Thomson Reuters financial products sales improve

Reuters

Published Oct 30, 2014 10:57AM ET

Thomson Reuters financial products sales improve

By Jennifer Saba NEW YORK (Reuters) - Thomson Reuters Corp on Thursday said more clients of its Financial & Risk business added new products than canceled, the first time since 2008 that net sales were positive in the Americas, Asia and Europe for the news and information company.

Net sales are an important metric for the division that serves the banking industry and one that Thomson Reuters has struggled to expand since Canada's Thomson Corp acquired Reuters Group Plc in 2008.

Overall, the company said third-quarter revenue increased 1 percent before currency changes to $3.1 billion on the strength of its Legal and Tax & Accounting businesses. Analysts on average were expecting $3.1 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

"It's another solid quarter of performance, and we are quite encouraged by what we are seeing," Chief Executive Officer Jim Smith said in an interview.

Smith also pointed to better trends at the Legal division, which includes products and services like WestlawNext and Practical Law. Revenue for that business increased 1 percent to $854 million, its first rise excluding acquisitions since the second quarter in 2013.

Tax & Accounting revenue rose 13 percent to $301 million.

Revenue at the Financial & Risk division fell 2 percent to $1.62 billion but should improve next year because it lags net sales by about three quarters.

Smith said the company expected a stronger revenue performance in 2015, but it was too early to say if net sales would be positive for the fourth quarter.

Piper Jaffray analyst Peter Appert said the turnaround was not complete. "The company is making progress, but there is still some heavy lifting to do," he said.

Europe, whose economic instability has caused banks to pull back on spending and slash costs, has been a particular challenge for Thomson Reuters. Smith said the environment had improved there, although professionals markets were "far from robust."

Thomson Reuters' net income attributable to common stockholders fell to $231 million, or 28 cents a share, from $271 million, or 33 cents a share, a year earlier.

Excluding items like tax charges, earnings of 45 cents per share were in line with analysts' estimates.

The company affirmed its outlook for the year and expects revenue to be unchanged from last year's $12.5 billion.