Earnings Statement KBC Group, 1Q 2010

Regulated information* - 12 May 2010 (07.00 a.m. CEST)  Summary KBC ended the three months to March 2010 with a net profit of 442 million euros, compared with a net profit of 304 million euros in the previous quarter. In the corresponding first quarter of 2009, when the financial crisis was at its height, a significant loss of 3.6 billion euros was posted. On an underlying basis, i.e. excluding non-operational items, net profit amounted to 543 million euros in the quarter under review. Jan Vanhevel, Group CEO: 'Against the backdrop of a modest European economic recovery, KBC continued to focus on its core markets. In the first quarter, the progress started last year continued without major disruption. Our quarterly profit was up on the previous quarter due to stable business development combined with generally lower loan loss provisioning. The core earnings trends remained solid. In addition, we are making good progress on our flagship projects to refocus the business portfolio.' Financial highlights 1Q 2010 Jan Vanhevel, Group CEO, summarises the underlying business performance for 1Q 2010 as follows: *   'Underlying, net interest income from the core deposit-taking and lending business stood at 1 344 million euros. The average net interest margin for the banking operations came to 1.82%, compared to 1.94% in the previous quarter. Deposit and credit spreads remained healthy. The tightening of the interest margin is mainly due to, for prudency reasons,  an increased focus on short-term assets for the reinvestment of savings deposits'. * 'Fee and commission income stood at 429 million euros, up 31% on the year-earlier quarter, when the financial crisis was at its height, thanks to increased income from the sale and management of investment products, on the back of improved investment sentiment. Compared to 4Q 2009, fee and commission income fell by 5%, partly related to seasonal effects.' * 'Net gains from financial instruments at fair value, which includes among other things the result from the dealing room activities, stood at 320 million euros. This strong performance was in line with the market trend'. *  'We are continuing our tight cost control. Following our efforts to cut costs over the past two years, our operating expenses were down 6% on the previous quarter and also 6% less than in the first quarter of 2009. The cost trend has been bottoming out and we expect costs to increase from this point.' * 'We think we may have seen a turn in the credit cycle. Our base case scenario for 2010 is that losses will visibly decline compared to the 2009 financial year. At the end of the first quarter, we added 355 million euros to the loan loss provisions, significantly down on the 652 million registered in the previous quarter. The 1Q 2010 credit cost charge came to 0.84% of total loans for the whole group. In Central & Eastern Europe, the first-quarter credit cost was 1.20%, down from 1.70% for the full year 2009. In Belgium, loan loss provisioning came to practically nil, while the credit cost ratio came to 1.47% for the loan book of the Merchant Banking Business Unit.' * 'During the first quarter, an excess of 1.5 billion euros of regulatory capital was built up over the 10% tier-1 target' Headlines of underlying performance per business unit: * It should be noted that the Group Centre now also includes all planned divestments of KBC Group. The aim here is to clearly indicate the financial performances of the long-term activities and the planned divestments separately. * In Belgium, a strong cost performance combined with virtually no loan loss charges and stable revenues led to a higher net result. * Central and Eastern Europe generated a slightly higher total income, as a result of a stable net interest margin, higher gross earned insurance premiums, increased trading and fair value income and slightly lower fees and commissions compared to the previous quarter. The main drivers for the better quarter-on-quarter net result of this business unit were substantially lower expenses and, even more importantly, much lower impairment on loans and receivables (around -50%). As a result, the bottom line for this business unit came to 110 million euros. * In Merchant Banking, very good dealing room results added substantially to the bottom line. Due to the intentional run-down of the loan book, net interest income was down on the previous quarter. Given the difficult outlook for the Irish economy, we have enhanced loan loss provisions there by 142 million euros. However, the total amount of impairment booked for this business unit still fell by some 14% compared to the previous quarter. In total, the business unit reported a net result of 85 million euros.  The quarter was also characterised by a number of one-off items that were not part of the normal course of business and were excluded from the underlying results (combined net impact: 0.1 billion euros). The main items were: * A valuation mark-up of CDO exposure in the amount of 0.2 billion euros, resulting mainly from the further improvement of the credit environment; * A trading loss of 0.1 billion euros, related to 'legacy' structured derivatives positions within KBC Financial Products (Merchant Banking Business Unit). Additional limited losses cannot be excluded for the next few quarters of 2010, while risk exposure is continuously being unwound.  1Q 2010 results per heading  Explanations per heading of the IFRS income statement for the first quarter of 2010 (see summary tables on the next few pages): * The net result for the first three months of the 2010 financial year amounted to 442 million euros, compared to ‑3.6 billion euros a year earlier, which included significant losses related to CDOs and shares. The underlying net result for the quarter under review totalled 543 million euros. * Net interest income came to 1 560 million euros, up 6% year-on-year (-1% on an underlying basis). While volume growth remained sluggish in the quarter, the average net interest margin of 1.82% was more or less unchanged from  the first quarter of 2009 (1.80%). * Gross earned premiums in insurance stood at 1 249 million euros, down 5% on the year-earlier figure. Net of technical charges and the ceded reinsurance result, technical insurance income came to 72 million euros. The claims level continued to be relatively high because of factors such as the storm Xynthia, leading to an 11% year-on-year hike in gross technical charges in the Non-Life segment. * Dividend income from equity investments amounted to 17 million euros. * Net (un)realised gains from financial instruments at fair value came to -3 million euros. On an underlying basis, this figure was significantly higher, at 320 million euros. Good sales and trading activities on the money and debt securities markets were recognised, in line with the market. * Net realised gains from available-for-sale assets stood at 26 million euros, markedly lower than in the previous quarter. * Net fee and commission income amounted to 420 million euros. This is 32% higher than the year-earlier level. Commission-based business continues to recover in volume terms after the historical low levels we have seen due to the financial crisis. * Other net income totalled 101 million euros, down on the year-earlier figure of 152 million euros. * Operating expenses came to 1 181 million euros, down 4% year-on-year (-6%, underlying). The cost level continued to benefit from cost containment measures initiated in 2008 but, going forward, costs are expected to move upwards. The underlying cost/income ratio for banking - a measure of cost efficiency - stood at 50%, compared to 55% for the whole of 2009. * Total impairment charges stood at 383 million euros, 46% lower than the year-earlier quarter, and attributable primarily  to loans and receivables. In 2009, the credit cost ratio had risen to 1.11%, but the ratio fell during the first quarter of 2010, to 0.84%. While impairment charges went down in all business units, the decline was most pronounced in Central & Eastern Europe. In Merchant Banking, part of the decrease in impairment on the international loan books was set off by higher impairment in KBC Bank Ireland. * Income tax amounted to 177 million euros in the quarter under review. * At the end of the first quarter of 2010, total equity came to 18.2 billion euros, up 1 billion euros on the figure at the end of 2009, mainly due to the inclusion of the positive quarterly result (+0.4 billion euros) and an increase of the revaluation reserve for available-for-sale assets (+0.6 billion euros). The group's tier-1 capital ratio - a measure of financial strength - stood at a sound 11.0% of risk-weighted assets (9.5%, when excluding non-state hybrid tier-1 instruments).  Strategy highlights and future developments * After reviewing its strategy in 2009, the Group clearly committed to lowering its risk profile while still maintaining its core earnings power and organic growth potential. Jan Vanhevel, Group CEO: 'Our assessment indicated plainly that our core business model remained largely untouched by the turbulence in the financial sector. However, it became obvious that we had to reduce our risk profile and the scope of activities to which we allocate capital. We, therefore, took our decision on strategy in accordance with this assessment.' * The new strategy, announced in November 2009, is focused on growing bancassurance on an organic basis in Belgium and selected Central and Eastern European markets, targeting retail and SME customers, including local mid-caps. Exposure to non-domestic corporate lending and non-core capital market activities will be largely reduced and KBL European Private Bankers will be divested. This will be complemented by some additional capital optimisation measures. Jan Vanhevel: 'We are ready for the future. We have a clear vision for the mid-term that is supported by a strong business case. Implementation of the strategy is progressing well and this is being tightly monitored.' * In line with the above strategy, all the activities earmarked for divestment have been regrouped, for reporting purposes, in the Group Centre. The results of the other business units hence exclude these companies. Jan Vanhevel: 'This makes it very easy to assess what activities are core to KBC and what their financial status is, allowing the investment community an even better insight into our financial strengths.' * The refocus process has made substantial progress and a number of divestment transactions have already been signed in 1Q10, such as for the US reverse mortgage portfolio and the Japanese cash equity operations. Moreover, a significant reduction of the group's credit derivatives, as part of the restructuring of KBC Financial Products, was initiated in the first quarter of 2010 as well. The other divestments scheduled for 2010 remain on track. * At the end of April, the Belgian tax ruling office ruled positively that a waiver of intercompany debt, related to CDO-linked losses incurred in past years, is tax deductible, provided certain conditions are met. In practice, this means KBC will be able to book a positive deferred tax income of 0.3 billion euros in the second quarter of 2010, partly compensating the losses it has suffered in previous periods. * KBC intends to redeem the core capital securities that were issued to the State largely by retaining earnings and releasing capital currently tied up in non-core assets. KBC also intends to maintain a regulatory tier-1 capital ratio of 10%, of which 8% core capital, according to the so-called Basel II banking capital adequacy rules (in a first phase, the core capital also includes the core capital securities issued to the State). * KBC's exposure to Greek sovereign bonds is limited to 1.9 billion euros (of which 0.6 billion in the trading book). More information on KBC's sovereign bond exposure to Southern Europe is provided in the Consolidated Financial Statements part of the quarterly report. * This news item contains information that is subject to the transparency regulations for listed companies. [HUG#1414325] KBC Quarterly report 1Q 2010.pdf: http://hugin.info/133947/R/1414325/366121.pdf
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