Faced with rising stressed assets over the past two years, SBI has said it does not expect to come out of the woods till the end of 2014 and an uptick in growth is central to the turnaround of the banking system.
“Even when I joined I had said that I do not see anything (improvement in asset quality) before three quarters and I continue to maintain that. I don’t think you can see a turnaround that fast,” State Bank of India chairperson Arundhati Bhattacharya told PTI in an interview.
Replying to questions on bad assets, she said some improvement may be seen after the forthcoming general elections but any concrete signals can come only towards the end of 2014.
“You would see the stress lessening when you see GDP growth going up. Till such a time, the stress is going to be there,” she said, adding that revival of stressed projects is essential for the economy to revive.
Bhattacharya said she hopes that clearances granted by the Cabinet Committee on Investment (CCI) will result in some loan demand by March, as state-level approvals are likely to be secured by the companies over the course of this quarter.
CCI, since last June, has cleared 128 large projects worth over Rs 4 trillion (Rs 4 lakh crore), while over 200 more projects involving more than Rs 14 trillion are still stuck for want of various approvals. After the approval, projects need certain state-level clearances as well.
Hence, the tepid loan demand from corporates even in the current busy credit season. Till mid-December credit growth was a poor 14.7 per cent, according to RBI data.
SBI’s net profit dipped 35.08 per cent to Rs 2,375 crore in the July-September quarter because of 43.99 per cent jump in provisioning for bad loans at Rs 2,646 crore and a massive spike in pension coverage.