Business a.m.

UBA’s Q3’21 numbers show brightness with 37% profit growth on N490bn gross earnings

- Onome Amuge

OLAGUNJU ASHIMOLOWO HAS been appointed vice president, operations, by the board of Lome, Togo headquarte­red ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Developmen­t (EBID).

The decision to appoint Ashimolowo was taken at the 75th meeting of the board of directors of the bank held recently at the head office of the bank in Lome.

Before his appointmen­t as vice president, operations, he served as director, internal audit and evaluation of operations, for four years at the bank. Prior to that he worked at Ecobank Transnatio­nal Incorporat­ed (ETI) where he was group office auditor for nine years.

A statement issued by EBID said Ashimolowo brings to his new position a wealth of relevant experience which will further strengthen and consolidat­e the bank’s operations and governance framework.

EBID emerged as a banking group (EBID Group) after the transforma­tion of the erstwhile Fund for Cooperatio­n, Compensati­on and Developmen­t of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS Fund) in 1999.

THIRD QUARTER PER FORMANCE AT UNITED BANK FOR AFRICA UBA) Plc has come in flying bright colours, the bank’s audited financial results for the period ended September 30, 2021, filed with the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), have shown. It includes a 37 percent rise in profit with gross earnings rising to N490.3 billion, up from the N454.4 billion posted in Q3 2020.

The pan-African financial services group also reported a 13 percent yearon-year growth in its operating income which stood at N331.7 billion as at September 2021, up from N293.7 billion posted in the comparable period of 2020.

The bank’s unaudited financial report also showed that its profit before tax rose to N123.4 billion compared to N90.4 billion recorded at the end of the third quarter of 2020. And in a similar trend, its profit after tax rose significan­tly by 36 percent to N104.6 billion up from N77.1 billion recorded a year earlier, while its annualised return on average equity for Q3 2021 stood at 19.2 percent compared to 16.4 per cent recorded in the similar period of 2020.

The bank posted a positive balance sheet as total assets stood at N8.3 trillion, an eight percent rise over the N7.7 trillion recorded at the end of December 2020.

Also, customer deposits rose to N6.1trillion, a 7.2 percent increase from N5.7 trillion at the end of the last financial year, reflecting an improved customer experience over the past years spurred by its technology­led initiative­s.

The shareholde­rs’ funds stood at N798.3 billion, up by 10.3 percent from N724.1 billion recorded in December 2020 to mark a strong capacity for internal capital generation and growth.

Kennedy Uzoka, group managing director and chief executive, remarked that the bank has shown resilience in delivering on its commitment to shareholde­rs, stakeholde­rs, and the investing public, evident in the strong positive financial metrics recorded in the reporting period.

Uzoka further explained that the gross earning, which was up eight percent to N490.3 billion in the nine-month period, mirrored the improvemen­ts seen in both the domestic and internatio­nal economies as countries rolled out vaccines, helping to return economic activities nearer to pre-pandemic levels. He added that the bank’s annualised Return on Average Equity (RoAE) of 19.2 percent showed its renewed commitment to creating more value for shareholde­rs.

The UBA chief executive also emphasised that the bank’s prudent approach to risk management and the efficacy of its digital-first customer-centric business strategy, helped in keeping loan growth steady at double-digit, while still being able to moderate cost in the period under review.

“Through the help of our digital-first strategy, we were able to increase the number of our agent network in the period by over 140 percent, increasing our controllin­g stake in the market,” he noted.

Commenting on the expectatio­ns for the rest of the year, Uzoka expressed optimism that the bank’s huge investment­s in digital business following lessons learnt from the pandemic, will continue to pay off in delivering significan­t growth opportunit­ies across its business operations even as the economy speedily heals from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We will continue to remain a bank holding company, leveraging on our robust balance sheet and diverse customer-base to deliver sound rewards to our shareholde­rs,” he added.

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