The Citizen (Gauteng)

FirstRand declares dividend

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FirstRand declared an interim dividend after withholdin­g its final payout last year while Africa battled the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic, delivering a sign of confidence even with the continent’s vaccine plans at an early stage.

Africa’s biggest lender by market value said it is acting “in anticipati­on of the expected rebound in the economy and to support the resultant balance sheet growth”. The lender has brought its dividend cover to the bottom end of its long-term range of 1.8 to 2.2 times, according to a statement yesterday.

FirstRand’s adjusted earnings per share beat estimates as profits excluding some items and accounting adjustment­s dropped 21% to R11 billion in the six months through December. That was partly due to provisions for souring loans as borrowers struggled with lockdowns and other hardships related to Covid-19.

With global vaccinatio­n programmes under way and prospects for faster economic rebound, FirstRand now expects earnings in the current year to exceed its performanc­e in 2020.

But the lagging effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic in its home market and the UK mean “the absolute level of earnings for the six months to December 2020 will likely not be repeated in the second half”.

South Africa’s banking regulator last month warned lenders that protecting cash reserves must still take priority over payments to shareholde­rs as uncertaint­y from the pandemic remains, easing earlier guidance to avoid dividends completely.

FirstRand is the first of South Africa’s big four banks to issue a payout and follows a surprise first-half dividend announceme­nt by smaller Investec in November.

The owner of retail bank FNB saw weak demand for credit and muted transactio­nal volumes even as business activity improved since June. FirstRand and its peers must now brace for the fallout from a potential resurgence in infections as South Africa heads into winter.

An inoculatio­n drive that started on 17 February may help the nation avoid the worst of a third wave but it’s still expected to take 12 to 18 months to vaccinate twothirds of the population.

For the country’s biggest banks, the crisis has hampered growth in a struggling economy with rising government debt and forced them to set aside billions of rand against potential credit losses.

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