Home Business GTCO reports 181.87% rise in profit to N367bn

GTCO reports 181.87% rise in profit to N367bn

141
0
GTCO




Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc has reported a 181.87 per cent rise in its profit after tax, to N367.42bn for the period ended September compared to N130.35bn as of September 2022.
This was revealed in the  Unaudited Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements submitted to the Nigerian Exchange Limited on Tuesday.
The rise was driven by net interest income which rose by 56.85 per cent in the period under review to N297.54bn, Net fees and commission income rose by 17.71 per cent to N82.48bn. The lender’s foreign exchange revaluation gains also appreciated significantly as it moved from a loss position of N7.39bn as of September 2022 to a gain of N334.35bn.
Recall that in September, the Central Bank of Nigeria directed Deposit Money Banks to stop using gains from their foreign exchange revaluation for dividends and operational expenditures in a bid to shore up the Naira.
In a circular, the central bank said changes to the currency regime have impacted banks to varying degrees and that “banks are required to … set aside the FCY revaluation gains as a counter-cyclical buffer to cushion any future adverse movements in the FX rate.”
Meanwhile, the nine-month report stated that GTBank Nigeria had restricted balances of N1.297tn with the CBN as of 30 September 2023 (December 2022: N1.014tn), which is the CBN cash reserve requirement. The cash reserve ratio represents mandatory total Naira deposits which should be held with the Central Bank of Nigeria as a regulatory requirement.
In its half-year report, GTCO reported profit before tax of N327.4bn, representing an increase of 217.1 per cent over N103.2bn recorded in the corresponding period ended June 2022. The Group’s loan book (net) increased by 22.8 per cent from N1.89tn recorded as of December 2022 to N2.32tn in June 2023, while deposit liabilities grew by 37.0 per cent from N4.61tn in December 2022 to N6.32tn in June 2023.
GTCO operates in Nigeria, West Africa, East Africa, and the United Kingdom in activities involving Payment, Funds Management, and Pension Fund Administration.

RELATED POSTS:  Industrial Court Restrains Union From Picketing FIRS Offices

All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.
Contact: [email protected]



Previous articleJose Mourinho banned for making ‘cry-baby’ gesture to Monza fans
Next articleMilitary has done well in tackling insecurity — Badaru