Financial Results
ABN AMRO Reports Rise In Group Profit; Private Bank Profit Falls On Higher Expenses
The Europe-headquartered bank, which operates in regions including Asia, reported a broadly positive set of figures for the third quarter. However, expenses hit private banking profit for the quarter when set against a year ago.
Netherlands-headquartered ABN AMRO, which recently signalled it is shortly to re-enter full private ownership when the government sells its stake via an IPO, yesterday reported an underlying profit of €509 million ($548.2 million) for the three months to end-September, a 13 per cent year-on-year increase.
The bank operates in a number of regions including Asia-Pacific.
The underlying profit excludes special items.
Operating income rose 5 per cent year-on-year to €2.109 billion; operating expenses rose 8 per cent to €1.234 billion, the bank said in a statement.
Across the bank, the cost/income ratio was 59 per cent, up from 57 per cent a year earlier.
Private banking
At the private banking side of the business, the underlying
profit for the third quarter fell 43 per cent year-on-year
to €28 million. Net interest income in Q3 fell 1 per cent
year-on-year to €147 million; net fee and commission income rose
7 per cent to €149 million; total operating income rose 3 per
cent to €314 million.
In the first nine months of 2015, private banking’s underlying profit advanced €43 million year-on-year to €188 million. The increase was mainly driven by higher operating income and lower loan impairments, partly offset by higher expenses.
The cost/income ratio for private banking "increased significantly" to 86 per cent in the third quarter of 2015, the bank said.
Client assets decreased by €14.8 billion in the third quarter to €191.3 billion at 30 September 2015. The decrease was due mainly to lower market performance as a result of the negative sentiment on the stock markets. France contributed €29 billion and Germany contributed €33 billion to the international client assets in Q3 2015.
IPO
The bank is gearing up to float on the stock exchange in one of
the largest European IPOs since the financial crisis,
which saw it bailed out by the Dutch state in October 2008.
The Netherlands government intends to sell shares as soon as the
final quarter of this year. The government has said it may sell
as much as 30 per cent of ABN AMRO in 2015.
The bank and government have been thought to be considering a share float for some time, conditional on the state of the market and general readiness of the bank.
ABN AMRO’s private bank is a significant player and, among moves in recent years, bought the onshore German private banking business - Bethmann - of Credit Suisse, completing the purchase in 2014. Bank executives told WealthBriefing last year that plans to float the whole Dutch group were on track. Such a move, if or when it goes ahead, will see it gain a march on the UK’s Royal Bank of Scotland, which was nationalised by the UK government around the same time amid the financial crisis.