Canara Bank eyes 8-10% loan growth; rise in corporate credit this fiscal

Canara Bank eyes 8-10% loan growth; rise in corporate credit this fiscal

In the fiscal ended on March 31, 2022, the lender's gross advances grew by 9.77%

AgenciesUpdated: Monday, May 16, 2022, 11:26 PM IST
article-image
The bank's Retail, Agriculture and MSME (RAM) segment, which constitutes 57 percent of its total loan book, rose by 10.94 percent in the previous fiscal. / Representative image |

State-owned Canara Bank is expecting an 8-10 percent growth in advances as well as a healthy double-digit rise in corporate loan portfolio in the current financial year, its Managing Director and CEO L V Prabhakar said on Monday.

In the fiscal ended on March 31, 2022, the lender's gross advances grew by 9.77 percent.

''Last year (FY22), we had targeted a loan growth of 7.5 percent and closed the year at 9.77 percent. For FY23, we have given guidance of a minimum growth of 8 percent. However, going with the present trend, we expect that we will grow at 10 per cent,'' Prabhakar told PTI in an interaction.

''Overall we are targeting that by March 2023 our balance sheet size will be more than Rs 20 lakh crore as compared to Rs 18.27 lakh crore today,'' he said.

The bank's Retail, Agriculture and MSME (RAM) segment, which constitutes 57 percent of its total loan book, rose by 10.94 percent in the previous fiscal. Within RAM, retail grew by 9.51 percent, agriculture by 12.75 percent and MSME by 9.87 percent.

Corporate loan book, which witnessed a growth of 8.27 percent in FY22, is expected to grow at 10 percent. The bank is seeing a good traction in corporate loan portfolio and has a pipeline of Rs 65,000-70,000 crore.

''We are getting a lot of inquiries as far as infrastructure, renewable energy and manufacturing sectors are concerned. At least we are having about Rs 65,000-70,000 crore of corporate loan proposals with us for appraisal.

''Already, we have underwritten Hybrid Annuity Mode (HAM) projects worth Rs 35,000 crore, which will be disbursed in the current year,'' he said.

On capital raising plan, Prabhakar said with reduction in risk-weighted assets to 72 percent from 78 percent earlier and higher Capital to Risk-weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR) at 14.90 per cent, the requirement for capital has also reduced.

''As of now, we don't require any capital but to be future ready, we will be raising at an appropriate time taking into consideration the yields,'' he said, adding that the bank will look to raise Rs 9,000 crore through issuance of additional tier I and tier II bonds in the latter part of the fiscal.

In the quarter ended March 31, 2022, the bank's Profit After Tax (PAT) jumped by 64.9 percent to Rs 1,666 crore from Rs 1,010 crore in the year-ago period. Net Interest Income (NII) grew by 24.84 percent to Rs 7,005 crore. NIM improved to 2.82 percent from 2.76 percent.

The bank saw its asset quality improving with Gross Non-Performing Assets (GNPAs) ratio declining to 7.51 percent from 8.93 percent. The net NPA ratio stood at 2.65 percent compared to 3.82 percent.

''In FY23, our net NPAs will be less than 2 per cent and gross NPAs at 6 percent,'' Prabhakar said.

Slippage ratio will be below 1.75 percent in FY23 and the bank is expecting recoveries of more than Rs 15,000 crore this fiscal.

The lender's exposure to Future Retail is Rs 1,400 crore and it has already recovered Rs 227 crore from the loan account, Prabhakar said. The bank has already made a provision of 60 per cent for the account.

(With PTI inputs)

RECENT STORIES

India's Forex Reserves Surge By $3.7 Billion To Touch $641.6 Billion Mark

India's Forex Reserves Surge By $3.7 Billion To Touch $641.6 Billion Mark

Aadhar Housing Finance IPO Subscribed 25.49 Times On Final Day

Aadhar Housing Finance IPO Subscribed 25.49 Times On Final Day

Cholamandalam Financial Records 26.9% Up In Consolidated Q4 PAT At ₹1,143 Cr

Cholamandalam Financial Records 26.9% Up In Consolidated Q4 PAT At ₹1,143 Cr

Style Revamped: Audi's Bold Q3 & Q3 Sportback

Style Revamped: Audi's Bold Q3 & Q3 Sportback

After Yesterday's Bloodbath, Markets End The Week Crawling Back To Green

After Yesterday's Bloodbath, Markets End The Week Crawling Back To Green