Financial Results
Group Profits Surge At LGT As Income Rises, Costs Slip
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The private bank logged SFr5.9 billion of asset inflows, although at the half-way point of the year its total AuM slipped, affected by foreign exchange movements, particularly the fall of the dollar.
Liechtenstein-headquartered LGT yesterday said it logged group
profit of SFr240.6 million ($297.7 million) in the first six
months of 2025, rising 38 per cent on a year ago, with operating
income rising 10 per cent year-on-year to SFr1.42 billion.
The bank said expenses rose “moderately” over the reporting
period.
Assets under management stood at SFr359.6 billion as at the end
of June, down 2 per cent from the end of 2024; net
inflows were SFr5.9 billion, equating to an annualised
inflow rate of 3.2 per cent, LGT said in a statement yesterday.
The 2 per cent AuM decline was caused by negative currency
effects, particularly against the dollar, while market and
investment performance made a positive contribution to the
result. The H1 2025 figure for LGT’s assets under management also
includes SFr2.9 billion from the acquisition of Commonwealth Bank
of Australia’s Private Advice business, it said.
Income from services – by far LGT’s largest revenue stream – rose
10 per cent on the back of higher client activity, while net
interest income declined 17 per cent. Income from trading
activities and other operating income grew 35 per cent, mainly
driven by increased foreign exchange transactions.
Business and office costs fell 1 per cent year-on-year to
SFr222.8 million in the first half of 2025, as development and
expansion projects from recent years transitioned into a
consolidation phase. Personnel expenses rose 11 per cent to
SFr848.4 million. The number of employees stood at 6106 as at 30
June 2025 (end of 2024: 6049), including 38 employees from the
acquisition of Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s Private Advice
business, which was announced in November 2024 and completed, as
planned, in mid-2025.
Depreciation, amortisation and provisions fell 6 per cent to
SFr64.2 million.
The cost-income ratio was 75.7 per cent as at the end of June
2025, down from 78.0 per cent at year-end 2024.
LGT had a Common Equity Tier 1 ratio – a common measure of a
bank’s capital strength – of 18.5 per cent as at the end of
the first half of 2025 and has a high level of liquidity.
Appointment
The firm said that Mika Kastenholz – previously head of products
and services and head of Asia-Pacific investment – has been
appointed global head of investment solutions and will join the
senior management board of LGT Private Banking, subject to
regulatory approval.