Financial Results
Estonia-Related Provisions Hit Danske's 2022 Results

The Copenhagen-based bank reached a settlement with US and Danish authorities in late 2022 linked to misconduct and failings at its former Estonia branch.
Danske Bank
yesterday reported a net loss in 2022 of DKK5.068 billion ($742
million), sliding from a profit of DKK12.92 billion a year
earlier as net fee and trading income fell and operating costs
rose.
The main source of the loss was caused by the Copenhagen-based
lender making a DKK13.8 billion provision to clear up legacy
issues relating to its Estonia business. It also booked a
goodwill impairment charge of DKK1.63 billion, contrasting with
no such charge in the preceding year.
“Throughout 2022, our business model delivered a reinforced
commercial momentum, and net interest income improved, driven
primarily by deposit repricing initiatives, positive trends in
volumes and higher interest rates. Fee income was resilient,
although weakening towards the end of the year, with especially
activity-driven fees holding up well and good customer demand for
our risk advisory solutions,” the bank said in its 2022 annual
report.
“While total costs continued to be impacted by high remediation
costs, given our efforts to close legacy issues, we saw
underlying costs continuing to trend lower as our efforts to make
Danske Bank more efficient also continued to result in a decrease
in the number of FTEs [full-time equivalent employees].”
Capital
For 2022, Danske’s capital ratio was 22.1 per cent and its Common
Equity Tier 1 ratio – a standard benchmark of a bank’s capital
buffer – was 17.8 per cent, against 22.4 per cent and 17.7 per
cent, respectively, at the end of 2021.
In view of the Estonia-related provision (as mentioned above),
Danske’s board of directors have proposed not to pay a dividend
for 2022.
“Danske Bank’s dividend policy remains unchanged, targeting a
dividend of 40 to 60 per cent of net profit. Danske Bank has
strong capital and liquidity positions, and the board of
directors remains committed to our capital distribution policy,”
it said.
Baltic misadventures
On 16 December 2022 Danske
reached final coordinated resolutions with the US Department
of Justice, the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the
Danish Special Crime Unit. This followed probes into failings and
misconduct relating to the non-resident portfolio at Danske
Bank’s former Estonia branch. Late last year, the bank was hit in
the US and Denmark with a $2.06 billion fine, confiscation and
forfeiture settlement over dirty money in Estonia. In its
statement last December, Danske said it fully accepted the
findings and unreservedly apologised. This contrasts with some
settlements where a bank might issue a statement hedging its
level of culpability.
The Baltic scandal has hung like a cloud over Danske – and the
wider European banking industry – for a decade or more and stems
from outflows of Russia-based money via Estonia and other
countries near the former Soviet Union.