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Union Bank of India Q4 net profit rises 18% on lower provisions

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For FY24, bank reported a consolidated net profit of Rs13,797 crore

Mumbai: State-owned Union Bank of India on Saturday reported an 18.36 per cent growth in its consolidated net profit for the March quarter to Rs3,328 crore, helped by lower provisions.

For the fiscal 2023-24, the lender reported a consolidated net profit of Rs13,797 crore against Rs8,512 crore in the year-ago period.

In the quarter under review, its standalone net profit increased to Rs3,311 crore from Rs2,782 crore a year ago.

The core net interest income grew 14.38 per cent to Rs9,437 crore on an 11.7 per cent growth in advances and widening of net interest margin to 3.10 per cent from 2.97 per cent in the year-ago period.

Its managing director and chief executive A Manimekhalai told reporters that for FY25, it is aiming for a credit growth of 11-13 per cent and deposit growth to be between 9-11 per cent compared to 9.3 per cent in FY24.

It, however, expects a fall in NIMs to 2.8-3 per cent, she said, adding that the targets will be reviewed midway through the year.

The non-interest income declined by over 10 per cent to Rs4,707 crore, primarily due to halving of recoveries from written off accounts.

For FY25, the bank is targeting the overall recoveries to come at Rs16,000 crore against over Rs18,000 crore in FY24.

The overall provisions declined to Rs3,222 crore from Rs4,041 crore in the year-ago period.

The fresh slippages increased to Rs3,202 crore from the Rs2,687 crore a year ago, but the final stock of gross NPAs was lower because of help coming in on recoveries, upgradation and write-offs.

The bank’s gross NPA ratio declined to 4.76 per cent against 7.53 per cent in the year-ago period, and Manimekhalai said it will be targeting to close FY25 with the number under 4 per cent.

The RBI’s newly introduced proposals on the project finance front will not have a big impact on the bank’s financials, she said, adding that the position will be “manageable” even if the draft is implemented in the present form.

She said about 28 per cent of the corporate loan book is project finance loans at present, of which 68 per cent is to projects that have been completed. Also, the RBI is proposing for a phased implementation of the provisioning requirements, which will be of help.

The bank has an overall pipeline of over Rs40,000 crore, which will ensure that the credit growth aims are met, she said, adding that there is demand from sectors like data centres, real estate, steel and renewables.

When asked about the tech side initiatives, Manimekhalai said it is revamping its mobile app at present, and exuded confidence about not being impacted by any challenges on the technology front.

The overall capital adequacy of the bank stood at 16.97 per cent, with the core buffer at 13.65 per cent. Manimekhalai said the bank will not need any new fund infusion unless there is a huge private capex improvement, which ups the demand.

The bank plans to open 250-300 branches in FY25, she said.

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