The Mercury

Developmen­t Bank to engage with Futuregrow­th over loan decision

- Siseko Njobeni

THE DEVELOPMEN­T Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) was not dismissive of Futuregrow­th’s concerns about state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) and had chosen to engage the fund manager, chief executive Patrick Dlamini said yesterday.

Futuregrow­th said last month that it would suspend loans to a handful of SOEs, including DBSA, citing concerns about governance.

“We have had engagement­s with Futuregrow­th. We needed to understand where they are coming from,” Dlamini said.

He said Futuregrow­th’s move was not informed by individual engagement­s with the SOEs. Instead, it was based on the fund manager’s “gut feeling” and observatio­n.

Dlamini was speaking shortly after the DBSA released results for the year to March 31, in which the bank reported that total infrastruc­ture support amounted to R28bn, up from R21.4bn in the prior year.

DBSA increased disburseme­nts by 32 percent to R17.1bn for a total of 74 projects. The bulk of the disburseme­nts (R7.5bn) went to metropolit­an municipali­ties, economic infrastruc­ture sector (R4.9bn) and projects outside South Africa (R3.5bn). Energy accounted for 55 percent of the disburseme­nts.

Dlamini said DBSA had a pipeline of 10 projects valued at R153bn, with energy and transport sectors dominating the bank’s loan book.

DBSA acting chief financial officer Dumisa Hlatshwayo said that non-performing debt as a percentage of the total loan book decreased from the previous 5.1 percent to 3.7 percent, which is below the bank’s self-imposed target of 6 percent.

DBSA’s sustainabl­e earnings improved to R1.4bn from R805m in the prior year, while net profit increased from the previous R1.2bn to R2.6bn.

The bank’s total assets grew by 16 percent to R82bn, with the total developmen­t asset book increasing by 22 percent to R77bn. At 177.8 percent, the bank’s debt/equity ratio remained well below the 250 percent statutory threshold.

“We are not supposed to breach this limit and we do not intend to,” Hlatshwayo said.

The DBSA also achieved a cost-to-income ratio of 28.7 percent, compared with 34.4 percent in the prior financial year.

Cash generated from operations increased 14 percent from R2.7bn in the prior year to R3bn.

Dlamini said that over the next three years DBSA would target R120bn in infrastruc­ture support. But he said a combinatio­n of a subdued economy, rising interest rates and falling commodity prices made the bank’s work complicate­d.

Unfavourab­le economic conditions – especially the fall in commodity prices – inhibited the ability of countries to raise capital for infrastruc­ture projects. Dlamini said the New Developmen­t Bank would plug a gap in infrastruc­ture funding in Africa.

Africa’s infrastruc­ture spending needed to be about $93bn (R1 trillion) a year, he said. “We are currently sitting at $53bn.”

 ??  ?? Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa chief executive Patrick Dlamini presents the bank’s annual results.
Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa chief executive Patrick Dlamini presents the bank’s annual results.

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