Equity Bank freezes dividend for second year as profit falls 11pc

Equity Group shareholders will go for the second consecutive year without dividends after the board on Monday froze the payout as net profits fell 11.6 per cent to Ksh20 billion (about $182.3 million).

The lender posted a drop in earnings from Ksh22.39 billion ($204 million) booked a year earlier on the back of a five times jump in provisioning for loan defaults in appreciation of economic hardships facing borrowers in the Covid-19 environment.

Loan loss provisioning rose from Ksh5.3 billion ($48.3 million) to Ksh26.63 billion ($239 million), piling pressure on the bottom-line despite growth in operating income.

Net interest income rose by 22.6 per cent to Ksh55.15 billion ($502.6 million), while non-interest income grew 25 per cent to Ksh38.51 billion ($350.9 million).

However, the board failed to recommend any dividend on this performance, extending the freeze to two years.

Equity’s last dividend payout was on the 2018 performance, with shareholders taking home Ksh7.54 billion ($68.7 million).

The dividend freeze is despite Equity having recorded the softest fall in earnings compared to KCB (22 per cent), Co-operative Bank (24 per cent), StanChart (33.9 per cent) and Stanbic with 18.6 per cent decline.

KCB, Co-op, StanChart and Stanbic all defied the profit falls to pay out dividends, citing strong capital buffers and the need to support investors.

Equity, the second-largest bank by assets, had last year raised the payout to Ksh9.43 billion ($85.9 million) but recalled it citing the need to preserve cash in the Covid-19 business environment.

The lender’s latest disclosures show that retained earnings have jumped by 20 per cent to Ksh118.76 billion ($ billion).

Stay in the Know!

Sign up for the latest news and information on African Companies and Economy.

By signing up, you agree to receive MoneyInAfrica offers, promotions and other commercial messages. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Leave a Reply