LBP president and chief executive officer Gary B. Teves attributed the improvement in net income to the increase in interest from loans and investments.
Its non-performing loans (NPL) in end-February stood at P19.5 billion, lower than the P20.7 billion in February last year.
The NPL ratio will drop to nine percent or lower after the booking of last years successful sale of non-performing assets worth P13.5 billion under the Special Purpose Assets Vehicle (SPAV) Law.
The government financial institution recorded a net income of P2.25 billion last year, or 12 percent higher than the P2 billion in 2003.
"Weve set another record by exceeding targets for four years in a row," Teves said. In 2001, net income hit P1.5 billion increasing to P1.65 billion in 2002.
The LBP ranked third among the commercial banks in deposits, which grew by 16 percent from P185.2 billion in 2003 to P214.9 billion in 2004.
In terms of assets, it placed fourth with an eight-percent increase from P266 billion to P287 billion. In terms of loans and capital, it ranked fifth with P133 billion and P21 billion, respectively. Ted Torres