Standard Chartered Bank Kenya posted a 28% rise in Net Earnings to 6.91 Billion shillings at the end of the six months ended 30th June 2023.
This is compared to a Net Profit of 5.51 Billion shillings over a similar period last year.
The bank posted a 27.7%y/y leap in 1H23 EPS to KES 18.29 with net income coming in at KES 6.9bn. The exemplary performance was attributable to a 38.3%y/y surge in net interest income (NII) to KES 13.9bn and a 26.8%y/y jump in non-interest revenue (NIR) to KES 7.0bn.
NII was lifted by a 34.4%y/y uptick in interest income from loans to KES 8.0bn on upward loan re-pricing as well as on loan book growth of 13.2%y/y to KES 145.4bn. In addition, income from interbank lending surged 241.4%y/y as interbank rates climbed to highs of 10.1% in June from 6.4% in early January.
Contrary to most of its peers, interest expenses rose very slightly, inching up 0.9%y/y, as the bank shunned expensive deposits (customer deposits declined 6.4%q/q) given the ample liquidity that the bank holds (62.84%) in addition to paying down dollar debt from the group – down 58.8%y/y to KES 5.9bn.
The cost of deposits dropped 15bps to 0.8%. Yields on loans and advances rose 188bps y/y to KES 11.25% on re-pricing of loans following CBR hikes.
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Bank loan repricing usually lags CBK’s rate hikes hence recent re-pricing may have been about last year’s hikes, but StanChart has raised lending rates 1.66 percentage points within half as CBK raised the CBR by 1.75 percentage points in a similar period.
Government securities holdings by the bank dropped 31.3%y/y to KES 71.4bn, likely due to higher maturities than re-investments. This is slightly surprising given the attractive yields on offer with the recent issuances by the government.
Meanwhile, NIR was supported mainly by a 96.4%y/y climb in FX income to KES 4.5bn. Despite this, NIR contribution to total income dropped to 33.7% from 35.6% in 1H22 on higher income from lending. Operating expenses (OPEX) rose 16.8% to KES 9.2bn on higher staff and rental costs.
The firm is on track to maintain FY22 dividend payout, which currently offers a dividend yield of about 13.8%. We expect an interim dividend to be announced in 3Q23, likely similar to last year’s at KES 6.00.
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Key Positives
- Net interest margins (NIMs) rose 172bps to 8.2% – the highest since the rate cap (2016) on loan re-pricing and declining interest expenses.
- Non-performing loan ratio improved 1.0 percentage points to 14.4% from 15.4% in 1H22 – slightly below industry NPLs at 14.5%. As highlighted in our earlier reports, the loan book performance for the bank looks healthy considering there were no provisions from the corporate book in FY22.
- Cost to income (CTI) improved from 50.6% in 1H22 to 44.1% in 1H23.
Key Negatives
- Cost of risk rose a significant 2.7 percentage points y/y to 2.9%, attributable to an 18-fold spike in loan loss provisions – signaling the impact of rising macro risks/re-pricings on the book. However, we like the proactive nature of the provisions.
- Write-offs seemed to have increased in half as other income closed in a negative position of KES 261.0m.
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