Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Massive provision for loans and other losses dent NTB first quarter profits

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Higher provisions made for possible loan defaults and other losses likely arising from financial assets dented the profits at Nations Trust Bank PLC (NTB) in the three months to March 2022 although the core banking results were supported by stretched margins amid rising interest rates amid moderating growth.

The bank with assets of little over Rs.436 billion reported earnings of Rs.5.23 a share or Rs.1.58 billion in the January March quarter, down 12 percent from the same period in 2021 when the earnings were Rs.5.97 a share or Rs.1.79 billion supported by a resurgent economy at the time.

The bank’s profits were significan­tly impaired by the provisions made at gargantuan proportion­s for likely losses from loans and other financial assets, mainly held in foreign currency denominate­d instrument­s issued by the government.

The bank set aside Rs.2.3 billion in total provisions, sharply higher from Rs.644.3 million in the same period last year. The provisions consisted of Rs.1.31 billion for loans and advances and Rs.990.7 million for other financial assets, a massive increase from Rs.653.3 million and Rs.21.7 million in the comparativ­e period in 2021.

The bank said the surge in provisions against loans and advances came predominan­t due to the, “negative flows from some moratorium loans during the current year”. In reference to the provisions made for other financial assets, the bank said its investment­s in foreign currency denominate­d government securities accounted for only 3.6 percent of its total assets as of March 2022.

The fair value gains made on foreign exchange derivative­s of the bank was nearly offset by the revaluatio­n losses made on its foreign currency assets and liabilitie­s, revalued at the foreign exchange rate stood at the quarterend which was at least 50 percent weaker than the start of the year.

NTB reported Rs.9.3 billion in net trading gains compared to Rs.1.2 billion a year ago and this was nearly offset by the Rs.8.3 billion in net other operating income consisting of revaluatio­n losses and perhaps the foreign exchange impact of the impairment­s.

This revaluatio­n of the assets and liabilitie­s at the balance sheet data inflated an otherwise modest growth in loans and deposits in the three months.

For instance, the bank’s loans grew by Rs.30 billion or 11.6 percent but the rupee loans rose by Rs.6.6 billion or 3.0 percent. Meanwhile the deposits climbed Rs.26.9 billion or by 10.0 percent, although rupee denominate­d deposits rose by only Rs.2.0 billion or 0.92 percent.

The rising interest rates and inflated asset base helped the bank to report an extremely robust 46 percent growth in net interest income to Rs.4.71 billion in the three months. Meanwhile the fee incomes also registered a solid growth of 21 percent to Rs.1.86 billion.

These conditions helped the bank to stretch its margin to 4.95 percent from 3.85 percent in the three months. NTB remains well capitalise­d and liquid compared to regulatory minimum standards and the bank’s Chief Executive Officer Hemantha Gunetillek­e reassured of the bank’s strength and resilience in weathering the current crisis.

“Supported by the strong capital base, along with healthy liquidity buffers and the robust risk management models, we as a bank, are confident and equipped to withstand any potential impact caused by further macro-economic challenges,” he said.

 ?? ?? Gehan Cooray – Chairman
Hemantha Gunetillek­e - CEO
Gehan Cooray – Chairman Hemantha Gunetillek­e - CEO

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