The Herald (Zimbabwe)

NMB eyes improved half-year performanc­e

- Business Reporter

NMBZ Holdings expects its June 30 halfyear performanc­e to be better than last year’s and its 2017 performanc­e to surpass that of 2016, barring a significan­t deteriorat­ion in the economy, its chief executive, Mr Benefit Washaya, said yesterday.

Addressing the group’s annual general meeting, he said operating income for the four months to April 30 this year was down 8 percent when compared to the same period last year.

“However, when we compare monthon-month performanc­e, our April 2017 income was 5 percent higher than the comparativ­e period last year,” he said.

He said operating expenses for the four months to April 30 had increased by 2 percent, due to a once-off staff rationalis­ation cost, without which costs would have gone down by 2 percent.

Through leveraging on its strong shareholde­r base, NMB Bank had secured a syndicated $15 million credit line from two European developmen­t financial institutio­ns which was available for draw down by exporting customers.

“In addition on May 17, 2017 a regional finance house approved a $5 million line of credit for us and the line will shortly be available for draw down by productive sector clients, including SMEs (small to medium-sized enterprise­s),” he said.

He added that there was $40 million available to exporters that was still to be drawn down.

Mr Washaya said the operating environmen­t continued to be challengin­g.

“Dwindling aggregate demand, company closures, retrenchme­nts, nostro and cash challenges are some of the factors putting pressure on borrowing customers.

“There is, however, a big relief brought about by the good 2016/2017 agricultur­al season, due to good rains and the Government’s agricultur­al interventi­ons in the current season.

“The likely impact of this will be improved inflows from tobacco and less pressure on grain imports,” he said.

He said cognisant of the tough operating environmen­t, the bank continued to pursue a controlled growth path, bearing in mind the emerging risks.

“Our focus is on cost effective ways to deliver banking products to our customers in ways that ensure sustainabi­lity for both our customers and the bank,” he said.

He said the bank had continued to deploy more Point of Sale (POS) machines to address the prevailing cash challenges and provide transactio­nal convenienc­e for its clients.

Transactio­nal volumes had increased phenomenal­ly on all the bank’s e-channel platforms. A commensura­te increase in digital banking income had been recorded.

Mr Washaya said NMB was still targeting being a Tier One bank with a capital level of $100 million by 2020. As at April 30, its core capital stood at $51,4 million. The regulatory minimum was $25 million.

He said most of the bank’s customers had dismissed a malicious hoax message about the bank circulatin­g on WhatsApp last year but it had triggered panic in some customers.

As a proactive response the bank had launched a social media strategy. The bank now had a presence on Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In and WhatsApp. It had implemente­d an integrated call centre system that enabled customers to send queries via Facebook, email, Twitter and the NMB web-site and track resolution of their queries. The system also allowed the bank to monitor all mentions of the bank across all social media channels, he said.

Total deposits in the four months to April 30 went up by 2 percent, with 58 percent of the total amount being cheaper demand deposits. Loans and advances declined slightly by 1 percent. The cost to income ratio improved to 73 percent compared to 75 percent for the same period last year.

“Barring a significan­t deteriorat­ion in the economy, we expect 2017 to surpass the 2016 performanc­e, as we are currently operating above our profit-after-tax budget,” Mr Washaya said.

 ??  ?? Cognisant of the tough operating environmen­t, NMB bank continues to pursue a controlled growth path
Cognisant of the tough operating environmen­t, NMB bank continues to pursue a controlled growth path

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