Categories: BankingEconomy

ING reports $2.5 bln pretax profit, plans dividends and buybacks

AMSTERDAM, Aug 6 (Reuters) – ING Groep NV (INGA.AS) on Friday reported a better-than-expected quarterly pretax profit of 2.07 billion euros ($2.45 billion) and said it plans to resume paying dividends as it reversed some provisions for bad loans taken amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Analysts had forecast a pretax profit at 1.62 billion euros for the biggest Dutch bank, according to Refinitiv data. That compares with 532 million euros in pretax profit in the second quarter of 2020, at the height of pandemic lockdowns.

Provisions were a negative 91 million euros, compared with 1.37 billion euros a year earlier.

“Looking at risk costs, these are actually negative for the quarter, but we have to remain prudent, there are still a lot of risks in the economies,” CEO Steven van Rijswijk said, pointing to uncertainty over COVID-19 variant strains.

ING’s biggest markets, the Netherlands and Germany, are both forecast to grow by more than 3% this year, and the bank said the economic recovery – uneven but quicker than had been expected a year ago – was the main reason.

Fee income rose by 18% to 855 million euros, mostly in daily banking and investment products for retail customers.

Net interest income declined by 2.6% to 3.34 billion euros amid continuing low interest rates. ING said net interest income benefited by 83 million euros from its participation in ECB lending programs, in which banks are paid, rather than charged, to borrow money from the central bank, on the condition they lend it on to customers.

Still, ING’s net interest margin, a key measure of lending profitability, shrank to 1.36% from 1.44% a year ago.

The ECB restricted banks from paying dividends at the onset of the pandemic and ING said on Friday it intends to distribute 3.62 billion euros in dividends, or 0.48 cents per share, in October, covering both 2020 and 2021 interim dividends.

In addition, it will distribute 1.74 billion euros it has been holding since 2019, either by dividend or share buyback.

The money for those distributions is kept outside the bank’s Tier 1 capital buffer, which stood at 15.7% at the end of the quarter.

ING shares closed at 11.17 euros on Thursday, up 46% in the year to date.

($1 = 0.8457 euros)Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman, Stephen Coates and Anil D’Silva

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/ing-bank-reports-better-than-expected-25-bln-q2-pretax-profit-2021-08-06/

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Peli Unveils 9730 Remote Area Lighting System, Redefining Portable Lighting for High-Risk Field Operations

Peli Products has launched the Peli™ 9730 Remote Area Lighting System, a next-generation portable lighting…

1 day ago

Polaris Brings Back Free Snowmobile Rides Program for February 2026

Polaris Inc. is set to revive its popular Free Snowmobile Rides program in February 2026

1 day ago

George Quinn Appointed Partner, Fractional Talent at Slone Partners

Slone Partners has appointed George Quinn as Partner, Fractional Talent, strengthening its focus on flexible

2 days ago

Philippe Brochard Appointed Chairman of Advisory Committee at Hanshow

Hanshow has appointed Philippe Brochard as Chairman of its Advisory Committee, strengthening the company’s governance…

2 days ago

Tiiny AI Introduces Pocket Lab, Redefining Personal and Private AI Computing

Tiiny AI’s Pocket Lab makes headlines at CES 2026 with a pocket size personal AI…

3 days ago

Cash buyers, ready homes dominate Dubai’s thriving resale market for ultra-luxury villas

Study by fäm Luxe highlights how Dubai has built ecosystem designed to attract and retain…

4 days ago