Financial Results
Profits Surge At EFG International, Shares Rise

Financial results from the Swiss firm cheered investors – shares gained yesterday – and it was able to point to higher profits, broadly steady costs and net inflows. The stronger Swiss franc did, however, dent the AuM result slightly.
EFG
International, the Zurich-listed private bank and wealth
management group that operates in several regions, yesterday
reported a rise in net profit of SFr303.2 million ($344.4
million), up from SFr202.4 million a year ago. Operating income
rose to SFr1.43 billion from SFr1.27 billion.
Operating expenses rose to SFr1.057 billion from SFr975
million.
The widening in profit, among other factors, narrowed the
cost/income ratio to 73 per cent from 76 per cent a year earlier.
The number of EFG full-time staff rose to 3,025 from 2,828.
Investors appeared to cheer the figures: Shares in EFG were up
about 5.5 per cent around 13:00 Swiss time yesterday, at SFr12.48
per share. Prices are up by about 18 per cent so far this
year.
Net new assets at the end of 2023 totalled SFr6.2 billion,
corresponding to a net new asset growth rate of 4.4 per cent,
which is within EFG’s target range of 4 to 6 per cent. EFG said
client relationship officers (CROs) who joined the firm last year
“contributed significantly” to total net new assets.
The Asia-Pacific region recorded net new assets of SFr3.7 billion
in 2023, with strong performance across all locations and with
new CROs already contributing significantly to these strong
inflows. The Continental Europe and Middle East region generated
SFr2.9 billion of net new assets, followed by the Latin America
region with SFr1.7 billion and the UK region with SFr200 million.
The Switzerland and Italy region recorded SFr1.5 billion of
outflows, due to de-risking and deleveraging in a volatile market
environment.
Investment solutions and wealth solutions experienced total
outflows of SFr800 million, EFG said.
Revenue-generating assets under management totalled SFr142.2
billion at the end of 2023, compared with SFr143.1 billion at the
end of 2022. This marginal decrease stems from negative foreign
exchange impacts of SFr10.2 billion due to the strengthening of
the Swiss franc, especially in the final quarter of 2023, which
offset net new assets of SFr6.2 billion and positive market
performance of SFr4.7 billion.
“Our record profit and our strong operational performance
demonstrate that we are delivering on our strategy more rapidly
than originally envisaged, which puts us a year ahead of plan.
This strong start to the 2023 to 2025 strategic cycle is a
testament to our well-diversified business model and the great
commitment of our colleagues as we continue to navigate a
volatile operating environment with many unforeseen developments
that caused disruption both in Switzerland and abroad,” Giorgio
Pradelli, CEO of EFG International, said.
“We made strategic investments in EFG’s future growth in 2023 by
hiring a significant number of new client relationship officers
as we expanded our talent base to further strengthen our offering
and reach,” he said.
Return on tangible equity rose to 18.2 per cent from 13.4 per
cent.
EFG International’s Common Equity Tier 1 ratio – a bank’s
capital “shock absorber” – was 17 per cent, rising from 14.7
per cent in 2022.