Coop Bank's deposit growth outpaces competitors amid profit lag

The Cooperative Bank of Oromia saw strong deposit growth outpacing competitors in the 2024/25 financial year. However, net profit dipped slightly to 1.56 billion birr from 1.61 billion birr the prior year, highlighting challenges in profitability.

The Cooperative Bank of Oromia, known as Coop Bank, navigated the 2024/25 financial year with robust deposit inflows that outpaced its competitors, riding a liquidity wave in Ethiopia's banking sector. Yet, this balance-sheet expansion did not translate into stronger profits, as expenses rose faster than income. Net profit stood at 1.56 billion birr, a slight decrease from 1.61 billion birr in the previous year. Profit before tax fell to 1.98 billion birr, marking a 21.3 percent decline. Earnings per share for shareholders dropped from 15 percent to 14 percent, underscoring the difficulties in converting growth into profitability amid rising costs. This performance reflects broader challenges in the sector, where liquidity surges have not always bolstered bottom lines. The bank's results, reported on January 10, 2026, by Nahom Ayele, highlight an imbalance between scale and earnings in Oromia's financial landscape.

Makala yanayohusiana

Amhara Bank reported a pre-tax profit of 1.15 billion birr in the first five months of the current fiscal year, reversing a previous loss. This turnaround stems from strategic efforts in wealth accumulation, digital transformation, and careful credit management.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Global Bank Ethiopia has achieved the National Bank's minimum capital requirement of five billion birr through new share sales and subscriptions. Total revenue increased to 5.56 billion birr from 4.05 billion birr the previous year, reflecting robust financial performance. The growth was primarily fueled by interest income from loans.

One month after initial appreciation driven by central bank efforts, the Ethiopian birr continues to hold steady, with commercial banks aligning their strategies to support currency resilience, according to Addis Fortune.

Imeripotiwa na AI

A new draft law in Ethiopia allows non-member investors to acquire up to 10% of a cooperative's shares, entitling them to dividends but barring them from voting or leadership roles. The Ethiopian Cooperative Commission, overseeing over 89,000 primary cooperatives, views this as a way to attract fresh capital while safeguarding core governance. This change marks a shift for cooperatives traditionally reliant on member funding.

Jumapili, 1. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 06:27:06

Authority orders Ethio telecom to cut rental prices for Safaricom

Jumamosi, 31. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 06:51:06

Egyptian bank assets rise to EGP 24.8trn on household deposit growth

Jumatano, 21. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 10:16:59

Ahadu Bank profits signal resilience but capital falls short

Jumamosi, 10. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 05:40:33

Akobo Minerals reports first profit, targets higher production by 2026

Jumatano, 7. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 10:15:05

National Bank of Ethiopia scraps 7% deposit interest rate floor

Ijumaa, 2. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 14:37:43

Abay Bank surges on currency gains and rapid growth

Jumatano, 31. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 07:03:17

Coopi Ethiopia invites proposals for external audit service

Jumatatu, 29. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 01:22:24

Berhan Bank outpaces peers with measured gains

Jumamosi, 27. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 15:35:04

Egyptian banks record EGP 433.8bn net profits in Q3 2025

Ijumaa, 12. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 05:58:31

Bank of Abyssinia reaches key financial milestone

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa