Axis Bank dragged to first quarterly loss by bad loans

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By and Sridhar

While the bulk of India's 9.5 trillion-rupee soured-loans as of end-2017 were with the country's dominant state-run banks, among the and its bigger rival ICICI also account for large chunks.

Stricter rules enforced by the Reserve of in February are set to push the industry's non-performing loans even higher.

Axis' net loss was 21.89 billion rupees ($328 million) for the fiscal fourth quarter to March 31, the Mumbai-based bank, which was founded in 1993, said.

The results were a reflection of the bank's desire to accelerate non-performing asset (NPA) recognition, said Shikha Sharma, who is due to step down at the end of December after being at the helm for nine years.

"With this accelerated recognition, we believe the NPA recognition phase of this credit cycle is now nearly complete and the focus shifts to resolution," she told a conference at the bank's headquarters.

has seen its non-performing loans jump more than eight times in the past three years to 342.49 billion rupees, or 6.77 percent of its loan book, at the end of March. In the March quarter alone, it added 165.36 billion rupees in incremental bad loans, which chief said was driven by the recent central rule changes.

Sridharan predicted net non-performing loans additions in the year to March 2019 will be "significantly lower" than the previous year, while lending growth will be in the "high teens".

For the March quarter, the bank's loans grew 18 percent, driven by a 23 percent rise in loans to Its net interest income growth was flat in the quarter, and rose 3 percent for the full year leading to a net interest margin of 3.44 percent.

EARLY EXIT FOR CEO

Last week, the appointed leadership advisory firm to help it search for a new chief executive, and said its board would ensure that the process is completed before Sharma's term ends.

Sharma, who had been originally given a three-year term to begin from June 1, sought to shorten her tenure after the central reportedly expressed concerns.

has also faced other problems.

A central audit last year found more bad loans than the had originally reported for the year ended March 2017.

In December, the was ordered by India's markets regulator to conduct an internal investigation into a suspected leak of financial information and to strengthen its handling of such data, after a report documented messages about company results being circulated on private groups ahead of official release.

The has submitted its report on the investigation to the capital markets regulator, but has yet to hear back, Sharma said on Thursday.

Bank's smaller rival Yes Bank, which also reported on Thursday reported a better-than-expected 29 percent rise in fourth-quarter profit as its bad-loan ratio narrowed.

Shares in Bank, valued at about $19 billion, closed 0.9 percent lower ahead of the results in a Mumbai market that gained 0.5 percent. The stock is down 12.4 percent so far this year, underperforming a 2 percent fall in the sector index and a 0.8 percent rise in the main index.

Yes shares have gained 11.8 percent in 2018.

($1 = 66.8000 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by and Sridhar; Editing by David Evans and Elaine Hardcastle)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 26 2018. 21:27 IST