By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Private Banks RankingPrivate Banks Ranking
Notification Show More
Latest News
EU trade chief says the outcome of China EV probe cannot be prejudged
EU trade chief says the outcome of China EV probe cannot be prejudged
Finance
4 Moderate-Risk, Long-Term Investments - NerdWallet
4 Moderate-Risk, Long-Term Investments – TBT
Personal Finance
Morning Bid: Fed’s hawkish pause keeps pressure on markets
Business
Airline SAS assesses final bids for its bail-out from bankruptcy
Banking
Goldman CEO dismisses calls to end ties to fossil-fuel firms
Goldman CEO dismisses calls to end ties to fossil-fuel firms
Banking
Aa
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Banking
  • Investing
  • ETFs
  • Mutual Fund
  • Personal Finance
  • 2022 RANKING
Reading: Investors cheer after UniCredit lifts payout goal by 40%
Share
Private Banks RankingPrivate Banks Ranking
Aa
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Banking
  • Investing
  • ETFs
  • Mutual Fund
  • Personal Finance
  • 2022 RANKING
Search
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Banking
  • Investing
  • ETFs
  • Mutual Fund
  • Personal Finance
  • 2022 RANKING
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Private Banks Ranking > Blog > Banking > Investors cheer after UniCredit lifts payout goal by 40%
Banking

Investors cheer after UniCredit lifts payout goal by 40%

By Private Banks Ranking 8 months ago
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE
  • Shares jump 12.3% to near five-year high
  • CEO betting on dividends, buybacks to lift shares
  • Sees 2023 distribution, profit in line with 2022

MILAN, Jan 31 (Reuters) – UniCredit (CRDI.MI) on Tuesday galvanised investors by pledging to return 5.25 billion euros ($5.69 billion) from its 2022 earnings after posting a record quarterly profit, as CEO Andrea Orcel works to deliver on his ambitious payout plans.

Contents
Latest UpdatesBILLIONS TO SPARESTRONG PROFIT BEAT

Orcel, who has focused UniCredit on capital light businesses to maximise returns since taking over in early 2021, said he was confident of receiving approval from European Central Bank supervisors before the bank’s general meeting in April.

His upbeat tone contrasted the cautious note struck by rival UBS (UBSG.S), Orcel’s former employer, which also reported on Tuesday, promising to pay out more than $6.7 billion.

Shares in UniCredit soared 12.3% to a near five-year high. UBS fell 2%.

UniCredit share price performance since CEO Andrea Orcel’s arrival

Lenders need ECB approval for share buybacks, which account for almost two thirds of UniCredit’s 2022 capital distribution target in addition to cash dividends.

Latest Updates

View 2 more stories

“We’ve had extensive discussions with the regulators over the distributions and we feel very confident that we will get authorisation to execute them,” Orcel told a media briefing.

ECB supervisors have urged the bloc’s lenders to prudently preserve capital while higher rates and energy bills cloud the economic outlook.

However, the receding chances of a European recession have boosted banking shares, with investors less wary of regulators hindering generous capital distribution plans.

See also  As Arm shuns London, tech investors question UK as an IPO destination

“We read the strong top-up in shareholder remuneration very positively for UniCredit and for those banks with solid capital, overlays, increasing profitability and clean asset quality,” Mediobanca Securities said.

BILLIONS TO SPARE

Orcel, UBS’ former investment banking chief, has bet on capital distribution to boost the appeal of his bank’s shares, which have traditionally traded at a discount to the sector.

Shareholders, who have been promised more than 16 billion euros in dividends and buybacks by 2024, received 3.75 billion euros from 2021 earnings.

Analysts calculate UniCredit could have at least 6 billion euros to spare after delivering on the 16 billion euro payout goal. Orcel said he would assess later whether to return the excess capital to shareholders or use it for acquisitions.

“If we go back to book (value in terms of share price) they’ll use their stock as currency to go take advantage of other people’s problems,” said Cole Smead at UniCredit investor Smead Capital Management in Phoenix, Arizona.

UniCredit trades roughly at half the value of its tangible book.

Smead, in whose $105 million International Value Fund UniCredit is the biggest banking holding, said the market was underestimating Orcel’s ability to continue to drive UniCredit’s share price to book value via the buybacks.

Core capital rose to 16% in the fourth quarter, from 15.4% at the end of September.

The latest distribution plans – which Orcel would like to replicate in 2023 – would leave the core capital ratio at 14.9%, well above UniCredit’s target of 12.5-13.0%.

STRONG PROFIT BEAT

UniCredit’s net profit of 2.46 billion euros for the quarter to Dec. 31 was more than twice the 1.10 billion euros expected by analysts polled by the bank.

See also  Blend posts another big loss but promotes market share gains

The figure includes 852 million euros in tax credits stemming from past losses that higher profitability allowed UniCredit to factor back in.

The tax boost more than offset an increase in generic provisions against future loan losses, known as overlays, to 1.8 billion euros from 1.3 billion.

UniCredit said income from lending jumped 38% from the previous quarter and 43% from a year earlier, as tighter monetary policy widened the gap between the rates banks charge on loans and those they pay to raise funds.

Revenue for the quarter rose to 5.72 billion euros, above a 5.12 billion euro average forecast.

Discounting only one further 50 basis point hike by the ECB, UniCredit expects a net interest margin of more than 11.3 billion euros this year and a net profit in line with 2022.

It said that included its Russian business, after previously excluding it from its profit targets because of the Ukraine war.

“We no longer see Russia as a source of substantial volatility,” Orcel said.

Despite having reduced its cross-border exposure to Russia by two thirds, UniCredit still owns one of the country’s top 15 lenders and Orcel reiterated it aimed to cut its presence “without leaving too much money on the table”.

The rouble appreciation, demand for hedging products and rising rates doubled UniCredit’s Russia revenues to 1.26 billion euros in 2022, though provisions meant the net profit impact was negative.

Reporting by Valentina Za; editing by Gavin Jones, Jason Neely and Barbara Lewis

: .

Source link

You Might Also Like

Airline SAS assesses final bids for its bail-out from bankruptcy

Goldman CEO dismisses calls to end ties to fossil-fuel firms

SEC, FINRA each fine Goldman $6M for sending inaccurate data

Hedge funds boost bearish bets on US equities amid market jitters

Judge approves TD Bank’s $8.7 million settlement with NYPD officers

TAGGED: cheer, goal, Investors, lifts, payout, UniCredit
Private Banks Ranking January 31, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article Investor Who Called Crypto Bottom Predicts Multiple Coins Will Reach Trillion Dollar Valuations Next Bull Market Investor Who Called Crypto Bottom Predicts Multiple Coins Will Reach Trillion Dollar Valuations Next Bull Market
Next Article FTX sues Voyager Digital to claw back $446 million in 2022 loan payments
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Private Banks RankingPrivate Banks Ranking
Follow US

© 2022 Private Banks Ranking- 85 Great Portland Street,W1W 7LT, London. All Rights Reserved.

  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Join Us!

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news, podcasts etc..

I have read and agree to the terms & conditions
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?