A day after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the government may consider bringing down its stake in state-run IDBI Bank to below 50 per cent, the lender on Tuesday announced a "transformational" plan entailing an investment of about Rs 20,000 crore over a three-year period.
The plan includes doubling the bank's business volumes and reducing gross NPA level below 3 per cent.
"The plan rests on business growth and our approach will be to catch up with the industry. We will double our business from around Rs 5 lakh crore in FY16 to Rs 10 lakh crore in FY19, representing CAGR of over 20 per cent per annum," Managing Director and Chief Executive Kishor Kharat told reporters in Mumbai.
However, he was quick to add the "transformational plan" has nothing to do with the Government's move to reduce stake in the bank.
"The plan has nothing to do with whether we remain a public sector or a private sector bank because it does not talk abut composition of ownership or holding. On a standalone basis we have made this plan for transforming the bank and therefore the thrust is more on business transformation."
Kharat said bad loan will remain an issue for some more time but expressed confidence the bank will be entering the next fiscal with a lighter stress. "Our endeavour will be to bring down gross NPA to 3 per cent and net NPA to near 0 per cent."
For the quarter ended December, the bank's gross NPAs jumped to 8.94 per cent from 5.94 per cent in the same period last year, while net NPA rose to 4.60 per cent.
To meet the plan, the bank is looking at raising around Rs 19,000-20,000 crore over the next three years, he said. Besides, it will be raising Rs 4,000 crore from Tier I bonds and Rs 8,000-9,000 crore through Tier II bonds.
The city-based lender has lined up around Rs 3,000 crore of assets for monetisation, of which it is expecting nearly Rs 1,200-1,500 crore to accrue this month.
Kharat said he would like to list the bank's subsidiaries - IDBI Capital, IDBI AMC, IDBI Federal - but no final decision has been taken so far. "Right now, we will monetise to the extent of our need only."
The bank has also put on hold its plan to raise Rs 3,771 crore through qualified institutional placement (QIP) route due to volatile market conditions.
"We have put the QIP plans on hold for now because the price is not right at this point in time. The investor interest during our roadshow was very good but they wanted more clarity around the impact of AQR (asset quality review).
Now that things are clearer, we will wait for the price to come back up," Kharat said.
(PTI)