Equity Bank posted a 26 per cent jump in net profit in the nine
months ended September, helped by increased lending and fees on
transactions.
The lender’s net profit in the period
stood at Sh11.2 billion compared to Sh8.9 billion a year earlier. Its
share price has gained 45 per cent over the past one year to trade at
Sh50.7.
The earnings were boosted by its subsidiaries
in Uganda, Tanzania, South Sudan and Rwanda whose combined net profit of
Sh1 billion represented an 80 per cent increase from Sh580.9 million
the year before.
The performance came as the bank’s
total loan book expanded to Sh206.6 billion in September, up from
Sh171.3 billion in December last year and Sh158.5 billion the previous
September.
Equity’s larger loan book saw its total
interest income rise 10.5 per cent to Sh26 billion in the nine months to
September though the bank’s interest margins fell on the back of lower
interest rates.
BANK CHARGES
Average
commercial bank lending rates stood at 16.6 per cent in the period,
down from 17.4 per cent a year earlier according to Central Bank of
Kenya.
The falling rates has seen loan book growth and
costs of deposits emerge as key profit drivers, with Equity incurring
higher cost of funds.
Its interest expenses rose faster than interest income at 16.8 per cent to Sh4.4 billion, thinning its net interest margins.
Equity
said its net interest margin has been dropping steadily in the past
four quarters, from a high of 12.2 per cent in the three months ended
December to 10.9 per cent in the three months to September.
Its operating expenses, including staff costs, also rose six per cent to Sh18.8 billion.
The
bank, which says it now has 9.2 million customers, saw earnings from
fees, commissions and dividends rise 23 per cent to Sh12.9 billion.
About
half of the amount or Sh6.5 billion came from the bank’s charges on
services such as withdrawals, indicating the large earnings in the
retail banking segment where Equity is the largest player.
“Equity’s
revenues from other fees and commissions … appear to be growing faster
than the fees and commissions income on loans and advances which has
been a traditional income driver for commercial banks,” the lender’s CEO
James Mwangi said
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