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Monday 12 June 2017

☰ Losing in dollars, gaining in naira :ETI





 Losing in dollars, gaining in naira :ETI

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Ecobank Transnational Inc (ETI) is showing two different pictures of earnings performance in the 2017 financial year. In dollar terms, the pan-African bank is showing a dismal picture of losing both revenue and profit. Gross earnings declined by 12% to a little over $582 million at the end of the first quarter trading in March 2017 and net profit plunged more than twice as much at 25% to $61 million at the end of the first quarter in March.


In naira terms, the bank is showing a healthy revenue growth of 36% to N178.39 billion in the first quarter and the bottom line improved by 15% to N18.7 billion. The different images of the same earnings records reflect principally the depreciation of the Nigerian currency that captures 40% of ETI Group’s revenues that historically come from the Nigerian market.

For the same reason of exchange rate depreciation of both the naira and other African currencies against the dollar – the bank’s reporting currency, ETI closed last year with a big net loss of N52.6 billion. The exchange rate instability isn’t expected to be as severe this year as it was last year and that creates a significantly improved earnings outlook for the bank in the current financial year.

Gross income is projected at N714 billion for ETI at the end of 2017, an expected growth of 7.4% over the gross earnings of N665 billion in 2016. The bank had grown the top line by 23% last year.

ETI’s group chief executive officer, Ade Ayeyemi, said macroeconomic headwinds that affected the bank’s earnings performance last year, are continuing into the current year. He expressed his satisfaction however that “all of our businesses made meaningful progress in executing our strategy by continuing to focus on cost discipline, stringent credit risk practices, and digitisation of processes to enhance the customer experience”.

Impairment charges for risk asset losses remain a problem area for the bank, as it was last year. At N23.4 billion, impairment charges grew by 76% year-on-year in the first quarter to claim over 50% of operating profit compared to 39% in the prior year. In 2016, impairment charges towered at about N222 billion at the end of the year of which an operating profit of N188.6 billion was insufficient to cover, thereby creating a net operating loss of over N33 billion.

A drop of 28% in pre-tax profits in dollar terms to $74.7 billion at the end of the first quarter is mainly explained by the huge impairment charges.  By the bank’s forecast, credit losses will continue to be elevated in the coming quarters. Ayeyemi assures the bank will continue to address the position aggressively in its ongoing overhaul of credit risk management.

Apart from impairment charges, other major cost lines of the bank appear to be under control but that is in dollar terms only. In naira value, interest expenses surged up by 51% to over N44 billion at the end of the firs

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