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Nordea closes out 2011 by beating forecasts

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Nordea closes out 2011 by beating forecasts

Nordea, the biggest Nordic bank, posted Tuesday a better-than-expected fourth quarter net profit, up by two percent to €786 million ($1.02 billion), while its full-year 2011 profit slipped by 1.0 percent to 2.63 billion euros.

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Nordea chief executive Christian Clausen said the bank had "delivered increased efficiency in cost, capital, liquidity and funding while we have maintained strong income growth and solid profit development."

The fourth quarter net profit figure was stronger than expected, as analysts had forecast a profit of 695 million, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

The bank's operating profit for the full year slid by three percent to €3.54 billion, and slipped by four percent in the fourth quarter to 1.02 billion.

But net interest income rose by six percent in the full year, to 5.45 billion, and by five percent in the fourth quarter to 1.42 billion.

Nordea's share price opened up by 1.14 percent on a Stockholm exchange down by 0.63 percent.

The bank said it had "no direct exposure" to the current eurocrisis.

"However, as all banks, we are indirectly affected by volatile markets and regulatory changes."

The bank noted that the slowdown of the global economy and the European downturn affected its net loan losses in the fourth quarter, which swelled to 263 million euros from 112 million in the third quarter and from 166 million in the fourth quarter a year earlier.

For the full year, net loan losses shrank by 16 percent to 735 million euros.

Nordea, which has some 34,000 employees, announced in August that it would slash 2,000 jobs across the Nordic region by the end of 2012 to counter the effects of rising costs.

So far, the number of employees has been reduced by around 1,100, it said.

The bank said its short term cost-cutting targets have been met.

It said it was maintaining its target "to reach a return on equity of 15 percent in a normalized economy with higher interest rates and capital requirements of 11 percent."

Swedish authorities have set the core tier 1 capital requirements to at least 12 percent from 2015.

“The Swedish capital requirements differ from (the bank's) assumptions, but before the European levels are known and the funding and liquidity regulation is finalized, it is difficult to foresee the full effect of this deviation."

The bank said it was concerned "not only about the risks of unfair competition from unequal regulation, but even more so about the effects on investments, growth and new jobs."

Clausen said 2012 looked "just as challenging" as 2011.

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