Corporate News
By GEORGE NGIGI, gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- KCB announced a Sh9.2 billion net profit in six months to June compared to Sh8.1 billion in a similar period last year, boosted by a 31.3 per cent growth of its loan book to Sh320 billion.
Increased interest income from KCB’s
loan book raised its after-tax profit for the first half of the year by
13 per cent, keeping the lender in contention to maintaining its
position as one of Kenya’s most profitable lenders.
The bank announced a Sh9.2 billion net profit in six months
to June compared to Sh8.1 billion in a similar period last year, boosted
by a 31.3 per cent growth of its loan book to Sh320 billion.
“We have consistently focused on growing new
business lines and strengthening the subsidiaries to drive the business
to higher profitability and guarantee its sustainability. This is
bearing fruit as seen in the increased earnings,” said chief executive
Joshua Oigara when he announced the results yesterday.
Equity Bank,
which is KCB’s closest challenger for the most profitable Kenyan bank
position, is expected to announce its half-year results on Tuesday next
week.
The contribution of its subsidiaries in Uganda,
Rwanda, Tanzania, Burundi and South Sudan to the bottom line rose to 10
per cent from 7.3 per cent last year, with Tanzania and Rwanda being key
drivers.
KCB said it plans to expand to four new markets in the next five years, with an eye on Ethiopia, Somalia, DRC and Mozambique.
The bank’s deposit base expanded by 26.2 per cent
to Sh443 billion over the one-year period driven by increased customer
numbers attributed to new business lines such as its partnership with Safaricom and Islamic finance arm, KCB Sahl.
Mr Oigara said KCB M-Pesa currently has 2.1 million
users who have borrowed more than Sh2 billion in the four months the
platform has been operational.
Fees and commissions were up 20.7 per cent with
growth mainly driven by increased transactions on the bank’s agency,
mobile and ATM fees, which now account for 69 per cent of total
transactions.
Analysts noted that the bank could have posted
higher profit if it were not for lower margins and higher provisions for
bad loans.
“The growth in assets was impressive but when you
look at earnings they were within target — profitability was affected by
margins and provisions,” said Francis Mwangi, head of research at
Standard Investment Bank.
Narrowing of interest margins is expected to be a
challenge to the banking sector in the second half of the year as cost
of funds rises while the increase in lending rates remains constrained
by the Kenya Banks’ Reference Rate policy.
The bank kept a tight lid on expenses resulting in
an improved cost to income ratio of 48.6 per cent from 51.2 per cent
three months earlier.
The management said the lender was looking at
raising long term capital through debt and equity to allow it book large
infrastructural loans in the region’s nascent, capital intensive
sectors such as mining, telecommunications and power generation.
“When we look forward we see capital will not be
enough to grow so we are looking at early 2016 when we will need to
raise equity, debt we are able to get,” said Mr Oigara.
The bank is currently above capital adequacy ratio
requirements with its core capital to total risk weighted assets at 14.6
per cent against a mandatory requirement of 10.5 per cent.
Its total capital to total risk weighted assets is at 15.9 per cent against the minimum required 14.5 per cent.
KCB’s borrowed funds rose 71 per cent due to
additional Sh17 billion debt from firms such as International Finance
Corporation and Ghana Investment Bank.
The lender is also seeking an additional Sh15
billion from IFC and Sh10 billion from European Investment Bank to boost
its tier two capital.
The bank was recently accredited an AA rating by South African, Global Credit Rating, giving investors confidence to lend to it.
Yesterday, KCB was the most actively traded counter
at the Nairobi Securities Exchange moving over five million shares
worth an estimated Sh256 million. The share traded at Sh50.50, a
shilling lower than the previous day’s price.
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