Posted on: Monday, July 23, 2001
Bankoh profits soar in quarter
By Frank Cho
Advertiser Staff Writer
Bank of Hawaii said second-quarter profits nearly tripled from a year ago as it eliminated bad loans and sold its California subsidiary and other assets as part of a plan to focus business on Hawai'i.
Parent company Pacific Century Financial Corp. reported today that net income for the three months ended June 30 was $26.7 million, or 32 cents a share, compared with $6.7 million, or 8 cents a share, in the 2000 quarter.
Still, the bank's earnings fell short of analysts' estimate of 36 cents a share, and its stock fell 2 percent to close at $24.90 in heavy trading of 1.2 million shares.
The bank said it will buy back as much as $70 million worth of shares, making existing shares more valuable.
Adjusted for one-time gains and other restructuring costs, the bank's core earnings per share for the quarter were 37 cents, on net income of $30.9 million.
"From an asset quality standpoint, they do appear to have turned the corner," said Jim Bradshaw, a Portland, Ore.-based analyst with D.A. Davidson.
The bank set aside about $6 million for credit losses, down from about $83 million in the year-ago quarter. "That is the prime driver for the improved quarter," said Allan Landon, vice chairman and chief financial officer.
For the first six months, net income of $60.4 million was up 30 percent from the year-ago figure of $46.5 million. Total assets were $12.8 billion, which the company said was on track with reductions in its strategic plan.
The board declared a quarterly cash dividend of 18 cents per share on outstanding shares, payable Sept. 17 to shareholders of record as of Aug. 24.
Frank Cho can be reached at 525-8088, or fcho@honoluluadvertiser.com.