Nedbank Release Their Numbers for 2020

Loading player...
Nedbank made good strategic and operational progress and delivered solid underlying growth in advances (+7%), deposits (+9,5%) and assets under management (+11%) for the year ending 31 December 2019 in a difficult macroeconomic environment. Headline earnings, which declined 7,3% to R12,5 billion, were impacted by the effect of the challenging macroeconomic environment on clients as well as a number of additional items that arose in the second half.
Nedbank CE Mike Brown said SA’s economic growth in 2019 at an estimated 0,3% was much slower than initially expected due to severe and frequent power outages, the unsustainable fiscal trajectory and ongoing policy uncertainty combined with a deteriorating global outlook.
“Under these difficult domestic conditions, company profits and household finances deteriorated during the year. Nedbank headline earnings (HE) were also impacted by some additional items in the second half of the year, including accounting for hyperinflation and legacy debt impairments in Zimbabwe (R186m HE impact) and an option that will increase our shareholding in Banco Único (R140m HE impact) from 50% plus one share to approximately 87,5% (subject to regulatory approval),” Brown says.
“In addition to these, the revaluing of a number of private equity investments as the underlying investee company performance was weaker and public market multiples declined (R238m HE impact), and the increase in the credit loss ratio from below the bottom end to just above the midpoint of our target range of 60 to 100 bps as a result of increased impairments raised on certain existing CIB watchlist clients, cyclical increases in Retail and Business Banking and an increase in the central impairment, all weighed on headline earnings,” said Brown.
3 Mar 2020 11AM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

EXPLAINER - Why some sports stars are worth more than companies.

An 18-year-old footballer valued at more than R6 billion has reignited a global debate: how do we really put a price on modern sports stars? Following a new long-term contract at Barcelona, teenage sensation Lamine Yamal has been named the world’s most valuable footballer — outranking established global icons and…
15 Jan 3PM 22 min

Why central bank independence matters.

GUEST – Prof Jannie Rossouw - Honorary professor at Wits Business School and economist at Altitude Wealth Central bank independence refers to a central bank’s ability to formulate and implement monetary policy - such as setting interest rates and managing liquidity - without direct control or interference from the political…
15 Jan 3PM 19 min

South Africa at Davos 2026: The Investment Message SA Is Taking to the World.

GUEST - Neville Matjie, CEO of Brand South Africa As global leaders gather in Davos under the theme “A Spirit of Dialogue”, South Africa is stepping onto one of the world’s most influential stages to make its investment case amid heightened geopolitical tension, economic uncertainty and rapid technological change. With…
15 Jan 3PM 10 min