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STANDARD BANK GROUP LIMITED - Financial information provided to ICBC and update on the operational performance for the three months ended 31 March

Release Date: 23/04/2021 11:57
Code(s): SBK SBKP SBPP     PDF:  
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Financial information provided to ICBC and update on the operational performance for the three months ended 31 March

Standard Bank Group Limited
Registration No. 1969/017128/06
Incorporated in the Republic of South Africa
JSE and A2X share code: SBK
ISIN: ZAE000109815
NSX share code: SNB
SBKP ZAE000038881 (First preference shares)
SBPP ZAE000056339 (Second preference shares)
 (“Standard Bank Group” or “the group”)

Financial information provided to the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited
(“ICBC”) and update on the group’s operational performance for the three months ended 31
March 2021

Financial information provided to ICBC

On a quarterly basis the Standard Bank Group discloses to ICBC sufficient information to enable
ICBC to equity account the group's results. Accordingly, the following consolidated financial
information, prepared on an International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) basis, is being
provided to ICBC for the three months ended 31 March 2021 (1Q21).


Statement of changes in ordinary shareholders' equity for the three months ended 31 March
2021

                              Balance as at 1          Earnings    Other movements      Balance as at 31
                               January 2021      attributable to       for the period       March 2021
                                                       ordinary
                                                  shareholders
                                         Rm                 Rm                   Rm                 Rm
 Ordinary share capital                  162                                                        162
 Ordinary share premium               17 854                                                     17 854
 Foreign currency
 translation and hedging
 reserve                              (8 696)                                    671             (8 025)

 Foreign currency
 translation reserve
 (FCTR)                               (7 735)                                    677             (7 058)
 Foreign currency net
 investment and cash
 flow hedging reserve                   (961)                                     (6)              (967)

 Retained earnings                   163 065              5 788              (4 465)*           164 388
 Empowerment reserve
 and treasury shares                  (2 806)                                   (405)            (3 211)
 Other                                 6 792                                    594#              7 386

 Ordinary shareholders’
 equity                              176 371              5 788               (3 605)           178 554



* Primarily   comprises the ordinary dividends declared in March 2021.
# The increase in other primarily relates to an increase in the statutory credit risk reserve, which has
  an equal and opposite reduction in retained earnings.
Update on the group’s operational performance for the three months ended 31 March 2021

The group’s performance in 1Q21, relative to the three months to March 2020 (“1Q20” or “the
comparative period”), needs to be considered in the context of Covid-19. January and February 2020
were largely “pre-Covid-19”. The group’s performance in March 2020 was positively impacted by
market volatility in terms of trading revenue but this was offset by the negative impact of the decline in
market valuations, particularly Liberty Holdings Limited’s (“Liberty”) Shareholder Investment Portfolio,
and the IFRS 9 driven increase in credit charges based on the portfolio performance and the forward-
looking assumptions used at the time.

In 1Q21, the operating environment in South Africa remained difficult. Electricity supply disruptions
continued, consumer confidence remained low and business confidence fell relative to 4Q20. In
January and February 2021, lockdown restrictions (introduced in late December 2020) negatively
impacted activity and customer spend. By March 2021, restrictions had eased, and activity levels
improved but remained below the levels seen in 1Q20 (pre-pandemic). In Africa Regions, higher oil
prices were positive for West Africa, Covid-19 related restrictions had largely been lifted and trade
activity improved from pandemic lows. In late March 2021, Kenya re-introduced restrictions as
infection rates increased, a risk to the East Africa region, and Mozambique battled an insurgency in
the North. In 1Q21, Private Sector Credit growth remained subdued in South Africa but was stronger
in Africa Regions. Considerable global stimulus supported markets.

Mortgage disbursements continued to be strong and well ahead of 1Q20. Vehicle and Asset Finance
and Personal Unsecured disbursements were more in line with 1Q20. Revenue pressures
experienced in 2H20 continued into 1Q21. Net interest income declined as higher average interest-
earning asset balances period on period were more than offset by lower margins relative to 1Q20
(principally due to lower interest rates across our countries of operation). Non-interest revenue
declined due to lower activity-related fees and lower trading revenue relative to 1Q20 (particularly in
March 2020). Operating expenses were well managed and declined marginally period on period.
However, this was insufficient to offset the decline in revenues, resulting in negative jaws for the
period.

Credit performance in 1Q21 was largely in line with expectations. Credit impairment charges were
lower than in the comparative period, driven principally by lower charges in the Wholesale Client
segment. The active payment holiday portfolios continued to reduce over the period both in South
Africa and Africa Regions (reduced from R21 billion as at 31 December 2020 to R10 billion by 31
March 2021).

Group headline earnings were boosted by stronger performances by Liberty and ICBC Standard Bank
PLC period on period, more than offsetting a marginal decline in banking activities’ headline earnings.
Liberty’s stronger performance in 1Q21 versus 1Q20 was driven by improved market returns in the
Shareholder Investment Portfolio.

In 1Q21 earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders were 20% higher than in the comparative
period. During the period the headline earnings adjustable items were not material.

GDP growth in 2021, and beyond, remains highly uncertain. The recovery is likely to be uneven
across geography and sector. However, as base effects begin to unwind, GDP growth will probably
recover notably in 2Q21. Inflation is expected to remain relatively benign across the group’s countries
of operation. In April 2021, the International Monetary Fund upgraded their 2021 GDP growth
forecasts for South Africa (to 2021 GDP growth of 7.0%), Kenya (7.6%), Nigeria (2.5%) and Uganda
(6.3%) but downgraded Zambia (0.6%). Vaccine roll-out programmes in sub-Saharan Africa have
been slower than previously expected and remain a threat to the recovery across the region.

The group remains well capitalised and liquid.

Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act: Annual Compliance Report
In accordance with paragraph 16.20(g) and Appendix 1 to Section 11 of the JSE Listings
Requirements, notice is hereby given that the Standard Bank Group´s annual compliance report in
terms of section 13G(2) of the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act has been published
and is available on the group´s website at
https://www.standardbank.co.za/southafrica/personal/about-us.

The information contained in this announcement and that on which the operational performance
update is based has not been reviewed and reported on by the group's external auditors.

Johannesburg
23 April 2021


Lead sponsor
The Standard Bank of South Africa Limited

Independent sponsor
JP Morgan Equities South Africa Proprietary Limited

Namibian sponsor
Simonis Storm Securities (Proprietary) Limited

Date: 23-04-2021 11:57:00
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