Nedbank CEO Mike Brown was in a good mood when doing his rounds of the media outlets this morning – as well he should have been. South Africa’s number four bank posted a better than expected profit growth for the half year to end June. Mr Market loved the news, pushing the share price 6.5% higher, its entire gain of the past 12 months after the stock flatlined since mid 2014. – Alec Hogg

by Renee Bonorchis

(Bloomberg) – Nedbank Group Ltd., the South African bank controlled by Old Mutual Plc, said interest rate increases in its domestic market will boost revenue and help offset any uptick in bad debts that may appear from next year.
A 1 percentage point increase in rates will add R1 billion ($79 million) to net interest income, Mike Brown, chief executive officer of Nedbank, said Tuesday by phone. âGiven the slow growth in South Africa, we think this interest rate cycle is likely to be flatter than usual. The entire cycle is likely to only be 150 basis points of increases.â
The central bank increased rates by 25 basis points last month and Nedbank is among lenders forecasting a similar move in September. The Johannesburg-based lender is targeting expansion in the rest of Africa where growth rates are relatively faster than its home market. It owns a fifth of Togo-based Ecobank Transnational Inc. and 37 percent of Mozambiqueâs Banco Unico.
âIn Mozambique, we will go to between 50 percent to 70 percent next year and we intend to pay in cash,â Brown said, adding that the payment wonât affect the bankâs capital levels. Nedbank isnât in discussions with Ecobank to buy a stake in its Nigerian operations, he said.
The number of people using Nedbank as their main bank rose 8 percent in the first half to 2.5 million customers, Brown said. Business banking took on 2,500 more small-and medium enterprise accounts and the corporate and investment unit won the account for the Durban municipality, South Africaâs third- largest city, known as eThekwini.
Nedbank CEO Mike Brown expects SA growth of just 2% this year.
â Sure Kamhunga (@SureKamhunga) August 4, 2015
Stock Record
Nedbank stock advanced to a record in Johannesburg Tuesday after the lender posted earnings that beat estimates. The shares climbed 5.6 percent to 272.37 rand as of 11:58 a.m. in the city, the highest intraday level since the bank started trading in August 1990. The six-member FTSE/JSE Africa Banks Index climbed 2.6 percent.
First-half profit rose 16 percent from a year earlier to 5.3 billion rand after bad debts fell and earnings from the rest of Africa increased, Nedbank said earlier in a statement. Earnings per share excluding one-time items rose 14 percent to 11.01 rand, beating the median estimate of four analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The interim dividend increased 16 percent to 5.37 rand a share.
âNedbank delivered good fee growth, ongoing improvement in the credit-loss ratio and disciplined cost management,â said Neelash Hansjee, bank analyst at Old Mutual Plcâs Cape Town- based investment unit. âThe environment is tough, but Nedbank seems defensively positioned with the wholesale business being a bigger part of its mix versus its peers.â
Market rewarding Nedbank for a solid set of results, stock +5.25%
â Devin Shutte (@devinshutte) August 4, 2015
âSustainable Performanceâ
Advances and non-interest revenue are expected to increase by more than five percent in the rest of the year, the bank said in its statement. The South African economy is projected to improve slightly in 2015 off its low 2014 base.
âManagement have maintained full-year guidance of diluted earnings per share excluding one time items growth at around 8 percent, so I think the performance is sustainable,â said Adrian Cloete, portfolio manager at PSG Wealth in Cape Town. âThe big banks are well diversified across corporate, retail, wealth and also into Africa. The banks are also very well run by good management teams, so itâs unlikely that we get negative surprises in the current environment.â