SocGen posts Q1 profit rise, as it goes ahead with management reshuffle

Reuters  |  PARIS 

By and Protard

The reshuffle, that came on Thursday evening with SocGen's board announcing the re-appointment of for a new four-year term, arrived several weeks after the departure of a deputy in charge of

reported a 14 percent rise in first-quarter net income to 850 million euros, that came above analysts' estimates of 821 million euros, according to a poll of 5 analysts.

"The results ... are generally in line with our strategic ambitions," said in a statement.

"With a renewed General Management team, the group is more confident than ever of its ability to successfully implement all the current transformation projects and meet its strategic and financial objectives," added Oudea.

The also kept litigation provisions stable at 2.3 billion euros and said a final agreement with relevant authorities was expected in the coming days or weeks.

It expected monetary penalties to be in line with provisions allocated to a case about alleged rigging of the Libor market and to an investigation into potential corruption violations in connection with transactions involving

Nevertheless, SocGen's quarterly revenue came in weaker than expected, as they fell 2.8 percent to 6.29 billion euros, compared to 6.48 billion seen by the analysts. Its corporate and investment was a weak spot with revenue down 13.4 percent and net income falling 56.9 percent, impacted by a "strong negative forex effect".

Its equity trading also declined despite a broad improvement in this area across other international banks.

said this "this lower performance in relation to the industry can be attributed to our business mix, which is more geared towards structured products, and our geographical mix, which is more focused on Europe".

Following the reshuffle, Severin Cabannes, previously in charge of control functions, will overview SocGen's investment

Under its new three-year plan, SocGen aims to improve the return on net equity at its to 14 percent from 10.8 percent it had in 2017, when revenues fell on the back of low market volatility.

SocGen's French were on path to stabilisation, down 0.7 percent over the period.

($1 = 0.8340 euros)

(Reporting by and Protard; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta)

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

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 12:11 IST