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BENGALURU, (Reuters): State Bank of India (SBI) on Friday reported its biggest ever quarterly profit on lower bad loan provisions and better asset quality, sending its shares up over 3%.
Net profit jumped to INR 55.83 billion ($785.56 million) in the three months to 31 Dec., from INR 39.55 billion a year earlier. That missed analysts’ estimates for a profit of INR 63.34 billion, according to Refinitiv data, due to a higher tax expense.
Provisions for bad loans dropped 41.4%, while gross bad loans as a percentage of total loans, a measure of asset quality, slipped to 6.94% at December-end from 7.19% in the immediately previous quarter, the Mumbai-based bank said in a regulatory filing.
SBI’s shares rose as much as 3.5% in a Mumbai market that was trading 0.1% lower as of 0830 GMT. Quarterly net interest income rose 22.42%, while net interest margin, a key indicator of a bank’s profitability, rose to 3.59%, up 37 basis points from the previous quarter.
Slippages, or fresh addition of bad loans, surged to INR 165.25 billion from INR 88.05 billion in the previous quarter, due to a INR 70 billion exposure to a large housing finance company, SBI said.