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Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Bank profits fell by 8pc in 3 months
By Frankline Sunday
Kenyan commercial banks recorded a 7.7 per cent drop in profit before
tax in the first quarter of 2020 as the economic disruption from the
Covid-19 pandemic started being felt in the economy.
Data from the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) indicates that commercial
banks recorded Sh76.3 billion in profit before tax in the months of
January, February and March this year, down from Sh82.7 billion made
over a similar period last year.
The new figures come as commercial banks witness record spikes in
non-performing loans as many businesses, particularly in the SME sector,
default on their facilities as coronavirus ravages the economy. CBK
Governor Patrick Njoroge last month said close to 75 per cent of SMEs
may fail to re-open their doors owing to the disruption to their
business models and revenue streams caused by the pandemic.
Njoroge, however, said the liquidity in the financial sector today is
more robust compared to a decade ago following the global financial
crisis.
Non performing loans
“Banks remain resilient and strong and the numbers indicate this,” said
Njoroge at a recent briefing. “It is true that NPLs have increased to
13.1 per cent mainly in real estate, trade and manufacturing, but these
loans were actually on watch on March 1st,” he said. “They have
obviously been hit by many factors before and the Covid-19 pandemic has
just worsened their situation.”
The amount of customer deposits also went up by Sh80 billion in March
this year representing the biggest rise in deposits since June last
year, when the CBK kicked off the demonetisation programme to phase out
old Sh1,000 notes.
The value of gross loans also went up by Sh73 billion from Sh2.7
trillion in February this year to Sh2.8 trillion in March as more
Kenyans facing dwindling earnings sought economic relief.
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