Financial Results
Credit Suisse's Private Banking, Wealth Arm Logs Strong Net Inflows; Income Rises

The private banking and wealth management arm of Switzerland’s second-largest bank logged net new assets of SFr8.8 billion in the third quarter of 2014, with strong growth from emerging markets, especially Asia.
The private banking and wealth management arm of Credit Suisse,
Switzerland’s second-largest bank, logged net new assets of
SFr8.8 billion ($9.22 billion) in the third quarter of 2014, with
strong growth from emerging markets, especially in the
Asia-Pacific region, it said today.
In the third quarter, the unit logged pre-tax income of SFr943
million and net revenue of SFr3.125 billion; in its strategic
businesses, private banking and wealth management logged pre-tax
income of SFr872 million and net revenue of SFr2.939 billion, it
said in a statement.
Compared to the same quarter of last year, pre-tax income
increased 8 per cent, mainly driven by lower operating expenses
reflecting continued cost efficiency gains. Net revenues were
stable compared to a year ago as higher transaction - and
performance-based revenues and improved other revenues were
offset by lower net interest income.
In its non-strategic businesses, private banking and wealth
management reported income before taxes of SFr71 million, which
included a SFr109 million gain on the sale of the domestic
private banking business booked in Germany. (That business has
been sold, as completed recently, to Bethmann, the German private
bank that is part of ABN AMRO.)
Cost ratio
In an encouraging move for the firm's private banking and wealth
arm, its cost/income ratio has fallen dramatically to 69 per cent
as at the end of the third quarter, compared with 123.8 per cent
in the second quarter. It is, however, a touch higher than in the
same quarter of last year, at 68.3 per cent, the statement
showed.
The Swiss bank said it had assets under management of SFr1.366.1
trillion, up by SFr36.4 billion compared to the end of the second
quarter of 2014, driven mainly by favourable foreign
exchange-related movements resulting from the appreciation of the
US dollar, positive market movements and net new assets.
Group results
For Credit Suisse as a whole, it logged pre-tax income of
SFr1.301 billion increased 89 per cent year-on-year, reflecting a
20 per cent increase in net revenues, partially offset by a 10
per cent increase in total operating expenses. In the strategic
businesses, net revenues increased 10 per cent to SFr 6.287
billion compared to a year ago, primarily reflecting higher net
revenues in investment banking and stable net revenues in private
banking and wealth management.
“We delivered a good performance, with our strategic businesses
generating returns on equity of 11 per cent for the quarter and
13 per cent for the first nine months of this year, Brady Dougan,
group CEO, said.
Commenting on the private banking and wealth unit, Dougan said:
“Our profitability benefitted from ongoing cost discipline,
although margins remain subdued and revenues continue to be
impacted by the low interest-rate environment. We generated net
new assets of SFr8.8 billion in our strategic businesses, driven
by strong growth in emerging markets, particularly in Asia
Pacific. This was partly offset by continued outflows from the
Western European cross-border business due to the importance that
we have placed on the regularization of our asset base. We saw
sustained growth in our ultra-high-net-worth individual lending
initiative and increased collaboration revenues across both
divisions, which we view as a competitive advantage, particularly
with this client segment.”