The Herald (Zimbabwe)

CABS supports key sectors with US$110m

- Business Reporter

CABS, a member of the Old Mutual Group, received US$110 million lines of credit in 2023 from AfreximBan­k and the Trade and Developmen­t Bank for on-lending to key economic sectors of the economy such as agricultur­e, mining, energy, and manufactur­ing.

The bank, in its 2023 annual report, said it remained committed to supporting public and private sector investment in Zimbabwe.

“The Society has continued to source offshore lines of credit for on-lending to sub-borrowers in key sectors of the economy such as agricultur­e, mining, energy, and manufactur­ing.

“A collective amount of US$110 million was received during the year from Afreximban­k and the Trade and Developmen­t Bank,”said Mr Mehluli Mpofu, the bank’s managing director.

He said the bank would also continue to support small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs) through value chain financing and financial literacy programmes.

During the period under review, CABS also received a grant from the African Developmen­t Bank, through the Affirmativ­e Finance Action for Women in Africa (AFAWA), to be applied towards the implementa­tion of a technical assistance programme to develop women-led small, micro, and medium enterprise­s (SMMEs).

Mr Mpofu said CABS also deployed trade facilities such as transactio­n guarantees and letters of credit for use by exporting and importing customers in support of smooth cross-border trading.

“We supported the industry and commerce through efficient processing of collection­s and payments, notably the deployment of additional point-of-sale machines (POS), multi-currency POS terminals, and efficient processing of inward and outward internatio­nal payments,” he said.

Mr Mpofu said the society’s contributi­ons to financial literacy are evident through Old Mutual’s on-the-money training, which provides essential financial knowledge to existing and potential customers.

However, for the period under review, the bank’s surplus increased by 202 percent to $429,27 billion in inflation-adjusted terms on the back of increased non-funded income bolstered by payment transactio­ns in key economic segments.

Mr Mpofu said the bank’s digitalisa­tion strategy resulted in a positive customer experience by widening transactio­n channel options.

“We added US$ services to our digital channels in response to the growing use by our customers, and this was positively embraced.”

He added that performanc­e was also boosted by foreign currency translatio­n gains and property fair value gains on investment property.

The introducti­on and growth of USD digital lending channels such as EezyCredit and Flexicredi­t supported CABS lending activities during the year.

The bank’s net interest income grew by 246 percent to $83,39 billion, while net fee and commission income increased by 1 067 percent to $139,18 billion.

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Mr Mpofu

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