Zenith Bank Plc has announced its audited results for the half-year ended 30 June 2021, with a growth in profit before tax of 3 per cent from N114 billion reported in H1 2020, to N117 billion in H1 2021.
This was despite a challenging macroeconomic environment exacerbated by the COVID 19 pandemic.
According to the bank’s audited half-year financial results presented to the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), the Group recorded a 9 per cent growth in non-interest income from N116 billion in June 2020 to N127 billion in June 2021.
Overall, the significant reduction in interest expense by 26 per cent and growth in non-interest income by 9 per cent culminated in improved profitability.
The Group’s retail journey continues to deliver positive results as retail deposits grew by N38.2 billion from N1.72 trillion to N1.76 trillion year-to-date. Savings balances grew marginally by 2 per cent to close at N1.18 trillion from N1.16 trillion as at December 2020.
The drive for increased retail deposits and a low-interest yield environment helped reduce the cost of funding from 2.2 per cent to 1.3 per cent in the current period.
Operating expenses grew by 10 per cent, but growth remains below the inflation rate, while the Group improved its Earnings per Share which grew 2 per cent from N3.30 to N3.38 for the half-year ended June 2021.
The Group also increased total customer deposits by 8 per cent to close the period at N5.77 trillion, demonstrating growth in the market share.
Total assets grew marginally to N8.52 trillion as at 30 June 2021 from N8.48 trillion recorded as at 31 December 2020.
Despite the COVID-19 pandemic induced challenges and the challenging operating environment, the Group grew its risk assets as gross loans were up by 3 per cent, from N2.92 trillion to N2.99 trillion.
This was conservatively achieved at a low Non-Performance Loans ratio of 4.51 per cent (FYE 2020: 4.29 per cent) and a reduced cost of risk of 1.3 per cent (June 2020: 1.8 per cent).
Prudential ratios such as liquidity and capital adequacy also remained above regulatory thresholds at 69.9 per cent and 22.0 per cent, respectively.
Despite the continued prevalence of the COVID-19 pandemic, there is cautious optimism that the global economy will continue to recover as vaccination programmes are intensified.
On the domestic economy, Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 5.01 per cent in the second quarter of 2021, and the inflation rate, which peaked in March 2021 at 18.17 per cent, is gradually trending down (currently at 17.38 per cent as at July 2021).