Cititrust targets 50% growth in N36b balance sheet

cititrust-targets-50-growth-in-n36b-balance-sheet

Cititrust Financial Services ‘ N36 billion balance sheet size will be be up by 50 per cent by year-end, its Country Chief Executive Officer, Peter Ikechukwu, has said.

Speaking during a media parley in Lagos, he said  the bank is also looking at growing its lending powers, and its risk asset portfolio of about N12 billion by another 50 per cent by the end of this year.

On the rising impact of Financial technology (Fintech) firms, he said: “The truth of the matter is that fintech is the way, and any business that is not positioned for that right will experience a dramatic nosedive. We are not there yet, but we are putting the virtual processes in place.

“The platforms are being built as we speak, the engagement with vendors is actually in top gear. So, between now and the end of the year, we should be playing actively in that space because the truth is, it is an investment that cannot go wrong. Plans are seriously in motion and before the end of the year, we will be active in that space.”

On the investment firm’s listing plan, Ikechukwu said the firm had made arrangements to list by introduction on the nation’s bourse before the end of the second quarter.

He said the company was also making plans to migrate Living Trust Mortgage Bank, which is listed on the Exchange, from a state-licenced mortgage bank to a national-mortgage bank.

 

“We are coming up with a programme through our Cititrust Academy on April 15, where people can learn the basics of business and be able to impact their operational lives as they move on.

We expect that by mid next year, all our subsidiaries will be top industry players in the space where they play, because we believe that money is made at the top,” he said.

 

 

Speaking on the company’s loan exposure, he said it was minimal and blow the five per cent  regulatory requirement of .

He attributed the reason for high non-performing loans to lack of effective monitoring from the point of disbursement.

 

“If you don’t monitor these loans properly, you will discover that even the customer that has the capacity to pay, will not pay.

 

“When proper structures are on ground, the monies will come back. When the monitoring is there, things will not go bad. The structure of the loan is another thing that should be looked at. Once all these dynamics are properly understood, the exposure will be minimal,” he said.

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