By GEORGE NGIGI and DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- KCB returned an after-tax profit of Sh14.3 billion, opening a Sh1.1 billion gap with its closest rival Equity Bank.
- Equity also released its annual financial results Thursday showing that its after tax profit grew 10 per cent to Sh13.2 billion for the same period.
- This means KCB also grew its profit at a faster rate than Equity – setting it up for continued market leadership if the trend continues.
- KCB returned a bigger profit despite the fact that Equity ran a wider revenue margin in the year under review.
KCB
Thursday asserted its position as Kenya’s most profitable bank for the
third year in a row after it reported a 17 per cent earnings growth for
the year ended December 2013.
KCB, which is also East Africa’s biggest bank by capitalisation, returned an after-tax profit of Sh14.3 billion, opening a Sh1.1 billion gap with its closest rival Equity Bank.
Equity also released its annual financial results Thursday showing that its after tax profit grew 10 per cent to Sh13.2 billion for the same period.
This means KCB also grew its profit at a faster
rate than Equity – setting it up for continued market leadership if the
trend continues.
“We are excited with the performance reflecting growth in all our business segments,” KCB chief executive Joshua Oigara said.
KCB returned a bigger profit despite the fact that Equity ran a wider revenue margin in the year under review.
Equity’s interest margin – difference between its
cost of funds and the lending rate- was 12 per cent compared to KCB’s
10.1 per cent – meaning it earned more for equal amount of loans
disbursed.
KCB therefore relied on better cost management to outpace its rival.
The bank used 54 per cent of its revenues to pay
for operational costs compared to 57.4 per cent a year earlier, riding
on a three-year staff restructuring plan that ended last year with a
one-off cost of Sh1.1 billion.
Kenya’s biggest bank by capitalisation had for
long been saddled by a heavy cost burden that forced it to call in
international consultants to help it shed some of the weight.
Equity’s efficiency, however, remains better than KCB’s at a cost to income ratio of 48.5 per cent.
This is what has enabled it to vigorously
challenge KCB’s market leadership with a comparatively smaller asset
base. Equity’s assets were Sh114 billion less than KCB’s in the year
under review.
KCB also reduced interest paid to customers at a
faster pace than Equity – a move that enabled it to cut interest
expenses by Sh3.4 billion despite a six per cent increase in customer
deposits.
Equity’s interest expenses fell by a smaller margin of Sh1.2 billion.
KCB, however, paid the price for the rapid
reduction of interest paid on customer deposits. The bank’s customer
savings grew by a smaller margin of Sh17 billion compared to Equity’s
Sh29 billion growth during the same period.
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