Johannesburg - Nedbank Group [JSE:NED], South Africa's fourth-largest bank, reported a 16% jump in non-interest revenue in the first quarter, as part of its strategy to lessen its reliance on lending and improve bad debts.
In a trading update on Friday, the bank outlined solid growth in other business lines, but left its full-year outlook unchanged.
Nedbank, like its rivals, was hit hard by bad debts in 2009, after a recession slashed more than a million jobs and left many consumers with ballooning household debt.
Nedbank has since outlined a strategy to turnaround its retail unit, lower bad debts and increase the money it makes from areas other than loans.
Nedbank said its non-interest revenue rose 16.4% to R3.5bn in the three months to end-March, compared with R3bn a year earlier. Growth in clients and higher transactions in electronic banking helped its fees and commissions, it said.
Net interest income, a measure of earnings from lending, rose by nearly 6% to R4.3bn.
It did not give numbers for net profit or headline earnings, the main measure of profit in South Africa.
The bank said its credit loss ratio, a measure of bad debts, improved to 1.15% of its total loan book, compared with 1.46% a year earlier.
Nedbank, which is majority owned by insurance firm Old Mutual [JSE:OML], is the South African bank that HSBC dropped a takeover bid for last year.
Shares of Nedbank are up about 8% so far this year, outperforming a slight decline in the Top 40 - (Tradeable) [JSE:J200]index of blue-chips.
In a trading update on Friday, the bank outlined solid growth in other business lines, but left its full-year outlook unchanged.
Nedbank, like its rivals, was hit hard by bad debts in 2009, after a recession slashed more than a million jobs and left many consumers with ballooning household debt.
Nedbank has since outlined a strategy to turnaround its retail unit, lower bad debts and increase the money it makes from areas other than loans.
Nedbank said its non-interest revenue rose 16.4% to R3.5bn in the three months to end-March, compared with R3bn a year earlier. Growth in clients and higher transactions in electronic banking helped its fees and commissions, it said.
Net interest income, a measure of earnings from lending, rose by nearly 6% to R4.3bn.
It did not give numbers for net profit or headline earnings, the main measure of profit in South Africa.
The bank said its credit loss ratio, a measure of bad debts, improved to 1.15% of its total loan book, compared with 1.46% a year earlier.
Nedbank, which is majority owned by insurance firm Old Mutual [JSE:OML], is the South African bank that HSBC dropped a takeover bid for last year.
Shares of Nedbank are up about 8% so far this year, outperforming a slight decline in the Top 40 - (Tradeable) [JSE:J200]index of blue-chips.