Business World

BPI net profit down 21.6% in Q1

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BANK OF THE Philippine Islands (BPI) booked a lower net profit in the first three months of the year due to a decline in revenues caused by lower net interest income.

The lender is moving forward under the leadership of its new President and Chief Executive Officer Jose Teodoro “TG” K. Limcaoco and plans to ramp up digitaliza­tion, expand its retail and small business portfolio, and veer away from financing coal projects, with the lender also looking into bidding for the retail business of Citigroup, Inc. in the Philippine­s.

The bank’s net income stood at P5 billion in the first quarter, it said in a filing with the local bourse on Wednesday. This is lower by 21.64% from the P6.381 billion booked a year earlier, based on BPI’s financial report for the first quarter of 2020.

BPI’s revenues slipped 1.5% to P24.3 billion last quarter as net interest income fell 6.5% to P16.9 billion, with net interest margin dropping by 31 basis points to 3.31%.

Meanwhile, non-interest income rose 12.1% to P7.4 billion, boosted by higher fees from its bancassura­nce, asset management, transactio­n banking, and investment banking businesses.

The bank’s credit book dropped 5% to P1.4 trillion as of March from a year earlier amid softer loan demand across all products except for mortgage (10.9%) and microfinan­ce (10.5%), which registered growth.

Its nonperform­ing loan (NPL) ratio stood at 2.76%, while NPL coverage ratio was at 123.5%.

With the drop in credit, BPI’s loan loss provisions declined by 12.7% to P3.6 billion from the P4.1 billion it set aside in the first quarter of 2020.

On the other hand, BPI’s total deposits stood at P1.7 billion. The bank said its current account, savings account (CASA) deposits rose by 11.9%, offsetting the 34.4% decline in time deposits. Its CASA ratio and loans-to-deposit ratio stood at 82.6% and 81.6%, respective­ly.

Meanwhile, operating expenses incurred by the bank in the first three months of 2021 slipped by 2.3% to P11.8 billion. This caused BPI’s cost-to-income ratio to improve to 48.6% from 49% in the same period a year ago.

The bank’s assets were nearly flat at P2.2 trillion, while total equity rose to P280.8 billion.

BPI’s common equity Tier 1 ratio and capital adequacy ratio at end-March were at 16.6% and 17.5%, respective­ly, both above the minimum regulatory requiremen­ts. Its return on equity and return on assets were at 7.2% and 0.93%, respective­ly.

TARGETS

BPI’s annual stockholde­rs’ meeting held virtually on Wednesday marked the transfer of the bank’s leadership to Mr. Limcaoco from former president and CEO Cezar P. Consing, who had headed BPI since 2013.

Mr. Limcaoco, who was Ayala Corp.’s chief finance officer prior to his new role at BPI, said he will continue the commitment of his predecesso­r to push the bank’s digitaliza­tion.

“What this means to me is that we need to invest in technology. We need to make our digital tools available for each and every customer...[and] to give access to digital tools to even non-customers,” Mr. Limcaoco said.

He added that they want to make their credit book “more inclusive” by increasing the share of retail and small business loans in their portfolio. —

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