Spanish state-owned lender Bankia said it swung into the red in the fourth quarter, for the first time in three years, blaming one-off restructuring costs after its acquisition of smaller peer BMN. Seeking to boost its earnings following a quick recovery from its 22.4 billion euro ($28 bln) bailout in 2012, Bankia agreed in June to acquire BMN to create Spain's fourth-biggest bank.
When it originally announced the tie-up, Bankia said it expected restructuring costs of around 300 million euros, mainly due to layoffs and branch closures. On Monday it reported restructuring costs of 312 million euros, resulting in the bank making a 235 million euro loss for the fourth quarter.
Shares in Bankia were down 2.7 percent by 0845 GMT, reversing a 1 percent gain on Friday after the bank announced it would pay back 207 million euros in state aid via a gross dividend from 2017 earnings of 0.11 euros per share. Bankia and BMN were given a 24 billion euro bailout in 2012 after losses on property loans at the height of Spain's financial crisis.
Excluding restructuring costs, Bankia's net profit rose 5.5 percent in October-December to 77 million euros, beating a 72 million euros forecast in a Reuters poll. Like its domestic competitors, the bank is struggling to lift earnings from loans in Spain as interest rates hover at historic lows and as increasing competition erodes margins.
Including one month of BMN into Bankia's earnings, net interest income, a measure of earnings on loans minus deposit costs, was 501 million euros in the quarter, down 3.1 percent from a year ago due to pressure from ultra-low interest rates.
However, lending income was up around 6 percent against the previous quarter due to lower funding costs. On Thursday, Spain's largest union, CCOO, said Bankia had proposed 2,291 job cuts following BMN's integration. That was down from an original layoff plan of 2,510 people announced in December.
BMN's integration contributed to an increase of 1.9 billion euros in bad loans from the previous quarter on Bankia's balance sheet at the end of 2017. However, the bank's non-performing loan (NPL) ratio edged up to 8.9 percent from 8.8 percent three months earlier.
After completing its takeover of BMN in December, Bankia said it finished the year with a core Tier-1 fully loaded capital, the strictest measure of solvency, of 12.33 percent, above the 12 percent target it had envisaged with the acquisition.
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