Thrissur-based South Indian Bank is  aiming for a net profit of Rs 230 crore by the end of this financial  year, by systematically repricing deposits and increasing fee-based  income.
  The bank also aimed  to achieve a business growth of 20 per cent at Rs 36,000 crore by the  end of March 2010, said Abraham Thariyan, Executive Director of the  bank.
  "As on March 2009,  our net profit was Rs 194 crore. We aim to have a net profit of Rs 230  crore by March 2010. This we we will do by repricing deposits and  increasing non-interest income," said Thariyan.
  The  bank would bet on low-cost NRI deposits, mainly from the Gulf  countries, and Current Account Savings Accounts (CASA), to increase  profitability, he added. The share of low-cost NRI and CASA deposits  for the bank is close to 33 per cent of the total deposits.
  The  bank's business stands at Rs 32,000 crore as on June 2009. "We have  currently set a credit and deposit growth target of 20 per cent for  this year. However, this will be revised based on how the credit picks  up in the next few days," said Thariyan. "Our high cost bulk deposits  are in the process of getting repriced for the last three months. Bulk  deposits currently account for 19 per cent of our total deposits," he  said.
  The bank's net  interest margin was at 3.11 per cent as on June 2009 and it would aim  to maintain it at 3 per cent level during this fiscal, he said. The  capital adequacy ratio of the bank stands at 15 per cent as on June  2009. "We raised Rs 200 crore Tier II capital post June this year so  our Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) is pretty comfortable, we will not  look at raising additional capital this fiscal," he added.