Shanghai Pudong Q1 profit rises 34% on interest

(Bloomberg)
Updated: 2007-04-28 14:12

Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co., the Chinese partner of Citigroup Inc., said first-quarter profit rose 34 percent as it increased loan margins and boosted lending in a surging economy.

Net income at the Shanghai-based national bank climbed to 978.3 million yuan ($126.8 million) from 732.1 million yuan a year ago, the firm said in a statement to the city's stock exchange yesterday. Earnings per share rose 20 percent to 0.23 yuan in the period, the statement said.

China's economy expanded at 11.1 percent in the first quarter, driving consumer and corporate demand for loans. The central bank raised lending rates three times in the past year while boosting deposit rates only twice, making loans more profitable for banks including Pudong Development and China Minsheng Bank Corp.

Pudong Bank said first-quarter non-performing loans were 1.8 percent of the overall, down from 1.83 percent at the end of 2006. The bank's capital adequacy ratio, a measure of financial strength, fell to 9.02 percent from 9.27 percent.

Net interest income gained 31 percent from a year earlier to 5.07 billion yuan, according to the statement, and net intermediary income rose 39 percent to 153 million yuan.

Total loans expanded 7.6 percent from the end of the year to 495.8 million yuan, while deposits over that period grew 0.9 percent to 601.7 million yuan, the company said.

The People's Bank of China is trying to curb bank loans to slow surging property prices and investment that threaten to overheat the economy. It raised the benchmark one-year lending rate by 0.27 percent point to 6.39 percent on March 17 and increased the one-year deposit rate by the same, to 2.79 percent.

Pudong Development Bank released earnings after the markets closed. The bank's shares fell 3.1 percent to close at 27.49 yuan today in Shanghai. They have climbed 29 percent since the end of last year, underperforming a 40.5 percent gain in the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index.

The unaudited results were based on domestic accounting standards.


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