RBI reports €81 million loss in Hungary through Q3

MNB

Yesterday’s release of a Q3 earnings report for Raiffeisen Bank International (RBI) showed that the financial institution has taken an €81 million loss on its Hungarian operations thus far in 2013. The loss narrowed from €97 million in the base period as net income from commissions and fees climbed and provisioning fell, the report shows.

Net interest income fell 16% to €149 million as the business’s net interest margin narrowed by 0.21% to 3.15%. But net income from commissions and fees jumped 47% to €84 million because of a transaction duty introduced at the start of the year. Net provisioning for impairment losses was down 34% at €97 million.

RBI’s Hungary-based business had total assets of €6.27 billion at the end of Q3, down 15% from twelve months earlier. Stock of client loans fell 5% to €5.16 billion and client deposits slipped 18% to €4.08 billion. Corporate loans accounted for 53% of lending stock and retail loans for 36%. Foreign currency-denominated loans made up almost 62% of the total.

MOL Shareholders Approve Dividend of Around HUF 250/Share Figures

MOL Shareholders Approve Dividend of Around HUF 250/Share

Gov't Awards HUF 6.5 bln of Subsidies to SMEs in Underdevelo... Government

Gov't Awards HUF 6.5 bln of Subsidies to SMEs in Underdevelo...

Hungary's Largest ESG Consultancy Formed by Merger of EY, De... Deals

Hungary's Largest ESG Consultancy Formed by Merger of EY, De...

Liz & Chain Rooftop Bar Debuts Sustainable Cocktails Drinks

Liz & Chain Rooftop Bar Debuts Sustainable Cocktails

SUPPORT THE BUDAPEST BUSINESS JOURNAL

Producing journalism that is worthy of the name is a costly business. For 27 years, the publishers, editors and reporters of the Budapest Business Journal have striven to bring you business news that works, information that you can trust, that is factual, accurate and presented without fear or favor.
Newspaper organizations across the globe have struggled to find a business model that allows them to continue to excel, without compromising their ability to perform. Most recently, some have experimented with the idea of involving their most important stakeholders, their readers.
We would like to offer that same opportunity to our readers. We would like to invite you to help us deliver the quality business journalism you require. Hit our Support the BBJ button and you can choose the how much and how often you send us your contributions.