Chang Hwa Bank eyes stable growth
The lender expects a 3 to 5% rise in loans, more investments in US bonds and high cashdividend stocks, and growth from overseas branches
State-run Chang Hwa Commercial Bank (CHB, 彰化銀行) said yesterday it is looking at stable profit growth this year on the back of improving loan demand, as exports and private investments come out of the woods after several quarters of inventory adjustments.
“We aim to increase outstanding loans by 3 to 5 percent this year, faster than last year’s 3.9 percent advance,” CHB spokeswoman Wang Shwu-fang (王淑芬) told an investors’ conference in Taipei.
Taiwanese firms would display more interest in capital spending and capacity expansion, as exports steadily emerge from technology product adjustments, Wang said.
The lender reported that net income last year grew 18.33 percent year-on-year to NT$12.98 billion (US$406.95 million), or earnings per share of NT$1.2.
Net interest margin shed 2 basis points to 0.82 percent at the end of last year, as high borrowing costs curbed loan demand.
Taiwan’s interest rate remains quite low compared with that of the US, which is favorable for foreign exchange swaps, a major profit driver in recent years and hopefully in the first half of this year, Wang said.
CHB expects the US Federal Reserve to start cutting interest rates in June to avoid an economic hard landing, she said.
As for investments, the lender said it would raise its stake in US bonds in batches to expand fixed income, and increase holdings in stocks that pay generous cash dividends and support environmental protection and social responsibility.
While focusing on corporate banking, CHB is looking to gain market share in mortgage operations and land financing, it said.
Property development might slow slightly this year, but housing transactions would pick up, buoyed by first-home purchases to take advantage of the government’s interest subsidy, it said.
Developers are likely to slow new project launches and prioritize digesting unsold houses, as authorities have no intention of easing credit controls, CHB said, adding that it would still focus on urban renewal projects this year.
CHB is seeking to boost profit contributions from overseas to 30 percent this year, from 11 percent last year, Wang said.
Its branch in Hong Kong is expected to generate the largest pre-provision income, followed by branches in the US and Singapore, she said.