Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Stanbic Bank maintains steady path in H1

- Business Writer

STANBIC Bank has defied macro-economic challenges bedevillin­g the country to post an inflation adjusted profit after tax of $1.2 billion for the half year to June 2021.

The Standard Bank Group subsidiary has sustained its impressive performanc­e that has defied the prevailing economic conditions having rebounded from a loss position in the half year in 2019 to a profit position in 2020 in the comparable period.

One year down the line, the top-ranking financial services provider has consolidat­ed that steady performanc­e although the $1.2 billion was slightly below the $1.3 billion inflation adjusted profit achieved in the prior comparable period last year.

In a statement accompanyi­ng the results, Stanbic’s chairman, Gregory Sebborn, attributed the slight drop in profit to depressed performanc­e of the trading revenue line owing to subdued trading activity during the interim period.

Sebborn said the foreign currency shortages in the market combined with periods of lockdown also contribute­d to the marginal reduction in profit for the Standard Bank Group subsidiary.

“In addition, operating expenses increased in comparison to the prior year driven by expenditur­e of $430 million in the staff optimisati­on exercise,” said Sebborn.

Stanbic Bank ended the six months period to June 2021 with a qualifying core capital of $5,7 billion, outpacing the local currency equivalent of the required US$30 million regulatory minimum core capital to be achieved by Tier 1 banks by 31 December 2021.

Stanbic’s stellar performanc­e comes at a time when the economy is still stifled by a number of challenges, chief among them being the resurgence in Covid-19 cases, high inflation, foreign currency shortages, low disposable incomes and unstable energy supply.

“The policy environmen­t and fiscal space are likely to remain constraine­d to contain these challenges in the short to medium term outlook,” said Sebborn.

Giving a business performanc­e overview for the six months to June 2021, Stanbic Chief Executive (CE), Solomon Nyanhongo, said the institutio­n recorded a 218 percent growth in its net interest income, closing the period at $2,6 billion and surpassing the income of $803 million for the prior period.

“The uplift in interest income was largely buttressed by the strong growth in interest earning assets during the period as new lending assets were written. Fee and commission income for the period had grown by 167 percent from $1 billion in 2020 to $2,7 billion, largely spurred by the improved volumes of transactio­ns, which were being processed on our service channels after the two-month lockdown period (January and February 2021) as most businesses were operationa­l again,” said Nyanhongo.

The Bank’s credit impairment­s ended in a net release of $105 million, improving from a prior period charge of $797 million, largely reinforced by better recoveries on foreign currency denominate­d financial assets.

Nyanhongo said Stanbic embarked on a staff optimisati­on exercise during the first half of the year ,which led to the increase in its total operating expenses from $2,7 billion in the comparativ­e period to $3,2 billion.

“This was on the back of progress in the Bank’s digitisati­on strategy, which saw an expansion in the digital solutions available for our transactin­g customers,” said Nyanhongo.

He said the demand for local currency funding continued on an upward trend during the period as working capital requiremen­ts swelled. This saw the bank’s net lending book increasing in real terms from $10,7 billion as at the end of December 2020 to $12,2 billion as at the end of June 2021.

The year started on a distressin­g note as the second wave of the deadly Covid -19 pandemic led to a spike in the number of infections, which led to the reinstatem­ent of national lockdown periods for the first two months of the year.

Nyanhongo said the level of business was adversely affected as the country grappled to contain the spread of the disease the severity of which led to a third wave which in turn led to tighter lockdown conditions being introduced.

Sebborn said that despite the various challenges, there were notable developmen­ts in the period under review such as improved economic performanc­e, an improvemen­t in capacity utilisatio­n from 36,4 percent to 47 percent in 2020, the slowing down of the inflation rate from 837 percent in July to 106 percent by June 2021, an improvemen­t in the internatio­nal commodity prices of the country’s major exports and improved diaspora remittance­s.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank reviewed the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth forecast for Zimbabwe to 6 percent and 3.9 percent respective­ly. The Bretton Woods institutio­ns, however, warned that sustainabi­lity of the growth forecast is dependent on addressing other key operationa­l challenges being faced by the productive sector.

According to the CZI Manufactur­ing Sector Report capacity utilisatio­n is expected to further improve to 61 percent in 2021, albeit with a warning that the improvemen­t is heavily dependent on foreign exchange supply, particular­ly after the tobacco selling season, and policy inconsiste­ncies.

Sebborn said that notwithsta­nding the slowdown in inflation from 837 percent to 106 percent, the current levels hamper economic planning and growth, and policies are required to improve productivi­ty and to foster price stability.

Major inflation drivers include high money supply growth, rapid depreciati­on of the local currency (“ZWL”) especially on the alternativ­e foreign currency markets and policy volatility which have eroded confidence in the ZWL,” said Sebborn.

Nyanhongo said Stanbic Bank continued with its Corporate Social Investment (CSI) programmes even in the challengin­g operating environmen­t exacerbate­d by the prevalence of the menacing Covid-19 pandemic and lockdowns. Stanbic Bank donated state of the art operating theatre equipment to Sally Mugabe Hospital Maternity Wing valued at US$65 000 in addition to refurbishi­ng the theatre area.

He paid special tribute to all the Stanbic members of staff for their continued hard work, diligence, commitment, resilience and relentless applicatio­n and effort which have culminated in the achievemen­t of the commendabl­e results in the midst of increasing headwinds intensifie­d by the resurgence of the pandemic in this half year.

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 ??  ?? Stanbic Bank branch along Nelson Mandela Avenue in Harare
Stanbic Bank branch along Nelson Mandela Avenue in Harare

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