This story is from November 18, 2018
State-owned banks' losses widened nearly 3.5 times in July-September
NEW DELHI: State-owned banks saw their cumulative losses widen nearly three-and-a-half times to Rs 14,716.2 crore in the July-September quarter of the current fiscal due to mounting bad loans.
These 21 public sector banks had posted a net loss of Rs 4,284.45 crore in the September quarter of 2017-18.
On a quarterly basis, however, their performance was somewhat better as they narrowed down their losses by about Rs 2,000 crore to Rs 14,716.2 crore in the said quarter from Rs 16,614.9 crore in April-June 2018.
Higher provisioning towards bad loans or non-performing assets (NPAs) had impacted the balance sheets of these PSU lenders.
As per the financial results posted by them, the biggest loss was posted by scam-hit Punjab National Bank (PNB) Rs 4,532.35 crore in the September quarter of the current fiscal as against a profit of Rs 560.58 crore in the year-ago period.
PNB's provisioning for bad loans and contingencies rose to Rs 9,757.90 crore for the quarter from Rs 2,440.79 crore a year ago. Of this, the provisions for bad loans or NPAs were Rs 7,733.27 crore as against Rs 2,693.78 crore a year ago.
The India's second largest PSU bank suffered huge losses after the detection of a massive fraud to the tune of nearly Rs 14,000 crore in March quarter this year, allegedly committed by diamond jewellery designer Nirav Modi and his associates. The bank had to make provisioning for the losses.
IDBI Bank posted a loss of Rs 3,602.50 crore and Allahabad Bank Rs 1,822.71 crore in the September quarter. IDBI Bank's loss was Rs 197.84 crore in the year-ago quarter while Allahabad Bank had posted a profit of Rs 70.2 crore.
The narrowing of the cumulative net losses on quarter-on-quarter basis could be mainly attributed to good performance by State Bank of India and Oriental Bank of Commerce.
SBI, which had incurred a net loss of Rs 4,875.85 crore in the June quarter, posted a profit of Rs 944.87 crore for July-September. Oriental Bank of Commerce posted a profit of Rs 101.74 crore as against a net loss of Rs 393.21 crore in the June quarter of the current fiscal.
The combined loss of these 21 banks was Rs 62,681.27 crore in the quarter ending March 2018.
The government and the RBI have been taking steps to help the debt-ridden public sector banks to improve their performance. The government on its part has been infusing capital in these banks and the Reserve Bank of India has tightened monitoring.
These 21 public sector banks had posted a net loss of Rs 4,284.45 crore in the September quarter of 2017-18.
Higher provisioning towards bad loans or non-performing assets (NPAs) had impacted the balance sheets of these PSU lenders.
As per the financial results posted by them, the biggest loss was posted by scam-hit Punjab National Bank (PNB) Rs 4,532.35 crore in the September quarter of the current fiscal as against a profit of Rs 560.58 crore in the year-ago period.
The India's second largest PSU bank suffered huge losses after the detection of a massive fraud to the tune of nearly Rs 14,000 crore in March quarter this year, allegedly committed by diamond jewellery designer Nirav Modi and his associates. The bank had to make provisioning for the losses.
IDBI Bank posted a loss of Rs 3,602.50 crore and Allahabad Bank Rs 1,822.71 crore in the September quarter. IDBI Bank's loss was Rs 197.84 crore in the year-ago quarter while Allahabad Bank had posted a profit of Rs 70.2 crore.
The narrowing of the cumulative net losses on quarter-on-quarter basis could be mainly attributed to good performance by State Bank of India and Oriental Bank of Commerce.
SBI, which had incurred a net loss of Rs 4,875.85 crore in the June quarter, posted a profit of Rs 944.87 crore for July-September. Oriental Bank of Commerce posted a profit of Rs 101.74 crore as against a net loss of Rs 393.21 crore in the June quarter of the current fiscal.
The combined loss of these 21 banks was Rs 62,681.27 crore in the quarter ending March 2018.
The government and the RBI have been taking steps to help the debt-ridden public sector banks to improve their performance. The government on its part has been infusing capital in these banks and the Reserve Bank of India has tightened monitoring.
Top Comment
Iindian
2187 days ago
govt bank se paisa nikaal lo sab govt bank uth jaane wali haiRead allPost comment
Popular from Business
- 'Couldn't have asked for better company': Zomato CEO's heartfelt message as rival Swiggy makes market debut
- Richest companies in the world by market cap 2024: From Nvidia and Tesla to Microsoft Apple and more
- Bloodbath on D-street: Investors lose Rs 13 lakh crore in last 2 days- Top reasons why market is falling
- Boeing begins process to cut 17,000 jobs, reduce global workforce by 10%
- CCPA orders investigation into 'deficiencies' of Ola Electric after most verification calls to aggrieved consumers found discrepancies in company's claim
end of article
Trending Stories
- Will banks open only for 5 days a week? Here’s what you should know about IBA’s proposal
- India set to be third largest economy, says S&P Global
- Dalal Street bull run continues! BSE Sensex crosses 69,000 for the first time; Nifty above 20,800
- Byju’s reduces notice period for employees as troubles mount
03:08 Sensex surges over 900 points, Nifty above 20,550 as BJP state election wins bolster Modi's Lok Sabha 2024 prospects- UltraTech to buy building materials business of Kesoram in 7,600 crore deal
- Tata Technologies stock debuts at a bumper 140% premium; share price at Rs 1200 on BSE
Visual Stories
- NEET UG 2024 result awaited: Top 10 NIRF-ranked medical colleges of India
- 7 New Expected Bullet Train Routes in India
- 10 Upcoming High-Speed Expressways That Will Change Highway Travel In India
- 8 Transformational Indian Railways Projects You Shouldn’t Miss
- Why Sensex, Nifty50 Hit New Highs, M-Cap At $5 Trillion: Top Reasons
TOP TRENDS
UP NEXT