ADIB-Egypt to continue activities despite losses exceeding 50%

Hossam Mounir
2 Min Read

The extraordinary general assembly of the Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank-Egypt (ADIB-Egypt) approved to continue its bank activities, despite its losses exceeding half of its capital.

Under the law of joint stock companies, a company with losses that exceed half of its capital should call for the extraordinary general assembly to make a decision to continue its activity despite the losses, which ADIB-Egypt has done over the past six years.

The result of ADIB’s operation revealed that it achieved a net profit, before taxes, during the first half of 2015, amounting to EGP 336.2M, an increase of 43% from the first half of 2014.

The bank’s total revenues reached EGP 712.8m, a 52.1%  increase from June 2014, and achieved an operating profit of EGP 365.2m, an increase of 130.5% compared to the same period last year.

Net loans witnessed a growth of 35.8%, which was met by an increase in customer deposits by 25.6% compared to the same period in 2014. The bank’s shareholders dues increased by 18%. ADIB Egypt achieved a profit that reached EGP 266m during 2014.

Those profits contributed to decreasing deferred losses, which resulted from allocations for defaulted debts that were present in the period preceding the acquisition of ADIB by the National Bank of Development.

According to the bank, defaulted debts decreased to EGP 2.9bm at the end of 2014, compared to EGP 3.5bm at the end of 2012.

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