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Saturday, May 24, 2025

Scotia sees reduced profits

by

Peter Christopher
717 days ago
20230607
Gayle Pazos, Scotiabank’s senior VP and managing director.

Gayle Pazos, Scotiabank’s senior VP and managing director.

COURTESY SCOTIABANK

Sco­tia­bank Trinidad and To­ba­go has seen a drop in prof­its for the first six months of fis­cal year 2023 com­pared to the same pe­ri­od in 2022.

In the com­pa­ny’s fi­nan­cial re­port for the six month pe­ri­od end­ed April 30, 2023, the com­pa­ny record­ed af­ter-tax prof­it of $344 mil­lion, $12 mil­lion less than the $356 mil­lion prof­it the com­pa­ny gained dur­ing the same pe­ri­od last year.

Gayle Pa­zos, man­ag­ing di­rec­tor of Sco­tia­bank T&T, De­spite the drop in prof­its, the com­pa­ny an­nounced im­proved re­turns to its share­hold­ers, said, “De­spite in­fla­tion­ary pres­sures im­pact­ing our ex­pense pro­file, I am pleased with the group’s core per­for­mance. Op­er­a­tional rev­enue con­tin­ues to im­prove, with net in­ter­est in­come im­prov­ing by 16 per cent year over year and 4 per cent over the last quar­ter.”

Pa­zos point­ed out that the bank was see­ing im­prove­ment in terms of loan sales.

She said, “Re­tail and com­mer­cial loans col­lec­tive­ly grew by $1.5 bil­lion or 9 per cent, demon­strat­ing the strength of our busi­ness lines, the con­fi­dence that our cus­tomers con­tin­ue to place in us and our com­mit­ment to our mar­ket.”

The com­pa­ny’s to­tal rev­enue, com­pris­ing of net in­ter­est in­come and oth­er in­come, was $974 mil­lion for the pe­ri­od end­ed April 30, 2023, an in­crease of $22 mil­lion or 2 per cent over the pri­or year.

Net in­ter­est in­come for the pe­ri­od was $695 mil­lion, an in­crease of $98 mil­lion or 16 per cent, dri­ven by growth in loans to re­tail and cor­po­rate/com­mer­cial cus­tomers com­bined with im­proved yields on the group’s in­vest­ment port­fo­lio. How­ev­er for the six months end­ed April 30, 2023, oth­er in­come of $280 mil­lion de­creased by $76 mil­lion com­pared to 2022 pri­mar­i­ly due to low­er trad­ing rev­enues.

She al­so hailed the com­pa­ny’s dig­i­tal trans­for­ma­tion which has im­proved cus­tomer re­la­tion­ships “through new tools and ad­vance­ments that help them con­duct their busi­ness faster, eas­i­er and more se­cure­ly.”

She al­so an­nounced that Sco­tia Ac­cess cus­tomers would have ac­cess to new tools of­fer­ing ded­i­cat­ed sup­port at the touch of a but­ton through the Sco­tia App. This, she ex­plained, would con­sol­i­date the bank’s po­si­tion as an in­dus­try leader in terms of dig­i­tal bank­ing us­age.

She said: “We are first to the lo­cal mar­ket with this dig­i­tal func­tion­al­i­ty, en­abling our Sco­tia Ac­cess cus­tomers to have in­stant mes­sag­ing, voice and video call­ing with their des­ig­nat­ed ad­vi­sors with­in our se­cured bank­ing plat­form.

“Our cus­tomers con­tin­ue to em­brace our dig­i­tal plat­forms with a record dig­i­tal adop­tion of 51.7 per cent, and dig­i­tal trans­ac­tions stood at 2.4 mil­lion, an in­crease of 20 per cent year over year.”


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