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NIC 1Q17
Pesa Nane
#1 Posted : Thursday, May 04, 2017 9:53:12 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/25/2012
Posts: 4,105
Location: 08c
NIC 1Q17: Click HERE

OR here for PDF https://view.publitas.co...od-ended-31st-mar-2017/

Pesa Nane plans to be shilingi when he grows up.
mufasa
#2 Posted : Thursday, May 04, 2017 3:29:52 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 4/15/2008
Posts: 204
Boss, I can't read a thing. Is there another link????
Do it today! Tomorrow is promise to no-one.
Pesa Nane
#3 Posted : Thursday, May 04, 2017 4:51:10 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/25/2012
Posts: 4,105
Location: 08c
mufasa wrote:
Boss, I can't read a thing. Is there another link????


Click HERE. And feel free to zoom
Pesa Nane plans to be shilingi when he grows up.
lochaz-index
#4 Posted : Thursday, May 04, 2017 5:35:32 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 9/18/2014
Posts: 1,127
The first bank to bite the Q1 bullet. Major deviation in LLPs saved the bottom line though the NPL figures (gross and net) don't quite tally with the change. Any explanation offered?
The main purpose of the stock market is to make fools of as many people as possible.
Pesa Nane
#5 Posted : Thursday, May 04, 2017 7:44:25 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/25/2012
Posts: 4,105
Location: 08c
lochaz-index wrote:
The first bank to bite the Q1 bullet. Major deviation in LLPs saved the bottom line though the NPL figures (gross and net) don't quite tally with the change. Any explanation offered?


Quote:
In the period under review, the Group’s net profit was weighed down by provisions taken to support non-performing facilities of a few large corporate customers that were impaired in 2015.
The Group’s overall NPL ratio dropped to 11.3% from 11.4% in 2016, as a result of sustained efforts to improve the quality of its loan book.

During this period, the Group also increased its operating expenses by KES 74m, a 5% change, as it increased its staffing to support the 7 new branches opened over the course of 2016.
Pesa Nane plans to be shilingi when he grows up.
VituVingiSana
#6 Posted : Friday, May 05, 2017 10:51:25 AM
Rank: Chief


Joined: 1/3/2007
Posts: 18,118
Location: Nairobi
The CEO & CFO bit the bullet on NPLs when the CEO was appointed in 2015. That prudence is paying off while other banks take the hit now.
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett
Horton
#7 Posted : Friday, May 05, 2017 10:53:57 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 8/30/2007
Posts: 1,558
Location: Nairobi
VituVingiSana wrote:
The CEO & CFO bit the bullet on NPLs when the CEO was appointed in 2015. That prudence is paying off while other banks take the hit now.


We have nothing to benchmark this on. Perhaps we wait for other banks first?
lochaz-index
#8 Posted : Friday, May 05, 2017 12:21:02 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 9/18/2014
Posts: 1,127
Pesa Nane wrote:
lochaz-index wrote:
The first bank to bite the Q1 bullet. Major deviation in LLPs saved the bottom line though the NPL figures (gross and net) don't quite tally with the change. Any explanation offered?


Quote:
In the period under review, the Group’s net profit was weighed down by provisions taken to support non-performing facilities of a few large corporate customers that were impaired in 2015.
The Group’s overall NPL ratio dropped to 11.3% from 11.4% in 2016, as a result of sustained efforts to improve the quality of its loan book.

During this period, the Group also increased its operating expenses by KES 74m, a 5% change, as it increased its staffing to support the 7 new branches opened over the course of 2016.

Cheers @pesanane. Prior provisions/prudence saved their skin as it put them ahead of the NPL curve. The question now is whether the trend - reduced provisions - is sustainable vis a vis the effect of macro conditions on its loan book going forward.

Impact of the rate caps is conspicuous...despite increasing their loan book, interest income was trimmed by about 19%. This was duly offset by a more vicious reduction of roughly 30% in interest expense - lots of accounts must have been converted to transactional ones - even though the deposits increased marginally.
The main purpose of the stock market is to make fools of as many people as possible.
VituVingiSana
#9 Posted : Friday, May 05, 2017 2:04:34 PM
Rank: Chief


Joined: 1/3/2007
Posts: 18,118
Location: Nairobi
lochaz-index wrote:
Pesa Nane wrote:
lochaz-index wrote:
The first bank to bite the Q1 bullet. Major deviation in LLPs saved the bottom line though the NPL figures (gross and net) don't quite tally with the change. Any explanation offered?


Quote:
In the period under review, the Group’s net profit was weighed down by provisions taken to support non-performing facilities of a few large corporate customers that were impaired in 2015.
The Group’s overall NPL ratio dropped to 11.3% from 11.4% in 2016, as a result of sustained efforts to improve the quality of its loan book.

During this period, the Group also increased its operating expenses by KES 74m, a 5% change, as it increased its staffing to support the 7 new branches opened over the course of 2016.

Cheers @pesanane. Prior provisions/prudence saved their skin as it put them ahead of the NPL curve. The question now is whether the trend - reduced provisions - is sustainable vis a vis the effect of macro conditions on its loan book going forward.

Impact of the rate caps is conspicuous...despite increasing their loan book, interest income was trimmed by about 19%. This was duly offset by a more vicious reduction of roughly 30% in interest expense - lots of accounts must have been converted to transactional ones - even though the deposits increased marginally.

Compare 4Q 2016 for NIC vs most banks. Their 1Q is a continuation of the trend. But you do have a point. That said, it's not the unaudited 1-3Q that will matter but 4Q in an election year and full impact of interest rate caps.
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett
bartum
#10 Posted : Monday, May 08, 2017 10:01:50 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 8/11/2010
Posts: 1,011
Location: nairobi
VituVingiSana wrote:
lochaz-index wrote:
Pesa Nane wrote:
lochaz-index wrote:
The first bank to bite the Q1 bullet. Major deviation in LLPs saved the bottom line though the NPL figures (gross and net) don't quite tally with the change. Any explanation offered?


Quote:
In the period under review, the Group’s net profit was weighed down by provisions taken to support non-performing facilities of a few large corporate customers that were impaired in 2015.
The Group’s overall NPL ratio dropped to 11.3% from 11.4% in 2016, as a result of sustained efforts to improve the quality of its loan book.

During this period, the Group also increased its operating expenses by KES 74m, a 5% change, as it increased its staffing to support the 7 new branches opened over the course of 2016.

Cheers @pesanane. Prior provisions/prudence saved their skin as it put them ahead of the NPL curve. The question now is whether the trend - reduced provisions - is sustainable vis a vis the effect of macro conditions on its loan book going forward.

Impact of the rate caps is conspicuous...despite increasing their loan book, interest income was trimmed by about 19%. This was duly offset by a more vicious reduction of roughly 30% in interest expense - lots of accounts must have been converted to transactional ones - even though the deposits increased marginally.

Compare 4Q 2016 for NIC vs most banks. Their 1Q is a continuation of the trend. But you do have a point. That said, it's not the unaudited 1-3Q that will matter but 4Q in an election year and full impact of interest rate caps.

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