HDFC Bank, India's second-biggest lender by assets, on Tuesday reported a record quarterly profit, buoyed by an increase in interest and fee incomes.
The Mumbai-based bank, which was recently added to the central bank's list of lenders it considers "too big to fail", raked in a net profit of Rs 41.51 billion ($634 million) in the three months to September 30, up 20 per cent from a year ago.
That was mostly in line with an average estimate of Rs 41.61 billion from 24 analysts, Thomson Reuters data shows.
Gross bad loans as a percentage of total loans stood at 1.26 per cent at end-September, versus 1.24 per cent in the previous quarter and 1.02 per cent a year ago.
With its focus on retail clients and relatively smaller exposure to segments such as infrastructure financing, HDFC Bank has the lowest bad-loan ratio among top Indian lenders. That has made it an investor favourite in a sector that has been marred by a record $146 billion of soured loans.
HDFC Bank's net interest income rose 22 per cent in the quarter on a 22.3 per cent rise in loans.
Non-interest revenue rose 24.3 per cent, while core net interest margin steadied at 4.3 per cent.
The bank has a market capitalisation of more than $87 billion, making it the most valuable in the sector and second among all Indian companies.
Shares of the bank were little changed after the results in a Mumbai market that was up 0.3 per cent.
It has rallied about 55 per cent this year, outperforming the sector index that has risen 33 per cent and the main market index that has added 24 per cent.
(Reuters)