KCB Group will offer National Bank of Kenya
shareholders dividends for the first time in six years after reporting a
4.8 percent rise in net profits to Sh25.1 billion.
The
lender said it grew both its net interest income and income from
transaction commissions and other lines last year, keeping its dividends
unchanged at Sh3.50.
It paid an interim dividend of
Sh1, meaning National Bank owners who were given 147.3 million shares in
KCB following its takeover will get Sh2.50 per share—pushing the total
payout to Sh368.4 million.
KCB Group acquired National
Bank through a share swap deal. KCB captured National Bank fourth
quarter results in its earnings report.
KCB Group CEO
Joshua Oigara said NBK helped them book a 26 percent jump in assets and a
28 percent growth in customer base and access to the coveted corporate
banking customers.
The lender's assets stand at Sh898.5 billion from Sh714.3
billion moving it closer to the Sh1 trillion psychological mark for the
country's largest bank by assets.
“The key drivers for
growth were the loan book growth of 17 percent to Sh535.4 billion —
reflecting the strong lending pipeline primarily driven by retail and
corporate banking customer segment—and the customer deposits growth to
Sh686.6 billion. The main driver for this growth was acquisition of
NBK,” Mr Oigara said.
The NBK book helped KCB grow its
loans by 17.4 percent to Sh535.3 billion. This helped grow the lenders
net income 14.9 percent to Sh56.1 billion.
But the bank’s non-performing loans nearly doubled to Sh63.3 billion last year from Sh32.6 billion a year earlier.
This could be linked to the historical unpaid loans at National Bank.
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