National Bank’s managing director Munir Sheikh Ahmed. PHOTO | FILE
By DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- The mid-sized lender reported a net profit growth of Sh140 million in the three quarters to September, 2014, a growth of 16 per cent.
National Bank’s
net earnings in the first nine months of this year grew by nearly a
fifth to Sh1.02 billion, even as the lender’s volume of bad loans
increased sharply.
The mid-sized lender reported a net profit growth of Sh140
million in the three quarters to September, 2014, a growth of 16 per
cent.
NBK’s stock of gross non-performing loans (NPLs)
surged to Sh6.04 billion from Sh3.7 billion in September 2013 and Sh5.1
million in June this year.
The bank’s managing director Munir Sheikh Ahmed
attributed the growth in profitability to higher interest margins and
transactional income due to increased business volumes.
The nine-month period saw NBK’s interest income
grow by a quarter to Sh7.6 billion while non-interest income surged by a
third to Sh2.2 billion.
Mr Ahmed declined to comment on the bank’s growing
mountain of bad loans but said in a statement that NBK would continue to
actively manage emerging risks across the businesses.
NBK’s ratio of gross NPLs to gross loans increased
to 10.4 per cent in September 2014 from 9.3 per cent, defying an
industry-wide decline in the load of bad debt.
Its loan book also grew substantially by Sh26.1 billion to Sh57.5 billion in September from Sh31.4 billion in September 2013.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) said the ratio of
bad loans in the banking industry dropped to 5.4 per cent from 5.7 per
cent over a similar period.
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