Reports

Societe Generale Q1 Profit Dips, Assets Down at Private Bank

Tom Burroughes Deputy Editor London 13 May 2008

Societe Generale Q1 Profit Dips, Assets Down at Private Bank

French banking group Société Genérale said its first quarter net profit fell to €1.096 billion ($1.703 billion) from €1.431 billion a year earlier as the impact of tougher markets and a recent financial scandal took its toll. The result beat analysts' estimates, however, and the Paris-based bank pledged to keep expanding in businesses and markets with strong potential. In its private banking arm, meanwhile, SocGen said it recorded a net inflow of €400 million during the quarter, slowing down from the inflow of €2.0 billion a year before. Assets under management at this business segment were €71.7 billion at end-March, compared with €76.9 billion at the end of last year. Operating expenses, meanwhile, were 14.8 per cent higher year-on-year, reflecting recruitment and other costs. Meanwhile, the corporate and investment banking business had write-downs of €1.179 billion that were offset by gains from one-off items. A Thomson Financial consensus forecast showed analysts had expected SocGen's net profit in the quarter to fall to €988 million. Some analysts had expected additional net provisions would total around €800 million. The bank said it will be able to keep expanding because its financial situation is solid after the €5.5 billion capital increase it launched after losing €4.9 billion amid the financial scandal. That loss involved unauthorised trading and the bank's decision to unwind related market positions as soon as it discovered the “exceptionally serious event,” at a time when financial markets were falling sharply. This occurred in January, but SocGen put the losses into last year's fourth quarter when accounting for them, Thomson Financial noted in a report. The bank said it had a Basel II Tier 1 capital ratio - a key measure of a bank’s financial strength - of 8.0 per cent.

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