Daily Observer (Jamaica)

ISP earnings grow as expenses drop by half

- BY DAVID ROSE

Although total net operating income fell by 29 per cent over the past nine months to $237.1 million, microcredi­t financial provider ISP Financial Services saw a 25 per cent jump in net profit to $50.8 million for the period up to September 30, 2020 as loan deployment fell sharply during the period.

The 12-year-old company which listed on the Jamaica Stock Exchange in March 2016 has not been spared from the impacts of COVID-19 with total interest income declining by four per cent to $263.6 million, attributab­le to the company’s lower loan deployment over the period as total loans only grew by 4 per cent to $821.8 million since December 2019.

Part of this lower deployment, as indicated by ISP principals in their annual report, has been due to a tightening of the micro-finance space as commercial banks enter the space and offer unsecured employer deduction loans. Other operating income experience­d a 195 per cent growth to $316,440 as other income surged over the period even when accounting for the foreign exchange loss.

This has also been accompanie­d by lower expected credit loss (ECL) provision on gross loans which only grew by 20 per cent to $191.3 million as the company accounts for the higher risk of possible default. However, ECL’S provisions charged to the income statement only came up to $30.8 million over the nine months as the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic remains behind the firm.

Despite COVID-19 slowing operations, total operating expenses have dropped by 12 per cent to $186.3 million mainly due to lower staff costs falling by 22 per cent which has come about due to the work-from-home policy which has yielded massive savings to ISP. These reduced expenses allowed ISP to grow net profit by 121 per cent when compared to the 2019 financial year. This is in contrast to the other two listed microcredi­t companies on the junior market which registered significan­t declines in their net profit due to the pandemic.

Total assets grew by 5 per cent to $698.5 million as loans net of credit loss provisions totalled $630.5 million while equity rose by 9 per cent to $394.4 million on the backdrop of higher profits and lower total liabilitie­s which closed out the quarter at $304 million.

Although ISP hasn’t indicated what its next move will be, ISP has expressed an interest to either merge or acquire new loan portfolios from other financial institutio­ns. As part of the planned event, ISP has retained the services of an investment bank to structure any potential opportunit­ies which might arise in the space.

over 284,000 in the US, the highest toll of any country. Government­s worldwide have been tightening restrictio­ns on businesses in an effort to stem the latest surge in cases, stoking worries about the potential economic fallout.

That’s kept investors focused on Washington and the prospects for another round of aid for Americans and businesses hit hardest by the pandemic. Congress is still stuck in a partisan stalemate over the size and scope of any additional aid to help cushion the financial impact to people and businesses. The economy has been showing signs of a stalled recovery as the virus surge broadens nationally, including slower job growth in the US last month.

Big tech stocks that have been big winners during the pandemic helped power the rally yesterday. Apple rose 0.5 per cent and Microsoft gained 0.8 per cent.

Health care stocks made solid gains. Pfizer rose 3.2 per cent and Johnson & Johnson rose 1.7 per cent. Exxon Mobil was among the big gainers in the energy sector, climbing 3.3 per cent.

Shop-from-home clothing seller Stitch Fix soared 39.2 per cent after reporting a surprise profit in its latest quarter. Etsy jumped 4.5 per cent.

A mix of companies that rely on direct consumer spending and those that would greatly benefit from a fuller economic recovery continued to see a bit of churn. The moves reflect the constant push-and-pull of hope for an eventual economic recovery pitted against the continued economic damage inflicted by the pandemic.

Cruise line operators gained ground, including a 6.2 per cent rise from Norwegian Cruise Line. The sector very much needs the virus to recede in order to get back to normal operations. Other companies that need a more normal economy in order to recover are still slipping. Darden Restaurant­s, which operates Olive Garden, fell 0.4 per cent.

Overall, many of the companies that have been beaten down have been doing better as investors see an eventual end to the pandemic. There’s been a push for broader investment­s in many of those industries and not much pullback, said Andrew Slimmon, senior portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley Investment Management.

“It’s a very positive sign when you see very broad participat­ion,” he said. “It tells me positionin­g is still in the process of moving more into cyclical stocks.”

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 0.92 per cent from 0.91 per cent late Monday.

European markets closed mixed and Asian markets fell.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? The Fearless Girl statue stands in front of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. US stocks edged lower in early trading yesterday as investors worried that rising virus cases will delay a full economic recovery while the world waits for wide distributi­on of a vaccine.
(Photo: AP) The Fearless Girl statue stands in front of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. US stocks edged lower in early trading yesterday as investors worried that rising virus cases will delay a full economic recovery while the world waits for wide distributi­on of a vaccine.

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