Net interest income (NII) rose 3.4 per cent sequentially to Rs 1,973 crore in Q2 from Rs 1,908 crore in the previous quarter.
Shares of YES Bank
rose 5 per cent at Rs 14.01 on the BSE on Monday, extending its Friday’s 5 per
cent gain, after the lender returned to profit in the quarter ended September
(Q2FY21).
However, the stock erased its early morning rally and was up 1.4 per cent
higher at Rs 13.54 on the BSE at 09:30 am. In comparison, the S&P BSE
Sensex was down 0.26 per cent at 40,579 points. A combined around 89 million
equity shares had changed hands on the counter on the NSE and BSE.
Private sector
lender YES
Bank’s net profit rose sequentially to Rs 129 crore in Q2FY21 from Rs 45
crore in the first quarter ended June 30 (Q1FY21). The bank had posted a loss
of Rs 600 crore in Q2 of the previous financial year (Q2FY20).
Net
interest income (NII) rose 3.4 per cent sequentially to Rs 1,973 crore in
Q2 from Rs 1,908 crore in the previous quarter. On year-on-year (YoY) basis,
NII was down by 9.7 per cent from the base of Rs 2,186 crore in the second
quarter of the previous year. Net interest margin (NIM) rose marginally to 3.1
per cent in Q2 from 3 per cent in the June quarter. NIM was at 2.7 per cent in
Q2 of the previous year.
Its asset quality
improved marginally as gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) stood at 16.9 per
cent in Q2 from 17.3 per cent in Q1. Net NPAs have also come down 25 bps to
4.71 per cent.
Non-interest
income was up 13.9 per cent to Rs 707 crore in Q2 from Rs 621 crore in Q1, due
to the strong bounce back across transactional and granular fee streams, aided
by pick-up in economic activity and improved credit ratings.
YES Bank’s Q2FY21
financial performance improved sequentially on the back of expansion in, better
traction in non-interest revenue and opex control. Given the Supreme Court
ruling halting recognition of NPAs, GNPAs (in absolute value terms) were
largely unchanged at Rs 323.4bn, forming 16.9 per cent of the total advances.
The outlook on asset quality remains dim as the bank has maintained its
slippage guidance of 7-8 per cent for FY21.
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