ING loses €793 million in first quarter

The Dutch bank and insurer blamed loss on falling asset prices, the weak performance of insurance contracts and restructuring charges.
MAY 13, 2009
ING Groep NV, the Dutch bank and insurer, reported Wednesday a €793 million ($1.08 billion) net loss for the first quarter, blaming falling asset prices, the weak performance of insurance contracts, and charges for restructuring its business. The figure compares with net profit of €.54 billion in the same period a year ago and with a €3.1 billion loss in the fourth quarter. Losses came from all directions for the financial group, which said it suffered a total of €1.7 billion worth of "negative impacts stemming from the market turmoil." "Market conditions remained challenging in the first quarter as equity markets declined further, credit spreads remained elevated, real estate prices continued to fall and loan losses increased as the crisis spread from the financial markets to the real economy," said Chief Executive Jan Hommen, who took the job after his predecessor resigned in January. He didn't offer any forecast for the rest of the year, saying "markets are volatile and the economic environment continues to be uncertain." "Our first priorities are to reduce costs, risk and leverage to strengthen the Group," Hommen said in a statement. Shares fell 11 percent to €6.94 in Amsterdam. They are down from €24 a year ago, but up from a low of €2.30 on March 9. "The drag of distressed assets, and provisions for market volatility are still weighing on overall performance," said Cubillas Ding, an analyst at consultancy firm Celent. ING's insurance arm lost €979 million on a mix of bad investments and a €550 million charge on insurance contracts that aren't worth as much as the company originally thought. Its banking arm had pretax profit of around €700 million, benefiting from the large numbers of investors keeping their money in cash accounts on which ING pays them little interest. However, provisions for bad loans rose dramatically, to €772 million from €98 million a year ago. ING said its Tier 1 ratio — a key measure of solvency for banks — rose to 9.7 percent from 9.3 percent at year-end. According to its balance sheet, total equity was €30.5 billion, €10 billion of which is due to the direct investment lifeline it received from the Dutch government last year. The company announced 7,000 job cuts in January, representing 5 percent of its total work force, and said Wednesday that 5,380 have been cut so far. The company took a €329 million hit for restructuring costs in the quarter. Among ING's investment losses were a €361 million impairment charge on direct real estate investments and an additional €290 million charge on troubled U.S. mortgage-backed securities. In January, ING said it had lost €2 billion on U.S. real estate derivatives in the fourth quarter. The Dutch state then assumed 80 percent of the risk for the remaining €27.7 billion in such derivatives that ING holds, at roughly 2/3 of their face value. Wednesday's charge implies Dutch taxpayers have taken a hit of at least €1 billion on that deal.

Latest News

Workers want financial help from employers and they're ready to walk if they don't get it
Workers want financial help from employers and they're ready to walk if they don't get it

New Morgan Stanley research shows retirement planning is a key area where advice is required.

SEC kills 'gag rule' that silenced thousands of settling defendants for over 50 years
SEC kills 'gag rule' that silenced thousands of settling defendants for over 50 years

ASA reacts as regulator drops no-deny policy, freeing firms and individuals to publicly dispute allegations after reaching settlements.

Washington state regulators claim advisor was running Ponzi-like fund
Washington state regulators claim advisor was running Ponzi-like fund

Joel Frank allegedly sold more than $39 million worth of investments in the Equilus Funds to more than 90 investors,

Bipartisan bill aims to take down 401(k) charitable giving hurdle
Bipartisan bill aims to take down 401(k) charitable giving hurdle

The Charity Parity Act would eliminate a costly IRA rollover requirement that blocks direct charitable transfers from workplace retirement plans.

Trump drops $10 billion IRS lawsuit as $1.7B settlement fund takes shape
Trump drops $10 billion IRS lawsuit as $1.7B settlement fund takes shape

A last-minute court filing ends a case against the federal tax-collecting agency that had drawn unprecedented conflict-of-interest questions from Democratic critics.

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline