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2024-08-13 12:00:00 CEST 2024-08-13 12:00:03 CEST REGULATED INFORMATION Kuntarahoitus Oy - Half Year financial reportMuniFin Group's Half Year Report January-June 2024: MuniFin's business operations remained strong during the first half of the yearMuniFin Group’s Half Year Report January–June 2024: MuniFin’s business operations remained strong during the first half of the year
This release is a summary of MuniFin Group’s Half Year Report published on 13 August 2024. The complete Half Year Report with tables is attached to this release and available at www.kuntarahoitus.fi/en. MuniFin Group has published its Pillar III Half Year Disclosure Report 2024 in accordance with Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 and Directive 2013/36/EU. The report is available at www.kuntarahoitus.fi/en.
Comparison figures deriving from the income statement and figures describing the change during the reporting period are based on figures reported for the corresponding period in 2023. Comparison figures deriving from the balance sheet and other cross-sectional items are based on the figures of 31 December 2023 unless otherwise stated. * Alternative performance measure President and CEO of MuniFin, Esa Kallio: ”The first half of 2024 was marked by continued economic uncertainty and inflation concerns. The challenges in the operating environment did not affect MuniFin’s performance, and we were able to successfully carry out our core mandate of ensuring the availability of affordable financing for our customers. Municipal finances are expected to deteriorate in 2024 as temporary non-recurring benefits that strengthened the municipal finances fade out. With tax income growing more slowly than expected and operating margins decreasing markedly, municipalities are not short of financial challenges. In the largest growth centres, municipal investment levels have remained high, which has helped soften the blow from the sharp fall in private investments. In the first half of the year, the demand for financing in municipalities was slightly lower than expected. We finance wellbeing services counties within the yearly EUR 400 million limit set for us by the Municipal Guarantee Board. In a survey conducted by us, wellbeing services counties’ CFOs expressed their concern over the limit’s negative effects on the price and availability of financing. After the first 18 months of operations, the wellbeing services counties are in a difficult financial position. In the affordable social housing sector, financing needs were high. Projects started in the first half of the year helped breathe some new life into the struggling construction sector. The past few years’ rise in construction costs and interest expenses has caused problems with some housing organisations, especially small organisations operating in areas with declining population. The demand for financing in the affordable housing sector was boosted by construction costs levelling out, the Housing Finance and Development Centre of Finland (Ara) being able to grant more government subsidies and speed up application processing, and the Finnish Government deciding to remove subsidies given to new right-of-occupancy homes by the end of 2025. The demand for sustainable finance remained strong in the first half of the year and developed in the desired direction overall. In construction, the emphasis should be placed increasingly on the lifecycle costs of projects: even if sustainable solutions cost more at the construction stage, they will pay themselves back through lower operating costs. Finland’s regulation on state-subsidised housing production and the affordable social housing production system currently do not adequately account for this. In the capital markets, the situation remained stable in the first half of the year despite the prevailing geopolitical tensions. Predicted interest rate cuts boosted investor demand. Our new funding amounted to about EUR 5 billion, which constitutes more than half of our target amount for 2024. In line with our revised strategy from 2023, we continue to focus even more decidedly on our core mandate: ensuring the availability of affordable financing. In 2024, we have adjusted our pricing to reflect this. And yet again, even in these uncertain times, we have been able to ensure that our customers have access to affordable financing despite the changing market conditions.” Key Figures (Group):
* Alternative performance measure. ** Change in ratio. MUNICIPALITY FINANCE PLC Further information: Esa Kallio Harri Luhtala MuniFin (Municipality Finance Plc) is one of Finland’s largest credit institutions. The company is owned by Finnish municipalities, the public sector pension fund Keva and the Republic of Finland. The Group’s balance sheet totals over EUR 50 billion. MuniFin’s customers include municipalities, joint municipal authorities, wellbeing services counties, corporate entities under their control, and non-profit organisations nominated by the Housing Finance and Development Centre of Finland (ARA). Lending is used for environmentally and socially responsible investment targets such as public transportation, sustainable buildings, hospitals and healthcare centres, schools and day care centres, and homes for people with special needs. MuniFin’s customers are domestic, but the company operates in a completely global business environment. The company is an active Finnish bond issuer in international capital markets and the first Finnish green and social bond issuer. The funding is exclusively guaranteed by the Municipal Guarantee Board. Read more: www.kuntarahoitus.fi/en Attachment |
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