Punjab National Bank (PNB) shares hit a nearly eight month low of Rs 103.65, after falling 4 per cent on the BSE in Wednesday’s intra-day trade amid heavy volumes.
On Monday, the company, in an exchange filing, said its board has approved and adopted the preliminary placement document along with the application form for the QIP issue. The bank may offer a discount of not more than 5 per cent on the floor price so calculated for the issue, it said.
The company’s stock is trading at its lowest level since January 29, 2024. It was down 27 per cent from its 52-week high of Rs 142.90 that it hit on April 30. The average trading volumes on the counter jumped 1.5 times, with a combined 48.38 million shares changing hands on the NSE and BSE.
PNB had taken the board’s approval last year for raising up to Rs 7,500 crore via the share sale in one or more tranches during 2024-25.
The bank intends to utilise the net proceeds from the QIP to augment its Tier-I capital base, which will help it meet its future capital requirements, along with supporting its growth plans and enhancing its business.
PNB is a well-capitalised public sector bank, which had a common equity tier-1 (CET-1) ratio of 10.95 per cent in June 2024 quarter (Q1FY25) and a capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of 15.79 per cent. The CET-1 ratio was at 11.04 per cent in FY24 and 11.22 per cent in FY23, while the CAR was at 1597 per cent and 15.50 per cent during the respective periods.
However, it is pertinent to sustain this trajectory through the cycle. Even after factoring in elevated provisioning requirements in the near term (even after net NPA of 0.6 per cent), India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) believes the capital buffers would remain significantly higher than the regulatory requirements, owing to its increasing internal accruals.
According to Ind-Ra, while PNB’s capital base is adequate for now, there is a need to continuously grow advances and build buffers ahead of the implementation of expected credit loss norms. This will continue to be a key monitorable, it added.
Meanwhile, PNB reported a healthy Q1 quarter, characterised by a sharp decline in provisions. Growth in advances was robust, and the bank’s management aims to improve its share in the real asset management (RAM) portfolio, which will support margins.
Special Mention Account (SMA) overdue (with loans over Rs 5 crore) remained under control at 0.16 per cent of domestic loans, while the bank continues to guide robust recoveries at 2x of slippages.
It guided gross non-performing assets (GNPA) ratio to decline to around 4 per cent (from the earlier guidance of 5 per cent), while credit cost is guided at 0.5 per cent (from earlier guidance of 1 per cent), Motilal Oswal Financial Services said in its result update for the company.
The PSU Bank index (NSEPSBK) fell from a high of 8,053 on June 3 to a low of 6,503 on September 11, representing a decline of around 19 per cent over 3.5 months.
The brokerage firm believes this significant drop offers an opportunity to re-evaluate the sector, with expectations that the PSU Bank index is more likely to outperform the Nifty in the future.
First Published: Sep 25 2024 | 1:06 PM IST