Credit Agricole beats forecasts on strong investment bank boost

Reuters

Published Nov 08, 2023 01:00AM ET

Updated Nov 08, 2023 03:20AM ET

By Mathieu Rosemain

PARIS (Reuters) -Credit Agricole, France's second-largest listed bank, beat third-quarter earnings expectations on Wednesday driven by a strong performance by its investment bank and retail activities.

Its net income jumped 33% to 1.75 billion euros ($1.87 billion), above the 1.37 billion expected by analysts in a company-compiled poll.

Group revenue rose 19% to 6.34 billion euros, topping the 5.99 billion expected by analysts.

It reported lower-than-expected provisions of 429 million euros, helping its bottom line.

Analysts at JP Morgan saluted a "solid Q3", noting the lower-than-expected provisions and higher revenue in investment banking, in particular from capital markets and securities services.

Credit Agricole (OTC:CRARY)'s shares were up by 0.4% at 0816 GMT while France's benchmark CAC 40 stock index was down 0.3%.

The listed entity of Credit Agricole Group, controlled by 39 French mutual banks, said revenue from its corporate and investment bank division rose by more than 9% propelled notably by a 25.6% jump in trading in fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC).

Credit Agricole's performance on that front was better than that of its two French rivals, Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY) and BNP Paribas (OTC:BNPQY), as well as Deutsche Bank and Barclays, as less volatile financial markets dented investment banks' earnings.

Sales at its French retail banking division edged up 0.4% as a decline in the net interest margin interest (NIM) -- earnings on loans minus deposit costs -- due to higher deposit costs was partially offset by hedging contracts against the risks tied to interest rates.

Its NIM in Italy, its second-biggest market, jumped by 48%, as higher interest rates are more quickly passed on to customers than in France, where almost all mortgages are signed on a fixed rate basis and where the government determines the remuneration of the country's most popular savings account, thus squeezing margins for banks.