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France's SocGen beats third quarter estimates

France's third-largest listed lender said its net income nearly doubled in the reported quarter to €1.6 billion from €862m a year ago
France's third-largest listed lender said its net income nearly doubled in the reported quarter to €1.6 billion from €862m a year ago

French bank Societe Generale has posted higher third-quarter earnings, beating estimates, supported by strong revenue from corporate and investment banking and lower bad loans and also appointed a new financial chief.

Earnings at SocGen mirror those of US and European competitors who slashed provisions for Covid-19 losses on a global economic rebound.

A record wave of dealmaking and financing activities also bolstered results for lenders such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan.

France's third-largest listed lender, after BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole, said its net income nearly doubled in the reported quarter to €1.6 billion from €862m a year ago.

It was also better than a mean forecast for €952m in a poll of analysts compiled by Refinitiv.

The lender improved its 2021 outlook for provisions. It now expects cost of risk, which reflects the level of provisioning against bad loans, not to exceed 20 basis points this year against a previous forecast of between 20 and 25 basis points.

In the third quarter, provisions decreased by 62.2%, while revenue grew 14.9% to €6.67 billion, above the €5.85 billion forecast by analysts.

SocGen said in a statement it was launching a share buyback programme of about €470m.

Revenue in equity trading was up 53% in the third quarter while revenue in advisory and financing rose by 31%.

SocGen's chief financial officer William Kadouch-Chassaing will leave the bank by the end of this month, and be replaced by current deputy financial chief Claire Dumas from December 1, the lender confirmed in a separate statement.

Dumas, a former Deloitte auditor, joined SocGen in 1998 and has been the bank's deputy CFO since September 2017