Financial Results
Vontobel Reports Decline In H1 2025 Net Profit; Shares Slide

The Swiss firm, which operates in several jurisdictions, reported a slip in profits, and the figure reportedly came in below consensus forecasts. Shares were sold off on the result. Vontobel called the results "solid" – achieved against a challenging market background. The weaker US dollar was one of the headwinds.
Zurich-listed wealth and asset management firm Vontobel yesterday reported a
group net profit of SFr115.5 million ($144.8 million) for the
first half of 2025, down from SFr135.8 million a year
earlier.
The decline reflected a dip in operating income and a rise in
costs over the period.
The profit figure missed analyst forecasts in consensus cited by
the Swiss publication ZKB. Shares in Vontobel were
down 12 per cent on the day, fetching SFr60.30 per share. Since
the start of this year, shares have weakened by 5.8 per
cent.
The firm said in a statement that the results
were “solid,” taking into account that they were
delivered against a “challenging market backdrop, characterised
by geopolitical uncertainty, a sharp decline in the US dollar and
lower interest rates.”
Assets under management stood at SFr233.3 billion at the end of
June 2025, down from $255.9 billion at the close of 2024 when
measured in dollars, although total advised client assets rose to
SFr261.3 billion from SFr254.5 billion. Overall client assets
increased to SFr305.5 billion, up from SFr291.1 billion.
The firm attributed the AuM increase to net new money inflows of
SFr2 billion and positive market performance of SFr11.3 billion,
which included SFr1.8 billion from the acquisition of the IHAG
business. However, these gains were partially offset by the
stronger Swiss franc against the US dollar.
In the private client segment, net new money totalled SFr3
billion, equating to a 6 per cent annualised growth rate – at the
top end of Vontobel’s target range.
By contrast, the institutional business recorded net outflows of
SFr1.8 billion in H1 2025. “This reflects a challenging market
environment for active managers, particularly in the first three
months of the year,” Vontobel said, noting that the trend began
to reverse in the second quarter.
Efficiency drive on track
Vontobel’s cost/income ratio stood at 77.9 per cent, supported by
a year-on-year reduction in operating expenses. The firm said its
SFr100 million efficiency programme remains “on track” and is
scheduled to run until the end of 2026.
As of 30 June 2025, the Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio stood
at 16.7 per cent.