Fixed income trading slump sends BNP Paribas shares lower

Reuters  |  PARIS 

By Maya Nikolaeva

PARIS (Reuters) - A 36 percent slump in pretax at Paribas's business overshadowed a rise in its third-quarter profit on Tuesday, knocking the of France's biggest

Revenues from fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC) fell 26 percent, worse than the average 22 percent decline at U.S. rivals, though better than the 30 percent-plus drops at European peers such as UBS, Deutsche and Barclays.

Major declines in bond trading revenue have hit investment banks due to reduced client activity and low market volatility compared with a year ago, when Britain's vote to leave the European Union and the U.S. election led to market turbulence.

Cost cuts and the sale of a stake in Indian insurance company SBI Life helped to post an overall 8 percent rise in quarterly net profit to 2.04 billion euros ($2.38 billion), above the 1.9 billion euros expected by analysts.

"reported in the third quarter good business development in an improved economic environment in Europe," the said in a statement. "However, the market context this quarter was unfavourable for the market activities".

Overall revenues fell 1.8 percent to 10.39 billion euros in the quarter, below the 10.6 billion expected by analysts. Revenues were also hit by adverse foreign exchange movements.

"Revenue miss driven by poor CIB likely to trigger profit taking," said a Paris-based trader, referring to BNP's investment banking business.

were down 3 percent in early trading, among the worst performers on France's benchmark CAC-40 index and underperforming a 0.4 percent decline on the STOXX Europe 600 banking index. The stock remains up around 10 percent since the start of 2017.

BNP, which had outperformed many of its rivals in recent quarters in bonds and equity trading, said its FICC business had maintained its leading position in bond issuances since the start of the year.

The cut operating expenses at its corporate and institutional by 6.2 percent in the quarter, part of a savings drive launched at the start of 2016. It also identified 200 processes that would be automated by the end of 2018.

($1 = 0.8595 euros)

(Reporting by Maya Nikolaeva and Jean-Michel Belot; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Mark Potter)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, October 31 2017. 17:36 IST