ID :
58934
Tue, 05/05/2009 - 10:06
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https://www.oananews.org//node/58934
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Shinhan Financial Q1 net plunges 81 pct on loan-loss reserves
SEOUL, May 4 (Yonhap) -- Shinhan Financial Group Co., South Korea's No. 2 financial services company, said Monday its first-quarter earnings tumbled 81 percent from a year earlier on squeezed interest margins and higher loan-loss reserves.
Net profit came to 118.1 billion won (US$92.4 million) in the January-March
period, compared with 620.4 billion won from the previous year, the group said in
a regulatory filing.
Sales jumped 101.9 percent on-year to 22.4 trillion won while operating profit
declined 76 percent to 205.7 billion won, it added.
"The weaker bottom line came mainly because interest income declined amid falling
market rates and the group set aside more loan-loss reserves to brace for the
ongoing corporate revamp drive," an official at the group said. The company set
aside 581.1 billion won in reserves in the first quarter, up 465.2 percent from a
year earlier.
South Korean banks, which are in the process of restructuring ailing companies,
are putting aside more reserves as the number of problem loans piles up,
compromising their financial health.
The group's total assets reached 325.1 trillion won as of the end of March, up
6.8 percent from a year earlier.
Shinhan Financial Group's dented profitability highlights to the difficulties
faced by Korean financial institutions in the slowing economy.
Shinhan Bank, the flagship unit of the group, posted a net profit of 73.7 billion
won, down 80.7 percent from a year earlier.
The lender's net interest margin (NIM), a key barometer of profitability, reached
1.66 percent in the first quarter, down 0.48 percentage point from three months
earlier as returns on certificates of deposit (CDs) which tied to lending rates
sharply declined.
South Korea's central bank had made six consecutive rate cuts totaling 3.25
percentage points to an all-time low of 2 percent until February, which pulled
down market rates like yields on CDs.
"But in the second half, the NIM is expected to rise as a loan-deposit spread is
improving," the official said.
Shinhan Bank's capital adequacy ratio, a key gauge of financial health, reached
14.5 percent as of end-March, up from 13.4 percent at the end of last year. The
group's ratio rose 1.4 percentage points on-quarter to 11.6 percent on the back of
1.3 trillion won in new share offerings.
But the bank's loan delinquency rate is on the rise as the slowing economy is
increasing the amount of bad debts. Its loan default rate came in at 0.9 percent,
up from 0.72 percent three months earlier, it added.
Net profit came to 118.1 billion won (US$92.4 million) in the January-March
period, compared with 620.4 billion won from the previous year, the group said in
a regulatory filing.
Sales jumped 101.9 percent on-year to 22.4 trillion won while operating profit
declined 76 percent to 205.7 billion won, it added.
"The weaker bottom line came mainly because interest income declined amid falling
market rates and the group set aside more loan-loss reserves to brace for the
ongoing corporate revamp drive," an official at the group said. The company set
aside 581.1 billion won in reserves in the first quarter, up 465.2 percent from a
year earlier.
South Korean banks, which are in the process of restructuring ailing companies,
are putting aside more reserves as the number of problem loans piles up,
compromising their financial health.
The group's total assets reached 325.1 trillion won as of the end of March, up
6.8 percent from a year earlier.
Shinhan Financial Group's dented profitability highlights to the difficulties
faced by Korean financial institutions in the slowing economy.
Shinhan Bank, the flagship unit of the group, posted a net profit of 73.7 billion
won, down 80.7 percent from a year earlier.
The lender's net interest margin (NIM), a key barometer of profitability, reached
1.66 percent in the first quarter, down 0.48 percentage point from three months
earlier as returns on certificates of deposit (CDs) which tied to lending rates
sharply declined.
South Korea's central bank had made six consecutive rate cuts totaling 3.25
percentage points to an all-time low of 2 percent until February, which pulled
down market rates like yields on CDs.
"But in the second half, the NIM is expected to rise as a loan-deposit spread is
improving," the official said.
Shinhan Bank's capital adequacy ratio, a key gauge of financial health, reached
14.5 percent as of end-March, up from 13.4 percent at the end of last year. The
group's ratio rose 1.4 percentage points on-quarter to 11.6 percent on the back of
1.3 trillion won in new share offerings.
But the bank's loan delinquency rate is on the rise as the slowing economy is
increasing the amount of bad debts. Its loan default rate came in at 0.9 percent,
up from 0.72 percent three months earlier, it added.