Africa operations boost Barclays Africa earnings
The pan-African lender, majority owned by the eponymous British bank, said headline earnings per share came in at 720.9 cents in the six months to the end of June, compared with a restated 655.7 cents a year ago.
Barclays had flagged headline earnings would rise by between 8 and 11 percent. Last year's first-half earnings, which did not include profit from its wider African structure, grew by 8 percent. Under a deal concluded last year, Barclays Plc handed over ownership of eight African businesses to its South African subsidiary in exchange for a 62.3 percent stake in a new combined entity that was renamed Barclays Africa Group.
Headline earnings from the rest of Africa grew by 34 percent to 1 billion rand, faster than the 6 percent growth experienced in the bank's biggest market, South Africa.Despite anaemic growth in Africa's most advanced economy, South Africa's Reserve Bank has raised interest rates by 75 basis points this year, saying it needed to keep a lid on inflation. Analysts expect that the central bank will maintain its hawkish stance, which may augur well for banking profits but push the number of non-performing loans higher.
Net interest income – the measure of income from lending – grew 10 percent to 17.2 billion rand as the bank passed on higher interest rates. The third-largest lender on the Johannesburg bourse, Barclays Africa is the first of South Africa's "big four" banks to report on this season's earnings. Its trailing five-year EPS has contracted by 1.5 percent, according Thomson Reuters data, lagging an average 4.1 percent growth by peers.
($1 = 10.6020 South African Rand)
(Reporting by Helen Nyambura-Mwaura; Editing by David Dolan)