Financial Results
Weaker Markets Cut Vontobel's AuM, Earnings
The firm pointed out that the AuM figure had fallen from what had been a record in 2021. It reiterated its strategy and talked of moves such as strengthening wealth management business in the US for clients seeking international exposures.
Vontobel, the Swiss
wealth management house, yesterday announced that its after-tax
profit fell to SFr229.8 million ($249.6 million) from SFr383.8
million in what was a record year of 2021. On a pre-tax basis,
profit fell to SFr267.4 million from SFr467 million, the
Zurich-listed firm said.
Slides to global equity and bond markets last year took their
toll, encouraging clients to sit on their hands rather than make
new investments, Vontobel said. As a result, clients pulled out
from the market, causing a 7.4 per cent outflow in the asset
management business, and on a net basis, last year saw an outflow
of 2.1 per cent in 2022 from the previous year.
Assets under management fell by 16 per cent to SFr204.4 billion,
it said.
In the wealth management segment, Vontobel said it recorded net
new money growth of 5.6 per cent, within its expected target
range.
The firm said it logged “satisfactory” returns on equity of 11.2
per cent, considering the tough market backdrop. Its Common
Equity Tier 1 ratio, a typical industry benchmark of capital
buffer, was 16.7 per cent at the end of last year. The firm
proposed to pay an unchanged dividend of SFr3 per share.
Vontobel said that a number of cost controls have been
introduced; adding that “gross cost reductions” of SFr65
million are expected to be made by the end of 2023. Operating
expense decreased by around SFr51 million to SFr1.018 billion
(2021: SFr1.068 billion), equating to a year-on-year fall of 5
per cent.
Outlining its strategy, Vontobel said it aims to “offer an even
more diversified range of future-proof investment solutions and
will therefore further enhance the quality of its investment
expertise in the coming years – especially in the area of equity
products, with a particular emphasis on ESG, Impact and
Thematics.” The firm said it will also form partnerships to
“give wealth management and digital investing clients access to
private market investments in the future – thus also providing
those clients with additional opportunities for
diversification.”
The firm said that it also wants to maintain its “strong growth”
in the US, and increase its institutional business with
global banks in the US and its business with North American
wealth management clients seeking an account in Switzerland for
diversification purposes.
“Vontobel anticipates that 2023 will be another challenging
period with numerous imponderables, even if markets recovered
somewhat in the first few weeks of the year. Geopolitical risks,
supply chain issues, high energy prices, inflation and a looming
recession will continue to impact the economy – and therefore
also investors – for the foreseeable future,” it added.