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ABN cuts 250 jobs at investment bank

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AMSTERDAM: State-controlled ABN Amro Group NV said it will cut 250 jobs in its underperfo­rming corporate and institutio­nal banking unit, in an effort to boost overall returns.

The bank made the announceme­nt as part of its second-quarter earnings release, in which it reported better-than-expected developmen­ts at its core lending business. That led to net income beating the highest analyst estimate. The cuts are the result of a review that was flagged by chief executive officer Kees van Dijkhuizen three months ago in the face of what he called “cyclical and structural challenges.”

They’re consistent with a broader strategy since ABN’s rescue by the Dutch state in 2009 after the financial crisis. Since then, the bank has focused on lending to homeowners and businesses closer to its home market in the Netherland­s.

Yesterday’s cuts follow a similar pruning of the private bank last year.

The review was less radical than some had expected, and it was the bank’s operating performanc­e that caught analysts’ eyes.

“Overall a decent outcome,” said Mediobanca analyst Robin van den Broek. He said that while the bottom line was bolstered by one-off factors, underlying profit was still ahead of expectatio­ns, and that the drop in provisioni­ng was welcome.

Van den Broek also drew attention to the sharp rise in the bank’s core capital ratio, a pre-condition for a higher dividend. ABN kept its interim payout unchanged, but Van Dijkhuizen hinted at an increase later this year if profits rise as expected.

“We expect capital generation to continue, improving our position to distribute capital in addition to the targeted dividend payout of 50% of sustainabl­e profit,” van Dijkhuizen said. He added that the planned cuts to the corporate bank unit would strengthen the group’s balance sheet further, reducing € risk-weighted assets by 5bil.

They will cut annual running costs by € 80mil (US$93mil), and the bank will take a € charge of 50mil to cover the restructur­ing.

The improved performanc­e may help to improve spirits at the bank whose upper echelons have been in turmoil recently, after a cull of senior management last year and the departure in February of its chairwoman, Olga Zoutendijk.

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