Bank of India announces closure of QIP issue; raises Rs 2,550 cr
With this QIP, government shareholding in the bank has come down to 82.50 pc from 90.34 pc earlier. The bank scrip was trading at Rs 66.75 apiece on BSE
The lender recovered Rs 9,000 crore in the March quarter on account of its disbursement against standby letters of credit (SBLC) issued by other banks.
State-run lender Bank of India (BOI) is expecting its business to grow 8-10 per cent in the current fiscal, an official said here on Saturday.
The lender recovered Rs 9,000 crore in the March quarter on account of its disbursement against standby letters of credit (SBLC) issued by other banks.
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“With the positive expectation on GDP (gross domestic product) growth and resolving of NCLT cases, we are expecting 8-10 per cent business growth this year,” the lender’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Dinabandhu Mohapatra told reporters here.
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Under the prompt turnaround plan, the public sector bank would resort to a host of measures including claiming back the entire amounts disbursed against standby letters of credit (SBLC) issued by other banks.
“We have already recovered Rs 9,000 crore from that in the March quarter and around Rs 500 crore is still outstanding. We are hopeful to recover this outstanding in this month,” he said responding to query that how much the lender had recovered on account SBLC.
Mohapatra said the banking industry would be benefitted as more resolutions coming through corporate insolvency resolution process.
Speaking on the acquisition of insolvent Bhushan Steel Ltd by Tata Steel’s wholly owned subsidiary Bamnipal Steel through corporate insolvency resolution process, he said: “The proceeds from this will help us to reduce our NPAs and we had an exposure of Rs 1,993 crore in the account (Bhushan Steel).”
Asked about the bank’s exposure into the 12 large NPA (non performing asset) accounts identified by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), he said: “We have exposure in 11 accounts, out of 12. Our exposure would be around Rs 8,300 crore.”
The RBI had identified 12 large accounts with exposure of more than Rs 5,000 crore and more than 60 per cent of which is recognised as NPAs. Banks had to refer to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) for these accounts.
He said retail lending along with advances to agriculture and micro, small, medium enterprises accounts over 50 per cent of the total lending.
Mohapatra and senior officers held a business review meet here with the banks employees and staffs operating in West Bengal, Odisha, Assam and north eastern states.
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