BCN-29 Commerzbank confirms 2019 objectives as Q1 profits tumble

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BCN-29

GERMANY-BANKING-EARNINGS-COMMERZBANK

Commerzbank confirms 2019 objectives as Q1 profits tumble

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, May 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Germany’s second-largest lender
Commerzbank said Wednesday it was sticking to full-year forecasts for 2019
even as profits halved in the first quarter, after merger talks with rival
Deutsche Bank fell through.

Net profits were down 54.2 percent year-on-year, at 120 million euros
($134 million), the group said in a statement, adding that a signficantly
higher tax bill was largely to blame.

Operating, or underlying profit was down 5.6 percent at 244 million euros,
on revenues down almost three percent at 2.2 billion.

Growth in the bank’s net interest income as it acquired more customers and
assets nevertheless allowed it to absorb the higher costs from new EU
regulations known as Mifid II, introduced last year.

Executives from both Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank walked away from merger
talks late last month, saying the business case for a tie-up was not strong
enough.

That leaves the lender with the yellow triangle logo to press on with its
solo strategy focused on retail banking and small business clients, which
added 123,000 new customers over the quarter.

“Business with our clients remains on a positive track,” said chief
financial officer Stephan Engels, also highlighting the corporate sector’s
“resilience” in a “very competitive environment” in the first quarter, when
it added 800 clients.

Commerzbank, which remains almost 16-percent owned by the German state
after a crisis-era rescue, stuck to its full year forecast that revenues will
be higher than in 2018 and it hopes to hold costs below 6.8 billion euros.

The group also aims to offer shareholders a dividend of 20 cents per share
for the year, the same level as in 2018.

BSS/AFP/HR/1410