Dubai Islamic Bank 1st Quarter 2021 Group Financial Results

Dubai Islamic Bank (DFM: DIB), the largest Islamic bank in the UAE and the second largest Islamic bank in the world, today announced its results for the period ending March 31, 2021.
First Quarter 2021 highlights:
- Total income reached AED 2.8 billion as the bank continued to display resilience in the given economic scenario.
- Profit before impairments rose to AED 1,614 million compared to AED 1,592 million in the same period last year.
- Group net profit of AED 853 million whilst lower YoY, excludes the one-off gain in Q1 2020 of AED 1 billion.
- Operating expenses of AED 612 million were lower by 27% year on year vs AED 839 million, driven by stringent cost discipline and materializing of substantial integration cost synergies.
- Cost to income ratio improves by 190 bps to 27.5% from 29.4% at YE2020, positioning the bank as the most efficient player in the sector.
- Impairment charges reduced by a significant margin signifying the success of the risk management strategy as well as improving market trend.
- Customer deposits increased to AED 214 billion from AED 206 billion, rising by 4% YTD and 7% YoY.
- Low cost deposit continue to remain strong with CASA at 40%.
- Strong liquidity position, with financing to deposit ratio at 91.7% and LCR of 127% is well above regulatory requirements under the TESS program.
- ROA at 1.2% and ROE at 9.6% remain robust given the challenging environment.
- Capitalization levels remained comfortably above minimum regulatory requirements, with CET1 at 12.3% and CAR at 17.1%.
- Strong year on year growth on key digital metrics.
- Mobile banking users - 20% YoY growth
- Mobile banking transactions – 43% YoY growth
- Internet banking users – 15% YoY growth
- Internet banking transactions – 57% YoY growth
Management’s comments for the first quarter ending March 2021:
His Excellency Mohammed Ibrahim Al Shaibani Director-General of His Highness The Ruler’s Court of Dubai and Chairman of Dubai Islamic Bank |
|
Abdulla Ali Obaid Al Hamli Board Member and Managing Director |
|
Dr. Adnan Chilwan Dubai Islamic Bank Group Chief Executive Officer |
|
Financial Review:
Income statement summary
AED millions |
Q1 2021 |
Q4 2020 |
QoQ % change |
Q1 2020 |
YoY % change |
Total Income |
2,847 |
3,251 |
(12%) |
3,559 |
(20%) |
Depositors’/ Sukuk holders share of profit |
(621) |
(715) |
(13%) |
(1,128) |
(45%) |
Net Operating revenue |
2,226 |
2,535 |
(12%) |
2,431 |
(8%) |
Operating expenses |
(612) |
(594) |
3% |
(839) |
(27%) |
Profit before impairment losses & income tax |
1,614 |
1,941 |
(17%) |
1,592 |
1% |
Impairment losses |
(751) |
(1,901) |
(60%) |
(1,483) |
(49%) |
Gain on bargain purchase |
- |
- |
- |
1,015 |
- |
Income tax |
(10) |
(5) |
100% |
(13) |
(29%) |
Net profit for the period |
853 |
35 |
2,337% |
1,111 |
(23%) |
Key Ratios (%) |
Q1 2021 |
Q4 2020 |
QoQ change (bps) |
Q1 2020 |
YoY change (bps) |
Net Profit Margin % |
2.5% |
2.6% |
(10 bps) |
3.00% |
(50 bps) |
Cost to income ratio % |
27.5% |
29.4% |
(190 bps) |
29.8% |
(230 bps) |
Return on average assets % |
1.2% |
1.2% |
- |
2.1% |
(90 bps) |
Return on average equity % |
9.6% |
10.4% |
(80 bps) |
16.0% |
(640 bps) |
Balance Sheet Summary
AED millions |
Mar 2021 |
Dec 2020 |
YTD % change |
Mar 2020 |
YoY % change |
Net Financing and Sukuk Investments |
232,098 |
232,044 |
- |
216,167 |
7% |
Interbank placement & CDs |
24,108 |
23,949 |
1% |
24,351 |
(1%) |
Equities & Properties Investments |
10,446 |
10,388 |
1% |
11,336 |
(8%) |
Cash & Other assets |
25,059 |
23,176 |
8% |
24,567 |
2% |
Total assets |
291,711 |
289,556 |
1% |
276,421 |
6% |
Customers’ deposits |
214,001 |
205,925 |
4% |
199,867 |
7% |
Sukuk financing instruments |
16,932 |
18,744 |
(10%) |
18,224 |
(7%) |
Total liabilities |
252,953 |
246,426 |
3% |
238,203 |
6% |
Shareholder Equity & Reserve |
27,898 |
28,606 |
(2%) |
27,225 |
2% |
Tier 1 Sukuk |
8,264 |
11,937 |
(31%) |
8,264 |
- |
Non-Controlling interest |
2,596 |
2,587 |
- |
2,729 |
(5%) |
Total liabilities and equity |
291,711 |
289,556 |
1% |
276,421 |
6% |
Key Ratios (%) |
Mar 2021 |
Dec 2020 |
QoQ change (bps) |
Mar 2020 |
YoY change (bps) |
Net Financing to customer deposit |
91.7% |
96.0% |
(430 bps) |
90% |
170 bps |
CET 1 ratio |
12.3% |
12.0% |
30 bps |
12.1% |
20 bps |
CAR |
17.1% |
18.5% |
(140 bps) |
16.5% |
60 bps |
NPF ratio |
6.2% |
5.7% |
50 bps |
4.3% |
190 bps |
Coverage ratio |
74.0% |
76.0% |
(200 bps) |
100.0% |
(2,600 bps) |
Operating Performance
The bank’s total income in the first quarter of 2021 reached AED 2,847 million, compared to AED 3,559 million in the same period last year, lower by 20% reflecting softer operating environment and muted domestic retail activity, in relation to the pre-covid quarter last year.
Net operating revenue during the quarter reached to AED 2,226 million supported by lower cost of fund during the period. Commission and fees continue to support income growth, rising by 3% to reach AED 425 million in the first quarter. Profit before net impairment charges increased YoY to AED 1,614 million from AED 1,592 million in 1Q 2020. The net profit of the bank for the first quarter of 2021 reached to AED 853 million, only marginally lower despite significant one-off gain of over AED 1 billion in the comparable quarter last year.
Net profit margin stands largely stable at 2.5% despite the low-rate environment.
Operating expenses declined to AED 612 million compared to AED 839 million in the same period of last year, an improvement of over 27%. The reduction in operating expenses is attributed to the integration synergies achieved as well as overall focus on cost management. The lower expenses have led to an improvement in cost to income ratio by nearly 2%, which now stands at 27.5% vs 29.4% at YE2020. This is expected to steadily improve, as synergies continue to materialize. Impairment charges were lower at AED 751 million, reflecting the bank’s prudent approach to underwriting risk given the current market conditions.
Balance Sheet Trends
Net financing & Sukuk investments remained stable at AED 232.0 billion for the first quarter of 2021, following some early repayments. Gross new consumer financing of nearly AED 3.3 billion achieved driven by a healthy growth in the mortgage and personal financing portfolio.
Customer deposits climbed strongly to AED 214.0 billion in the first quarter of 2021, from AED 205.9 billion at year-end 2020 reflecting a robust rise of 7% YoY and 4% YTD. CASA now stands at AED 84.9 billion representing about 40% of customer deposits. Net financing to deposit ratio stood at 92%, signifying ample liquidity whilst liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) remains comfortable at 127%, well above the minimum requirement set by the UAE Central Bank of 70%, as part of the TESS program.
Non-performing financing (NPF) ratio stood at 6.2%, with impaired financing at AED 12.9 billion vs AED 12.0 billion in end of 2020. Total provisions against financing assets were AED 8.8 billion with provision coverage including collateral at 102% as of March 2021. Cost of risk for the period was 101 bps.
Capital adequacy ratio stands at 17.1% and CET 1 ratio is stable at 12.3% during the first quarter of 2021.
Key business highlights:
- DIB successfully priced a landmark USD 500 million Perpetual Non-Call 5.5yrs Additional Tier 1 Sukuk with a
profit rate of 3.375% per annum. This transaction represents the lowest ever pricing achieved by a GCC bank (both conventional and Islamic) on an Additional Tier 1 instrument and the lowest ever on a USD AT1 Sukuk globally. Despite the volatility witnessed in credit markets during the past month on account of US Treasury rates, achieving this landmark success in the current scenario is testament to the bank’s strong credit profile and standing with international and regional investors.
- DIB acted as an arranger and bookrunner for the UK as it issued its second Sukuk for £500 million with a 5-year maturity. The issuance attracted strong demand from investors in the Middle East, Asia and the UK. The issuance served to bolster UK’s reputation as an open international financial centre. The transaction achieved the objectives of Her Majesty’s Treasury by more than doubling the issuance size of the debut 2014 Sukuk issuance and providing critical liquidity in the Islamic financial market. The issuance was sold to high-quality institutional investors around the world.
Background Information
Dubai Islamic Bank
Since its formation in 1975 as the world’s first full-service Islamic bank, Dubai Islamic Bank has established itself as the undisputed leader in its field, setting the standards for others to follow as the trend towards Islamic banking gathers momentum in the Arab world and internationally.