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- Net Interest Income: 31% increase at the individual level; 23.6% increase at the consolidated level.
- Net Fees and Commission Income: 15.4% increase at the bank level; 14.7% increase at the consolidated level.
- Operating Expenses: 25% increase at the bank level; 26% increase at the consolidated level, primarily due to a new turnover tax.
- Net Profit: 42.6% increase at the bank level; 35% increase at the consolidated level.
- Net Interest Margin: 3.46% at the bank level; 4.6% at the consolidated level.
- Return on Equity (ROE): 31.5% growth.
- Cost-Income Ratio: 45%, a decrease of 2.26 percentage points from the previous year.
- Total Assets: Almost 5% increase at both individual and consolidated levels.
- Loans Growth: 4.9% increase at the bank level; 4.2% increase at the consolidated level.
- Deposits from Customers: 3.4% increase at the bank level; 3.3% increase at the consolidated level.
- Non-Performing Loans (NPL): 2.9% at the bank level.
- Capital Adequacy Ratio: 24% Tier 1 capital at the bank level; 23.3% at the group level.
- Loan to Deposit Ratio: 66.35%.
- New Clients: 46,000 new company clients and 250,000 new retail clients in the first six months.
- Transactions: Over 1 billion transactions in the first six months, a 40% increase from the previous year.
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
- Banca Transilvania SA (BSE:TLV) reported a 31% increase in net interest income at the individual level and a 23.6% increase at the consolidated level for the first half of 2024.
- The bank achieved a 15.4% growth in net fees and commission income, indicating strong customer engagement and transaction volumes.
- The bank's return on equity showed a significant growth of 31.5%, outperforming peers in the Romanian banking market.
- Banca Transilvania SA's non-performing loan ratio is at a comfortable level of 2.1%, below the local market average.
- The bank's capital adequacy ratio is robust, with a total capital ratio of 20% at the bank level and 26.5% at the group level, indicating strong financial stability.
- Operating expenses increased by 25% at the bank level and 26% at the consolidated level, driven by a new turnover tax and wage inflation.
- The cost of risk, although within guidance, showed a slight increase compared to last year, reflecting some pressure on asset quality.
- There is a slight increase in stage two loan provisions, particularly related to retail and large corporate customers, indicating potential risk concerns.
- The integration of OTP Bank is ongoing, with potential challenges in ensuring a smooth and timely integration process.
- The bank's net interest margin is expected to remain stable, with no significant increase anticipated, which may limit future profitability growth.
A: Omer Tetik, CEO, explained that there are minor differences between the budget and actual numbers. The income side performed better due to increased business volumes, while expenses were in line, impacted by a new tax on the banking sector and investments in technology and skilled personnel.
Q: What is the outlook for net interest margin and loan growth for 2024?
A: Omer Tetik noted that the net interest margin is expected to remain stable, with a slight increase possible due to decreasing deposit interest rates. Loan growth is anticipated to surpass the budgeted 7% but remain below 10%.
Q: Are there any updates on the OTP integration and its impact on risk-weighted assets?
A: LuminiEa Runcan, Deputy CEO and Chief Risk Officer, stated that the integration is progressing well, with no significant negative surprises expected. The decrease in risk-weighted assets is attributed to new regulatory rules and state guarantees from the MMI Invest program.
Q: What factors could reverse the strong asset quality cycle, and what is the expectation for 2024 net cost of risk?
A: Omer Tetik mentioned that fiscal consolidation post-election is unlikely to impact asset quality significantly. The cost of risk is expected to remain below budgeted levels, supported by disciplined payment behavior and government support programs.
Q: What are the reasons behind the capital ratios jump between the first and second quarter, and how is the lending market expected to perform in the second half of the year?
A: LuminiEa Runcan explained that the capital ratio increase is due to new European regulations and state guarantees. Omer Tetik expects strong lending activity in Q3 and Q4, driven by EU funds and government programs.
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.