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ABN Amro results beat profit expectations

Europe, Netherlands
Uncategorized
Financial Results

(9 August 2017 – Netherlands) Dutch bank ABN Amro reported a larger than expected 45 percent rise in second-quarter underlying net profit, helped by a growing loan book and lower costs.

Underlying net of €960 million (A$1.4 billion) compares with an average expected forecast of €750 million, and with 662 million a year before.

“The underlying trend in the second quarter was generally positive and supported by continued growth of the Dutch economy”, Chief Executive Kees van Dijkhuizen said.

Earnings were helped by a €200 million gain on the sale of private banking activities in Asia, concluded in April. With nearly 50 percent of its loan book linked to the real estate market, however, ABN also benefited from the strong growth of the Dutch housing market.

Coupled with the improving health of its corporate clients, this helped the Netherlands' largest domestic lender to release €96 million from earlier provisions for bad loans.

Since its bailout by the Dutch state in 2008, ABN has refocused its operations and orientation on the Dutch market, cutting thousands of jobs in the process.

In the first half of this year these measures helped to lower the ratio of costs to income to 57.4 percent, compared with 61.8 percent a year earlier.

ABN continues to hold high levels of capital while it awaits new rules from the Basel Committee of banking regulators on asset risk weightings, with its core capital adequacy ratio standing at 17.6 percent of risk-adjusted assets at the end of June, up from 17 percent at the end of 2016.

The bank said it will decide on its capital position in the first quarter of 2018 if regulators don't reach an agreement on the Basel IV rules this year.

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