Equity Bank Holdings Ltd recorded a 14 per cent decline in net
profit for the three months to March 31, as a result of increased loan
loss provisioning to cushion businesses against uncertainties caused by
the Covid-19 pandemic.
The Nairobi
Securities Exchange-listed lender saw its profit after tax fall to
Ksh5.28 billion ($52.8 million) from Ksh6.15 billion ($61.5 million).
The management took a conservative approach to surviving the economic
downturn by increasing loan loss provision by Ksh3.11 billion ($31.1
million) from Ksh409.89 million ($4.09 million) in the same period last
year.
Equity’s regional subsidiaries
in Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of
Congo accounted for a combined 26 per cent of the group’s bottom line,
compared with 17 per cent in the same period last year.
The Covid-19 pandemic has hit global economies, paralysing economic activities and pushing households into financial distress.
“The
global Covid-19 pandemic has mutated into a global economic crisis,
occasioned by a sudden standstill of economic activity as a result of
the global lockdown. This has introduced unprecedented uncertainty
within the global financial systems prompting us to adopt a conservative
approach, fortifying our balance sheet and assuring ample liquidity to
support our customers,” said Equity Group chief executive James Mwangi.
According
to Mr Mwangi, the Group’s business model of high-volume low margins
with non-funded income contributing 42 per cent of total revenues and a
low cost of funding enables the bank to navigate a period of compressed
interest margins on loans and advances and other interest earning
assets.
The group’s total income grew 13 per cent to
Ksh19.85 billion ($198.5 million) from Ksh17.61 billion ($176.1
million), with regional subsidiaries’ combined contribution to total
revenues increasing to 30 per cent from 28 per cent in the same period
last year.
According to the group’s
unaudited financial statements released last week, total interest income
grew 14 per cent to Ksh15.42 billion ($154.2 million) from Ksh13.49
billion ($134.9 million) and total non-funded income increased 16 per
cent to Ksh8.31 billion ($83.1 million) from Ksh7.18 billion ($71.8
million) in the same period.
Forex
trading income grew by 34 per cent to Ksh1.1 billion ($11 million) from
Ksh815 million ($8.15 million). Diaspora remittances commissions grew by
22 per cent to Ksh234 million ($2.34 million) from Ksh192 million
($1.92 million) and merchant banking commission grew by 11 per cent to
Ksh582 million ($5.82 million) from Ksh523 million ($5.23 million) in
the same period.
No comments:
Post a Comment