction, and AIF among others, logged in 53 per cent rise in net income at Rs 2,755 crore in the June quarter over the corresponding period a year ago
Private sector lender Kotak Mahindra Bank on Saturday reported a 26 per cent rise in net income at Rs 2,071.15 crore in the June quarter, buoyed by record margins and a decline in bad loans.
On a consolidated basis, the city-headquartered financial services group, which is also into life and non-life insurance, share broking, asset reconstruction, and AIF among others, logged in 53 per cent rise in net income at Rs 2,755 crore in the June quarter over the corresponding period a year ago, the bank said.
The higher profitability is despite the bank booking a loss of over Rs 800 crore from treasury operations.
The chief financial officer Jaimin Bhatt refused to detail how much G-secs (government securities) the bank holds in excess of the regulatory requirement of 18 per cent.
In a low credit demand or bank credit scenario banks park their funds in government securities which are highly liquid assets and the average system level statutory liquidity ratio is over 23 per cent.
Explaining comparatively low amount of losses from the bond market, joint managing director Dipak Gupta told PTI that as much as 61 per cent of its bond holdings are in the AFS (available for sale) category and only 39 per cent in held to maturity segment, which has helped the bank to prevent a larger hit.
Total income for the quarter improved to Rs 8,582.25 crore from Rs 8,062.81 crore, boosted by an increase in interest income to Rs 7,338.49 crore, from Rs 6,479.78 crore in the year-ago period.
The key profitability gauge, the net interest income (NII) rose to Rs 4,697 crore, from Rs 3,942 crore, up 19 per cent on a near-record net interest margin (NIM) of 4.92 per cent.
NIM is the difference between what a bank earns from lending after paying for the depositors.
This high margin is in spite of the fact that the bank saw its low cost CASA ratio (current and savings account ratio) declining by over 200 bps to 58.2 per cent in the quarter.
On the asset quality front, gross non-performing assets declined to 2.24 per cent from 3.56 per cent, while net NPAs fell to 0.62 per cent from 1.28 per cent.
Provisions for bad loans and contingencies slipped multi-fold to Rs 23.6 crore in the quarter, from Rs 934.8 crore in the year-ago quarter and the provision coverage ratio stood at 72.6 per cent.
Advances rose 29 per cent to Rs 2,80,171 crore. Around 77 per cent of the incremental lending this quarter was unsecured, which are typically personal loans and credit cards and retail micro finance.
Gupta said 77 per cent of loans being unsecured is neither sustainable nor healthy but this is primarily because of low base and will eventually come down.
Gupta and Bhatt guided towards a 20 per cent loan growth for the year, with a caveat that if the interest rates do not go over the roof.
They also admitted that despite a 29 per cent loan growth, their wholesale book is still not in the pink of health.
Among the many subsidiaries, Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance reported Rs 248 crore of net income up from Rs 243 crore, Kotak Securities at Rs 219 crore down from Rs 236 crore, Kotak Mahindra Prime at Rs 157 crore, up from Rs 79 crore, and Kotak Mahindra AMC logged in Rs 106 crore down from Rs 107 crore.