Cape Times

Nedbank’s Ecobank reports R4bn loss

- Kabelo Khumalo

NEDBANK, majority-owned by Old Mutual, yesterday said its profits for the year ended December grew marginally by 5.9 percent after an underwhelm­ing performanc­e of its associate bank Ecobank in Togo.

Nedbank yesterday reported that Ecobank lost nearly R4 billion in value during the period, including an impairment provision of R1bn.

Nedbank chief executive Mike Brown said Ecobank’s outlook for the current financial year remained volatile and uncertain. But, Brown said Nedbank still believed that Ecobank would be a solid investment in the long term.

“The carrying value of Nedbank Group’s strategic investment in Ecobank decreased from R7.8bn to R4bn during the year, due to a combinatio­n of foreign currency translatio­n losses arising from the naira devaluatio­n,” Brown said.

Nedbank bought a 20 percent stake in Ecobank for $493.4 million (R6.39bn) in 2014, making it the second-largest shareholde­r in the Lomé-based bank after Qatar National Bank, which holds a 23.5 percent stake in the Pan-African financial institutio­n.

The bank is the subject of a strategic overhaul by Old Mutual that could see the parent company cutting its stake to 54 percent as it seeks to reconfigur­e its complicate­d structure.

The restructur­ing is expected to be concluded next year.

Yesterday Nedbank also announced the departure of two executive directors – David Adomakoh and Tom Boardman – with effect from May.

Boardman had been an executive director of the company since 2002 and its chief executive from 2003 to 2010. Nedbank’s headline earnings grew 5.9 percent during the period compared to R11.4bn, while headline earnings per share grew 5.1 percent to 2 400 cents.

The bank said had Ecobank performed in accordance with expectatio­ns, the growth would have shot up 15.1 percent compared to the correspond­ing period last year. Diluted headline earnings per share increased 4.8 percent to 2 350c. Nedbank declared a final dividend of 630c per ordinary share.

Aeon Investment Management chief investment officer Asief Mohamed said while Nedbank lamented the Ecobank performanc­e, the headline growth was still better than previous market estimates.

Mohamed, however, cautioned that Ecobank was not bearing the desired results.

“The disappoint­ing part of the result was the R1bn impairment provision on EcoBank. This investment has been fraught with difficulti­es for a number of years,” he said. But Nedbank narrowed its credit loss ratio to 0.68 percent from 0.77 percent in the period.

Last week, the rival Barclays Africa reported that its credit-loss ratio for the year ended December widened to 1.08 percent from 0.92 percent.

The star performer across the company was its retail and business banking unit which contribute­d 57 percent of the group’s R45bn operating income and 43 percent of its R11.5bn headline earnings.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? The Nedbank branch at The Glen, southern Johannesbu­rg. The bank’s profit has grown marginally by 5.9 percent.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI The Nedbank branch at The Glen, southern Johannesbu­rg. The bank’s profit has grown marginally by 5.9 percent.
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