India’s Kotak Mahindra Bank reported lower-than-expected third-quarter net profit on Saturday, weighed down by higher bad loan provisions and shrinking lending margins.
The private bank reported standalone net profit of 30.05 billion rupees ($361.7 million) in the quarter ended Dec. 31, compared to analysts’ expectations of 31.94 billion rupees, per LSEG data.
The standalone numbers do not include the business of its subsidiaries.
Provisions and contingencies rose to 5.79 billion from 1.49 billion rupees a year ago.
Kotak Mahindra Bank also made provisions of 1.43 billion rupees on exposure to alternative investment funds (AIFs) following stricter norms by the central bank, it said.
“We do have additional exposure to AIFs… but this (exposure) is not involving any kind of evergreening,” CFO Jaimin Bhatt said in an earnings conference.
Net interest income – the difference between interest earned and paid out – increased 16% on-year to 65.54 billion rupees.
However, net interest margin (NIM) – the difference between interest obtained on loans and paid on deposits expressed as percentage – shrank to 5.22% from 5.47% last year, but remained flat from the previous quarter.
NIMs going up is a “challenge at this stage” given high deposit rates and the bank’s cost of funds will keep going up, Bhatt said.
Indian lenders have been reporting double-digit loan growth consistently over the past few months owing to higher demand, but their margins have been pressured by rising deposit costs.
Earlier this week, HDFC Bank, India’s biggest private bank, reported weak margins for a second consecutive quarter.
Kotak Mahindra Bank’s loans grew 19% from last year, while deposits rose 18.6%.
Gross non-performing assets (NPA) ratio was at 1.73% at the end of December, compared to 1.72% as of September-end.
The bank’s board also approved raising up to 100 billion rupees through bonds on a private placement basis in 2024-25.
Shares of the bank ended 2.3% higher on Saturday.