Reports
Net Profit Rises Sharply At ABN AMRO In Q1

The banking group, which last year sold off its Asia private bank, has seen profits surge by almost a third.
ABN AMRO, the
Netherlands-listed lender that sold its Asian private bank last
year, has logged a net profit of €615 million ($682 million) net
profit for the first quarter of 2017, surging by 30 per cent on a
year earlier.
Operating income was €2.246 billion in Q1, from €1.971 billion a
year earlier.
As a measure of improved margins, the bank said its cost/income
ratio was 60.2 per cent in the first quarter, narrowing from 66.9
per cent a year earlier.
"We have been able to offset the low and negative rate
environment and increase net interest income by growing all major
loan books (mortgages, SME and corporate loans) and lowering
deposit rates. Fees were stable and other operating income was
higher," Kees van Dijkhuizen, chief executive, said.
In May last year, Liechtenstein-headquartered LGT completed the acquisition of
ABN AMRO’s private banking business in Hong Kong, Singapore and
Dubai, part of a process of merger and acquisition activity in
the Asian region.