CREDIT AGRICOLE SA: Second quarter and first half 2023 RESULTS -
EXCELLENT PERFORMANCE OF THE UNIVERSAL BANKING MODEL
EXCELLENT PERFORMANCE OF THE UNIVERSAL BANKING
MODEL |
CAG AND CASA STATED AND UNDERLYING DATA
Q2-2023 |
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CRÉDIT AGRICOLE S.A. |
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CRÉDIT AGRICOLE GROUP |
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Stated |
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Underlying |
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Stated |
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Underlying |
Revenues |
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€6,676m+18.8% Q2/Q2 |
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€6,329m+15.6% Q2/Q2 |
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€9,546m+7.9% Q2/Q2 |
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€9,159m+9.5% Q2/Q2 |
Costs excl. SRF |
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-€3,218m+3.0% Q2/Q2 |
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-€3,200m+4.5% Q2/Q2 |
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-€5,233m+4.8% Q2/Q2 |
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-€5,215m+5.7% Q2/Q2 |
Gross Operating Income |
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€3,461m+39.3% Q2/Q2 |
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€3,133m+30.3% Q2/Q2 |
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€4,319m+12.3% Q2/Q2 |
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€3,950m+15.4% Q2/Q2 |
Cost of risk |
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-€534m x2.6
Q2/Q2 |
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-€450m x2.2 Q2/Q2 |
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-€938m+52.5% Q2/Q2 |
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-€854m+38.8% Q2/Q2 |
Net income Group share |
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€2,040m+24.7% Q2/Q2 |
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€1,850m+18.0% Q2/Q2 |
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€2,481m+2.1% Q2/Q2 |
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€2,249m+6.7% Q2/Q2 |
C/I ratio (excl. SRF) |
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48.2%-7.4 pp Q2/Q2 |
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50.6%-5.3 pp Q2/Q2 |
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54.8%-1.6 pp Q2/Q2 |
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56.9%-2.0 pp Q2/Q2 |
QUARTERLY AND HALF-YEAR RESULTS AT
AN ALL TIME BEST:
CASA REPORTED NET INCOME OF €2,040m IN Q2-23 AND
€3,266m IN H1-23.
Underlying figures:
- Revenues at
record level, €6,329m Q2-23, +15.6% Q2/Q2 pro-forma IFRS17
- Revenues driven
by dynamic business, notably in Insurance across all business
lines, with continued strong net inflows in unit-linked products,
Asset Management, Consumer Finance driven by the auto channel
(first consolidation of CA Auto Bank), Investment banking with
excellent performance in structured finance and financing solutions
(repo, primary credit and securitisation).
- French retail
banking impacted by the increase in refinancing costs and the
slowdown in loan production
- CA Italia,
IRB excluding Italy, CACEIS and CA Indosuez revenues supported
by net interest margin
- Costs excl. SRF
+4.5% Q2/Q2 pro-forma IFRS17 (first consolidation of CA Auto
Bank)
- Cost/income
ratio excl. SRF 52.3% H1-23
SOLID CAPITAL AND LIQUIDITY POSITIONS
-
Crédit Agricole S.A. phased-in CET1 11.6%
(340 bps>SREP)
- CAG phased-in
CET1 17.6% (840 bps>SREP)
Within the scenario of strict adverse EBA stress tests, and based
upon hypotheses radically contradictory to the French retail
market, GCA strength does not waver as shown by CET1 2025 ratio,
amongst strongest European banks.
- LCR 157.3% and
€334bn in liquidity reserves at Crédit Agricole Group
level after June-23 TLTRO-3 repayment
- Stock of
provisions for performing loans €20.6bn, coverage ratio 83.6% for
GCA
CONTINUED DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
- Strengthening on
Mobility market (start-up of Leasys and
CA Auto Bank)
- Integration of
European activities of RBC IS by CACEIS completed 03/07/2023
- Signing of an
agreement for the acquisition of a majority stake in the capital of
Banque Degroof Petercam1
ESG: CRÉDIT AGRICOLE SA RANKED AT TOP OF
“DIVERSIFIED BANKS (EUROPE)” CATEGORY
-
Crédit Agricole S.A.’s non-financial ratings raised
(72/100, +5 pts) by the Moody’s Analytics agency
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At the meeting of the Board of Directors of
Crédit Agricole S.A. on 3 August 2023, SAS Rue La Boétie
informed the company of its intention to purchase Crédit Agricole
S.A. shareson the market for a maximum amount of one billion euros
in line with the operation announced in November 2022. Details of
the transaction are provided in a press release issued today by SAS
Rue La Boétie.
Dominique Lefebvre,Chairman of SAS Rue La
Boétie and Chairman of the Crédit Agricole S.A. Board of
Directors“These excellent results demonstrate the universal banking
model’s ability to adjust to a less favorable context and its
usefulness towards both society and clients. I would like to thank
our chairmen, mutual shareholders and employees for their
unwavering and daily commitment towards our clients.” |
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Philippe Brassac,Chief Executive Officer of
Crédit Agricole S.A. “Being available everywhere,
to everyone, at any given time, to cover all possible needs, is
what makes the model universal and safe for both clients and
banks.” |
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This press release comments on the results of
Crédit Agricole S.A. and those of Crédit Agricole Group, which
comprises the Crédit Agricole S.A. entities and the Crédit Agricole
Regional Banks, which own 60.2% of Crédit Agricole S.A. Please
refer to the appendices of this press release for details of
specific items, which are adjusted for the various indicators to
calculate underlying income. All 2022 figures are presented on a
pro forma basis under IFRS17.
Crédit Agricole Group
Group activity
The Group’s commercial activity over the quarter
was good across all business lines thanks to the customer focused
banking model. In the second quarter of 2023, gross customer
capture remained high, with 471,000 new retail banking customers,
while the customer base grew by 114,000 customers2. More
specifically, over the quarter, the Group recorded
+371,000 new Retail banking customers in France and +100,000
new International retai banking customers (Italy and Poland), and
the customer base grew respectively by +69,000 and +45,000
customers.
Inflows remained at a good
level in the Asset gathering and Large customers division at +€1.1
billion over the quarter, driven by positive net
inflows in Asset Management of +€3.7 billion
despite customers’ risk aversion in uncertain markets, both in MLT
assets and in Treasury, with retail and institutional customers and
in the JVs in India and Korea. In insurance, net
inflows remained positive in France, driven by the success of
unit-linked bond insurance, which also boosted the rate of gross
inflows into unit-linked products, which remained high at 45.3%.
Business also remained buoyant in property and casualty insurance
and personal protection, with premium income up by 10.4%3 and 5.2%2
respectively compared with the second quarter of 2022. Insurance
product equipment rates continued to rise
year-on-year and at end June 2023 stood at 42.8% for the Regional
Banks, 27.4% for LCL and 17.9% for CA Italia4
Corporate and Investment
Banking posted good performance this quarter, especially
in structured financing activities (up 20.4% compared with the
second quarter of 2022) and good commercial activity in capital
markets, particularly in financing solutions (repo, primary credit
and securitization).
In consumer finance, CACF’s
production was up 9% compared with the second quarter of 2022,
driven by the dynamism of the automotive channel (+30%, due in
particular to a good start of the CA Autobank’s white label
business).
In retail banking, loan
production was down compared with the second quarter of
2022 in a declining market, but the level of outstanding loans
continued to rise across all business lines. Housing production was
down in France, as monetary policy was tightened (-45.6% for LCL
and -23.7% for the Regional Banks), as well as in Italy (-23.5%).
At the same time, the rate at which new home loans were granted
continued to rise compared with March 2023, both for retail banking
in France and in Italy. Retail banking customer
assets were slightly up from the first quarter of 2023.
On-balance sheet deposits (+0.5% compared with March 2023 and +3.5%
compared with June 2022) were driven mainly by CA Italia (+2.9%)
and the Regional Banks (+0.5%) thanks to corporate maturity
transactions. Quarterly off-balance sheet customer assets, up 0.7%,
were positive across all business lines.
Group results
In the second quarter of 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group’s stated
net income Group share came to
€2,481 million, up +2.1% compared to the
second quarter of 2022.
Specific items for the quarter
had a cumulative impact of +€232 million on net income Group share,
and comprised non-recurring accounting items totalling +€244
million, mainly the reorganisation of the SFS division’s Mobility
business5 (+€140 million) and the reversal of the provision for the
Cheque Image Exchange fine provision (+€104 million). Recurring
items amounted to -€11 million on net income Group share, and
included accounting volatility items under revenues, i.e. the DVA
(Debt Valuation Adjustment), the issuer spread portion of the FVA,
and secured lending for -€11 million in net income Group share
on capital markets and investment banking, and hedging of the Large
Customers’ loan book for -€1 million in net income Group
share.
Excluding these specific items,
Crédit Agricole Group’s underlying
net income Group share6 amounted to
€2,249 million, up +6.7% compared to
second quarter 2022.
Credit Agricole Group – Stated and underlying results, Q2-23 and
Q2-22
€m |
Q2-23stated |
Specific items |
Q2-23underlying |
Q2-22stated |
Specific items |
Q2-22underlying |
∆ Q2/Q2stated |
∆ Q2/Q2underlying |
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Revenues |
9,546 |
388 |
9,159 |
8,849 |
485 |
8,364 |
+7.9% |
+9.5% |
Operating
expenses excl.SRF |
(5,233) |
(18) |
(5,215) |
(4,996) |
(63) |
(4,933) |
+4.8% |
+5.7% |
SRF |
6 |
- |
6 |
(8) |
- |
(8) |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Gross operating income |
4,319 |
369 |
3,950 |
3,845 |
422 |
3,423 |
+12.3% |
+15.4% |
Cost of
risk |
(938) |
(84) |
(854) |
(615) |
- |
(615) |
+52.5% |
+38.8% |
Equity-accounted
entities |
46 |
(12) |
58 |
103 |
- |
103 |
(55.7%) |
(44.0%) |
Net income on
other assets |
33 |
28 |
5 |
22 |
- |
22 |
+54.7% |
(74.6%) |
Change in value
of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Income before tax |
3,460 |
301 |
3,160 |
3,355 |
422 |
2,933 |
+3.1% |
+7.7% |
Tax |
(772) |
(69) |
(704) |
(771) |
(108) |
(664) |
+0.1% |
+6.0% |
Net income from
discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
4 |
- |
4 |
23 |
(3) |
26 |
(83.2%) |
(85.2%) |
Net income |
2,692 |
232 |
2,460 |
2,607 |
311 |
2,295 |
+3.3% |
+7.2% |
Non controlling
interests |
(211) |
(0) |
(211) |
(176) |
11 |
(187) |
+20.1% |
+12.9% |
Net income Group Share |
2,481 |
232 |
2,249 |
2,431 |
322 |
2,108 |
+2.1% |
+6.7% |
Cost/Income ratio excl.SRF (%) |
54.8% |
|
56.9% |
56.5% |
|
59.0% |
-1.6 pp |
-2.0 pp |
In the second quarter of 2023,
underlying revenues totalled €9,159 million, up
+9.5% from the second quarter of 2022, driven by the Asset
Management and Insurance Services division (+46.4%), which
benefited from a rise in insurance revenues (x3.1 and +42% on an
IFRS17 basis7), the Specialised Financial Services division
(+26.1%), which includes the first line-by-line integration of CA
Auto Bank, International Retail Banking (+21.0%), with a healthy
net interest margin, and Corporate and Investment Banking (+1.6%),
which also benefited from a higher net interest margin in
institutional financial services, with Investment Banking (BFI)
revenues slightly lower but close to the historical best 2022 Q2;;
underlying revenues in the French Retail Banking division (-2.9%)
fell as a result of higher refinancing costs and resources.
Underlying operating expenses excluding
the Single Resolution Fund (SRF) rose by +5.7% in the
second quarter of 2023, to €5,215 million, mainly due to higher
compensation in an inflationary context, support for business
development and IT expenses. Overall, the Group’s
underlying cost/income ratio excluding SRF
recorded a decrease of -2.0 percentage points to 56.9% in the
second quarter of 2023. The underlying gross
operating income was up +15.4% compared to the second
quarter of 2022, reaching €3,950 million.
The underlying cost of credit
risk declined to -€854 million, an increase of +39%
compared with the second quarter of 2022, when it stood at -€615
million. The expense of -€854 million in the second quarter of 2023
breaks down into a provision for performing loans (stages 1 and 2)
of -€154 million (vs. €220 million in the second quarter of 2022),
a provision of -€697 million for proven risk (stage 3 - vs. €401
million in the second quarter of 2022), this decline is linked to
the default of major French banking operations and the increase in
proven risk in retail banking and consumer finance, and lastly a
provision of -€3 million for other risks. The provisioning levels
were determined by taking into account several weighted economic
scenarios, as in previous quarters, and by applying adjustments on
sensitive portfolios. The weighted economic scenarios for the
second quarter were updated, with a favourable scenario (French GDP
at +1% in 2023, +2.4% in 2024) and an unfavourable scenario (French
GDP at +0.1% in 2023 and -0.1% in 2024). The
cost of credit risk on outstandings8
over a rolling four-quarter period stood at
25 basis points, which is in line with the 25 basis
point assumption of the Medium-Term Plan. It stands at 29
basis points on a quarterly annualised basis9.
Underlying pre-tax income stood at
€3,160 million, a year-on-year increase of +7.7%. The
underlying pre-tax income included the contribution from
equity-accounted entities for €58 million (down -44.0%, mainly
due to the line-by-line consolidation of CA Auto Bank, formerly FCA
Bank) and net income on other assets, which came to €5 million
this quarter. The underlying tax charge
was up +6.0% over the period. Underlying net
income before non-controlling interests was up +7.2% to
€2,460 million. Non-controlling interests rose +12.9%. Lastly,
underlying net income Group share was
€2,249 million, +6.7% higher than in the second
quarter of 2022.
Credit Agricole Group – Stated and underlying results, H1-23 and
H1-22
€m |
H1-23stated |
Specific items |
H1-23underlying |
H1-22stated |
Specific items |
H1-22underlying |
∆ H1/H1stated |
∆ H1/H1underlying |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
18,473 |
356 |
18,117 |
17,730 |
564 |
17,166 |
+4.2% |
+5.5% |
Operating
expenses excl.SRF |
(10,517) |
(18) |
(10,498) |
(10,078) |
(81) |
(9,997) |
+4.4% |
+5.0% |
SRF |
(620) |
- |
(620) |
(803) |
- |
(803) |
(22.8%) |
(22.8%) |
Gross operating income |
7,337 |
338 |
6,999 |
6,850 |
483 |
6,367 |
+7.1% |
+9.9% |
Cost of
risk |
(1,486) |
(84) |
(1,402) |
(1,503) |
(195) |
(1,308) |
(1.1%) |
+7.1% |
Equity-accounted
entities |
153 |
(12) |
165 |
211 |
- |
211 |
(27.4%) |
(21.7%) |
Net income on
other assets |
37 |
28 |
10 |
35 |
- |
35 |
+8.0% |
(72.4%) |
Change in value
of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Income before tax |
6,042 |
269 |
5,773 |
5,592 |
288 |
5,304 |
+8.0% |
+8.8% |
Tax |
(1,483) |
(60) |
(1,422) |
(1,474) |
(123) |
(1,351) |
+0.6% |
+5.3% |
Net income from
discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
6 |
- |
6 |
25 |
(7) |
31 |
(76.9%) |
(81.8%) |
Net income |
4,565 |
209 |
4,356 |
4,143 |
158 |
3,984 |
+10.2% |
+9.3% |
Non controlling
interests |
(415) |
(0) |
(415) |
(362) |
11 |
(373) |
+14.7% |
+11.4% |
Net income Group Share |
4,150 |
209 |
3,941 |
3,781 |
169 |
3,612 |
+9.8% |
+9.1% |
Cost/Income ratio excl.SRF (%) |
56.9% |
|
57.9% |
56.8% |
|
58.2% |
+0.1 pp |
-0.3 pp |
Stated net income Group share in the
first half of 2023 amounted to €4,150 million,
compared with €3,781 million in
the first half of 2022, an increase of
+9.8%.
Specific items for the first six months of 2023
include the specific items of the Regional Banks for first half
2023 detailed in the Regional Banks section, and the specific items
of Crédit Agricole S.A. detailed in the Crédit
Agricole S.A. section.
Excluding these specific items,
underlying net income Group share amounted
to €3,941 million, up +9.1% compared
to first half 2022.
Underlying revenues totalled €18,117
million, up +5.5% in first half 2023
compared with first half 2022. This increase was due to very high
revenues across all the business lines in the Asset
Gathering division, the first line-by-line integration of
CA Auto Bank in the Specialised Financial Services
division, the highest level of revenues in the Large
Customers division and a higher net interest margin in the
International Retail Banking division; revenues in
the French Retail Banking division were down due
to the lower interest margin.
Underlying operating expenses
excluding SRF amounted to -€10,498 million, up +5.0% compared with
first half 2022, mainly due to higher compensation in an
inflationary environment, support for business development and IT
expenditure. The underlying cost/income ratio excluding SRF for
first half 2023 was 57.9%, down -0.3 percentage points
compared to first half 2022. The SRF totalled -€620 million in
2023, down -22.8% compared to 2022.
Underlying gross operating
income totalled €6,999 million, up +9.9% compared to
first half 2022.
The underlying cost of risk for
the half-year rose to -€1,402 million (of which -€221 million in
cost of risk on performing loans (stage 1 and 2), -€1,162 million
in cost of proven risk, and +€19 million in other risks
corresponding mainly to reversals of legal provisions), i.e. an
increase of +7.1% compared to first half 2022.
As at 30 June 2023, risk indicators confirm
the high quality of Crédit Agricole Group’s
assets and risk coverage level. The diversified loan book
is mainly geared towards home loans (46% of gross outstandings) and
corporates (32% of gross outstandings). Loan loss reserves amounts
to €20.6 billion at the end of June 2023 (€10.9 billion
for Regional Banks), 42% of which represented provisioning of
performing loans (48% for Regional Banks). The loan loss reserves
for performing loans have increased at Group level by
+€3.3 billion since the fourth quarter of 2019. The prudent
management of these loan loss reserves has enabled the
Crédit Agricole Group to have one of the best10 overall
coverage ratios for doubtful loans (83.6% at the end of June 2023)
among the largest European banks.
Net income on other assets
stood at €10 million in first half 2023, vs.
€35 million in first half 2022.
Underlying pre-tax income before discontinued operations
and non-controlling interests rose by +8.8% to
€5,773 million. The tax charge was -€1,422 million, up +5.3%,
with an underlying effective tax rate of 25.4%, down
-1.2 percentage points compared to first half 2022. Underlying
net income before non-controlling interests was therefore up
by +11.4%. Non-controlling interests amounted to -€415 million
in first half 2023, up +11.4%.
The underlying net income Group share
for first half 2023 thus stood at €3,941 million, up
+9.1% compared to first half 2022.
Regional
banks
Regional
banks’ activity grew in the
second quarter of 2023. Gross customer capture was
up, with +291,000 new customers over the quarter, while
the customer base grew by +62,000 new customers
over the quarter. The number of customers using digital
tools increased, with “Ma Banque” application reaching now
8.6 million11 users and the number of online signatures12 grew
up by +40% between the second quarter of 2022 and the second
quarter of 2023. The strong performance of
the offer "Ma Banque Au
Quotidien" for individual customers has led to an
increase and improvement of
the card stock (+2.2%
year-on-year, with +13% for Premium cards). In the professional
market, the offer “Propulse” has quickly found its place in the
range, complementing the offer of a 100% digital solution with
management services (in eight months: 8,000 accounts opened
strictly online and 15,000 online prospects, with a high
satisfaction rate13).
Loan production has
declined this quarter by -19.3% compared to the second
quarter of 2022, (-6.8% Q2-23 vs. average 2018-2022). The decline
is sharp in home loans (-23.7% compared to the second quarter of
2022), but it remains lower than the market14. The home loan
production rate is up compared to the first half of 2023, and the
average rate for 20-25 year lending reached 3.5%15 early July 2023.
Loan outstandings reached €642 billion at end
June 2023, up +4.6% compared to the end of June 2022 (+1.0%
compared to the end of March 2023) driven by the corporate market
(+7.5% compared to the second quarter of 2022).
Total customer assets rose by
+3.3% year on year to €866 billion at end June 2023. This
growth was driven by on-balance sheet deposits, which reached
€579 billion at end June 2023, up +2.7% compared to end June
2022 (including +9.9% for passbook accounts and +64.5% for term
deposits). Compared with the first quarter of 2023, on-balance
sheet deposits rose by 0.5%. Off-balance sheet customer assets
reached €287 billion at end June 2023, up +4.6%
year-on-year.
In the second quarter of 2023,
Regional banks’ stated revenues,
including the SAS Rue La Boétie dividend16, amounted to
€4,950 million, down -5.3% compared to the second quarter of 2022,
due to a decline in the intermediation margin of -33,8% (excluding
the base effect of home purchase savings plans) and an increase in
refinancing costs. There was also a negative base effect on the
provision for home purchase savings plans of -€342 million recorded
under specific items in the second quarter of 2022. Portfolio
revenues were up, benefiting from positive market effects and an
increase in dividends received. Fee and commission income was up
2.3%. Operating expenses increased +3.6% over the
period largely due to the increase in staff costs. Gross
operating income decreased by -12.5%. The
cost of risk fell slightly by -1.7% compared to
the second quarter of 2022 to -€408 million. The
Regional Banks’ net income Group share, including SAS Rue
La Boétie dividend, amounted to €2,037 million in the second
quarter of 2023, down -9.2% compared to the second quarter of
2022.
The Regional
banks’ contribution to the results of
Crédit Agricole Group amounted to €413 million
(- 46.2%) in stated
net income Group share in the second quarter of 2023, with revenues
of €3,353 million (-10.3%) and a cost of risk of -€405 million
(-1.6%).
In the second quarter of 2023, specific
items had a positive impact of €41 million on revenues
(identical impact on net income Group share) and were linked to a
reversal of the provision for “cheque image” exchange. In
the second quarter of 2022, specific items had an impact
of €342 million on revenues (€254 million on net income Group
share) and corresponded to a reversal of provisions on home
purchase savings plans.
In first half 2023,
revenues including the dividend
from SAS Rue La Boétie were down (-6.9%)
compared to first half 2022. Operating expenses rose by +3.1%, and
gross operating income consequently fell by -18.8%
over the first half. Finally, with a cost of risk
up +3.4%, the Regional
banks’ net income Group share, including
SAS Rue La Boétie dividend, amounted to €2,472 million,
down -18.2% compared to 2022 first half.
The Regional
banks’ contribution to the results of
Crédit Agricole Group in first half 2023 amounted to €833
million (-45.9%) in stated net income Group share, with revenues of
€6,686 million (-9.9%) and a cost of risk of -€577 million
(+3.6%).
Crédit Agricole S.A.
Results
Crédit Agricole S.A.’s Board of Directors,
chaired by Dominique Lefebvre, met on 3 August 2023 to examine
the financial statements for the second quarter of 2023.
Credit Agricole S.A. – Stated and underlying results, Q2-23 and
Q2-22
€m |
Q2-23stated |
Specific items |
Q2-23underlying |
Q2-22stated |
Specific items |
Q2-22underlying |
∆ Q2/Q2stated |
∆ Q2/Q2underlying |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
6,676 |
346 |
6,329 |
5,619 |
143 |
5,477 |
+18.8% |
+15.6% |
Operating
expenses excl.SRF |
(3,218) |
(18) |
(3,200) |
(3,123) |
(63) |
(3,061) |
+3.0% |
+4.5% |
SRF |
4 |
- |
4 |
(11) |
- |
(11) |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Gross
operating income |
3,461 |
328 |
3,133 |
2,485 |
80 |
2,405 |
+39.3% |
+30.3% |
Cost of
risk |
(534) |
(84) |
(450) |
(202) |
- |
(202) |
x 2.6 |
x 2.2 |
Equity-accounted
entities |
27 |
(12) |
39 |
94 |
- |
94 |
(71.1%) |
(58.2%) |
Net income on
other assets |
29 |
28 |
1 |
11 |
- |
11 |
x 2.7 |
(89.1%) |
Change in value
of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Income
before tax |
2,983 |
259 |
2,724 |
2,387 |
80 |
2,307 |
+25.0% |
+18.1% |
Tax |
(677) |
(69) |
(609) |
(549) |
(19) |
(530) |
+23.3% |
+14.9% |
Net income from
discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
4 |
- |
4 |
23 |
(3) |
26 |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Net
income |
2,309 |
190 |
2,119 |
1,861 |
57 |
1,803 |
+24.1% |
+17.5% |
Non controlling
interests |
(269) |
(1) |
(269) |
(225) |
11 |
(235) |
+19.9% |
+14.2% |
Net
income Group Share |
2,040 |
190 |
1,850 |
1,636 |
68 |
1,568 |
+24.7% |
+18.0% |
Earnings
per share (€) |
0.64 |
0.06 |
0.58 |
0.51 |
0.02 |
0.49 |
+25.5% |
+18.5% |
Cost/Income ratio excl. SRF (%) |
48.2% |
|
50.6% |
55.6% |
|
55.9% |
-7.4 pp |
-5.3 pp |
In the second quarter of
2023, Crédit Agricole S.A.’s stated
net income Group share amounted to
€2,040 million, an increase of +24.7% from
the second quarter of 2022.
Specific items for the quarter
had a cumulative impact of +€190 million on net income Group share,
and comprised non-recurring accounting items totalling +€201
million, mainly the reorganisation of the SFS division's Mobility
business17 (+€140 million) and the reversal of the provision for
the Cheque Image Exchange fine (+€62 million). Recurring items
amounted to -€11 million on net income Group share, and
included accounting volatility items under revenues, i.e. the DVA
(Debt Valuation Adjustment), the issuer spread portion of the FVA,
and secured lending for -€11 million in net income Group share
on capital markets and investment banking, and hedging of the Large
Customers’ loan book for -€1 million in net income Group
share.
Excluding specific items,
underlying net income Group share18 stood at
€1,850 million in the second quarter of 2023,
a +18.0% rise over the second quarter of 2022.
In the second quarter of 2023,
underlying revenues came to €6,329 million,
up +15.6% compared to the second quarter of 2022. This growth was
driven by the Asset Gathering division (+47.5%), which benefited
from a rise in insurance premium revenues (x3.1 and +42% on an
IFRS 17 basis19); Specialised Financial Services (+26.1%),
which includes the first line-by-line integration of CA Auto Bank;
International Retail Banking (+20.9%), with a healthy net interest
margin in Italy, Poland and Egypt; and Corporate and Investment
Banking (+1.5%), boosted mainly by a higher net interest margin in
asset servicing, with CIB revenues slightly lower but close to the
historical best Q2 achieved in 2022. The underlying revenues of
French Retail Banking (-4.4%) fell due to the higher costs of
refinancing and funding resources.
Underlying operating expenses
totalled -€3,196 million in the second quarter of 2023, an
increase of +4.1% compared to the second quarter of 2022.
Excluding SRF, this item comes to -€3,200 million
for the second quarter of 2023, an increase of -€139 million, or
+4.5%, of which -€62 million is due to the effect of the first-time
consolidation of CA Auto Bank. The remainder is mainly attributable
to the payroll increase of -€75 million (primarily Large
Customers and IRB), and provisions for variable compensation and
bonuses of -€26 million (mainly Corporate and Investment Banking),
IT investments increased by -€35 million (mainly for Large
Customers).
The underlying
cost/income ratio excluding SRF in the second quarter of
2023 thus stood at 50.6%, a - 5.3 percentage points
improvement compared to the second quarter of 2022.
Gross underlying operating
income in the second quarter of 2023 totalled €3,133
million, a rise of +30.3%.
As at 30 June 2023, risk indicators confirm
the high quality of Crédit Agricole S.A.’s assets
and risk coverage level. The diversified loan book is
mainly geared towards home loans (26% of gross outstandings) and
corporates (43% of Crédit Agricole S.A. gross
outstandings). The Non Performing Loans ratio remained stable and
low at 2.6%. The coverage ratio20 was high at 71.4%, up
+0.6 percentage points over the quarter. Loan loss
reserves amounted to €9.7 billion for
Crédit Agricole S.A., an increase of +3.7% compared to
end March 2023. Of those loan loss reserves, 36% were for
performing loan provisioning. Loan loss reserves for performing
loans are higher by €1.5 billion compared with the fourth
quarter of 2019.
The underlying cost of credit
risk deteriorated to -€450 million, a 2.2x increase
compared with the second quarter of 2022 figure of -€202 million.
The expense of -€450 million in the second quarter of 2023
consists of a write-back on performing loans (Stages 1 and 2) for
-€14 million (versus a write-back of -€76 million in the
second quarter of 2022), provisioning of proven risks for -€468
million (Stage 3, compared to -€309 million in the second
quarter of 2022), the degradation due to a market significant case
and the increase in proven risk on retail banking and consumer
credit, and lastly a write-back of €4 million for other risks.
The provisioning levels were determined by
taking into account several weighted economic scenarios, as in
previous quarters, and by applying adjustments on sensitive
portfolios. The weighted economic scenarios for the second quarter
were updated, with a favourable scenario (French GDP at +1% in
2023, +2.4% in 2024) and an unfavourable scenario (French GDP at
+0.1% in 2023 and -0.1% in 2024). The cost of risk relative to
outstandings on a four quarter rolling basis21 stood at
33 basis points, i.e. in line with the assumption of
the Medium-Term Plan of 40 basis points and 35 basis
points on an annualised quarterly basis22.
The underlying contribution of
equity-accounted entities came to
€39 million in the second quarter of 2023, down -58.2%
from the second quarter of 2022, impacted by a scope effect linked
to the line-by-line consolidation of CA Auto Bank within SFS.
Net income on other assets
stood at €1 million in the second quarter of 2023, down
€10 million compared to the second quarter of 2022.
Underlying
income23 before tax,
discontinued operations and non-controlling interests was up +18.1%
to €2,724 million. The underlying effective tax
rate stood at 22.7%, while the underlying tax charge
increased by +14.9% to -€609 million. Net income on
discontinued operations came in at +€4 million, versus
+€26 million in the second quarter of 2022.
Underlying net income before non-controlling
interests was therefore up +17.5% to €2,119 million.
Non-controlling interests amounted to
-€269 million in the second quarter of 2023, an increase of
+14.2%.
Underlying
net income Group share was up by +18.0%
compared to the second quarter of 2022 at
€1,850 million.
Underlying earnings per share
in the second quarter of 2023 reached
€0.58, increasing by +18.5%
compared to the second quarter of 2022.
Underlying RoTE24, which is
calculated on the basis of an annualised underlying net income
Group share25 and IFRIC charges linearised over the year, net of
annualised Additional Tier 1 coupons (return on equity
Group share excluding intangibles) and adjusted for certain
volatile items recognised in equity (including unrealised gains
and/or losses), reached 14.7% at 30 June 2023,
+0.3 percentage point compared to 31st March 2023.
Credit Agricole S.A. – Stated and underlying results, H1-23 and
H1-22
€m |
H1-23stated |
Specific items |
H1-23underlying |
H1-22stated |
Specific items |
H1-22underlying |
∆ H1/H1stated |
∆ H1/H1underlying |
Revenues |
12,797 |
315 |
12,482 |
11,203 |
152 |
11,051 |
+14.2% |
+12.9% |
Operating
expenses excl.SRF |
(6,546) |
(18) |
(6,528) |
(6,256) |
(81) |
(6,175) |
+4.6% |
+5.7% |
SRF |
(509) |
- |
(509) |
(647) |
- |
(647) |
(21.3%) |
(21.3%) |
Gross
operating income |
5,741 |
296 |
5,445 |
4,300 |
71 |
4,229 |
+33.5% |
+28.8% |
Cost of
risk |
(908) |
(84) |
(824) |
(943) |
(195) |
(748) |
(3.7%) |
+10.1% |
Equity-accounted
entities |
113 |
(12) |
125 |
189 |
- |
189 |
(40.1%) |
(33.8%) |
Net income on
other assets |
33 |
28 |
5 |
20 |
- |
20 |
+60.8% |
(75.9%) |
Change in value
of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Income
before tax |
4,979 |
227 |
4,752 |
3,567 |
(124) |
3,691 |
+39.6% |
+28.7% |
Tax |
(1,199) |
(60) |
(1,138) |
(950) |
(17) |
(934) |
+26.2% |
+21.9% |
Net income from
discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
6 |
- |
6 |
24 |
(7) |
31 |
n.m. |
n.m. |
Net
income |
3,786 |
167 |
3,619 |
2,641 |
(147) |
2,788 |
+43.4% |
+29.8% |
Non controlling
interests |
(520) |
(0) |
(519) |
(434) |
11 |
(445) |
+19.8% |
+16.8% |
Net
income Group Share |
3,266 |
167 |
3,100 |
2,207 |
(136) |
2,344 |
+48.0% |
+32.3% |
Earnings
per share (€) |
1.00 |
0.06 |
0.95 |
0.67 |
(0.05) |
0.72 |
+48.6% |
+31.5% |
Cost/Income ratio excl.SRF (%) |
51.2% |
|
52.3% |
55.8% |
|
55.9% |
-4.7 pp |
-3.6 pp |
Stated net income Group share in first
half 2023 amounted to €3,266 million, compared with
€2,207 million in first half 2022, an increase
of +48.0%.
Specific items in
first half 2023 had a positive impact of
+€167 million on stated net income Group
share. In addition to the second quarter items already
mentioned above, the first quarter 2023 items had had a
negative impact of -€23 million and corresponded to the
recurring accounting volatility items, i.e. the DVA for -€6 million
and the hedges of the Large Customers’ loan book for
-€17 million. The specific items for first half 2022 had a
negative impact of -€136 million on stated net income Group share,
explained by one of the recurring accounting volatility items,
specifically the DVA for -€6 million, as well as hedges on the
Large Customers’ loan book for +€53 million and changes in the
provision for home purchase savings plans for +€63 million. To
this were added the Creval integration costs for -€16 million
and those of Lyxor for -€26 million in net income Group share,
as well as the provision for equity risk in Ukraine for
-€195 million, and the reclassification of Crédit du Maroc to
assets held for disposal for -€10 million. Excluding these
specific items, underlying
net income Group share amounted to
€3,100 million, up +32.3%
compared to first half 2022.
Underlying earnings per
share stood at €0.95 per share in first half
2023, up 31.5% compared
to first half 2022.
Underlying26
RoTE, which is calculated on the basis of an
annualised underlying net income Group share27 and IFRIC charges
linearised over the year, net of annualised
Additional Tier 1 coupons (return on equity Group share
excluding intangibles) and restated for certain volatile items
recognised in equity (including unrealised gains and/or losses),
reached 14.7% for
first half 2023, up from first half 2022
(13.9%).
Underlying revenues were
up +12.9% compared to first half 2022.
Underlying operating expenses excluding SRF
increased by 5.7% compared to first half 2022. The cost/income
ratio excluding SRF for the first half of the year was 52.3%, an
improvement of 3.6 percentage points compared to first half
2022. SRF for the period came to -€509 million, a decrease of
21.3% compared to first half 2022. Underlying gross
operating income totalled €5,445 million, up +28.8%
compared to first half 2022. Lastly, cost of risk
increased over the period (+10.1%/-€76 million to
-€824 million versus -€748 million in first half
2022).
Analysis of the activity and the
results of Crédit Agricole S.A.’s
divisions and business lines
Activity of the Asset Gathering division
In the second quarter of 2023, assets under
management in the Asset Gathering (AG) division stood at
€2,482 billion, up +1.2% compared to the end of March 2023
thanks to a positive market effect. Net inflows for the quarter
were positive at +€1.1 billion, driven by €3.7 billion at Amundi.
Over one year, assets under management rose by +2.0%, due to a
positive market effect. Net inflows year-on-year were negative at
-€4.7 billion, mainly due to significant outflows in the first
quarter of 2023 for Amundi on low-margin institutional assets.
Excluding double counting, assets under management stood at
€2,205 billion at 30 June 2023, up +2.9% compared to 30 June
2022.
Insurance activity
(Crédit Agricole Assurances) reached a record
level in the second quarter, with total premium income of
€9.1 billion, up +2.7% compared to the second quarter of 2022
(+3.8% at constant scope, excluding La Médicale). Premium income in
first half 2023 achieved a record of €20.8 billion, up +3.6%
compared to first half 2022 (+5.6%, at constant scope,
excluding La Médicale).
In Savings/Retirement, the
business enjoyed strong commercial momentum, with premium income of
€14.8 billion at end June 2023, up +4.7% compared to first
half 2022. Gross inflows amounted to €6.6 billion this quarter,
with the unit-linked share remaining very high at 45.3% (+4.4
percentage points compared to the second quarter of 2022 and
-0.4 points compared to the first quarter of 2023). Net
inflows were -€0.2 billion this quarter as net inflows in France
(+€1.1 billion) offset outflows from international markets,
particularly Italy and Luxembourg. Similarly, positive net inflows
from unit-linked contracts (+€1.5 billion) offset outflows from
euro funds (-€1.8 billion).
Assets (savings, retirement and
death and disability) stood at €326.3 billion, up year-on-year
by +€6.9 billion, i.e. +2.2%. Unit-linked contracts accounted
for 27.9% of assets, up +0.8 percentage points compared to
March 2023, and +2.7 percentage points over one year. This
asset was buoyed by the successful marketing of unit-linked bond
products and favourable financial markets.
Policy Participation Reserve (PPE28) amounted to
€11.9 billion at 30 June 2023, representing 5.6% of total euro
outstandings.
Property and casualty insurance
activity was dynamic, with premium income of €1.2 billion in
the second quarter of 2023, up +3.8% compared to the second quarter
of 2022 (+10.4% at constant scope, excluding La Médicale). At the
end of June 2023, the portfolio of property and casualty policies
totalled nearly €15.6 million29, an increase of +1.1% over the
quarter and +3.5% over one year (at constant scope, excluding La
Médicale). The equipment of individual customers in the banking
networks of Crédit Agricole Group increased compared to
end June 2022 for all networks: 42.8%, or +0.5 percentage
point for Regional Banks, 27.4%, or +0.5 percentage point for
LCL, and 17.9% for CA Italia including Creval’s customer base,
or +2.3 percentage points. The combined ratio stood at
97.8%, an improvement of +3.9 percentage points year-on-year, as
the second quarter of 2022 had been heavily impacted by
weather-related claims.
In death & disability/creditor/group
insurance, premium income for the second quarter of 2023
stood at €1.3 billion, up +5.2% from the second quarter of
2022, at constant scope excluding La Médicale, thanks to the strong
growth of death & disability (up +15% at constant scope,
excluding La Médicale) and of group insurance (+19%). Premium
income from creditor insurance is stable.
In the second quarter of 2023, the European
asset management market was marked by persistent risk aversion,
with very modest total inflows and even outflows from active
management. Against this backdrop, Asset Management
(Amundi) posted positive net inflows, both in
Medium/Long-Term assets and Treasury products, in the Retail and
Institutional segments alike
Assets under management reached
€1,961 billion at the end of June 2023, up +1.4% compared to
31 March 2023. Year-on-year, AuM rose by +1.9% compared to 30 June
2022.
The Retail segment recorded net
inflows of +€2.1 billion in the second quarter, reflecting the
particularly high level of risk aversion among this client base, as
evidenced in particular by a high level of inflows into Treasury
products (+€1.9 billion) continued strong activity in Structured
products (+€2.2 billion), which offer capital protection and
returns, as well as Buy & Watch bond funds.
The Institutionals segment also
recorded positive net inflows of €2.4 billion in the second quarter
of 2023, driven by a record quarter in Employee Savings (+€3.4
billion in MLT assets). The excellent performance of this business
line is due to a combination of rising corporate profits and
companies’ desire to develop ways to share value with their staff,
such as through employee savings schemes.
Finally, the Asian JVs30
recorded outflows of -0.9 billion in the second quarter of 2023,
entirely due, as in the first quarter, to outflows from major
institutions at ABC-CA (China, with outflows of -€5.5 billion),
whereas the Indian JV recorded very buoyant activity (+€3.6
billion) and the other JVs also recorded positive net inflows.
Amundi Technology saw its
revenues grow by more than +30% in the second quarter and second
half 2023 compared with the same periods last year. The entity
gained three new customers in the second quarter and seven in first
half 2023.
In wealth
management31, total
assets under management (CA Indosuez Wealth Management and LCL
Private Banking) amounted to €194.6 billion at the end of June 2023
(including €132.7 billion for Indosuez Wealth Management), and were
stable compared to the end of March 2023 owing to a positive market
effect. Net inflows were negative in wealth management at -€2.3
billion, impacted by changes in customer behaviour in a context of
rising rates.
Results of the Asset Gathering division
The 2023 data for the Insurance business line,
and therefore the data for the Asset management and Savings
business line, are compared with 2022 pro forma IFRS 17
data.
In the second quarter of 2023, AG generated
revenues of €1,732 million, up +47.5%
compared to the second quarter of 2022, with a very high level of
revenues across all of the division's business lines, in Insurance,
Asset Management and Wealth Management. Costs excluding SRF
decreased -1.7%. Thus, the cost/income ratio excluding SRF stood at
41.3%, down -20.7 percentage points compared to the
second quarter of 2022. Gross operating income stood at
€1,017 million, 2.3 times greater than the second quarter of
2022. Taxes stood at €246 million, a +72.6i % increase. The
net income Group share of AG stood at
€676 million, 2.8 times greater than the second quarter of
2022. Net income Group share increased between the second quarter
of 2022 and the second quarter of 2023, across all of the
division's business lines: asset management (+38.4%), insurance
(x6.3) and wealth management (+56.3%).
In the first quarter of 2023, AG generated
revenues of €3,478 million, up +26.8%
compared to first half 2022. The increase is explained by a very
good level of revenues overall in Insurance and Wealth Management
activities. Costs excluding SRF were stable (+0.3%). As a result,
the cost/income ratio excluding SRF stood at 41.1%, down
-10.8 percentage points compared to first half 2022.
Gross operating income stood at €2,042 million, a sharp
increase of +55.8% compared to first half 2022. Taxes stood at
€478 million, a +46.6% increase. The net income Group
share of AG stood at €1,374 million, up +67.6%
compared to first half 2022. Net income Group share increased
between first half 2022 and first half 2023 across all of the
division’s business lines: asset management (+12.8%), insurance
(x2.1) and wealth management (+62.3%).
In first half 2023, AG contributed 47% to the
underlying net income Group share of
Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses (excluding
Corporate Centre division) and 30% to underlying revenues excluding
Corporate Centre division.
As at 30 June 2023, equity allocated to the
division amounted to €12.4 billion, including
€10.5 billion for Insurance, €1.3 billion for Asset
management, and €0.5 billion for Wealth management. The
division’s risk weighted assets amounted to €46.9 billion,
including €27.6 billion for Insurance, €13.6 billion for
Asset management and €5.7 billion for Wealth management.
The underlying
RoNE (return on normalised equity) stood at 25.6%
at end of June 2023.
Insurance results
In the second quarter of 2023,
revenues from insurance totalled €668 million, 3.1
times higher than in the second quarter of 2022 pro forma under
IFRS17, and +42% under IFRS17, i.e. after restatement for the base
effect in 2022, which did not take into account the investment
management decisions implemented at the end of 2022 (segregation of
equity and desensitisation of the portfolio). This 42% increase is
linked to the market downturn and a high level of claims in the
second quarter of 2022.
This quarter’s revenues were made up of
Savings/Retirement (€539 million)32, personal protection (€123
million)33 and property and casualty insurance (€59 million)34.
Gross operating income came to
€593 million and tax to -€142 million. As a result, net
income Group share was €433 million, 6.3 times higher than
in the second quarter of 2022, and 1.7 times higher under the
IFRS17 run rate35.
The Contractual Service Margin (CSM) stood at
€23.6 billion at 30 June 2023, up 8.2% compared with 31 December
2022. CSM rose again in the second quarter thanks to the impact of
new business exceeding the quarter's CSM allocation, the positive
effect of the market environment on inventory valuation, and a good
performance by the savings business line in France.
Revenues from insurance in first half
2023 amounted to €1,379 million, up 83.9% compared with
first half 2022, and up 13.6% under the IFRS1735 run rate, mainly
due to a base effect in 2022 (investment management decisions
implemented at the end of 2022, i.e. segregation of equity and
desensitisation of the portfolio, were not taken into account in
the IFRS17 pro-forma), a decline in the markets in first half 2022,
and a high level of weather-related claims in the second quarter of
2022. Gross operating income was twice as high as in first half
2022, up 13.7% under the IFRS17 run rate35. Finally, the tax charge
for first half 2023 rose by 81.4%. All in all, net income Group
share came to €907 million, 2.1 times higher than in first half
2022, and up 16% at constant scope under the IFRS17 run rate35.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Assurances’ solvency was high at 222%,
increasing of +18 percentage points compared to 31 December
2022.
Insurance contributed 26% to the underlying net
income Group share of Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core
businesses. (excluding the Corporate Centre division) at the end of
March 2023 and 11% to their underlying revenues.
Asset management results
In the second quarter of 2023,
revenues totalled €803 million, up 9.5% compared
with the second quarter of 2022, thanks to higher margins on
management fees, financial revenues that became positive and a high
level of performance fees. Operating expenses
excluding SRF stood at €439 million, a slight increase of +1.9%
compared with the second quarter of 2022 (excluding Lyxor
integration costs recorded last year), boosted in particular by
synergies from the Lyxor acquisition, which were achieved at 80% of
target, ahead of the initial timetable. As a result, the
cost/income ratio excluding SRF was 54.7%. Gross
operating income increased by +38.8% compared to the second quarter
of 2022. The contribution from equity-accounted entities,
comprising the contribution from the Amundi joint ventures, stood
at €27 million, up +29.6% from the second quarter of 2022,
while the tax charge amounted to -€91 million, up +37.0%.
Lastly, net income Group share increased by +38.4% to
€201 million.
In first half 2023, revenues
from asset management rose by 1.9%, driven as in the quarter by
financial income (€29 million vs. -€27 million in first half 2022)
and Amundi Technology revenues (+33.0% to €29 million), while net
management fee and commission income and performance fee and
commission income were down. However, the decline in management fee
and commission income was less pronounced than the decline in
average assets excluding JVs, reflecting the improvement in margins
already commented on in the quarter. Operating expenses excluding
SRF rose by 1.4%, excluding the impact of Lyxor integration costs
recorded in first half 2022 (€51 million before tax). The
cost/income ratio excluding SRF was 55.2%, a decline of
-3.5 percentage points compared to first half 2022. As a
result, gross operating income was up +10.8% compared to first half
2022. The net income of equity-accounted entities increased by
+20.7%. All in all, net income Group share stood at
€387 million, an increase of +12.8%.
Asset management contributed 11% to the
underlying net income Group share of
Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses. (excluding the
Corporate Centre) at end June 2023 and by 12% to their
underlying revenues.
Wealth management
results36
Revenues from Wealth Management
amounted to €262 million in the second quarter of 2023, up +14.9%
from the second quarter of 2022, boosted by the rise in interest
rates, which had a positive impact on the interest margin, which
increased by +75% between the second quarter of 2022 and the second
quarter of 2023. Expenses excluding SRF totalled
€201 million, up steadily by +5.0%. As a result, the
cost/income ratio fell by -7.2 percentage points
year-on-year to 76.9% in the second quarter of 2023. Gross
operating income, excluding SRF, rose +66.4% to €60 million.
Net income Group share amounted to
€43 million, up +56.3% compared to the second quarter of
2022.
In first half 2023, Wealth management’s revenues
rose sharply by +17.3% compared to first half 2022, to reach
€522 million. Costs excluding SRF were up +7.1%. Gross
operating income was therefore up +76.3% at €115 million.
Thus, net income Group share increased by +62.1% to
€80 million for the half-year.
Asset management contributed 2% to the
underlying net income Group share of
Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses (excluding the
Corporate Centre) at end June 2023 and by 4% to their
underlying revenues.
On the 4th of August, signing of an agreement
for the acquisition of a majority stake in the capital of Banque
Degroof Petercam37.
Activity of the Large Customers division
Corporate and Investment Banking
(CIB) posted excellent commercial performance in the
second quarter of 2023, close to the second quarter of 2022’s
record level. Asset servicing recorded very good
business levels during the period, benefiting from interest rate
levels.
In the second quarter, underlying
revenues in Corporate and Investment Banking
(CIB) were close to the level of the best second quarter
on record38 at €1,550 million, down -1.8% year-on-year.
Capital markets and investment banking maintained
a high level of underlying revenues at €774 million, down -4.9%
compared with the second quarter of 2022, especially in FICC (down
-1.1% over the period) thanks to excellent business in financing
activities (repo, primary credit and securitization. In a less
active M&A market, investment banking activity declined, with
underlying revenues down -23.2% over the period. Underlying
revenues from financing activities were up +1.4%
compared to the second quarter of 2022 to stand at
€776 million. This can be explained in particular by the
excellent performance of structured finance in all sectors (+20.4%
compared with the second quarter of 2022). Commercial banking was
down (-7.8% compared with the second quarter of 2022), in Corporate
& Leverage Finance due in particular to greater selectivity in
leverage finance, and despite the dynamic activity of International
Trade & Transaction Banking driven by cash management.
Financing activities thus confirmed its
position as leader in syndicated loans (#1 in
France39 and #2 in EMEA39) and ranked #3 in project finance loans
worldwide39 CACIB reaffirmed its leading position in bond issues
with its rankings as #2 in All bonds in EUR Worldwide39 and #2 in
Green, Social & Sustainable bonds in EUR40. Average regulatory
VaR stood at €17.9 million in the second quarter
of 2023, an insignificant increase from the €15.9 million recorded
in the first quarter of 2023, reflecting changes in positions and
financial markets. However, it remained at a level that reflected
prudent risk management.
In asset servicing (CACEIS),
the acquisition of the activities of RBC Investor Services in
Europe was completed on 3 July; the operations acquired will be
consolidated in the third quarter of 2023. Uptevia, a 50/50 joint
venture combining the issuer services business lines41 of CACEIS
and BNP Paribas, has been accounted for using the equity method
since the first quarter of 2023.
In the second quarter of 2023,
assets were up +2.1% compared with the first
quarter of 2023 thanks to dynamic sales and a confirmed market
recovery. Assets under custody rose by +1.7% at
end June 2023 compared to end March 2023 (up +4.8% from end June
2022), to reach €4,273 billion. Assets under
administration were up +2.8% this quarter (+5.4%
year-on-year), to €2,278 billion at end June 2023. In
addition, settlement/delivery volumes rose by 29%
in the second quarter of 2023 compared with the second quarter of
2022.
Results of the Large Customers division
In the second
quarter of
2023, stated revenues of the
Large customers division amounted to €1,906 million, down
-3.3% compared to the first quarter of 2022, buoyed by excellent
performance in both corporate and investment banking and asset
servicing, and remained close to the very high level of the second
quarter of 2022. The division’s specific items this quarter had an
impact of -€16 million on financing activities and comprised
the DVA (the issuer spread portion of the FVA, and secured lending)
amounting to -€15 million, and loan book hedging totalling
-€1 million. Operating expenses excluding SRF
were 8.2% higher than in the second quarter of 2022, notably in
staff costs and IT investments to support growth. As a result, the
division’s gross operating income was down from
the second quarter of 2022, standing at €869 million. The division
recorded an overall net addition for cost of risk
of -€32 million in the second quarter of 2023, compared to a
reversal of +€76 million in the second quarter of 2022, which
included a +€14 million reversal of provisions related to the
war in Ukraine. Stated profit before tax totalled
€844 million, down -22.5% during the period. The tax charge
was -€174 million. Lastly, stated net income Group
share reached €622 million in the second quarter of
2023, compared with stated income of €843 million in
the second quarter of 2022. Underlying net income Group share came
to €633 million in the second quarter of 2023, versus
€785 million in the second quarter of 2022.
In first half 2023, the
revenues of the Large Customers business line
amounted to a historic high of €3,957 million (+7.1% compared
to first half 2022). Operating expenses excluding
SRF rose +12.0% compared to first half 2022 to
€2,159 million, largely related to staff costs and IT
investments. SRF expenses fell sharply by -29.4%
compared to first half 2022. Gross operating income for first half
2023 therefore totalled €1,486 million, up +12.2% from first
half 2022. The cost of risk ended first half 2023
with a net provision of -€68 million compared to a net
provision of -€202 million in first half 2022, which included
the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war and its consequences in terms
of provisioning on performing loans in the first quarter of 2022.
The business line’s contribution to underlying net income
Group share was at €998 million, a strong increase of
+24.9% compared to first half 2022. Underlying net income Group
share came to €1,033 million in first half 2023, versus
€753 million in first half 2022.
The division contributed 30% to the
underlying net income Group share of
Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses. (excluding the
Corporate Centre division) at end June 2023 and 31% to
underlying revenues excluding the
Corporate Centre.
At 30 June 2023, the equity
allocated to the division was €12.8 billion,
while its risk weighted assets were
€135.1 billion.
Underlying RoNE (return on
normalised equity) stood at 17.2% at end June 2023.
Corporate and Investment banking
results
In the second quarter of 2023,
Corporate and Investment Banking reported a high level of
stated revenues of €1,535 million, down -7.4% from
the second quarter of 2022, which was the best second quarter on
record, thanks to excellent performance in all of its business
lines. The division’s specific items this quarter had an impact of
€-16million and comprised the DVA (the issuer spread portion of the
FVA, and secured lending) amounting to -€15 million, and loan
book hedging totalling -€1 million. Operating
expenses excluding SRF rose by +9.4% to
-€807 million, mainly in staff costs (increase in FTEs in 2022 and
adjustment of variable compensation) and IT to support the
development of the business lines. Gross
operating income was down -20.9% compared to the
second quarter of 2022 and
reached €727 million. The cost/income ratio (excluding SRF)
was 52.6%, a negative change of +8.1 percentage points over the
period. However, it remains at a low level, below the target set
out in the Medium-Term Plan 2025 (<55%). The cost of
risk recorded a moderate net depreciation of -30 million
compared to a significant reversal of +€75 million in the second
quarter of 2022. Lastly, pre-tax income in the
second quarter of 2023 stood at €697 million, versus
€994 million one year earlier. The tax charge is
-€136 million. All in all, stated net income Group
share for the second quarter of 2023 stood at
€547 million. Underlying net income Group share came to
€558 million in the second quarter of 2023, versus
€733 million in the second quarter of 2022.
In first half 2023,
stated revenues rose +5.1%
compared to first half 2022, to €3,226 million, the highest
half-yearly level ever. The specific items this half-year had an
impact of -€47 million and comprised the DVA (the issuer
spread portion of the FVA, and secured lending) amounting to
-€23 million, and loan book hedging totalling
-€25 million. Expenses excl.
SRF rose +14.2%, mainly in staff costs, due to the growth
in FTEs in 2022 and continuing adjustment of variable compensation
to activity, and in IT to support the development of the business
lines. The contribution to the SRF fell
significantly in the first half of the year, by -29.5% to -€271
million in first half 2023. As a result, gross operating
income at €1,264 million was up sharply (+5.0%
compared to first half 2022.) The cost of risk
recorded an addition of -€65 million in first half 2023, compared
with -€204 million in first half 2022, which included the
conservative provisioning of Russian exposures (addition of -€346
million on performing loans in Russia in the first quarter of
2022). The tax charge came to -€298 million, a +19.7% increase
in line with activity growth. All in all, stated net income
Group share for first half 2023 stood at a record level of
€879 million, an increase of +19.9% over the period.
Underlying net income Group share came to €914 million in
first half 2023, versus €687 million in first half 2022.
Risk weighted assets at end June
2023 rose by a moderate +€2.4 billion compared to end
March 2023 to €126.0 billion. This change was mainly due to
higher market RWAs (changes in VaR, SVaR and CRTB42), positive
model and exchange rate impacts.
Asset servicing results
In the second quarter of 2023,
stated asset servicing revenues amounted
to €371 million, a sharp increase of +18.4% compared to the
second quarter of 2022 (+21.6% when adjusted for Uptevia43, which
contributed €8.1 million in the second quarter of 2022). This
increase was driven by the net interest margin, which doubled over
the period as a result of treasury activity, which itself benefited
from interest rate levels. Operating expenses
excluding SRF increased by +4.2% to -€231 million (+7.3% when
adjusted for Uptevia43, which contributed -€6.4 million in the
second quarter of 2022). These figures reflect the impact of
inflation on payroll and include -€6.3 million in integration costs
relating to the acquisition of RBC Investor Services’ activities in
Europe, which will be consolidated from the third quarter of 2023.
As a result, gross operating income rose strongly
(+55.1%) in the second quarter of 2023 to €142 million. The
cost/income ratio excluding SRF thus came to 62.2% (60.5% excluding
RBC integration costs), an improvement of 10.2 percentage
points compared to the second quarter of 2022. The second quarter
of 2023 also recorded €7 million in income from
equity-accounted entities. This was the result of strong
performance by the Latin-American entities and now includes the
contribution from Uptevia43. Net income thus
totalled €109 million, up +39.8% compared to the second
quarter of 2022. Adjusted for the €34 million share of
non-controlling interests, the business line’s contribution to
net income Group share totalled €75 million
in the second quarter of 2023, up by +42.0% compared to the second
quarter of 2022.
Stated revenues for first half
2023 were up +16.9% compared with first half 2022, buoyed
by strong commercial momentum and an interest margin that doubled
over the period. Costs excluding SRF were up
+4.8%, and include -€9.5 million in integration costs relating to
the acquisition of RBC Investor Services’ activities in Europe.
Meanwhile, SRF costs fell sharply by -28.3%. This
resulted in a very strong +83.4% increase in gross
operating income compared to first half 2022. Net
income was thus up by +78.3%. The overall contribution of
the business line to net income Group share in
first half 2023 was €119 million, representing a +80.6%
increase compared to 30 June 2022.
Specialised financial services activity
In the second quarter of 2023,
commercial production at
Crédit Agricole Consumer Finance (CACF) remained
high at €13.6 billion, a +9% increase over the second quarter
of 2022, driven by particularly brisk business in the Automotive
channel44 (+30%). At end June 2023, CACF’s total outstandings stood
at €107 billion, i.e., +10.8% compared to end June 2022.
Outstandings at the automotive entities amounted to €40.4 billion,
of which €24.7 billion at Crédit Agricole Auto Bank this quarter.
This follows the reorganisation of CACF’s “Mobility” activities and
the execution of the agreement with Stellantis with effect from the
beginning of April. Leasys, the 50/50 joint venture with
Stellantis, contributed €5.9 billion in outstandings at 100%.
Commercial production in
leasing at
Crédit Agricole Leasing and Factoring
(CAL&F) saw strong momentum in the second quarter of 2023 with
a year-on-year increase of +4.9%. Leasing outstandings rose to
€18.3 billion at end June 2023 (of which €14.7 billion in
France and €3.6 billion abroad), for a year-on-year increase
of +9.5%. By contrast, commercial production in
factoring at
Crédit Agricole Leasing and Factoring
(CAL&F) fell in the second quarter of 2023 by -23.6% due to a
base effect (the second quarter of 2022 had seen the start-up of a
major deal). Factored revenues for the quarter rose by +3.4% to
€30.4 billion, with particularly good growth in France.
Lastly, the financed quota also rose in second quarter to 70.9%
(+8.2 points vs the second quarter of 2022).
Key developments for the business line include
the implementation of the agreement between CACF and Stellantis,
which took effect this quarter and finalised the creation of the
Leasys 50/50 joint venture with Stellantis, and the acquisition of
100% of CA Auto Bank (formerly FCA Bank) and Drivalia (car
renting and car sharing). In addition, CACF acquired the activities
of ALD and LeasePlan in six European countries, representing a
total fleet of more than 100,000 vehicles (of which 30,000 were
taken over by Leasys and 70,000 by CA Auto Bank) and
total outstandings of approximately €1.7 billion.
Specialised Financial Services results
The division’s results were impacted by the
execution of the agreement between CACF and Stellantis, which came
into effect this quarter. The stated revenues of
Specialised Financial Services rose to €1,162 million in the
second quarter of 2023, up +69.8% compared to the second quarter of
2022. The division’s specific items, totalling €299 million,
stemmed solely from consumer finance and were linked to the
reorganisation of CACF’s Mobility activities45. Excluding
these items, underlying revenues came to
€863 million, an increase of +26.1% over the quarter. The full
consolidation of CA Auto Bank contributed €176 million to revenues
this quarter. Stated costs excluding SRF came to
-€430 million, i.e. an increase of +19.5%. Specific items,
linked to the reorganisation of CACF’s Mobility activities45,
amounted to -€18 million. Excluding this item,
underlying expenses came to - €413 million, an
increase of +14.3% over the quarter. The full consolidation of CA
Auto Bank contributed -€62 million to expenses this quarter. As a
result, underlying gross operating income
increased by +39.3% to €454 million. The underlying
cost/income ratio excluding SRF also showed strong
improvement at 47.6% (-4.9 percentage points). The stated
cost of risk rose sharply compared to
the second quarter of 2022 by 2.7x to €304 million.
Adjusted for -€85 million in specific items relating to the
reorganisation of CACF’s Mobility activities (day-1 loss)45, cost
of risk was €219 million. The increase in the underlying cost of
risk was thus +95.6% (+€107 million over the period). The full
consolidation of CA Auto Bank contributed -€25 million to cost of
risk this quarter. The stated net income from
equity-accounted entities fell by -86% to €11 million.
This includes the formation of the Leasys 50/50 joint venture which
launched in this quarter (formerly FCA Bank accounted for as a
50/50 JV). Adjusted for -€12 million in specific items relating to
the reorganisation of CACF’s Mobility activities45, net income from
equity-accounted entities came to €23 million, with the creation of
Leasys contributing €14 million this quarter. The stated
net income group share totalled €304 million,
up by +51.4%. Specific items had an impact of €140 million on
net income Group share. Underlying
net income Group share thus came to
€164 million, down by -18.2% compared to the
second quarter of 2022.
In first half 2023, the stated
revenues of Specialised Financial Services
increased by +33.6%, driven by the excellent performance of
CAL&F (+7.4% compared to first half 2022) and higher revenues
for CACF (+41.5% compared to first half 2022), linked to the full
consolidation of CA Auto Bank since the second quarter of
2023. The specific items for first half 2023 were
concentrated in the second quarter of 2023 and are thus the same as
those mentioned above, relating exclusively to the reorganisation
of CACF’s Mobility activities46. The various items in the income
statement for first half 2023 are impacted by the line-by-line
consolidation of CA Auto Bank starting in the second quarter of
2023. The division’s underlying revenues came
to €1,535 million, an increase of +11.8% over the
period. Underlying costs excluding
SRF increased by +7.7% compared to first half 2022. The
underlying cost/income ratio excluding SRF remained low at 50.9%%,
an improvement of +2.0 percentage points compared to first
half 2022. The SRF contribution came to
-€29 million in first half 2023, down -15.7% compared to first
half 2022. The underlying cost of risk increased
by +59.8% in first half 2023 compared to first half 2022. The
contribution of equity-accounted entities fell by -38.6% in
underlying terms over the period. The underlying
net income Group share thus came to
€291 million, down by -20% compared to the
second quarter of 2022, mainly related to the increased
cost of risk.
The division contributed 8% to the
underlying net income Group share of the
Crédit Agricole S.A. business lines. (excluding the
Corporate Centre division) in the first half of 2023 and 12% to
underlying revenues excluding the Corporate
Centre.
At 30 June 2023, the equity
allocated to the division was €6.6 billion and its
risk weighted assets were €69.9 billion.
Underlying RoNE (return on
normalised equity) stood at 9.5% at end of June 2023.
Consumer finance results
The business line’s results for the second
quarter of 2023 were impacted by the execution of the agreement
between CACF and Stellantis, effective this quarter, on the
reorganisation of CACF’s Mobility activities46.
Specific items for the quarter
were the same as those previously described for the Specialised
Financial Services division, with an impact of €140 million on net
income Group share. Stated revenues amounted to
€981 million. Adjusted for specific items, revenues totalled €682
million in the second quarter of 2023, up +29.5% compared to the
second quarter of 2022. The total was affected by the consolidation
of CA Auto Bank47 and a margin still penalised by refinancing costs
(but with a continued gradual rise in customer loan production
rates, up +25 bps in the second quarter of 2023 compared with
the first quarter of 2023). Stated costs excluding
SRF stood at €335 million. Adjusted of specific items, they
came to €316 million, up 16.5% compared to the second quarter of
2022, mainly reflecting the consolidation of CA Auto Bank.48. As a
result, gross operating income rose by +43.8% to €368 million,
while the cost/income ratio excluding SRF stood at 46.4%, an
improvement of 5.2 percentage points over the second quarter
of 2022. The stated cost of risk was
-€285 million in the second quarter of 2023. Adjusted for
specific items, the cost of risk doubled over the period, standing
at -€201 million. The increase is mainly attributable to the
traditional segments, reflecting the inflationary environment. Also
noteworthy was the integration of the Mobility activities49 this
quarter, which are inherently less risky. The annualised cost of
risk on outstandings was 123 bps50, with the first-time
consolidation of CA Auto Bank representing a gain of around
50 bps. The Non Performing Loans ratio and the coverage ratio
fell respectively to 3.8% (versus 4.9% at end March 2023) and 83.4%
(versus 85% at end March), mainly due to the consolidation of CA
Auto Bank. The stated contribution of equity-accounted
entities came to €14 million (down -82.2%). Adjusted for
specific items, it totalled €26 million, down -66.8% compared with
the second quarter of 2022, due to the full consolidation of CA
Auto Bank (formerly FCA Bank, previously recognised under
equity-accounted entities at 50%). The new entity, Leasys, a 50/50
joint venture with Stellantis specialising in multi-brand
operational leasing, contributed €14 million this quarter. The
stated tax charge was -€122 million. Adjusted for specific
items, the tax charge amounted to -€49 million in the first
quarter of 2023, an increase of +9.3%. Finally, stated net
income Group share totalled €262 million (+66.7%).
Adjusted for specific items, it came to €122 million in the second
quarter of 2023, a decrease of -22.2%.
In first half 2023, the
specific items affecting consumer finance were concentrated
exclusively in the second quarter, with the reorganisation of
CACF’s Mobility activities. The impacts are the same as those
mentioned above. Stated revenues amounted to
€1,492 million (+41.5%). Adjusted for specific items, revenues
totalled €1,192 million, an increase of +13.1% compared to the
first half 2022. Stated costs excluding
SRF amounted to €612 million (+11.5%). Adjusted for specific items,
costs were up by +8.2% compared with first half 2022. The
contribution to the SRF was -€13 million (-17.7% compared with
first half 2022), and the underlying cost/income
ratio excluding SRF fell to 49.8%, remaining at a low
level. This resulted in a +19.6% increase in underlying gross
operating income compared to first half 2022. The stated cost of
risk totalled -€432 million (+99.1%). Adjusted for specific
items, the cost of risk increased by 60.4% to -€347 million
compared to first half 2022. The stated underlying contribution of
equity-accounted entities was €88 million,
down by -44.4%. Adjusted for specific items, it fell by -36.8% to
€100 million. Finally, net income Group share for first
half 2023 totalled €358 million (+23.8%). Adjusted
for specific items, it came to €219 million, a decrease of
-24.2%.
Leasing & Factoring
results
Revenues totalled €180 million,
up 14.0% compared with the second quarter of 2022, driven in
particular by a volume effect on factoring. Of note, leasing
revenues stabilised over the quarter. Costs excluding SRF rose by
+€7 million (+6.8%), reflecting higher costs both abroad, with
increased payroll in Poland and the ramp-up of leasing in Germany,
and in France, with IT development projects. The
cost/income ratio excluding SRF
stood at 52.2%, an improvement of -3.5 percentage points
compared to the second quarter of 2022. As a result gross
operating income totalled €70 million, up sharply
(+22.7%) from the second quarter of 2022. The cost of
risk increased to €19 million, with several
quarter-specific items, while net income Group
share stood at €42 million, a slight decline of
-€2 million from the second quarter of 2022 (-4.2%).
In first half 2023, revenues
totalled €342 million, a +7.4% increase compared to
first half 2022. Costs excluding
SRF increased by +5.8% to €187 million. The SRF
contribution came to -€15 million in first half 2023, (-15.0%
lower than in first half 2022). Gross operating
income rose to €139 million, a +12.7% increase
compared to first half 2022. The underlying
cost/income ratio excluding SRF amounted to 54.9%, an
improvement of 0.8 percentage points compared to first half
2022. The cost of risk was up compared to first
half 2022 (+56.2%). Underlying
net income Group share was
€72 million, a modest decline of -3.3% compared to first half
2022.
Crédit Agricole S.A. Retail Banking
activity
In Crédit Agricole S.A.’s
Retail Banking business, loan production slowed
amid rising interest rates, particularly at LCL, but customer
capture remained buoyant, and the number of customers taking out
insurance policies was high.
Retail banking activity in France
For French Retail Banking, loan
production at LCL continued to slow in the second
quarter of 2023 and stood at €7 billion, down -41.5% compared with
the second quarter of 2022, in line with the overall slowdown in
the market linked to the tightening of monetary conditions and with
a base effect linked to a great level of production in the second
quarter of 2022. The loan production in the second quarter of 2023
down -20.2% compared to the 2018-2022 loan production average. In
the Small Businesses market, production was down -21.2% compared
with the second quarter of 2022, -50.1% in the Corporates market
and -45.6% in the Home Loans market, against a backdrop of a
slowdown in the French market (-47% in home loan production
according to the Banque de France, May 2023/May 2022), while
lending rates for home loans continued to rise, with LCL recording
an increase of 61 basis points between the second quarter of 2023
and the first quarter of 2023. The rate at signature was 3.99%
(week of 17 to 21 July 2023). Outstanding loans totalled
€167.3 billion at end June 2023, up +6.7% from end June 2022,
of which +7.2% for home loans, +6.6% for loans to small businesses,
+6.2% for corporate loans and +3.8% for consumer finance. Customer
assets, which stood at €240.9 billion at end June 2023, were also
up, by +4.5% compared with end June 2022, driven by on-balance
sheet deposits (+5.9%) linked to growth in term deposits (2.6x
compared with end June 2022 but up a moderate +8.0% compared with
end March 2023) and passbook accounts (+12.2% compared with end
June 2022 but virtually stable at -1.3% compared with end March
2023), with off-balance sheet savings also up compared with end
June 2022 (+2.2%).
In first half
2023, gross customer capture stood at 175,000 new
customers and net customer capture at 28,100 customers. The
equipment rate for car, multi-risk home, health, legal, all mobile
phones or personal accident insurance rose year-on-year by
+0.5 percentage points compared to the second quarter of 2022
to stand at 27.4% at end June 2023.
Retail banking activity in Italy
The business of CA Italia, the
retail bank in Italy, continued to grow in the
second quarter of 2023 in a declining market environment. Gross
customer capture for the second quarter of 2023 reached 45,000 new
customers, while the customer base increased by about 16,500
customers. Loan outstandings at CA Italia stood at
€59.751 billion at the end of June 2023, up +1.5% compared to
the end of June 2022 despite the declining market52. Loan
production was down -12% (excluding Ecobonus and PGE)53 compared
with the second quarter of 2022, mainly due to the fall in home
loans (down -23.5% compared with the second quarter of 2022), in
line with the market54. However, the loan production rate was up
+22 basis points compared with the first quarter of 2023 and the
rate for home loans was up +43 basis points over the same
period.
Consumer finance production55 was up +3.8%
compared with the second quarter of 2022. Customer assets stood at
€113.2 billion at the end of June 2023, up +2.8% compared to
the end of June 2022. On-balance sheet deposits improved by +5.5%
compared with the second quarter of 2022, driven by corporate
transactions falling due and stable individual deposits despite the
attractiveness of Italian government securities. Off-balance sheet
deposits remained stable compared with June 2022, but edged up by
+0.2% compared with the first quarter of 2023.
CA Italia’s equipment rate in car, multi-risk
home, health, legal, all mobile phones or personal accident
insurance increased to 17.9% (+0.5 percentage points compared
with the second quarter of 2022).
Crédit Agricole Group activity in Italy56
The Crédit Agricole Group in Italy has
been jointly developing retail banking and business lines. As a
result, in first half 2023, the launch of CA Auto Bank will
contribute to the expansion of services dedicated to car and
mobility financing, both in terms of electric vehicle sharing and
short- and long-term vehicle leasing. In addition, changes to the
digital platform aims to accelerate synergies between entities.
Finally, the launch of the Private Equity business, with its two
dedicated funds - APEI-Private Equity and Ambition Agri Agro
Investissement, aim, respectively to promote the investment in the
non-listed SMEs as well as in the French and Italian companies
specialising in the agricultural and food sectors. In addition, the
Group in Italy continues to pursue its ESG strategy, enriching the
existing set up with new offers aiming at financing green vehicles
and proposing subsidised financing conditions for the green
financing projects as well as for the cross-selling initiatives
between entities.
Loan outstandings and
the level of inflows stood respectively at 97
billion euros and 329 billion euros as of 30 June 2023. The number
of customers reached 5.9 million at the end of June 2023, an
increase of around 760,000 customers compared with the end of 2022,
mainly due to the integration of CA Aurobank’s customers into the
scope of the entities present in Italy, as well as the dynamic
customer capture at CA Italia.
Underlying
revenues of the Italian entities rose by
20%57 compared with first half 2022, especially at CA Italia,
thanks to a net interest margin boosted by higher rates on customer
loans. Expenses remained under control and were up
slightly by 5% compared to first half 2022. Lastly, Italy's
contribution to Crédit Agricole SA’s results in
the first quarter of 2023 amounted to €591 million on an underlying
basis57, representing an improvement of +32% compared with the
first half of 2022.
International Retail Banking activity excluding
Italy
For International Retail Banking
excluding Italy58, commercial activity
was brisk in Poland and Egypt. On the contrary, it continues to be
heavily penalised for Ukraine against a backdrop of continuing
conflict with Russia.
International Retail Banking business
excluding Italy had loan outstandings of
€6.9 million at the end of June 2023, down -43.2% (-39% at constant
exchange rates) compared with the end of June 202259, and customer
assets were down -31.6% (-26.7% at constant exchange rates) over
the same period. At constant exchange rates, in Poland and
Egypt, loan outstandings rose by +6.8% and customer assets
by +14.4% over the same period; in Poland, loan
outstandings rose by +6.1% compared with June 2022 across all
segments. Inflows rose by +4.4% over the same period, driven by
transactions on term accounts. Loan production also remained
dynamic, up +12% compared to the second quarter of 2022. Lastly,
gross customer capture in Poland rose by 55,000 in the second
quarter of 2023 (+16,000 in customer base). In
Egypt, between end June 2022 and end June 2023,
loan outstandings increased by +10.1% at constant rate. Customer
assets rose sharply by 52.9% over the same period at constant rate.
Finally, since the start of 2023, Egypt has increased its active
customer base by +3%.
The surplus of deposits for
loans in Poland and Egypt amounted to €2.1 billion at 30
June 2023, and reached €3.6 billion including the Ukraine
scope.
As at 30 June 2023, the Retail
banking business line contributed 22% to the net income
Group share of Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses
(excluding Corporate Centre division) and 30% to underlying
revenues excluding Corporate Centre.
As at 30 June 2023, the equity allocated to the
division was €9.4 billion, including €4.9 billion for
French retail banking and €4.5 billion for International
retail banking. Risk weighted assets for the division totalled
€98.8 billion, including €51.7 billion for French retail
banking and €47.1 billion for International retail
banking.
French retail banking results
In the second quarter of 2023,
LCL’s revenues were down by -5.1% compared to the
second quarter of 2022, at €959 million60. The decrease in the
net interest margin (-18.8%) is linked to the increase in the cost
of client resources and refinancing and with the client rate
repricing progression. Fee and commission income also rose
significantly (+11.8%), driven by growth in fee and commission
income from payment instruments and life and property and casualty
insurance. Expenses excluding SRF were kept under
control at -€554 million, down compared to the second quarter of
2022 (-3.2%). The cost/income ratio excluding SRF increased
slightly by 1.1 percentage points to 57.7% and remains at
a low level. Gross operating income fell by -5.5% to €411 million.
The cost of risk continued to normalise, rising by
+60% compared with the second quarter of 2022 to -€69 million
(reversal of provisions for various claims in second quarter of
2022). The coverage ratio stood at 62.8% at the end of June, down
-5 percentage points this quarter compared to the end of March
2023. The non-performing loan ratio was 1.9% at end June 2023, up
slightly by 0.2 pp compared to end March 2023. As a result,
net income Group share stood at €257 million and
decreased by -11.6% compared to the second quarter of 2022.
In first half 2023, LCL’s
revenues fell by -5.1% compared with first half 2022, to €1,895
million, due to the contraction in the net interest margin (-16.7%)
against a backdrop of higher refinancing and funding costs, but
with an increase in fee and commission income (+8.9%), particularly
for life and property and casualty insurance and payment
instruments. Expenses excluding SFR were down by -1.3% and the
cost/income ratio excluding SFR remained under control (+2.3
percentage points compared with first half 2022) to 60.8%. As a
result, gross operating income fell by -8.1% and the cost of risk
rose by +29.0%. All in all, the business-line’s contribution to net
income Group share stood at €409 million and was down -13.7%.
In the end, the business line contributed 11% to
the underlying net income Group share of
Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core businesses. (excluding the
Corporate Centre division) in the first half of 2023 and 15% to
underlying revenues excluding the Corporate
Centre.
LCL’s underlying return on normalised equity
(RoNE) stood at 16.0% at end of June 2023.
International Retail Banking
results61
In the second quarter of 2023,
International Retail Banking revenues totalled
€982 million, up +20.9% (+25.6% at constant exchange rates)
compared with the second quarter of 2022, driven mainly by the rise
in the net interest margin against a backdrop of rising interest
rates. Operating expenses excluding SRF remained
under control despite the inflationary environment, coming in at
€502 million, down slightly compared to the second quarter of 2022
(stable at constant exchange rates). As a result, gross
operating income amounted to €479 million, an
increase of +58.4% (+69.9% at constant exchange rates) compared to
the second quarter of 2022. The cost of risk came
to -€127 million, up +8.3% (+14.3% at constant exchange rates)
compared to the second quarter of 2022, taking into account the
conservative provisioning of CHF loans in Poland and higher
provisioning for performing loans in Italy. Income from
discontinued operations was down -74.2%, due to the
disposal of the controlling interest in Crédit du Maroc in the
fourth quarter of 202262. Net income Group share
of International retail banking was €197 million, up +75.0%63
(+85.6% at constant exchange rates) compared to the fourth quarter
of 2022.
For first half 2023,
International Retail Banking
revenues rose by 22.0% to €1,951 million (+26.9%
at constant exchange rates). Expenses excluding
SRF were kept under control at €987 million, stable
compared with first half 2022 (+2.3% at constant exchange rates).
Gross operating income totalled €924 million,
up +61.4% (+73.1% at constant exchange rates). The cost of
risk fell by -38.2% (-29.5% at constant exchange rates) to
-€241 million compared to the second half 2022, mainly due to the
conservative provisioning for Ukraine risk, which was adjusted to
underlying income for the first quarter of 2022 (provisions of -
€195 million for Ukraine risk, adjusted to underlying income for
Q1-2022). All in all, net income Group share of
International retail banking was €375 million,
compared to €13 million in the fourth quarter of 202264.
In the first half of 2023, the International
retail banking business line contributed 11% to the underlying net
income Group share of Crédit Agricole S.A.'s core
businesses (excluding Corporate Centre) and for 15% to underlying
revenues excluding Corporate Centre.
Italian retail banking
results
In the second quarter of 2023,
Crédit Agricole Italy
revenues stood at €760 million, up +22.2%
compared to the second quarter of 2022. The rise in rates continues
to benefit the net interest margin(+43.6%), which has a positive
impact on loan production rates, which increased by +22 basis
points between the first and second quarter of 2023, but also via
the revaluation of the rate on the stock of loans on the asset side
by +38 basis points over the same period. Operating
expenses excluding SRF were stable compared to the second
quarter of 2022, coming in at -€397 million. Adjusted for
Créval integration costs64 in the second quarter of 2022, they were
up +6.7%, reflecting the increase in business. All in all, gross
operating income increased by +65.6% compared to the second quarter
of 2022 to €363 million. The cost of risk amounted
to -€89 million in the second quarter, up +20.4% compared to
the second quarter of 2022, including -€44 million for proven
risk and -€45 million in provisioning for performing loans.
Cost of risk on outstandings65 stood at 57 basis points, up
3 basis points compared to the first quarter of 2023. The
Non-Performing Loans ratio stands at 3.5%, down slightly from the
second quarter of 2022, and the coverage ratio stands at 67.7%
(-0.9 percentage points compared to the first quarter of 2023).
This translates into a net income Group share of
€150 million for CA Italia, up +65.8% compared to the second
quarter of 2022.
In first half 2023,
revenues for Crédit Agricole
Italia rose +22.5% to €1,520 million.
Expenses excluding SRF stood at €769 million,
stable66 compared to first half 2022. Gross operating
income thus stood at €712 million, an increase of
+64.6% compared to the second quarter of 2022. The cost of
risk rose by +25.8% to €150 million compared to the second
half 2022, mainly due to the increase in provisions for performing
loans (+€41 million), with defaults remaining limited. As a result,
net income Group share of CA Italia totalled
€310 million, an increase of +70.4% compared to first half
2022.
CA Italia’s underlying RoNE (return on
normalised equity) was 21.9% at 30 June 2023.
International Retail Banking results –
excluding Italy67
In the second quarter of 2023,
revenues for International Retail Banking
excluding Italy totalled €222 million, up +16.9% (+39.1%
at constant exchange rates) compared to the second quarter of 2022.
The increase in revenues was driven by the net interest margin,
which rose sharply against a backdrop of rising interest rates,
particularly in Poland and Egypt (+20.4% compared with the second
quarter of 2022, +41.7% at constant exchange rates), as a result of
higher lending prices and volumes. Operating expenses
excluding SRF remained under control at €106 million,
stable compared with the second quarter of 2022 (up 9.5% at
constant exchange rates). Gross operating income
amounted to €116 million, an increase of +39.6% (+84.7% at
constant exchange rates) compared to the second quarter of 2022.
The cost of risk reached -€38 million, down
-12.3%, (+2.1% at constant exchange rates) taking into account the
provisioning of CHF loans in Poland, bringing the provisioning rate
for CHF loans in Poland above 74% (compared with around 55% in the
first quarter of 2023). Furthermore, at end June 2023, the coverage
ratio for loan outstandings remained very high in Poland and Egypt,
at 122% and 146% respectively; in Ukraine, the local coverage ratio
was 30%. Income from discontinued operations was
down -74.2% due to the disposal of the controlling interest in
Crédit du Maroc in the fourth quarter of 202267. All in all,
International Retail Banking excluding Italy
contributed €47 million to net income Group share, x2.1 (x3 at
constant exchange rates) compared to the second quarter of
2022.
In first half 2023,
revenues for International Retail Banking
excluding Italy totalled €430 million, up +20.3% (+45.1%
at constant exchange rates) compared to second quarter 2022, driven
by the increase in the net interest margin. Operating
expenses excluding SRF were stable at -€218 million (+0.2%
compared with first half 2022, up +11.9% at constant exchange
rates). Thanks to the strong growth in revenues, gross
operating income excluding SRF came to €212 million, up by
+51.6% (x2 at constant exchange rates) compared with first half
2022. The cost of risk amounted to -€91 million, a
decrease of -66.3% (-59% at constant exchange rates) compared with
first half 2022, which had been impacted by the provisioning of
-€195 million for Ukraine, adjusted to underlying income for the
first quarter of 2022. Income from discontinued
operations fell by -62.9%, related to the disposal of the
controlling interest in Crédit du Maroc in the fourth quarter of
2022. Finally, the contribution of International Retail Banking
excluding Italy to net income Group share was €65
million (versus -€169 million in first half 2022, impacted by the
provisioning for Ukraine).
The underlying RoNE (return on normalised
equity) of International Retail Banking excluding Italy stood at
21.5% at 30 June 2023.
Corporate Centre results
The “internal margins” effect at the time of the
consolidation of the insurance activities at the
Crédit Agricole level was accounted through the Corporate
Centre, contributing to a further reduction in the cost/income
ratio of Crédit Agricole S.A. The impact of internal
margins was -€206 million in revenues and +€206 million
in expenses.
The underlying net income Group share of
Corporate Centre was -€16 million in second quarter 2023, up
by +€36 million compared with second quarter 2022. The
contribution of the Corporate Centre division can be analysed by
distinguishing between the “structural” contribution
(-€107 million) and other items (+€91 million). The
contribution of the “structural” component increased by +€22
million compared to second quarter 2022 and can be broken down into
three types of activity:
- The activities
and functions of the Corporate Centre of the
Crédit Agricole S.A. corporate entity. This contribution
was -€261 million in the second quarter of 2023, down by
-€95 million, including a drop in revenues linked mainly to a
base effect on the TLTRO and on the home purchase savings
provision.
- The businesses
that are not part of the business lines, such as CACIF (Private
equity), CA Immobilier and BforBank (equity-accounted). Their
contribution was +€147 million in the second quarter of 2023,
reflecting the positive impact of the revaluation of Banco BPM
shares (+€138 million, with a share price of at 30 June 2023
€4.26).
- Group support
functions. Their contribution amounted to +€7 million this
quarter (+€3 million compared with second quarter 2022).
The contribution of “other items” was up by
+€14 million compared to second quarter 2022.
The underlying net income Group share of the
Corporate Centre division in first half 2023 was
-€321 million, down -€58 million compared to
first half 2022. The structural component contributed
-€487 million, while the division’s other items contributed
+€167 million over the half-year.The “structural” component
contribution was down -€70 million compared with first half
2023 and can be broken down into three types of activities:
- The activities
and functions of the Corporate Centre of the
Crédit Agricole S.A. corporate entity. This contribution
amounted to -€647 million for first half 2023, down by
€191 million compared with first half 2022;
- Business lines
not attached to the core businesses, such as Crédit Agricole CIF
(private equity) and CA Immobilier and BforBank: their
contribution, which stood at +€151 million in first
half 2023, increased +€120 million compared to first
half 2022.
- Group support
functions: their contribution was +€9 million in first half
2023 compared to a neutral contribution in first half
2022.
The contribution of “other items” was up
+€12 million compared to first half 2022.
At 30 June 2023, risk-weighted assets stood
at €26.2 billion.
* *
*
Financial strength
Crédit Agricole Group
As at 30 June 2023, the phased-in Common
Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of
Crédit Agricole Group was 17.6%, unchanged from end March
2023. Consequently, Crédit Agricole Group had a
substantial buffer of 8.4 percentage points between the
level of its CET1 ratio and the SREP requirement of 9.2%,68 which
is the largest SREP gap among European G-SIBs69. The fully loaded
CET1 ratio is 17.4%.
During second quarter 2023:
- The CET1 ratio benefited this
quarter from an impact of +30 basis points related to
retained earnings, which exceeds the organic
growth of the business lines,
- Changes in risk weighted assets
related to business line organic growth impacted
the Group’s CET1 ratio by -28 basis points, which corresponds to an
increase in the business lines’ risk weighted assets (of which
+€2.1 billion for the Regional Banks),
The phased-in Tier 1 ratio
stood at 18.8% while the phased-in total ratio was
21.5% at end June 2023.
The phased-in leverage ratio
stood at 5.6%, well above the regulatory requirement of 3.5%. In
addition to the minimum requirement of 3% in effect since
1 January 2023, and only for global systemically important
institutions (G-SII), a leverage ratio buffer will be added,
defined as half of the G-SII buffer of the entity, which amounts to
0.5% for the Crédit Agricole Group.
Risk weighted assets for the
Crédit Agricole Group amounted to €595.8 billion, up by +€11.6
billion compared to 31 March 2023. The organic growth of
the business lines (including foreign exchange)
contributed +€9.2 billion to this increase, of which +€2.1 billion
of risk weighted assets at the Regional Banks. Mergers and
acquisitions related to the restructuring of the
partnership between CACF and Stellantis contributed +€2.7 billion
to the growth of RWAs, while methodology and regulatory effects had
a slightly positive effect of -€0.3 billion in the quarter.
Maximum Distributable Amount (MDA and
L-MDA) trigger thresholds
The transposition of Basel regulations into
European law (CRD) introduced a restriction mechanism for
distribution that applies to dividends, AT1 instruments and
variable compensation. The Maximum Distributable Amount (MDA, the
maximum sum a bank is allowed to allocate to distributions)
principle aims to place limitations on distributions in the event
the latter were to result in non-compliance with combined capital
buffer requirements.
The distance to the MDA trigger is the lowest of
the respective distances to the SREP requirements in CET1 capital,
Tier 1 capital and total capital.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group posted a buffer of
778 basis points
above the MDA trigger, i.e.
€46 billion in CET1
capital.
At 30 June 2023, Crédit Agricole
S.A. posted a buffer of
338 basis points
above the MDA trigger, i.e. €13 billion in CET1
capital.
Failure to comply with the leverage ratio buffer
requirement would result in a restriction of distributions and the
calculation of a maximum distributable amount (L-MDA).
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group posted a buffer of
213 basis points above the L-MDA
trigger, i.e. €42 billion in
Tier 1 capital.
TLAC
The TLAC ratio requirement was transposed into
European Union law via CRR2 and has been applicable since 27 June
2019. Crédit Agricole Group must comply with the
following TLAC ratio requirements at all times:
- a TLAC ratio
above 18% of risk weighted assets (RWA), plus – in accordance with
EU directive CRD 5 – a combined capital buffer requirement
(including, for the Crédit Agricole Group, a 2.5% capital
conservation buffer, a 1% G-SIB buffer and the counter-cyclical
buffer set at 0.40% for the CA Group at 30/06/23). Considering the
combined capital buffer requirement, the
Crédit Agricole Group must adhere to a TLAC ratio of
above 21.9%;
- a TLAC ratio of
above 6.75% of the Leverage Ratio Exposure (LRE).
The Crédit Agricole Group’s
2025 target is to maintain a TLAC ratio greater than or equal to
26% of RWA excluding eligible senior preferred debt.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group’s TLAC ratio stood
at 27.1% of RWA and
8.1% of leverage ratio
exposure, excluding eligible senior preferred
debt,70 which is well above the
requirements. The TLAC ratio expressed as a percentage of risk
weighted assets fell by 30bps over the quarter, reflecting the
increase in RWAs, which was not offset by the increase in equity
and eligible items over the period. Expressed as a percentage of
leverage exposure (LRE), the TLAC ratio was up +20 basis
points compared to March 202371.
The Group thus has a TLAC ratio excluding
eligible senior preferred debt that is 520 bps, i.e.
€31 billion, higher than the current requirement of 21.9% of
RWA.
At end-June 2023, €2.2 billion equivalent
was issued in the market (senior non-preferred and Tier 2 debt) on
top of the €1.25 billion of AT1. The amount of
Crédit Agricole Group senior non-preferred securities
taken into account in the calculation of the TLAC ratio was
€27.5 billion.
MREL
The required minimum levels are set by decisions
of resolution authorities and then communicated to each
institution, then revised periodically. Since 1 January 2022,
Crédit Agricole Group has been requested to meet a
minimum total MREL requirement of:
- 21.04% of RWA,
plus – in accordance with EU directive CRD 5 – a combined
capital buffer requirement (including, for the Crédit Agricole
Group, a 2.5% capital conservation buffer, a 1% G-SIB buffer and
the counter-cyclical buffer set at 0.40% for the CA Group at
30/06/23). Considering the combined capital buffer requirement, the
Crédit Agricole Group must adhere to a total MREL ratio
of above 24.9%;
- 6.02% of the
LRE.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group had a MREL ratio of
32.1% of RWA and
9.6% of leverage
exposure, well above the total MREL requirement.
An additional subordination requirement to TLAC
(“subordinated MREL”) is also determined by the resolution
authorities and expressed as a percentage of RWA and LRE, in which
senior debt instruments are excluded, similar to TLAC, which ratio
is equivalent to the subordinated MREL for the
Crédit Agricole Group. Since 1 January 2022, this
subordinated MREL requirement for the
Crédit Agricole Group did not exceed the TLAC
requirement.
The distance to the maximum distributable amount
trigger related to MREL requirements (M-MDA) is the lowest of the
respective distances to the MREL, subordinated MREL and TLAC
requirements expressed in RWA.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Group had a buffer of
520 basis points above the M-MDA trigger, taking into
account the TLAC requirement applicable at 30 June 2023, i.e.
€31 billion of CET1 capital.
Crédit Agricole S.A.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole S.A.’s solvency ratio was higher than the
Medium-Term Plan target, with a phased-in Common Equity
Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.6%, stable
compared to end March 2023. Crédit Agricole S.A. therefore had a
substantial buffer of 3.4 percentage points between the level of
its CET1 ratio and the 8.2% SREP requirement 72. The buffer is
lower than the 3.7 percentage points at end March 2023 due to the
impact of the increase in the countercyclical buffer. The fully
loaded CET1 ratio reached 11.5% in second quarter 2023:
- The CET1 ratio
benefited this quarter from a positive impact of +21 basis points
linked to retained earnings. This impact
corresponds to net income Group share net of AT1 coupons and the
distribution of 50% of income, i.e. a provision for dividends of
€0.32 per share for the second quarter of 2023, and a provision for
dividends of €0.50 per share for first half 2023,
- The change in
risk weighted assets due to organic growth in the business
lines impacted the CET1 ratio by -21 basis points,
including an increase of +€5.2 billion in the risk weighted assets
of the SFS division due to the strong momentum generated by the
launch of Crédit Agricole Auto Bank, an increase of +€3.1 billion
in the risk weighted assets of the Large Customers division, mainly
due to the increase in market RWAs (VaR, SVaR and Counterparty Risk
in the Trading Book), and a decrease of -€1.6 billion in the risk
weighted assets of Insurance as a result of the decline in
equity-accounted value73 following the payment of the final
dividend for the 2022 financial year,
-
Methodology and regulatory effects mainly concern
irrevocable payment undertakings (IPU). This item had a negative
impact of -3 basis points on the CET1 ratio,
- Finally,
mergers and acquisitions, OCI and other items had
a negative impact of -2 basis points on the CET1 ratio, and mainly
related to the restructuring of the partnership between CACF and
Stellantis (-3 basis points).
The phased-in leverage ratio was 4.0% at end
June 2023, up +0.2 percentage point compared to end March
202374 and above the 3% requirement.
The phased-in Tier 1 ratio
stood at 13.5% and the phased-in total ratio at 17.6% this
quarter.
Risk weighted assets for Crédit
Agricole S.A. amounted to €376.9 billion at 30 June 2023, up
by +€8.8 billion compared to 31 March 2023. The business
lines’ RWA contribution (including foreign exchange
impact) was +€6.4 billion, including an increase of +€5.2 billion
in the risk weighted assets of the SFS division due to the strong
momentum generated by the launch of Crédit Agricole Auto Bank, an
increase of +€2.9 billion in the risk weighted assets of the Large
Customers division, mainly due to the increase in market RWAs (VaR,
SVaR and Counterparty Risk in the Trading Book), and a decrease of
-€1.9 billion in the risk weighted assets of Insurance as a result
of the decline in equity-accounted value following the payment of
the final dividend for the 2022 financial year, Mergers and
acquisitions related to the restructuring of the
partnership between CACF and Stellantis contributed +€2.7 billion
to the growth of RWAs, while methodology and regulatory
effects had a slightly positive effect of -€0.3 billion in
the quarter.
Liquidity and Funding
Liquidity is measured at
Crédit Agricole Group level.
In order to provide simple, relevant and
auditable information on the Group’s liquidity position, the
banking cash balance sheet’s stable resources surplus is calculated
quarterly.
The banking cash balance sheet is derived from
Crédit Agricole Group’s IFRS financial statements. It is
based on the definition of a mapping table between the Group’s IFRS
financial statements and the sections of the cash balance sheet and
whose definition is commonly accepted in the marketplace. It
relates to the banking scope, with insurance activities being
managed in accordance with their own specific prudential
constraints.
Further to the breakdown of the IFRS financial
statements in the sections of the cash balance sheet, netting
calculations are carried out. They relate to certain assets and
liabilities that have a symmetrical impact in terms of liquidity
risk. Deferred taxes, fair value impacts, collective impairments,
short-selling transactions and other assets and liabilities were
netted for a total of €39 billion at end-June 2023. Similarly,
€130 billion in repos/reverse repos were eliminated insofar as
these outstandings reflect the activity of the securities desk
carrying out securities borrowing and lending operations that
offset each other. Other nettings calculated in order to build the
cash balance sheet – for an amount totalling €195 billion at
end-June 2023 – relate to derivatives, margin calls,
adjustment/settlement/liaison accounts and to non-liquid securities
held by Corporate and Investment banking (BFI) and are included in
the “Customer-related trading assets” section.
Note that deposits centralised with Caisse des
Dépôts et Consignations are not netted in order to build the cash
balance sheet; the amount of centralised deposits
(€91 billion at end-June 2023) is booked to assets under
“Customer-related trading assets” and to liabilities under
“Customer-related funds”.
In a final stage, other restatements reassign
outstandings that accounting standards allocate to one section,
when they are economically related to another. As such, senior
issuances placed through the banking networks as well as financing
by the European Investment Bank, the
Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations and other
refinancing transactions of the same type backed by customer loans,
which accounting standards would classify as “Medium long-term
market funds”, are reclassified as “Customer-related funds”.
Note that for Central Bank refinancing
transactions, outstandings related to the T-LTRO (Targeted
Longer-Term Refinancing Operations) are included in “Long-term
market funds”. In fact, T-LTRO 3 transactions are similar to
long-term secured refinancing transactions, identical from a
liquidity risk standpoint to a secured issue.
Medium to long-term repurchase agreements are
also included in “Long-term market funds”.
Finally, the CIB’s counterparties that are banks
with which we have a commercial relationship are considered as
customers in the construction of the cash balance sheet.
Standing at €1,640 billion at 30 June 2023,
the Group’s banking cash balance sheet shows a surplus of
stable funding resources over stable application of funds of
€172 billion, down
-€45 billion compared to end-march 2023 due to the
€12 billion increase in refinancing needs resulting from
commercial activity (€22 billion increase in loans and
€10 billion increase in customer-related funds), and the
repayment of TLTROs in June (€48bn) partially offset by medium to
long-term market funds raised.
Total TLTRO 3 outstandings for
Crédit Agricole Group amounted to €45.5 billion75 at
30 June 2023, down -€48 billion76, which were repaid during
the quarter. It should be noted, with regard to the position in
stable ressources, that internal management excludes the temporary
surplus of stable resources provided by the increase in T-LTRO 3
outstandings in order to secure the Medium-Term Plan’s target of
€110 billion to €130 billion, regardless of the repayment
strategy.
Furthermore, given the excess liquidity, the
Group remained in a short-term lending position at 30 June 2023
(central bank deposits exceeding the amount of short-term net
debt).
Medium-to-long-term market funds stood
at €260 billion at
30 June
2023, down -€35 billion compared to end-March
2023, due to the repayment in June 2023 of €48 billion of
TLTRO 3 resources.
They included senior secured debt of
€113 billion, senior preferred debt of €96 billion,
senior non-preferred debt of €30 billion and Tier 2
securities amounting to €21 billion.
The Group’s liquidity
reserves, at market value and after haircuts, amounted to
€334 billion
at 30 June 2023, down
-€123 billion compared to end-March 2023. They covered
short-term net debt more than two times over (excluding the
replacements with Central Banks).
This decrease in reserves is mainly explained by
the impact of the end of the “ACC77 real estate” channel for -€114
billion and the normalization of the haircuts from Banque the
France on other eligible claims (temporarily eased during Covid
crisis) for -€5 billion.
The issuance program of the new CA HL SFH
(Crédit Agricole Home Loan SFH), which has received ACPR/BCE
approval on 18 July 2023 and which claims were issued at the end of
July 2023, is expected to rebuild around +€70 billion of
ECB-eligible reserves.
The overall level of liquidity reserves will
remain at a very high level, estimated at around €404 billion
pro-forma 30 June 2023.
Crédit Agricole Group also continued
its efforts to maintain immediately available reserves (after
recourse to ECB financing). Central bank eligible non-HQLA assets
after haircuts amounted to €54 billion.
Credit institutions are subject to a threshold
for the LCR ratio, set at 100% on 1 January 2018.
At 30
June 2023, the average year-on-year LCR
ratios were respectively 157.3%
for Crédit Agricole Group and
146.4% for Crédit Agricole S.A.
The month-end LCR ratios were respectively 142.9% for Crédit
Agricole Group (a surplus of €84.3 billion) and 140.3% for Crédit
Agricole S.A. (a surplus of €72 billion). They were higher than the
Medium-Term Plan target (around 110%).
In addition, the NSFR of
Crédit Agricole Group and Crédit Agricole S.A.
exceeded 100%, in accordance with the regulatory
requirement applicable since 28 June 2021 and above the Medium-Term
Plan target (>100%).
The Group continues to follow a prudent policy
as regards medium-to-long-term refinancing, with a
very diversified access to markets in terms of investor base and
products.
At 30 June 2023, the Group’s main
issuers raised the equivalent of €38.4
billion78,79 in
medium-to-long-term debt through the open market, 51% of
which was issued by Crédit Agricole S.A. Significant
events for the Group were as follows:
-
Crédit Agricole CIB issued €8.6 billion in
structured format;
-
Crédit Agricole Italia completed a new issuance in covered bond
format in June for €1 billion with a six-year term;
-
Crédit Agricole Consumer Finance issued
€2.8 billion in ABS securitisations;
-
Crédit Agricole Auto Bank (CAAB), the new name
of FCA Bank, extended its access to the market with a new
senior preferred issuance in June for €600 million with a
three-year term;
-
Crédit Agricole Next Bank (Switzerland) carried
out a covered bond issuance in June with three- and seven-year
terms (green format) for CHF 100 million each.
The Group’s medium-to-long-term financing can be
broken down into the following categories:
-
€10.5 billion in secured financing;
-
€14.9 billion in plain-vanilla unsecured financing;
-
€9.0 billion in structured financing;
-
€4.0 billion in long-term institutional deposits and CDs.
In addition, €12.2 billion was raised through
off-market issuances, split as follows:
-
€8.6 billion from banking networks (the Group’s retail banking
or external networks);
-
€2.2 billion from supranational organisations or financial
institutions;
-
€1.4 billion from national refinancing vehicles (including the
credit institution CRH).
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole S.A. raised the equivalent of
€19.7 billion80,81
through the open market:
The bank raised the equivalent of
€19.7 billion, of which €1.8 billion in senior non-preferred
debt, €0.4 billion in Tier 2 debt, €11.8 billion in
senior preferred debt and €5.8 billion in senior secured debt.
The financing comprised a variety of formats and currencies:
-
€11.8 billion;
-
4.1 billion US dollars (€3.8 billion equivalent);
-
1.3 billion pounds sterling (€1.4 billion equivalent);
-
172 billion Japanese yen (€1.1 billion equivalent);
-
0.8 billion Swiss francs (€0.8 billion equivalent);
-
0.9 billion Australian dollars (€0.6 billion equivalent);
-
0.5 billion Singapore dollars (€0.4 billion equivalent).
Crédit Agricole S.A. has announced an increase
in its 2023 refinancing plan from €19 billion82,83 to €25 billion
in order to support its strong commercial momentum and to maintain
its regulatory ratios at a high level.
Since end June 2023,
Crédit Agricole S.A. has raised an additional
€0.6 billion, including a €0.5 billion senior secured
issue through the CA PS SCF vehicle and a CNY1 billion senior
preferred issue in Panda format (€126 million equivalent). At end
July 2023, the MLT financing plan thus stood at €20.4 billion,
or 81% of the 2023 programme.
Note that on 3 January 2023,
Crédit Agricole S.A. issued a PerpNC6 AT1 bond for
€1.25 billion at an initial rate of 7.25%.
Economic and financial
environment
First half
In the first half of the year, inflation
in the major developed economies continued to fall, while still
remaining high (especially core inflation), and monetary tightening
continued. The momentum of the post-Covid recovery continued to
ease off and growth rates dipped. Drastic recessions were avoided
particularly because of the buffers left over from the pandemic,
namely private savings which, although diminishing, were still
abundant, and labour markets which had proved fairly
resilient.
Inflation: fall in headline inflation,
slow progress for core inflation
Value chains, congested at the end of the Covid
pandemic due to demand very quickly outpaced supply, and commodity
markets, disrupted by the war in Ukraine, gradually returned to
normal. Energy, manufacturing and food commodity prices fell, as
did transport costs. At end-June 2023, for example, prices of oil,
iron ore, wheat and sea freight were down year-on-year by close to
34%, 7%, 21% and 50% respectively. This upstream disinflation led
to a rapid and largely automatic fall in headline inflation.
In the United States, year-on-year price
inflation fell to 6.4% in December and then to 3% in June, having
peaked at 9% in June 2022. Meanwhile, core inflation remained high
at 4.8% in June, after peaking at 6.5% in March 2022. In the
eurozone, after peaking at 10.6% in October 2022, inflation ticked
down to 9.2% in December and then 5.5% in June. After peaking at
5.7% in March 2023, core inflation has been falling only very
slowly (5.4% in June). Although a wage-price spiral cannot be
blamed for this, despite a buoyant labour market, core inflation
has been resistant. This is because increases in upstream costs
have been spread across all prices and the increased consumption of
services has taken over from the consumption of goods.
Growth: more robust than expected but
slowing significantly
Although growth in the United
States has continued to be revised upwards, it regressed
slightly (annualised quarterly rate of 2% in the first quarter,
versus 2.6% and 3.2% in the fourth and third quarters of 2022
respectively). In contrast to brisk consumption (growth of 4.2% in
the quarter, and contribution to growth of 2.8 percentage points,
or pp), productive investment turned in a mediocre performance
(virtually zero contribution) and residential investment continued
to contract (-4%, down for the eighth consecutive quarter, which is
a cumulative drop of 22% between first quarter 2021 and first
quarter 2023). Inventory changes were the main drag on growth in
the first quarter with a contribution of -2.1 pp. This was due
to major destocking and a slowdown in investment. Although
corporate profits fell sharply for the second consecutive quarter,
the financial position of households improved: after seven
consecutive quarters of reduced spending power, real disposable
income grew by 2.9%. The savings rate (4.3%) recovered slightly,
but has remained below its pre-Covid average (7.9%, 2017–2019)
since mid-2021. For its part, the labour market has held up well:
since March 2022, the unemployment rate has hovered between 3.4%
and 3.7% and stood at 3.6% in June.
There was also a marked slowdown in the
eurozone: GDP growth (year-on-year) fell from 1.8%
in the fourth quarter of 2022 to 1% in first quarter of 2023.
Business activity subsequently fell again by 0.1%
(quarter-on-quarter), dragged down by growth in Germany (-0.3%),
which also recorded two consecutive quarters of decline. Although
domestic demand once again made a negative contribution to growth
(-0.3 points), this was modest compared to the previous quarter
(-1.2 points). With inflation easing from its peak in the fourth
quarter of 2022, household consumption fell for the second
consecutive quarter (-0.3%), even though this was less than in the
previous quarter (-1%). Investment picked up (+0.6%, following
-3.5%), but growth remained modest. Foreign trade’s positive
contribution to growth was once again due to a sharper fall in
imports than exports.
As suggested by a number of indicators, the
period of sustained expansion was therefore coming to an end,
particularly in the manufacturing sector. That said, the reduction
of business in this sector has not yet translated into an increase
in corporate failures. These have remained relatively few across
the economy as a whole. The unemployment rate of 6.5% in May 2023
showed little change from one month earlier but was down slightly
from one year earlier (6.7% in May 2022).
In France, after an abrupt
slowdown in the second half of 2022, growth proved resilient,
remaining positive at the start of the year (0.2% in first quarter
2023). However, this apparent robustness masked the weakness of
domestic demand. While foreign trade continued to drive growth,
household consumption failed to rebound in the first quarter. After
contracting in the fourth quarter of 2022, it was only stable in
the first quarter of 2023 and remains below its pre-pandemic level.
Goods consumption fell sharply, impacted most notably by food
consumption (year-on-year food inflation was still 13.7% in June,
after having reached 15.9% in March). Household investment was also
down sharply for the third consecutive quarter. Lastly, monetary
tightening began having an impact on investment by non-financial
companies; this declined for the first time since the third quarter
of 2021.
Ongoing monetary tightening and interest
rate hikes
Since the beginning of 2022, central
banks have been prioritising the fight against inflation.
Both the Federal Reserve and the ECB have steadfastly introduced
aggressive policies to raise key interest rates. Since March 2022
in the United States and July 2022 in the eurozone, interest rates
have risen by 500 and 400 basis points (bp) respectively to stand
at 5.25% (Federal Funds Rate Upper Limit) and 4% (refinancing rate)
at the beginning of July 2023.
Alongside this monetary tightening, short
maturities of the yield curve (two-year swap rates or sovereign
rates) rallied sharply. On the other hand, yields on long
maturities (ten-year rates) had less of a “climb”. This was due to
the nature of inflation – considered more of a shock than an
ongoing, steady increase – fears of a slowdown and central banks’
determination to get inflation down to their targets.
Interest rate curves have therefore inverted.
Equity markets performed particularly well at the beginning of the
year, based on the view that there would be a vigorous recovery in
China after it abandoned its zero-Covid policy and an imminent
pivot in monetary policy (imminent end to the hike in key interest
rates rapidly followed by a reduction).
However, these movements were briefly
interrupted in March when US monetary tightening claimed its first
banking victims in the US (the most notable being the collapse of
Silicon Valley Bank)84 followed by a carbon copy in Europe caused
by the vicissitudes of Crédit Suisse. These two events brought the
issue of financial stability back to the fore and triggered a
temporary upturn in risk aversion (fall in equities and “risk-free”
sovereign rates, wider credit spreads) and expectations of rapid
monetary easing. Central banks nevertheless reaffirmed their
commitment to fighting inflation and to dealing with the sources of
financial instability using ad hoc measures. The Fed unveiled a new
instrument of monetary policy to help banks meet potential
liquidity requirements.85 It then continued its monetary
tightening, as did the ECB. After a turbulent March, the markets
calmed down again.
At 30 June 2023, US two- and ten-year
sovereign yields stood at 5.0% and 3.9%, a year-on-year rise of
around 200 bp and 80 bp respectively (+50 bp and
-2 bp in the first half of 2023). German two- and ten-year
sovereign yields were 3.2% and 2.4%, a year-on-year rise of
270 bp and 100 bp respectively (+50 bp and
-20 bp in the first half of the year). Despite the end of the
ECB’s bond purchase programme under the APP (Asset Purchase
Programme) and major TLTRO maturities at the end of June, the risk
premiums paid by non-core and semi-core countries remained close,
contrary to what some may have feared. At 30 June, French and
Italian spreads stood at approximately 55 bp and 170 bp
respectively against the Bund (declines of around 5 bp and
35 bp respectively since the start of the year). In addition,
equity markets posted strong gains: the S&P 500,
Eurostoxx 50 and CAC 40 indexes rose by 16%, 14% and 12%
respectively during the first half of the year. Over the same
period, the euro (at 1.09 against the dollar) appreciated by
2.2%.
Finally, the Livret A passbook accounts rate
rose from 2% (the level at which it had been since
August 2022) to 3% in February 2023. It was decided in
mid-July to keep it at 3% until the start of 2025.
Outlook
With the labour market holding up well and
savings still abundant, albeit diminishing, household consumption
absorbed the drain on spending power and monetary tightening better
than feared. Growth held up better than expected, as did core
inflation.
Business activity is nevertheless decelerating,
as indicated by surveys suggesting a widespread global slowdown.
Developing a scenario of deceleration without collapse presupposes
a slow decline in inflation easing revenues and putting an end to
key rate hikes.
Global environment
In the United States, cracks
are beginning to appear and are getting wider as the repressive
effects of monetary and financial tightening are being felt.
Residential investment has already been significantly curtailed,
and productive investment is likely to contract in turn. Consumers,
who had been shoring up growth, have been dipping into savings and
resorting to credit, and could be less confident and less
extravagant going forwards. While better-than-expected employment
figures may provide a softer landing, the risk of a recession will
still loom in the second half of the year. A moderate recession
would lead to average growth of 1.2% in 2023 and then just 0.7% in
2024. This ultimately natural slowdown is based on the assumption
that headline inflation and especially core inflation will continue
to decline, ending 2023 at around 3.2% and 3.6% respectively,
before both approaching 2.5% at the end of 2024. The risk to this
scenario is that inflation will be more persistent than predicted
and lead to a monetary scenario that is more aggressive than
anticipated.
Far from the hoped-for recovery,
China is struggling to regain its momentum. A
profound confidence crisis among households (fear of unemployment,
precautionary savings) together with unresolved turbulence in the
property market continues to dampen domestic demand. This
translates into inflation so low as to threaten deflation. The
Chinese authorities cannot ignore the fact that the recovery is not
living up to its promises, but they lack the appropriate tools to
stimulate consumption. The annual growth target cautiously
announced by the authorities of “around 5%” should be achieved
(favourable base effects) but there are doubts about China’s
ability to maintain this pace.
Eurozone including France
In the eurozone, the scenario
assumes modest growth of 0.6% in 2023 and 1.3% in 2024 – still
below its potential rate – based on average headline inflation
falling from 8.4% in 2022 to 5.5% in 2023 and 2.9% in 2024.
The (actual and forecast) fall in the growth rate is fairly
drastic: rather than heralding a recession, it “normalises”
behaviours.
The factors underpinning this normalisation
scenario remain. Corporate failures are still relatively few and
limited to specific sectors (hospitality, transport and logistics);
the labour market is holding up well; corporate profits are
“acceptable”, with businesses having, in certain sectors, restored
their margins thanks to the rise in prices. In addition, the
expected decline in inflation should limit the extent to which
business activity is weakened: consumption should benefit from the
improvement in real income as well as excess savings available to
the wealthiest households, even though a large portion of this
surplus has already been turned into non-liquid property and
financial assets. Meanwhile, non-housing investment is expected to
remain steady thanks to the decline in the cost of intermediate
goods and strong support from European funds. Most factors,
however, are threats: there are fears of tighter credit
conditions (which could shift growth normalisation towards a
sharper correction) and an anticipated margin squeeze.
Unlike some European countries,
France was able to avoid a technical recession at
the beginning of the year. However, growth drivers are “seizing
up”. Household consumption has already fallen as a result of
inflation. Furthermore, the rise in interest rates designed to
counter inflation is weighing on household investment and will
contribute to the slowdown in investment on the part of
non-financial companies. Growth is expected to decline sharply in
2023, from 2.5% in 2022 to 0.6%. In 2024, a slow recovery with
growth of 1% could be on the cards.
Monetary policy and interest
rates
While the sharp fall in headline inflation has
mostly been automatic, the resilience of core inflation, itself
fuelled by stronger-than-expected growth, has led central banks to
be more aggressive. Provided that inflation, and especially core
inflation, continues to fall, the end of key rate hikes can be
expected soon. Long rates could then slowly move towards a modest
decline.
In June, following ten consecutive rate hikes
totalling 500 basis points, the Federal Reserve
opted for the status quo (Federal Funds Rate Upper Limit at 5.25%),
pointing out that there could be further hikes and delivering a dot
plot86 that suggested a further tightening of 50 basis points (bp),
which is an aggressive forecast. The fear of a recession coupled
with the fact that inflation is still too high argues in favour of
an increase limited to 25 bp, as the market has suggested. The
Fed Funds could therefore reach their peak in the summer (Upper
Limit at 5.5%). There could be a gradual monetary easing from the
second quarter of 2024 (25 bp per quarter), leaving the Upper
Limit at 4.75% at the end of 2024.
The ECB is likely to maintain a
restrictive, or even a highly restrictive, monetary policy over the
coming quarters since inflation is falling too slowly and is still
nowhere near target. The ECB is therefore likely to raise rates
twice (in July and September, taking the deposit rate to 4%) while
continuing its policy of quantitative tightening: reinvestments
under the APP would end in July 2023 while those up to the end of
2024 under the PEPP would continue; TLTRO repayments would continue
until the end of 2024 (but more gradually after the June 2023
repayment). There would be no cut in key rates before the end of
2024 (-50 bp).
By prioritising the fight against inflation,
monetary strategies have helped limit the de-anchoring of inflation
expectations and long-rate over-reaction, but they have promoted
inverted interest rate curves and low or even negative real yields.
Barring any inflation surprises, the risk of a rise in “risk-free”
long rates and a noticeable widening of sovereign spreads within
the eurozone is limited. The risk of an inverted curve over the
long term is very real; our scenario assumes a slightly positive
slope (2/10-year swap rate) from 2025 onwards. The US and German
10-year rates are expected to be approximately 3.75% and 2.60%
respectively at the end of 2023, then falling slightly to 3.50% and
remaining stable. The spreads against the Bund are predicted to be
65 bp for France and 200 bp for Italy at end-2023.
Finally, our scenario banks on the euro being around 1.10 against
the dollar at the end of 2023.
Appendix 1 – Specific items,
Crédit Agricole Group and
Crédit Agricole S.A.
Credit Agricole
Group – Specific
items,
Q2-23,
Q2-22,
H1-23 and
H1-22
|
|
Q2-23 |
Q2-22 |
|
H1-23 |
H1-22 |
€m |
|
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
|
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
DVA (LC) |
|
(15) |
(11) |
22 |
16 |
|
(23) |
(17) |
(9) |
(6) |
Loan portfolio hedges (LC) |
|
(1) |
(1) |
57 |
42 |
|
(25) |
(18) |
74 |
55 |
Home Purchase Savings Plans (LCL) |
|
- |
- |
29 |
21 |
|
- |
- |
34 |
26 |
Home Purchase Savings Plans (CC) |
|
- |
- |
35 |
26 |
|
- |
- |
53 |
39 |
Home Purchase Savings Plans (RB) |
|
- |
- |
342 |
254 |
|
- |
- |
412 |
306 |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
299 |
214 |
- |
- |
|
299 |
214 |
- |
- |
Check Image Exchange penalty (CC) |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
Check Image Exchange penalty (LCL) |
|
21 |
21 |
- |
- |
|
21 |
21 |
- |
- |
Check Image Exchange penalty (RB) |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
Total
impact on revenues |
|
388 |
306 |
485 |
360 |
|
356 |
283 |
564 |
418 |
Creval integration costs (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
(22) |
(13) |
|
- |
- |
(30) |
(18) |
Lyxor integration costs (AG) |
|
- |
- |
(40) |
(21) |
|
- |
- |
(51) |
(26) |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(18) |
(13) |
- |
- |
|
(18) |
(13) |
- |
- |
Total
impact on operating expenses |
|
(18) |
(13) |
(63) |
(34) |
|
(18) |
(13) |
(81) |
(44) |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
Provision for own equity risk Ukraine (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
- |
- |
(195) |
(195) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
impact on cost of credit risk |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
|
(85) |
(61) |
(195) |
(195) |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
Total
impact equity-accounted entities |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
Total
impact on Net income on other assets |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
Reclassification of held-for-sale operations (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
(3) |
(3) |
|
- |
- |
(7) |
(10) |
Total
impact on Net income from discounted or held-for-sale
operations |
|
- |
- |
(3) |
(3) |
|
- |
- |
(7) |
(10) |
Total impact of specific items |
|
301 |
232 |
419 |
322 |
|
269 |
209 |
281 |
169 |
Asset gathering |
|
- |
- |
(40) |
(21) |
|
- |
- |
(51) |
(26) |
French Retail banking |
|
63 |
63 |
371 |
275 |
|
63 |
63 |
446 |
331 |
International Retail banking |
|
- |
- |
(25) |
(16) |
|
- |
- |
(232) |
(223) |
Specialised financial services |
|
212 |
140 |
- |
- |
|
212 |
140 |
- |
- |
Large customers |
|
(16) |
(12) |
79 |
59 |
|
(47) |
(35) |
65 |
48 |
Corporate centre |
|
42 |
42 |
35 |
26 |
|
42 |
42 |
53 |
39 |
* Impact before tax and before non-controlling interests
Crédit
Agricole S.A. – Specific Items
Q2-23,
Q2-22,
H1-23 and
H1-22
|
|
Q2-23 |
Q2-22 |
|
H1-23 |
H1-22 |
€m |
|
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
|
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
Gross impact* |
Impact on Net income |
DVA (LC) |
|
(15) |
(11) |
22 |
16 |
|
(23) |
(16) |
(9) |
(6) |
Loan portfolio hedges (LC) |
|
(1) |
(1) |
57 |
41 |
|
(25) |
(18) |
74 |
53 |
Home Purchase Savings Plans (FRB) |
|
- |
- |
29 |
20 |
|
- |
- |
34 |
24 |
Home Purchase Savings Plans (CC) |
|
- |
- |
35 |
26 |
|
- |
- |
53 |
39 |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
299 |
214 |
- |
- |
|
299 |
214 |
- |
- |
Check Image Exchange penalty (CC) |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
|
42 |
42 |
- |
- |
Check Image Exchange penalty (LCL) |
|
21 |
20 |
- |
- |
|
21 |
20 |
- |
- |
Total
impact on revenues |
|
346 |
264 |
143 |
104 |
|
315 |
241 |
152 |
111 |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(18) |
(13) |
- |
- |
|
(18) |
(13) |
- |
- |
Creval integration costs (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
(22) |
(12) |
|
- |
- |
(30) |
(16) |
Lyxor integration costs (AG) |
|
- |
- |
(40) |
(21) |
|
- |
- |
(51) |
(26) |
Total
impact on operating expenses |
|
(18) |
(13) |
(63) |
(32) |
|
(18) |
(13) |
(81) |
(42) |
Provision for own equity risk Ukraine (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
- |
- |
(195) |
(195) |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
Total
impact on cost of credit risk |
|
(85) |
(61) |
- |
- |
|
(85) |
(61) |
(195) |
(195) |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
Total
impact equity-accounted entities |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
|
(12) |
(12) |
- |
- |
Mobility activities reorganisation (SFS) |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
Total
impact Net income on other assets |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
|
28 |
12 |
- |
- |
Reclassification
of held-for-sale operations (IRB) |
|
- |
- |
(3) |
(3) |
|
- |
- |
(7) |
(10) |
Total
impact on Net income from discounted or held-for-sale
operations |
|
- |
- |
(3) |
(3) |
|
- |
- |
(7) |
(10) |
Total impact of specific items |
|
259 |
190 |
77 |
68 |
|
227 |
167 |
(131) |
(136) |
Asset gathering |
|
- |
- |
(40) |
(21) |
|
- |
- |
(51) |
(26) |
French Retail banking |
|
21 |
20 |
29 |
20 |
|
21 |
20 |
34 |
24 |
International Retail banking |
|
- |
- |
(25) |
(15) |
|
- |
- |
(232) |
(221) |
Specialised financial services |
|
212 |
140 |
- |
- |
|
212 |
140 |
- |
- |
Large customers |
|
(16) |
(11) |
79 |
57 |
|
(47) |
(34) |
65 |
47 |
Corporate centre |
|
42 |
42 |
35 |
26 |
|
42 |
42 |
53 |
39 |
* Impact before tax and before non-controlling
interests
Appendix 2 – Crédit Agricole Group: results by
business lines
Credit Agricole Group – Results by business line, Q2-23 and
Q2-22
|
Q2-23 (stated) |
€m |
RB |
LCL |
IRB |
AG |
SFS |
LC |
CC |
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
3,353 |
959 |
1,005 |
1,741 |
1,162 |
1,905 |
(578) |
9,546 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(2,448) |
(554) |
(520) |
(715) |
(430) |
(1,038) |
471 |
(5,233) |
SRF |
2 |
6 |
(0) |
(0) |
2 |
2 |
(6) |
6 |
Gross operating income |
907 |
411 |
485 |
1,026 |
735 |
869 |
(113) |
4,319 |
Cost of risk |
(405) |
(69) |
(125) |
(0) |
(304) |
(32) |
(3) |
(938) |
Cost of legal risk |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Equity-accounted entities |
0 |
- |
0 |
27 |
11 |
7 |
(0) |
46 |
Net income on other assets |
4 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
26 |
0 |
(0) |
33 |
Income before tax |
507 |
345 |
361 |
1,053 |
468 |
844 |
(116) |
3,460 |
Tax |
(93) |
(76) |
(105) |
(245) |
(143) |
(174) |
63 |
(772) |
Net income from discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
- |
- |
3 |
1 |
0 |
- |
- |
4 |
Net income |
413 |
269 |
259 |
809 |
325 |
670 |
(53) |
2,692 |
Non controlling interests |
(0) |
0 |
(39) |
(122) |
(21) |
(34) |
5 |
(211) |
Net income Group Share |
413 |
269 |
220 |
687 |
304 |
635 |
(48) |
2,481 |
|
Q2-22 (stated) |
€m |
RB |
LCL |
AG |
IRB |
SFS |
LC |
CC |
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
3,738 |
1,010 |
1,189 |
830 |
685 |
1,970 |
(573) |
8,849 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(2,359) |
(572) |
(726) |
(517) |
(360) |
(959) |
497 |
(4,996) |
SRF |
3 |
(3) |
0 |
(8) |
1 |
(1) |
(0) |
(8) |
Gross operating income |
1,382 |
435 |
463 |
305 |
326 |
1,010 |
(76) |
3,845 |
Cost of risk |
(411) |
(43) |
(4) |
(118) |
(112) |
76 |
(3) |
(615) |
Cost of legal risk |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Equity-accounted entities |
1 |
- |
21 |
0 |
78 |
3 |
0 |
103 |
Net income on other assets |
11 |
5 |
2 |
6 |
(2) |
(1) |
0 |
22 |
Income before tax |
982 |
397 |
482 |
194 |
290 |
1,088 |
(79) |
3,355 |
Tax |
(213) |
(94) |
(147) |
(55) |
(60) |
(204) |
3 |
(771) |
Net income from discont'd or held-for-sale ope. |
- |
- |
11 |
11 |
1 |
- |
0 |
23 |
Net income |
768 |
303 |
347 |
149 |
231 |
884 |
(76) |
2,607 |
Non controlling interests |
(0) |
(2) |
(91) |
(27) |
(30) |
(27) |
1 |
(176) |
Net income Group Share |
768 |
301 |
256 |
123 |
201 |
858 |
(76) |
2,431 |
Credit Agricole Group – Results by business line, H1-23 and
H1-22
|
H1-23 (stated) |
€m |
RB |
LCL |
IRB |
AG |
SFS |
LC |
CC |
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
6,686 |
1,895 |
1,994 |
3,486 |
1,834 |
3,956 |
(1,378) |
18,473 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(4,889) |
(1,153) |
(1,020) |
(1,430) |
(800) |
(2,159) |
935 |
(10,517) |
SRF |
(111) |
(44) |
(40) |
(6) |
(29) |
(312) |
(77) |
(620) |
Gross operating income |
1,686 |
698 |
934 |
2,050 |
1,005 |
1,485 |
(521) |
7,337 |
Cost of risk |
(577) |
(135) |
(240) |
(1) |
(463) |
(68) |
(3) |
(1,486) |
Equity-accounted entities |
7 |
- |
1 |
49 |
85 |
11 |
(0) |
153 |
Net income on other assets |
6 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
25 |
5 |
(1) |
37 |
Change in value of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Income before tax |
1,122 |
566 |
695 |
2,098 |
652 |
1,433 |
(525) |
6,042 |
Tax |
(289) |
(138) |
(203) |
(475) |
(177) |
(358) |
157 |
(1,483) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
- |
- |
5 |
1 |
0 |
- |
- |
6 |
Net income |
833 |
428 |
497 |
1,624 |
475 |
1,075 |
(368) |
4,565 |
Non controlling interests |
(0) |
(0) |
(79) |
(233) |
(44) |
(54) |
(4) |
(415) |
Net income Group Share |
833 |
428 |
418 |
1,390 |
431 |
1,021 |
(372) |
4,150 |
|
H1-22 (stated) |
€m |
RB |
LCL |
AG |
IRB |
SFS |
LC |
CC |
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenues |
7,425 |
1,996 |
2,757 |
1,634 |
1,372 |
3,692 |
(1,147) |
17,730 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(4,685) |
(1,168) |
(1,425) |
(1,018) |
(726) |
(1,927) |
872 |
(10,078) |
SRF |
(156) |
(69) |
(7) |
(38) |
(34) |
(442) |
(56) |
(803) |
Gross operating income |
2,584 |
759 |
1,324 |
578 |
612 |
1,323 |
(331) |
6,850 |
Cost of risk |
(557) |
(104) |
(5) |
(393) |
(237) |
(202) |
(6) |
(1,503) |
Equity-accounted entities |
5 |
- |
41 |
1 |
158 |
6 |
- |
211 |
Net income on other assets |
24 |
5 |
3 |
6 |
(2) |
(1) |
(0) |
35 |
Change in value of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Income before tax |
2,056 |
659 |
1,363 |
193 |
532 |
1,127 |
(337) |
5,592 |
Tax |
(516) |
(175) |
(330) |
(112) |
(114) |
(279) |
53 |
(1,474) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
- |
- |
10 |
12 |
2 |
- |
0 |
25 |
Net income |
1,540 |
484 |
1,043 |
92 |
420 |
847 |
(285) |
4,143 |
Non controlling interests |
(1) |
(2) |
(206) |
(57) |
(56) |
(36) |
(4) |
(362) |
Net income Group Share |
1,540 |
482 |
837 |
35 |
364 |
811 |
(289) |
3,781 |
Appendix 3 – Crédit Agricole S.A. : results by
business line
Crédit Agricole S.A. – Results by business line, Q2-23 et
Q2-22
|
Q2-23 (stated) |
€m |
AG |
LC |
SFS |
FRB (LCL) |
IRB |
CC |
Total |
Revenues |
1,732 |
1,906 |
1,162 |
959 |
982 |
(66) |
6,676 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(715) |
(1,038) |
(430) |
(554) |
(503) |
21 |
(3,218) |
SRF |
(0) |
2 |
2 |
6 |
(0) |
(6) |
4 |
Gross operating income |
1,017 |
869 |
735 |
411 |
479 |
(51) |
3,461 |
Cost of risk |
(0) |
(32) |
(304) |
(69) |
(127) |
(2) |
(534) |
Equity-accounted entities |
27 |
7 |
11 |
- |
0 |
(19) |
27 |
Net income on other assets |
0 |
0 |
26 |
2 |
0 |
- |
29 |
Income before tax |
1,045 |
844 |
468 |
345 |
353 |
(71) |
2,983 |
Tax |
(246) |
(174) |
(143) |
(76) |
(103) |
65 |
(677) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
1 |
- |
0 |
- |
3 |
- |
4 |
Net income |
799 |
670 |
325 |
269 |
252 |
(6) |
2,309 |
Non controlling interests |
(123) |
(48) |
(21) |
(12) |
(55) |
(10) |
(269) |
Net income Group Share |
676 |
622 |
304 |
257 |
197 |
(16) |
2,040 |
|
Q2-22 (stated) |
€m |
AG |
LC |
SFS |
FRB (LCL) |
IRB |
CC |
Total |
Revenues |
1,174 |
1,971 |
685 |
1,010 |
812 |
(33) |
5,619 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(727) |
(959) |
(360) |
(572) |
(502) |
(3) |
(3,123) |
SRF |
0 |
(1) |
1 |
(3) |
(8) |
(0) |
(11) |
Gross operating income |
447 |
1,011 |
326 |
435 |
302 |
(36) |
2,485 |
Cost of risk |
(4) |
76 |
(112) |
(43) |
(117) |
(3) |
(202) |
Equity-accounted entities |
21 |
3 |
78 |
- |
0 |
(9) |
94 |
Net income on other assets |
2 |
(1) |
(2) |
5 |
6 |
0 |
11 |
Income before tax |
467 |
1,090 |
290 |
397 |
191 |
(48) |
2,387 |
Tax |
(143) |
(204) |
(60) |
(94) |
(55) |
6 |
(549) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
11 |
- |
1 |
- |
11 |
0 |
23 |
Net income |
335 |
885 |
231 |
303 |
147 |
(41) |
1,861 |
Non controlling interests |
(93) |
(43) |
(30) |
(12) |
(35) |
(11) |
(225) |
Net income Group Share |
242 |
843 |
201 |
291 |
113 |
(52) |
1,636 |
Crédit Agricole S.A. – Results by business line, H1-23 et
H1-22
|
H1-23 (stated) |
€m |
AG |
LC |
SFS |
FRB (LCL) |
IRB |
CC |
Total |
Revenues |
3,478 |
3,957 |
1,834 |
1,895 |
1,951 |
(318) |
12,797 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(1,430) |
(2,159) |
(800) |
(1,153) |
(987) |
(18) |
(6,546) |
SRF |
(6) |
(312) |
(29) |
(44) |
(40) |
(77) |
(509) |
Gross operating income |
2,042 |
1,486 |
1,005 |
698 |
924 |
(413) |
5,741 |
Cost of risk |
(1) |
(68) |
(463) |
(135) |
(241) |
(0) |
(908) |
Equity-accounted entities |
49 |
11 |
85 |
- |
1 |
(33) |
113 |
Net income on other assets |
0 |
5 |
25 |
2 |
0 |
- |
33 |
Change in value of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Income before tax |
2,090 |
1,433 |
652 |
566 |
684 |
(447) |
4,979 |
Tax |
(478) |
(358) |
(177) |
(138) |
(201) |
153 |
(1,199) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
1 |
- |
0 |
- |
5 |
- |
6 |
Net income |
1,613 |
1,076 |
475 |
428 |
488 |
(293) |
3,786 |
Non controlling interests |
(239) |
(77) |
(44) |
(19) |
(113) |
(27) |
(520) |
Net income Group Share |
1,374 |
998 |
431 |
409 |
375 |
(321) |
3,266 |
|
H1-22 (stated) |
€m |
AG |
LC |
SFS |
FRB (LCL) |
IRB |
CC |
Total |
Revenues |
2,743 |
3,694 |
1,372 |
1,996 |
1,599 |
(201) |
11,203 |
Operating expenses excl. SRF |
(1,425) |
(1,927) |
(726) |
(1,168) |
(988) |
(22) |
(6,256) |
SRF |
(7) |
(442) |
(34) |
(69) |
(38) |
(56) |
(647) |
Gross operating income |
1,311 |
1,325 |
612 |
759 |
572 |
(279) |
4,300 |
Cost of risk |
(5) |
(202) |
(237) |
(104) |
(390) |
(4) |
(943) |
Equity-accounted entities |
41 |
6 |
158 |
- |
1 |
(17) |
189 |
Net income on other assets |
3 |
(1) |
(2) |
14 |
6 |
0 |
20 |
Change in value of goodwill |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Income before tax |
1,349 |
1,128 |
532 |
669 |
189 |
(301) |
3,567 |
Tax |
(326) |
(280) |
(114) |
(175) |
(112) |
57 |
(950) |
Net income from discontinued or held-for-sale operations |
10 |
- |
2 |
- |
12 |
0 |
24 |
Net income |
1,033 |
848 |
420 |
493 |
90 |
(244) |
2,641 |
Non controlling interests |
(213) |
(49) |
(56) |
(20) |
(77) |
(19) |
(434) |
Net income Group Share |
820 |
800 |
364 |
473 |
13 |
(263) |
2,207 |
Appendix 4 – Data per share
Crédit Agricole S.A. – Bénéfice par action, actif net par action et
RoTE |
Crédit
Agricole S.A. - data per share |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(€m) |
|
Q2-2023 IFRS17 |
Q2-2022 IFRS4 |
|
H1-23 IFRS17 |
H1-22 IFRS4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net income Group
share - stated |
|
2,040 |
1,976 |
|
3,266 |
2,528 |
- Interests on
AT1, including issuance costs, before tax |
|
(94) |
(86) |
|
(235) |
(208) |
NIGS
attributable to ordinary shares - stated |
[A] |
1,946 |
1,890 |
|
3,031 |
2,320 |
Average number
shares in issue, excluding treasury shares (m) |
[B] |
3,025 |
3,023 |
|
3,024 |
2,965 |
Net earnings per share - stated |
[A]/[B] |
0.64 € |
0.63 € |
|
1.00 € |
0.78 € |
Underlying net
income Group share (NIGS) |
|
1,850 |
1,908 |
|
3,100 |
2,665 |
Underlying NIGS
attributable to ordinary shares |
[C] |
1,756 |
1,822 |
|
2,865 |
2,457 |
Net earnings per share - underlying |
[C]/[B] |
0.58 € |
0.60 € |
|
0.95 € |
0.83 € |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(€m) |
|
|
|
|
30/06/2023 IFRS17 |
30/06/2022 IFRS4 |
Shareholder's
equity Group share |
|
|
|
|
67,879 |
64,417 |
- AT1
issuances |
|
|
|
|
(7,235) |
(5,986) |
- Unrealised
gains and losses on OCI - Group share |
|
|
|
|
1,352 |
2,006 |
- Payout
assumption on annual results* |
|
|
|
|
- |
- |
Net book value (NBV), not revaluated, attributable to
ordin. sh. |
[D] |
|
|
|
61,997 |
59,288 |
- Goodwill &
intangibles** - Group share |
|
|
|
|
(17,077) |
(18,345) |
Tangible NBV (TNBV), not revaluated attrib. to ordinary
sh. |
[E] |
|
|
|
44,920 |
40,943 |
Total shares in
issue, excluding treasury shares (period end, m) |
[F] |
|
|
|
3,024.7 |
3,022.9 |
NBV per share ,
after deduction of dividend to pay (€) |
[D]/[F] |
|
|
|
20.5 € |
19.6 € |
TNBV per share,
after deduction of dividend to pay (€) |
[G]=[E]/[F] |
|
|
|
14.9 € |
13.5 € |
* dividend
proposed to the Board meeting to be paid |
|
|
|
|
|
|
** including
goodwill in the equity-accounted entities |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(€m) |
|
|
|
|
H1-23 IFRS17 |
H1-22 IFRS4 |
Net income Group
share - stated |
[K] |
|
|
|
3,266 |
2,528 |
Impairment of
intangible assets |
[L] |
|
|
|
0 |
0 |
IFRIC |
[M] |
|
|
|
-542 |
-682 |
Stated NIGS
annualised |
[N] = ([K]-[L]-[M])*2+[M] |
|
|
|
7,075 |
5,738 |
Interests on
AT1, including issuance costs, before tax, annualised |
[O] |
|
|
|
-470 |
-416 |
Stated result
adjusted |
[P] = [N]+[O] |
|
|
|
6,605 |
5,322 |
Tangible NBV
(TNBV), not revaluated attrib. to ord. sh. - avg (1) |
[J] |
|
|
|
42,778 |
40,195 |
Stated ROTE
adjusted(2) (%) |
= [P] / [J] |
|
|
|
15.4% |
13.2% |
Underlying Net
income Group share |
[Q] |
|
|
|
3,100 |
2,665 |
Underlying NIGS
annualised |
[R] = ([Q]-[M])*2+[M] |
|
|
|
6,741 |
6,011 |
Underlying NIGS
adjusted |
[S] = [R]+[O] |
|
|
|
6,271 |
5,595 |
Underlying ROTE
adjusted(2)(%) |
= [S] / [J] |
|
|
|
14.7% |
13.9% |
|
|
|
|
0.0% |
0.0% |
(1) Average of the NTBV not
revalued attributable to ordinary shares calculated between
31/12/2022 and 30/06/2023
(2) ROTE calculated on the
basis of an annualised net income Group share and linearised IFRIC
costs over the year
Alternative Performance
Indicators87
NBV Net Book Value not
re-evaluatedThe Net Book Value not re-evaluated
corresponds to the shareholders’ equity Group share from which the
amount of the AT1 issues, the unrealised gains and/or losses on OCI
Group share and the pay-out assumption on annual results have been
deducted.
NBV per share Net Book Value per share -
NTBV per share Net Tangible Book Value per shareOne of the
methods for calculating the value of a share. This represents the
Net Book Value divided by the number of shares in issue at end of
period, excluding treasury shares.
Net Tangible Book Value per share represents the
Net Book Value after deduction of intangible assets and goodwill,
divided by the number of shares in issue at end of period,
excluding treasury shares.
EPS Earnings per ShareThis is
the net income Group share, from which the AT1 coupon has been
deducted, divided by the average number of shares in issue
excluding treasury shares. It indicates the portion of profit
attributable to each share (not the portion of earnings paid out to
each shareholder, which is the dividend). It may decrease, assuming
the net income Group share remains unchanged, if the number of
shares increases.
Cost/income ratioThe
cost/income ratio is calculated by dividing operating expenses by
revenues, indicating the proportion of revenues needed to cover
operating expenses.
Cost of
risk/outstandingsCalculated by dividing the cost of credit
risk (over four quarters on a rolling basis) by outstandings (over
an average of the past four quarters, beginning of the period). It
can also be calculated by dividing the annualised cost of credit
risk for the quarter by outstandings at the beginning of the
quarter. Similarly, the cost of risk for the period can be
annualised and divided by the average outstandings at the beginning
of the period.
Since the first quarter of 2019, the
outstandings taken into account are the customer outstandings,
before allocations to provisions.
The calculation method for the indicator is
specified each time the indicator is used.
Doubtful loanDefaulting loan.
The debtor is considered to be in default when at least one of the
following conditions has been met:
- a payment
generally more than 90 days past due, unless specific circumstances
point to the fact that the delay is due to reasons independent of
the debtor’s financial situation;
- the entity
believes that the debtor is unlikely to settle its credit
obligations unless it avails itself of certain measures such as
enforcement of collateral security right.
Impaired loanLoan which has
been provisioned due to a risk of non-repayment.
MRELThe MREL (Minimum
Requirement for Own Funds and Eligible Liabilities) ratio is
defined in the European “Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive”
(BRRD). This Directive establishes a framework for the resolution
of banks throughout the European Union, with the aim to provide
resolution authorities with shared instruments and powers to
pre-emptively tackle banking crises, preserve financial stability
and reduce taxpayers’ exposure to losses. Directive (EU) 2019/879
of 20 May 2019 known as “BRRD2” amended the BRRD and was transposed
into French law by Order 2020-1636 of 21 December 2020.
The MREL ratio corresponds to an own funds and
eligible liabilities buffer required to absorb losses in the event
of resolution. Under BRRD2, the MREL ratio is calculated as the
amount of eligible capital and liabilities expressed as a
percentage of risk weighted assets (RWA), as well as a leverage
ratio exposure (LRE). Are eligible for the numerator of the total
MREL ratio the Group’s regulatory capital, as well as eligible
liabilities issued by the central body and the Crédit Agricole
network affiliated entities, i.e. subordinated notes, senior
non-preferred debt instruments and certain senior preferred debt
instruments with residual maturities of more than one year.
Impaired (or doubtful) loan coverage
ratio This ratio divides the outstanding provisions
by the impaired gross customer outstandings.
Impaired (or doubtful) loan
ratio This ratio divides the gross customer
outstandings depreciated on an individual basis, before provisions,
by the total gross customer outstandings.
TLACThe Financial Stability
Board (FSB) has defined the calculation of a ratio aimed at
estimating the adequacy of the bail-in and recapitalisation
capacity of Global Systemically Important Banks (G-SIBs). This
Total Loss Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) ratio provides
resolution authorities with the means to assess whether G-SIBs have
sufficient bail-in and recapitalisation capacity before and during
resolution. It applies to Global Systemically Important Banks, and
therefore to Crédit Agricole Group.
The Group’s regulatory capital as well as
subordinated notes and eligible senior non-preferred debt with
residual maturities of more than one year issued by
Crédit Agricole S.A. are eligible for the numerator of
the TLAC ratio.
Net income Group shareNet
income/(loss) for the financial year (after corporate income tax).
Equal to net income Group share, less the share attributable to
non-controlling interests in fully consolidated subsidiaries.
Underlying Net income Group
shareThe underlying net income Group share represents the
stated net income Group share from which specific items have been
deducted (i.e. non-recurring or exceptional items) in order to
facilitate the understanding of the company’s actual earnings.
Net income Group share attributable to
ordinary shares The net income Group share attributable to
ordinary shares represents the net income Group share from which
the AT1 coupon has been deducted, including issuance costs before
tax.
RoTE Return on Tangible
EquityThe RoTE (Return on Tangible Equity) measures the
return on tangible capital by dividing the Net income Group share
annualised by the group’s NBV net of intangibles and goodwill. The
annualised Net income Group share corresponds to the annualisation
of the Net income Group share (Q1x4; H1x2; 9Mx4/3) excluding
impairments of intangible assets and restating each period of the
IFRIC impacts in order to linearise them over the year.
Disclaimer
The financial information for
second quarter and first half 2023 for
Crédit Agricole S.A. and Crédit Agricole Group
comprises this press release and the presentation slides and
related appendices, all of which are available at
https://www.credit-agricole.com/en/finance/financial-publications.
This press release may include prospective
information on the Group, supplied as information on trends. This
data does not represent forecasts within the meaning of EU
Delegated Act 2019/980 of 14 March 2019 (Chapter 1, Article 1,
d).
This information was developed from scenarios
based on a number of economic assumptions for a given competitive
and regulatory environment. Therefore, these assumptions are by
nature subject to random factors that could cause actual results to
differ from projections. Likewise, the financial statements are
based on estimates, particularly in calculating market value and
asset impairment.
Readers must take all these risk factors and
uncertainties into consideration before making their own
judgement.
Applicable standards and
comparability
The figures presented for the six-month period
ending 30 June 2023 have been prepared in accordance with IFRS as
adopted in the European Union and applicable at that date, and with
prudential regulations currently in force. This financial
information does not constitute a set of financial statements for
an interim period as defined by IAS 34 “Interim Financial
Reporting” and has not been audited.
Note: The scopes of consolidation of the
Crédit Agricole S.A. and Crédit Agricole Groups
have not changed materially since the
Crédit Agricole S.A. 2022 Universal Registration Document
and its A.01 update (including all regulatory information about the
Crédit Agricole Group) were filed with the AMF (the
French Financial Markets Authority).
The sum of values contained in the tables and
analyses may differ slightly from the total reported due to
rounding.
At 30 June 2023,
Crédit Agricole Auto Bank is the name of the new
entity formed from the takeover of 100% of FCA Bank by
Crédit Agricole Consumer Finance.
Crédit Agricole Auto Bank is fully consolidated in
the Crédit Agricole S.A. consolidated financial
statements.
At 30 June 2023, Leasys is the new joint
subsidiary between CACF and Stellantis. This entity is consolidated
using the equity accounted method in the
Crédit Agricole S.A. consolidated financial
statements
Financial Agenda
8 November
2023 Publication
of the 2023 third quarter and first 9 months results8 February
2024 Publication
of the 2023 fourth quarter and full year results03 May
2024 Publication
of the 2024 first quarter results22 May
2024 General
Meeting1 August
2024 Publication
of the 2024 second quarter and the first half year results6
November
2024 Publication
of the 2024 third quarter and first 9 months results
Contacts
CREDIT AGRICOLE PRESS CONTACTS
Alexandre Barat + 33 1 57 72 12
19 alexandre.barat@credit-agricole-sa.frOlivier
Tassain + 33 1 43 23
25
41 olivier.tassain@credit-agricole-sa.frMathilde
Durand
+ 33 1 57 72 19
43
mathilde.durand@credit-agricole-sa.frBertrand
Schaefer +33 (0)1 49
53 43
76 bertrand.schaefer@ca-fnca.fr
CRÉDIT AGRICOLE S.A. INVESTOR RELATIONS
CONTACTS
Institutional
shareholders |
+ 33 1 43 23 04
31 |
investor.relations@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Individual
shareholders |
+ 33 800
000 777 (freephone number – France only) |
relation@actionnaires.credit-agricole.com |
|
|
|
Cécile
Mouton |
+ 33 1 57 72 86
79 |
cecile.mouton@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Equity investor relations: |
|
|
Jean-Yann
AsserafFethi Azzoug |
+ 33 1 57 72 23 81+
33 1 57 72 03 75 |
jean-yann.asseraf@credit-agricole-sa.fr
fethi.azzoug@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Joséphine
Brouard |
+ 33 1 43 23 48
33 |
joséphine.brouard@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Oriane Cante |
+ 33 1 43 23 03
07 |
oriane.cante@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Nicolas
Ianna |
+ 33 1 43 23 55
51 |
nicolas.ianna@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Leila Mamou |
+ 33 1 57 72 07
93 |
leila.mamou@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Anna
Pigoulevski |
+ 33 1 43 23 40
59 |
anna.pigoulevski@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Annabelle
Wiriath |
+ 33 1 43 23 55
52 |
annabelle.wiriath@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
|
|
|
Credit investor and rating agency relations: |
|
Rhita Alami
Hassani |
+ 33 1 43 23 15
27 |
rhita.alamihassani@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
Florence Quintin
de Kercadio |
+ 33 1 43 23 25
32 |
florence.quintindekercadio@credit-agricole-sa.fr |
|
|
|
|
|
|
See all our press releases at: www.credit-agricole.com -
www.creditagricole.info
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Crédit_Agricole |
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Crédit Agricole Group |
|
créditagricole_sa |
1 It would have an impact of around -30 bps on Crédit Agricole
S.A.'s CET12 Gross customer acquisition for first half 2023 was
~1,026,000 and the customer base was ~267,000.3 Constant scope
excluding La Médicale4 Change vs. June 2022: +0.5 pp for RBs, +0.5
pp for LCL and +2.3 pp for CA Italia5 The reorganisation of the
Mobility activities of the CA Consumer Finance Group
had a non-recurring impact in Q2 2023 on all intermediate operating
totals due to the transfer of business assets, indemnities received
and paid, the accounting treatment of the 100% consolidation of
CA Auto Bank (formerly FCA Bank) and the
reorganisation of the automotive financing activities within the
CA Consumer Finance Group (particularly the review
of application solutions).6 See Appendixes for more details on
specific items. 7 Q2-22 base effect not taking into account
investment management decisions implemented at the end of 2022,
i.e. ring-fencing of equity and desensitisation of the portfolio.8
The cost of risk relative to outstandings (in basis points) on a
four quarter rolling basis is calculated on the cost of risk of the
past four quarters divided by the average outstandings at the start
of each of the four quarters after reintegration of CA Auto Bank
outstandings9 The cost of risk relative to outstandings (in basis
points) on an annualised basis is calculated on the cost of risk of
the quarter multiplied by four and divided by the outstandings at
the start of the quarter after reintegration of CA Auto Bank
outstandings
10 Analysis based on 30/06 data for
Crédit Agricole S.A. and Crédit Agricole Group.
Analysis based on 30/06/2023 reporting on customer loans, Stage 3
outstandings and Stage 1, 2 and 3 provisions for Banco Santander,
Standard Chartered, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, HSBC.
Société Générale, BPCE Group and UniCredit. 11 Number of active
profiles on “Ma Banque” corresponding to at least one
synchronisation during the month
12 Signatures initiated in BAM deposit mode
(multi-channel bank access), Mobile customer portal or “Ma Banque”
app13 4.8 over 5 on the store14 Home loan production in France down
-47% for May 2023 according to the Banque de France15 Average rate
for 20-25 year lending +58bp Q1/Q216 SAS Rue La Boétie dividend
paid annually in Q217 The reorganisation of the Mobility activities
of the CA Consumer Finance Group had a non-recurring
impact in Q2 2023 on all intermediate operating totals due to the
transfer of business assets, indemnities received and paid, the
accounting treatment of the 100% consolidation of
CA Auto Bank (formerly FCA Bank) and the
reorganisation of the automotive financing activities within the
CA Consumer Finance Group (particularly the review
of application solutions).
18 Underlying, excluding specific items. See
Appendixes for more details on specific items. 19 Q2-22 base effect
not taking into account investment management decisions implemented
at the end of 2022, i.e. ring-fencing of equity and desensitisation
of the portfolio.
20 Provisioning rate calculated with
outstandings in Stage 3 as denominator, and the sum of the
provisions recorded in Stages 1, 2 and 3 as numerator.21 The cost
of risk relative to outstandings (in basis points) on a four
quarter rolling basis is calculated on the cost of risk of the past
four quarters divided by the average outstandings at the start of
each of the four quarters after reintegration of CA Auto Bank
outstandings22 The cost of risk relative to outstandings (in basis
points) on an annualised basis is calculated on the cost of risk of
the quarter multiplied by four and divided by the outstandings at
the start of the quarter after reintegration of CA Auto Bank
outstandings23 See
Appendixes for more details on specific items.24 See details on the
calculation of the business lines’ RoTE (return on tangible equity)
and RONE (return on normalised equity) on Appendix425 The
annualised underlying net income Group share corresponds to the
annualisation of the underlying net income Group share (Q1x4; H1x2;
9Mx4/3) by restating each period for IFRIC impacts to linearise
them over the year26 See details on the calculation of the business
lines’ ROTE (return on tangible equity) and RONE (return on
normalised equity)27 The annualised underlying net income Group
share corresponds to the annualisation of the underlying net income
Group share (Q1x4; H1x2; 9Mx4/3) by restating each period for IFRIC
impacts to linearise them over the year28 Scope “Life France”
29 Scope: property and casualty in France and
abroad30 Net inflows include assets under advisory and assets sold,
and take into account 100% of Asian JVs’ net inflows. For Wafa
Gestion in Morocco, net inflows reflect Amundi’s share in the JV’s
capital.31 LCL Private Banking and Indosuez Wealth Management32
Amount of allocation of CSM and RA33 Amount of allocation of CSM
and RA, excluding funeral guarantees34 Net of cost of reinsurance,
excluding financial results35 IFRS17 run rate: i.e. after
restatement of the 2022 base effect, which did not take into
account the investment management decisions implemented at the end
of 2022 (segregation of equity and desensitisation of the
portfolio).36 Indosuez Wealth Management scope37 Cf. dedicated
press release available on our website38 The second quarter of 2022
was the best ever for CIB’s underlying revenues, which totalled
€1,579 million. 39 Refinitiv40 Bloomberg41 Operational register
keeping, organisation of general meetings and other services to
issuers in France42 CRTB: Counterparty credit risk in the trading
book43 Formation on 1 January 2023 of a 50/50 joint venture
combining the issuer services business lines of CACEIS and BNP
Paribas; Uptevia has been equity-accounted since Q1-23.44
CA Auto Bank, automotive JVs and auto activities of other
entities45 The reorganisation of the Mobility activities of the
CA Consumer Finance Group has a non-recurring impact
in the second quarter of 2023 on all intermediate operating totals
due to the transfer of business assets, indemnities received and
paid, the accounting treatment of the 100% consolidation of
CA Auto Bank (formerly FCA Bank) and the
reorganisation of the automotive financing activities within the
CA Consumer Finance Group (particularly the review
of application solutions).46 The reorganisation of the Mobility
activities of the CA Consumer Finance Group has a
non-recurring impact in the second quarter of 2023 on all
intermediate operating totals due to the transfer of business
assets, indemnities received and paid, the accounting treatment of
the 100% consolidation of CA Auto Bank (formerly
FCA Bank) and the reorganisation of the automotive financing
activities within the CA Consumer Finance Group
(particularly the review of application solutions).47 Contribution
of €176 million over the quarter to revenues48 Contribution of -€62
million over the quarter to expenses49 Contribution of -€25 million
over the quarter to cost of risk50 Annualised cost of risk as a
share of outstandings (in basis points) calculated on the basis of
the cost of risk for the quarter multiplied by 4 divided by the
outstandings at the beginning of the quarter after adding back CA
Auto Bank’s outstandings51 Net of POCI outstandings52 Source: Abi
Monthly Outlook, June 23: -1.9%
53 “Ecobonuses” correspond to refinancing of the
customer tax credit: Italian tax deductions for renovation, energy
efficiency and building safety, introduced in 2021. 54 Source:
CRIF: -22.4% of home loan production H1/H1 in Italy, but increase
in demand for home loans of +6.6 pp YoY55
Agos56 At 30 June 2023, this scope corresponds to the
aggregation of all Group entities present in Italy: CA Italia, CACF
(Agos, Leasys, CA Auto Bank), CAA (CA Vita and CACI), Amundi,
CACIB, CAIWM57 Excluding participation in Banco BPM (accounted in
CC) and including the contribution of CAAB and Leasys starting from
April 202358 At 30 June 2023, this scope includes the entities of
CA Polska, CA Egypt and CA Ukraine.59 Including Crédit du Maroc
customer assets in the second quarter of 2022, the entity
classified under IFRS 5 since the first quarter of 2022 and the
sale of control (63.7%) in the fourth quarter of 2022. The
remaining 15% is to be sold within 18 months.60 Including €21m
reversal of provision for Cheque Image Exchange as a specific
item61 At 30 June 2023 this scope includes the entities CA Italia,
CA Polska, CA Egypt and CA Ukraine.62 The Crédit du Maroc entity
has been classified under IFRS 5 since the first quarter of 2022
and the disposal of the controlling interest (63.7%) took place in
the fourth quarter of 2022. The remaining 15% is to be sold within
18 months; Crédit du Maroc’s contribution to net income was €2.8 m
in Q2 2023 (€8.8m in Q2 22) and €4.5m in H1 23 (€1.4m in H1 22).63
Provisions of -€195 million for Ukraine risk, adjusted to
underlying income for Q1-202264 +6.7% excluding Creval integration
costs of -€22 million adjusted to underlying income for Q2 2022
65 Over a rolling four quarter period.66 Up
+3.9%, adjusted for Creval integration costs of -€30m in H1-22 on
an underlying basis67 The Crédit du Maroc entity has been
classified under IFRS 5 since the first quarter of 2022 and the
disposal of the controlling interest (63.7%) took place in the
fourth quarter of 2022. The remaining 15% is to be sold within 18
months; Crédit du Maroc’s contribution to net income was €1.6m in
Q2 2023 (€10.1m in Q2 22) and €4.5m in H1 23 (€7.1m in H1 22).68 At
30 June 2023, increase in the countercyclical buffer (to
40 bps at 30/06/2023 from 7 bps at 31/03/2023), raising the
SREP requirement to 9.2%.69 Based on public data of the 12 European
G-SIBs as at 30/06/2023 for CAG, BPCE, BNPP, Deutsche Bank,
Santander, UniCredit, Barclays, HSBC, Standard Chartered, ING,
Société Générale, and as at 31/03/2023, for UBS. CASA data
(30/06/2023). Distance to SREP or requirement in CET1 equivalent.70
As part of its annual resolvability assessment,
Crédit Agricole Group has chosen to waive the possibility
offered by Article 72ter(3) of the Capital Requirements Regulation
(CRR) to use senior preferred debt for compliance with its TLAC
requirements in 2023.71 The presentation on the balance sheet of
the revaluation difference of rate-hedged portfolios was
reclassified between assets and liabilities as of March 31, 2023,
generating an adjustment to the TLAC ratio of +6bp72 At 30 June
2023, increase in the countercyclical buffer (buffer of 34 bps
at 30/06/2023 vs. 8 bps at 31/03/2023), raising the SREP
requirement to 8.2%. 73 Change in equity-accounted value excluding
OCI74 The presentation on the balance sheet of the revaluation
difference of interest rate hedged portfolios was reclassified
between assets and liabilities as of March 31, 2023, generating a
leverage ratio adjustment of +4 bp75 Including CA Auto Bank76
Including CA Auto Bank77 Additional Credit Claims78 Gross amount
before buy-backs and amortisations79 Excl. AT1 issuances80 Gross
amount before buy-backs and amortisations81 Excl. AT1 issuances82
Gross amount before buy-backs and amortisations83 Excl. AT1
issuances
84 A regional bank specialised in financing tech
start-ups and companies, sectors that have experienced difficulties
in raising funds in a context of monetary tightening and that
consume high levels of cash. To cope with its customers’
withdrawals, SVB had to sell $21 billion of US bonds and
registered a loss of $1.8 billion due to the bonds having lost
their value on the secondary market on account of the rise in
interest rates. Poorly capitalised and coping with potential
capital losses on its securities portfolio, SVB launched a capital
increase that failed. This led to a bank run (mass withdrawals from
its customers) that the bank was unable to withstand, precipitating
its bankruptcy. Furthermore, due to its relatively small size, the
bank had benefited from more relaxed banking regulations sanctioned
by the Trump administration. As a result, the bank’s potential
losses and low capitalisation had not been detected upstream.85
Loans of up to one year in length against collateral such as US
Treasuries valued at par rather than market value. This eliminates
the risk of unrealised losses that can occur very suddenly when a
bank is forced to sell assets (as was the case with SVB).
86 A chart showing the projected key interest
rates of each FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) member. The
dots/projections reflect what each member believes to be the
appropriate federal funds rate at the end of the next three years
and in the long term.87 APMs are financial indicators not presented
in the financial statements or defined in accounting standards but
used in the context of financial communications, such as underlying
net income Group share or RoTE. They are used to facilitate the
understanding of the company’s actual performance. Each APM
indicator is matched in its definition to accounting data.
- EN_CASA_CP_2023-Q2_Results
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