Financial Results
Vontobel Aims At Sharper Profitability; Logs Strong H1 Result
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The Swiss firm, which operates in a number of regions, reported financial numbers for the first six months of this year today.
Zurich-listed Vontobel, which reported a 31
per cent year-on-year rise in profits for the first six months of
2018, raised its profitability targets for wealth management
today, aiming to tighten its cost/income ratio to 70 per cent
from 75 per cent.
Group net profit grew SFr132.7 million ($133.4 million), up from
SFr101.5 million in the first six months of 2017, it said
today.
The strongest driver of earnings came from asset management,
delivering pre-tax income of SFr92.5 million (first half of 2017:
SFr69.5 million). The combined wealth management arm, comprising
wealth management and the external asset managers business,
brought in a 46 per cent jump in pre-tax profit of SFr56.2
million. The financial products business generated another
pre-tax profit of SFr51.9 million (first half of 2017: SFr51.5
million).
The past few months have seen Vontobel acquire Notenstein La
Roche Privatbank, a move that led it to announce its aim to boost
wealth management profitability. This acquisition is an example
of the kind of industry consolidation affecting Swiss and other
countries’ wealth management markets. The 2020 profit targets
that apply to Vontobel as a whole have increased. It aims to
achieve a cost/income ratio of less than 72 per cent (previously
75 per cent) and a return on equity of more than 14 per cent
(previously 12 per cent).
Vontobel generated a net inflow of new money of SFr5.1 billion in
the first half of 2018. Client assets reached a new record level
of SFr253.6 billion, compared to SFr246.5 billion at the end of
2017.
The organisation said its capital buffer is strong: the BIS
common equity tier 1 ratio – a common measure of banks’ financial
strength - was 19.1 per cent, but contract 12 per cent after the
Notenstein acquisition.
Earlier in July, it was reported that
job cuts will happen as a result of the Notenstein
deal.