Prof.
Benedict Oramah, President, Afreximbank.
The
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has released its abridged
unaudited financial performance for the three months ended 31 March
2018, showing a 59 per cent growth in total revenues to $240.71
million compared to the $151.17 achieved during the same period in
2018.
The
results, released in Cairo, show that the Bank achieved a 28 per cent
growth in attributable income during the period, amounting to $69
million as against $54 million in 2018.
The
Bank’s operating income increased by 66 per cent from $79 million
in 2018 to $132 million during the quarter while loans and advances
grew by 50 per cent.
A
major driver of the significant growth by the Bank was interest and
similar income which went up by 56 per cent from $150 million in 2018
to $235 million.
The
Bank’s total assets grew by 33 per cent to $15 billion as against
$11 billion in 2018) while the shareholders’ funds grew by 35 per
cent to close the period at $2.63 billion.
Other
highlights include an increase in the loans and advances balances
from $8 billion in 2018 to $12 billion as at 31 March 2019; an
increase in the net asset value per share at from $46,187 in 2018 to
$51,913 (equivalent to $4.62 per Depository Receipt in 2018 and $5.19
in 2019); and growth in total liabilities by 36 per cent to $12.4
billion (2018: $9.1 billion), largely attributable to a 31 per cent
increase in borrowing balance to fund the growth in the loan book.
Commenting
on the results, Bank President Prof. Benedict Oramah said that the
Bank expected to grow its attributable income by year-end in line
with full year targets while maintaining a sustainable balance
between a strong capital base, business growth and profitability to
deliver sustainable returns to its shareholders.
Afreximbank,
which implements its programmes and facilities through five-year
strategic plans, began implementing its fifth strategic plan, dubbed
“Impact 2021, Africa Transformed”, in 2018. That strategy is
anchored on four pillars: Improving Intra- Africa Trade; Facilitating
Industrialization and Export Development; Strengthening Trade Finance
Leadership; and Improving Financial Soundness and Performance.
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