NCBA doubles dividends as profit hits Sh10.2b

NCBA Managing Director John Gachora [Courtesy]

NCBA Group has doubled its dividends to Sh4.94 billion on the back of net profit rising 1.2 times to Sh10.22 billion.

The bank, a product of the 2019 merger between NIC and CBA, said on Wednesday the improved performance from Sh4.57 billion net profit in 2020 was helped by increased income and reduced operating expenses.

“I am extremely proud of the financial results that the group delivered in 2021. While there is still much more to do, it is clear that our merger is paying dividends,” said NCBA Group Managing Director Mr John Gachora (pictured).

Net interest income rose from Sh25.5 billion to Sh27.04 billion, helped by increased lending to government even as loans dropped by two per cent to Sh244 billion.

Non-interest income hit Sh22.11 billion from Sh20.94 billion, adding support to the growth in the bottom line.

Operating expenses fell from Sh40.03 billion to Sh33.45 billion as the lender cut loan loss provisioning by 38 per cent to Sh12.72 billion.

The improved performance saw the NCBA board recommend the doubling of total dividend per share from Sh1.50 to Sh3.

The lender had already paid an interim dividend of Sh0.75 per share in October last year, and now plans to pay the final dividend of Sh2.25 on or after May 5.

Local companies, with a stake of 76.97 per cent in the lender, will have received a total payout of Sh3.8 billion while local individual shareholders will receive Sh1.12 billion on their 22.63 per cent stake.

Last year, the bank opened 13 new branches and plans to launch another 12 this year as it expands its reach in the country.

“One important thing customers consider when opening an account is proximity to a branch. It is the most significant factor,” said Mr Gachora.

 

Business
Premium Civil servants face the axe as Ruto seeks to ease ballooning wage bill
By Brian Ngugi 30 mins ago
Real Estate
Premium End of an era: Hilton finally up for sale, taking with it nostalgic city memories
By Esther Dianah 30 mins ago
Business
Kenya to miss growth target on budget gaps and revenue leaks
Real Estate
Sustaining single-digit mortgage amid tough economic conditions