BAKU
The state-owned International Bank of Azerbaijan (IBA) reported a net profit of 32.4 million manats ($19.1 million) in the first quarter of 2021, 36.5 percent less than in the same period last year.
The bank said that its assets increased by 2.2 percent year-on-year to 9.2 billion manats, while its liabilities rose by 2 percent to 7.8 billion manats.
IBA’s loan portfolio rose by 2.1 percent in the first quarter to 2.7 billion manats. Consumer loans increased by 4.5 percent to 626.652 million manats, business loans – by 1.9 percent to 1.4 billion manats, loans for real estate – by 0.4 percent to 688.806 million manats.
The bank’s deposits rose from the beginning of this year by 2.8 percent to 5.7 billion manats, while its capital rose by 3 percent to 1.4 billion manats.
Established in 1992, IBA, the largest bank in Azerbaijan by assets, said in 2019 that it had completed its recovery, paving a way for its planned privatisation.
In 2015, the country’s President Ilham Aliyev ordered IBA’s privatisation following a clean-up operation to get rid of distressed assets resulting from poor management. The bank’s former head, Jakhangir Hajiyev, was arrested on suspicion of fraud and misappropriation of public funds.
Aliyev has been very vocal about the need to end large-scale corruption in Azerbaijan, a promise he has enacted through a systematic wide-scale crackdown on graft, with continuing arrests of high level or former officials suspected of financial wrongdoing.
Oil-rich Azerbaijan has for years scored low marks on indexes involving corruption, and some government officials say the need for a house cleaning has been evident for some time, partially in order to improve its image among would be foreign investors, especially in the non-oil and gas export sector.
The finance ministry said that about $3 billion could have been misappropriated by Hajiyev, who denied the charges. He was convicted of fraud and embezzlement in 2016 and sentenced to 15 years in jail.
In 2017, IBA proposed a plan to restructure $3.3 billion of its debt and later received approval from creditors holding 93.9 percent of the affected debt.
The restructuring process has been completed with the support of the government, which holds more than 99 percent.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has said in 2019 it might be interested in buying a stake in IBA, but privatisation plans have been postponed several times and it’s not yet clear when the bank will be ready for sale.