Financial Results
Third-Quarter Rises At ABN AMRO
The Dutch banking group, operating in a number of countries, reported a broadly stronger set of financial results for the latest quarter.
ABN AMRO, the
Netherlands-headquartered bank that provides services including
private banking, today said it logged a 2 per cent year-on-year
rise in profit for the third quarter of 2023, standing at €759
million ($810.7 million).
The bank achieved the result on a 2 per cent rise in operating
income of €2.211 billion; operating costs fell 2 per cent to
€1.228 billion.
The lender said income tax costs surged 55 per cent to €246
million.
ABN AMRO’s cost/income ratio narrowed to 55.5 per cent in
Q2 2023 from 58 per cent a year earlier. Return on average
equity slipped to 13.6 per cent from 13.9 per cent. Its Common
Equity Tier 1 ratio – a standard measure of a bank’s capital
buffer from shocks – was 15 per cent, down from 15.2 per
cent.
The bank said it had €21 million of impairment releases in Q3,
against impairments of €7 million a year before.
'In the third quarter, we once again delivered a strong financial
result with continued high net interest income (NII) compared
with last year, supported by high other income and impairment
releases,” Robert Swaak, chief executive, said. “The Dutch
economy is cooling down and uncertainty about the economy and
inflation remains, while I continue to be concerned about the
ongoing uncertainty in the geopolitical environment. Slowing
economic growth contrasts with our strong business momentum.
Demand for credit remains good and both our mortgage and
corporate loan books increased. Our market share in mortgages
increased to 15 per cent, while house prices are rising due to
improved affordability.”
“NII was 20 per cent higher than last year. Compared with the
previous quarter, NII was affected by deposit migration to higher
yielding products, a shift to other income, limited asset margin
pressure and lower results in trading activities. Costs were
higher than in Q2, mainly due to regulatory levies. We now expect
lower full-year costs for 2023, between €5.1 and €5.2 billion,
due to good cost control and a delay in investments mainly given
the tight labour market,” Swaak said.