JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, May 31, 2025

First Citizens profit rises by 5.89%

by

Anthony Wilson
543 days ago
20231205
CEO of First Citizens, Karen Darbasie

CEO of First Citizens, Karen Darbasie

COURTESY FIRST CITIZENS

Ma­jor­i­ty state-owned First Cit­i­zens Group Fi­nan­cial Hold­ings Ltd yes­ter­day dis­closed that it record­ed au­dit­ed prof­it af­ter tax of $776.75 mil­lion for its fi­nan­cial year end­ed Sep­tem­ber 30, 2023. That was an in­crease of 5.89 per cent over the $733.50 mil­lion the Port-of-Spain-based fi­nan­cial hold­ing com­pared earned in 2022.

The group’s 2023 prof­it of $776.75 mil­lion ex­ceeds the $752 mil­lion prof­it af­ter tax First Cit­i­zen de­clared in 2019, the full fi­nan­cial year be­fore the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic de­pressed bank prof­itabil­i­ty.

The bank’s prof­it be­fore tax for its 2023 fi­nan­cial year was $1.069 bil­lion, which was 15.94 per cent more than it earned for the 2022 fi­nan­cial year. The First Cit­i­zens prof­it be­fore tax in 2023 just ex­ceed­ed the $1.063 bil­lion it re­port­ed in 2019.

The fi­nan­cial hold­ing com­pa­ny’s net in­ter­est in­come (which is the dif­fer­ence be­tween the rev­enue gen­er­at­ed from its in­ter­est-bear­ing as­sets and the ex­pens­es as­so­ci­at­ed with pay­ing on its in­ter­est-bear­ing li­a­bil­i­ties)amount­ed to $1.85 bil­lion in 2023. That is an in­crease of 24.54 per cent on the $1.49 bil­lion in net in­ter­est in­come First Cit­i­zens re­port­ed in 2022.

The bank’s to­tal as­sets de­clined by 1.4 per cent, drop­ping from $45.43 bil­lion in 2022 to $44.79 bil­lion in 2023. But the group’s loans to cus­tomers in­creased by 6.36 per cent, mov­ing from $18.88 bil­lion in 2022 to $20.08 bil­lion in 2023.

Cus­tomers’ de­posits in­creased mar­gin­al­ly from $28.37 bil­lion in 2022 to $28.65 bil­lion in $28.65 bil­lion.

The First Cit­i­zens earn­ings per share in 2023 to­talled $3.08, which was 5.84 per cent more than the earn­ings per share of $2.91 in its 2022 fi­nan­cial year.

The bank de­clared a fi­nal div­i­dend of $0.68 a share for its fourth quar­ter. That div­i­dend, which will be paid on De­cem­ber 28, 2023, brings its div­i­dend pay­out for its 2023 fi­nan­cial year to $2 per share. That an­nu­al div­i­dend rep­re­sents 64.93 per cent of the First Cit­i­zens earn­ings per share of $3.08.

The 2023 div­i­dend of $2 per share is 25 per cent more than the $1.60 First Cit­i­zens dis­trib­uted in 2022.

Apart from T&T, First Cit­i­zens has op­er­a­tions in Bar­ba­dos, St Lu­cia and St Vin­cent in the East­ern Caribbean. The St Lu­cia and St Vin­cent op­er­a­tions are sub­sidiaries of First Cit­i­zens In­vest­ment Ser­vices (FCIS), the in­vest­ment and wealth man­age­ment arm of the group. First Cit­i­zens al­so has an op­er­a­tion in Cos­ta Ri­ca, which par­tic­i­pates in loans that have been orig­i­nat­ed by mul­ti­lat­er­al lend­ing agen­cies for cus­tomers in Latin Amer­i­ca.

First Cit­i­zens CEO Karen Dar­basie said T&T ac­count­ed for rough­ly 85 per cent of the bank’s bal­ance sheet as at the end of Sep­tem­ber 2020, but that dropped to 80 per cent at the end of its 2022 fi­nan­cial year end.

“Our re­gion­al di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion, even though it’s based on or­gan­ic growth, has re­sult­ed just over that short pe­ri­od, in that shift to a big­ger con­tri­bu­tion of the re­gion­al as­set base to the group’s as­sets. It’s trend­ing in a sim­i­lar di­rec­tion this year (2023). Once we pub­lish, we’ll be able to give you the specifics on that. But the trend has con­tin­ued, that much I can tell you, as our re­gion­al as­sets are con­tribut­ing a greater and greater per­cent­age,” said the First Cit­i­zens CEO.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored