Bank Of Ireland Fiscal Year Net Profit Slumps, Impairments Worsening
May 19 2009 - 1:31AM
Dow Jones News
Bank of Ireland PLC (IRE) said Tuesday that net profit slumped
due to restructuring and impairment charges, the crash in the
property market, and also announced the retirement of its
governor.
The bank sees loan impairments rising to EUR6 billion from
EUR4.5 billion in the three-years to March 2011, citing a change in
the economic forecasts in Ireland where 50% of the credit risk on
the bank's lending portfolio is based.
In Ireland, the impairment charge rose to 129 basis points
versus 28 basis points last year. Of the increase in the charge to
EUR708 million from EUR129 million, 10% relates to residential
mortgages, 12% is consumer lending and 78% relates to property and
construction.
The new Group Chief Executive Richie Boucher said that the bank
faces "another difficult financial year" in the 12 months to March
31, 2010.
The bank posted a net profit of EUR59 million in the 12 months
to March 31, 2009, down from a net profit of EUR1.68 billion a year
earlier, while operating income fell 5% to EUR3.9 billion and
underlying earnings-per-share fell 80% to 30.2 cents versus EPS of
150.3 cents last year.
It posted a pretax loss of EUR7 million versus a profit of
EUR1.93 billion after several costs, including EUR304 million in
impairment of goodwill and other intangible assets and EUR83
million in restructuring charges.
Before these charges, pretax profit fell 81% to EUR332 million
from EUR1.79 billion last year.
In a move that was widely expected, the bank's Governor Richard
Burrows announced his retirement from the Annual General Court in
July 2009. "Accountability for these losses must be taken at the
top," Burrows said in a statement.
Shares closed Monday up 6.7% at EUR1.08 on the Irish Stock
Exchange. Analysts remain concerned over its loan losses. At that
price it's capitalized at EUR1.1 billion. It has plummeted from
EUR8.69 this time last year.
Company Web site: http://www.bankofireland.com
-By Quentin Fottrell, Dow Jones Newswires; 353-1-676-2189;
quentin.fottrell@dowjones.com