Absa Bank Kenya has announced a final dividend of KSh 1.85, bringing the total 2025 dividend to KSh 2.05 per share, up 17% year on year, including the KSh 0.20 interim dividend. The dividend, amounting to KSh 10,048,342,000.00, will be paid on 19th May 2026 to shareholders on record as of 30th April 2026.
At the current price of KSh 32.05, this implies a dividend yield of 6.4% and a payout ratio of 49% based on 2025 earnings per share of KSh 4.22. The combination of yield, growth, and moderate payout signals management confidence and a sustainable approach to returning capital to shareholders.
Absa Bank Kenya Performance Highlights
Absa Kenya’s profit after tax rose 10% to KSh 22.9Bn, despite pressures on core income. The key drivers behind this performance were a 31% reduction in loan loss provisions and lower operating expenses, which more than offset a 6% decline in net interest income and a 2% drop in operating income to KSh 61.4Bn.
Total assets expanded 6% to KSh 537.6Bn, reflecting steady lending and franchise growth despite a challenging income environment.
The story here is one of discipline over expansion — cost control and credit quality management compensated for margin pressures and slightly weaker revenue.
Investor Takeaways
For income-focused investors, Absa’s 2025 results are reassuring. The 17% dividend increase on a 49% payout ratio delivers both a competitive yield (6.4%) and confidence in the bank’s capital strength.
Revenue softness signals caution — margins and net interest income will need to stabilize in 2026 to sustain growth. But the combination of profit growth, controlled costs, improved credit quality, and strong dividends paints a picture of defensive resilience.
In short, Absa Kenya remains a reliable dividend payer with steady fundamentals, appealing to investors seeking income with moderate risk.
Absa Bank Kenya Directors’ Comments
In a statement from Absa Bank Kenya Directors, net profit grew by 10% year-on-year to KSh. 22.9 billion, supporting sustainable returns on equity of 22.8%. Revenue closed the year at KSh. 61.4 billion, a 2% decline from last year. This decline is attributed to a reduction in interest rates, although it was offset by better cost of funds management. Net interest income declined by 6%, while non-interest income grew by 12% to KSh. 18.1 billion, supported by our payments business.
In the year, total assets grew by 6% to KSh. 537.6 billion, underscoring the resilience of our balance sheet. Customer deposits increased to KSh. 372.4 billion, while customer assets increased to KSh. 312.2 billion, reflecting strong customer engagements and depth of relationships.
In Private and Personal Banking, the lender launched Absa Wealth, revamped its Prestige offering, and strengthened Personal Banking value proposition with new branches and a significant expansion of its Agency Banking footprint to 8,060 outlets.
In Business Banking, Absa Bank Kenya expanded its Shariah-compliant offerings under the La Riba brand as the lender marked 20 years of Islamic Banking.
Additionally, the bank advanced SME capacity-building through strategic international partnerships, scaled its ecosystem of anchor clients, and introduced the Business Credit Card.
In Corporate Bank, the lender executed landmark transactions, including a KSh 16 billion Medium Term Note, advisory on major corporate acquisitions, and a US$156 million solar securitisation, underscoring its ability to structure complex, high-impact deals.
The Bank also strengthened its digital payments and transactions capabilities, gaining strong market share gain in the first year, while assets under custody surpassed KSh 69 billion.
The lender’s Global Markets business achieved leading position in forex revenues, with a 15% market share, supported by diversified income lines.
Absa Bank Kenya also led the dual listing of the Satrix MSCI World ETF on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, while delivering strong performance across risk-management products and executed major rights issue in the capital markets. The lender’s continued investment in customer-focused transformation and disciplined cost management delivered a 5% reduction in operating expenses to KSh 22.4 billion.
Impairment charges improved significantly by 32% to KSh 6.2 billion, reflecting prudent credit-risk management and a healthier portfolio with adequate coverage ratios.
ALSO READ: Absa Bank Kenya Profit Climbs 10% on Lower Loan-Loss Provisions, Higher Fees
Leave a comment