Kuwait's Dar sees full year profit rise despite weak Q2
by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on Tuesday, 05 August 2008
Kuwait's Investment Dar, expects a profit rise in 2008 despite a slight second-quarter decline, it said on Tuesday, as the Islamic bank expands by setting up units in London and Dubai.
Shares of Dar, which owns half of British luxury carmaker Aston Martin, jumped as much as 5 percent after it said second-quarter net profit eased by 0.3 percent to 50.7 million dinars ($190.6 million).
This topped the 42.80 million dinars Global Investment House had forecast in a survey by newswire Reuters. In the same period last year Dar had made a profit of 48.7 million dinars by selling a company.
Executive Vice-President Amr Abou El-Seoud told Reuters that profit was driven by Dar's main operations, but did not elaborate.
Apart from Aston Martin, Dar has set up an Islamic bank in Bahrain, is a major shareholder in Kuwait's Boubyan Bank and like its main rival Kuwait Projects Co (KIPCO) owns stakes in companies around the Middle East.
"Actually, Dar has done very well. They didn't sell anything substantial this quarter," said Bikash Rout, a financial analyst at Global.
"Their own revenue stream is becoming robust." Assets under management grew to 1.44 billion dinars at the end of June, up 9.1 percent from the previous quarter.
"We don't expect to have a decline by year-end. The overall performance is expected to be growth," El-Seoud said. He declined to give a precise 2008 outlook for the group, which invests according to Islamic law.
Like bigger local rival KIPCO, which had assets of 4.83 billion dinars at the end of June, Dar is tapping growth in other markets to diversify its revenue sources.
Dar is setting up an Islamic bank in London to offer advisory services which could start operation as early as October.
"We are still on track, we are in the very final [stage] for that and I think... by the beginning of the fourth quarter we will be fully operational," he said, adding the startup capital would be about 50 million pounds ($97.8 million).
Dar is also in talks to set an investment bank in Dubai by the fourth quarter of this year, he said.
The London lender would serve clients in Europe and the United States interested in businesses complying with Islamic law, which bans interest, while the Dubai bank would focus on Asia and North Africa, Dar said in a statement.
Dar also owns a 12.5 percent stake in Syria's Cham Bank which it is close to selling to Commercial Bank of Kuwait, an official at Dar told Reuters last month.
Dar is not looking to buy a stake in German tyre-to-brakes firm Continental which is trying to fend off a hostile bid by German ball-bearing firm Schaeffler. "We have not considered Continental as a possible deal for Dar," El-Seoud said.
Dar's shareholders' equity increased 6.5 percent to 406.83 million dinars in the first half from a year earlier.
Earnings per share were 53.62 fils in the second quarter, compared with 53.86 fils in the same period a year earlier. There are 1,000 fils to the dinar.
Net income in the first half came in at 95.95 million dinars, including 15.04 million of unrealised profit on investments, it said. The stock closed at 820 fils, up 2.5 percent. (Reuters)
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