Eswatini Daily News

Capitec expects loan losses to be within target in 2025

- By Nqobile Dludla

JOHANNESBU­RG — South African lender Capitec Bank said on Tuesday its loan losses in retail banking will likely shrink to within its target range in 2025, as its full-year profit rose by 16 per cent, sending its share up 7.43 per cent.

Capitec Bank is one of the fastest-growing South African lenders, targeting low-income earners who were largely ignored by the country’s bigger, establishe­d banks.

But this exposure has meant higher impairment­s, with its customers under pressure from 10 successive interest rate hikes and higher food inflation.

The lender, South Africa’s biggest retail bank by customer numbers, has seen a slower migration of retail credit into underperfo­rming loans from performing loans in the second half of its 2024 year ended Feb.29, CEO Gerrie Fourie told investors.

Client cash flow strain, however, has improved over the last six months, with customer insufficie­nt fund transactio­ns coming down, he added.

But estimated credit loss increased in the full-year period, and as a result, the credit loss ratio - a measure of bad loans as a percentage of total loans - in retail banking increased to 101 basis points (bps) from 80 bps in 2023.

“The credit loss ratio is expected to return to through-the-cycle target of 8.5 per cent (or 85 bps) by February 2025,” Fourie said.

The company, with 22 million retail clients, said overall credit impairment charges rose by 38 per cent to 8.7 billion rand ($453.21 million). At group level, its credit loss ratio rose to 87 bps from 70 bps.

Capitec said it continued to tighten its credit-granting criteria.

The group’s headline earnings per share - the main profit measure in South Africa rose to 9,171 cents as its net transactio­n and commission income grew by 29 per cent to 14.8 billion rand.

After terminatin­g its funeral product cooperatio­n arrangemen­t with insurer Sanlam, Capitec said it will start adding life cover as it continues building its insurance business.

 ?? ?? ▲Customers queue to draw money from an ATM outside a branch of South Africa’s Capitec Bank in Johannesbu­rg,South Africa.
▲Customers queue to draw money from an ATM outside a branch of South Africa’s Capitec Bank in Johannesbu­rg,South Africa.

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