It is important to note that AT1 bonds are unsecured, perpetual bonds that banks issue to improve their core capital base
Stocks to Watch: Paytm has narrowed its consolidated net loss to Rs 392 crore in Q3FY22. The company had posted a net loss of Rs 778.4 crore a year ago
Private sector DCB Bank on Saturday reported a 52 per cent jump in its profit to Rs 114 crore for the December 2022 quarter, mainly due to a decline in bad loans. The bank's net profit stood at Rs 75 crore in the same quarter of the preceding financial year. The total income increased to Rs 541 crore in the latest December quarter from Rs 463 crore in the year-ago period, the bank said in a regulatory filing. At the same time, net interest income rose to Rs 446 crore against Rs 345 crore a year ago. On the asset quality front, the bank recorded an improvement, with gross NPAs (Non-Performing Assets) declining to 3.62 per cent compared to 4.78 per cent at the end of the third quarter of the previous fiscal. Net NPAs too eased to 1.37 per cent compared to 2.55 per cent in the year-ago period. The capital adequacy ratio stood at 16.26 per cent in the December quarter.
Private sector DCB Bank on Saturday posted a 73 per cent jump in net profit at Rs 112 crore for the quarter ended September 2022 on the back of reduction in bad loans. The bank had reported a profit of Rs 63 crore in the year-ago period. Total income of the lender during the July-September quarter of FY23 rose to Rs 510 crore against Rs 421 crore in the corresponding period of FY22, DCB Bank said in a statement. Net interest income increased to Rs 411 crore as against Rs 323 crore in the same period of the previous fiscal. The bank's gross non-performing assets (NPAs) declined to 3.89 per cent of the gross advances at the end of September 2022, from 4.73 per cent at September-end 2021. Net NPAs also came down to 1.54 per cent from 2.66 per cent. The Provision Coverage Ratio (PCR) as on September 30, 2022 was at 72.83 per cent. PCR without considering gold loan NPAs stood at 74.21 per cent, it said. Capital adequacy continues to be strong, it added. As on September 30, 2022, the
Private sector DCB Bank has revised upwards the marginal cost of funds-based lending rate by 27 basis points across tenors. The revised rates will come to effect from November 5, 2022, DCB Bank said in a regulatory filing on Friday. The benchmark one-year MCLR rate will be priced at 10.23 per cent from Saturday against the existing rate of 9.96 per cent. The one-year tenor MCLR is used to price most of the consumer loans, such as housing, auto and personal. The one, three and six-month tenor MCLRs will be 9.63 per cent, 9.79 per cent and 10.02 per cent, respectively. While the overnight tenor MCLR will be 9.58 per cent.
Stocks to Watch today: The US FDA has issued Glenmark Pharma form 483 with 6 observations for its Baddi Unit, which was inspected between June 13-22, 2022.
Private sector lender DCB Bank on Saturday posted a 44.87 per cent rise in its net profit at Rs 113 crore for the quarter ended March 2022
Natrajan has led the bank since April 2009. In 2024, he will complete 15 years at the helm, the maximum allowed under current RBI guidelines
The weakening in the asset quality was partly due to the bank's customer profile, mainly comprising small-ticket borrowers in the self-employed segment, that was more severely impacted by the pandemic
The stock declined 1.47 per cent to settle at Rs 86.85 on the BSE; during the day, it tumbled 4.02 per cent to Rs 84.60
Sequentially, net profit rose marginally from Rs 65 crore in Q2FY22
Munjee was the chairman of the bank since August 2005.
The bank's asset quality worsened with the gross NPAs spiking to 4.09% of the gross advances as of March 31, 2021
DCB Bank said it has acquired 9 per cent stake in non-banking financial company Techfino Capital which is engaged in providing technology-based education and healthcare loans.
DCB Bank Limited announced on Wednesday that it has acquired a minority equity stake of approximately 9% in Bengaluru-based NBFC company Techfino Capital Private Limited
Private sector lender DCB Bank on Thursday said it is seeing a good business prospects from rural areas and wants to focus on "encouraging" tractor loans demand from the farming community. The bank is offering customised loans in Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Rajasthan, which saw a growth in demand last year. The bank is positive about rural prospects, as evident from sales in Q2 FY21, and is expecting incremental growth in business, DCB Bank said in a release on Thursday. Citing a recent Crisil report that tractor sales were up by 12 per cent in first half of FY21, the lender said good monsoon and higher crop production generally support farm incomes and this in turn provides a fillip to tractor demand. Typically, fortunes of the tractor loan business depend on the vagaries of the weather and the harvest season among other macro and micro variables, it said. "The sale of tractors shows a heartening trend, it has posted
Little leeway on pricing and asset quality at a tricky level could places both segments in a tight spot
RBI decision will clarify its stand on 15-year cap mentioned in discussion paper
The bank has said the moratorium has been reduced from Rs 1,908.1 crore as on March 31, 2020, to Rs 710 crore on May 31, 2020.
Net profit for the financial year ended March 31, 2020 (FY20), stood at Rs 337.25 crore, up marginally from Rs 325.37 crore in FY19.