City Trust owns 7.28% (needs to be confirmed) of I&M Bank therefore it cannot report (per IAS) the proportionate share of I&M's profits on its books. The only 'profits' are the dividends it receives & interest earned.
If I&M Bank (which recently bought 55% of BCR of Rwanda) retains most of its earnings for expansion, growth or other requirements - better capital ratios or reinvestment - then the 'profit' for City Trust will be relatively low.
A better calculation is the 'look-through' method which means you use 7.28% of I&M's profits as the proxy for City Trust's 'real' profits. Then divide this PAT by the number of shares City Trust has. The EPS derived in this manner is approximately 50/-.
*There may be some variations based on:
1) The % ownership of I&M by City Trust. If you look carefully, you will see 100,000 shares were issued recently & these were to employees of I&M under an ESOP. Whereas this would dilute City Trust's %, it is a good tool to buy loyalty of employees.
2) The 2Q results seemed 'poor' vs 1Q but 3Q should see a boost from BCR's acquisition completed in July 2012.
3) The recent decrease in T-Bond yields should provide a boost in the valuation of the Bond portfolio*
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett