SocGen income hit by trading, raises litigation reserve

Reuters  |  PARIS 

By Maya Nikolaeva

PARIS (Reuters) - Societe Generale missed third-quarter forecasts on Friday and raised reserves for litigation costs by 300 million euros ($350 million), knocking the French bank's

Investors are concerned that pending legal disputes, for which has set aside 2.2 billion euros, could hurt its dividend payouts. The said it should resolve two legal disputes with U.S. authorities within the coming months.

The French bank, which is seeking to reassure the market before its medium-term strategy presentation on Nov. 28, reported a 15 percent fall in third-quarter net to 932 million euros, below analysts' estimates of 1 billion euros, according to a poll.

"De facto, we are capable of preserving a good level of dividend, regardless of litigation," the bank's chief executive Frederic Oudea told journalists on a call.

Oudea added that its target for the investor day was to present a plan that would deliver a level of profitability that covers the cost of capital.

Like other European banks, the quarterly result was weighed down by a slump in fixed and equities trading.

were down 3.5 percent to 46.15 euros at 0851 GMT, underperforming both France's benchmark CAC-40 index and the STOXX Europe 600 Banking index.

The said it was in talks with U.S. authorities over two investigations, the first concerning the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) and the other over interest rate benchmarks.

In May, reached an 11th-hour settlement over LIA allegations that trades were secured as part of a "fraudulent and corrupt scheme" involving the payment of $58.5 million by to a Panamanian-registered company.

But the two disputes may not mark the end of SocGen's legal problems, with the still in talks with U.S. authorities over dollar transfers it made on behalf of entities based in countries subject to economic sanctions.

BELOW ESTIMATES

Profits are being squeezed by revenue pressure in French retail banking, due to low interest rates, investments in digital technologies and a slump in trading.

Revenue at SocGen's investment banking arm slumped 15 percent, mirroring at other banks including French rival BNP Paribas.

SocGen's fixed trading revenue fell 27.8 percent, this compared with a 26 percent drop at BNP Paribas and more than 30 percent fall at others, such as Deutsche

The also underperformed rivals in equities and prime services trading, which fell 19.3 percent.

($1 = 0.8576 euros)

(Reporting by Maya Nikolaeva; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Alexander Smith)

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

First Published: Fri, November 03 2017. 15:01 IST