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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2023
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loan ‘Non-controllable’ cost surge Mortgage approvals hit 4-andblocks bank matching 2022 a-half year low By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net COMMONWEALTH Bank believes it would have come close to matching 2022’s “extraordinary” nine-month profitability had it not been for $3m in new Business Licence fees and utility costs “more than doubling”. Tangela Albury, the BISX-listed lender’s vice-president and chief financial officer, told Tribune Business that these increases - together with a 25 percent year-over-year jump in general insurance costs - are “becoming an increasingly more prominent contributor” to growth in general and administrative expenses (G&A) which rose by over $6.5m during the first nine months of 2023. And, in written replies to this newspaper’s questions,
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t $PNNPOXFBMUI T N #VTJOFTT -JDFODF IJU t 4FU UP CFBU UBSHFUT BT JOTVSBODF VQ t %FQPTJU *OTVSBODF QSFNJVNT UP AEPVCMF JO A she disclosed that such costs will likely further rise in 2024 due to the “doubling” in premiums that Commonwealth Bank and its fellow commercial lenders will have to pay to the Deposit Insurance Corporation. This is the entity that fully insures deposits up to a maximum $50,000 in the event of bank or credit union failure While Commonwealth Bank’s profits for the nine months to end-September 2023 were down year-overyear by almost 14 percent,
standing at $50.3m compared to $58.2m, the latter figure benefited heavily from the onetime $21.679m reversal of COVID-related loan loss provisions as borrowers returned to work and were able to service their obligations once again. The bank enjoyed just a $2.596m reversal of such provisions in 2023 by comparison, and Ms Albury said it had been buoyed by the fact this year’s results have been driven by “organic growth of our
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
TANGELA ALBURY core business” rather than one-time, non-recurring reversals. “The nine months of 2023 have shown organic growth of our core business, impairment reversals contributing only $3m to the bank’s profitability compared to $22m for the same period in 2022, and yet the net profits as of September 2023 are only $8m below that of
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Chamber chief: Cost of living ‘is out of control’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net ABACO’S Chamber of Commerce president says the cost of living is “getting out of control” as she warned the island can absorb no further hikes following the summer’s “exorbitant” light bills. Daphne DeGregory Miaoulis told Tribune Business that protections such as home and health insurance “are not affordable for the average person any more” as she warned that Abaconians “cannot afford any more increases” when it comes to the general level of prices and cost of imports.
DAPHNE DEGREGORY MIAOULIS She recalled how a recent rebuilding project at her Abaco Neem farm exceeded the budgeted costs by 20 percent largely due to the increased cost of imported building materials
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RBC blocked from twice seeking default damages By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net ROYAL Bank of Canada (RBC) has been blocked from pursuing damages twice over the same delinquent loan that a Bahamian jitney operator first defaulted on more than 12 years ago. The Canadian-owned bank, almost 11 years after securing a $600,000-plus default judgment against Arthur Deal and Deal’s Bus Service, initiated fresh litigation against the duo again seeking “judgment for the sums outstanding under” the original mortgage.
The previous action, and default judgment, was not disclosed to the Supreme Court by RBC and its attorneys when they launched their new claim on June 29, 2022. That sought declarations and Orders for a receiver/manager to be appointed over the mortgaged property upon which Deal’s loan was secured, while giving the bank the power to take possession and sell it to satisfy the alleged outstanding loan sum. However, Justice Carla Card-Stubbs, in a November 16, 2023, verdict ruled that the specific demand for “judgment for the sums
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MORTGAGE loan approvals have slumped to their lowest level in fourand-a-half years, it has been revealed, with almost one in four applications rejected because borrowers have a 50 percent debt service ratio. The Central Bank’s full Lending Conditions Survey for the 2023 first half, released on Friday, reveals that less than one third or fewer than one of every three - out of a total 1,104 applicants were approved for a mortgage loan during the six months to end-June. And survey data showed that the 32.2 percent approval ratio is the lowest since the 2019 first half, which represented a period prior to both Hurricane Dorian and the COVID-19 pandemic. The 52.6 percent
and 52.7 percent mortgage approvals ratio for the 2019 first and second half, respectively, represent the high points of the past fourand-a-half years. The approval rate slumped in the 2021 calendar second half, dropping from 51.5 percent for the first six months to 39.4 percent and continuing a steady downward slide ever since. While the economic fall-out from COVID is likely to be held at least partially responsible, the Central Bank has since relaxed its lending guidelines by allowing its bank licensees to extend credit worth up to 50 percent of a borrower’s income. Previous guidelines have set this limit at 40-45 percent, but the regulator’s lending survey reveals that the reason more than onethird - or one in every three
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