The Borneo Post

Bank of Cyprus posts big loss on bad debt provisions

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NICOSIA: Bank of Cyprus, the Mediterran­ean island’s largest lender, announced losses of more than half a billion euros for the six months to June as it increased buffers for bad debt.

Cyprus is recovering from a financial crisis that left a number of its top banks insolvent and forced it to negotiate a painful bailout with internatio­nal creditors in 2013.

Bank of Cyprus said it had set aside another 500 million euros for bad loans in the first half of 2017.

That left the lender saddled with losses after tax of 554 million euros ( US$ 667 million) for the sixmonth period, compared with a 56-million- euro profit in the first half of 2016.

Chief executive John Patrick Hourican said the bank was focused on reducing risk in its balance sheet.

“We expect to continue to utilise the operating profit of the Bank in the remainder of 2017 for further balance sheet de-risking,” he said.

On an upbeat note, the bank noted that Cyprus’s 3.5-per cent economic growth rate in the second quarter of the year was the second fastest in Europe.

It said the group had more than doubled its new lending in the six months to June from a year earlier, to 1.1 billion euros.

In March 2013, Cyprus clinched a 10-billion- euro loan from the European Union and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to bail out its troubled economy and oversized banking system.

Under the terms of the deal, the government was required to close the island’s second-largest bank, Laiki, and impose a 47.5-per cent haircut on deposits above 100,000 euros at Bank of Cyprus.

The bank has since undergone major restructur­ing, which included absorbing the good assets of the former Laiki Bank and selling assets.

Underlinin­g its comeback, the bank listed on the London Stock Exchange in January. — AFP

 ??  ?? Commuters walk across Waterloo bridge during the morning rush hour in London. The British government announced reforms that could see companies that award generous pay packages despite shareholde­r opposition shamed in a public register, although the...
Commuters walk across Waterloo bridge during the morning rush hour in London. The British government announced reforms that could see companies that award generous pay packages despite shareholde­r opposition shamed in a public register, although the...

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