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Rothschild & Co's 2019 Net Income Drops

Editorial Staff

16 March 2020

Paris-based reported a drop in net income – excluding exceptional items – to €233 million ($258 million) in 2019 from €303 million a year earlier. Pre-tax profit fell by 66 per cent year-on-year to €465 million, the group said last week. 

Revenue fell by 5 per cent to €1.872 billion; staff costs rose by 3 per cent, to €1.065 billion. Depreciation and amortisation soared by 120 per cent, contributing to the lower profit result.

On a brighter note, assets under management at the wealth and asset management side rose by 17 per cent to €76.0 billion in 2019, aided by €2.4 billion in net new assets. 

During the last quarter of 2019, Rothschild & Co’s global advisory business completed its purchases of the Livingstone operation in the UK. (The global advisory business focuses on providing advice in the areas of strategic advisory and M&A, financing advisory encompassing debt advisory, restructuring and equity advisory, and investor advisory advising on engaging with shareholders on a variety of topics including activism, sustainability and governance.)

Among further details about the wealth and asset management side, Rothschild & Co said that operating income for 2019 was €73 million (2018: €85 million pre-Martin Maurel integration costs, or €76 million including these costs), representing an operating margin of 14.7 per cent, narrowing from the margin of 17.7 per cent pre-Martin Maurel integration costs.)  The margin contraction mainly reflected higher costs in the period relating to additional personnel costs (recruitment of client advisors in 2018 with a full impact in 2019 and opening of Dusseldorf office) higher compliance and IT costs as well as NII effect. (The Martin Maurel bank in France was bought by the group more than three years ago.)

“The profitability target set for wealth and asset management was fixed in 2017 when future interest rate expectations were more positive. We now believe our target of around 20 per cent of pre-tax profit margin will be achieved in 2022 rather than 2020. This two-year delay mainly reflects the more challenging interest rate environment, higher costs linked to more complex regulation and our investment in technology, to respond to our clients’ requirements,” the firm said.