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Kennzahlen
📘 Marktkapitalisierung
📈 Was ist das?
Die Marktkapitalisierung zeigt, wie viel ein Unternehmen laut Börse aktuell wert ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft Unternehmen in Größenklassen (Large, Mid, Small Cap) einzuordnen und gibt Hinweise auf Marktmacht und Stabilität.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Große Unternehmen gelten als stabiler, zahlen oft Dividenden, wachsen aber langsamer.
- Kleine Firmen können stärker wachsen, sind aber schwankungsanfälliger.
- Die Marktkapitalisierung ist ein guter Indikator für Unternehmensgröße, aber kein Maß für Unter- oder Überbewertung.
📘 Enterprise Value (Unternehmenswert)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Enterprise Value (EV) zeigt, was ein Unternehmen tatsächlich kostet, wenn man es komplett übernehmen würde – inklusive Schulden und abzüglich Cash.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
(= Marktkapitalisierung + Nettoverschuldung)
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der EV ist eine realistischere Bewertungsbasis als die Marktkapitalisierung, da er die Kapitalstruktur berücksichtigt. Er ist Grundlage für Kennzahlen wie EV/FCF oder EV/Sales.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Der Enterprise Value zeigt, was ein Unternehmen tatsächlich wert ist – unabhängig davon, wie es finanziert ist.
- Er ist besonders wichtig für professionelle Investoren, da er eine objektivere Grundlage für Bewertungsvergleiche bietet als die Marktkapitalisierung allein.
- Ein Unternehmen mit hoher Verschuldung erscheint im EV teurer, eines mit viel Cash günstiger – auch wenn sie an der Börse gleich viel wert sind.
📘 Nettoverschuldung
📈 Was ist das?
Die Nettoverschuldung zeigt, wie viele Schulden nach Abzug des verfügbaren Cashs tatsächlich verbleiben.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen von Fremdkapital abhängig ist – und wie gut es in der Lage ist, seine Schulden kurzfristig zu bedienen.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine niedrige oder negative Nettoverschuldung bedeutet hohe finanzielle Stabilität.
- Unternehmen mit viel Cash und geringer Verschuldung sind besser gerüstet für Krisen.
- Eine hohe Nettoverschuldung erhöht das Risiko – besonders bei steigenden Zinsen oder konjunkturellen Schwächen.
📘 Cash
📈 Was ist das?
Der Cashbestand zeigt, wie viele liquide Mittel einem Unternehmen sofort zur Verfügung stehen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Er gibt Auskunft über die finanzielle Flexibilität: Ein hoher Cashbestand ermöglicht Investitionen, Rückkäufe oder Krisenresistenz.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Cashbestand zeigt finanzielle Stärke und Handlungsspielraum.
- Cash kann für Investitionen, Schuldentilgung oder Aktienrückkäufe genutzt werden.
- Allerdings: Zu viel ungenutztes Kapital kann auch auf mangelnde Investitionsideen hinweisen.
📘 Anzahl ausstehender Aktien
📈 Was ist das?
Die Anzahl ausstehender Aktien gibt an, wie viele Aktien eines Unternehmens aktuell im Umlauf sind und von Investoren gehalten werden.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie ist die Grundlage für viele Kennzahlen wie Gewinn je Aktie (EPS), Marktkapitalisierung oder KGV.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Je weniger Aktien im Umlauf sind, desto höher fällt z. B. der Gewinn je Aktie aus – wichtig für Bewertung und Dividendenrendite.
- Aktienrückkäufe verringern die Anzahl ausstehender Aktien – und steigern den Wert je Aktie.
- Kapitalerhöhungen haben den gegenteiligen Effekt: mehr Aktien → Verwässerung der bestehenden Anteile.
📘 Kurs-Gewinn-Verhältnis (KGV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KGV zeigt, wie oft der Gewinn pro Aktie im aktuellen Aktienkurs enthalten ist – also wie „teuer“ eine Aktie im Verhältnis zum Gewinn ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KGV gehört zu den bekanntesten Bewertungskennzahlen. Es hilft Anlegern einzuschätzen, ob eine Aktie im Vergleich zu ihrem Gewinn eher günstig oder teuer erscheint.
🧮 Berechnung
📊 KGV (TTM) = bezogen auf den Gewinn der letzten 12 Monate (Trailing Twelve Months):🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges KGV kann auf eine günstige Bewertung hindeuten – oder auf Probleme im Geschäftsmodell.
- Ein hohes KGV kann Wachstumserwartungen widerspiegeln – oder eine überbewertete Aktie.
📘 Kurs-Umsatz-Verhältnis (KUV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KUV zeigt, wie viel Anleger für 1 € Umsatz eines Unternehmens zahlen – unabhängig vom Gewinn.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KUV ist besonders bei wachstumsstarken oder noch nicht profitablen Unternehmen hilfreich. Es zeigt, wie hoch der Umsatz an der Börse bewertet wird.
🧮 Berechnung
Marktkapitalisierung = 43,27 Mrd. € | Umsatz (TTM) = 13,65 Mrd. €
Marktkapitalisierung = 43,27 Mrd. € | Umsatz erwartet = 13,35 Mrd. €
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges KUV kann auf Unterbewertung hindeuten – oder auf schwache Margen.
- Ein hohes KUV kann hohe Erwartungen widerspiegeln – oder übermäßigen Optimismus.
- Besonders sinnvoll bei Wachstumsunternehmen, bei denen der Gewinn oder Free Cashflow (noch) keine Aussagekraft hat.
📘 Unternehmenswert zu Umsatz (EV/Sales)
📈 Was ist das?
EV/Sales zeigt, wie viel Anleger für 1 € Umsatz eines Unternehmens zahlen, wenn man auch Schulden und Cash berücksichtigt – es ist eine kapitalstrukturbereinigte Version des KUV.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl eignet sich besonders für den Vergleich von Unternehmen mit unterschiedlicher Verschuldung – sie zeigt, wie teuer ein Unternehmen tatsächlich im Verhältnis zum Umsatz ist.
🧮 Berechnung
Enterprise Value = 43,27 Mrd. € | Umsatz (TTM) = 13,65 Mrd. €
Enterprise Value = 43,27 Mrd. € | Umsatz erwartet = 13,35 Mrd. €
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- EV/Sales ist neutral gegenüber der Kapitalstruktur und eignet sich gut für Unternehmensvergleiche.
- Ein niedriges Verhältnis kann auf eine günstig bewertete Aktie hindeuten – ein hohes Verhältnis auf hohe Erwartungen oder Überbewertung.
- Besonders nützlich bei wachstumsstarken, noch nicht profitablen Firmen.
📘 Unternehmenswert zu Free Cashflow (EV/FCF)
📈 Was ist das?
EV/FCF zeigt, wie viele Jahre es dauern würde, bis ein Unternehmen seinen Unternehmenswert durch freien Cashflow „zurückverdient”.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl hilft, Unternehmen auf Basis ihrer tatsächlichen Cash-Erträge zu bewerten – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln oder buchhalterischem Gewinn.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges EV/FCF deutet auf eine günstige Bewertung bei starker Cashgenerierung hin.
- Ein hohes EV/FCF kann entweder auf Optimismus oder auf temporär schwachen Cashflow hindeuten.
- Besonders hilfreich bei reifen, profitablen Unternehmen mit stabilen Cashflows.
📘 Kurs-Buchwert-Verhältnis (KBV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KBV zeigt, wie hoch der Marktwert eines Unternehmens im Verhältnis zu seinem bilanziellen Eigenkapital ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KBV ist besonders bei Substanzwerten (z. B. Banken, Industrie) relevant. Es hilft Anlegern zu erkennen, ob ein Unternehmen unter oder über seinem buchhalterischen Vermögen bewertet ist.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein KBV unter 1 kann auf Unterbewertung oder schwache Rentabilität hindeuten.
- Ein KBV über 1 zeigt, dass der Markt dem Unternehmen Mehrwert über den Buchwert hinaus zuschreibt (z. B. Marken, Patente, Wachstum).
- Das KBV eignet sich besonders gut für Unternehmen mit stabilen, materiellen Vermögenswerten.
📘 Dividende je Aktie
📈 Was ist das?
Die Dividende je Aktie zeigt, wie viel Geld ein Unternehmen pro Aktie an seine Aktionäre ausschüttet – typischerweise jährlich oder quartalsweise.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie ist die absolute Größe der Auszahlung je Aktie – wichtig für alle, die regelmäßige Erträge suchen oder Dividendenstrategien verfolgen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine stabile oder wachsende Dividende je Aktie ist oft ein Zeichen für ein solides Geschäftsmodell.
- Die Dividende je Aktie allein sagt aber nichts über die Rendite – dafür ist auch der Aktienkurs relevant (→ Dividendenrendite).
- Langfristig steigende Dividenden sind oft ein sehr gutes Merkmal (z. B. Dividenden-Aristokraten).
📘 Dividendenrendite
📈 Was ist das?
Die Dividendenrendite zeigt, wie hoch die Dividende eines Unternehmens im Verhältnis zum Aktienkurs ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft dabei, Dividendenaktien vergleichbar zu machen – unabhängig vom absoluten Auszahlungsbetrag.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine stabile Dividendenrendite kann auf verlässliche Ausschüttungen hinweisen.
- Ein Vergleich der 1J- und 5J-Rendite hilft zu erkennen, ob das Dividendenwachstum mit dem Kurswachstum Schritt hält.
- Eine niedrige Rendite ist nicht zwingend negativ – sie kann auf starkes Kurswachstum hindeuten.
📘 Dividendenwachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Dividendenwachstum zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen seine Dividende je Aktie über die Zeit gesteigert hat.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
5J: durchschnittliche jährliche Wachstumsrate (CAGR)
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Stetig steigende Dividenden gelten als Zeichen für finanzielle Stärke und Aktionärsorientierung – besonders interessant für langfristige Investoren.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein stabiles Dividendenwachstum ist ein Zeichen nachhaltiger Ertragskraft.
- Ein hohes Dividendenwachstum kann ein erheblicher Hebel deiner Rendite sein:
- Wenn ein Unternehmen z. B. 1 € Dividende zahlt und diese über 5 Jahre jährlich um 15 % erhöht, bekommst du im 5. Jahr bereits 2 € je Aktie – doppelt so viel wie zu Beginn!
📘 Ausschüttungsquote (Payout)
📈 Was ist das?
Die Ausschüttungsquote zeigt, wie viel Prozent des Unternehmensgewinns (pro Aktie) als Dividende an die Aktionäre ausgeschüttet wird.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Quote hilft einzuschätzen, ob eine Dividende auf Dauer tragfähig ist – besonders im Verhältnis zum erzielten Gewinn.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine niedrige Ausschüttungsquote bedeutet: Das Unternehmen behält einen größeren Teil des Gewinns für Investitionen – typisch für Wachstumsunternehmen.
- Eine moderate Quote (z. B. 25–50 %) steht oft für ein gesundes Gleichgewicht zwischen Ausschüttung und Zukunftsinvestitionen.
- Hohe Ausschüttungsquoten können attraktiv wirken, sind aber riskanter, wenn die Gewinne schwanken oder sinken.
📘 Dividendensteigerungen in Folge (Erhöhungen)
📈 Was ist das?
Diese Kennzahl zeigt, wie viele Jahre in Folge ein Unternehmen seine Dividende pro Aktie erhöht hat – ohne Kürzung oder Aussetzung.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein langer Track Record kontinuierlicher Erhöhungen spricht für Verlässlichkeit, solide Finanzen und aktionärsfreundliche Unternehmenspolitik.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein langer Zeitraum mit Dividendensteigerungen stärkt das Vertrauen – besonders in Krisenzeiten.
- Solche Unternehmen gelten als verlässlich und planbar für Einkommensinvestoren.
- Je länger die Serie, desto stärker das Commitment gegenüber den Aktionären.
📘 Umsatz
📈 Was ist das?
Der Umsatz zeigt, wie viel ein Unternehmen insgesamt mit seinen Produkten und Dienstleistungen verdient – also den Bruttoerlös vor Abzug von Kosten.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Umsatz ist eine der zentralen Kennzahlen zur Einschätzung der Unternehmensgröße, Marktstellung und Wachstumskraft.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein wachsender Umsatz zeigt eine steigende Nachfrage und kann ein guter Frühindikator für Gewinnsteigerungen sein.
- Vergleiche von aktuellem und erwartetem Umsatz geben Hinweise auf das Marktumfeld und Analystenerwartungen.
- Wichtig: Starker Umsatz allein genügt nicht – auch Margen und Profitabilität zählen.
📘 EBITDA
📈 Was ist das?
EBITDA steht für „Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization“ – also Gewinn vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen. Es zeigt das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens, bereinigt um bilanztechnische und finanzierungsbedingte Effekte.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EBITDA ist eine verbreitete Kennzahl zur Beurteilung der operativen Leistungsfähigkeit – insbesondere bei kapitalintensiven Unternehmen oder im internationalen Vergleich.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hohes oder wachsendes EBITDA spricht für starke operative Erträge – unabhängig von Bilanzierung oder Steuerlast.
- EBITDA ist besonders nützlich, um Unternehmen branchenübergreifend zu vergleichen.
- Wichtig: EBITDA ist keine offizielle Gewinnkennzahl – Abschreibungen und Finanzierungskosten werden ausgeklammert.
📘 EBIT
📈 Was ist das?
EBIT steht für „Earnings Before Interest and Taxes“ – also Gewinn vor Zinsen und Steuern. Es zeigt das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Finanzierungs- und Steueraufwand.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EBIT ist eine zentrale Kennzahl zur Beurteilung der Profitabilität aus dem Kerngeschäft – unabhängig von Kapitalstruktur oder Steuersystem.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hohes EBIT deutet auf ein profitables Kerngeschäft hin – vor Zinslasten oder steuerlichen Effekten.
- Es erlaubt objektivere Vergleiche zwischen Unternehmen mit unterschiedlicher Finanzierung.
- Im Vergleich mit EBITDA zeigt EBIT bereits den Einfluss von Abschreibungen auf das operative Ergebnis.
📘 Nettogewinn
📈 Was ist das?
Der Nettogewinn ist der verbleibende Jahresüberschuss (oder -fehlbetrag) eines Unternehmens – nach Abzug aller Kosten, Steuern, Zinsen und Abschreibungen
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Nettogewinn ist die zentrale Erfolgskennzahl – er zeigt, wie profitabel ein Unternehmen nach allen Kosten tatsächlich arbeitet.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein steigender Nettogewinn zeigt, dass das Unternehmen effizient wirtschaftet – trotz aller Kosten.
- Die Entwicklung des Gewinns beeinflusst z. B. direkt das KGV und weitere Kennzahlen.
- Im Zeitverlauf lässt sich ablesen, wie stabil und profitabel ein Geschäftsmodell wirklich ist.
📘 Free Cashflow (FCF)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Free Cashflow gibt Aufschluss über die echte finanzielle Stärke eines Unternehmens – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln. Er zeigt, wie viel Spielraum für Dividenden, Aktienrückkäufe oder Schuldenabbau besteht.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
FCF reflects a company’s real financial strength – regardless of accounting profits. It shows how much flexibility a company has for dividends, share buybacks, or debt reduction.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Free Cashflow bedeutet, dass ein Unternehmen echte Finanzkraft besitzt – unabhängig vom bilanzierten Gewinn.
- Er ist oft die solideste Grundlage für nachhaltige Dividenden und Aktienrückkäufe.
- Sinkender FCF kann ein Warnsignal sein – auch wenn der Gewinn stabil aussieht.
📘 Umsatzwachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Umsatzwachstum zeigt, wie stark sich die Erlöse eines Unternehmens im Vergleich zum Vorjahr verändert haben – tatsächlich (TTM) und auf Prognosebasis (erwartet).
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (Umsatz erwartet ÷ Umsatz Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein wachsender Umsatz ist ein zentrales Signal für steigende Nachfrage, Geschäftsausweitung und Marktanteilsgewinne – besonders bei Wachstumsunternehmen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Wachstum ist der Motor langfristiger Wertsteigerung – besonders bei Technologie- und Wachstumsaktien.
- Wichtig ist nicht nur das aktuelle Wachstum, sondern auch dessen Nachhaltigkeit.
- Prognosen zeigen, ob Analysten weiteres Potenzial erwarten – oder eine Verlangsamung.
📘 EBITDA-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das EBITDA-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen im Vergleich zum Vorjahr gestiegen oder gesunken ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwartetes EBITDA ÷ EBITDA Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein steigendes EBITDA ist ein Zeichen für verbesserte operative Ertragskraft – unabhängig von Finanzierungsstruktur oder Abschreibungen.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Starkes EBITDA-Wachstum signalisiert operative Effizienz und Skalierung – besonders relevant in Wachstumsphasen.
- EBITDA-Wachstum ist ein Frühindikator für Margen- und Gewinnentwicklung – sollte aber stets im Zusammenhang mit Umsatz und EBIT betrachtet werden.
📘 EBIT Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das EBIT-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens (nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Zinsen und Steuern) im Vergleich zum Vorjahr gewachsen ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwartetes EBIT ÷ EBIT Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das EBIT-Wachstum ist ein direkter Indikator für die wirtschaftliche Entwicklung des operativen Geschäfts – unter Berücksichtigung der Kapitalintensität (Abschreibungen).
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Steigendes EBIT signalisiert wachsende operative Rentabilität – auch unter Berücksichtigung von Abschreibungen.
- Das EBIT-Wachstum ist ein wichtiges Maß zur Beurteilung von Geschäftsmodellen mit hohen Investitionskosten.
- Im Zusammenspiel mit Umsatz- und EBITDA-Wachstum ergibt sich ein umfassendes Bild zur operativen Entwicklung.
📘 Nettogewinn-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Nettogewinn-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark der Jahresüberschuss eines Unternehmens gegenüber dem Vorjahr gestiegen oder gesunken ist – sowohl tatsächlich (TTM) als auch auf Basis von Prognosen (erwartet).
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwarteter Nettogewinn ÷ Nettogewinn Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Der erwartete Wert basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Gewinn ist die entscheidende Ergebnisgröße für ein Unternehmen. Ein wachsender Nettogewinn deutet auf steigende Effizienz, stabile Kostenkontrolle und nachhaltige Ertragskraft hin.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Wachsender Nettogewinn stärkt die Bewertung, Dividendenfähigkeit und Kursfantasie.
- Stagnierender oder rückläufiger Gewinn trotz Umsatzwachstum kann auf Margendruck hinweisen.
📘 Free Cashflow-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Free-Cashflow-Wachstum zeigt, wie sich der freie Mittelzufluss eines Unternehmens im Vergleich zum Vorjahr verändert hat – also der Betrag, der nach allen operativen Ausgaben und Investitionen übrig bleibt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Free Cashflow ist der echte, verfügbare Geldzufluss. Wachstum in diesem Bereich ist ein Zeichen für finanzielle Stärke und steigende Flexibilität bei Dividenden, Rückkäufen oder Investitionen.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Sinkender Free Cashflow kann auf steigende Investitionen, höhere Kosten oder stagnierende operative Erträge hindeuten.
- Besonders bei Dividendenwerten ist das FCF-Wachstum wichtig – denn Dividenden werden letztlich aus dem verfügbaren Cash gezahlt.
- Ein negativer Trend sollte genauer analysiert werden – er ist nicht zwangsläufig schlecht, aber potenziell ein Warnsignal.
📘 Bruttomarge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Bruttomarge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug der direkten Herstellungskosten (Material, Produktion) als Bruttogewinn übrig bleibt – also der „Rohgewinn“ eines Unternehmens.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Auch: Bruttomarge = Bruttogewinn ÷ Umsatz × 100
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Bruttomarge gibt Aufschluss über die Profitabilität eines Produkts oder Geschäftsmodells vor Fixkosten, Steuern und Zinsen. Sie zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen produzieren oder einkaufen kann.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Bruttomarge deutet auf starke Preissetzungsmacht und effiziente Herstellung hin.
- Sinkende Bruttomargen können auf Kostensteigerungen oder Preisdruck hindeuten.
- Besonders im Vergleich zu Wettbewerbern liefert die Bruttomarge wertvolle Einblicke in die Geschäftsqualität.
📘 EBITDA-Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die EBITDA-Marge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz als operativer Gewinn vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen (EBITDA) übrig bleibt. Sie misst die operative Effizienz – ohne Verzerrungen durch Finanzierung oder Buchwerte.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die EBITDA-Marge hilft zu verstehen, wie viel operativer Gewinn ein Unternehmen aus jedem Euro Umsatz erzielt – unabhängig von Kapitalstruktur oder steuerlichem Umfeld.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe EBITDA-Marge zeigt starke operative Ertragskraft – unabhängig von Bilanzierungseffekten.
- Die Marge ermöglicht gute Vergleiche zwischen Unternehmen und Branchen.
- Ein stabiler oder wachsender Wert kann auf effiziente Kostenkontrolle und Skalierbarkeit hindeuten.
📘 EBIT-Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die EBIT-Marge zeigt, wie viel Prozent des Umsatzes als operativer Gewinn nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Zinsen und Steuern übrig bleiben.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die EBIT-Marge misst die operative Ertragskraft eines Unternehmens unter Berücksichtigung der Kapitalintensität (z. B. Maschinen, Anlagen). Sie eignet sich gut zum Vergleich von Geschäftsmodellen mit unterschiedlich hohen Abschreibungen.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe EBIT-Marge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen auch nach Abschreibungen effizient arbeitet.
- Sie ist besonders relevant in kapitalintensiven Branchen.
- Langfristig stabile oder steigende Margen sind ein Zeichen wirtschaftlicher Stärke und Preissetzungsmacht.
📘 Nettomarge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Nettomarge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz am Ende als „Reingewinn“ übrig bleibt – also nach Abzug aller Kosten, Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Nettomarge gibt an, wie effizient ein Unternehmen über alle Stufen hinweg wirtschaftet. Sie zeigt, wie viel Gewinn tatsächlich je Euro Umsatz übrig bleibt.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Nettomarge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen nicht nur operativ stark ist, sondern auch seine Finanzierung und Steuerbelastung im Griff hat.
- Vergleiche mit Wettbewerbern geben Einblicke in die wirtschaftliche Qualität.
- Sinkende Nettomargen trotz Umsatzwachstum können ein Warnsignal sein – etwa für steigende Kosten oder sinkende Effizienz.
📘 Free Cashflow Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Free-Cashflow-Marge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug aller operativen Ausgaben und Investitionen tatsächlich als freier Mittelzufluss übrig bleibt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Marge misst die echte Liquidität, die ein Unternehmen erwirtschaftet – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln oder Abschreibungen. Sie ist besonders relevant für Dividenden, Rückkäufe und Investitionen.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Free-Cashflow-Marge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen nachhaltig liquide Mittel erwirtschaftet.
- Sie ist ein starkes Signal für finanzielle Stabilität und Ausschüttungspotenzial.
- Wichtig ist der langfristige Trend – sinkende Werte können auf steigende Investitionen oder rückläufige operative Effizienz hindeuten.
📘 Eigenkapitalquote
📈 Was ist das?
Die Eigenkapitalquote zeigt, wie hoch der Anteil des Eigenkapitals an der Bilanzsumme eines Unternehmens ist – also wie stark es sich aus eigenen Mitteln finanziert.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Eine hohe Eigenkapitalquote steht für finanzielle Stabilität, Krisenfestigkeit und gute Bonität. Sie ist besonders relevant bei der Beurteilung der Verschuldung.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Eigenkapitalquote signalisiert finanzielle Stabilität – besonders in Krisenzeiten.
- Ein niedriger Wert kann auf ein höheres Risiko oder eine aggressive Verschuldung hinweisen.
- Wichtig: Die Eigenkapitalquote sollte immer gemeinsam mit der Eigenkapitalrendite betrachtet werden. Nur so lässt sich beurteilen, ob ein Unternehmen nicht nur solide, sondern auch effizient wirtschaftet.
📘 Eigenkapitalrendite (ROE)
📈 Was ist das?
Die Eigenkapitalrendite zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen mit dem Kapital seiner Aktionäre arbeitet – also wie viel Gewinn es pro Euro Eigenkapital erwirtschaftet.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Eigenkapitalrendite ist eine zentrale Rentabilitätskennzahl. Sie hilft Anlegern zu erkennen, ob das Unternehmen eine attraktive Verzinsung auf das eingesetzte Eigenkapital erwirtschaftet.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Eigenkapitalrendite spricht für ein starkes, effizientes Geschäftsmodell.
- Besonders interessant ist sie bei kapitalintensiven Firmen oder solchen mit hoher Eigenkapitalquote.
- Wichtig: Ein sehr hoher ROE kann auch auf hohe Schulden hinweisen – daher sollte sie immer im Kontext mit der Eigenkapitalquote betrachtet werden.
📘 Return on Capital Employed (ROCE)
📈 Was ist das?
ROCE misst die Gesamtrentabilität eines Unternehmens – also wie effizient es das eingesetzte Kapital (Eigen- und Fremdkapital) zur Gewinnerzielung nutzt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Das eingesetzte Kapital ist das gesamte betriebsnotwendige Kapital, unabhängig von der Finanzierungsquelle.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
ROCE eignet sich besonders gut für den Vergleich unterschiedlich finanzierter Unternehmen. Es zeigt, wie effektiv ein Unternehmen Kapital investiert – unabhängig von der Kapitalstruktur.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher ROCE zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen sein Kapital effizient einsetzt – unabhängig davon, ob es durch Eigen- oder Fremdkapital finanziert ist.
- Je höher der ROCE im Vergleich zu ähnlichen Unternehmen, desto mehr Wert schafft das Unternehmen mit seinem investierten Kapital.
- Besonders wichtig ist der ROCE bei Firmen mit hohen Investitionen – z. B. in Industrie, Energie oder Infrastruktur.
📘 Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
📈 Was ist das?
ROIC zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen das Kapital investiert, das langfristig im operativen Geschäft gebunden ist – unabhängig davon, ob es aus Eigen- oder Fremdkapital stammt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
- NOPAT = „Net Operating Profit After Taxes“
- Investiertes Kapital = operatives Vermögen abzüglich nicht-verzinster Schulden
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
ROIC ist eine der präzisesten Kennzahlen zur Bewertung der Kapitalrendite – besonders im Vergleich zur Eigenkapitalrendite, weil es Verzerrungen durch Schulden vermeidet. Er zeigt, ob ein Unternehmen Mehrwert für alle Kapitalgeber schafft.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher ROIC zeigt, wie gut ein Unternehmen mit dem tatsächlich investierten (betriebsnotwendigen) Kapital wirtschaftet.
- Im Unterschied zu ROCE wird nur Kapital betrachtet, das wirklich zur Finanzierung operativer Aktivitäten dient – und verzinst werden muss.
- Besonders hilfreich, um die Kapitalrendite von Unternehmen mit viel „überschüssigem“ Kapital oder zinsfreien Verbindlichkeiten realistisch zu vergleichen.
📘 Verschuldungsgrad (Leverage Ratio)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Verschuldungsgrad zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen durch verzinsliche Schulden (z. B. Kredite und Anleihen) im Verhältnis zum Eigenkapital finanziert ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Kennzahl hilft, das finanzielle Risiko und die Abhängigkeit von Fremdkapital zu beurteilen. Ein hoher Verschuldungsgrad kann die Eigenkapitalrendite steigern – birgt aber auch erhöhte Risiken bei Zinsanstiegen oder Liquiditätsengpässen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriger Verschuldungsgrad steht für finanzielle Stabilität und Unabhängigkeit.
- Ein hoher Wert kann auf erhöhte Risiken hinweisen – insbesondere bei schwankenden Zinsen oder konjunkturellen Schwächen.
- Wichtig: Immer im Kontext zur Branche und Kapitalintensität bewerten.
📘 Ergebnis je Aktie (EPS)
📈 Was ist das?
Das Ergebnis je Aktie (EPS) zeigt, wie viel Gewinn auf eine einzelne Aktie entfällt – und ist eine der wichtigsten Kennzahlen zur Bewertung von Unternehmen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Die verwässerte Aktienanzahl berücksichtigt auch potenzielle neue Aktien, etwa durch Optionen, Wandelanleihen oder andere Umtauschrechte.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EPS bildet die Basis für viele Bewertungskennzahlen wie KGV, PEG oder Payout Ratio. Es macht den Gewinn für Aktionäre vergleichbar – unabhängig von der Unternehmensgröße.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- EPS hilft, die Profitabilität pro Aktie zu erfassen – und ist besonders wichtig im Zeitvergleich oder im Vergleich mit Analystenschätzungen.
- Steigendes EPS kann ein Zeichen für stabiles Wachstum oder Aktienrückkäufe sein.
- Wichtig: Verwende verwässertes EPS für realistische Bewertungen – besonders bei stark aktienbasierten Vergütungssystemen.
📘 Free Cashflow je Aktie (FCF je Aktie)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Free Cashflow je Aktie zeigt, wie viel freier Mittelzufluss einem Unternehmen pro Aktie zur Verfügung steht – nach Investitionen, aber vor Dividenden oder Schuldentilgung.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der FCF je Aktie zeigt, wie viel liquide Mittel pro Aktie tatsächlich im Unternehmen verbleiben – wichtig für Dividenden, Aktienrückkäufe oder Schuldentilgung. Im Gegensatz zum Gewinn ist er schwerer manipulierbar und daher besonders aussagekräftig.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Free Cashflow je Aktie ist ein Zeichen für hohe finanzielle Flexibilität.
- Er zeigt, wie viel Kapital ein Unternehmen effektiv einsetzen oder ausschütten kann.
- Besonders relevant für dividendenstarke Unternehmen oder solche mit starker Kapitalrendite.
📘 Short Interest
📈 Was ist das?
Short Interest zeigt, wie viele Aktien eines Unternehmens aktuell leerverkauft wurden – also von Investoren geliehen und verkauft, in der Erwartung fallender Kurse.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Der Wert zeigt den Anteil der Aktien, der aktuell auf fallende Kurse spekuliert wird.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Short Interest dient als Stimmungsindikator: Ein hoher Wert deutet auf Skepsis oder negative Erwartungen gegenüber dem Unternehmen hin – kann aber auch zu einem „Short Squeeze“ führen, wenn der Kurs plötzlich steigt.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriger Short Interest deutet auf Vertrauen in das Unternehmen hin.
- Ein hoher Wert kann ein Warnsignal sein – oder eine Chance, wenn sich die Stimmung dreht.
- Besonders spannend in volatilen Märkten oder vor wichtigen Quartalszahlen.
📘 Employees
📈 Was ist das?
Die Mitarbeiteranzahl zeigt, wie viele Personen ein Unternehmen weltweit beschäftigt – ein Indikator für Größe, Struktur und Geschäftsmodell.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft bei der Einschätzung von Skaleneffekten, Effizienz und Personalkosten. Zusammen mit Umsatz und Gewinn lassen sich Kennzahlen wie Produktivität je Mitarbeiter ableiten.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Viele Mitarbeiter bedeuten große operative Komplexität – aber auch hohes Umsatzpotenzial.
- Produktivität je Mitarbeiter ist ein wichtiger Indikator für Effizienz.
- Besonders spannend bei stark wachsenden Tech- oder Industrieunternehmen.
📘 Umsatz je Mitarbeiter
📈 Was ist das?
Der Umsatz je Mitarbeiter zeigt, wie viel Erlös ein Unternehmen durchschnittlich pro Beschäftigtem erwirtschaftet – eine Kennzahl für Effizienz und Produktivität.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Die Mitarbeiterzahl stammt in der Regel aus dem letzten verfügbaren Jahresbericht.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl hilft, Geschäftsmodelle zu vergleichen – insbesondere zwischen arbeitsintensiven und technologiegetriebenen Unternehmen. Ein hoher Wert deutet auf Automatisierung, Effizienz oder hohen Wertschöpfungsanteil hin.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Umsatz je Mitarbeiter spricht für ein skalierbares und margenstarkes Geschäftsmodell.
- Ein niedriger Wert kann auf arbeitsintensive Prozesse oder geringere Wertschöpfung hinweisen.
- Besonders hilfreich beim Vergleich von Tech- vs. Industrieunternehmen.
Commerzbank Aktie Analyse
Analystenmeinungen
21 Analysten haben eine Commerzbank Prognose abgegeben:
Analystenmeinungen
21 Analysten haben eine Commerzbank Prognose abgegeben:
Beta Commerzbank Events
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Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 30th Annual European Financials Conference 2026
1. Question Answer
Okay. Good afternoon, everyone. My name is Dirk Lievens, I Co-Chair our Global Financial Institutions business for Goldman Sachs. It is my pleasure to welcome to the stage this afternoon, Bettina. Bettina Orlopp, CEO of Commerzbank; and Christoph Wortig, Head of IR at Commerzbank. Thank you for being here with us and for making time for this discussion. It's been a busy 3 days.
As this discussion is also being webcast, we are also welcoming the people who are online. Just a few housekeeping points before we open. As a reminder, there should be no discussion of confidential or nonpublic information, in particular, due to the ongoing takeover offer by UniCredit. Discussion about the offer should be limited to the formal public statements and documents published by the parties. And secondly, although Goldman Sachs Investment Banking is hosting this meeting, we will not be sharing any confidential information or views of Goldman Sachs. So please respect these rules.
And with that, I hand it over to Bettina and Christoph.
Thank you very much, Dirk, and welcome, everyone, also from my side, Christoph. I'm moderating the session today with Bettina. Very much looking forward to this, Bettina. And we thought it's a good idea to kick it off a little bit around our strategy, a little bit about touching on the most relevant macro points, I believe you're all interested in before we then move over to the topic of the current takeover offer by UniCredit. And throughout all the time, we're happy to take questions. We have a mic over there, and Alex will be happy to move it around so that everybody also in the webcast can listen to it.
And with that, Bettina, I'd like to start to kick it off and put it very easily for beginners. Our strategy Momentum 2030 comes with 17% return on tangible in '28, and it comes with 21% in 2030. Would you like to summarize a little bit around these quite high numbers for Commerzbank in the German market?
Yes. Thank you. Thank you both for the introduction. Thank you for being here. Interesting times indeed. So let me start with the strategy, which we have presented the update in May 8. The reason was a very successful year 2025, you're all aware of, which is the continuation of the improvement of profitability at Commerzbank. We had quite a development over the past years based on a very robust business model. And with the experience which we have seen specifically last year, we decided that an upgrading of our numbers is important. And we base that on the one side, very strong growth, which we see and based on the strength of our business model and growth comes on the NII side, but also on the NCI side, coupled with a very strong trajectory when it comes to transformation and the improvement of our cost base.
And you can also see that when you look at our cost/income ratio, which is now at 56%. It's projected for this year for 53%. It will come down until '28 to 48% and then 43% for 2030. And that is due to the fact that we see a lot of positive momentum. So not only our strategy is called Momentum, but we see a lot of momentum. And one of the key drivers is on the efficiency side, clearly, AI, which is probably the hot topic also of this conference because we have seen in the past year that the impact is higher than we originally thought back last year. And it comes with improved customer experience and therefore, also increased revenues, but it comes specifically also with increased efficiency, which we will see and will organize for 2028, but more importantly, for 2030 because our cost base will shrink in absolute terms when you exclude mBank, which is already today at a very attractive cost/income ratio and shows a lot of growth.
And we see just that workplace efficiency, but also the improvement of processes, the acceleration of processes with AI is very powerful. And so it's really the combination of growth and transformation, and that does the trick. And you also see there's no hockey stick in our plans, very important. It's a continuous improvement as we speak for this year, 12%, next year, 14%, the year after, the 17%, 19%, 21%. And it's indeed pretty good numbers for the German market, but they come with very limited execution risk from our perspective.
Yes. Thank you, Bettina. Maybe talking about execution risk and about the different components of the plan, NII obviously stands out as a contributor to the increased revenue and profitability going forward. Would you like to shed some more light on what you see on the deposit side when it comes to pass-through rates with customers, competition with Chase entering the stage, but also with our famous replication portfolio?
Yes. I mean you will have seen that also in the May presentation that NII is driven on the one side by loan growth, which we have shown also in the past years, also this quarter, very much driven also by our international network, and by a very solid deposit development. We do not assume a lot of deposit growth also for the future. That's important to state. We just assume that it will increase like what we see, which is basically driven by inflation. So it's a 2% to 3%, very modest growth of the deposits.
And on the other side, we have been super conservative by still assuming that deposit beta, which is already at a very, very high level in Germany with a 41% that this will grow further up to 45%. And that is very much driven by the competition. We see Chase at the day of our AGM, wonder why started its deposit program, its call money account. But what we currently see, given it's only -- it's not a current account, it's just a call money account thing that they attract exactly the same crowd, which we see already the last 1.5 years flying around between the different players, and that includes comdirect, that includes ING, N26, BBVA since last year and some other specifically direct banks.
And what you see is basically that the same number of interest rate hoppers are just jumping on the best offer. And the best offer in the moment is clearly Chase, 4%. We are also out there currently with an attractive offer of 5%. It just has a little, little side condition that the German team needs to win the World Soccer Championship. I have to say inflow is not great. You can imagine that we hedged it and hedge costs were not really high. That is the bad thing on it. But joking aside, I mean we see it. It got attraction. I mean they have done a slow start. They will definitely increase it.
I think for them in the moment, what they're doing is just marketing spend to become a little bit more popular. We observe it. We do not have the feeling that this is also given it's only a call account, call money account that this is really a threat for us in the moment because they're just picking up the same crowd we have seen all the time. But we carefully analyze the situation because we are aware of the fact that there could be current account coming next and probably some more marketing spend. But what we do is what we always have done with competition in Germany, we try to have a better offer. So we also invest a lot in our mobile app to get the onboarding even quicker to increase also the value proposition.
And one has to say that the competition, we really always need to differentiate between Commerzbank brand and comdirect brand and also the Chase offer specifically goes, if at all, against the comdirect brand and less against Commerzbank brand because Commerzbank is very much driven by a full-fledged offering, including a branch network, which still a lot of Germans love.
Have you talked about the replication portfolio?
Sorry, big important step, no. But I assume this is a very informed crowd. So you have seen the replication portfolio, it is basically adding value every year. We have not assumed, which will probably not the case that the replication portfolio will further increase. So there is the upside part because we kept it stable. We have assumed the forward rates back end of April. We all know that this is very much something which has decent volatility in there.
But you also see that these benefits come pretty surely because we have an average yield currently at the replication portfolio of 1.3% for this year, which means every year and as long as we do not have a changing of the forward rates to a significant extent, you will see additional benefits every year as long as we keep at least the deposits stable. And even then we have a lot of buffer when it comes to our sticky deposits. So we haven't spent and not invested everything in the replication portfolio. So it's a very safe bet on this revenue stream.
Yes. Thank you, Bettina. And then maybe switching to the other side of the balance sheet, a little bit about loans and loan growth. I think we've seen quite significant loan growth in our Corporate Clients division. What do you expect going forward? Is that trajectory going to continue? And where does the loan prospectively come from? The growth?
Yes. I mean we have assumed further loan growth. That has not changed between momentum and Momentum 2030. We have seen more loan growth last year than originally expected because we thought it would be an annual growth rate of 8%. Now last year, it has been 10%, so even more. So it will probably not go on with this double-digit number, but it will be still a very, very high number. And I think what has been a surprise was what were the sources for loan growth because originally, we really thought that there would be more in Germany given that we have the stimulus package. And we also had originally higher assumptions on the GDP growth for Germany.
And what we currently see is that also due to the geopolitical topics we see, including the Middle East conflict that there are investments, but they are unfortunately not so much investments in Germany. So our German clients localize even more, and they do investments outside of Germany. And the good thing is we have an international network, which works very nicely. And therefore, we do the loan growth and we show the loan growth outside of Germany, except for a little bit. And then public sector is strong, which has to do with the stimulus package. And then we have some things linked to institutional business and also renewable energy.
Super. And you touched on it in the very beginning of the session, talking about AI. Would you like to share some numbers from Commerzbank of what we expect as contribution from AI in terms of efficiency levels?
I mean we said we figured -- and that is our current belief, I have to say, because what we learn is every day something new, but our current belief at the moment is that you will have a value contribution of AI from 2030 onwards of around EUR 500 million. Vast majority will be linked to cost reduction. There's also some cost avoidance. There's also revenue increase or also avoidance of negative revenues because you can avoid fraud via AI, but we also use AI already today when it comes to pricing. But I have to say it's our current assumption because we really see how powerful it is.
I just had a meeting this week with our legal team. We have just introduced Legora, which is a Swedish legal tech tool. And one of our Level 2 managers said that she had to write a brand-new policy, which we didn't have so far. You could say policy, but we are a regulated bank. And she said, for the basic draft where she normally would need a week to do so, she basically had this basic draft within 30 seconds. And then she said, now she's working on that. That's basically also the examples which we have, we are collecting, and we need to see what does this do to our business model. So -- but that are the current numbers which we have.
All right. So now let's switch gears a little bit and talk about the big topic, which is the offer of UniCredit. And I mean, maybe it's best to start with your view on the question, is there still a path -- a potential path for a friendly deal?
Well, I mean, we always have said that we would be open for discussions, and that has never changed. We said that from the beginning on because we see as a management team, our task to produce value for our stakeholders, and that starts with the investors, with the shareholders of the bank. And I think we have proven to a large extent that we were able to produce a lot of value in the past 20 months for our shareholders, but also for our customers and for our staff. And that is the driving force of what we do. And we also said that our job is to provide alternatives.
We now have provided again the alternative. This is the value you can get with our stand-alone strategy, which is with the -- which is a set of targets we have just talked about. And then there might be different paths. And there is a path of a friendly deal, and we are fully aware of it, and we always said that we would also be willing to sit down and discuss such a solution. We just did 2 [indiscernible] visits on that. One is we want to have a decent premium for our shareholders because we see that the current offer does not include any premium. It rather comes with a discount as we speak. So we said there must be a significant premium in it because our shareholders give up control, they give up value creation potential.
So that is one of the prerequisites. And the other one is that we believe that there's a lot of value in our business model in how we do things because we are not a bank which needs to be restructured. We are a bank which will show significant growth over the past years. And you can make use of it. If you're smart, you can use that very nicely also in the combined bank. And we said we want to make sure that this is reflected in business model and governance, plus one should not forget that if there would be a combination, the largest market would be Germany. So you need to reflect to a certain extent also for the stakeholders in Germany that this is reflected. So these are the preconditions. We said that publicly.
We said it -- I said it during the AGM. And to be very clear also, I did an active reach out to UniCredit to make sure that they also know that we are prepared to do so. But there are these 2 prerequisites. And we are where we are. There is, in the moment, no friendly deal, but there's always a side that we say we want to provide you as our investors with the alternatives. And then there is a third alternative clearly out there where you could say that there is an acceptance of the offer, but it takes place in a hostile approach as it appears in the moment, which I think is value destructive.
It's value destructive for all stakeholders on both sides actually. It's not only on Commerzbank side, it's also on UniCredit side because we will suffer. Commerzbank will suffer, HVB will suffer. Our competitors out there publicly state that they think it's great if that would happen because they can steal clients from us, they can steal key talent from us, and that is what happens if we are not doing it in a proper and an organized version. And we think that currently, in this hostile approach, we see no reason why our investors should accept the offer because there is no premium, it comes with a discount.
So it would be -- if you really want to have UniCredit shares, it would be much smarter at this point in time, sell our shares and buy UniCredit, which I think would not be very smart because we have a very good stand-alone strategy out there, super attractive capital return. One should not forget that with the plan we have presented, we will -- as we speak, we will return approximately 50% of our market cap in the next 4 years to our shareholders. So it's super attractive. So you have to compare that.
Absolutely. And is there any news on the German government and what the German government is currently saying in the situation we are in?
Well, I mean, they have been very clear. I mean, they are -- first of all, they are also investors, shareholders. And then clearly, they have an interest that there's a stability for German economy. And with a bank where 30% of German trade runs over its books, you can imagine and who is the financer of the German Mittelstand, there is an interest also from public authorities on how the whole governance look like.
And also one should not forget, which hopefully will never happen, but we also know that always the governance of an institution where the largest market is in is always the one everybody will turn to first if such an institution would be in any point of time in trouble, they would always turn to the government, which would lose most for its economy. So they have an interest that the governance works. And when you listen carefully to them, they always said that they don't like the approach and that -- and they will stick to their shares until the approach is not changing.
All right. Very clear. And now let's turn and let's talk to about the tender offer. You released a press release yesterday -- we released a press release yesterday, that's right, questioning the progress of the offer. What are your concerns actually?
Well, it's exactly what I just said. I mean our real task, and I see that personally as my task is that you get the best out of what can be offered. And I want to create the maximum value for our stakeholder. And therefore, I want to have a fair process. I always said that the investors will finally decide what happens. If they like option A better than option B, one has to accept that. But I think we should be all aware of the fact that there is a transparent process, what's really going on.
And what triggered us actually already last week when we saw it for the first time is that there is a tendering into the offer where it is economically not sensible or rational to do it. because why should you, at this point in time, tender into an offer which is a discount to the current share price. We don't find any reason why you should do that. And this is why we dig a little bit deeper into it. We did that already last week and saw last week, it was just one player tendering. It was Nomura. This week, there are more. But we see that at least for many what we have seen already and the analysis are still ongoing, that these are banks who are, in most cases, even connected with UniCredit via the TRS structures.
And that is something where we have to say that, no, it's not that our institutional investors, they do not like this offer. And that was the impression created because no institutional investor. And when I listened to you and I was at another conference in Paris on Tuesday, and I spoke to many of you and your colleagues, and they all said and you all said to me, you would not take this offer because it is a discount. So no institutional investor and the retail investors are at 0.05%, so neglectable. And -- so you can't say that this offer is in the moment attractive. And that is the one key message we want to bring across. This offer is not attractive.
And the second part is that there is this attempt to increase a little bit the tender dynamic, if I may say so, by suggesting that basically the majority -- a control majority, de facto control is already achieved also by including the derivative structure into the thing. And what we see is, yes, there are 3%, which are also linked to physical shares. So they will allow you also to have voting rights. But then now 13%, we were wondering how can you build up such an enormous amount without seeing it in our share price because you would assume normally because at a certain point in time, UniCredit could ask the counterpart to deliver shares. So you would assume that the counterpart somewhere has already the shares, but that is not the case because we only find 5% approximately maximum with banks holding it for such purposes.
And that compares to the 16%, 13% and 3%, which we have here, which also means that if this should be delivered at a certain point in time, there must be a lot of acquisition via the market to ensure that, which also means our share price will go up. And what we just wanted to achieve yesterday is that we make that very transparent so that people know that, that everybody is considering carefully the next step. And we also asked BaFin to look into it because we at least have the feeling that this is not what was originally intended with a public tender offer that you have so much in transparency in the whole process. And I can say so because it's my academic background that I have spent a lot of time in finding out how you do that with minority shareholders, and it was definitely not the intention to create a situation which you currently have.
Yes. Super clear. At this point in time, is there any questions from the audience we should take? Yes, happy to.
Just to pick up on that last point you made in terms of the best-price rule and the contract that UniCredit may or may not have with the banks tendering the stakes, how would that work if they buy them at a premium, who takes the loss when they tender?
That is exactly the question we are asking ourselves as well. And that is something we also want to know who's paying for it because someone indeed needs to pay for the difference. And it's not on us who can figure that out, but we exactly put this question in the [indiscernible] BaFin.
Thank you. Are there any other questions from the audience?
So I would move on with one more aspect in that sphere that is share lending. I think we figured out that there is quite an amount of the tendered shares, obviously from our lended shares or borrowed shares. And I wonder what your take is on this one.
Well, this is a little bit a similar take on what I said on the derivative structure, if it's borrowed and someone is tendering it. In my little word, I found it anyhow totally strange that this is possible, but that is a different thing that still the one who now tendered and has borrowed somewhere still needs to get the shares from the market. So again, that will also put additional pressure on the whole price levels because -- and let me also say one word that even if UniCredit ends up with something between 40% to 50%, and they would have a majority in the AGM. This is what I said, which is the third scenario.
This is a very messy scenario for both sides, not to say also that UniCredit would have a real high negative capital impact, but they also could still not do structural measures because for that, they need a 75% majority. And that's very hard to get if you have a government and probably also some other shareholders against you. So it is really this path of misery we would then see because we wouldn't really be able to move neither party. And therefore, I mean, we can live very nicely as we have proven also the last 20 months with a very large shareholder, but we need to make sure that our team, which has presented really good results and which is working really hard on delivering the future that they feel the stability and also our clients. We are in the lucky situation that our clients are super loyal to us. But you never know how this changed if we come in such a limbo situation.
Yes, absolutely. And maybe for all Commerzbank shareholders that do lend their shares, you should maybe reconsider the policies behind it if you're not wanting them to be tendered into the offer. That's just the Investor Relations view on this one.
Other than that, is there further questions from the audience? Please go ahead.
Two question, is this 40%, 50% limbo base case scenario for you? First question. And second question, is such scenario a drag for credit investors? Did you have exchange with the rating agencies? What do they think about this kind of situation?
No, it's not our base scenario. Our base scenario is -- and I think UniCredit has a similar base scenario, if I follow up on all what they have said when they launched the lowball offer is that they will rather end up above 30%. They will not enact control, and we are a little bit in the situation before 15th of March because it's very clear that nobody wants to have this limbo situation, and then it's much better to arrange again as a very high-performing bank with a large shareholder at their side. And so that's the base scenario for us. The credit investors, we have no indication. I mean we have very frequent interactions. And we also see when we do funding in the moment, we are very successful. We have lots of demand. We come in always with lower rates than expected. So nothing, absolutely nothing what we see currently.
And I could open up for 1 or 2 additional questions if there is demand. And otherwise, Bettina, you want to do some closing words before we finish the session?
Yes. I mean, thank you very much for your attention. I'm pretty sure that you are observing the situation quite intensively. And I can only ask you to do -- to first trust in us that we will do whatever we think is best for the bank, for its stakeholders. And I can tell you, I'm not always popular because I'm saying that also internally because I want that also our staff knows that if we believe that a friendly agreed deal is the best for the company, we would always go for that as a management team because we really want to do what is best for the bank. And keeping that in mind, however, I would say you should carefully compare the different options on the table. And I think it's also very clear that the worst of all options is a hostile takeover because it will destroy a lot of value. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
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Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 30th Annual European Financials Conference 2026
Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 30th Annual European Financials Conference 2026
Commerzbank hebt die Momentum‑2030‑Ziele nach starkem 2025 an; das Management betont Wachstum, Kostentransformation (inkl. AI) und warnt vor der UniCredit‑Offerte.
🎯 Kernbotschaft
- Kernaussage: Nach einem starken Jahr 2025 hat Commerzbank die Momentum‑2030‑Ziele angehoben: klares RoTE‑Aufwärtspotenzial durch NII‑/NCI‑Wachstum und Kostenabbau; das Management sieht begrenztes Ausführungsrisiko.
⚡ Strategische Highlights
- RoTE‑Ziele: Zielwerte: rund 17% in 2028 und 21% in 2030 (Return on tangible equity).
- Kostenpfad: Cost‑income ratio soll von ~56% aktuell auf ~53% (dieses Jahr), 48% (2028) und 43% (2030) fallen.
- AI‑Beitrag: Management erwartet ~€500M Wertbeitrag bis 2030, überwiegend durch Kostensenkung, Effizienz und vereinfachte Prozesse.
- Ertragsbausteine: NII getrieben durch Kreditausweitung und stabile (modest) Einlagenentwicklung; Replikationsportfolio mit aktueller Rendite von ~1,3% liefert annualisierten Zusatzerlös.
🆕 Neue Informationen
- Übernahmeprozess: Management hat Transparenz‑Bedenken gegenüber UniCredits Tenderstruktur (Total Return Swaps/geliehene Aktien) und hat BaFin gebeten, die Vorgänge zu prüfen.
- Kapitalrückfluss: Stand‑alone‑Plan sieht vor, in den nächsten ~4 Jahren rund 50% der Marktkapitalisierung an Aktionäre zurückzugeben.
- Guidance‑Änderung: Finanzielle Guidance wurde mit dem Momentum‑Update (8. Mai) angehoben; im Call selbst kamen keine weiteren quantitativen Anpassungen.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Tender‑Mechanik: Wer trägt Verluste, wenn Gegenparteien Aktien über Marktpreise erwerben? Management hat diese Frage an Aufsicht/Markt gestellt.
- Share‑Lending & TRS: Geliehene/derivative Positionen können Tenderdynamik verzerren; bei Auslieferungsansprüchen würde Markt‑Kaufdruck bestehen und den Kurs beeinflussen.
- Eigentümer‑Szenarien & Bonität: Basisannahme: UniCredit landet >30% ohne de‑facto Kontrolle; ein 40–50%‑„Limbo“ wäre unattraktiv und governance‑problematisch. Ratingagenturen/Investoren sehen aktuell keine unmittelbaren Kreditprobleme; Fundingnachfrage bleibt hoch.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit für Aktionäre: Operativ und strategisch ist Commerzbank nach dem Momentum‑Update gut positioniert (signifikantes RoTE‑Upside, klarer Kostendeckel, AI‑Hebel, attraktive Kapitalrückflüsse). Die UniCredit‑Offerte wird als rabattiert und intransparent kritisiert; Management empfiehlt, Angebote kritisch zu bewerten, Lending‑Policies zu prüfen und eine feindliche, wertvernichtende Lösung zu vermeiden.
Commerzbank — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
[Audio Gap]
Regarding the first quarter results 2026. Please note that this call is being transmitted as well as recorded by audio webcast and will subsequently be made available for replay in the Internet. [Operator Instructions] the floor will be open for questions following Bettina Orlopp and Carsten Schmitt's presentation.
Let me now turn the floor over to our CEO, Bettina Orlopp.
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our earnings call. Carsten and I are pleased to present the results of a very good start to the year for Commerzbank. We have delivered a record quarterly profit, which gives us the confidence to raise our outlook for 2026 and to present an even more ambitious strategic path towards 2030. Our message today is clear, with Momentum we are delivering on our promises, and with Momentum 2030, we are accelerating our transformation to deliver higher profitability after.
Let's start with a summary of the key figures for the quarter. We increased our revenues to EUR 3.2 billion and delivered a record net result of EUR 913 million. The 5% year-on-year growth in our total revenues was broad-based demonstrating the health of our underlying client business. This top line growth, combined with our strict cost discipline translated into an even stronger 11% increase in our operating results which reached EUR 1.4 billion. It highlights the enhanced operating leverage we have successfully built into our business model. The bottom line figures translate into an excellent return on tangible equity of 12.7%, underpinned by a very strong cost/income ratio of 53%. Carving out compulsory contributions, our cost/income ratio is already at 50%. Our CET1 ratio stands at a very solid 14.5%, well above our targeted ratio of 13.5%. This excellent start to the year gives us a conviction and the confidence to raise our guidance for the full year 2026. Against the backdrop of the German economy that is still expected to grow by 0.6% at an average ECB rate of 2.2%. We now target a net result of at least EUR 3.4 billion. We are tightening our cost-to-income ratio target to 53%. Consequently, we are raising our RoTE target to 12%. That remains unchanged. And what is the cornerstone of our equity story is our commitment to a total payout of 100% of the net result after AT1 coupon payments and before extraordinary nonrecurring items. This upgraded guidance confirms the powerful traction of our momentum strategy, which has proven to be highly successful for Commerzbank.
The guiding principle of our Momentum strategy is delivery for all key stakeholders. And this remains front and center also with our upgraded strategy, Momentum 2030. For investors, we will deliver what we promise, continuously improving profitability and ensuring reliable, attractive capital returns. For our clients, we are a very strong and dependable partner, investing in our products and services to provide them with attractive solutions tailored to their specific needs, which ultimately drives our growth. And for our employees, we are fostering an attractive work environment and a culture of ownership for instance, through our successful employee share program. It allows them to participate directly in the long-term success of our company. Today, we have started the subscription period for the next offering of Commerzbank shares to all our colleagues.
This momentum 2030, we are accelerating our strategy with a simple and powerful goal, delivering higher profitability faster. We will achieve this through further profitable growth and an accelerated transformation of the bank towards higher efficiency. On growth, we are scaling up our proven and well-established business models in both our private and corporate client segments. On transformation, we are fundamentally transforming how we operate by leveraging the power of AI and driving further efficiency throughout the organization.
By combining growth and transformation, we will achieve significant scaling effects, including a well-contained cost base and a step change in productivity. This will create a clear and tangible path towards our new targets for 2030. An RoTE of 21%, and net result of EUR 5.9 billion, a cost-income ratio of 43% and a revenue CAGR of 6%. Adjusted for compulsory contributions, our targeted cost/income ratio is planned to reach even 41%. And let me point out that Momentum 2030 is not an excel spreadsheet exercise, but the result of a diligent strategy process. It involved the entire management team who reviewed all business levers to identify tangible transformation and growth cases for their respective areas. And this strategy comes to life in our client segments. In our corporate client business, we will continue our profitable growth by supporting the backbone of the German economy, the Mittelstand and by leveraging our unique global network. In our private and small business customer business, we will increase the growth via our digital channels and expand our high-valued advisory services for our wealth and premium clients. mBank pursues its highly successful strategy full speed ahead and will significantly contribute to our group targets.
Let me deep dive a few important cornerstones of our business model and our strategy towards 2030 and start with corporate clients. A crucial driver of our strength is our international franchise anchored in Germany and connected globally. With our Strategy 2024, we rightsized the international network and realigned the business to full connectivity with our home markets. In Germany, relationship managers and product specialists support the Mittelstand with their domestic business across our entire product range. Internationally, we provide a complete corporate banking offering to support our clients in their cross-border needs with local expertise in important markets. And through [ rep officers ] and corresponding bank relationships we combine local presence with flexibility along key trade corridors in a very efficient way.
I want to be very clear on this point. Our international business is an integral and highly valuable part of our DNA. Our bank was founded 156 years ago with a mission to support German trade globally. This mission is as relevant today as it was then. That [indiscernible] makes us tangible with a typical example that perfectly illustrates the value of our integrated network.
Consider a German engineering firm with a subsidiary in China. They are a long-standing client of Commerzbank in Germany and work closely with our international network. The subsidiary in China wanted to bid on a EUR 10 million contract to supply a plant to an importer in Africa. The process began with a bidding phase. To even participate, our clients needed to provide a [ bit ] bond. They instructed our brands in China to issue this guarantee. Thanks to our established network of several banks than the importer's country, we were able to negotiate the best possible terms for our clients who ultimately won the contract. The next step was the export financing. The construct stipulated payment via a confirmed letter of credit to mitigate the nonpayment risk for our German exporter. The importer's bank in Africa was talked with opening the [ LC ]. Crucially, this bank is one of our correspondents, meaning we were perfectly positioned to handle the [ transaction ]. Our [ Web ] Officer in that African country provided us with up-to-the-minute political and financial data on the country and the bank. This underground intelligence justified the necessary credit lines. After confirmation of the [ LC ], our client started the delivery of the plant and ultimately received the money. This single transaction shows a profitable full chain in action and demonstrate that our international franchise is a unique core asset that strengthens our entire business.
The international franchise contributes around EUR 1.8 billion in revenues. Importantly, this franchise is tightly connected to our core corporate client base in Germany and DAC. It strengthens our ability to support German multinationals, subsidiaries of the German Mittelstand abroad and international corporates with DAC connectivity. We hold a leading market share of 30% in German trade finance and a remarkable 58% of our corporate client's revenues are generated with clients who are anchored in this international network. This is a truly unique value proposition, and we will continuously adjust our footprint to meet the needs of our Mittelstand. Serving the Mittelstand will only mean corporate banking, but also wealth management for the families owning these companies. And this is a perfect bridge over to private clients.
Investable assets in the Wealth Management segment in Germany are expected to grow by almost EUR 1 trillion by 2028. Equally important, Germany is facing a decade of generational transitions in the Mittelstand and we are in the best position to benefit from this potential as we have the strongest access to the family-owned businesses. With our holistic approach as a one-stop shop, we have significant growth opportunities. Our well-balanced product and service offering as well as AI will support us on our journey to become the family office of the Mittelstand.
Comdirect, on the other hand, is well established a digital primary bank and performance broker. It is our successful answer to new brokers. We are investing in the further development of the digital user experience and the value proposition, including the expansion of trading functionalities and AI-based order triggers. We are developing our app further into a content hub, including financial education while consistently driving efficiency gains and AI support for customer service.
The vision for 2030 is very clear. A fully digital banking and brokerage experience that simply works and gives customers maximum autonomy. This is a strong strategic fit with our Momentum 2030 agenda because it combines growth with scalability. The growth strategies in our customer-facing businesses are complemented by efficiency measures on the transformation path of the bank. We are targeting a net cost reduction and higher capital efficiency in Commerzbank [ XM Bank ]. On costs, we will make further use of our well-established shoring and sourcing locations, e.g and Sofia and in Kuala Lumpur. Furthermore, we will reduce external resource [indiscernible] and the use of AI. This comes in sync with the ongoing effort to reduce complexity and optimize processes. On the capital side, we keep steering for RWA efficiency to increase the value accretion of our business. SRTs will further contribute to capital efficiency by freeing up risk-weighted assets.
Now let me talk about AI at Commerzbank. AI is already well established in our banking operations. It is a core driver of efficiency and a creator of new revenue opportunities. We are already applying AI across customer experience, operational excellence and risk management. Let me highlight three recent examples. First, in retail banking, the implementation of an end-to-end process redesign for an optimized complaint management has started by applying agentic AI. Second, in risk management, we have successfully introduced Hawk AI, an AI model that significantly improves the efficiency and effectiveness in generating transaction monitoring alerts. And third, on operational excellence, we start integrating AI into the credit analysis. Very promising examples are AI-based screening of annual reports and the origination of early warning messages. These are all practical applications with practical impact to drive our transformation.
We are backing the AI value realization with a substantial financial commitment planning for approximately EUR 600 million in cumulative AI investments through 2030. We are driving efficiency with 3 key approaches. First, we increased workplace productivity using tools such as MS Copilot and Gemini, and we have established an AI academy to upskill employees. Second, we will use agentic AI to increase product and process efficiency, including the setup of an agentic AI factory. And third, we will make use of agentic software development, which will accelerate the modernization of our application landscape. By those means we will free up around 10% of capacity, but will be partially redeployed to customer interactions. Overall, we will create tangible value of EUR 500 million per annum, of which 70% is assigned to cost reduction. This is what we can quantify today, but the technology and its capabilities are evolved exponentially, and we believe that we will see further upside to these numbers as we progress. In short, AI is a key driver of our Momentum 2030 strategy and supports our confidence in upgrading our targets for 2028.
We have a transparent and credible road map to a return on tangible equity of 17% in 2028, 2 percentage points more than envisaged one year ago. Starting from our expected RoTE of 12% in 2026, the journey is driven by clear quantifiable levers. We anticipate strong contributions from both net interest income and net commission income. NII will benefit from the replication portfolio as well as from growth in loans and deposits. NCI should sustain the strong growth path of 7% each year. Critically, the important -- the impact of our efficiency measures will largely offset inflationary pressures and necessary investments. This is the operating leverage of Momentum 2030 translated into financial outcomes.
And we will not stop there. We see a clear path to an even higher return of 21% by 2030 which comes with a competitive cost/income ratio of 41% when excluding the compulsory contributions. Furthermore, we will continue to distribute our full earnings under our targeted CET1 ratio of 13.5% is reached. The replication portfolio remains a key driver and will still significantly contribute to NII even beyond 2030. Carsten will elaborate on this later in the presentation.
On the cost side, the broad-based deployment of AI will drive efficiency. Hence, we will reduce our cost base in Commerzbank [ XM Bank ] until 2030 despite significant growth in revenues. This comes with a group-wide FTE reduction of gross 3,000 FTEs by 2030, of which almost 50% will be reduced on a net basis. The program will come with around EUR 450 million cost to achieve. The reduction will be largely achieved by applying early retirement schemes as well as making use of natural attrition. With the transformation agreement we signed yesterday, the employee representatives generally support our continued transformation.
The new targets are the next logical step in a long and successful journey of transformation -- the evidence. We have consistently met or exceeded the targets we set for ourselves. From our Strategy 2024 to our Momentum goals in 2025. We deliver what we promise. The steady delivery is the foundation of ability and provides confidence in our ability to also achieve our new, more ambitious goals. And this leads me to UniCredit's offer. After completing a comprehensive review of the offer document, the Management Board and Supervisory Board will issue their full reason statement, including a recommendation. Separately, we have published a presentation today highlighting selected preliminary observations on UniCredit's proposal, including the presentation of April 20. I would like to briefly draw your attention to the most significant aspects from our perspective.
First, UniCredit is using misleading credit [indiscernible] to talk down our valuation. Second, UniCredit's proposition for Commerzbank shareholders is vague [indiscernible] considerable execution risk. Third, our shareholders are asked to give up the upside we just spoke about and control for no premium. And fourth, Commerzbank shareholders who remain invested, retain material upside potential and optionality. I would like to address a few points in particular. Our analysis shows that the clients and assumptions of UniCredit do not pass the reality check. We have improved profitability substantially over the last years, and we have exceeded ambitious financial targets. Within our robust and stable business model, we have a prudent risk profile with strong asset quality. We don't need additional overlays. The risk on our book are well covered.
We are investing in platform and technology and we are significantly scaling AI adoption. We are the leading bank for the German Mittelstand and have a market share of more than 10% across all products with German corporate clients. And I think I made it very clear that our international franchise is a value-accretive unique business proposition.
Against that reality, UniCredit's assumption on cost cutting, revenue effects and investment requirements are not plausible in terms of scale and timing. The claimed cost efficiency potential of EUR 1.3 billion stand-alone for Commerzbank until 2028 is extremely aggressive and would come with significant execution risk and revenue attrition. In our view, the negative revenue impact would be significantly above EUR 1 billion, which you can derive from the revenues attached to our international franchise leaving aside any revenue attrition due to [indiscernible] in overlap, which would come on top. Timing -- agreements and changes for thousands of employees, shutting down parts of the international network, offboarding clients, returning licenses and stopping large growth and transformation projects all at the same time to become effective in 2028. That is not credible in a highly regulated sector and does not reflect the operational reality of the bank.
The same applies to the assumptions around RWAs and investments. The implied reductions and the implied cost to achieve do not align with what is realistically feasible without destroying revenues and client relationships. This is exactly why execution risk is so central in our assessment. In essence, the presented case lacks the necessary willingness to appreciate and reflect our business model. This is all the more puzzling given that we provided the opportunity in more than 10 meetings in the past 20 months to discuss any ideas and also all questions regarding our business model and our financials. Only in the two meetings after the announcement of the offer we verbally learned about the cornerstones of UniCredit's plan. It became clear that we have fundamentally different views on the business model that are hard to reconcile. We were clearly told that there was no room for any adjustment of the proposed model to reflect our core value proposition, especially when it comes to our international franchise. If you're dealing with a counterparty that tells you upfront that they will not adopt the plan to find common ground, what's the merit of doing any deep dives or workshops, in particular, if there is no preparedness to offer premium either. And this leads me to valuation.
As this was the second important topic in our conversations with UniCredit. No matter which metric you pick, UniCredit's offer fundamentally undervalues Commerzbank. Our standalone strategy has proven to be successful. Our tangible and credible path to increasing returns every year is well regarded by the market. It fully justifies our evaluation and a low-ball offer without a significant premium is just inadequate. And with that, I would like to share my key takeaways.
First, we achieved a record Q1 results and have raised our 2026 guidance. Second, with Momentum 2030, we built on a proven strategy. We are committed to our upgraded targets delivering reliable shareholder value with low execution risk. Let me add to this that by 2030, we will return around 50% of our current market cap to our shareholders. Third, we stay open for discussions and [indiscernible] has a real willingness to discuss the issues we flagged. With a clear intention of an attractive premium for our shareholders and that takes the success factors of our business model and our momentum strategy into account, we remain open to sit down again.
To conclude, we have a very strong momentum in our business. We have the strategy, the team and the determination to create significant value and limited execution risk. And with that, I will now hand over to Carsten.
Thank you, Bettina, and a warm welcome also from my side. Given the focus on strategy today and to have sufficient time for Q&A, I will keep the presentation of the Q1 numbers short and will not go through all the slides in detail. Bettina has already given you a summary of the Q1 financials. To start, there's one key point I would like to stress. We have again improved our operating leverage with higher revenues and slightly falling operating expenses -- positive jaws the core of our momentum strategy and our #1 priority. And I will now go through the line items starting with revenues.
Revenues have developed very well. The highlight is the record net commission income that is up 9% year-on-year with strong contributions from all customer segments. Corporate clients increased by 8%, with the biggest driver being bond origination. Private and small business customers, Germany grew by 9%, mainly with the securities business and from higher account fees. mBank increased by 12% across products. This growth is a clear testament to our client-centric strategy and our ability to successfully leverage our market position across all key areas. Net interest income is broadly stable as underlying growth in PSBC Germany and corporate clients was offset by day count effects and rate cuts in Poland. I will now jump directly to slide [indiscernible] on the very strong loan growth in Corporate Clients.
In the last 12 months, Corporate Clients achieved a remarkable loan growth of almost EUR 17 billion or 16% with EUR 5 billion stemming from the first quarter. Risk growth is broad-based. Year-on-year, we saw a EUR 2 billion increase from corporates in Germany driven by investments in working capital needs. The public sector in Germany contributed another EUR 2 billion capital-accretive business. We saw strong demand for green infrastructure financing, adding another EUR 2 billion. The largest driver was our business with German and Germany connected corporates outside Germany. It grew by EUR 7 billion as we continue to support our clients' international activities, particularly in Europe, the U.S. and Asia. Finally, our business with financial institutions also added EUR 3 billion, mainly from trade finance and lending. This performance underscores our strategy to grow profitably with our customer base where we see attractive risk-adjusted opportunities.
This brings me to our NII outlook for 2026. We raised our outlook to around EUR 8.6 billion. The main reason for this is the more favorable rates outlook compared to our assumptions in February as well as the successful margin management of deposits in Q1. This has made us confident that EBITDA should increase to 41% on average for 2026, 1 percentage point less than our original assumption. We have also slightly increased the size of the replication portfolio, which will further stabilize the NII in the next years. Next, I will give you a longer-dated outlook for the replication portfolio.
As you know, the replication portfolio is a very important and very reliable contributor to our revenues with an additional benefit of EUR 600 million in 2026. This will continue for many years. Based on the current size and [ structure ] and applying the current forward rates for the scheduled rollovers, we will have additional revenues in the range from EUR 400 million to EUR 600 million every single year until 2032. This leads to cumulative EUR 1.6 billion in 2028, and EUR 2.7 billion in 2030. By 2032, this increases to EUR 3.7 billion and even beyond 2032, EUR 200 million per year are to be expected.
As you know, we have added to the size of the portfolio over the last quarters. And depending on volume growth and customer behavior, we could potentially grow the portfolio further over the years, amplifying the effect. When looking at the current average yield of the portfolio, you can clearly see where the incremental interest income is coming from. For 2026, we have an average yield of only 1.3%. The current yield level is mainly attributable to the very low yield on all tranches of the 10-year models when reinvesting a maturing tranche at the current yield of around 3%, this leads to a strong pickup every year. The replication portfolio is, therefore, a very dependable revenue contributor for many years to come and a core component of our plan to sustainably increase profitability.
Now very briefly to costs on Slide 34. We have maintained our strict cost discipline. Overall costs are slightly below Q1 last year, although we increased our investments further. Higher compulsory contributions in mBank were offset by lower operating expenses on group level. Within the group, excluding mBank, cost even decreased, supported by a lower valuation effect from equity-based compensation. The combination of strong revenue growth and disciplined cost management resulted in an excellent cost-income ratio of 53% for the quarter or 50% when excluding compulsory contributions. The risk results came in at EUR 142 million. This is in line with Q1 last year, and our outlook as the portfolio remains highly resilient with a nonperforming exposure ratio of only 1.1%. We have maintained our approvals to overlays, and there has been no material change in the outstanding amounts. While there were headwinds from the contract in the Middle East, we maintain our guidance of around EUR 850 million for the risk result for the year. This concludes
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8% in the quarter. For 2026, we expect a tax rate closer to 30% due to a higher tax rate in Poland. I will now jump straight to the outlook on Slide 42.
We expect total revenues of approximately EUR 13.2 billion. As already mentioned, we've raised our outlook for NII further to EUR 8.6 billion. For NCI, we expect EUR 4.3 billion based on 7% growth. We maintain our outlook for the risk result of around EUR 850 million. Based on costs of around EUR 7 billion, we improved our cost/income ratio target again to now approximately 53%. This translates to raised net results target of at least EUR 3.4 billion, leading to a return on tangible equity of around 12%. We confirm our plan for a payout ratio of 100% after AT1 coupon payments and expect our CET1 ratio to be above 14% at the end. After this review of our record first quarter, I will now guide you through the financials of our strategy Momentum 2030 before going into Q&A.
Our planned figures are based on the current forward rates and our economists' outlook for GDP growth in Germany. We assume an uptick of GDP in 2027 and a moderate positive impact from the fiscal stimulus. If reforms should gather steam, there could be an upside, but we have prudently remained conservative. The revenue trajectory is set for a steady increase in both interest income and fee income while we conservatively plan for only modest contributions from fair value and other income as we are -- as these are hard to forecast. Total revenues are expected to increase from EUR 13.2 billion in 2026 to EUR 16.8 billion by 2030. This translates into a compound annual growth rate of 6%. Looking at the interest income in more detail, the picture is very similar to what we have seen last year and expect for 2026. The most significant driver is the predictable replication portfolio, which will contribute an additional EUR 2.1 billion by 2030 as we reinvest maturing assets at higher yields. On top of that, we plan for a EUR 300 million contribution from disciplined loan and deposit growth in PSBC Germany and corporate clients. These positive effects will comfortably outweigh the anticipated headwind of close to EUR 600 million from a steadily increasing deposit beta due to anticipated deposit competition. Expected increases in the ECB rates will add around EUR 100 million. mBank will resume its growth path and at around EUR 600 million overall. This structural predictable growth in NII is a cornerstone of our increasing profitability.
Slide 47 details our strategy in the Corporate Clients segment. Crucially, the focus is on capital efficiency. Building on our already established initiatives, we will continue our strong loan growth, further leveraging the capabilities of our franchise. While growing our loan book, we will be selective and focus on RWA efficiency of the growth. This might also mean selective reductions in the existing portfolio where targets cannot be met. In addition, more contributions from relatively RWA-light areas like the bond business or trade finance are in focus, further contributing to RWA efficiency. All this will be supported by our digital product offering that is convenient for clients and frees up time that our staff can instead use for value-added sales and advisory. The sales activities are furthermore augmented by AI-based models and advanced data analytics. AI data analytics also helps to price our products competitively. Finally, we intend to further increase the use of significant risk transfers. We have broadened our [ issuance ] by extending SRTs to further client portfolios and asset classes. We are thereby freeing up capital to fuel further profitable growth and increase the RWA efficiency to 6.4%.
In our private and small business customer segment in Germany, the focus is clearly on growing our high-margin net commission income. We will scale the securities business of comdirect and expand our relationship-driven initiatives with wealthy clients supported by AI. This will result in 7% annual growth in net commission income until 2028 keeping up with a strong expansion of interest income that is boosted by the replication portfolio. For 2029 and 2030, we prudently plan with 5% to 6% growth.
Let's now look at costs on Slide 49. Our plan is to slightly reduce costs in the group, excluding mBank. While we account for inflation, salary adjustments and [indiscernible], these increases will be offset by significant efficiency gains. These efficiencies are driven by our ongoing transformation program and increasingly by the smart implementation of AI across all processes. In addition to the already committed restructuring, we will implement a further reduction of around 3,000 gross FTE planned to be achieved in a socially responsible manner, contributing to the efficiency gains. We have already reached a transformation agreement with our workers' representatives. Detailed agreements will be reached in due course and expenses then be booked step by step. In total, the cost to achieve for the FTE reduction is expected to be around EUR 450 million.
While maintaining our strict cost discipline and increasing our efficiency, we will continue to invest. In 2026, we have allocated a EUR 600 million [ change in ] the bank budget, nearly EUR 50 million higher than in 2025. We will maintain the level of delivery that we planned for in 2026 also in subsequent years. However, the cost to get this output will decrease over time as we increase efficiency. The 3 biggest drivers are shoring, internalization and AI. The effects combined as we relocate activities into our shoring centers, while at the same time deploying AI to raise efficiency at these shoring locations. Overall, we expect 30% efficiency gains until 2030.
Looking briefly at the risk results. Based on our high-quality loan book, we expect to maintain a cost of risk of around 25 basis points throughout the cycle. For 2026, we plan with around EUR 850 million risk result which translates to a slightly elevated cost of risk of around 28 basis points.
Moving on to risk-weighted assets. We plan with nearly
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2026 to 2028. Credit risk RWA should decline slightly as we plan to compensate higher RWA from volume growth with securitizations and improvements in the portfolio. From 2029 to 2030, we expect a net increase of credit risk RWA by around EUR 7 billion. Thereof, a substantial contribution will come from mBank. Operational risk RWA will rise in sync with our profitability. Our RWA efficiency measured as revenues over RWA will improve from 7% last year to 9% in 2030.
Let me conclude with the expected trajectory of our net results and the capital return. As you can see on Slide 53, our capital return plan is as clear as it is attractive. We will distribute 100% of our growing net profit until we reach our target CET1 ratio of 13.5%. We project a payout of EUR 3.2 billion in 2026, and then increasing steadily every year. This translates into an attractive total yield starting from 7% in 2025 and reaching double digits latest in 2028. We will deliver this through a combination of steadily increasing dividends and the substantial share buybacks, returning around 50% of our current market cap by 2030.
With that, I conclude the financial presentation. Thank you for your attention. Bettina and I are now looking forward to your questions.
[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Benjamin Goy from Deutsche Bank.
2. Question Answer
A couple of questions, please. So the first is on your net interest income bridge. Just trying to understand why the contribution from volume growth is relatively low, in particular, considering the growth rates you have shown over the last quarters and years?
And then secondly, on the new cost program, the 3,000 FTEs, will the positive impact be mainly '29 and 2030 or already some benefits before that? And then lastly, just quickly on the RoTE definition, why you have adjusted it?
RoTE definition, I think we have not adjusted, it's just the same. And on the cost program, it will come in 2029 and 2030. You should not forget that we have the Momentum -- that comes into play first and the [ 3,000 ] other ones, which are meant for 2029, 2030 and for the NII, which I hand over to Carsten.
Benjamin, on the NII bridge and your question there. the increase from loan and deposit volumes, if we're looking, for example, towards 2028, is actually based on the growth of our underlying portfolios. Not to be too detailed on this, but if we consider PSBC being largely stable and corporate clients growing at around 8%, this gives you sort of a volume uptick which taken with our average margin, that needs to be reduced a bit by the SRTs that we are conducting. If you're then considering also that we are optimizing the portfolio and reduce fuel low-yielding assets, then you are actually ending up with an amount that's added to the revenue uplift from deposits actually ends up with EUR 200 million to EUR 300 million to '28. And then in a similar session beyond '28 as we are being prudent with the growth towards 2030 declines a bit. The rest you see in the uptick coming from the replication portfolio.
The next question is [indiscernible] from Bank of America.
Just a follow-up on the NII and loan growth. Can you share with us what's the expectation for loan growth term or more the timing between now and '28 and then '28 and 2030? And how much of the potential fiscal stimulus you've embedded in your numbers?
And then on costs, I mean, I hear you about preserving revenues and being realistic about taking out costs. But don't you think you can actually would have pushed the boat a bit further and do more or you suggest that there is actually -- it's very conservative and you probably could beat that?
And lastly, just on the SRTs, can you update us on how much has been done of the EUR 13 billion of the momentum plan and see you have EUR 5 billion of securitization in 2028. And is that on top? Or what remain to be done from the previous package?
[indiscernible], let me go through the questions one by one. First of all, your question on the loan growth. Until '28, we continue with the expected loan growth in terms of volume of around 8% per year and then trail off a bit after that. Regarding the fiscal stimulus that you mentioned, we have included the current expectation of our Chief Economist, which also means that for this year, we will see a rather ample GDP growth of 0.6%. For next year, we will see the GDP growth in Germany recovering to 1.2%, and that is also fueled by fiscal stimulus. But clearly, we are hoping and expecting for more of an impact to come later on.
On the cost side, fully understood that you are seeing us to be able to do a bit more. But let me also point you at the fact that on a group level, excluding mBank, we will actually decline in our operational cost base over the next years with all the efficiency measures, therefore, countering all of the usual updrift in terms of inflation, compulsory contribution, et cetera. And the investments in mBank clearly are linked towards the announced strategy and their business growth plan that they are having also with a low cost/income ratio adding clearly to the KPIs of the group.
And then lastly, on SRTs, Out of the EUR 13 billion that we have announced with the Momentum strategy beginning of last year, we did transact around EUR 4 billion of RWA relief in last year. I expect this year to be in the region of EUR 4 billion to EUR 5 billion as well in terms of execution distributed across the quarters and then likely another EUR 4 billion to come in '28. We will then add another EUR 3 million, not EUR 5 billion from '28 to '30, mostly to also start replenishing the maturing previous tranches in SRTs.
The next question comes from Jeremy Sigee from BNP Paribas.
One detailed question and one bigger picture question, please. The first one on the NII improvement this year. So very short term, you're aiming to you've upgraded the guidance for the full year. Is that a linear progression from where we are today. You were flat in 1Q quarter-on-quarter. Do we start to see NII picking up already in 2Q and then building through the year? Or is it more back-end loaded? So just the timing as we go through this year, please?
And then my second question, it's very useful and interesting that you picked up on the international activities because that does seem to be a point of contention with UniCredit. Your previous business plan back in 2022 talked about refocusing your international activities to purely focus on German clients and their overseas needs. Where are we in that process? I mean, how much of your international activities are linked to German clients? Or are there still significant bits of business that are done for local or other international clients in that international network?
Thank you, Jeremy. So on the first one, it is indeed -- NII will increase quarter-by-quarter. So you will see already in Q2, we expect higher NII. It's very much linked to the increase also of the replication portfolios, which we have done in the past quarters. When it comes to the international activity, we did indeed decided in 2020, back in 2020 to streamline our international network, and we closed a number of branches sold, for example, also Hungary to [indiscernible] and did some more steps. And we also significantly reduced the business, which has no connectivity to Germany, Austria or Switzerland with the maximum extent. And you see that also on the numbers of Page 9, where you see what are the revenues stemming or which are linked to the international business, which is 37% but you also see on the left-hand side that there's very, very few revenues linked to clients who do not have a DAC connectivity. It's basically only the -- 100 million approximately which are linked to selected future-oriented sectors like TMT and others. And so it's a very, very low number.
The next question comes from Chris Hallam from Goldman Sachs.
Just two from my side. So maybe a bit of a long-dated question, but just on distribution. How are you thinking about the right payout ratio in '29 and 2030? So if I look at the RWA growth, you've given us helpfully on Slide 52, I think you're going to need to be increasing CET1 at '29 and 2030 to stay at or above 13.5%. You said you'll stay at 100% payout until you get to 13.5%. So can we assume that after that point, you'll distribute any excess above 13.5%, i.e., you'll just pull back the payout ratio slightly to, say, 80% plus in '29 and 2030?
And then secondly, on efficiency, maybe I missed it in the comments, but just any comments on the timing of the gross reduction, the 3,000 and the [ 450 ], the phasing of that? And a few of your peers have used -- have commented on AI enabling them to use attrition to work down headcount. And I guess we can see that in the 50% net reduction of the 3,000 FTEs. But is there any scope for that 50% replacement to move lower, i.e., like a higher net reduction if AI improvements in workflow has become a bit more tangible? Or is that 3,000 gross reduction basically contingent on a 50% rehiring commitment maybe?
On distribution, you're right and the math right, but you can assume that our distribution will be something shortly above 90% in '29 and 2030. And when it comes to efficiency, I mean, natural attrition is one of the key levers which we use for those programs for the first program coming from Momentum, which we are, in the moment, implementing as we speak and then the additional 3,000 which we assume will happen in the years '29 and 2030 and beta attrition is one mean which we use. We will also use reskilling, which means that we will try to basically redirect people on other jobs and upskill them to
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And we have a demographic situation, where we can use a lot of [ aged instruments ] who are very socially with responsible to do the head count reduction.
And it's, however, clear that, I mean, we see such a speed in the AI technology and the development that we will definitely review the situation basically year-by-year, quarter-by-quarter because we have already seen within a year, and that's also one of the reasons for the update that so many things have happened that have changed our attitude to certain things. And that I assume will continue also in the next quarters.
The next question comes from Riccardo Rovere from Mediobanca.
Thanks a lot for taking my questions. Two or three, if I may. The first one, I've just seen -- some headlines from Bloomberg, they say that the -- if I understand it correctly, we have agreed already with trade unions around job cuts. I just wanted to have a confirmation around that. This is the first question.
The second question I have is for Carsten, I guess. How can -- you have deposit beta again going up in your region, NII, ECB rates have been EUR 100 million, deposit EBITDA taken out a couple of hundred million, if I'm not mistaken. How can this be possible? I mean your NII -- when rates went up, NII went up and the deposit EBITDA is 40%, 45%, 50%, whatever it is. It's not 100%. How can be EUR 200 million versus EUR 100 million, that's not clear to me.
The second question -- the last very question I have is your target net profit for 2028 is EUR 4.6 billion, which is not too far away from the consensus you have uploaded on your website. So the question here is, is there any kind of prudence in the EUR 4.6 billion target for 2028 and if there is, what's the point of being prudent at this stage?
Riccardo, so on your first question, yes, we signed a transformation agreement with Worker's Council. Yesterday where we agreed also already on what type of social plan we will apply. And then it is, as always, there were subsequent negotiations about the details where exactly the reduction will happen. But overall, we have an alignment and the support, and that's very important, the support of our colleagues from the workers' council.
On the second point, we are conservative people. So when it comes to the deposit better, we just take into account that there is a lot of deposit competition ongoing. And therefore, we are staying cautious on that, and that's clearly also some upside, and Carsten will probably reflect on that in a minute, even more.
And then on the last point, on the EUR 4.6 billion. First of all, I mean you see it also in the difference in the consensus. The consensus has 15%. We have a 17%. One reason for that is that we clearly have a little bit higher net income that's rounding. So consensus comes from the lower end. We come from the upper end of the EUR 4.6 billion because we have indeed a much higher operating results in our calculations. And that is one reason why we end up with a 17% plus capital is a little bit lower in our calculation given that we took into account already the EUR 450 million restructuring costs. And also, we never assume any cost -- capital allocation during the year. That are the key reasons. And I mean there is upside as always, but you also know us that we will only put something out where we now, from this perspective think that this is achievable that we can deliver what we promise and I think it is good -- it has been a good strategy, and it's also a good strategy for the future.
Yes. And Riccardo, adding to what Bettina already said on beta, which is basically the ongoing positioning that we're having, we're [indiscernible], you cited explicitly the bridge that we're having. We currently have a negative EUR 100 million for the full year in it. And please bear in mind that this is always the movement from last year's NII. So it's a delta view towards end of this year's NII. So last year, we had an average beta of 40%. We are now calculating with around 41%. That used to be 42% beginning of the year. So we are now coming down within the year, but we're still having a slight increase in beta expectation from last year to this year. So that is basically why we have a slight decline in this.
Why are we now more optimistic? A, it is our deposit management and the margin management that we're seeing and we also had runoffs of high beta tranches on the personal customer side. So that, in essence, is moving our view on this end and towards '28 and '30, as you know, we do yield the market and the competition landscape and hence, expect a slightly increasing [indiscernible] years.
The next question comes from Flora Bocahut from Barclays.
I have two, one on NII, one on risk-weighted assets. On the NII, obviously, a lot of, if not all, of the NII increase to 2030 is coming from the replicating portfolio given I think you're considering volume growth would be largely offset by the deposit competition. Can we just talk about the potential risk if the rate curve would move in there? Because looking at the Slide 33, where you show the detailed evolution of your replicating portfolio, I can see that only 15% is invested in two years or less. I can see that 55% is invested in 10 years or more. So would it be fair to say that even if the rate curve will move versus your expectations, it wouldn't lead to a significant deviation for your replicating portfolio contribution towards 2030?
And then the question on RWA, I'm just trying to understand how aggressive or not the securitization targets that you present are. Can you just give us maybe something like how much of your RWA relief you already have today in euro billion from securitization? Or how much of your CET1 ratio release in basis points from securitization that would be helpful. And just on the portfolio management, what do you mean there?
All right. Let me start with the NII. I think your interpretation of the NII and the functioning, the mechanics of the portfolio are absolutely correct. The portfolio is a long-standing portfolio, and we have different tranches in it. The split is exactly on Page 33, and you can expect that with every monthly role in the portfolio, we adjust to the current yield curve. And for the long-standing tranches, that means we have a relatively high pickup every single month, if we're rolling, especially coming from the older tranches that come out of the negative or low interest rate environment. And that also means that if the yield curve changes, clearly, the whole portfolio is moving very slowly. To put it differently, it also -- you can see that on that page takes us quite some time to bring the current average yield of 1.23%, up to market level. So to the upside, it's also dampening, but the positive is if there is a change in the yield environment, this is also going to be dampening and stabilizing. So we have a really reliable and structurally sound contribution over the next years, as you can see.
Then secondly, on the RWA and the SRTs on that, as per end of last year, we had a total relief in the group of around EUR 9 billion in RWA, EUR 2 billion coming from mBank, EUR 7 billion coming from Commerzbank AG. And then together with the relief that I've cited earlier in Chris's question, I think that was -- we will see another EUR 4 billion to EUR 5 billion this year and another EUR 4 billion next year. mBank is going to be relatively stable, and then we're mostly working against roll-offs in the following years.
You had another question on -- Sorry, you had a question on portfolio optimization. In terms of portfolio optimization, what we are looking at when growing our business, clearly, we're also constantly reviewing our portfolio in terms of efficiency of the underlying business. And when we're talking optimization, we're mostly looking into also exiting engagements where we have a lower efficiency business
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connected business that we can actually achieve with it. So that's the major part of the portfolio optimization. So it's business oriented, much more than model oriented.
Can I just follow up on the question on the SRT contribution. Basically, what was the stock of SRT you already had before the contribution that you described on this call, was it 0? Or did you already have some contribution from that?
Yes, we did indeed actually already have contribution. So SRTs means that we've been using for years. I think we had around 5 or 6 transactions ongoing already before we started with momentum beginning of last year and we had around EUR 3.5 billion, if I'm right in remembering this from relief already before we started into momentum. So we started picking up the pace a bit. But as you all
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how we see this in light of the overall portfolio. And we think we have a prudently small amount that we're looking at. And what's important to mention, we use expertise exclusively to also free up capacity that we're having in order to redeploy these resources. So we started with that before and have now pretty much double digit since start of Momentum.
The next question comes from Borja Ramirez from Citigroup.
I have two. Firstly, I would like to ask a high level on the strategy, I saw that you should have very strong growth in corporate loans. I think it's plus 16% year-over-year. I would like to ask how do you prioritize organic market share growth? Maybe could you consider any bolt-on M&A? Because I think you still have a bit of excess capital by 2028, above that 13.5%. So maybe that could be an option.
And then my second question would be on the deposit growth. So I see you have a conservative assumption on deposit beta, 44% in 2028 and higher in 2030. I would like to ask how do you see the growth in the deposit volumes going forward? So if you could provide some color on the overall market dynamics in the German deposit market, please.
So on the -- I mean the corporate loan growth is clearly part -- a crucial part of our Momentum 2030 strategy when it comes specifically to corporate clients. And I mean the growth on a year-on-year basis was 16%. If you compare a quarter-on-quarter basis, it's still 5%, which is also very important. And what we expect for the coming quarters is probably a little bit of shift again towards Germany, given that our expectation is that investments in Germany will start as hopefully also the reform exercises of the government will progress. And we have, as you rightfully say, we have enough space for growth, and we are absolutely determined to use it. However, it must be RWA efficient growth. That is one of the requirements which we have. When it comes to the deposit growth, it's a conservative assumption so it's an adjusted 2% growth, which is very much in line with the market.
The next question comes from Anke Reingen from RBC.
I just wanted to ask about the cost slide 49 and your confidence about delivering this absolute cost level. I think the inflation salary adjustments in the past probably was an area that provided some volatility versus guidance and I think this is like maybe like 1.4%, although I think your embedded inflation in the plan is more like 2%. And if inflation comes in higher, I think in the past, you also had higher costs from employee plans. Should we have the confidence that you'll be able to offset those headwinds with additional efficiency gains?
And then just a question on Q1 in terms of the corporate bank. I understand that Q4 NII was obviously very strong. But if we think about the Q1 level, is this like a run rate you expect to jump off for? And should it be improving? Or is it more, given the uncertain economic environment? Would you think that's something that you see some near-term headwinds?
So Anke, thank you very much for your question. So our confidence is very high. If we can't do something, then we can manage cost, and we took into account. Clearly, the inflationary effects, both in Germany [indiscernible] locations abroad and it's also very clear if you see differences, then we will manage against that. So high confidence in delivery on that. And you have seen it also in the past. I mean the only thing that we can't really control and which is a good thing is if our share price is increasing further because then our available long-term compensation will increase. That is something which is hard to predict, but that I think is a good signal because it just means that we are overdelivering also on all our other targets.
When it comes to Q1 and NII for the corporate bank, yes, so it's a structural increase, which you can assume, and that is also true for our corporate clients.
The next question comes from Stefan Stalmann from Autonomous Research.
I have one [indiscernible] question and one big picture question. So on the numbers, and I apologize if I missed that already, the EUR 450 million cost to achieve, are you planning to spend that in 2029 and or 2030? Or could it already happen earlier than that? And the big picture question, you mentioned earlier that the 12.7% RoTE in the first quarter was excellent, and I think that's true. But you almost plan to double that return to 21% in coming years. And you assume that basically most, if not all, of your AI efficiency gains are flowing to the bottom line. And the only competitive impact that you explicitly allow for is on the deposit beta. It looks like you are assuming that neither your clients nor your competitors are reacting in any way to the efficiency gains that they will probably also achieve from. So I guess the question is, how do you think about the competitive threat to your medium-term targets given these aspects?
Thank you, Stefan. So first, on the restructuring costs, I mean, it very much depends on the speed and progress and how we do the negotiations with the workers council. So in the moment, there might be assumption that it could happen in 2027, but it might be also that it's spread across years so that we're very much dependent on the negotiation. When it comes to your second question and the RoTE and how do we get from 12.7% for first quarter to the '28 and 2030 numbers. First of all, I think it's very important to say that this is not hockey stick, and we have a miracle happening in the last year, but it's a step-wise year-on-year improvement, which we assume. And it's broad-based. It's -- on the one side, it's clearly revenues, and we basically see growth in our net commission income, and that is true for mBank. It's true for corporate clients and private clients, and we see a lot of upside here. I talked about the wealth management business as one example but it's same when it comes to our brokerage business when it comes to capital markets business and so on. We have not assumed that competition will lighten. We did not assume any improvement of margins, not at all, [indiscernible] contrary when you think about the deposit better. And on the NII side, I think it's pretty clear that given what we have done with the replication portfolio, we just a year-on-year improvement on the NII, coupled with the growth rates, which we expect specifically on the corporate side. And if you just think about the investment programs all necessary in Europe, and I mean we have so many reports about it. [indiscernible] you report or others and we also see what is needed, for example, in Germany, we think that there is a lot of growth in the system, and we intend to participate in that despite all the competition we are fully aware of. And this is coupled with lots of cost discipline. And AI will help us. It will help us on the customer experience side. It will help us on the revenue side, but more importantly, it will help us on the operational excellence side. And we see it already today with all the use cases which we have in place that it's freeing up capacity. It's freeing up capacity for doing even more client meetings, but it's also freeing up capacity and the back office function to organize the growth. So one of the assumptions also that we have more growth, more business, more clients to serve but still, we can do that with a very similar amount of people. And therefore, we think it's a very viable way and a very reliable path. It's aspirational but absolutely achievable.
The next question comes from Tobias Lukesch from Kepler Cheuvreux.
Also three questions on my side. One on the SRTs, one on the RoTE drivers and one on the efficiency gains again. On the SRTs, Carsten, I think we talked about that over the last quarters. Could you remind me if you say 16.5% in RWA benefits against the [ potential ] 210 base, that makes 7.5% to 8%. Again, and with the developments, where would you see a potential threshold in terms of -- or ceiling in terms of RWA gains from these SRTs? Is it 10%? Is it a 15% or 20%?
And secondly, on the RoTE drivers, Page 16. I was wondering what the 1 percentage point of the [ capital ] means if I look at the RWA growth and understand that, that might be from the RWA growth, it will explain, let's say, 50%, 60% of that. That would be interesting.
And secondly -- thirdly, on the efficiency gains on Page 49, the EUR 0.5 billion between '26, '28 and the additional EUR 3.3 billion of '28 to '30. Could you maybe put a bit more flesh on the bone here, where this is coming from, how we could expect that?
Let's start with the SRTs. The question, which level we are comfortable with and how far we could go to sort of further RWA release, I would answer we're probably fine and comfortable with the level that we had at the moment. We think we can extend that a bit further, but there's two aspects playing into this. One is the absolute amount that we are having, and I think there could be a bit more room above what we're having. But we're also keeping a clear eye on the rollover of maturing tranches. So we are looking into the full sort of maturity range over the next years, which is also why we said we're going to extend other -- the SRT issuance beyond '28, but to a slightly lower degree than what you see today in order to replenish what is becoming maturing at that point. So current level, we're very comfortable with slight room to grow beyond that.
Then you asked on the RoTE and the 1% in the bridge towards the longer end. I mean, first of all, we are now into a few extra charges that we will be seeing by restructuring expenses, which also means that we might be returning more than the 100% level technically given that we are excluding this according to our capital return policy, and that, in turn, would mean that we are actually having slightly lower RoTE on that end.
Then last point on the efficiency gains in the bridge again in the corporate client portfolio and the portfolio overall. When we are talking about efficiency gains, I mean, there's always two ways to look at this. One is efficiencies in the RWA by model adjustment. This is what we are doing only sort of on a prudent level according to the general update of the models also in full accordance with what the regulator discusses with us. But most importantly, we are constantly looking into optimizing the portfolio when it comes to flushing out, let's say, lower yielding and lower efficient business and exchanging that with higher-yielding business. So I think this is the question that you had.
Yes. Carsten, if I may. On the efficiency question, it was a bit more on the bridge on Page 49. On the cost bridge, How are these EUR 0.5 billion, EUR 0.3 billion efficiencies are being reached?
Well, this is a combination of showing efforts, head count and therefore, head count reduction, it's about the reduction in external costs specifically on the IT side, and that's very much driven also by AI and the replacement of, for example, external software developers in the application environment. and things like that. So multiple levers. And specifically, on the external side, we expect already some steps pretty early. Take, for example, our call center capabilities. We have a lot of call center -- external call center capacities and through the introduction of agent assist last year, we expect quite some impact short term at this end.
And let me just add on the 1%. I think one point Carsten did mention, and that is prudence. So we really wanted to make sure that we have a reliable RoTE target out there. So there is also some prudent assumptions which are embedded in the 1%.
The last question for today is once again, Riccardo Rovere from Mediobanca.
Thanks for taking my quick follow-up. When it comes to the common equity Tier 1 target, the 13.5% in the previous strategy was supposed to be achieved in 2028. Now I see that, that has been moved to 2030 or 2028. Now you said the 13.7%, if I'm not mistaken. I was just wondering what is the reason why the 13.5% has been moved by further two years? And what is the reason of having 14%, 14.5% or whatever the number is, throughout such a long period of time? So it's like saying that 13.5%, again, has been moved by a couple of years. I was wondering why.
Riccardo, great question. I mean, first of all, on the target of 13.5%. I mean we just simply do not have another number yet. So it is clear that there could be a rightful expectation that with this increasing profitability, our MDA might come down. But for the time being, we just planned with our actual MDA. And therefore, I think it's prudent to also assume that for the time frame, but I would also share the view that at a certain point in time, that could come down given the strong profitability we are currently showing and will show in the future.
And when it comes to 2028, yes, I mean, it has also to do with our increasing profitability and the fact that we have restricted that to the 100% payout before extraordinaries, and we will see it's a dialogue, which we have to have with our [ work ] later. And before we haven't had a dialogue, we stay very much to our capital return policy, which we have put into action.
So Bettina, sorry, if I understand it correctly, it's like saying that your profit is kind of EUR 400 -- maybe million higher in respect to the previous targets but that should be paid out completely by your RWAs? Maybe and I haven't checked I admitted maybe with the SRTs will be a bit lower than initially foreseen in the previous Capital Markets Day. Is that the case why the 13.5% go to 13.7%?
Yes, it's just -- I mean it's an equation out of many things, including also RWA growth expectations and stuff like that. And with the increased profitability, the capital generation on the one side, but also the RWA development and our RWA efficient growth. That's basically what's happening. But I can ensure you, we understand the expectations from the market. And I think if you just sum it up what we have returned already, but what we will also return in the coming years. I think it's a good story.
Thanks so much, and we'll receive the one final question, which will conclude the Q&A session from [indiscernible] from Bank of America.
Just last question, please. So now you presented your plan and your vision for the bank by 2030, you answered to UniCredit's comments and statements. So you mentioned that you stay open for discussions and you publish your reasoning statement in due course. But I just want to understand if you are now in a mindset of let's extract maximum value. The trade will happen because it's up to shareholders, but your job is to extract the maximum value or you are more in the camp of we still have a chance to stay independent. And in this case, what tools you can actually bring beyond what you presented today?
Thank you, [indiscernible]. So I mean, first of all, our job is to present a strategy and to present alternatives for our shareholder. I think you have seen that we are very convinced of our Momentum 2030 strategy, which puts at very, very good results for our shareholders. But it is at the very end, the decision of our shareholders to decide what they want to do. Our job is to, first of all, keep the business model stable to create value for our shareholders but also for our clients. And to move forward and to not let us or our staff get distracted by anything. But it's also very clear, as we said that we always stay open for discussions with UniCredit. We, however, have two key requests and one is that one should take into account the strength of our business model and of our franchise. And second is that there is no sense that our shareholders give up their shares of Commerzbank and the upside attached to it without a premium. And that are the two things. But besides that, we are always willing to sit down again.
Okay. So yes, thank you very much for your attention. We are delighted to ask or to answer any questions after this call again, our Investor Relations teams is ready for you. And otherwise, I wish you a beautiful weekend later on. Thank you.
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Commerzbank — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
Commerzbank — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
Starkes Q1: Rekordgewinn, Guidance erhöht, Momentum‑2030 mit klaren RoTE‑Zielen und Dividendenzusage – UniCredit‑Offerte bleibt umstritten.
Management berichtet Rekordquartal, hebt 2026‑Ziele an und skizziert beschleunigte Strategie mit AI‑Investitionen und deutlichen Kapitalrückgaben.
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Umsatz: €3,2 Mrd. (+5% YoY)
- Nettoergebnis: €913 Mio. (Rekordquartal)
- Operatives Ergebnis: €1,4 Mrd. (+11% YoY)
- Return on Tangible Equity (RoTE): 12,7% Q1
- Capital & Effizienz: Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) 14,5%; Cost/Income 53% (50% ex Pflichtabgaben)
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Momentum 2030: Beschleunigte Strategie mit Zielen: RoTE 21% und Nettoergebnis €5,9 Mrd. bis 2030, Umsatz‑CAGR 6%.
- AI & Effizienz: €600 Mio. kumulative AI‑Investitionen bis 2030, erwarteter Wertbeitrag ~€500 Mio./a (70% Kosteneinsparung).
- Kapitalrückgabe: 100% Auszahlung des Jahresergebnisses nach AT1‑Kupon (vor außerordentlichen Posten); klare Priorität auf zuverlässige Ausschüttungen.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- 2026‑Ziel: Nettoergebnis ≥ €3,4 Mrd.; RoTE ~12%; Gesamterlöse ≈ €13,2 Mrd.; Net Interest Income (NII) ≈ €8,6 Mrd.; Net Commission Income (NCI) ≈ €4,3 Mrd.
- Kosten & Risiko: Kosten ~€7,0 Mrd.; Risikoergebnis ≈ €850 Mio.; Taxrate ~30%.
- Mittelfristig: RoTE 17% in 2028; Cost/Income 43% (41% ex Pflichtabgaben) und Wachstumspfade bis 2030.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- NII‑Timing: Management erwartet bereits Q2 anziehendes NII – Haupttreiber: Replikationsportfolio (zus. Beitrag 2026 ~€600 Mio.) und Margenmanagement.
- Kostensenkungsprogramm: 3.000 brutto FTE bis 2030, ca. 50% netto; Kosten zur Umsetzung ~€450 Mio.; Effekte größtenteils 2029–2030.
- Übernahmen & Bewertung: Viele Fragen zur UniCredit‑Offerte; Management sieht Unterbewertung, hohe Ausführungs‑/Revenue‑Risiken und verteidigt Standalone‑Upside.
⚡ Bottom Line
Commerzbank liefert ein starkes Startquartal, hebt 2026‑Ziele an und präsentiert ein ambitioniertes Momentum‑2030 mit klaren RoTE‑, Kapital‑ und Effizienzvorgaben. Positive Nachricht für Aktionäre, aber Risiken bleiben: Abhängigkeit vom Replikationsportfolio, Ausführung der großen KI‑/Kostenprogramme, RWA‑/SRT‑Phasing und die ungelöste Übernahmefrage durch UniCredit – genaues Monitoring empfohlen.
Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2026
1. Question Answer
Hi. Good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to be joined today by Bettina Orlopp, CEO of Commerzbank. Thank you for being with us, Bettina.
Thank you, Giulia.
I have plenty of questions for you. I'm sure the room has as well. But first, as always, we start with a polling question. If I can have it please. Okay. So not related to UniCredit. We will get to UniCredit in a second. But what is the best use of excess capital for Commerzbank beyond the planned 100% profit distribution.
One, pitch for additional buybacks of the regulator; two, pursue bolt-on acquisitions. Three, pursue organic growth; or four, invest into AI and further cut costs. Buybacks. Okay. We will get to this in a second, but let me start with the topic of the day. UniCredit announcement yesterday, their intention to increase the stake in Commerzbank. Can I hear your thoughts?
Yes. Thank you, Giulia. It's clear that this is topic number one. So let me just do three statements at the beginning, and then we probably dig deeper into it.
So first of all, it came as a surprise for us. It was again not pre-aligned. There was no pre-information, anything. So we learned it yesterday, same as everybody else, by the ad hoc. And it was a surprise because it was again a change of narrative when you compare it to the February messaging. The other surprising thing in relation to it is the offer itself because it is at a very low price if you compare it to our target prices. And it comes with this messaging, where we want to go beyond the 30%, but we do not want to get control, which per se is not fitting together, and therefore, it feels a little bit like a tactical move.
And the second point belongs to that, and that is this messaging that this is the mean to get us to the table to discuss. And I mean, I don't get it basically because we have said since the beginning of the year since October 2024, we clearly said that we would sit down and evaluate a proposal, discuss a proposal if we get one and compare that in the interest of our stakeholders, starting with the shareholders, with clients and employees, the stand-alone strategy with the combination.
But for that, we need something in our hands. And one would expect that someone who has moved now so far has something in the drawer, which they can share with us. And that is the ask which we have. We have now since 15 months, we always said that. I also say that publicly and also with colleagues that they need to be aware that if we get a proposal and we sit down and this proposal makes sense, we will recommend that.
But as long as we do not have a proposal, we are back with our stand-alone strategy, and that is my third point, this very promising and successful stand-alone strategy called Momentum, which we are in implementation. We have delivered in 2025 is a record result. We have a very good start for 2026, have a very nice guidance out there for 2026. have good targets out there for 2028, and we will present updated and upgraded targets in the course of this year, not only for 2028, but 2030, making specific use and that fits to this pole by our investments into AI. So all in all, for us, it's strange and brings us back to the question, why not putting a proposal on the table?
So let's expand on that the proposal. What would you like to see?
Well, what you would always see, and I mean, we have said that also several times, and that is a normal behavior if someone is knocking at your door and say, should we do something together?
Normally, you come with a draft. And in our case, this draft would include clearly the topic of synergies. What are the expectations on revenue synergies, probably negative revenue synergies given the overlap -- but then clearly, positive cost synergies, restructuring costs, speed of integration, integration structure, price related to that, very important for all the ones sitting here as our investors because our target is to create value for our shareholders, for our stakeholders, and that means we need to know what is the potential premium, which we can see.
And then it relates to governance, organizational structure. One should not forget that a combined entity would have as biggest market, the German market, given the sizes. And then it's also because we have not only the shareholders and stakeholders, but we have also clients and staff. There are the stakeholder issues and social topics one need to address.
And the thing is that I think we all agree to the fact that takeover integrations are always difficult, and you should only do them if they are value creating. But it's also very clear that it's very, very tough to do it not jointly, but in a hostile environment.
Yes, absolutely. And can I follow up on stuff? It must be difficult to motivate people when these type of headlines are out. So how do you achieve that?
But I think putting a lot of focus on why we are here and what we are doing is -- and we made it very clear from the beginning on that we really need to stay calm first. second, that we really need to focus on our role. And our role as Commerzbank is to be there for our clients and to create value for clients and clearly for our investors, for our shareholders.
And that is the thing and the task, and that is also what -- where we -- the whole organization is focused on that. It is full steam of integrating the different topics we have from momentum, implementing that. We are now, as we speak, we are thinking about the elements of our AI strategy and how that can even accelerate the profitabilization of the bank because we have made very good experience over the past year with a number of AI use cases, and that one is now to be embedded in our future plans.
And it's really focus, but clearly, yesterday has been a distraction. And clearly, you go out and you then try to calm down people, but it takes a while to get people back on track.
Yes, I can imagine. So in the absence of a proposal, let's focus on defense strategy, maybe the best defense would be to push the share price up. And typically, that happens when beat raise. So let's discuss -- you have an ambitious 15% ROTE target, but then you like the word floor, I guess. So how can we see -- when do we see the upside?
Yes. I don't like the word defense actually in this context because we are not doing defense, we are doing value creation, and that is our task. I mean, we have the commitment to create value for our stakeholders and it starts with the shareholders. And what we have proven with all we have done over the past quarters is that we are committed to create value by moving bank forward, by increasing the profitability, by increasing capital return, and that is what we also intend to do in the upcoming quarters.
We have already aspirational targets out there with a 50% ROTE and the 50% cost income ratio. But we made it already clear 4 weeks ago that is, as you said, it is very likely that this is more a floor when it comes to the ROTE and the cap when it comes to the cost income ratio given the movements we currently see and given also what we see already for 2026, where our original plan just a year ago was to reach a cost/income ratio of 56%, and now we are already down to 54%.
And therefore, it is very clear that we think about different measures. It's on the growth side also because we see that AI can free up relationship capacities and stuff like that, and that can lead to further growth. But then clearly, also on the efficiency side, when you think about where we can be much quicker, where we can avoid costs through applying AI. And then clearly, some other elements in place, the interest rate environment, which is at least currently an attractive one for us, and we see that also in the development of NII in the past years and also in our guidance for the coming years. But then it's also the point of the stimulus in Germany, where still there is more to come and we probably have not seen yet the full amount.
Thank you. And I want to open it up to the floor. I will do shortly, but let me just ask a couple more. So from a geopolitical perspective now, the German fiscal stimulus also European focus on competitiveness is great. On the other side, you've got, however, an Iran war, which impacts, I would say, Germany, perhaps more than other countries. So how is that impacting your clients and your business at the moment?
Well, short term, not yet. It's very clear because our exposure to Middle East is also very limited. But clearly, the second round effects are the ones where we also now focus on. So if the energy prices still stay up we see more inflation that will -- and that is also the assumption of our economic team is it will put a drag on our GDP growth assumption. We still currently assume that there will be a 0.9% GDP growth for Germany this year.
If the war is longer and the energy prices stay up and there is more inflation, there is a risk that this will be a significant lower like reduced by 0.4%, still grows, but then very limited again. And then the question really is what does it mean for us? Is there an impact on the loan growth question mark because we have shown also last year, when we had a 0% growth in Germany that we produced a 10% loan growth. So that one is to be seen.
And then the second part is clearly on asset quality. What does it mean for our loan portfolio. And there, we are anyhow always a little bit cautious population. So we have laid out this risk result guidance of EUR 850 million, which is already a little bit an elevated level when you also now compare it to 2025, where the number was lower, but this gives us a certain flexibility, but clearly depends also on the length of the crisis.
Perfect. And actually, since you mentioned the EUR 850 million, that does sound conservative. Consensus is below that. But every week, we have a different topic ping up on the asset quality side. One is oil, we just touched upon it. There is software, there is private credit. So where do you see the risks to this guidance to the upside or to the downside?
But the truth is we have a very well-diversified loan portfolio. But what we all know is what can happen is we finance a lot of medium-sized corporates. And just for that alone, you have one or two more defaults in this larger bucket. risk result can come in higher in a quarter or also for a full year.
So it's just very conservative to rather stick to the higher end. When it comes to private credit, our exposure to the U.S. is not there, a direct exposure. So that's at least assuring. But there are other parts, and that is the exposure to German corporates. We know that not all industries are progressing in the same way. But that is reflected in our risk models, and that is also reflected in our risk result guidance. So that's really how we manage the things.
Perfect. And if I can come to the more positive part. So Germany is stimulating and the defense spending is definitely there. Hopefully, the infrastructure is coming as well, and Commerzbank is uniquely positioned with your Mittelstand franchise. So how are you positioned to benefit from that? And what are you seeing on the ground? Because I think on paper, you are definitely positioned to benefit from it. But then the Mittelstand are quite cautious and not to necessarily invest
While the board clearly didn't help to increase the investment plans of German Mittelstand. What we currently see is clearly already effects unfolding when it comes to defense to infrastructure, numbers are developing exactly as planned, and that then has spillover effects, positive ones on suppliers and manufacturers. So that one is clearly there.
The topic which we have, and it is also a public debate is about reforms besides the stimulus. And there, there has been progress, but there is more to come, and there's also the ask of German economy, and we do that via the Made for Germany initiative to really see more reforms so that people are really moving and feeling prepared to also invest in Germany because truth is and we see that also in our loan portfolio that people invest specific larger ones, but they do that outside.
They do more localizing of business, which also has a reason because of the tariff situation, but it's also about this belief that reforms are sustainable in Germany, and we need to see more to come. And then it would be great if we do not have every second week another crisis. because if you're an entrepreneur who is having a family-owned, not listed company and the fortune of your family and most likely also some larger part of family is dependent on that, you will be always more conservative than some others.
Clear. Let me see if the audience has questions. I wasn't expecting that. So let me ask you another one. In Q4, you commented that Q1 was off to a good start on revenues, but also on the cost side. How has that progressed since the last time?
Yes. I mean we feel comfortable with our guidance. So I mean, February is always a short month. So that one is always a little bit different to all the other months, but we had a very good start in January. March, I mean, volatility also helps. So very confident with respect to the guidance we gave. And more importantly, we also made very good progress on the AI side when it comes to really rolling out several programs to our complete staff and other things.
Yes. And I actually was going to ask you about AI next because I think you are passionate about this topic, you are deploying it. So can you give us some example of the value you are able to extract in AI?
I mean, AI is a really important topic for us, and there are different perspectives we need to take as a bank. One is the one which you all as investors also do with other industries, and we do that as a lender. We really need to figure out what does it mean to our loan portfolio. So who's exposed and who's benefiting from AI, who's less impacted by AI, who's very quickly in adapting, who's probably a little bit slow in adopting.
So that is an important topic for us, and that is something for the corporate client and the risk side. The second part is really coming from the client perspective, how clients look at AI, how will they use AI to get in contact with us -- and then we also need to keep in mind that we have very different client groups. We have the super digital native clients who jump on every tool we offer them like we have an Avatar and [indiscernible] app where you can easily ask questions with the avatar, you can block your credit card and things like that. Beautiful.
But unfortunately, it can be only used by the ones who have mobile credentials, which is in many countries, I know already not and not a problem. But in Germany, we still have a lot of analog clients who even do not have mobile credentials for the mobile banking. So that is something where we also put a lot of focus this year on how to get more clients onto the digital channels and to really help them in doing their basic services on the digital channels.
And the third part is the part which you asked for is where can we apply it. And truth is when looking at a bank, you can apply it basically everywhere. Not always it makes sense because there should be always a business case and one should not forget that there's cost attached also to AI and dependent on whether it's a high-risk process, you need to make sure that you have enough control, human touch control against it.
And sometimes it might be that it doesn't make sense, but we see that we will apply it, and we're already applying it in every corner of our bank. It's for the relationship managers preparing and wrapping up the client meetings. It's for the advisory centers where we have already introduced an agent assist who's transcripting calls, providing solutions, summarizing the call for the client history and all these things. We use it in complex processes like KYC, alert monitoring. We use it in detecting fraud when onboarding clients. And we use it also in the central functions like we have just introduced it for contract management and the legal department. And I could go on and on and on.
And what we now try to figure out what does it mean for our cost and our revenue base for 2028, but also for 2030 because the developments are much faster than we thought last year when we announced the momentum strategy there would be. And the good part is we are not newbies to the whole thing. We started with big data and analytics back in 2017, 9 years ago. We had our first large language model doing large analytical work in 2019.
We have lots of use cases, and therefore, we have a very good starting position to work with that and to accelerate that because we are also not too complex, and we have still -- because we are in a high-cost location, we still also have a cost/income ratio, which gives you some room for improvement actually, which is less easy when you're anyhow in a very -- in a low-cost location.
And then last but not least, and that is also very important, and it's equally important to the client part. And that is the part that AI technology only works if you make sure that the people are applying it. So one of our key tasks for this year for leadership, but then also for complete staff is to make sure that people are using the tools. We have rolled out large language models to all employees that they are using it, that they see the efficiency, that they see the benefits out of it, that they are not scared about it, but that they are skilled on it.
So we train a lot. And it's really -- that is a cultural change we all need to do in the coming months and rather quicker because the development is at such a speed, which we currently see. And that's how we look on AI. So it's a full program, but it's very different perspectives you need to take.
Absolutely. So if I can unpack some of that. On the cost side, I think you have a plan to offshore some people. But in fact, perhaps AI can help. with part of that? Is that one of the potential upside?
Yes. I mean, it's always a question what do you do? I mean, do you now -- because we have a reduction program planned in Germany, and we are also recruiting our size because we also need certain skills, IT skills, et cetera. But to some extent, we really need to know are we really building up additional capacities?
Or is that not something which we can now be dealt with the AI. Same holds true. We have external call center capacities we use as an overflow and to make sure that we handle the volumes. It's pretty clear that the first ones, we will reduce our external call center capacities.
Perfect. And the other aspect that you touched upon is how do you assess your corporate loan book? Because when we lend to corporate and the corporates might be significantly disrupted by AI, that's a risk. How do you go about that?
Yes. I mean we have anyhow a strategic portfolio review, which is done and performed by corporate clients together with risk management, and they do that basically every month where they really go through the portfolio to figure out what might be the impact. I mean, it was very important during the pandemic to understand what the impact is. It was very important when the Russian invasion started to understand with every new topic, we need to understand where our clients are.
And same was true for the ESG topic and where are they moving and are they moving at the right speed and the right direction. And then clearly, for the larger ones, they anyhow have their own programs and concepts and AI programs. But specifically for the medium-sized corporates, it's also our task to help them to put a connection to centers to provide, I would say, best practice examples to make sure that they move in the right direction by best practice sharing. And then clearly, it's also not a secret that we will adjust our lending strategies according where we see industries moving to.
Perfect. Let me check back in the room if we have questions. We have one over there.
And at the Capital Markets Day for 2028, you gave us guidance for cost/income ratio, but you also mentioned a range of EUR 6.5 billion to EUR 7.1 billion of costs as an aspiration within that. Does that guidance still hold? And if not, why not?
You're referring to the absolute cost growth versus cost-income ratio. I mean, given that we now constantly improve on the one side, our cost/income ratio and bring it down. I mean, one part is clearly the revenue side, which is developing more nicely than we thought. And that will be one part of the equation.
The other part is clearly what happens on the cost side and why we had this increase of the cost side up to 2028. That is one point what we are currently examining. Is this cost baseline still holding the same? Or is it developing differently? Clear is that the 50% is the minimum we want to achieve and the likelihood that we will stay below the 50% is pretty high, and that will be the result of higher revenues and probably even more cost discipline.
Great. Let me see if there are other questions. Okay. So we managed most of the fireside chat without even talking about NII. So finally, we get to an important topic. Comdirect launched a deposit campaign in Germany in January and the guidance is for 42% pass-through, which is up from 40% to allow for this type of campaigns. On top of that, I would say the competitive environment has always been fierce in Germany, but it's, of course, getting perhaps even tougher with Credit Agricole, Chase openly talking about entering the market. So how profitable are these campaigns? What value does this add to your top line?
Yes. I mean that's a fair question. And I mean this attacker product, which you see basically since the year is very different to the first attacker products, which we had seen at the beginning of the cycle because at the beginning of the cycle, we saw basically attacker products, which were still below the ECB rate. So producing regardless on how many clients would stick after that with you as a bank would be profitable because you were just still gaining money.
Now it is different because many of the attacker products are far above the ECB rate, which means that this is only a smart case if you have enough interesting options you want to fund with, which create a certain profitability or that you also make sure that there is a stickiness in the deposits so that people, even if you reduce the interest rates on the attacker product, they will still stick with you. And I think everybody is currently figuring that out. And I think it is important to stay really vigilant and cautious on that.
What we observe currently is there is this group, which we call the interest rate surface, hoppers, you name it as you want, yes. I'm not sure whether I like hoppers or surface more, but it's the same group. It's a group which is digital native because we see it more in our case, for comdirect brand and then clearly with the ING, DKB and also the neobanks and the new players coming on the scene because you need to be digital native because you must be prepared to open up an account, then move your call money to that, then when the attacker product ends, they move to the next online account.
So you need to be some kind of digital nature to do so. And it's also very important to note that people do not move around with the key accounts, so house bank accounts because nobody really is prepared to every 6 months tell his employee or her employee that the account details have changed again. So what is important to note that everything which is on current accounts, the side deposits, is normally not touched by this account or deposit war. It is really about the coal money.
And there, it's about the coal money or a specific group, which is prepared to move money around and do this extra effort for, I don't know, 1% advantage on a EUR 30,000, EUR 50,000. And that is certain type, and this competition is clearly getting a new player, whatever JPMorgan is entering this chase. But it's -- they are all hunting, I would say, in the moment very similar group of clients.
Great. Just a follow-up on that. The market has been testing this theory that with the AI agents actually, the trend that you described will become way faster in therefore deposits way more competitive. Do you subscribe to this view?
Well, I mean, one, again, need to -- I mean, it's a regulatory environment. So we have already today the platforms like Raizen who are helping clients in picking the best interest rate offer, which is in the market available. But truth is also that the clients still sit with each and every bank they are moving to. So you have to open up an account and then you have to move the money to that. So this platform idea and whether it's done by an AI agent or it's by a platform, it's very similar. You have that already today. The thing is that to do it really more quicker, you only have -- I mean, you only have still the situation that the clients need to open up with each and every bank they want to move the money to, they would have to open up again and again and again an account.
And why is that so? -- because we, as a bank, cannot accept any money from someone we haven't KYC and have under close monitoring. The alternative would be that the company providing the AI agent is acting as a bank with all consequences when it comes to regulatory environment, leverage ratio, liquidity ratio requirements and stuff like that.
But then they would also need to onboard each and every client and KYC it and make a transaction monitoring, everything when they would then like to send liquidity to different banks. So it's -- the one thing is not very dissimilar to the other one. And the other thing I can't see that someone is really prepared to really get into the banking license game.
Yes, we had raising here yesterday for our Fintech Day. So exactly. That's also the answer I think about. It already actually exists. Yes. Okay. And then another question on fees instead. So you had quite nice growth in '25, 6% and then consensus is expecting 6.5% CAGR over the next few years. So what are the key levers for growth here?
Yes. And I can say that also 2026 is progressing exactly in the direction we want that. So very much in line with the guidance. And the levers, and that is a good part on it is really multiple. We have on the one side, we have clearly mBank, which was more focused on the payment side, but what is now and also Poland is getting a pension reform to increase the investment culture in Poland and mBank is well situated to also take a benefit out of it, whether this is already the case in 2026, not sure.
But this is also a growth area for mBank. Then we have our corporate client side, where one should not forget that with every loan growth, there is also a link to net commission income growth, but it's not only about NII when it comes to loans, but there's also an NCI part in nearly all the loan agreements. And you clearly have the capital market business where we all know that some kind of volatility helps in the moment, no surprise. The whole FX business is a good one. And then you also have payments business also in place for corporate clients.
And then again, when you look at private clients, it's multiple levers. It's the payment side, specifically when it comes to the small business clients we have as part of the private clients, but it's also account fees. We have just changed the model for all account fees, which drives net commission income.
But then you have Comdirect, which is very much driven by transactions and no surprise. Lots of volatility means lots of transactions. And then you have the wealth management, the discretionary portfolio management with more wealthy clients on the private and the wealth management side, private banking and wealth management side, where, yes, constant increase in volumes also helped to drive revenues.
And then there is something which we're driving a lot and where we also have the expectation that the upcoming pension reform will put an additional booster on it, and that comes to -- for the mass market, the whole topic of also security savings plans and things like that, which are small at the beginning because people are saving, I don't know, EUR 50, EUR 100 every month.
But if you then, first of all, you roll it out to many, many clients and then it's piling up over time. And that is also one of the concepts in the pension reform to support more the -- what we call the column 3 in the pension system, which is what people do privately and subsidize that with tax advantages so that people are getting more and get more the courage in not only saving the money on the current account or in the call money or at home, worst case, but to really invest that.
And that the security savings plans are a good mean. And they are also one lever which helps us specifically midterm and long term to secure the revenues we expect on the net commission income side. So multiple levers.
Yes, quite a few. And if I follow up there, so you are optimistic about the pension reform. -- potentially, we get something more in June, I guess. And also, we just heard from Commissioner Alb on stage about the efforts on the savings and investment unit. And I know you're close to the regulators, of course. So what is your ask? And how confident are you that we get close to that?
Yes. I mean for us, as banks, one is really important and that is where we also talked a lot to the regulator, and that is the securitization framework. it's very complex, lots of regulation and there are now proposals out there. There are some kind of divulging when you look at the one which came from the commission and you have the rapporteur who did something, you have the -- then you have the council, it's moving in the right direction. It will hopefully support the, yes, revitalization of the securitization market in Europe, which is still very, very small in comparison to the U.S.
And the other part is really the part which we have just discussed, and that is -- I mean, our capital market in Europe will only get deeper if we make sure that we unlock the potential sitting on our deposits. And Germany is not a great example. I mean we still have only 70% of German savings, of which only 40% currently are investing in securities. The good news is that Gen Z is much smarter than the rest. So they are much higher in their numbers, but still.
And we are, however, not an exception in Europe because there are other countries who are doing the same. And what we really need to make sure is that we put enough incentives out there as banks with attractive products, but then also from the governance to make sure that people feel supported in doing investments and therefore, not only securing their retirement plans, but also in making the capital market much more deeper because the more capital we have, the biggest disadvantage we have when you look to the U.S., but also to Canada is they have this huge, huge pension schemes, which can invest a lot of money, and we don't have that. at least in large parts of Europe. There are some who have been a little bit smarter than others.
Great. I'll check one last time. No? Okay. So then my last question. I would like to close the way we started. So with the polling question. How do you agree or disagree with the results?
Yes. I think -- I mean, at the very end, we will do and we currently pursue all the four things. So they are important for us. And I would start the order differently. I think the most important part is how to push organic growth.
That is something which is -- and that is linked to the fourth point, which is investing into AI because AI is there to foster growth, but also to support efficiency gains. So that comes together, and that is the organic part which we have. And that will be always our first question, what do we do with our profitability? Do we have ideas on how to invest and how to even increase further our profitability. That is always question number one.
Question two is then, are there any interesting acquisitions out there that they need to fit to the requirements which we have when it comes to profitability and also the possibility to really integrate smoothly. And then the last part is capital return. And then on capital return, we have two different options.
Apparently. We have dividends, and we have share buybacks. And the thing is that dividend, we understand we want to have a very nice track record of increasing dividends but no up and down. So we really want to have a constant track here.
So that leaves us for the rest of share buybacks, and we will continue that. And I think it's also worth to note that share buyback program -- share buybacks from our side are also not a problem for our largest shareholder because there is no way that someone is getting kicked above 30% without not being able to put some countermeasures in place. That's also very important to state because there's always a couple of months of prewarning, number one.
And even if for whatever reason, it happens, then there is a grace period of the regulatory authorities where you can go below the 30%, again, if you don't want to be kicked above the 30%. So what we will do is still in the interest of our shareholders, and we think attractive capital return is part of our story, and that is beneficial for all our shareholders.
Excellent. Thank you very much, Bettina.
Thank you.
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Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2026
Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2026
🎯 Kernbotschaft
- Takeaway: Management sieht UniCredit‑Angebot als überraschend und preislich zu niedrig; Commerzbank bleibt aber bei ihrer Stand‑alone‑Strategie "Momentum", bestätigt 2026‑Guidance, plant weiter Kapitalrückfluss und priorisiert organisches Wachstum sowie gezielte Investitionen in Künstliche Intelligenz (KI) zur Profitabilitätssteigerung.
⚡ Strategische Highlights
- UniCredit: Vorstand fordert ein konkretes Kaufangebot mit Synergieannahmen, Integrationsplan, Preis und Governance‑Vorschlägen; aktuelle Äußerungen werden als taktisch bewertet.
- Kapitalallokation: Priorität für organisches Wachstum und KI‑Investitionen, Dividendenkontinuität plus fortgesetzte Buybacks als Ergänzung.
- AI‑Strategie: Breiter Rollout (Relationship Management, KYC, Betrugserkennung, Vertragsmanagement), Fokus auf Schulung, Effizienzgewinne und mögliche Revenue‑Upside bis 2028/2030.
🔭 Neue Informationen
- Guidance‑Update: Management kündigt aktualisierte/aufgestockte Ziele für 2028 und erstmals für 2030 im Laufe des Jahres an; bestätigt jedoch die bestehende 2026‑Guidance und ein Risikorergebnis‑Band (Risk result) von EUR 850 Mio.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Asset‑Risiken: Kritische Nachfragen zu Branchenrisiken (Öl, Private Credit, Software); Bank betont Diversifikation, monatliche Portfolioreviews und konservative Risikopuffer.
- Depositenwettbewerb: Diskussion zur Comdirect‑Kampagne (42% Pass‑through) und zur Bedeutung von KYC/Onboarding—Management warnt vor Margendruck und strukturellen Grenzen für Agenten‑lösungen.
- Kosten vs. AI: Fragen zu Offshoring und Personalabbau; Antwort: AI kann Teile ergänzen, aber Personalaufbau für Skills bleibt nötig, externe Call‑Center‑Kapazitäten sollen reduziert.
📌 Bottom Line
- Fazit: Für Aktionäre bleibt das wichtigste Ergebnis: Commerzbank setzt weiter auf Wertschöpfung durch organisches Wachstum und KI‑Effekte, hält Kapitalrückfluss hoch und bereitet aktualisierte Langfristziele vor. UniCredit‑Ankündigung erhöht kurzfristige Unsicherheit, ändert aber die strategische Ausrichtung nicht.
Commerzbank — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Hello, and welcome to the Commerzbank AG conference call regarding the fourth quarter results 2025. Please note that this call is being transmitted as well as recorded by audio webcast and will be subsequently made available for replay in the Internet. [Operator Instructions] The floor will be opened for questions following Bettina Orlopp's and Carsten Schmitt's presentation.
Let me now turn the floor over to our CEO, Bettina Orlopp.
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our earnings call. You already saw the bottom line and capital return yesterday with our pre-release. And today, we are pleased to present the full picture of our Q4 and full year performance 2025. I will present to you our overview of the year and share our strategic and financial view going forward. Afterwards, Carsten will walk you through the detailed financial performance of the fourth quarter.
We can report on a very successful year for Commerzbank. We achieved our growth targets and in many areas, exceeded them. We delivered a record operating result and will return even more capital to shareholders than originally planned. This is a clear proof to the fact that our Momentum strategy pays off and drives profitable growth.
In 2025, we created significant value. On the financial side, we achieved an operating result of EUR 4.5 billion, an increase of 18% compared to previous year. Our return on tangible equity before restructuring expenses reached 10%. This is the highest return since the global financial crisis, and hitting this double-digit figure is an important milestone. It demonstrates the improved strength and profitability of Commerzbank and sets our new baseline for growth from 2026 onwards.
This is complemented by a capital return of EUR 2.7 billion for 2025, higher than we thought back in November, and bringing the total since 2022 to EUR 5.8 billion. This financial success translates into value for all our stakeholders. For our shareholders, the market has recognized our growth path and our transformation. Our share price has more than doubled in 2025, reflecting the confidence in our strategy and its execution.
For our employees, our success is also their success. We launched an employee share program and saw a high participation rate of 90%. This creates a culture of ownership and aligns the interest of our team with the long-term success of our bank. And for our clients, our growth is a reflection of their trust. We grew our corporate loan volume by 10% and our securities volume by 9%. This shows that our clients value our partnership and our expertise, in particular, in the current economic environment. We are a reliable partner for our clients, especially in the German Mittelstand.
A more detailed look at the financial performance underpins the positive trend across our key metrics. Our total revenues climbed by 10% to EUR 12.2 billion. This was driven by good performance across the board, particularly by a 7% growth in our net commission income and the strong results from our Polish subsidiary, mBank.
Even in an environment of lower benchmark interest rates, we kept our net interest income nearly stable, reflecting our successful NII management. At the same time, we have maintained our consistent cost discipline. We improved our cost-income ratio by 2 percentage points to 57%, achieving our target for the year. This was accomplished alongside strategic investments as well as absorbing one-off effects such as higher valuation of equity-based compensation due to our share price performance. This combination of revenue growth and cost control led to the 18% increase in operating results. This demonstrates the improved earnings power of our bank.
Our net result stands at EUR 2.6 billion. If adjusted for the restructuring expenses, it rose strongly by almost 13% to EUR 3 billion. This underlying profitability is also reflected on our net RoTE before restructuring expenses, which, as mentioned, reached 10%, exceeding our target. I already touched on capital return, and we'll come back to it shortly.
But before that, I would like to draw your attention to the execution of our Momentum strategy. We have delivered on our strategic milestones in 2025, driving both growth and transformation. On the growth side, we have leveraged our franchise for capital-accretive loan growth, demonstrating our strong client relationships. Furthermore, we have taken a smart analytical approach to deposits. By using AI, we improve savings retention, apply sophisticated pricing schemes and grow volumes through reactivation of existing customers. The strong focus on client needs has supported the growth in our fee business across all customer segments, contributing to our revenue uplift.
On the transformation side, we have implemented the new enhanced service model for our private customer. As one key element, we have created more capacity for high-quality advice in private banking and wealth management. This is a key step to further grow our fee income.
Our restructuring program is on track with the ongoing shift to sourcing and shoring locations progressing as planned. An important component of this transformation has been the introduction and expansion of AI-based capabilities. We are already realizing initial efficiencies and improve both customer and employee experience. This is happening as we speak, and I will come back to this in a minute.
Overall, we are very pleased with the success of our Momentum strategy, which paves the way for 2026 and beyond.
Our priorities are clear. First, we are fully committed to delivering on our 2026 to 2028 strategic and financial targets. We have a clear plan, and our 2025 results give us all the confidence that we will achieve it. Second, we will continue our growth path. This will be supported by an expected modest recovery in the German economy and the government's stimulus package. Further catalysts from 2027 onwards will be the pension reform in Germany, which comes with government-subsidized securities savings plans.
Third, we will further increase the usage of artificial intelligence to transform the bank. We will increase the investments in AI to drive efficiency, enhance customer service and create new revenue opportunities. Fourth, we will continue the execution of our Asset Management Growth strategy. This is an important building block to achieve our targeted growth of 7% annually in fee income. And finally, we will strive to optimize the deployment of our excess capital, including the ongoing screening of inorganic growth opportunities.
Let me expand on 2 of these key priorities, artificial intelligence and asset management, starting with AI. AI is a fundamental driver of our ongoing transformation. We have built a solid starting point in 2025, moving from concepts to concrete applications that deliver benefits. Let me highlight a few of them.
In our advisory and customer service center, our AI-powered agent assist provides real-time call transcription, generate summaries and recommend suitable solutions. Workplace tools like cobaGPT make information retrieval and content creation for our employees significantly faster. Our in-house tool Fraud AI helps to automatically detect fraudulent activities. And in our banking app, our virtual assistant, Ava, combines generative AI with Avatar technology to assist customers with their banking needs. The benefits are already visible and will increase every year.
In 2026, we will expand and enhance the use cases we started in 2025. We will also introduce additional GenAI applications such as for legal contract generation and annual report analysis for risk assessment. Furthermore, we will continue piloting agentic AI in collaboration with our strategic partners to drive further process transformation.
In conclusion, AI will change banking, and we are well underway in this transformation. We have increased our change budget for 2026 from originally planned EUR 500 million, to almost EUR 600 million and an increasing share of this is allocated to AI.
The key lever for growth, particularly in our fee income is our Asset Management strategy. Our strategy is based on a combination of in-house asset management offerings and partnerships, creating a platform that provides a wide choice for our clients. Our in-house capabilities cover a broad range. This includes discretionary portfolio management and liquid strategies at Commerzbank and our specialist manager, Yellowfin. And in the areas of private markets, we have the expertise of Commerz Real in real estate and infrastructure as well as Aquila Capital in clean energy and sustainable infrastructure. Combined, our in-house units managed EUR 67 billion.
Currently, we see more inflows in liquid assets and the more challenging environment for less liquid assets. Regarding early-stage investments into renewable energy projects, Aquila faces market challenges, which put pressure on 2 specialized institutional funds. Hence, we have pulled forward the full depreciation of the acquired capitalized client value. Going forward, we fully focus on developing our existing business and adding new business to meet the demand of our clients.
The in-house offerings are complemented by our partnerships, which provide a full set of standard fund and ETF solutions with a volume of EUR 95 billion. This setup is designed to expand our business with our clients. It will further strengthen our position as a comprehensive partner for their investment needs.
Let me move on with a central element of our equity story, our commitment to delivering capital returns to our shareholders. For the 2025 financial year, we will return EUR 2.7 billion to our shareholders, EUR 200 million more than originally planned. This reflects a 100% payout ratio before restructuring expenses and represents a total yield of 7% based on the market capitalization at the start of the year. Regarding the mix and given that we trade well above book value, we have decided to put more emphasis on the dividend. Hence, we intend to propose an increase to EUR 1.10.
On share buybacks, we have decided yesterday to start another buyback of up to EUR 540 million tomorrow. This comes on top of the EUR 1 billion buyback, which was completed already in December. Looking forward, we continue targeting a payout ratio of 100% of our net result after AT1 coupon payments. We intend to further grow the dividend share towards 50%, establishing Commerzbank as a reliable dividend stock. This capital return policy comes with a total yield increasing to 10% in 2028 and remains a key cornerstone of our strategy.
Our performance and strategic execution give us confidence for the year ahead, and January has already been a very good start. Hence, we have increased our outlook for 2026, which confirms the traction of our Momentum strategy. We anticipate a supportive, albeit modest macroeconomic environment in Germany with government stimulus supporting the economy. This is reflected in a GDP growth of 0.9% and an inflation remaining close to the 2% target. Furthermore, we expect ECB's deposit rates to remain at 2% throughout the year.
Against this backdrop, we have set clear targets for 2026. We are aiming for a net result of more than EUR 3.2 billion. We will continue our strict cost management and plan for a cost-income ratio of 54%, which is 2 percentage points better than originally planned. And we are targeting a return on tangible equity of more than 11.2%. And as I just mentioned, we are committed to a total payout of 100% of the net result after AT1 coupon payments.
Finally, I would like to provide a transparent view of our path towards our 2028 RoTE target of 15%. Starting from our 2025 adjusted RoTE of 10%, we have a credible road map to reach our goal. The journey will be driven by several key factors. The diminishing burdens from the FX loans in Poland will provide an uplift, and the positive impact from the restructuring will also contribute in terms of cost measures. The main drivers, however, will be loan growth and the replication portfolio lifting net interest income and the target 7% annual growth in net commission income.
We also see potential upside. The steep yield curve, a stronger-than-expected German stimulus and an accelerated impact from our AI initiatives could all provide additional tailwinds to our profitability. They are not yet reflected in our 2028 plan but form tangible drivers with a very good likelihood to materialize. Of course, we are also diligently monitoring potential headwinds such as geopolitical risk, trade tensions and intensifying deposit competition.
However, we are confident that we have a very robust and credible plan to navigate these challenges and deliver on our 15% RoTE target. And to use one of my favorite words, you can consider the target as our floor.
And with that, I hand over to Carsten for a detailed look at the financials of the fourth quarter. Over to you, Carsten.
Thank you, Bettina, and good morning, everyone. The results of the quarter speak for themselves, strongly contributing to the excellent results for the year. In Q4, the net RoTE reached 10.1%, slightly above the level we reached for the whole year before restructuring expenses. This is driven by a near record operating result that is in turn based on very strong revenues. The CET1 ratio remained unchanged at 14.7%.
I will now go through the details, starting with revenues. Revenues were exceptionally strong in the quarter, up 6% compared to last year. Net interest income has exited the trough that was induced by the ECB rate cuts and will continue to grow in the next quarters. Net commission income is the best ever achieved by the bank in the fourth quarter. The net fair value result reached EUR 74 million. The EUR 27 million increase compared to Q4 last year was driven by a higher fair value result, mainly at mBank, offsetting lower interest income. Other income, excluding FX loan provisions, reached EUR 79 million and mainly stems from a positive hedge result.
Now to net commission income in more detail. All customer segments grew their business year-on-year, resulting in a record fourth quarter. This is a clear testament to the excellent work done by the teams. Corporate Clients continues to grow in trade finance year-on-year on the back of our strong market position and despite the ongoing weakness in German exports. The biggest increase, however, came from lending where fee income linked to loan origination has continued its upward trajectory as we have maintained good volume growth.
Private and Small Business Customers in Germany continue to expand the securities business, both from securities volumes and transactions. The better payments business is driven by higher account fees, while the cards business contributed less this quarter. We have continued to increase the share of customers who have signed up to the new account model to around 65% and have only lost customers with low revenue contribution. As last year, the discretionarily managed portfolios performed very well in the quarter, contributing a significant portion of the revenue increase compared to the last quarter.
Let's move on to the interest income. With ECB rates unchanged to Q3, a strong loan business in Corporate Clients and successful deposit management, interest income in Commerzbank grew slightly in Q4. Conversely, in mBank, the effect of materially lower Central Bank rates is visible in net interest income. However, the effect has been partially offset in net fair value. As rates in Poland are well below last year and might be reduced further, this will also have an effect in 2026.
Looking at volumes, growth has continued across the board. Corporate Clients has again increased loan volumes in all customer groups. As customers improved their liquidity positions towards the end of the quarter, the average deposit balance was EUR 2.7 billion higher than in Q3. Therefore, both loans and deposits contributed to the increase in revenues.
In PSBC Germany, loan volumes have been stable. Deposits are up based on inflows in both sight and call deposits. The deposit beta has come down in the quarter as high rates offered for new retail deposits in the summer started to expire. While we will have more expiries in Q1, comdirect has initiated a new deposit campaign with attractive rates in January. We, therefore, will have offsetting effects in the beta.
On the next slide, I will give you more details on the loan growth in Corporate Clients. In 2025, Corporate Clients achieved a EUR 10.9 billion loan growth, of which EUR 2.4 billion was achieved in the fourth quarter. The mix in 2025 has been weighted towards the international business. In Germany, we had only moderate demand from corporates. However, we did see growth from the public sector. Corporate demand has been across sectors with the 2 largest being energy and consumption.
New business has been good in Q4. The new loan agreements signed will be drawn over time and start contributing to the net interest income in the next quarters. Looking into 2026, January has started well. We have seen some pickup in demand in Germany and have continued demand outside of Germany. We are, therefore, confident that we will continue our profitable growth trajectory in 2026.
This brings me to the next slide with the outlook for NII. We raised our outlook to around EUR 8.5 billion for 2026. The main reason for this is the more favorable forward curve in combination with the increased size of the replication portfolio. Due to these, the replication portfolio will contribute an additional EUR 600 million in 2026. ECB rates are expected to remain at the current level, slightly lower than in 2025. In combination with the effect of moving more deposits into the replication portfolio, we anticipate an impact of around minus EUR 200 million from the deposits invested at floating rates. For the beta, we expect an increase from 40% on average in 2025 to 42% in 2026, leading to EUR 100 million lower interest income. This should be more than compensated for by growth in loans and deposits.
Finally, interest rates in Poland have come down significantly and are forecast to go down further. We, therefore, expect interest income in mBank to be lower in 2026. Based on the current business mix and our assumptions for the deposit beta, volume growth and the forward curve, we expect further increases in interest income in 2027 and 2028 with a clear potential to reach around EUR 9.4 billion in 2028. Of course, there could be more intense deposit competition than anticipated or lower rates, particularly in Poland, than assumed, which would lead to slower revenue growth. Conversely, the environment might become more favorable.
Now to costs on Slide 21. We have reached our target cost/income ratio of 57% for 2025. This is based on strict cost management as we had to compensate 2 larger unplanned cost items in 2025. One is the doubling of the share price and its impact on share-based compensation. The other is the accelerated impairment of intangible assets. Together, they represent 3% of our cost base. Excluding these items and due to our cost management, costs increased by only 3%. The main cost drivers have been general salary increases, investments and the build-out of our shoring and sourcing centers. The cost increase in mBank is mainly due to business growth but also higher compulsory contributions are a significant factor.
We will maintain our strict cost management approach in 2026 and are therefore confident that we will reach our improved target cost/income ratio of 54% for the year. While not part of the regular cost base, we had final restructuring expenses of EUR 9 million related to our Momentum strategy in the quarter.
The next slide covers the risk result. The risk result came in at EUR 207 million. This is better than expected and in line with the previous year. The portfolio has proven to be very resilient. We have maintained our approach to overlays. There has been no material change in the outstanding amount, which stood at EUR 147 million at the end of the quarter. The risk result for the financial year reached EUR 722 million, well below our guidance of less than EUR 850 million.
Nevertheless, for 2026, we again guide for a risk result of around EUR 850 million. In 2026, the German economy will leave a 3-year phase of stagnation and should show moderate GDP growth. But given the ongoing structural changes and higher default rates, we prudently plan with a slightly higher risk result, which is equivalent to 25 to 30 basis points cost of risk.
This concludes the view of the key line items. I've already covered the main drivers of the excellent operating result and will therefore focus on the net result.
Full year taxes and minorities are higher in 2025 than in 2024, reflecting material changes in the tax codes in Germany and Poland as well as a better profitability in mBank, increasing the minorities. For 2026, we expect a tax rate at around 30% due to a higher tax rate in Poland and further rising minorities as the profitability of mBank should continue to increase.
The next slides cover the results of the operating segments, starting with Corporate Clients. As already mentioned, Corporate Clients had a very good fourth quarter. Revenues benefited from the ongoing healthy loan growth and the good capital markets business. Also, the increase in deposit volumes contributed. This is clearly visible in international corporates with 13% higher revenues.
Institutionals again reached a very good level of last year. Mittelstand also increased revenues in the loan business. However, year-to-year, this could not fully compensate the effect of lower rates on deposits. In PSBC Germany, our new client advisory model has become fully operational in Q4. This has come with the reassignment of some customers. Due to these changes, the Q4 revenues of the 2 units can be only compared in combination to the previous quarters.
Looking at Private Customers and Small Business Customers in aggregate, revenues have increased substantially in the quarter. The biggest drivers have been the securities business and the deposit business. While asset management overall showed better revenue than in the previous quarters, the asset management subsidiaries have lower Q4 revenues compared to the previous quarters as these benefited from transaction fees, which tend to be lumpy and not evenly distributed over the quarters. For the financial year, revenues of the asset management subsidiaries have been only slightly lower, reflecting a partially more difficult market environment.
mBank has maintained its good profitability. The customer business has held up well despite being impacted by the lower interest rates in Poland. As expected, provisions for FX loans have again been lower than in the previous quarter. For 2026, we maintain our outlook that the burdens from FX mortgages, which have been EUR 483 million in 2025, should no longer be material. mBank should further increase its contribution to our result in 2026 and plans to resume paying a dividend.
Others and consolidation reported a small operating loss in the quarter. For the full year, the operating result is plus EUR 32 million, in line with our expectation of a neutral result for the full year. For 2026, we again expect a more or less neutral result.
Now to the RWA and capital development. The CET1 ratio was stable at 14.7%. Overall, minor RWA and capital changes largely canceled each other out. In total, we have dedicated EUR 2.7 billion for distribution to shareholders. This is equivalent to 154 basis points of the CET1 ratio and represents a yield of 7% based on the market capitalization at the end of the year. In 2026, we intend to again distribute 100% of the net result after AT1 payments. Therefore, as in 2025, we will not include the net result in our CET1 ratio calculation.
As already communicated with the Q3 results, we have received the SREP letter from the ECB. Our 2026 capital requirements were lowered by 10 basis points as we must hold only part of the regulatory capital requirement as CET1, the MDA will be reduced by around 6 basis points effective since January.
This brings me to the outlook for 2026. As already mentioned, we have improved our outlook for NII from EUR 8.4 billion to EUR 8.5 billion. As in 2025, we target 7% growth in net commission income and expect a risk result of around EUR 850 million. Based on the improved revenue outlook compared to our original momentum strategy, we target a cost/income ratio of 54%. This is well ahead of our original target of 56%. The same applies to the outlook for the net result, which should be above the original EUR 3.2 billion target. As mentioned, we confirm our target payout ratio of 100%.
The CET1 ratio at the end of the year should still be above 14%. And the RoTE should increase from 10% in 2025 to more than 11.2% in 2026. For '28, we confirm all targets laid out in our Momentum strategy and, as Bettina has pointed out, with clear upside potential.
Thank you very much for your attention. Bettina and I are now looking forward to taking your questions.
[Operator Instructions] Several questions are incoming. The first question is from Jeremy Sigee from BNP Paribas.
2. Question Answer
Two questions, please. Firstly, thank you for all the guidance on the outlook and that kind of thing. Could you talk about your expectations for costs in absolute terms? You've obviously given us a cost-to-income ratio, but could you talk about the absolute amount of costs that you expect in 2026?
And then second question, you mentioned loan demand limited so far from German domestic corporates. But I think you said you'd seen a pickup in January, unless you're talking about something else, I think you said you've seen a pickup in loan demand in January. And I just wondered if you could give us an update on how corporates are behaving and how they see the German stimulus and reforms coming through? How much action you're starting to see on that front?
Yes. Thank you, Jeremy. So on the second question, with respect to loan demand, I mean, we have seen a very good start actually into January. But this is again very much broad-based. So it includes international locations but also Germany. If it comes to Mittelstand, they are still hesitant. They are still waiting for more reforms to come. There are always exceptions. But overall, and I mean, you see it also in the GDP growth, which is now at 0.9%, but we also expected it last year a little bit higher that this hesitance and you see it in the sentiment index, that we still wait for the turnaround [indiscernible] because we also support our clients going abroad.
And on costs, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. Thanks for the question, Jeremy. So on the cost side, as you know, our main sort of driving principle is the cost/income ratio, which we are aiming to improve to 54% this year. With regard to the absolute cost target for the year, which will also keep firmly inside clearly, let's start from -- coming from '25. We are looking at EUR 6.9 billion in '25. And as lined out, we had around EUR 200 million of extraordinary effects, which we compensated with our strict cost discipline last year. So deduct that. If you add 3% to 4% of the updrift in cost that we have by general salary increases and potentially another EUR 100 million for additional investments we intend to make this year into our strategy, then you arrive at something that should be nearing the EUR 7.1 billion from below.
The next question comes from Benjamin Goy of Deutsche Bank.
Two questions, actually follow-ups to what you said. The first one is, Carsten, you mentioned net interest income will continue to grow in the next quarters, specifically wondering about Q1 where you obviously face some headwinds from day count. So also Q-on-Q up in Q1, then steady growth after that?
And the second question is on the very strong start to January. I mean you commented on loans but also wondering about any comments you could do on deposit campaigns, how the retention went on -- at comdirect and also on the fee income side, what you're seeing so far?
Yes. I mean, January has been strong across all dimensions, actually. I mean, risk result, you would anyhow not expect anything in January. But on the cost side, high cost discipline on the revenue side, a very, very good start on NII, and Carsten will dig deeper into that in a minute. But also on the net commission income side, it has been an excellent start.
Yes. And Benjamin, looking into the NII, you had a few questions. So first of all, I think what we've seen in Q3 last year was what we call the trough of the NII development. So we've seen an uptick already in Q4, and we expect this to also carry into the coming quarters. As mentioned earlier, we are looking at a slightly lower beta at the end of the year given that we had campaigns running out, and we are now starting a new campaign. So let's see actually how that potentially impacts the beta movement. But generally, you should expect the net interest income to steadily increase throughout the year and towards the new guidance of EUR 8.5 billion.
With regard to the campaigns, we started, as we usually do beginning of the year with a campaign in comdirect. And you also asked around the retention rates of the previous offers that we had out. I mean those fluctuate, as you know. The purpose that we have with these offers is to bring the money and the customers in in order to ideally then also transform them into other quality products like asset management, investment, securities volume. So it's always a bit tough to say how much is actually flowing out, but we see this as a very good means to actually increase volume also on that side and then also support our commission income.
The next question comes from Kian Abouhossein of JPMorgan.
The first question is just on the beta. What gives you the confidence? You mentioned 40% for '25. I think I saw 41% in the fourth quarter average and 42% for the year '26. Just if you can discuss where that confidence is coming from. Clearly, you have delivered in the past. Just trying to understand the deltas, both on the corporate side, where I think last quarter, you also discussed a little bit more pressure, but not this time around, from what I listened to.
And in that context, can you just talk a little bit around your funding profile. I can see there's some funding coming up not just this year, but over the next 2 years as well. And I'm just trying to understand how you -- how should we think about duration of funding and cost of funding on replacement, if I may?
Yes, Kian, thanks for the questions. Let's start with the beta. You're, of course, as always, absolutely right on the beta figures, also for last year. We had an average of 40% last year. What makes us confident that we are planning well with the 42% is that, A, we will see a slight updrift, as I just mentioned, given that we are running new campaigns. Also, we are aware that usually beginning of the year, we see the market being quite competitive. We had a similar discussion last year.
But if we are looking a bit into sort of what we base our confidence on, number one, we have proven actually for ourselves last year that managing the deposits and also the pricing of the deposits, is including our AI-based approach, i.e., we are also making improvements in how we price, what we have in the books and how to retain these volumes. So that actually puts us into a confidence space that we can use this to also counter a bit of the challenging environment we might be seeing.
And you mentioned the corporate side specifically, as you might have heard also in my speech, we had quite significant volumes coming in also on the corporate side. And this actually gives us, at this point in time, also support. So at the moment, this is what puts us very confident for the beta development.
Then when it comes to sort of the funding profile over the next years, I mean, we are looking at around EUR 12 billion that we are going to fund this year. As you know, we have a funding plan that is usually rolled out over the next years, and we are trying to keep our well-established and good mix. We are currently looking into slightly longer tenors that we are issuing, also making sort of benefit of the current market environment. And clearly, credit spreads are beneficial for us. So funding profile that we have improved since last quarter with a bit of prefunding last year already and also going into the next should actually help us to further positively manage our funding costs.
The next question is from Tarik El Mejjad from Bank of America.
Two questions from my side, please. First, on the net interest income guidance. You've done a beat and raise in every -- literally every quarter since your CMD. And I think there's more to go, but you haven't really updated on '28. So when should we expect guidance change or update in '28? And should we see the same dynamics so far being applying in the long term as well there with the volume component?
And then my main question actually is on the cost-to-income and on your investments. I've noticed actually in Slide 9 on the payout ratio for '26, you say that this is before restructuring expenses -- potential expenses for '26. Is it fair to think that the whole your increased focus on AI, and you've -- Bettina, you've highlighted as really a critical driver for better efficiency in the longer run, should we expect a lower than 50% cost-to-income in '28 coming from investments from this year that will be actually removed from the payout ratio? So in other words, you basically be able to pay more than 100% payout with shareholders not paying for the cost of this restructuring and also you lower by then your CET1 ratio? Is my reading correct?
Thank you, Tarik. So on your first question, it's pretty simple. EUR 9.4 billion is the latest expectation for 2028, assuming that the yield curve stays intact as we see them currently. When it comes to the cost-to-income ratio, and the guidance for 2028, we said that it's really -- it's -- for the cost-to-income ratio, you could say it's a cap because we definitely want to achieve the 50% and might go even below given that we will use specifically the year 2026 and the upcoming strategic dialogue and multiyear planning process to evaluate the effects we currently see. And as said, and you know that from us, whenever we are done with the planning, we also come out with updated numbers. So you can expect that this year as well.
When it comes to the payout ratio, I mean, investments into AI are clear investments. They are shown in the cost line and nowhere else. So there is no real possibility to exclude that one from the payout ratio. We are increasing our investments as we speak. So already in the 54% guidance for this year, we have an increase in investments from the original EUR 500 million planned for change into -- up to EUR 600 million. So we absorb it basically in our cost targets.
So the payout reference is really restricted to real one-offs and something like real restructuring charges. But at least with the latter one, we are definitely done and -- except for the Russian topic, which we always raise, we don't see also any potential one-offs luckily.
Okay. And the strategic update is usually -- always you do it in September, right?
Yes. I mean, I think normally, we come out with the Q3 numbers, but something around that, yes, you can expect.
The next question comes from Borja Ramirez from Citi.
I have 2, please. Firstly, on the hedge. I would like to ask the increase in the hedge in the 4Q. What were the duration of that and also the average yield? And also your -- the hedge benefit that you disclosed, I would like to ask, is that based on the current forward swap rate?
And then my last question would be, I think based on the ECB data, the yields on your mortgages are around 100 basis points above the 10-year swap rates. So I think there's maybe some benefit in your NII from this as well. So I would like to ask if there's also some upside compared to the target on this point as well, please?
Yes. Borja, thank you for your questions. Let me start with the replication portfolio, so the hedge portfolio that you referred to. In Q4, we did increase the size of the portfolio. As always, we are looking at the overall amount of deposits that we're having and then the amount that we can model. The amount that is available for modeling is slightly above EUR 200 billion, and we decided in Q4 to actually enhance the size of the portfolio by EUR 9 billion.
Together with that, because we've invested that indeed at current rates, you see an uptick in the average yield of the portfolio of around 9 to 10 basis points on the full portfolio, and we're now at around 1.14%. So that is up from the levels we discussed in the previous quarters last year. So with that, actually, we will have positioned ourselves nicely in the current market environment and also slightly to the longer term in the investments.
Then second question you had on the mortgages. Let's just assume the rates that you mentioned. I think the ingoing factor for us is the volume of the mortgage book, and you will have seen that this is stable if you look at the volume bars in our presentation. In Q3, we saw a very healthy front book of EUR 2.7 billion. In Q4, we saw another EUR 2.1 billion. And as you know, these will roll in with time. So it will take about a few quarters until we see the full volume. That clearly stands against some of the early repayments. But overall, that book and the front book comes in at good margins and should be supportive for our NII.
And just to confirm, the replication portfolio benefit in NII guidance, that's based on the current forward curve?
Yes, that's correct, Borja.
The next question comes from Riccardo Rovere from Mediobanca.
2 or 3, if I may. The first one is, Bettina, throughout the call, you and Carsten have repeatedly stated that there is some degree of prudence or upside potential here and there within your 2026 outlook. Could you please list all the areas where you think you might have been prudent in setting the 2026 guidance?
The second question I have is 2 -- a few days ago, UniCredit in its UniCredit Unlimited update set the cost trajectory down in absolute terms. I was wondering whether this puts pressure on you to achieve more efficiency throughout over the next few years?
And then I have -- sorry to get back to the steepening of the yield curve. It's not clear to me whether a steeper yield curve is included in the EUR 8.5 billion NII guidance, if that's the case or not?
And the last question I have is on the capital. Again, you have a target of above 14% but technically, the target is 13.5% at some point in the future. I was wondering what prevents you to bring it down to 13.5%. And on this topic, I was wondering if you could update us where you are on the SRTs on the RWA optimization because especially on the corporate side, I remember you had a fairly large amount of risk-weighted assets reduction related to securitizations.
Thank you very much, Riccardo. Lots of questions. I hope we get them all. So with respect to upside potential for 2026, where are we prudent? And you know us, we are normally always conservative to make sure that we deliver. I mean, to start with, clearly, we have the risk result. Again, we are guiding it for EUR 850 million. And you have seen in the past years that we always come in below. So there is upside potential, hopefully there -- if things are developing as planned.
Number two, it is -- we always have the problem with the fair value, and you know that -- to predict that correctly, so we are always a little bit cautious on that one. Why we are very convinced about the EUR 8.5 billion NII? That is, for us, always a starting point to say it like that. And also on the net commission income, the 7% is an aspirational target, but we are strongly convinced that we can deliver that.
And when it comes to the cost side, you have seen that we have maintained a very high cost discipline this year. So we could really also balance out some of the extraordinary burden, which we have seen, and we intend to do that. Also, I have to say that, in 2026, we still have also some doubling effect because we are building up capacities in our shoring locations on the one side. And on the other side, we still have also some people still running the business here to really, really ensure smooth transition.
When it comes to competitors, I mean, we really focus on ourselves. Every competitor is different. So for us, it is important that we drive with the right path for our organization. It is very clear that we are committed to efficiency to transformation. It's part of our strategy, Momentum, growth and transformation. And as I said, I mean, we are now in the second year of the strategy implementation. We now start the normal process as we always do. We didn't do it last year because we just had the presentation of the strategy. But this year, we start with our strategic dialogue process, which then ends an updated multiyear plan figures. And clearly, we take into account all the learnings and experience we gathered specifically from our AI use cases which seems to be very promising. So there is -- as also said in the speech, there's upside on that.
When it comes to capital, I mean, it's a path, as you know, we have already lowered our CET1 ratio. The target CET1 ratio stays at 13.5%, but we do it, as always, in a path, which is fully aligned also with the regulatory authorities. And the final target, however, stays the 13.5%.
And when it comes to SRTs, we have done transactions in the fourth quarter, and we currently have an RWA relief because of SRTs of approximately EUR 9 billion.
And on the yield curve, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. Riccardo, on the yield curve and the EUR 8.5 billion target for the NII, that's on the current forward curve. So if there's a movement, of course, there is potential. But you also have to bear in mind the portfolio is set up in a way that we stabilize the net interest income, which also means that we do reinvest slightly above EUR 3 billion every month in the rolling tranches. So you will have an averaging up effect in any case. And if there's a change to the forward curves with that amount, we will then also see additional pickup also pending potential decision to invest more in it. So that would be the upside potential in this.
Sorry, Carsten, to get back to this. So the first bullet point on Slide 11, steep yield curve and corresponding benefit for replicated portfolios, this would be, like say, in a steeper yield curve than the one that it is today because it is already a bit -- there is already a bit of steepening.
Yes, absolutely. And then you're absolutely -- yes. Sorry. But you're right.
No, no. Okay, okay. And the other -- sorry, to get back to RWA 1 second. Am I right in saying that what is left in terms of SRTs in '26 should not be enough to compensate for the normal lending growth that you are expecting? Am I right in saying so?
Yes. As you know, we're using SRTs to manage RWA. If you want also a bit of the risk profile, what we're looking at in 2026, is around EUR 8 billion in volume and an RWA effect of around EUR 4 billion. And that you can see actually, if you look at the volume growth we have set out for ourselves on the corporate side, is helping us to free up resources but not countering the growth.
Last question for today from Stefan Stalmann, Autonomous.
I wanted to ask you about the trends in sight deposits, please. PSBC Germany, that number has been basically flat for almost 2 years now. Is that something where your existing clients are shifting the mix away from sight deposits? Or are you losing actually market share in sight deposits in the German market?
And also in Corporate Clients, the number tends to be quite flat [ this year ] by the occasional seasonal side at year-end. And I was wondering if you're actually raising any corporate sight deposits outside of Germany, given that you're doing quite a bit of lending business with [ out of Germany ].
And the second question regarding Aquila, the impairments that you have done in '25 are roughly half of the total intangible assets that came with Aquila. Do you think there could be more to come? And are you seeing any problems with the funds and [indiscernible] and whether or not this could impact the behavior of your clients and the willingness of your clients to invest in new funds?
Yes. Thanks, Stefan, for the question. So first of all, on the deposits and the deposit side, you're right. If you look at actually the last 8 quarters, we have a stable sight deposit volume across the personal customer space, which, given the markets actually, is what we've always been talking about. We are defending our market share that we're having there and making sure that we have this also at reasonable rates, from our point of view. And overall, you see a slight growth in the portfolio.
So we see no structural shifts from sight to term or call deposits. But what we are doing, as I mentioned earlier, is we are also attracting these when we go out with our offers in order to allow us to transform them into other and usually then commission income-bearing products.
On the corporate side, also stable. This is always depending a bit on also the economic cycle and how corporates use their liquid assets, if we can call it that, for the time being. And you're right, we see slight fluctuations, especially in Q4, we saw a good inflow on that end. You also asked on the international portion of this, we have smaller portions coming in from corporates internationally when it comes to deposits but not to a structural degree. So it's in line with the business that we're doing with these customers abroad.
And when it comes to Aquila, I mean, first of all, our Asset Management strategy is clearly a combination of 2 things, in-house and partners. And you see also on the Slide 8, the distribution of volumes and significance. And what we have observed in the past quarters is there is, yes, some skepticism in the moment on illiquid assets, and it's a cycle, but cycles normally also have the benefit that they change. So we stay basically on path here.
And when it comes to the depreciation, we did the full depreciation of the intangibles. So nothing more to expect because the rest is embedded in our goodwill of the Private Client segment, and we do not expect any write-downs there.
And I think that -- was this -- I think we have had the last question. So I wish you all a very successful day, and I'm looking forward to seeing you soon again. Thank you.
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Commerzbank — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
Commerzbank — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Umsatz: EUR 12,2 Mrd. (+10% YoY)
- Operatives Ergebnis: EUR 4,5 Mrd. (+18% YoY)
- Nettoergebnis: EUR 2,6 Mrd.; bereinigt EUR 3,0 Mrd. (+~13% bereinigt)
- Net RoTE (Return on Tangible Equity): 10% vor Restrukturierung – erstes zweistelliges RoTE seit der Finanzkrise
- CET1 (harte Kernkapitalquote): 14,7%; Ausschüttungen 2025: EUR 2,7 Mrd. plus neuer Buyback bis zu EUR 540 Mio.
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Momentum-Strategie: Management sieht Strategie als Treiber für profitables Wachstum; 2025‑Ziele erreicht bzw. übertroffen.
- AI & Transformation: Change-Budget 2026 erhöht auf ~EUR 600 Mio.; Fokus auf KI-Anwendungen zur Effizienz- und Umsatzsteigerung (Agent‑Assist, Fraud AI, cobaGPT, Ava).
- Asset Management & Kapitalallokation: In‑house und Partnerplattform (EUR 67 Mrd. / EUR 95 Mrd.) als Fee‑Wachstumstreiber; aktive Prüfung inorganischer Optionen und Ausschüttungspolitik (100% Auszahlung Ziel nach AT1).
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- NII: Guidance 2026 erhöht auf ~EUR 8,5 Mrd.; Ziel 2028 ca. EUR 9,4 Mrd. (bei aktuellem Forward‑Curve‑Szenario).
- Ergebnisziele 2026: Nettoergebnis > EUR 3,2 Mrd.; Cost‑Income‑Ratio 54%; RoTE > 11,2%; Risikokosten ~EUR 850 Mio.
- Kapital & Ausschüttungen: CET1 >14% Ende 2026; wieder 100% Ausschüttung nach AT1; Dividendenvorschlag EUR 1,10 für 2025 plus neuer Buyback.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Kostenprofil: Absolutziel 2026 nahe EUR 7,1 Mrd. (Ausgang 2025: EUR 6,9 Mrd.; +3–4% Gehalts‑/Investitionseffekte); strikte Kostenkontrolle bleibt Priorität.
- Deposit‑Beta & Replikationsportfolio: Beta erwartet bei ~42% 2026; Replikationsportfolio um EUR 9 Mrd. erweitert, Durchschnittsrendite ~1,14%, liefert ~EUR 600 Mio. Zusatzwirkung 2026.
- mBank & Polenrisiken: Niedrigere polnische Zinssätze drücken NII in mBank 2026; FX‑Lasten 2025 betrugen EUR 483 Mio. und sollen 2026 nicht mehr material sein.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Bewertung: Starke 2025‑Zahlen, attraktive Kapitalrückflüsse und konkrete Wachstumshebel (Kreditwachstum, Replikationsportfolio, AI, Asset Management). Risiken: Zinsentwicklung in Polen, intensivere Einlagenkonkurrenz und geopolitische Unsicherheiten. Für Anleger bedeutet das: positives Momentum und hohe Dividendenorientierung, Beobachtungspunkte bleiben NII‑Execution, mBank‑Performance und RWA/Capital‑Pfad.
Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2025
1. Question Answer
Great. Thank you very much for joining us on the last day of the financial conference in London. I have with me Carsten, Commerzbank CFO. First of all, it's a great day to have you with us because this is the day a year ago, you were announced as CFO of Commerzbank. So it's a perfect timing to give us an exact update after 1 year of announcement. And maybe Carsten, I can start there.
Can you give us a little bit of your impression considering you were at Commerzbank, left and came back, how things have changed, but also kind of what are the top-down issues for Commerzbank at this point, more from a top-down strategic perspectives that are a focus for you and the management team?
Yes, very happy to do that. And Kian, thank you very much for having me also in this fantastic hall here. So indeed, it has been exactly 1 year since my announcement. I started beginning of this year, so there was a bit of time in between, but quite a bit has changed during that period of time.
You asked around what strategically has changed also from possibly the time that I experienced in the bank before I rejoined. I think the firm at the moment is really best described as fully focused and unified in its voice from management to the employees to our employee representatives in actually getting our strategy and active that we're having.
And talking about that strategy, we announced our strategy beginning of the year, focusing on '28, focusing on growth and transformation. And that probably is what is accompanying us every single day, seeing how we can grow the business further for our customers, and strategic points we are clearly looking at, at the moment is also what's happening economically in Germany. So I would say this is pretty much what we're looking at mostly.
And starting on Germany and German stimulus, clearly, a lot of questions of how do you see that actually feeding into your numbers? What are your expectations? There's also a lot of concern, maybe it's more delayed, and as a result, there's maybe over-excitement on German stimulus when you talk to investors. Can you give us an update how you think about it? What are your expectations? And how does that impact the bank?
Yes. Look, the stimulus package came to life earlier this year, and I always like to go back to the very beginning of this year when we didn't have a stimulus package at all, no government actually at that point in time. So quite a lot has happened since beginning of the year. And I think that from the get-go is a very positive thing to look at.
Looking a bit at our expectation for the stimulus package and the impact it will have also for the economy in Germany, we are currently looking at a 1.2% GDP growth next year, which admittedly is not the highest. But if you consider the last years, actually, this is a quite big step up now.
And a good portion out of this, actually close to 1 percentage point, 0.8 is what we think is going to be fueled by the stimulus package and all the investments and then follow-on investments that we are seeing. So for us, clearly being so ingrained in the German economy via our customers, clearly, it will have an impact. It shall have an impact once these packages actually come to life via actual spending.
And if we go maybe a level down and we now look a little bit at net interest income and how that gets impacted by also the top-down environment, you've given a guidance of EUR 8.4 billion for 2026. You actually increased that at your last investor update.
Can you tell us the path to that? Your guidance has been EUR 8.2 billion for this year? And the kind of the environment and the potential of improvement that you see further considering you went on a path of continuous beating that number clearly in terms of expectations?
Yes. Well, we started into the year actually with a target of EUR 7.7 billion, so even lower, and we upgraded that in summer. The reason why we went into the year expecting a number that is apparently now lower than the strong performance we have seen, I think was, first and foremost, coming out of a relatively okay-ish, high-ish interest rate environment in the last years, knowing that we were going into a slight rate cut cycle.
So expectation was to, first and foremost, keep the interest income stable. We did this throughout the full year and managed our books quite intensively also via having a stabilization. We have a good portion of the deposit base that we're having invested in, in what we call replication portfolio.
So stabilizing longer-term portfolio, which supports the NII, and doing this throughout the year, we saw actually that we are having more stable and structurally sort of consistent output out of these portfolios, which effectively brought us to this upgrade. For this year, we are now expecting EUR 8.2 billion for the year. For next year, as we said, we are upgrading this to EUR 8.4 billion.
Reason why we did this at this point in time before we actually guide for the full year in February with all the other line items was that coming out of our strategy, it's clearly already above what we originally anticipated for '26, and in terms of the stability of this portfolio, for us, again, we are seeing this coming in, in a quite stable and strong way.
We are on an upward trajectory for net interest income in any case in our strategy towards '28. And we'll see, I think, towards February, what this will also mean for the follow-on years, but it will definitely be supportive.
And is there a possibility that we should be looking at a further update on NII in the full year results for '27-'28?
Well, we've so far not really split out the '27-'28 figures for NII. We have a target for '28 out. I think what I can say is already with the structural changes we made to our book in summer, it became clear that we will have an add-on for the follow-on years, which will carry through also to '28.
So I think it's fair to assume that a good portion of the uplift that we've seen throughout the year will also carry stably throughout the following years. And in February, I think we will -- not only for '26 but we will see actually what we can guide for. But in general, it's not wrong to assume that part of this uplift will carry through and basically add on to the full series until '28.
But you're generally comfortable with the consensus that you're seeing, especially for '28, where you have given a guidance, but there's -- the numbers are already well above that from what I can see.
Yes, given what we've seen this year and for next year, I think the direction is the right one. Yes, yes.
And if we unpack NII a little bit more between lending, so asset side, liability side and clearly structural hedge in that context. Can we talk, first of all, about loan growth?
Mortgage growth in Germany hasn't really picked up. You mentioned, I think, in the third quarter call, a little bit of an improvement. But corporate client growth has been very strong at 13% year-on-year. So how should we think about the lending picture going forward within your operations?
Yes. Let's start with the mortgage side, which actually was pretty strong in our books, especially in Q3. So as many of you know, we've come out of a phase where, given housing prices, interest rate levels, there was a bit of a depressed mortgage market, but this has been continuously picking up.
So in the third quarter, we actually saw a quite healthy front book, close to EUR 3 billion actually, also considerably higher than in Q2. Overall book, back book declined a bit. That is also what we showed in Q3, but that is mostly because we have early termination rights for customers usually in the middle of the year. So there's a technical effect.
And then the new mortgages will be drawn upon and then basically roll into the book the next quarter. So from that perspective, also the mortgage side is stable to rather inclining again. I should also say at prevailing rates and margins. So there's no change in the appetite or margin expectation from our end.
When it comes to the corporate side, we did actually have a super strong sort of year-on-year 13% growth in the book mostly fueled by our customer business pretty much split half-half into international business, but also German business. And that we see a quite broad range of loan demand coming in.
What you will have seen in Q3, particularly, we see a heightened demand from the public sector in Germany, which we interpret as the first signs of the investment packages, the infrastructure packages, which are drawn upon from the public side, if you want so, and hence, the loan demand from that end.
And with that, we see really good sort of risk-adjusted returns in terms of margins on this portfolio. But this, I would expect to skip a bit more into the classical corporate book next year once we see the stimulus packages really kicking in.
So to your question on how do we see the loan growth continuing, we have a loan growth expectation that is quite strong over the full strategy cycle. Clearly, the growth we've seen over the last year is super healthy. Let's see how that carries on, but especially the corporate book, I expect to come in strongly next year.
And in corporate segment, you guided towards 8% per annum growth. So we are on track.
Yes. Absolutely, yes. We're on track. And as always, with the strategy announcement, I think it's fair to assume that there's always a bit of a structure also when it comes to volume growth.
So starting off, especially at a time when the German economy is still a bit sluggish, and where there's a lot of positive momentum now and impulse and also we're getting this feedback from our customers that there is a more sort of forward-looking view, clearly, it helps a lot to start into the strategy cycle with such a strong year of growth, yes.
And can you talk a little bit about the lending margin? You mentioned on the mortgage side, still attractive, both mortgages and on the corporate side. How are mortgage -- how are lending margins behaving as I assume it's a competitive environment out there for banks to participate in that growth?
Yes. Yes, absolutely. Especially, I think on the mortgage side, the German mortgage market is a heavily competed one or competed for. So margins on that end have been stable actually for us. I think I can also say that margins and the front book that we're seeing at the moment is really healthy. So it's not only holding, but rather having slightly positive tune in it.
On the corporate side, really depends a bit what part of the book we are looking at. All parts by themselves are stable in terms of margin or slightly positive/attractive at the moment. If we're looking at the distribution of the loans that we have been seeing in terms of growth, given that there's a good portion of public sector in it.
So municipalities, but also municipality near business, which is often from a margin perspective, a bit closer to corporates. This is what I meant earlier by good risk-adjusted returns because it also comes at super low risk clearly.
But this, I would, again, expect to rather shift into the sort of more margin healthy portion of the book next year. But overall, rather stable and positively tuned margins, despite the competition.
Yes, sounds positive. Yes. And maybe moving from there to the liability side, deposit growth, you had some very successful campaigns of getting deposits in. How should we think about deposit growth in terms of volumes?
And also in this context, can you talk about is there a mix shift happening between checking, savings accounts, so to say, or term deposits? And clearly, you've given beta guidance. So if we package that all together, you guided to, I think, 43% beta in the fourth quarter stage. And just wondering how you think -- how you see that developing?
Yes. Yes, then let's start with the activity we've seen and we've been active in ourselves. I think especially beginning of the year was pretty heavily competed for. We saw quite large promotional offers by the competition actually attracting quite a lot of deposit inflow. That was a period of time in Q1, Q2, we didn't want to participate in that market.
It also became a bit more subdued towards summer. In summer, we went out with a larger promotional offer ourselves. We collected EUR 8 billion within a few weeks at the conditions we wanted to actually have.
So clearly, that's always a bit more expensive than collecting the deposits on a regular basis. But we have quite good behavioral, let's say, data on what customers also do, how sticky these deposits are once the promotional offers run out.
So for us, in short, I would say this was a rather regular sort of activity we had in the market, targeted to the amount we wanted to collect within the budget we wanted to spend, and that's probably also it for this year so far.
General development also over the next years is clearly an incline. We want to continue growing sort of the deposit base. I think competition has always been high in that space, but that's what we're aiming for.
And in terms of beta, you're still on track.
Yes. On the beta, I think when we went into the year, we were cautious in seeing where would especially this year's development go. On the personal customer side or personal customer deposits, clearly a question of competition. On the corporate customer side, always an interplay also with what is required for them from an economic perspective, depleting the deposits versus taking in loans.
But from a beta perspective, we've actually seen very good margin management on our side. You correctly said we are guiding for 43% in Q4. The overall year, we'll be averaging out more towards the 40% range. And then we'll have to see how this trends into next year.
So I think Q4 is probably the, I call it, the exit velocity, if you want so, on the personal customer and the corporate customer side, and personal customers will be dominated by whatever competition is out there. Corporates likely stable at this relatively high level, if you want, so mostly because of the current interest rate level altogether.
And what is the risk that considering -- I mean, Germany has excess deposits as a system. But what is the risk that lending picks up, especially in the corporate side, and also on the mortgage side, it starts to come through on a net basis that there could be more customer deposit pressure, so to say, or competition, I should say, to finance that?
Yes, absolutely. I mean I think that's definitely a scenario that could kick in, especially if you consider positively that all of the stimulus will have an effect at some point. So it's not an unlikely scenario.
And if you want to, I mean, we're having around EUR 280 billion of deposits altogether collected via corporate customers, personal customers. So we are quite active in the market, and we have a pretty good overview of what's happening and which economic cycle, how do the customers behave, what are the pricing points we have to put out.
So from that perspective, you see me rather curious and relaxed to see what's coming in collecting deposits. If the demand is really picking up heavily on the loan side, that's clearly also what we can manage.
I mean we have the resources at this point in time, also very conveniently supported by securitization transaction. So in terms of capacity to further grow, I think we are exactly prepared for that in line with our strategy.
And customer behavior on the retail side hasn't changed materially between more term deposits and checking accounts?
Not really. What -- I think what you will always see in a rather rate declining cycle, even at this moment where it's not coming from super high interest rates levels, but we are in a slight decline, so the lower the rates are, let's say, the less selective retail customers are also when it comes to differentiating between current account and term deposits.
So there's always a drift towards more term deposits and more attractive offers, the higher the rates are. So this is clearly having a bit of a mark, but no structural shifts we are seeing.
And maybe we finish then on the structural hedge. Structural hedge is EUR 147 billion. You have mentioned in the past that it could go based on your modeling up to roughly EUR 200 billion, in that range. I mean why not move there quicker, considering your deposits are expected to grow as it would help your NII quite significantly?
Yes. I think that's a prudent management of the overall book. The slightly above EUR 200 billion you mentioned, that's technically what we could model from a modeling perspective. So we're looking into all of the deposits that are coming in. We look at the stickiness levels, EUR 208 billion is basically what we can model.
What's then coming out of the models in terms of expected depletion rates, drawdown rates, et cetera, is having quite a structure. So the EUR 147 billion which you can expect to likely be adjusted rather upwards a bit with the deposits we're having, but that is basically what we are happy to have also as a bit of a cushion towards what's happening in the market. If there's quick drawdowns, I don't have to unwind the stabilizing portfolio so quickly. So let's call that prudent.
I guess that's a difference between running a bank and running a spreadsheet, so on the analyst side. It's always easy for us to say.
If we move to the fee side, you have a guidance of EUR 4.8 billion by '28. So it's about 6% annual growth, but you're already running at 7%.
Yes.
So things look pretty healthy. Could you talk about what is driving that and unpack a little bit the fee side, what should drive it going forward?
Yes. So what we set out in our strategy to '28 was basically a CAGR of 7% on the commission income side. And again, my earlier comments, running or going -- entering into a strategy cycle, I should say it this way, always comes with a bit of a structure. So you have to ramp up and then you sort of roll into the run rate.
So having this strong start into the strategy cycle with 7% to date this year already is a really good start, fully fueled by our underlying client business, and that's the positive thing. So we basically see increases in every single product category and customer area.
And if I take this apart a bit also in terms of what's coming in the next years, on the personal customer side, I think this is now reaping a bit the fruits also from previous changes in the setup, in the advisory setup, which we triggered years ago, but also which went into last month, completing sort of reshaping our advisory model towards customers, focusing much more also on to value-add products, products for customers with more complex needs when it comes to securities advisory, wealth management, et cetera. So that's fueling it.
Pretty prominently this summer, actually, we changed our fee model for current accounts and actually charging the better part of -- actually the full part of our accounts in the main brand now, and contacted 2.5 million customers and actually asked them to please pay up for the accounts going forward.
And the return rates actually of accepting this or bringing in further funds to actually make certain thresholds to not pay is coming in quite nicely. So this is all underlying business that is fueling the commission income.
And then lastly, on the corporate client side, what we are clearly seeing is, yes, revenue that is coming in, fees, commissions that are coming in, in line with our loan growth. So it's usually connected to actual customer activity plus then, of course, our trade finance and markets business, which also brings in a bit.
So in terms of growth in the next years, as this is all linked towards the customer and volume growth we are seeing coming in at the moment, I'm actually very much looking forward to the 7% growth.
Yes. It feels like it's just ramping up, so to say. And in that context, you mentioned clearly lending growth has an impact, et cetera, as well on the fee side. You talked a lot about lending and stimulus impact, et cetera. But on the fee side, is there anywhere for us as analysts think about, okay, how can I translate German stimulus into fee? Should we do it through lending? Or is there other measures that we should look at to get a feeling of what is the potential?
That's an interesting one to fill the spreadsheet. Yes, I mean, first and foremost, looking at the corporate customer side, I mean the logical sequence would be stimulus actually is coming to life. You see additional activity in terms of production, in terms of providing services, takeout of loans, but clearly also increased trade and trade finance business coming out of this.
So I would say, on the corporate side, it's not wrong to go via general volume growth and then also seeing how the stimulus really sort of affects GDP going forward.
On the personal customer side, I would always say this is really dependent on customer activity, which we're continuously ramping up. But also, I mean, once if we follow that logic, once the economy actually becomes more stable, clearly, this will have a slightly delayed impact, but impact also in every single person's pocket. So ultimately, we would expect that this is coming in.
Then another point, probably still a bit on the horizon, but there's also political initiatives at the moment in Germany to rather fuel securities-based investing also for personal pensions in the end, a discussion that I think is long overdue in Germany, but it's at least now gaining speed. So if something like this comes in, I think that is also something to consider for in a few years because this clearly fuels a lot of the investments.
And maybe we then move to net fair value results, which were minus EUR 60 million on the 9-month stage in '25, but you're guiding towards EUR 500 million in '26. And there's been some question, how do we get there. Maybe you can explain what happened and how do we see that delta?
Yes. So there's two ways to go about this. I can come from this year or I can start actually with next, and I'll start with next year. So we have a net fair value guidance of EUR 500 million for next year. And if you disseminate the net fair value line, there's a few components in it.
The most important component is our customer-driven business. So usually corporate client side business, which is fueling the net fair value. That is coming in at a fair and stable rate, and this is effectively underpinning this EUR 500 million.
What we then have in addition is in a year like this, and this explains a bit the difference to the 9-month result at the moment, net fair value result also has counter positions of interest rate hedges that we had in the book. So clearly, there is a portion that came in this year, which stands partially against net interest income.
So you see a bit of a distortion of the underlying sort of base client business. This, I wouldn't expect next year, given the interest rate environment. So that should actually leave that clean, if you want so. And then there's another component, which usually stands against the other income, which is inefficiencies and hedges from an accounting perspective.
So there can always be a bit of a noise level around the net fair value. But if you look into next year and if you take out these effects for this, then effectively, next year, the EUR 500 million is the underlying business. Ideally, we see this growing and then potentially a bit of fluctuation against other income from the hedges.
And if we then move towards cost, you guided to 50% cost income by '28. We have a forecast of 57% this year. Should we think about the cost income improvement kind of a linear movement in terms of continuous improvement to get there? And tell us about the drivers that are impacting your cost base?
Yes. So then let's start with the movement. It won't be exactly linear. Our strategy in itself is a growth and transitioning strategy. So you will see that over the years, the aim is not to -- besides diligently managing the cost base, clearly is not to run down the cost base, but it's rather have an incline in business activity and in income.
And if you look at the measures that we've taken, we see a slight structure where we will see additional costs or, let's say, costs that run down a bit slower, especially next year, the following year. So for this, we have 57% as a guidance for the cost/income ratio. For next year, it's 56%. And then it will drop off towards 50%.
Main reason is that within the strategy, we are transforming a good portion of our staff base from within Germany, especially headquarter, especially operations based into our near-shoring or shoring in-sourcing hubs. And there's a period of time where we want to, a, allow for a handover of tasks, hence, a slightly sort of a delayed decline or stronger decline of the cost as was planned.
And then secondly, we want to also facilitate the reduction of head count in Germany in a socially responsible manner, which we fully negotiated and contractually signed off with the workers' council. So hence, you see a bit of a structure.
But I think the important thing on the cost side is base costs managed very diligently and staying stable/coming down and then the cost income ratio is fueled by income.
And in the context of cost, clearly, a large proportion is still always with the branches. Should we think about further branch measures in terms of potential reductions?
Yes, you're talking to the CFO now. But on a serious note, we've pretty much transformed the branch setup we've had over the last year significantly. If you consider a few years back, we had 4-digit number of branches in Germany. I think the number of 1,000 branches was hovering around for quite a while. We've reduced this now to 400 branches and transformed the branch setup in itself.
So it's not so much the classical branch where a customer comes in and we basically have inbound business. A good portion of these branches are now outbound advisory hubs, which we've positioned so that we are using this much, much more for active customer advisory or outbound calls as well if we need to.
So the branch structure has changed quite a lot. At the moment, this is a good mix. But clearly, we are very much looking into exploring also digital channels via our brands. So I think time will tell what size is the right one. At the moment, this is exactly what we need for our advisory setup.
And moving towards asset quality, you have a guidance of 25 basis points by '28. Do you see any major issues on the credit side? It feels like there is not much concern in the market at this point, either on CRE or other areas from your perspective, any...
Yes. Well, I mean, we're very selective in what we have in our book. Let's put it this way, there's areas which we were active in, in very past times that we're also deliberately not active in that much anymore. So our book in itself actually is really stable what we're seeing this year.
And we could also demonstrate that in the Q3 numbers is effectively a stable book with no surprises in it. Risk guidance or risk result guidance for this year, we just took down because we expect at the current rates and still pending Q4 and everything that we don't see any extraordinary movements.
The interesting discussion clearly is how is the economy in Germany continuing to develop. But again, on that end, I'm rather on the slightly more positive side because I think the signaling and the stimulus that is actually coming in must leave a mark.
The investment packages are too large. The current commitment to actually changing also some of the conditions around it are so concrete and this will leave a mark and hence, should hopefully also support the credit book going forward. But on our end, you're absolutely right, we're running very stable also towards '28. Nothing I would have to cautiously warn you on here.
And if you look at capital, which is very healthy, above your guidance, clearly, and you have a payout ratio target or guidance of 100% by '28 continuously. What would trigger a change? I mean what is it on your side that you say, okay, we want to go above that? And secondly, what do you have to illustrate to your regulator in order to get a approval to get to a level of above 100%?
Yes, it's -- I think that's one of the favorite questions the last month. Capital base is strong.
14.7%.
Yes, at the moment. We took it actually up from an original guidance for this year of 14%. So actually, we've come in quite strongly, perfectly in line with how business generally is developing for us. And you saw that in the numbers.
So we've basically planned out a path of returning 100% over the next years in line with our strategy to arrive at a target capital ratio of 13.5%, which we, at this point in time, deem the right level to underpin our business and also be able to yield proper returns for our investors.
So consider the next years until '28 also as a path towards that target ratio. The discussion with the regulator is, of course, a regular one on this. And clearly, there's different positions that the parties are looking at. I would tend to say that if you look at it from a regulatory perspective, there's always an ambition to keep capital in the system to rather sort of stabilize more than less.
There's no benefit in actually encouraging too much of a flush out of capital. And then from our perspective, I think we are very much focused on having the exact right level of capital in order to also have a proper return.
So if we were to have a discussion with the regulator to go above the currently agreed levels, then I think that really depends on the current state of, a, the overall system, and then clearly, our own health. But the second I would always assume is then there, otherwise we wouldn't ask. And we have to take that year by year.
And in terms of finishing the -- before we're opening up to the audience, you -- just in terms of your interaction with your main shareholder, maybe you can talk a little bit how is that different from any other investor? How does the interaction work?
And in that context, clearly, a potential -- I mean your defense from a potential bid, the way I understand it from the wording is basically, it doesn't make a lot of sense to do that because considering where the numbers don't stack up, a lot of it is related to that in terms of your overall defense at least the way I interpret it.
Can you talk about that? First of all, what are the interactions and what is, so to say, your defense mechanism in that sense?
Yes. So in terms of interaction, I think you can consider the interaction being the exact same as we have it with every shareholder that we're having, regular investor relations meetings around the quarterly figures, absolutely professional. So nothing out of the ordinary. That's one thing we don't discuss clearly in these meetings. But apart from that, nothing out of the ordinary.
When it comes to the defense, as you call it, I wouldn't put it too much towards only hinting at the spreadsheet, so to say. That's the result. What we're actually focusing on is generating a lot of value with our strategy and implementing that one. And I think that is what we've demonstrated.
If you look at the market capitalization, at the share price incline, at the business and the numbers that are coming in, that is, if you want, so not our defense, but this is what we're focusing on, providing and then creating value for our shareholders.
And that, in turn, gives us the benefit of having a market capitalization that I think at this point in time, puts a question mark behind value accretion for investors in a potential change of the setup.
We open up for questions. Yes, please. There's a mic on the table, yes.
And there's a growing fashion in Germany for retail deposit collection to be price led and you talked about that yourself. Is there any evidence that there is a growing proportion of the deposit base which is becoming price-sensitive? Or should we think about this as the same part of money, which is price sensitive, but rotating between the banks?
Yes. Thanks, [ Ian ]. Good question. So the activity we have seen this year certainly was interesting to watch because we have seen deposit collection by competitors and also us that were marked by really attractive offers for customers. I can only talk for ourselves.
We are doing this because we have a pretty good set of, let's call it, behavioral data on what's happening with these deposits afterwards. So when we are going into the market with attractive rates, it's also to attract the full customer relationship. So the offers that we had out in the market were high, were also partially going beyond ECB deposit rates, but only if you brought your full customer relationship actually to us.
So there is a point of not only attracting the deposits but also longer-standing customer relationship. We know that works for some customers; for some, it doesn't. Some are indeed actually very, let's say, fluent in picking the banks they deposit their money with because they are very sensitive to where the rate is, and we don't really see this portion to increase, at least not in our numbers.
So there's always a portion of depositors that jump for the next highest offer. But with every single run that we collect deposits on, we have a relatively high sticky quota even once the promotional rate drops off, and we managed to keep a good portion of those customers in.
Those that move on, we usually see a similar amount of customers moving on and then coming back. It really depends a bit on where this is going in the next years, clearly. I think the market is growing, but it's also becoming more competitive. So I think we'll have to watch that space.
In terms of our competitiveness level, I always like to also highlight that we have a quite large depositor base and also good channels with our two brands in the German market to collect deposits. So we know quite well what's happening at which point in time in the market also regarding competitive offers. And we're watching this, of course. So I think we have to take that quarter by quarter, Ian.
Can you remind me when you do a deposit campaign, price-led, what proportion of those deposits you assume remain with you on the other side of the [indiscernible]?
Yes, we usually don't put that number out. But if I say the better part, then it's literally the better part. So consider that really depending a bit on where we are to be in the upper part of the 100%. So it's not less than half. It's not much more.
Great. Thank you very much, Carsten. Thanks for joining us. And it looks like a very much operational gearing going all in the right direction even beyond, from our perspective, at least the guided numbers here.
Perfect. Thank you very much, Kian. Thank you.
Thank you.
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Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2025
Commerzbank — European Financials Conference 2025
📣 Kernbotschaft
- Kurzform: CFO Carsten Schmitt zieht nach einem Jahr positive Zwischenbilanz: Strategie bis 2028 bleibt Wachstum + Transformation. Management hebt Net Interest Income (NII) ambitioniert an, sieht deutliche Nachfrage aus dem Firmenkundensegment und erwartet stimuluseffekt für die deutsche Wirtschaft.
🎯 Strategische Highlights
- NII-Fokus: Aktuelle Erwartung: NII ~€8,2 Mrd. für das laufende Jahr; Upgrade auf ~€8,4 Mrd. für das Folgejahr und struktureller Aufwärtstrend bis 2028.
- Loan Growth: Starkes Firmenkundengeschäft (+13% YoY), Ziel ~8% p.a. im Corporate-Portfolio; Hypothekenfrontbuch zieht an.
- Deposits & Fees: Gezielte Depotkampagnen (≈€8 Mrd. gesammelt), neues Kontofee-Modell (2,5 Mio. Kunden kontaktiert) und Fee-CAGR ~7% bis 2028.
🔭 Neue Informationen
- Fair Value: Guidance für Net Fair Value ~€500 Mio. im nächsten Jahr; aktuelles 9M-Resultat belastet durch Hedge-Effekte.
- Struktur-Hedge: Aktuell ~€147 Mrd.; modellierbares Potenzial bis ~€208 Mrd., Management bleibt aber vorsichtig und schrittweise.
- Kosten & Kapital: Cost/Income-Ansatz: ~57% dieses Jahr → 56% nächstes Jahr → 50% bis 2028; CET1 ~14,7% heute, Zielpfad zu ~13,5% mit 100% Ausschüttungsziel bis 2028.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Deposit-Preisempfindlichkeit: Nachfrage nach Belegen, ob mehr Kunden dauerhaft preissensitiv werden; Management sieht nur Teilrotation, konkrete Verbleibsquote bei Aktionseinlagen nicht veröffentlicht.
- Kapital & Aktionärsstrategie: Wie Interaktion mit Großaktionär läuft und welche Voraussetzungen für >100% Payout nötig sind; Antwort: normale IR-Prozesse, über 100% abhängig von Kapitalbedarf und Regulator.
- Lending-Risiken: Nachfrage, ob Kreditwachstum zu höherem Wettbewerbsdruck bei Einlagen führt; Management betont Kapazität (inkl. Verbriefung) und selektive Risikoausrichtung.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Operative Dynamik bestätigt Strategie: NII-Aufwärtstrend, robustes Firmenkundengeschäft und aktive Einlagenpolitik schaffen Ertragshebel. Wichtige Überwachungsgrößen für Anleger: tatsächliche Nachhaltigkeit der NII-Verbesserung, Einlagen-Stickiness nach Aktionsangeboten und regulatorische Gespräche zur Kapitalverwendung.
Commerzbank — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Hello, and welcome to the Commerzbank AG Conference Call regarding the third quarter results of 2025. Please note that this call is being transmitted as well as recorded by audio webcast and will subsequently be made available for replay in the Internet. [Operator Instructions] The floor will be opened for questions following Bettina Orlopp's and Carsten Schmitt's presentation.
Let me now turn the floor over to our CEO, Bettina Orlopp.
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our earnings call. Our growth story in Commerzbank continues, and we have achieved the best 9 months operating result in the history of Commerzbank. This strong momentum also drives our outlook. With increased expectations for net interest income, we are very confident to deliver on our targets in 2025. I will present to you the financial overview after 9 months of this year and the key strategic topics before Carsten will walk you through the financial performance of the third quarter.
Let me start with our view on the last 12 months. It was a special journey that we embarked on. Based on an exceptionally good team spirit, we created a very strong momentum for Commerzbank. We developed our momentum strategy with ambitious targets for 2028, 50% cost-income ratio, 15% return on tangible equity and 100% payout each year. In this process, the extremely high commitment of everybody involved was as important as the bare numbers and targets. And this has translated into strong focus on delivery.
The success is impressive. 13% loan growth in Corporate Clients, 8% growth in fee income and a 11% increase in total revenues are proof of the strength of our Team Yellow. This is, however, only possible because we have a strong and robust business model that meets the needs of our clients. We further strengthened our client franchise and are proud of the deep relationships -- deep client relationships, I have to say, that are underpinned by many awards we have won.
The very good performance and positive prospects have also driven our share price, which has almost doubled in the last 12 months. Based on our team spirit, our well-established client relationships and with some support from macro developments, I see a lot of further potential to be lifted. Our focus on shareholder value will also be further strengthened by the employee share program, which has started in October and aims to make every employee a shareholder of Commerzbank.
Now let us have a look -- a closer look at the 9 months financial performance of this year. The material growth in fee income and around EUR 500 million higher revenues in mBank, including less burdens from the provisions of FX loans have led to the record operating result after 9 months. Together with high cost discipline, this growth is reflected in the cost-income ratio of 56%, which is exactly where we wanted to be on the path towards increasing efficiency going forward.
In terms of return on tangible equity, we have achieved 10% after 9 months when excluding the restructuring charges. The double-digit return level is our new baseline for growth from 2026 onwards and demonstrates the significantly increased strength of Commerzbank. The high revenue growth of 11% is based on our significantly increased fee income. But equally important is a very successful management of net interest income in an environment of significantly lower rates compared to last year. The decrease of just 1% in NII provides us with lots of confidence for the next quarters.
At the divisional level, the somewhat lower net fair value result in Corporate Clients has been broadly offset by the strong fee income in PSBC, and the group overall benefited from the strong trajectory in mBank. So the first 9 months have been very successfully -- successful financially. And this also applies to the implementation of our strategy.
Let me highlight five areas in which we have made significant progress. First, on customer focus. Since last month, the new client coverage model in PSBC Germany is live. Key elements are personal one-on-one relationships for affluent clients and more time for high-quality advice in wealth management. Second, on growth. Based on our deep client relationships in Corporate Clients, we are the leading go-to bank. This has led to significant capital accretive loan growth of 13% in the last 12 months. Carsten will further elaborate on this. Important to note is that this growth is thanks to strong ties with our clients rather than any pricing concessions.
Third, on AI. We already reported on use cases such as fraud detection and AI-assisted documentation for advisory calls with Corporate Clients. One of the latest applications is the AI enhancement of our KYC processes. Fourth, on costs. The implementation of the restructuring program is fully on track. The latest milestones have been the successful completion of all negotiations with the workers' representatives and the offering of part-time early retirements to a selective group of people. The acceptance rate of almost 50% is very high.
And fifth, on capital. In Q3, we have successfully completed our first SRT of the year. The EUR 3 billion notional and EUR 1.6 billion RWA relief came at low cost in the area of 1% of RWA. This is very capital efficient. And in placing the first loss, we also achieved some risk mitigation. We plan for further SRTs in the weeks to come. All these achievements and the financial performance contribute to the confidence of the regulators into Commerzbank. This is reflected in our improved SREP results with a 10 basis points relief in Pillar 2 requirement.
Looking into the next years, our regular planning update has confirmed our strategy. A few topics of special strategic importance have been identified and addressed. First, we stay focused on our growth path and pay special attention to the German stimulus package. This is a meaningful additional catalyst for our financial performance. Second, AI is one of the most important drivers to transform our bank and ensure increasing efficiency levels. What we have seen so far is just the beginning, and we will further invest heavily into AI. One example is the support of our staff in the advisory center. Live transcription of calls, proposals for client solutions and support for outbound calls will contribute to increasing efficiency and client satisfaction.
And third, we strive to optimize the deployment of capital above 13.5%. Besides capital return by means of dividends and share buybacks, this includes the exploration of further organic growth opportunities as well as inorganic options such as bolt-on acquisitions. In an ongoing screening, all options must meet our investment criteria in terms of business fit and value accretion.
Now back to macro and the German stimulus. The German investment package for defense and infrastructure, combined with legislative changes such as taxation relief and depreciation rules will significantly support our growth ambitions. Within our GDP forecast of 1.2% for 2026, we expect a considerable fiscal stimulus of 0.8% of GDP. The recently weaker German economic data do not contradict the expectation that a more expansionary fiscal policy will boost the economy. The budget for 2025 and the law on the extrabudgetary fund only came into force at the beginning of October. Hence, the positive impact will only be visible in future economic data.
Furthermore, the federal government has shifted a considerable amount of investment spending from the core budget to the extrabudgetary fund in the budget for 2026. This increases the federal government's financial leeway and it can quickly increase other expenditures. This will help the economy in 2026 and 2027, even if the extra spending is partially directed at consumption instead of investments. The halving of the ECB deposit rates to 2.0% also points to higher economic growth. The positive view into 2026, however, still needs to translate into higher economic activity of corporates and especially the German Mittelstand.
In this regard, the highest business expectations since 2022 according to the [ ifo] survey are positive. So sentiment has improved, the Mittelstand still remains cautious when it comes to investments in Germany. Bureaucracy energy prices and shortage of skilled workers still weigh on the business prospects of many corporates. Government-induced reforms to tackle these issues are important to unfold the huge potential of the stimulus package.
Now let's move on with our own capital return program. We are very well on track and plan for a steady increase in capital return. Our currently active EUR 1 billion buyback program for 2025 is progressing well, and we have applied for a second tranche of up to EUR 600 million. Once we have a clear view on the full year results, we will decide on how much we will propose as dividend for 2025 and what the exact size of the second share buyback will be. Both steadily increasing dividends and the flexible use of buybacks will remain integral parts of the capital return program. Returning 100% of net profit after AT1 translates into attractive capital return yields of 8%, increasing to 11% over the next years. This is a key element of our strategy and our equity story.
Let me now conclude with our outlook for 2025. Based on the strong performance after 9 months, we raised our outlook for net interest income from EUR 8 billion to EUR 8.2 billion. Furthermore, we improved our expectation for the risk result to below EUR 850 million. We stick to our cost-income ratio target of 57% and our target for the net result of EUR 2.5 billion, which translates into EUR 2.9 billion when excluding the restructuring charges. And we consider this to be the floor of our full year expectations. And we maintain our expectations for the CET1 ratio of at least 14.5% at the end of this year.
Looking at 2026, our view is also very positive. The strong NII trajectory and the macro tailwind from the German stimulus forms significant support for our momentum strategy. With the presentation of our full year results next February, we will provide the full view on our outlook for 2026.
Now let me hand over to Carsten for the financial performance of the third quarter. Over to you, Carsten.
Thank you, Bettina, and good morning, everyone. It is my pleasure to present the results of the quarter. Let's start with a brief overview. Based on strong revenue growth, the operating result is up 18% compared to Q3 last year. The net result is lower, but only due to a one-off tax effect from DTAs driven by the reduction of the German corporate tax rate from 2028. Net RoTE thus came in at 7.8% for the quarter. For the whole financial year, we are on track to reach our RoTE target despite the tax effect; thanks to the good underlying performance of the business. The CET1 ratio of 14.7% is 18 basis points higher than in Q2 and fully in line with our target of at least 14.5% by year-end.
I will now go through the details, starting with revenues. In the quarter, we achieved a 7% increase in revenues compared to last year. Net interest income is holding up very well, being on the same level as Q3 last year despite significantly lower ECB rates. In net commission income, we have maintained our momentum with income growth in line with our target of around 7% year-on-year. While opposing effects are largely canceling out, the net fair value result is marginally negative due to a minus EUR 34 million valuation effect from our holding in eToro. Other income, excluding FX loan provisions, mainly stems from a positive hedge result.
Now [Technical Difficulty] in more detail. All customer segments grew their business year-on-year with mBank additionally benefiting from a one-off from the cards business. Corporate Clients generated good revenues in the generally slower summer quarter. Trade Finance has increased revenues despite the ongoing weakness in exports, and Capital Markets had a very healthy syndication business. The biggest increase came from Lending, where fee income linked to loan origination was significantly higher, in line with volume growth. Green Energy was especially strong.
Private and Small-Business Customers in Germany continued to grow the fees from Securities business, both from securities volumes and transactions compared to last year. In Payments, the higher account fees that were introduced at the end of Q2 are starting to contribute. We have finished the first round of reach out to customers with a good acceptance rate. It has also resulted in customers increasing volumes. Asset Management benefited from higher transaction fees at Commerz Real and growth with wealth management products. With our ongoing initiatives, we have maintained momentum and are on track to reach our growth target for the year.
Let's move on to interest income. We again had some headwinds from rates. In Q3, ECB rates were on average 25 basis points and Polish rates 50 basis points lower than in Q2. Nevertheless, net interest income is nearly on the same level as in Q3 last year. This clearly demonstrates the resilience of our business model. In Corporate Clients, net interest income is up compared with Q2 and Q3 last year. Lower funding costs for trading positions and higher income from the lending business were the main drivers. The lower funding costs linked to lower ECB rates are, however, partly offset in net fair value of trading book positions.
In PSBC Germany, net interest income is up year-on-year and on the same level as in Q2. The effect of lower ECB rates and our investment in promotional offers for new deposits were offset by increased contributions from the replication portfolios and mortgages.
In mBank, the lower NII results mainly from the cut in policy rates. The effect has been offset by higher net fair value from derivatives. In Others & Consolidation, NII is also lower, mainly due to rate cuts. Again, there is a positive offset in the net fair value result from derivatives.
Looking at volumes, we had a very strong quarter. Corporate Clients has continued to grow the loan business with all customer groups. The loan volume is now up 13% year-on-year. The deposit volumes have been stable. PSBC Germany has maintained stable site deposit volumes and increased call money by almost EUR 8 billion with the promotional offers in July. This strong inflow has led to an expected uptick in the average deposit beta to 42%.
In the mortgage business, the volume of new contracts has increased further, indicating a recovery in demand as house prices have stabilized and interest rates have reached a steady level. The outstanding volume is somewhat lower due to seasonally higher early repayments.
On the next slide, I will give you more details on the loan growth in Corporate Clients. As mentioned, Corporate Clients is well ahead of its 8% annual growth target and achieved this growth based on our diversified franchise. This franchise extends to customers worldwide who have a connection to Germany. It also includes the foreign activities of German companies. As expected, with the sluggish German economy, there has been only moderate growth with corporates in Germany. In contrast, demand from the public sector has picked up over the last quarters. Another area of growth has been green infrastructure, both inside and outside of Germany.
We have steadily grown the portfolio over the last years. We expect this to continue despite the changes in the political environment, given the economic attractiveness of the projects we are involved in. Also, demand outside of Germany has been healthy. Around 80% of the growth has been equally spread across Europe and the U.S. and the rest came from Asia. The new business has been diversified by sector with the largest demand from energy, chemicals and consumption. Finally, in line with our Momentum strategy, we expanded our relationship with Institutionals, especially financial institutions in emerging markets in loan and trade finance products. All this business has been generated at attractive risk-adjusted margins as we maintain our focus on the RWA efficiency of our client relationships.
Looking into 2026, we expect demand in Germany to pick up as the extra spending by the German government should start stimulating the economy. The significant growth we have seen in renewable energy and in financing for the electricity grid as well as guarantees for the defense projects are first halving us. We are, therefore, confident that we will maintain our profitable growth trajectory.
This brings me to the next slide with the outlook for NII. On the back of the successful loan growth and deposit management of the last quarters, we again raised our NII outlook from EUR 8 billion to around EUR 8.2 billion for the year. We believe that we have reached the trough in interest income in the second half of this year. For Q4, we do not expect significant deviations of the main drivers and net interest income should therefore be on the same level as in Q3.
We anticipate an ongoing increase in contributions from the replication portfolio, offset by slightly higher deposit beta and continued volume growth. The contribution from mBank will be somewhat lower due to the expected rates development in Poland. 2025 proves that our business model is holding up well even during a rate cut cycle with ECB rates on average around 1.5% lower than in 2024. While lower rates have reduced NII in 2025, we also had a positive effect in the net fair value of around EUR 300 million. For 2026, we expect ECB rates to remain at the current level. We, therefore, do not anticipate the contribution of positions that are rate sensitive to ECB interest rates to change significantly, neither in interest income nor in the fair value result.
With an expected EUR 2 billion NII in the fourth quarter, we, therefore, start with a baseline of EUR 8 billion NII for 2026. From this starting point, the main drivers of net interest income in 2026 will be rising contributions from the replication portfolios and continued growth, partially offset by headwinds from the beta and rate cuts in Poland. In total, these drivers should contribute approximately EUR 400 million, resulting in an expected net interest income of around EUR 8.4 billion. This is a good basis to reach our profitability target for 2026 and subsequent years.
Now to costs on Slide 19. We have continued to manage our operating expenses in accordance with our target cost-income ratio of 57% for 2025. The main driver of costs, excluding mBank, has been personnel expenses. Half of the increase is attributable to planned increases and half to valuation effects of a higher share price on equity-based compensation. Additionally, in H1, we had impaired intangibles of EUR 65 million of Aquila Capital, which is reflected in the cost line.
mBank has, as planned, a higher cost increase from significant investments in business growth. Additionally, compulsory contributions were higher. For Q4, we expect higher costs than in Q3 as there will be some seasonal effects, further growth in mBank and higher personnel costs as we continue to ramp up shoring and sourcing centers to transfer further tasks currently done in Germany. After booking the momentum restructuring expenses in Germany in the first half of 2025, we booked the majority of the provisions for staff reductions at our international locations in Q3. In Q4, we expect an additional booking of less than EUR 20 million.
The next slide covers the risk result. The risk result came in at EUR 215 million. This is fully in line with our expectations. The portfolio continues to be resilient. And while the -- while we expect a somewhat higher risk result in the longer fourth quarter, we are very confident that we will end up below EUR 850 million given the good performance so far. As this has been a topic recently, we have added a slide on our NBFI portfolio in the appendix. This portfolio mainly reflects our well-established Institutionals business in Corporate Clients, which we are very comfortable with. Our exposure to private credit is not noteworthy. We have no direct exposure to U.S. private credit markets. This concludes the view on the key line items.
I've already covered the main drivers of the excellent operating results and will therefore focus on the tax rate. With 36%, the tax rate was well outside our normal range of 25% to 30%. This is primarily due to a change in the German tax law. From 2028, the corporate tax rate will be reduced in 1% steps from 15% to 10% in 2032. While this will be positive long term, it reduces the current value of future tax credits. We, therefore, had to reflect this in the DTAs that we hold and is a one-off event. In case the proposed tax increases in Poland come into law, we will have an opposite effect in Q4 with a write-up of Polish DTAs. Overall, we expect the 2025 tax rate to be rather in the upper half of our expected range of 25% to 30%.
The next slides cover the results of the operating segments, starting with Corporate Clients. As already mentioned, Corporate Clients had a good performance in the quarter, increasing the operating result by 15% year-on-year. Revenues benefited from the strong loan growth and the good Capital Markets business. This is most visible in International Corporates with 14% higher revenues and the strongest loan growth. In Mittelstand and Institutionals, the business has also performed well. However, the effect of lower rates on deposits could not be fully compensated. And finally, the risk result has remained well contained, supporting the operating result.
PSBC Germany has also improved its operating results, both year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter. As mentioned, the main revenue drivers have been the Securities business, the new account fees as well as some contribution from loans and deposits. In Private Customers, the investment and promotional offers had the expected impact in Q3 and will start to pay off in 2026. Asset Management held revenues on the level of Q2 in the rather slower summer months.
mBank has maintained its profitability nearly at the record level of Q2. As expected, provisions for FX loans have been lower than in the previous quarter, and we expect Q4 to be the last quarter of sizable provisions. In September, mBank published its new strategy until 2030. mBank targets continued growth with the ambition to reach a 10% market share in Poland. With this growth and a target cost-income ratio below 35% before banking tax, mBank will materially contribute to the financials of the group. For 2026, mBank aims to start paying a dividend. This will ultimately benefit Commerzbank shareholders as it supports our capacity to distribute capital.
Others & Consolidation reported an operating loss of EUR 53 million in the quarter, nearly on the same level as Q3 last year. Year-to-date, the operating result is plus EUR 66 million, in line with our expectation of a more or less neutral result for the full year. Revenues are slightly higher than Q3 last year with lower NII compensated by the fair value result. Compared to Q2, there has been some additional valuation effects. Most noteworthy has been our stake in eToro. In Q2, we booked a gain of EUR 63 million following the IPO, while we needed to book a valuation loss of EUR 34 million in Q3 as the share price fell during the quarter. We will also see some effects in Q4 depending on share price performance.
On the next slide, I will cover the RWA and capital development. The CET1 ratio stood at 14.7% at the end of the quarter, up 18 basis points from Q2. There were two main drivers. Risk-weighted assets are lower as RWA from loan growth were more than offset by an SRT issuance and model effects. We plan to issue further SRTs in Q4, optimizing the return from the loan book of corporate clients. At the same time, capital has increased as the deductions from Prudential Valuation were lower due to decreased market volatility after spiking up in spring of this year. In line with our distribution target of 100%, we have not included the quarterly profit for the calculation of the CET1 ratio. In total, we have already dedicated EUR 2.1 billion for distribution to shareholders in the first 9 months of the year.
The MDA has gone up from 10.2% in Q2 to 10.4%. The reason is the introduction of a countercyclical buffer in Poland. A similar impact is expected in Q3 next year when the Polish countercyclical buffer is increased further. Finally, we have received the SREP letter from the ECB. Our 2026 capital requirements were lowered by 10 basis points. For us, this is a recognition of our solid business model and our increased resilience in recent years. As we must hold only part of the regulatory capital requirements as CET1, the MDA will be reduced by around 6 basis points effective from January.
The outlook for 2025. As already mentioned, we have improved our outlook for NII from EUR 8 billion to EUR 8.2 billion and for the risk result from around EUR 850 million to below EUR 850 million. We confirm all other targets. We continue to expect growth of the net commission income of around 7% compared to last year, a cost-income ratio of 57%, a net result of around EUR 2.5 billion, and a CET1 ratio of at least 14.5%. We will provide our outlook for 2026 alongside the full year results in February. We clearly see upside of NII -- on NII compared to our original plan that we published in February and expect support from an improving macro environment.
Thank you very much for your attention. Bettina and I are now looking forward to taking your questions.
[Operator Instructions] The first question at this point comes from Benjamin Goy, Deutsche Bank.
2. Question Answer
Two questions, please, on net interest income. The first, thanks for Slide 17, the breakdown on the Corporate Clients growth, but maybe you can speak a bit more about your growth expectations for corporates in Germany and when this is going to inflect, whether it's early '26 or a bit later? And then secondly, you also mentioned that your '26 NII is likely impacted by higher deposit beta, which you consistently -- I think, conservatively assumed. So just wondering what increase you have expected? And how much was actually the comdirect campaign in July increasing the deposit beta last quarter?
Thank you, Benjamin. So I mean, what is the outlook for corporates in Germany? You see that the growth is also already now in Germany when it comes to public institutions and also partly Green Infrastructure. But the majority we expect for 2026, one factor will be clearly the stimulus package of the German government. But then also given the improving business sentiment, which we see, there should be also more activity, specifically from Mittelstand clients for Germany. And there is apparently also the Made for Germany initiative, which means to have significant investments in Germany in the coming years. And on NII 2026, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. Thanks, Benjamin. Let me start with the increase in the deposit volume that we've seen in the third quarter. As you asked for it, so in July, we increased our deposit volume by around EUR 8 billion from the offers that we had out via comdirect. This led to an increase in the beta. On the personal customer side, we expected this, which is why you also see the beta coming up in Q3 to 42%. We've now said that we expect a slight increase into Q4, which is not stemming from the personal customer business, but rather from the Corporate Clients side. Given the generally lower rate environment at the moment, it becomes harder to actually fully transmit the rate cuts into the client business. And hence, you have a structural increase of the beta from that side.
So for the full year, we are still expecting an average beta of around the 40% mark we indicated beginning of the year, potentially minimally higher. And for '26, as you asked for the development towards the EUR 8.4 billion NII, for '26, we expect that the current rate environment actually will come with the same strain on the corporate client beta. On the personal customer side, as mentioned, we expect this to come down again in Q4 and then manage it as we go in the quarters of next year.
The next question comes from Tarik El Mejjad, Bank of America.
Just a couple, please. On cost savings, can you update us a bit on the progress on the different initiatives you've launched with your CMD earlier this year and how you're confident to deliver especially the trajectory on that? And second one on the capital. So if I understand well, by year-end, we will have a better view on the mix between the cash and buyback. So you say paying 100%, is it possible to pay more than 100% if you are above 14.5% CET1? Because we know that it will be EUR 1.6 billion or so of buyback, and then the components on the cash, given where you trade, could that be higher to lead you more than 100% from this year? Because I think that now what we need to look at is the 14.5% CET1.
So Tarik, thank you for your questions. On cost savings, we make very good progress. First, when it comes to the restructuring program itself and the headcount reductions, we concluded all necessary negotiations with the workers' council, and we have already announced all structural changes, and we are in the process of implementing them. And we also started with one instrument, which is kind of a part-time retirement program, which has a benefit that people stay on for the next 1 to 3 years, so you can really manage transition and then they will go in the passive retirement phase. And we had a very high acceptance rate higher than we expected with 50% of the people we address that to. And then all other social instruments are also now available. And therefore, we are very much developing according to plan.
When it comes to the necessary measures, when it comes to efficiency, streamlining, AI showing, we are also showing exactly the progress we expect. We are delivering AI use cases day by day. One can really say there's a lot of speed in that. And also the sharing activities are ongoing. We have already hired a number of people in Sofia, in KL for the different teams. So all well underway and on track.
When it comes to capital, actually, I mean, we are paying more than 100% because we have the benefit that we can exclude the restructuring costs from our payout ratio. So if you take really the net result after restructuring costs, we will pay out more than 100% this year. But we will stick with 100% net income after AT1 before restructuring costs because that is exactly what we aligned also with the regulator as a basis for our share buyback requests.
But the clear mix between dividend and share buybacks, we will finally decide. When we see the results, it's clear that we want to show a very attractive dividend as well. We now had EUR 0.30, EUR 0.65. And apparently, we want to have a further increase also given that share price has nicely improved over the last months, and it will be very attractive, and it will be a very attractive mix. And as said, the EUR 1 billion share buyback program is currently underway. The next one we have just applied for and then the rest, we will update in February.
The next question comes from Jeremy Sigee, BNP Paribas Exane.
Two questions, both on capital, please. Firstly, is there anything specific coming in Q4 that would bring the 14.7% down to 14.5%? Or does the sort of greater than 14.5% mean actually it could stay at 14.7%? So anything specific you're expecting in Q4? And then the second question I had was on your Slide 6, when you talked about sort of future strategy elements, topics of special strategic importance for the coming quarters, you mentioned optimizing deployment of capital above 13.5% target. Are there any new ideas that you have in mind or any new areas of focus? Or are you just reflecting something that's already a core plank of your strategy?
Thank you, Jeremy. I mean on capital, we always know that a 0.1% up and down can also be just reflected by currency changes, FX changes and stuff like that. But overall, we expect more growth to come in Q4, and that will have an impact. There will be also more SRTs to come, but that's the whole story around that. When it comes to future capital deployment, I mean, we're thinking about investments all the time. The whole discussion around AI, specifically Agentic AI is accelerating. So we definitely also think to invest more into it to accelerate certain things.
And then we explore -- as we have said beforehand, we explore different M&A opportunities to make sure that we can strengthen our business model. But the problem is they have to meet very strict criteria because we have very clear targets out there when it comes to 2028. So it needs to be value accretive and supporting our growth ambitions, but also our profitability ambitions for the years to come.
The next question comes from Kian Abouhossein, JPMorgan.
The first one is related to loan growth in the Corporate Clients where you have given very helpful details on Slide 17. Can you talk about the asset spread margin environment in the different areas? And what are you doing differently versus peers, which is driving this very strong growth rate that we are seeing? And the second question is on PSBC deposits, where we've seen also very strong growth. And should we be looking for more flattish growth going forward? How should we look around deposit growth in PSBC? And in this context, you mentioned that the structural hedge could grow from EUR 147 billion, which was flat. Wondering how should we think about the deposit growth and in conversion, the structural hedge? Is there any guidance you can give us?
Let me start off with the PSBC deposit growth. I mean, the deposit growth has been very much supported by the attacker products, which we have seen in July. We now have stopped them. But overall, when you look in our plans, that has not changed. We plan for an average deposit growth of approximately 2%, and that is also very much coming by what our clients do, but also we definitely want to grow with our client base.
And for the rest, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. Maybe to then also add to your question regarding the structural hedge position. We have an unchanged position regarding the replication portfolio coming from Q2 to Q3. And as you know from the slides, we have EUR 147 billion currently in this portfolio. Given the changed deposit structure that we're having now or size of the portfolio, we will, of course, look at potentially increasing this. So this is something we'll decide during Q4 and then update you on it. I would also like to remind you that we have in total EUR 200 billion plus in deposits that we can model and always sort of remain a distance to what we actually have in the model. So there is room to look at that, and we will do this during Q4.
Then on your first question regarding loan growth on Corporate Clients and the margin development, I would like to pull this into two directions a bit. First and foremost, you've seen that we saw a healthy loan growth, especially on the International side. We grow the portfolio on that end, as mentioned, has good margins. The business is contributing. So we are actually seeing a healthy increase. And it is mainly coming, quite frankly, Kian, from our point of view, coming from the deep relationships we have with our customers and the international presence that we are offering with our outlets internationally. So that basically allows us to accompany them whenever there's financing needs coming up.
And looking a bit more into the domestic part and the growth, especially when it comes to the public sector, to the municipalities, we interpret this as the first pickup of the infrastructure packages that also have been announced by the government. This business is a fantastic business when it comes to the risk position of the book. It, of course, also comes at slightly lower margins. But I would also like to say that in this space, municipalities -- or not necessarily only the municipalities, but also municipalities [ operates ] like suppliers, et cetera. And those usually from a margin perspective, go a bit more into the Mittelstand territory. So hence, growth in the book at good margins and rather accreting to the RWA efficiency of the book.
The next question then comes from Borja Ramirez with Citi.
I have two, these are on the NII. Firstly, I would like to ask on 2026, could you disclose the deposit beta that you are assuming? Because I think there was some comment on corporate deposit beta rising maybe because of higher -- of lower margins. But then also the retail deposit beta, I think maybe that's maybe improving as your attacker products are repriced at lower rates. So that would be my first question.
And then my second question would be if you could kindly provide a bit more color on the moving parts in the 2026 NII. For example, I think there is -- I think you guided for EUR 300 million of benefit from the replication portfolio in 2026. In NII, I have slightly higher EUR 400 million because you [indiscernible] and also you increased the portfolio. So if you could kind of add more details there, please?
Borja, thank you very much for the questions. Let me start with the first one on the deposit beta. Again, I would like to start with 2025. You've seen that we came sort of from a low level, which was steadily increasing over the year as expected. Q3 is now a bit higher coming in mostly because of the attacker products we had out in July. And as mentioned, we expect actually the private customer beta to come down again in Q4. So the main driver for the slightly higher beta that we expect for the end of the year comes from the Corporate Client business.
All in, the beta, as mentioned earlier, will remain actually at a level of 40%, maybe 40.5% for the year as we expected. And running into '26, the beta from an expectation perspective will likely be driven by the Corporate Client side, where we see basically an unchanged beta landscape compared to Q4. You mentioned briefly sort of the impact from our attacker products on the personal customer side. I would like to make the point, the deposits that we actually got in beginning of July are term deposits. And while that always has a short-term impact on the beta, the longer-term benefit of actually having these deposits in the bank actually will be contributing in '26.
Then the second question on the EUR 400 million increase of NII in '26. We will expect for '26 a pretty much unchanged at least ECB rate environment. So expect this to be flattish. The replication portfolio actually will be the driver with the investments and the position we have in the replication portfolio, we do see the stabilization effect. And as you've also seen in the last quarters, we continuously actually increase the average return out of that portfolio. So that will be the main driver. And then, of course, we will see growth effects and a slight negative coming from mBank given the Polish rate environment and expected a slightly higher beta next year. But that's the main drivers for the EUR 400 million so that we will see a positive development from EUR 8.2 billion, sorry, to EUR 8.4 billion next year.
Okay. Then I think the next question comes from Tobias Lukesch, Kepler Cheuvreux.
Also quickly touching on the NII again and the outlook for '26. You guided for this EUR 8.4 billion. I was just wondering what the net fair value expectation is in your old strategy at the CMD at EUR 0.5 billion, but you also had EUR 0.4 billion for '25, which is now still confirmed at EUR 0.3 billion. So I was just wondering if this still holds up and what your total view on this combined revenue contribution is.
And secondly, basically on the cost side. So if I understand your guidance correctly now for '25, you have this EUR 200 million more in NII. At the same time, a EUR 70 million tax effect leaves us with EUR 140 million, which is more or less eaten up by higher costs. On the share price, I mean, one could hope it, but it's rather unrealistic to see the same compensation potentially for next year. So I was just wondering like what you see in terms of like this kind of cost development, how it will come back and how you will steer that basically into the future?
Yes. Thank you very much, Tobias. Starting with the NII for '26, and you referred to specifically regarding the net fair value. So for '25, so for this year, we have a net fair value contribution, which is linked as we always refer to it to the NII to the degree of EUR 300 million. This is a change coming out of last year. So the reason why we listed this explicitly when going into the year and guiding for the NII was that in the rate declining environment, we wanted to also express it's not only the NII, but also partially contribution from derivatives that help us on the NII side.
Now going into '26, we are guiding the NII for EUR 8.4 billion, but we expect a flat rate environment and hence, also no significant movements on the net fair value result stemming from the NII position. Hence, EUR 8.4 billion and at the moment, flat, so no additional contribution from the net fair value for '26.
Then towards your second question regarding the cost side. I think you went through that quite nicely. We have some effects that you listed, which we also mentioned in the speeches regarding our '25 development. When we look at the operational, let's say, cost level and development that we're seeing in the bank, we're seeing a very disciplined way the bank is managing its costs at the moment. So looking into '26, we are basically very confident that we are running with the level that we have guided in the Capital Markets Day. As you know, we're steering for cost-income ratio. 56% is the target that we set for next year. And at this point, we hold clearly towards that 56%.
If I may, again on this net fair value. I'm a little bit puzzled, to be honest, because with the CMD, you guided for EUR 8 billion NII in '26 and EUR 0.5 billion net fair value, which makes EUR 8.5 billion. If I understand you correctly, now you're guiding for a combined EUR 8.4 billion only for next year. And also again, on the '25, I don't get this unchanged EUR 0.3 billion net fair value result. I mean we're at a negative minus EUR 60 million, if I'm not wrong. And that would indicate a kind of EUR 350 million contribution in Q4. So how is that to read and to square?
Yes. I think that's a super fair question. So first of all, Tobias, on '26, to be absolutely clear, we have EUR 8.4 billion expected NII and unchanged net fair value expectation of EUR 0.5 billion. So that stands. I was referring mainly to the net fair value we expect from the NII side. So for '26, no change in the net fair value guidance to be absolutely clear here. Then coming back to '25, the net fair value, in essence, is made up of multiple positions. One position is the net fair value, which we have from interest rate-related positions. That is the EUR 300 million that we mentioned. These are included as one portion of the net fair value, and they hold. We see them at the moment in the books. And given the current rate environment, we don't expect them to change towards the end.
What's also included in net fair value is then the positions from our Capital Markets business, that is contributing to it. And the third position, which is contributing to net fair value is general valuation effects. And those have to be seen in combination with the other income. And if you combine those positions, so the net fair value that we have as a run rate at the moment, the other income and if you exclude from that the FX mortgage provisions which we hold for mBank, then you actually end up with a value around the EUR 250 million mark for '25. And hence, we stand with that guidance.
The next question comes from Riccardo Rovere, Mediobanca.
Again, on NII. If you look at the loan book, EUR 263 billion at the end of the 9 months is -- this is the average, is 2.5% higher than the average since the start of the year. And then in 2025 -- '26, you're going to have a support from the fiscal boost in Germany, 1.2% in GDP. This is real, then you add 2 percentage points from inflation. So the loan book will continue probably to grow in Germany. I don't know if it's 3.5% or something like that is reasonable or not. And then you have Poland, which is supposed to grow more than that, while your NII is supposed to grow 2%. So you are implicitly plugging in a fairly decent, I would guess, margin compression. While the rates are supposed to be stable, at least in Europe, but Europe is 70% to 75% of your business and Poland is 25%, 30%.
So given that in 2025, your NII guidance went from 7.8% to 8%, then 8.2%. I'm just wondering whether the approach you have in the 9 months '25 when you set the 8.4% is with some caution, some prudence as you have constantly done throughout 2025. This is the first question. The second question I have is on the call money, core deposits in PSBC. As I understand, the promotional offer was in July, if I understood it correctly. So that means that the impact on NII should more or less be fully visible in this set of numbers. More than that, why are you gathering this -- why you're doing this promotional offer still?
And then the other question I have is on the medium- to long-term funding, the amount has gone up dramatically over the past -- since the start of the year is almost, if I'm not mistaken, kind of EUR 20 billion or so, kind of EUR 18.5 billion in debt securities. It went from EUR 45 billion, something like that EUR 53 billion to more than EUR 70 billion. What is -- why has this gone up so much? And what is the spread that you get? Because the feeling I have is that then you invest in debt securities on the asset side. And I was curious to know what kind of debt securities this amount of money is invested in. That's just to have an idea.
Yes. Thank you, Riccardo, for your questions. And specifically the first one, as you know, we like this wording of floor. And yes, we are always conservative, and you know that. So when it comes to next year, what are the driving factors? So first of all, we plan for another 8% loan growth in Corporate Clients. That's for sure, and that will be also supported by everything we see in the moment when it comes to the stimulus package. And I think we have proven nicely that we are able to organize that given the 13%, which we have shown year-to-date.
However, what you need to keep in mind is two things. One is clearly Poland, which will also see nice growth on the loan side, but we will -- we expect a further decrease in interest rate levels there that will have a negative impact. And what Carsten said before on the deposit beta that you need to take the fourth quarter basically as something which will also drive then the full year 2026, and that will be a slightly higher deposit beta on [Technical Difficulty] which we have seen for this year. That is at least our assumption, and that is also the assumption which we have embedded in our plans back at the Capital Markets Day. If you look in this document, we always spoke about 41% for this year. Now it's 40% most likely, which would then go up to 44% until 2028. And that's just a reflection. It's lower than we thought, but there is still some increase in the deposit beta.
When it comes to the -- so yes, you can say that the EUR 8.4 billion is clearly, again, a floor number and nothing else. And when it comes to the call money, we have that in July. We stopped the program actually after 3 weeks because we had so much inflow. But most of this money runs until January, February. And in the moment, we do only have our normal offers out there and nothing specific.
And on funding, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. On the funding side, Riccardo, we had planned -- in terms of debt instruments, we had planned for around EUR 10 billion-plus for the full year, and we're currently standing at around EUR 11 billion in terms of funding. In terms of the spread across different instruments, we actually had a wide variety in the market this year from AT1 to AT2 issuances, et cetera. So basically, we had the full spread and made use of the market environment to do our regular sort of refunding activities.
So actually, the funding plan is pretty much in line with our plan. We extended it a bit in Q4 effectively to make use of the current market environment. And also, I should say, looking a bit back into the first half of the year, we know that the markets are not always there when you want them to be there. So we basically looked a bit into stabilizing the funding position, but pretty much in line with the plan, maybe a bit on the upside. Also, given the current market environment and the spreads that we are seeing -- attractive spreads for the re-issuances, so generally, you can expect that we improved our funding cost position overall in the book throughout this year. And given that we hold the margins actually on the asset side steady, this will be contributing to our business plan.
Very clear. Just maybe a quick follow-up. On the loan growth in PSBC Germany, the book is fairly stable at EUR 125 billion. Do you expect that the easing by the ECB is going to have an impact at some point in 2026 here?
You mean on the private client side?
Yes, exactly. On the retail side in Germany.
Yes. I mean what we currently see is already much more activity again. So the mortgage activity has increased. Basically, it's back to the levels which we have seen pre-COVID. And there's just a time effect in there because people start a mortgage, but then until they really take the money, it takes a while because its most of the time, just paced in construction. So yes, we expect a loan growth for next year also on the PSBC side.
The next question comes from Anke Reingen, RBC.
There's two areas, please. The first is just coming back on the very strong corporate loan growth in Q3. Some of this seems to be a bit more short term in nature as in Working Capital and Trade Finance. And given Q4 is normally seasonally a bit weaker, I just wanted to confirm that you expect there shouldn't really be a reversal in Q4 from these levels. And then secondly, you talked at the beginning about your wealth management initiatives. And I just -- I'm sorry, I'm not -- can't really fully remember, but what you mentioned, is this incremental to your plan? And maybe can you just sort of give us an indication of how much it currently contributes to your revenues and what you sort of like size as an opportunity?
First, we do not expect any reversal on the loan growth for the fourth quarter. And second, on wealth management, I mean, this is a core element of our Momentum strategy. So it's fully embedded in the plans. It's -- I mean, one of the factors which should drive our net commission income, the 8% or 7%, the 8%, which we have seen year-to-date, but also the 7% we expect for the years to come. And what we have now done is we basically intensified the coverage of clients. So there are more relationship managers to cover these groups of clients. We have wealth management centers. We also have new locations. We opened a number of new locations in Germany this year, and they will be a significant driver for the net commission income growth. We do not really say how much percentage-wise it is.
The next question comes from Máté Nemes, UBS.
I have two of them, please. The first one would be a follow-up on deposits, specifically the strong call money inflows. Can you talk about the retention rates that you've observed on such attacker products once the high interest period ends in the past 1 to 2 years? Would love to know what is your experience on that front, how sticky those new funds are?
The second question would be on the risk result or risk costs and specifically your guidance. So in the first 9 months, you had EUR 515 million in risk results. And clearly, you revised your guidance down for the full year to below EUR 850 million. I'm just wondering what prevents you from being more specific on the full year risk results. It seems like there is an awful lot of room between the current result and the upper end of the guidance. Would you expect anything sort of inorganic in the fourth quarter, any model changes? Why not, let's say, a somewhat more precise lower guidance?
Well, thank you. Yes, on the call money, the inflows and now you're asking what do we expect. I mean we can only speak for the past programs because the attacker products, which we have laid out in July are running, as I said, until January, February. So we will only see in the new year how sticky it is. You really have to differentiate between the two client groups, Commerzbank clients and comdirect clients. Commerzbank clients actually, whatever we get there is more sticky than on the comdirect side. And at the comdirect side, we also have more of these, I call them, interest rate hoppers. But still, we have been pleasantly surprised by the stickiness of how many clients still also keep their money with us. That is also due to the fact that most of the time, we also couple that with really client onboarding. We have a very attractive brokerage offering at the comdirect side, and that is clearly something which we combine also with new clients.
So overall, so far, we have been rather pleasantly surprised on how much call money stays with us after the attacker products. But the risk result, I mean, totally clear, we see it the same. However, it's a long quarter, and this is why we, as always, stay a little bit cautious. We do not see anything specific. We do not expect anything specific, but it is a long quarter, which runs until February. So we're just leaving a space. There are not specific model changes planned or something like that. I mean there's always a time there are model updates, but nothing specific here. And that's also very confident. I mean, we wouldn't have changed it to below EUR 850 million if we would not believe that it comes lower than the EUR 850 million, which we originally laid out. But how much in total, we really will see in February when the quarter ends.
So I think we are at the end of this call. Thank you very much for your questions. We are looking forward to further discussions with you and wish you now a great and sunny day. Thank you.
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Commerzbank — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
Commerzbank — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Umsatz (9M): +11% YoY; Rekord‑Operating‑Result nach 9 Monaten.
- Kreditwachstum: Corporate Clients +13% YoY.
- Gebühren: Netto‑Provisions‑/Fee‑Income +8% YoY.
- Cost‑Income: 56% (9M); auf Pfad zu 50% bis 2028.
- NII: Guidance 2025 erhöht auf EUR 8,2 Mrd (Net Interest Income).
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Strategie 2028: Momentum‑Strategie mit klaren Zielen: 50% Cost‑Income, 15% RoTE (Return on Tangible Equity) und 100% Ausschüttung.
- Wachstum: Fokus auf kapitalakzretives Kreditwachstum vor allem bei Corporate Clients, Ausbau mBank (Polen) und selektive SRTs (Synthetic Risk Transfers) zur RWA‑Optimierung.
- Digital & KI: Massive Investitionen in KI‑Use‑Cases (KYC‑Automatisierung, Transkription, Beratungstools) zur Effizienz‑ und Ertragssteigerung.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- 2025 Guidance: NII EUR 8,2 Mrd, Risikoaufwand < EUR 850 Mio, Cost‑Income 57%, Nettoergebnis ~EUR 2,5 Mrd (EUR 2,9 Mrd excl. Restrukturierung), CET1 (Common Equity Tier 1) ≥14,5%.
- 2026: Baseline NII EUR 8,0 Mrd; erwartete Treiber ≈+400 Mio → Ziel ~EUR 8,4 Mrd.
- Wesentliche Risiken: Q3‑Steuereffekt durch Anpassung von DTAs (deferred tax assets) erhöhte Steuerquote; steigender Deposit‑Beta, polnische Zinsentwicklung und verbleibende Q4‑Unsicherheit beim Risikoaufwand.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Deposit‑Beta: Kernfrage zu Annahmen und Einfluss der Juli‑Aktion (≈EUR 8 Mrd Einlagen); Bank erwartet Jahresmittel ~40–40,5%, mittelfristig steigend.
- NII‑Breakdown: Nachfrage zu Replikationsportfolio vs. Net‑Fair‑Value; Bank nennt ~EUR 300 Mio Fair‑Value‑Effekt 2025 und bestätigt langfristiges Fair‑Value‑Ziel von EUR 0,5 Mrd.
- Kapital & Ausschüttung: Diskussion über Mix Dividend/Buyback; Management strebt 100% Ausschüttung nach AT1 (vor Restrukturierung) an, konkrete Mischung folgt bei Jahresabschluss.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Starke operative Dynamik und angehobene NII‑Prognose untermauern das Investmentcase; CET1 und Kapitalrückführung sind solide. Wichtige Überwachungsfaktoren: Umsetzung der Kosten‑/Restrukturierungsmaßnahmen, Entwicklung des Deposit‑Beta, polnische Zinssituation und Q4‑Risikoaufwand. Anleger: positiv gestärkt, aber auf Execution achten.
Commerzbank — Bank of America 30th Annual Financials CEO Conference 2025
1. Question Answer
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining this session. Please take your seat. So Bettina, good morning.
Good morning, Tarik.
So remember, we had fireside chat exactly 1 year ago.
That's true.
It was at the same stage. It was first day as the designated CEO. You had back then very confident message and pushing hard on the argument that Commerz has the right business mix, the potential to deliver attractive returns on a stand-alone basis. Then you followed up with a very solid earnings and most importantly, punchy and credible medium-term plan. Then positive outcome from the German elections, the surprise fiscal stimulus and strong tailwind to the shares. So since, I mean, you've been CEO, the shares are actually up more than 100%, outperforming the sector by 50%. So clearly, the market is on board. So we'll have plenty of time to discuss operationally and what to expect next.
But first, let's start with the question that everyone has in mind, and maybe you can give us your latest view on the UniCredit stake. Today, Mr. [indiscernible] announced that the full stake is now there. So what can you tell us regarding the UniCredit situation?
Yes. Thank you. And probably we should not spend too much time on it given that there are so many other good things to discuss. So I mean, most importantly, Commerzbank focus is clearly implementing our momentum strategy. It is about delivering the growth story and maximizing the value for our shareholders. And when it comes to UniCredit, I think there are some things we can agree on with them. And most importantly is that we both think that Commerzbank has shown a very good performance over the last quarters, and we intend to continue that for the coming quarters. And it somehow also seems that we agree on the point that at current valuations, a transaction does not really make sense.
There are, however, no surprise also some topics where we do not have the same viewpoint. And let me just refer to 3 points. First, this situation, the actual situation is not really helpful and unsatisfactory because having a nearly 30% shareholder is in parallel, a direct competitor in our home market requires a lot of extra attention to make sure that we keep our franchise, that we grow our franchise and that we implement our strategic plan. And then constant comments on what might be done with the shareholding are clearly not helpful as they create additional noise.
Second, a domestic consolidation, specifically with 2 players who have a very similar business model normally do not result in a revenue-led merger. And there would be revenue attrition because there is heavy client overlap on the corporate client side, which means focus would be on cost synergies, which we all know are not easy and not a risk-free value add, which you can just put in your axles. It requires really a lot of work, attention, time and money to achieve that, specifically when it comes to a rather unfriendly large-scale transaction.
And third, and that belongs a little bit to the second point is, Commerzbank has a huge growth opportunity in the moment, given -- and we will come to that, I'm sure, in a minute, given the stimulus package, the investment needs in Germany, in Europe, and we are well positioned to explore this growth potential given our position as a bank for the Mittelstand as a bank for Germany. And our focus is really to stay focused and not get distracted.
So to sum it up, I mean, for us, it's very clear to sit down and assess a plan against our very successful, very attractive stand-alone plan, we would require and we need a very concrete proposal with numbers, metrics and so on. And as long as there is no proposal on the table, which is -- that is UniCredit willing to share with us, it just means that we do what is most important and that is creating value for our shareholders.
Very clear. I will not follow up on this. I think you've given enough elements to the audience. So I guess your -- as you alluded to as well, your first line of defense is your share price and your performance. So we'll spend time on this. Maybe first starting with the everyone's topic in mind, German macro. The market welcome favorably the historical paradigm shift in terms of fiscal stimulus and policy. Some argue that capital market is actually overappreciating what the actual on the ground, what will bring. So can you maybe give us like on the ground or what's the progress of this spending? How is going in terms of coalition as well and on the infrastructure side?
So I mean, first of all, I think it's important to state that we never expected a real impact for this year. So we stay with also our forecast for the year, which is something around 0.2% GDP growth because we also have the tariff situation kicking in and it takes -- as you said, it takes time to really see the investments unfolding. However, we stay very positive for the year 2026 and after that, because there is really an important stimulus to happen. So we basically have 3 factors you need to keep in mind when thinking about German economy, and there's probably lots more, but I will just mention 3.
One is clearly a headwind, which is the tariff situation, which you always have to keep in mind, but where we also now see that the corporates are arranging with it, they are repositioning their portfolios, and they will manage. And then we have 2 clear tailwinds. One is -- and that's a little bit overlooked in all the debate is that interest rates have come down to a significant amount, which means that it's much more also attractive and easier to implement investment programs. So that is also a stimulus for whatever we might see in the next quarters.
And then most important tailwind is clearly also that there is momentum in the moment. There has been a lot of momentum before the summer break. We had a little pause and now we definitely request from the German government that they really start implementing the reforms and they are working on a lot of initiatives, but we really also need to see actions now. But my impression also from the dialogue with Berlin is that they are very committed to do so, but we will all wait for the delivery. And the stimulus is not only that we have stimulus on the energy sector, the defense sector, infrastructure, but it's also that you see it in the sentiment. And that one, you actually see already today. If you take sentiment indicators like the EFO data, it has improved 6 times in a row. I have just seen the latest data on construction. It's improving.
The data on retail revenues are improving and mortgage activity actually, which is a reflection of consumer behavior is increasing. So there is already momentum today. And what we already see is that it's not only restricted to defense and energy and infrastructure, but it will have an impact also on other areas, and we can definitely also leverage that across the value chain. And one should also not forget by the extra fund, some of budget needs haven't been moved out of the normal budget into the special funds, which means that there is more space in the normal funds to invest in certain areas, which again then will have a positive effect. But that is also very clear. We will see that next year. So 1.4% real GDP growth is what we expect. If you then add, which is important for us as a bank and also when it comes to business, the inflation to it, then we talk about something around 3.5% nominal growth.
Very clear. So we'll watch that closely. And what do you think is the next milestone in terms of government communication we should track to see how if it's progressing well?
Well, my understanding is that, first of all, they need to get the budgets done. That is in parliament now in the next...
Yes, a few countries at the moment.
Yes. And then clearly also, I mean, energy cost is a key focus point. They have lots of debates around social reforms. And the whole labor law and bureaucracy thing is a key topic. And I think what is also important to state that there's a very close alignment and cooperation probably better than we have seen in the past years between government and corporates. There's this Made for Germany initiative where a number of large corporates, including also Commerzbank, are really supporting and working hand-in-hand with the government to really make sure that important reforms hopefully will be implemented. But -- and we also should watch out what's happening in the coming months.
Very clear. Let's move on to your '28 business plan. You had a good start. I mean this plan was transformational for you. I mean, waiting for from a low single digit or mid-single-digit RoTE to 15%, which was came as a surprise to everyone. I mean, now a few months into the plan, maybe a quick overview before go in detail on what's the areas that you think are on track, exceeding your expectations or a bit lagging?
So on net commission income, loan growth, we are fully on track, feel very comfortable not only for this year, but also for the years to come. NII, we are always seen as rather conservative on it, and that seems to be also the case. So we feel very comfortable. And I think it was the right decision to really base the plan back in February also on rather conservative GDP and macroeconomic numbers because that is clearly now helpful. And there, we are always talking about a floor. So that's a good one.
Risk result is as expected also. And when it comes to costs, there's a high cost discipline in the bank. We had some one-offs and also a pleasant surprise, which is a burden for the cost side that due to the very good development of our share price, the cost for our LTIs or long-term incentives for our staff has increased quite significantly in the past half year. I would say that's a good one. And we stick fully, fully committed to the targets, which means 57% for this year cost/income ratio and then 50% for 2028. And what we also see is that specifically on the IT side that the use cases when it comes to AI are really delivering what we expect. And that will be also the most interesting part also for the next quarters to explore what we can do in addition in this area.
And so therefore, all in all, it's good. I mean FX provisions clearly have put more burden on us than originally at least planned. But this is something we believe should be over by the end of this year.
Okay. Very clear. So let's start with the net interest income. This is an area where you had a beat and raise for the last 2 quarters in terms of guidance. And now consensus is actually ahead of your guidance on '25 and also in 2028. And in this area, I think that the area will be probably conservative is on the deposit beta in Germany, maybe the shape of the curve as well and the level of the curve. Starting with deposit beta, I mean, in Germany, you're guiding still for 40% by year-end. Can you tell us a bit on the dynamics in Q3 in terms of competition on deposits and why you think that, that will go up because that could be the big part of...
Yes. that's true. But I have to say that most -- I mean, the importance of deposit beta is becoming smaller because other things, specifically when you look forward for 2028, the replication portfolio, the mix of it development on that is much more important than at a steady interest rate level, the deposit beta should -- will always fluctuate a little bit, but it will be rather stabilizing. And I mean, what we have seen in the third quarter, we have been out with our own attacker products. We said that after Q2, we would be out with our own attacker products, very attractive ones. We had to stop the initiative basically after 2 weeks because we got so much inflow that we thought that's enough. And clearly also moves the deposit beta.
But it's always good to explore to see how sticky things are. And I mean, there is a lot of competition anyhow in Germany, there's also a lot of competition on the deposit side. But we have the feeling that we have a very good role in that, and we feel very comfortable with the floor now of EUR 8 billion, might be more. We will see how things are developing. But as I said, loan growth and the replication portfolio are the 2 things I think one should watch out when looking in the next quarters.
So how would you see the stickiness of these deposits after attackers campaign? Because some of your competitors that were very active in Q1, the migration out is quite rapid. So how do you compare to competition on this?
Yes. I mean we only have past experiences. With the past experiences, we have been very, very satisfied. This time, it's too early because these programs still run. Most of them have a duration of 6 months. So we will definitely see in January and February, how things are developing. And it's very dependent on which clients you have in there. We also see that [ Corporate ] Clients are reacting differently to our Commerzbank clients. And then we have mBank, which is despite the fact that they have seen a sharp decline also in interest rate levels, they kept the NII pretty stable by a number of measures.
I mean you mentioned the Poland that was my follow-up on the net interest income. We had discussions a few times together that the forward curve assumptions in your plan were too low-ish and also the growth prospects were -- but you argue this is mBank's targets, so you have to go with that. So if you have now a few months in and who was right, who was wrong, I mean, versus these targets? And how do you see you qualify those as conservative?
Yes. I think mBank is also similar to us conservative on NII assumptions. But I mean, we really need to wait. We also expect still the interest rate levels in Poland coming down. So I think it's also wise to just wait and see and then perhaps get a pleasant surprise in it.
So Poland is 20% of your revenues and business. How are you optimistic about this region and the opportunities for growth there given the momentum we see in the region there?
Yes. I mean, Poland is the largest economy in this region. It's faster growing. It's also now maturing, which is for us a very attractive thing because we have a very attractive customer base at mBank, young, very well educated, getting now more wealthy. So when it comes to net commission income, it's a very attractive area because we believe that you can really grow in Asset and Wealth Management. And Poland itself is well positioned also. If you think at a moment that there might be at a certain point, hopefully, peace in Ukraine, I think they're also well positioned to support the rebuild. I mean there's a political situation. We always have to analyze. There's a discussion about potential banking tax.
That is something we all need to keep in mind. But most importantly, the thing where we have discussed every year, which is about the FX provisioning that should now come to an end.
Then we'll move to the large part contribution to net interest income, which is volume growth or lending growth. You had really significant growth in the first half, 8% coming from international corporates and also Mittelstand. I mean some cynical view would be alluding that this is basically the way for you to kickstart this growth and -- but can you really give us in substance where this growth is coming from and how sable, I mean, this is ex fiscal stimulus. So this is you in a stand-alone and with no help.
Yes. And some of you could even relate it already to the stimulus because we also said that part what is reflected in the Mittelstand numbers is due to the fact that it's also public institutions, which come at a lower margin on the one side, but also with less RWAs connected to that. And so it's also attractive business. And the core medium-sized corporates there, we see a lot of activities and planning investment plans, but we haven't seen that yet. So I would say there, the best is still to come. So this is something where we believe we will see even more growth in the coming quarters.
I mean if you go a bit granular in terms of industries that are actually starting to show a bit of revival in activity or at least confidence. Maybe you can give us some indication.
I mean, it's everything around defense. That's no question. You can see that also on all conferences and had our own conference last week and the defense companies have a lot of demand in any aspect. But also infrastructure is clearly important. The whole energy sector is very vibrant and a lot of things happening. So that I would say, the most important.
So you mentioned as well the -- you have to deal with the tariff situation, which came slightly better than initially feared, but still much higher than the previous levels. And before the potential real benefit kicks in, do you think this 8% growth is sustainable in this transition period? It's part of your plan.
Yes. Yes, it's sustainable because there is anyhow a lot of need also to invest in Germany and in Europe. And it's -- you can really observe that corporates -- I mean, they also have all the scenario planning and stuff like that. They adapt pretty quickly to certain situations, which is a good one.
And then moving to the loan growth on the private customer side. This is still muted. So what's the outlook you see there? And do you see any sign of green shoots?
Yes. I think that is a pleasant surprise, which you see in the past months because, I mean, we have been very cautious when laying out the plan with respect to volume growth on the mortgage side because we thought that it will be tough to repeat really this high activity levels, which we have seen in previous years, and that will still create new business, but it would have an impact on the absolute volumes. I would say this one, we are getting a little bit more positive on because we see -- as I said at the beginning, we see really more activity on the mortgage side than envisaged.
So we are back basically on levels back in 2019 and 2020, and that should be seen. But it's always -- I mean, on the mortgage side, there's always a play between volumes and margin. And we also want to keep the margin at a healthy level. So that will be something we need to balance out.
So moving to the fee parts of the business. You have also quite a bunch of targets, 7% CAGR across the plan. So you have been delivering that. So first of all, can you discuss what have been the main drivers and sustainability of those? And then I have follow-up questions on how you can boost that through nonorganic.
Yes. So the good part is really that when it comes to our net commission income plans, it's just not one area. It's really across the bank. It's all 3 segments. So it comes from Corporate Clients, Private Clients and mBank. When it comes to mBank, you basically see it because the economy is maturing, our clients are maturing. So Asset and Wealth Management is becoming more important and payments plays a big role in that. And there are also a number of fees connected to loans, which are basically net commission fees. When it comes to Private Clients in Germany, it's clearly securities and Asset and Wealth Management, which plays the most important role. It's on the one side, really creating volumes on the Corporate -- on the Commerzbank side, comdirect is all about number of transactions and activity.
And -- but then one should not forget that you also have the payment areas, which is of increasing importance. We also have the joint venture with Global Payments and things like that, which have not yet seen a lot of results, but we expect more in the coming years. And then we have also introduced a new account fee model, which pays in -- for this year and also next year with respect to the growth rates. And then on the Corporate Clients side, it's also across all products and areas. We have -- and we constantly enlarge our offering when it comes to hedging also on our EFX platform. We have trade finance, which is apparently very important for us as a Mittelstandsbank. And payments, again, plays an important role. And we also know also on the Corporate Clients side, some of the fees of net commission income fees related to loans.
And do you see any opportunities to do bolt-on M&As in this area? I mean, have you been looking at some parts of the business on this and anything interesting there?
Yes. I mean we are exploring different opportunities, but the thing is that the bar is pretty high. I mean -- no, the bar also our threshold before we do it because, I mean, we would not do anything which will hinder us in realizing the 15% RoTE and the 50% cost-income ratio. So that is part number one. And part number two, and that is also very important for us is we do not want our IT department to spend too much time in migrating legacy systems, be it small or larger because that would prevent them doing the necessary innovation. And that is always something which is also very important to judge how much integration effort is necessary, and we really want to stay focused.
Yes. Moving into your cost efficiency, which was a key pillar in your business plan. Can you update us what's the progress so far? I mean the last 2 quarters where there's some progress, but probably a bit softer in some areas. Yes, I mean, just on the ground in terms of FTEs, rationalization.
Yes. So first of all, we just concluded last week the negotiations with the workers' council. So now also the partial interest agreements, which are necessary to do really the structural changes are in place. Communication is up and running this week. So now this week, basically, everybody knows where changes are, where we do the reductions and we have full transparency. It's also now the time where all social instruments are available for all employees who want to take that. And we have started already in the first quarter with a so-called part-time retirement program and the acceptance rate is actually very high. So we are very satisfied with it.
So overall, when it comes to FTE reduction in changes, we are making very nice progress, so everything according to plan. And more importantly also is that on the IT side, when it comes to AI use cases, which are also an important element to not only increase customer satisfaction, but also improve our efficiency, we have some very nice progress there.
So your restructuring costs came lower than initially guided for in during the plan. Can you explain what's the reason because it's very early into the process and what actually was overestimated?
Well, it's just a matter of fact that whenever you prepare the detailed plans and you think about who in which area is now really eligible for certain instruments. It's just that we realize that there might be in some points, less reductions necessary than in others, and it comes cheaper. It's just a mixture of a bottom-up versus a top-down estimate at the beginning. There's still a little bit to come because there are some, also, restructuring fees, which might be booked next year, but we definitely will stay below our original number.
And then on cost on the FX mortgages. I think we are at the end of this saga. Maybe can you give us the latest updates on what you expect in terms of the provisioning? And could there be any reversals as well?
Well, the latter one, I do not believe, but I take pleasant surprises. But I mean, we always said that quarter-by-quarter, we would see less provisioning, and we will also see provisioning most likely in the third and the fourth quarter. But the clear target is also to close the story, as I said before. And it seems to be that this is a realistic assumption.
There was some news yesterday about this fund in Germany, EUR 2.3 billion. Were you part of this as well? Is there any...
We are part of it. Also, I have to say that this fund was built up in a time where Commerzbank was rather in big difficulties. It was shortly after the financial crisis. Everybody remembers that. We were in the middle of the Dresdner Bank integration. So our volumes have been much lower. We talk here about a higher double-digit number. And we took note of the ruling, but we also now wait what happens next. There is a potential of an appeal. And it's also just a onetime effect. So we also take positive onetime effects, but we just wait and see how things are.
What will be the time line on this?
Well, actually, it depends now -- I mean now the Berlin authorities, the Ministry of Finance needs to think about whether they do an appeal. We all assume that they will do an appeal, but it's their decision and it will go on the next level. And so we all need to stay tuned on that. But I think it's also important to keep in mind that this is a onetime effect and nothing more.
So clearly, Europe have turned the base on. Moving to asset quality. You raised a little bit the guidance with the -- of the full year to EUR 850 million with the plan. And you've done EUR 300 million or you booked EUR [indiscernible] million as of first half. Are there any concerns that there will be higher provisions coming in the second part of the year? Maybe you can link that to tariffs as well, if there's any stress there.
No. I think everything is developing exactly as we assumed so. Why I'm always talking about a floor when it comes to NII, I would say it's fair to say that we are talking about a cap when it comes to our risk guidance, if everything is developing as planned. It's just, I think, why do we not adjust that in the moment is just because we know there's a third quarter to come, and there is a very long fourth quarter to come, which always has a higher risk result normally than the other quarters because it basically lasts until mid-February. So it's just that we feel very comfortable with the guidance.
Yes. Moving on to the capital side. Your payout ratio is 100%. This year is even higher when you adjust for the restructuring costs. And with that, your CET1 is kind of stand still, which is a good problem to have. In your discussions with the ECB, I know it's a bit early already doing a lot of buyback and so on. But do you feel you can actually break this 100% on reported earnings, but on underlying to speed up the convergence towards your CET1 because that's an important part of your RoTE target, I understand.
Well, I think we've made good progress in our capital return. When you look on the past years, we are now a very steady dividend payer with a steadily increasing dividend, and we intend to keep it like that. We now have done or collected some experience on the share buybacks. The next one, we said that is due to come. We have applied for EUR 1 billion. And so therefore, we really focus on the things we want to deliver now. And then when it comes to -- I mean, the plan for 2025 is pretty clear. And when it comes to 2026, I think we take it in a step-wise approach and see how things are developing.
And can you help us maybe on the mix of the cash components and the buyback? This is something a bit wide in the range. How do you think about it?
Well, I mean, we have now applied already for EUR 1 billion. If you keep in mind that we said that we want to pay out our net income before restructuring and after AT1, you know that there's still quite a number which you have to pay out. And I think we will think about it in November, December, what the right mix is. There will be clearly, again, a share buyback component in it. And our target clearly is to have a steady dividend and a steadily increasing dividend. But we also will be cautious to not increase dividend too much and then face the risk that we have to reduce it in the years to come. So that will be the interplay.
Clear. Now in terms of the regulation on the capital side, the German banks came surprisingly higher in terms of RWA inflation on the outflow 2033 into the Pillar 3 latest report end of June. What are the discussions you have now with the Central Bank in terms of rating of corporate -- non-rated corporate semis? And are you confident to mitigate a large part of those?
I think that is the absolute objective. We also -- as you know that we are -- all European banks are in constant debate with the regulator and other institutions to think about whether also in light of what's happening in the U.S., whether we anyhow should not rethink the Basel regulation still out there. So that is an ongoing debate. And I mean, we focus on the moment on the short-term things, but we keep the midterm things in mind. But we think there are also good arguments to reconsider Basel.
Maybe a bit -- getting technically a bit, but on the SRT part, it was also part of your capital optimization. So where are you in this program? And are you still confident to push as much as part of the capital efficiency?
Yes. I mean it's in the moment, it's something also which is attractive given the cost attached to it, and we are planning to do something in either third or the fourth quarter. So our plans have not changed. We have also made it very clear that it's part of our momentum strategy. And besides that, we are also very active in lobbying for the securitization file, which is currently in debate at the European level. And I think it's very important that we see progress there because it would be a real chance for Europe if we have I would say more securitization because if you compare it to the U.S., we still have a lot of volumes that could be done, and we think it would really help when it comes to the investment programs of Europe and Germany.
And then I mean, the German are clearly pushing as well the agenda of the saving investment union and more financial integration in Europe. What's on the ground and what's really actually is pushed. Do you think this is aligned with actions and there will be a key play on this?
I mean I said the securitization file is now out, and it's now in discussion and in review with the different institutions. And we -- there was just a conference yesterday in Frankfurt organized by the banking association together with also representatives of the EU to make sure that we are heard because it's a good starting point, and it's great that there is a willingness of the EU to move forward with respect to the savings and investment Union.
And the securitization topic is probably one of the most efficient measures. And therefore, it's good that I have started with that. But the proposal which we have now is something we still need to improve to be really effective and to really create more volume. And that's what all the debates are on the moment. But I also understand there has been this French, German meeting between the 2 governments that -- also France and Germany really want to push that together with Denmark to make sure that by the end of the year, we have something in place.
It's good to hear. And just for the audience, we have a keynote speaker later on, Christian Lindner, who will be talking about more German and growth in Europe and see if this agenda is going ahead. Maybe we'll finish where we started about interactions with your key shareholder. And in terms of the share buyback, so this is fresh news, 29% and there's always a risk that mechanically goes above 30%, then they automatically have to do make a bid and so on. How that impacts your thinking about the buyback, if at all?
Not at all because, I mean, they are professionals. They know exactly what we do. It's not coming like a surprise that we do a EUR 1 billion share buyback. And then at a certain point in time, we take back the shares. That is something everybody can plan with. And if you do not want to accidentally move above the 30%, there are clear measures in place, which you can take to prevent that from happening. And otherwise, they would be pushed into a mandatory offer, which I think they do not want. And I have my trust in the professional teams of UniCredit that this will not happen.
Brilliant. Do you have any closing remarks?
No. I mean we are very eager to deliver for the rest of the year. We're very positive. And we think we are on a very good path delivering even more shareholder value.
Fantastic. Thank you very much, Bettina.
Thank you.
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Commerzbank — Bank of America 30th Annual Financials CEO Conference 2025
Commerzbank — Bank of America 30th Annual Financials CEO Conference 2025
🎯 Kernbotschaft
- Fokus: Management betont Umsetzung des „28“-Plans und will Commerzbank als wertschaffendes Stand‑alone-Unternehmen weiterführen.
- UniCredit: Großaktionär liefert kein konkretes Übernahmeangebot; bei aktuellen Bewertungen sieht das Management keinen sinnvollen Deal.
- Makro: Fiskalstimulus in Deutschland ist positiv, wesentliche Realwirkungen erwartet das Management primär ab 2026.
⚡ Strategische Highlights
- Wachstum: Kreditwachstum (H1 +8%) und Nettoprovisionen treiben die Performance; Mittelstands- und Firmenkunden bleiben Kernfokus.
- Kostendisziplin: Ziel C/I 57% 2025, 50% 2028; FTE‑Programme und Verhandlungen mit Betriebsrat laufen, Restrukturierungskosten voraussichtlich niedriger als geplant.
- Kapital & Tech: Antrag für EUR 1 Mrd. Buyback, stetige Dividende, Fokus auf IT/AI‑Use‑Cases; SRT und Verbriefungsagenda zur Kapitaloptimierung aktiv verfolgt.
🆕 Neue Informationen
- UniCredit‑Status: Anteil ist jetzt voll offenbart (~29%); Vorstand verlangt konkrete, nummerische Vorschläge für jede Transaktionsprüfung.
- FX‑Provisionsende: Management erwartet Auslaufen der FX‑Belastungen bis Ende Jahr.
- Einmaleffekte: Gerichtliche Fonds‑Entscheidung (≈EUR 2,3 Mrd. Thema) bleibt offen; mögliche weitere Schritte auf Ebene Staat/Appeal.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Deposit‑Beta: Nachfrage zu Wettbewerbsdruck und Stickiness nach sogenannten „Attacker“ Kampagnen; Management nennt Floor ≈EUR 8 Mrd., Wirkung erst nach 6‑Monats‑Laufzeiten beurteilbar.
- mBank/Polen: Diskussion zu konservativen NII‑Annahmen, Wachstumspotenzial in Asset & Wealth; FX‑Risiken thematisiert, aber rückläufig.
- Risiken: Analysten fragten zu RWA‑Effekten, SRT‑Timing und möglichen zusätzlichen Risikoaufwendungen in H2; Management bleibt bei Guidance (Jahresrisikovorsorge ≈EUR 850 Mio.).
📌 Bottom Line
- Bewertung: Call bestätigt: Plan ist intakt, operativ Momentum vorhanden, Kapitalrückführung ist Teil der Strategie. Kurzfristige Risiken (Depositenwettbewerb, RWA‑/Regulatorik, verbleibende FX‑Aufwände) bleiben, erscheinen aber beherrschbar; für Aktionäre bleibt der Case Wachstum plus hohe Ausschüttungen bei klaren Ausführungsbedingungen.
Commerzbank — Barclays 23rd Annual Global Financial Services Conference
1. Question Answer
Okay. Thank you very much for joining us for this presentation. So my name is Flora Bocahut. I co-head the European Banks Research here at Barclays. I'm very delighted to have with us Carsten Schmitt, Commerzbank CFO. Thank you for being here.
Thanks for having me.
So we are actually going to start with a couple of questions to the audience. The first question is what would cause you to become more positive on Commerzbank shares? First, the better NII; two, stronger fees; three, a better cost control, better asset quality, greater capital return or stronger German macro. You should have a kind of a phone in front of you where you can put your answer, and we'll give it a few seconds before we see the outcome.
Stronger German macro, I guess this one is not super surprising, followed by better NII. I guess, I don't know if you want to comment, but I would argue, rather expected answers, right?
Yes, I would have hoped for number 7, which would have said, all of the above. But I think the starting point on the stronger German macro is clearly also the main theme in all investor conversations and has been since we've seen the government indicate very strong investment packages beginning of the year.
So naturally, this is what's now expected to sim through into economy, into actual demand and then also in further growth. And being the bank that we are, being very present in the corporate landscape and especially in the small and medium-sized Mittelstand segment, which is our home turf. Clearly, this would have an immediate effect. So not surprised about this one, and happy to dive into that a little bit more later.
Yes. I think you know what, we'll hold up just 1 second before we ask the second question. Let's actually move on here on the German macro question. This is actually the first thing I wanted to ask you because to your point and to the audience outcome here, this is a very important element of the investment case indeed on Commerzbank.
So maybe can you tell us, first, what are you seeing on the ground lately in terms of corporate activity, in terms of loan demand? Do you see it picking up already? And how well geared is Commerzbank to this potential tailwind from the German macro?
Yes. When talking about that, then I should start with the German economy at the moment. And we've been pretty much flat the last years. Even for this year, the current growth of 0.2%, which our Chief Economist sees is pretty much a flat line.
We expect this to actually spring to life with the investment packages that have been announced to 1.4% GDP next year. Half of that actually coming from the investment packages and when I'm talking about the investment packages, what are we talking about? We're talking about EUR 0.5 billion -- sorry, EUR 0.5 trillion in investments in defense specifically set aside by the government and then also EUR 0.5 trillion that is going into infrastructure investment.
And I always like to say that there's also a third piece to this, which is not seen so clearly, and that is effectively freeing the general budget that the government has by carving out these two special pots because that also opens up spending on the social side and on the, let's say, regular household items in a much swifter form.
And in terms of timing, all of this has been announced pretty early on sort of with the government change we've seen in the beginning of the year. Commitment was in early and strong, and we've seen these packages land, go through official household meetings. And the interesting question is, of course, when do we see this hitting the ground with our customers? When do we see this actually in business in our books?
And our expectation is that we see first impacts of this end of this year and to actually materialize also in our books in the beginning of next year. That's also pretty much what we're hearing from our customers. So when we have one-to-one conversations with them, generally, there is a quite long period that you need in order to get through all the procurement processes. Some of the bureaucratic red tape is being cut, but still, there's an expectation that this takes up to spring next year to actually create demand in the order books of the corporates.
And with that, we would then also see downstream activity in the relevant sectors and with covering especially the smaller ones, we would expect to see, first and foremost, activity in the trade finance space, then likely in the financing area, so loan demand, but also when it comes to the trade chains in FX and hedging products, of course.
Okay. No, very clear. I think maybe before we get into some more questions, let's this time ask the second question to the audience, please.
So this time, we're looking at what you're most concerned about for Commerzbank. Is it that weaker earnings, weaker capital, lower distributions, the regulatory or legal risk? Is it the political risk? Or is it M&A risk? So I'll let you guys take a few seconds to answer with the phone in front of you, and then we can have a quick look at the results.
So we have a majority of M&A risk with 44%. And then we have weaker earnings and political risk. Okay, interesting. I think we need to discuss a bit maybe the M&A angle right after.
Before we dive into this, let's go through some of the elements in the P&L. I think NII is something we have to discuss, obviously, is your main source of revenue. This is something that came up in the first question as an element -- a positive element of the investment case. So in Q2, you raised the outlook for the NII this year to EUR 8 billion. You were pointing to that as being a floor on the earnings call.
Within the NII bridge, you have the replicating portfolio uplift, you have the deposit beta and the volume growth. So maybe can you just elaborate on the prospects for your NII, whether there is potentially upside risk, especially in H2 and any key sensitivities that we need to consider there?
Yes. Happy to go through the NII. So yes, for us, NII represents roughly 2/3 of the income line when it comes to distribution of NII versus commission income. So naturally, NII is important for us to manage. And as we said, we started into the year when we announced our strategy with an expectation that we would end up between EUR 7.7 billion and EUR 7.9 billion this year. I would say the interest rate landscape has not necessarily changed. So the assumptions we put out for this year and also for the next years are still intact with regard to our strategic assumptions. But what we've seen in the first half of the year is predominantly actually effects coming from management of our interest rate position.
You mentioned the replication portfolio. We have around EUR 260 billion in deposits, out of which EUR 200 billion roughly can be modeled. And out of those, EUR 147 billion are modeled and are effectively what we call the replication portfolio. So in essence, we take the very short-dated deposits that we're having and model them in terms of maturity structure and invest them.
And from the management that we've seen actually in this portfolio and also from managing the margin side on our deposits, we have actually gone to a point that at this stage, we were able to upgrade the expectation for the year. So mostly coming from a lower deposit beta. We started into the year with a 39% beta coming out of last year, expected 42% as an average for this year. But what we've also seen in the beginning of the year is that the management of our positions of the deposits of the margins made us end up basically still at 39% for the first half. So we only expect a moderate increase in the second half, if at all.
The current interest rate landscape naturally is supporting us. We saw a decline since last year. We lost, on average, if we look at the deposit rate, 1.5%, close to 1.5% last year to the expectation this year and still managed to keep the portfolio pretty stable. So coming from EUR 8.3 billion NII last year to EUR 8 billion this year.
In addition to that, we will have a few effects from net fair value. So some hedge derivatives will also pay into this. So in total, we actually see EUR 8 billion plus EUR 300 million coming out of net fair value. So in total, actually, we've kept this pretty stable.
And if you're asking to upside risk, we called it the floor because we are very confident that actually the NII contribution in itself actually will end up where it does. And we modeled all of this, even expecting a further rate cut of the ECB to 175. So call that a bit of a sort of upside potential that we would have. At least it strengthens our EUR 8 billion together with the margin management.
So that's how we're looking into this year. And then we'll likely end up with a very strong, i.e., stable portfolio despite the strong reduction in the deposit rate.
And that makes a lot of sense. I'm not going to discuss fees yet, but we can definitely come back also to the other part of your revenue base at a later stage.
I think let's move maybe further down the P&L and get into the cost story. So you target cost of EUR 6.9 billion for this year. Again, can you maybe help us understand what are the driving parts here on your cost base? And any levers that you think you can pull to manage the cost base towards 2026 and '27?
So going into the year, we announced an upgrade to the strategy, which also entails managing the cost base this year, but also going into '28. So the natural biggest part of our cost base is effectively personnel cost, where we see a constant uplift from annual agreements in the tariffs, if you want so.
But also on top of this, we expected a roughly 5% incline of costs for this year. The strategy foresees that we manage this cost base actively by addressing cost factors to go into sourcing, shoring, investing into our system landscape and also into simplifying processes. So effectively on our path towards '28, we're fueling our growth strategy by investing a bit more and only slightly increasing cost over time, but actually keeping it relatively stable even compared to the regular increases you would see on an annual basis.
And looking at '25 specifically, we originally entered the year with an expectation to end up at EUR 6.8 billion in cost. I can say that from an operational perspective, the bank is running extremely stably in terms of costs and actually in a very disciplined manner, even undercutting this partially, but we also see a few additional items that we didn't anticipate. And on our end, I commented on this in the Q2 results call, we have actually one larger position, which is linked to longer-term share-based compensation, which given the development of our share price, we've more than doubled since beginning of the year, actually leaves the cost mark that we normally would manage by balancing that out with other costs sort of disciplined items.
But at this point in time, it's pretty much a triple-digit million amount for deferred compensation, which, if you want so, is a positive problem to have because naturally, there's more income coming in, triggering less of a long-term incentive payment in the end, but that came on top. So we guided to slightly upwards to EUR 6.9 billion now. Still aim to manage that. But again, we're running pretty stably in our costs and also do this over the next years.
I can confirm it's a good problem to have for sure that I'm sure others would like to have as well. Okay. Quickly moving to the provision outlook before we ask the next questions to the audience.
So on provisions, I would say when we look at Germany, there is obviously the tailwinds that you discussed from 2026. There is also all the exporting companies and these discussions around tariffs. So I guess, what's the outlook in your view for your provisioning impact on the P&L. Should we expect potentially some slight deterioration in the short term before an improvement in the longer term?
Yes. So again, I have to start with what we've set ourselves as a target or an ambition level until '28 and we have a pretty strong incline. We expect 7% commission income growth every single year until '28, which is quite a strong statement. You see this as being testament to our strategy aiming to better differentiate between the different income lines and actually focus a lot on commission income.
The underlying activities that we're having to fuel this are coming out of the customer segments. So on the personal customer side, we are shifting a lot into asset management business and activity, a more differentiated customer and advisory model when it comes to private banking, wealth management, et cetera.
But we're also increasing the running sort of commission income by addressing our -- for example, our cost model for current accounts. So there's a multitude of topics that is coming in on that side.
And on the corporate client side, we're naturally looking at commission income that is linked to loan business. A lot of that is linked to the capital markets business where we're advising customers.
And the reason why I'm saying this is, the first half of the year actually has shown us a strong incline of our commission income by 8% already in the first half. So we had a good start to the strategy cycle, if you want so. We definitely benefited from the activity that we saw in the market, especially when it comes to commission income on the personal customer side and the asset management side. But we also see a steady incline in the base fees that we're having.
So for the next years, clearly, we want to run with that run rate, so the 7%. From the expectation that we're having regarding the business activity, I don't see any reason why this couldn't sort of come in and also don't see a big risk of that declining. So the current run rate actually gives us a good head start to the strategy cycle.
Okay. So that's super helpful on the fees side of the story and that complete the NII answer from the floor. I wanted to move to the credit risk angle of things in the P&L just to also maybe remind us of your outlook there and whether we should expect any potential deterioration on your cost of risk.
Yes. So cost of risk for 25 is EUR 850 million or less, which we've guided for. At this point in time in the year, we stand at EUR 300 million coming out of the first half.
So what we are seeing in the portfolio is we generally have a relatively low cost of risk variance in our portfolio. We're running at a cost of risk of 20 basis points. Even averaging this through the cycle, we're in the higher 20s. So overall, pretty low.
And that's also what we're seeing in the portfolio at the moment, relatively stable portfolio, no specific outliers, nothing that would be unexpected and good distribution, if you want so, between larger medium-sized and more smaller cases. So at the moment, the portfolio doesn't really indicate to us that we should expect more. If at all, we are cautiously looking at the run rate at the moment. And as the CFO, I'm clearly hoping that we would end up a bit below the EUR 850 million that we've planned for, but currently, we're trending actually in a proper way for that.
The economic development because we had that discussion in the beginning regarding impulse, packages, et cetera, from the German government actually should, if at all, be coming in as a support for this generally positive trend in the economy once it kicks in, should definitely also have a supportive action in our portfolio. So you don't see me concerned about the current trajectory we're having on the risk side.
Understood. Let's move actually to the questions to the audience again. This time, I would like to ask you a question about the RoTE development for Commerzbank. So how do you expect Commerzbank's RoTE to develop over the next couple of years? So that would be in 2027 compared to 2025. Do you think it will be significantly higher, modestly higher, in line, modestly lower or significantly lower? So we let you answer this question, and then we'll look at it ourselves actually.
Modestly higher, okay. That is -- I would say, it is -- I mean it's a good answer. The good point is you have 80% of the audience that thinks it's going to go in the right direction. So that's a very strong outcome. If I look at your targets to be fair, you do have targets that would be rather towards the significantly higher portion. So -- but yes, it's a good outcome already.
Let's -- before we discuss it in more detail, let's move to the next question, please, question 4. How do you see potential risks to Commerzbank's capital and dividend? Do you think there's upside risk because earnings will be stronger, upside risk on lower regulatory requirements, downside risk on weaker earnings, downside risk on higher regulatory requirements or downside risk because of potential M&A? So we'll give it a few seconds again if looking at the results.
So we have a majority of upside risk, which again is a good news and better earnings. So that's logical, I would argue, and a good outcome. And then we have also a few concerns on the downside risk from either earnings or acquisitions.
Yes. So also a picture that I would have expected actually from the conversations that I'm usually having. So I think the upside risk on better earnings is also mostly linked to the expectation regarding a stimulus package economy in Germany and then, therefore, potentially a bit of a better trajectory than what we've seen.
Also, we've upgraded our expectations this year, not only for NII, but also for our results for the end of the year, but we have not amended any of the future targets. So we are also aware that the '25 ambition level has been increased, but the following, not yet. So I think that makes perfect sense.
On weaker earnings, I think that's a classical risk when it comes to capital and dividends then. I should say at this point, I mean, we have a dividend or capital distribution policy of 100% of our net results for all of the next years. So it will scale clearly sort of with the net result that we're having. This year, we will technically be above the 100% distribution, given that we calculate before any restructuring charges, which we will see this year. So I think actually, it's just fair that this would swing.
And then in terms of acquisitions, I mean, I can only comment on what we would potentially actively do and any acquisition and M&A, we're looking at from our side would always be to enhance the business case. So we would be looking at M&A activity to the tune of what you have seen us doing in the last 2, 3 years. So that's usually in the range of, call it, 10, 15, 20 basis points of the capital, so something that we would look at, if there's a product that's out there that's contributing to our strategy. If there's something that's commercially aiding us to achieve the '28 targets. So I don't see that as a downside risk because we have the choice on that end.
So on M&A, you're basically saying you're looking at bolt-on deals rather than any potentially transforming operation here?
At the moment, I would say that's really the point, given that we are very focused on implementing our strategy. So clearly, in a position that we've been granted a lot of credibility by the market once we had announced the strategy and also have run through the first 2 quarters, demonstrating the strength that is coming with it. But clearly, we're in the third quarter now of a 16-quarter strategy cycle. So naturally, first and foremost, we want to focus on further strengthening the current business case that we're having.
And as we had the RoTE question just before, I mean, we are currently sort of having quarters that show a double-digit return on tangible equity. And for the year, we aim to close, close to this. But target is 15% in '28. So we have an ambitious plan ahead of us, which we think is realistic, but anything that we're doing is then contributing to that.
Yes. Let me follow up actually on that point you're making on the RoTE and also following the answers we saw here from the audience.
So to your point, you delivered an RoTE that is 11% in H1. Again, when we exclude restructuring costs here, you have in Q2 results reaffirmed your target of an RoTE of 9.6% for the full year. That does point to a more cautious outlook for the second half of this year.
So maybe that would be the first question, why be a bit more cautious on H2 versus H1. And then you talked about the target for '28 at 15%. Can you remind us the key drivers, the key levers to get there? And maybe what you think the consensus may be missing on that point, given it is a little bit below at 13.5% here.
Yes. So let's start then with this year and the second half of the year. I think the first half has been really strong in terms of return also because we've seen a strong development on the income side, clearly.
What we expect for the second half of the year, though, there's a few factors that usually come in, in the second half. I mean first of all, there is still pressure going on when it comes to the deposit market. While NII is guided upwards, there is still risk that we see slightly more pressure in the second half than we saw in the first. So that's one point.
Second point is that on the cost side, naturally, the second half of the year usually has an incline, especially in the beginning of a strategy cycle where a lot of the investments that we have dedicated actually for implementing the strategy also requires ramping up in terms of resources. So often, you see that coming in, in the second half of the year.
There's a third portion, which is relating to our Polish subsidiary. As we are running through the last year as we expect of provisions, we have to put out for the FX-linked mortgage portfolios in Poland, we still expect provisions to be built in the second half of the year, which is also drawing down a bit.
So all in all, you see there's nitty-gritty pieces that are impacting the second half of the year, which is why we see a slightly lower full year RoTE. But overall, actually pretty much in line with what we expected on the trajectory to '28.
And on the 15% for '28, the main driver is the strategic change that we had. It's a growth strategy. So it's all around extending the top line. It's all around transforming the bank. So there's a lot coming in on that end. And I will discuss also over the next years, this will be one of the strong contributors. But our customer business and also extending the portfolio size clearly is exactly what we're looking at the next years in order to push sort of the income line there.
When it comes to the equity side, I spoke about the 100% return. So when we're looking into the next years, we also want to end up at a capital ratio of 13.5%, which gives us, as we feel, a sufficient capitalization, also slightly above the regulatory requirement. But at a point in time where we can operate freely and then also provide a decent return. So we approach this from two sides, income side, through cost management, clearly, but then also from the capital base, which will be target 13.5%.
Okay. I think I'm just going to ask you a question also. We haven't touched about this yet, but about mBank, which is your Polish subsidiary, there's been lots of talks in Poland.
I think there are several things we need to discuss. One is the news we had a couple, 3 weeks ago now, around new taxes. So that would be one question. I guess there is also the FX mortgage related burden on your P&L, where do we stand there and shall we expect some more in 2026? And then generally speaking, the macro outlook for Poland? So maybe if you could tell us a little bit about those elements for your Polish bank.
Yes. Let me start with what concerned us most the last year's in mBank and there was working off the burdens coming from the FX mortgage portfolios. Most of that was Swiss Franc, but we also had a few other currencies in there, similar to most, if not all of the other banks also in the Polish market. So we saw quite high provisions coming in mostly to settling lawsuits coming in.
At this point in time, we had close to EUR 1 billion of additional provisions last year, and we expect this year with significantly less. We built EUR 286 million of additional provisions in mBank in the first half of this year, but on a declining pace. So also for Q3 and 4, I expect this to be less each quarter. And then in total, we expect this to cease this year, so that we have a well-provisioned portfolio where mBank is also actively going into settlements.
And I'm usually looking at three parameters. One is the active portfolio, which is pretty much gone. So we're not only looking at what's coming in from the mature portfolio. So incoming lawsuits or claims actually at the courts, which is coming down as expected and then also the number of settlements we're actively seeking. So all of that basically means we will see the end of this, this year. That's what we expect.
And then diving a bit into the Polish economy and what impact we might see from further taxation. Polish economy actually is running pretty strong at 3% plus. And as much as I can see and feel whenever I'm in Poland, actually, it's a very vibrant place. You can really feel that there is a lot of positive expectation in terms of development in the next years, and mBank is perfectly positioned in this.
With a strengthened capital base with having worked off the FX portfolio soon, we're in a good position to further grow the business. And the taxation you mentioned, which is indicated at this point, but not fully acknowledged or fully agreed to and ratified, we'll see a banking tax coming in for the sector.
We are currently going through the calculation what this means. I don't expect this to be a radical change at all in the strategy. mBank is actually currently reformulating its strategy, and we'll have a Capital Markets Day in a few weeks. So we will see sort of the future path of the bank there. And we will take into consideration what this means. Don't expect it to be significant to a degree that we have to change the strategy. And neither on mBank side and definitely not on our side with regard to mBank being a core part of our strategy at Commerzbank on group level. So that's the Polish answer.
Okay. Thank you. Before we open actually to Q&A, we'll have time for 1, maybe 2 questions. Just if we could finish quickly with the ARS questions, please, we have 2 more. We'll need your help on this.
So question number 5, how would you view significant acquisitions for the group? You think it would be very positive, marginally positive, marginally negative, very negative or you would prefer no M&A and the capital to be returned to shareholders. So we'll give you a bit of time here. It'll be interesting after everything we've discussed.
So I'm not sure how to read this one actually. It's rather mixed right? So there is a majority of positive.
Well, it's at least not too negative. So that's something. I think I mean we had this partially already, right? So we're looking into whatever sort of M&A makes sense for the business case. And given that we're returning pretty much as much as we, I think, can do in line with the regulatory sort of acknowledgment with 100%, I think we've covered five easily.
Yes. And the last question, please, question number 6, what's your view on the 2028 strategy and targets that have been set by Commerzbank in February. You have the remainder of those targets in the question. Do you think the strategy makes sense? And do you expect management will deliver on the target set? You think the strategy is not ambitious enough and they can do better than those targets? You think it is ambitious and the targets will be difficult to reach? You would have liked to see more cost cutting? You would have liked to see more distribution to shareholders? You would like to see a change in the geographical footprint of Commerzbank.
So we'll let you answer that one, and then we can move to one quick question from the audience, if any.
So that's a very spread outcome again. I mean the good point is there is not anything that you didn't do that they would have liked to see, right? You did right on the cost cutting, right on the distribution. They are not big fans of change in the geographical footprint is what I take from this, but it's a rather split outcome, actually.
Yes. I'm actually happy to see this outcome, quite frankly, because looking not too far back, I think the answer to these questions would have likely been totally different. So we've seen quite a step change in our ambition level and what we aim to achieve and also what the market sort of credits us to achieve over the last year, quite frankly. So first 3 points, I very happily take.
That's totally fair. We have time for one quick question, if any, from the audience. So if any of you would like to ask Carsten a question, please let us know.
No one. Then conscious of time, I think I'm just going to leave it there. But Carsten, thank you very much. Thank you for attending our presentation, and thank you for this fireside chat.
Yes. Again, thank you for having me. Thanks for the audience.
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Commerzbank — Barclays 23rd Annual Global Financial Services Conference
Commerzbank — Barclays 23rd Annual Global Financial Services Conference
📣 Kernbotschaft
- Kurzfassung: CFO Carsten Schmitt betont, dass Commerzbank auf einem stabilen operativen Kurs liegt: NII als „Floor“ bei EUR 8 Mrd. plus ~EUR 0,3 Mrd. aus Net Fair Value, verstärkte Kommissionsdynamik (+8% H1) und ein bewusstes Investitionsprofil in die Transformation. Makro-Impulse aus deutschen Investitionspaketen sollten Ende 2025/Anfang 2026 sichtbar werden.
🎯 Strategische Highlights
- NII-Fokus: NII ~2/3 der Erträge; aktives Margin- und Replikationsportfoliomanagement (Deposit-Beta H1 ~39%) sichert die Guidance.
- Wachstum & Gebühren: Ziel: +7% p.a. Kommissionswachstum bis 2028; Ausbau Asset Management und Advisory im Privat- sowie Firmenkundengeschäft.
- Kosten & Kapital: Investitionen in Systeme/Prozesse bei gleichzeitigem Kostendisziplin-Pfad; Ziel CET1 ~13,5% und Ausschüttungspolitik: 100% des Nettoergebnisses.
🔭 Neue Informationen
- Timing Makro: Regierungspakete (je ~EUR 0,5 Bio. für Verteidigung und Infrastruktur) sollen laut Management Ende 2025 ins Kundengeschäft und Anfang 2026 in Kredit-/Trade-Aktivitäten durchschlagen.
- Aktualisierte Punkte: Kostenanstieg 2025 auf EUR 6,9 Mrd. (u.a. höhere latente Aktienvergütungen), mBank: FX-Mortgage-Provisionsbedarf geht deutlich zurück und soll dieses Jahr weitgehend auslaufen.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Der Chat bestätigt das operative Stabilitätsbild: NII-Ground, beschleunigende Gebührenerlöse und planbare Risiken. H2 bleibt aufgrund Kostendynamik, Polen-Folgen und Deposit-Markt vorsichtig, aber Kapitalpolitik (100% Ausschüttung, 13,5% CET1-Ziel) und nur bolt‑on M&A reduzieren Verwässerungsrisiken — für Aktionäre bleibt das Profil wachstumsorientiert, jedoch auf realistische Zwischenziele ausgerichtet.
Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our earnings call. In the first half of this year, we have achieved the best operating results in the history of Commerzbank.
Based on this excellent performance and the momentum we have created, we raised our targets and expectations for 2025. Hence, Carsten and I look forward to walking you through the numbers and performance drivers, including our outlook. I will concentrate on H1 and the overall strategic and macro picture, Carsten will focus on the performance of the second quarter.
The financial dynamics and earnings momentum continue, and our teams have developed the best-ever operating result in the first half of the year. The 23% increase is especially in light of the macro impact a strong proof for the commitment of our staff at Commerzbank and mBank as well as for the trust of our clients.
The second point of my summary addresses the very good progress in the implementation of our momentum strategy. I will come back to this in a moment. Let me highlight that we are running according to plan regarding the negotiations of our restructuring program. This is thanks to an extremely good cooperation with the Works Council, which demonstrates the high degree of common interest.
Third point of my summary is about capital return. Already in mid-July, we have applied for the next share buyback of up to EUR 1 billion. This demonstrates our unchanged strong focus on returning capital to our shareholders. The first point is about macro. The investment program of the German government will provide us with ample business opportunities. It translates into a tailwind for our financial development going forward, especially combined with a somewhat more hawkish outlook of ECB. And this leads me to my last point, we raised our outlook in 2025 for net interest income and net results.
Let's have a closer look at the key financials of the first half of 2025. Based on 30% higher revenues, including less burdens from the provisions for FX loans and mBank, we have reached a record operating result of EUR 2.4 billion. This is 23% higher than last year and 36% higher than in 2023.
This strong result comes with unchanged high cost discipline. With our cost/income ratio of 56% in the first 6 months of the year, we are well on track towards our full year target of 57%. Bottom line and when you exclude the restructuring charges, our very good performance is reflected in a return of 11.1% on tangible equity. Hence, we are very confident to meet our target of 9.6% for the full year.
The strong revenue development is also visible when looking at net interest income and fee income. NII, again, have proven to be very resilient in the decreasing rate environment. We managed to keep it at a high level and increase our full year guidance from EUR 7.8 billion to EUR 8 billion. And in anticipation of your foreseeable question, I would say, yes, EUR 8.0 billion is probably the floor of our NII expectations for 2025.
On net commission income, we are very satisfied with the strong 8% growth we have achieved in the first 6 months of the year. Driven by the strong securities business in PSBC Germany, this outstanding growth makes us very confident that we will achieve our growth target of 7% in NCI for the full year.
Strong client business, which is in particular reflected in NCI forms the backbone of our momentum strategy. All 3 customer divisions grew significantly in fee income, 4% in Corporate Clients, 10% in PSBC Germany and 14% in mBank lead to the overall 8% growth in the first half of the year. I was very pleased with the 8% loan growth in Corporate Clients. This clearly helped to mitigate the impact from lower rates on deposit NII. The lower reported revenues from the net fair value result in Corporate Clients and primarily from legacy positions and our offset in net interest income.
Now, many Mittelstand clients are still hesitant when it comes to the deployment of investments in Germany, client interactions are at a higher level, which provides a good pipeline for future revenues. And this leads me to the recent achievements with our Momentum strategy. With our value-accretive growth strategy, we are heading to our 15% return on tangible equity in 2028 and plan the full distribution of profits for every year.
On this journey, we have made further tangible progress in the execution of strategic measures. First, we are completely on track with the restructuring negotiations. This is a further milestone to reach our targeted cost/income ratio of 50% by 2028. All remaining negotiations with the works council about the detail of the restructuring should be finalized by September. And we will enter the next phase of strategy implementation and value creation.
Second, we have successfully introduced a new account fee structure for private customers in Germany. Of overall 2.4 million free-of-charge accounts, already more than 1 million customers agreed to the new fee of EUR 4.90 per month. Through the second half of -- though the second half of consent is always harder to get, this is already a significant and tangible contribution to fee income of PSBC.
Third, we have further enhanced our digital trading platform and corporate clients. For example, we have introduced online money market deposits for international clients. With targeted investment in technology, we have increased our market share in FX and interest rate derivatives, which contributes to the revenue growth case of corporate clients.
Of course, the high customer focus, especially in the German Mittelstand is highly appreciated by our clients. According to Finance Magazine's Banking Survey 2025, Commerzbank was once again singled out as best Mittelstand bank. Around 75% of respondents view Commerzbank as the leading bank for the German mid-market sector, which is seen as the backbone of the German economy.
Furthermore, Euro Magazine awarded Comdirect as Best Direct Bank and Commerzbank as best branch-based bank, both for the eighth time in a row. We have finalized the negotiations with the works council regarding our employee share program. We now plan for the rollout of the program in autumn this year. And then every Commerzbank employee will receive shares with a value of around EUR 50 and become shareholder of the bank. Follow-up for 2026 are also already agreed. These successful initiatives are complemented by strong efforts to make further use of AI, which has the potential to be a real game changer, also in banking.
Now, let me briefly update you on our capital return book. With a dividend of EUR 0.65 approved at our AGM in May, we successfully concluded the capital return of EUR 1.7 billion for 2024. For 2025, we target to fully distribute the net result of EUR 2.6 billion before restructuring expenses and after AT1 coupon payments. To ensure a smooth exclusion of the share buybacks for 2025, we have already applied for a first chance of up to EUR 1 billion mid-July.
Overall, we are fully on track to deliver on our capital return target with a steadily increasing dividend every year. I also feel very comfortable with our targets for the year 2026 to 2028 and see potential for further tailwind. So we have made very good progress strategically and financially. Our stand-alone momentum strategy works and pays off. We remain firmly committed to creating value for all our stakeholders, and this includes our new largest shareholder.
However, the shareholding situation with UniCredit is to put it mildly, not ideal as UniCredit is a direct competitor in the German market. We are convinced that the ongoing successful execution of our standalone strategy is the right focus.
And now let's move to macro. The German investment programs are on everyone's lips. Our view is clear. Things are moving in the right direction. The government has already tackled important topics like energy costs, corporate taxes and depreciation. Our defense spending is already increasing, it is now about preparation for the deployment of the infrastructure funds.
German corporates demonstrated strong support with their initiatives made for Germany and an investment spend of more than EUR 600 billion. We, as Commerzbank, are happy to be part of this important joint effort of corporate Germany. All these activities are clearly positive for Germany and for Commerzbank as a leading bank for the Middelstand. Also the sentiment in the German Middelstand is improving, and we have seen the fifth upward revision of the business climate with the recent EFO data from July.
However, Middelstand remains cautious regarding the investment plans in Germany. We do not expect a very visible increase in 2025. There is great potential for 2026, assuming that issues like bureaucracy and the shortage of skilled workers are addressed.
On a net basis, we expect a stimulus to push GDP growth to 1.4% in 2026, despite the expected impact from the tariffs imposed by the U.S. This growth provides us with good tailwinds for our business in 2026. At the same time, we would also benefit from the slightly more hawkish view of the ECB. Our economists now expect ECB rates to bottom out at 2%, it would further increase the confidence in our NII trajectory towers 2028. And this leads me to the raised outlook for 2025.
Based on the strong performance in H1, we increased our outlook for net interest income from EUR 7.8 billion to EUR 8 billion. We also increased our target for the net results from EUR 2.4 billion to EUR 2.5 billion, which translates into EUR 2.9 billion when excluding the restructuring charges. We stick to our cost/income ratio target of 57%. Regarding capital return, we plan for 100% payout based on the net result before restructuring charges in after AT1 coupon payments. And we maintain our expectation for the CET1 ratio of at least 14.5% at the end of this year.
Now, let me hand over to Carsten, who will walk you through the detailed financials of the second quarter. Over to you, Carsten.
Thank you, Bettina, and good morning, everyone. It's also my pleasure to present you record results. A double-digit return on tangible equity before restructuring expenses is a clear proof of the excellent performance of the business. We are clearly well on our way to reach our financial targets for the year, which we have raised again. The CET1 ratio of 14.6% is around 50 basis points lower than in Q1 and fully in line with our target of at least 14.5% by year-end. It reflects our commitment to return more than the net results to our shareholders via share buybacks and dividends for this fiscal year. The quarter's performance is based on 13% higher revenues compared to last year, reaching broadly the same level as the record Q1 of this year.
Net interest income has held up very well and is only slightly lower despite the ECB rate cuts. Net commission income has grown strongly. The net fair value result is slightly negative and on the same level as last year. Positive valuation effects from investments, compensated FX effects from our U.S. dollar AT1 instrument and derivatives valuations. As in Q1, the relatively high other income, excluding FX loan provisions stems largely from a positive hedge results.
Now to net commission income in more detail. Net commission income grew by 10.3% year-on-year with good contributions from all customer segments. Following on an already strong Q1, corporate clients further improved revenues in the FX and bond businesses. Lending grew fee income from the loan origination business. Even trade finance managed a slight increase compared to last year despite the sluggish German economy. This is a clear testament to our close client relationships. Private and small business customers in Germany grew net commission income by a healthy 8.8% compared to last year. Our product areas contributed.
Again, the securities business was the biggest contributor. In particular, Wealth Management performed well and higher transaction volumes in a volatile market helped at comdirect. In the payments business, we see the first effect of the higher account fees, which started to meaningfully contribute to revenues in June.
Let's move on to interest income. In Q2, ECB rates were on average 50 basis points and Polish rates 25 basis points lower than in Q1. Nevertheless, the net interest income is only slightly reduced demonstrating the resilience of our business model. In Corporate Clients, net interest income is up slightly compared with Q1. Lower funding costs and higher income from loans more than compensated, reduced contributions from deposits. The lower funding costs are, however, offset in net fair value from connected hedging derivatives.
In PSBC Germany, net interest income was slightly lower, the reason our early mortgage repayments, which are always highest in the second quarter. This is an internal effect with corresponding gains shown in others in consolidation. Otherwise, the interest income was basically on the same level as in Q1.
In mBank, the lower NII results mainly from a weaker Polish zloty. Lower interest rates were largely compensated by volume growth. In Others & Consolidation, NII is slightly lower. There is, however, an offset in the net fair value results from derivatives. Looking at loan volumes, CC has continued to increase the business with all customer groups.
In total, CC managed to grow the loan book by 8% in the first half. There's been a pickup in investment loan demand in Mittelstand. This is encouraging and includes growing demand from the public sector. PSBC Germany has again slightly grown the mortgage book. In the deposit businesses, we have seen stable volumes and only a small increase of the EBITDA to around 39%, as we have offset the effect of lower ECB rates with strict margin management. At the end of the quarter, we have launched new initiatives to acquire additional deposits in PSBC Germany.
This brings me to the next slide with the outlook for NII and related net fair value results in 2025. We raised our baseline NII outlook from EUR 7.8 billion to around EUR 8 billion for the year. I will now go through the drivers. The replication portfolio has been marginally adjusted by an increase of EUR 2 billion to EUR 147 billion in June, further stabilizing our future interest income. This has no big impact in 2025, where we continue to expect around EUR 400 million uplift from the replication portfolio, but will stabilize NII in later years.
Looking at the ECB rate sensitive positions for 2025, we now assume around EUR 600 million less contribution than last year due to the lower rates. This is based on an average ECB rate of 2.17% for the year and is EUR 100 million improved from our expectations in Q1. Current forwards are higher, and there is, therefore, further upside potential.
With 39%, the Q2 deposit beta was only around 1 percentage point higher than in Q1, thanks to our continued successful margin management. While we expect a higher beta in H2, also, due to our attractive offers for new money, we improved our outlook for the full year to 40%. This would then lead to an NII reduction of around -- of only around EUR 100 million from the deposit beta compared to last year, while we were originally expecting a drag of EUR 300 million. Concerning volumes, we continue to plan for moderate growth in deposits towards the end of the year. Due to the composition of new loans and deposits, we lowered the expected contribution from volume growth from EUR 200 million to around EUR 100 million NII. For mBank, we continue to plan with around EUR 100 million lower NII offset in net fair value.
Given all these factors, we expect NII in H2 to be somewhat below H1, but adding up to at least EUR 8 billion NII for the financial year 2025. When also considering the net fair value results, where we have offsetting positive effects from lower ECB rates, the total rate-related revenues should be on the same level as last year. This would be an excellent result and a good starting point from which we can grow in subsequent years.
So looking beyond 2025 and assuming no further changes in volumes and the current forward rates, we now expect an additional EUR 1.2 billion NII from the replication portfolios in 2028 versus 2025. Most of the EUR 1.2 billion uplift in 2028 comes from the deposit models, but the equity models are also contributing more than EUR 150 million.
In total, the outlook for the contribution from the replication portfolios in 2028 is now around EUR 300 million ahead of our original plan, but please keep in mind that part of this is offset by lower interest rates -- by lower interest income from ECB rate sensitive positions, which is correspondingly reduced when deposits are moved to the replication portfolio. This reduction in volume leads to around EUR 200 million less contribution from these deposits. So we clearly see a potential tailwind, but stick to our outlook for 2028 for the time being.
Now to costs on Slide 19. Operating expenses have been managed in line with our target of a cost/income ratio of around 57% for the year. The cost increase in the group ex-mBank results from generally -- general salary increases and the effect of a higher share price on equity-based variable compensation. The cost increases were partially offset by the cost savings we have realized from our ongoing restructuring and cost optimization measures.
mBank's costs increased by 16% from investments in business growth and FX effects from the stronger zloty compared to the last year. Furthermore, there was a significant increase in the compulsory contributions in Poland already in Q1. We have concluded the detailed cost in FTE planning for the Momentum strategy in the quarter. This has confirmed our cost targets and has resulted in lower required restructuring expenses for the FTE reductions than initially estimated.
So far, we have booked restructuring expenses of EUR 534 million in the first half. The total required restructuring expenses are now expected around EUR 600 million with the remainder to be booked in the second half. The next slide cover the risk result. The risk result comes in at EUR 176 million. Overall, the portfolio has been resilient and developed in line with our expectations. We, therefore, stick to our guidance of a risk result of approximately EUR 850 million in 2025. This quarter's risk result includes the effect of some methodology improvements.
In 2020, with COVID, we introduced top-level adjustments as an overlay to the risk result and have used this approach since then. In 2024, we have started to complement the top level adjustments with collective staging for novel risks. This quarter, we implemented changes in our risk methodology that lead to a higher sensitivity to macroeconomic effects. These include in model adjustments for macro effects, mainly due to U.S. tariffs and the recalibration of our rating methodology for small- and medium-sized corporate customers in PSBC and Corporate Clients.
This has resulted in a EUR 142 million increase of the risk result. At the same time, we have released the remaining EUR 182 million top level adjustments since the COVID issues were either resolved or are now addressed by the updated methodology. So net, we have a release of EUR 40 million.
On the next slide, I will give you an overview of the total stock of overlays. Overall, we have built up additional provisions of EUR 270 million for novel risks since Q2 2024. Around half are covering macroeconomic or factor-related risks. The other half is for climate and environmental risks as well as a one-off effect stemming from rating recalibrations.
As with the GLA, the additional provisions will be reviewed on a quarterly basis and adjusted, if required. This concludes the view on the key line items. I've already covered the main drivers of the excellent operating results and will therefore only briefly touch the tax rate. The tax rate was 22% in Q2 and 24% for the first half at the low end of our expected range of 25% to 30% for the year.
From now, we stick to this guidance as the tax rate also depends to some degree on future developments in Russia and Poland. The next slide covers the results of the operating segments, starting with Corporate Clients. Corporate Clients has increased loan volumes and grown capital markets revenues by 7% year-on-year. Also trade finance has held up well.
Nevertheless, overall revenues are 7% lower compared to Q2 last year due to the impact of lower ECB rates on the deposit business. With no significant change in ECB rates expected in the next quarters. Income from deposits should stabilize at the current level. This is already visible in the comparison with Q1 where customer revenues were relatively stable overall. Lower revenues and others mainly reflect the lower net fair value results in comparison to the strong first quarter and includes effects from legacy positions.
PSBC Germany has again grown its fee business year-on-year. This has come from private customers, while net commission income from small business customers was stable. During the quarter, we have made progress in our asset management strategy and are now reporting our asset management subsidiaries, Commerz Real, Yellowfin and Aquila Capital together.
In Q2, we have impaired intangibles of EUR 65 million of Aquila Capital, which is reflected in the cost line. The impairment results from a shift in the market for early-stage solar projects in Southern Europe in the first half of the year. This has reduced the operating result to EUR 262 million. Before impairments, PSBC Germany's operating result was on last year's level.
mBank, again performed extremely well on an operating level, more than doubling the operating results of EUR 300 million. Revenues before burdens from FX loans and credit holidays were on the same level as last year. Burdens from FX loans are nearly half the level of last year. For the whole year, we expect the burden to be less than half of what we have seen in 2024 as mBank continues to manage -- to make very good progress on settlements, reaching about 30,000 by the end of July. Next year, we should benefit from the strong performance of mBank's core business, no longer weighed down by FX loan provisions.
Others & Consolidation delivered a positive result of EUR 109 million in the quarter. Our net interest income was slightly lower, the net fair value result was improved compared to the previous quarter. It also includes a EUR 51 million valuation effect related to the IPO of eToro in which CommerzVentures had a stake. Revenues were further boosted by positive hedge results and realization gains.
For the year overall, we expect neutral result from Others & Consolidation.
I will now move to the group RWA and capital development on the next slide. The CET1 ratio was 14.6% at the end of the quarter, down around 50 basis points from Q1. There were 3 drivers. First, we will return the full net result before restructuring expenses and after AT1 coupon payments to shareholders. We have therefore deducted the restructuring charges after tax from CET1 capital and not accrued the net result. This has reduced the CET1 ratio. Second, RWA has increased by around EUR 2 billion in the quarter, mainly from higher credit risk RWA from growth and higher market risk RWA due to the extreme market volatility in April.
Third, there have been other CET1 capital changes, mainly FX effects and regulatory adjustments. With a CET1 ratio of 14.6%, we are now close to our target of at least 14.5% for the year. For H2, we expect modest growth of risk-weighted assets when considering the SRTs planned for the second half and do not anticipate a significant change in capital. This brings me to the end of the presentation and the outlook for 2025.
As Bettina has already mentioned, we have raised our outlook for NII and the net results. We confirm all other targets. We continue to expect growth of net commission income of around 7% compared to last year, a risk result of around EUR 850 million and the aforementioned CET1 ratio of at least 14.5%.
Thank you very much for your attention. Bettina and I are now looking forward to taking your questions.
And the first question is from Benjamin Goy, Deutsche Bank.
2. Question Answer
Two questions, please. The first on the net interest income and the deposit beta in particular. Maybe you can give a bit more color how much of this potential increase in deposit beta in the second half is accompanied by higher volumes given comdirect and other campaigns you're running at the moment?
And then secondly, coming back to the risk results, now EUR 300 million in H1 and your more -- momentum seems to be improving, macro seems to be improving, just maybe can you just explain in a bit more detail why you expect actually EUR 550 million and reiterate your full year guidance?
So on the risk result, I mean, we are a conservative group. So it's still a second half. I mean, we have seen now 3 years of limited or no growth in Germany. So we just stay cautious. And we all remember that the fourth quarter is always a long quarter because it goes once until mid-February, and that's the whole reason that we haven't seen any indication why we now should adjust our guidance. That is a simple story, not that we see anything specific moving here. And for NII, I hand over to Carsten.
Benjamin, on NI, you asked how the deposit beta in the second half will be impacted by the offers we had out in comdirect. As you've seen end of June into July, we started offering promotional rates to customers to attract deposits, which we've done over the course of July. We have attracted actually the volume we were anticipating and planning for. So from that offer, you can expect a slight impact to the beta, which is also why we are seeing a mild increase to 40% in the second half of the year from the current 39%.
And the next question is from Jeremy Sigee, BNP Paribas.
Two questions, please. I thought it's very encouraging to see the loan growth. And I just wanted to get you to talk about that a little bit more, particularly in the corporate clients. We're seeing an acceleration here and quite a nice pickup, which is what you were relying on in your plan. So is this the beginning of that trend coming through? Is this all good now and this is a growth rate that we can expect to continue?
And then my other question was just on costs. I thought costs were a little whisker heavy in the operating divisions in the quarter. And I just wondered you've reiterated the 57% cost/income for the full year. I just wondered what you're expecting in absolute terms, what the EUR billion cost number is you're expecting for the full year?
So thank you, Jeremy. On loan growth, yes, I mean, we are very optimistic that the positive trend will continue. As I said in my speech, we really see sentiment improving, not only among the large corporates, but also among the medium-sized corporates, the so-called Mittelstand. And we see a lot of activity, a lot of discussions about investment plans. So there is a pipeline.
How fast this will show off, we will see, but it's clearly a tailwind for our 8% growth, which we have predicted year-on-year for the coming years, and we are absolutely confident to achieve that. And on the cost side, I mean, it's where the costs come from inflation and other things, but I hand over for Carsten.
Yes. On the cost side, we confirm our 57% cost/income ratio. But for the absolute target, as I also mentioned in the speech, we are also seeing increased costs from our equity-based long-term incentives, which are trending in line with the share price. So we're seeing an additional pickup of cost there. So we're heading towards EUR 6.9 billion-ish towards end of the year, slight increase from EUR 6.8 billion. But again, the 57% cost/income ratio stands, and we are keen to manage the cost down. First half has been encouraging on that path.
The next question is from Tobias Lukesch, Kepler Cheuvreux.
Also 3 questions from my side, please. First, touching on the Swiss loan provisions. So I was wondering now you also adjusted the guidance in a way that you no longer say it's subject to potential Swiss loan provisions and also Russia. So I was wondering, can we really calculate with a 0 basically for '26? And would you also expect hardly anything to happen in H2?
Secondly, on the NII floor statement, so you provided Page 18, very helpful. If you say EUR 8 billion is the floor and we understood that the moving parts you described about the deposit beta, basically, the EUR 200 million delta. How should we think about what's giving the upside if you look at that Page 18, is it the replication portfolio? Is it the loans and deposits?
Is it coming from mBank? So this would also be helpful. And on the risk provisions, there are -- you have seen model adjustments. So you stick to that guidance, which gives you a big ballpark number basically for H2 still to provisions. I was wondering, we have seen a couple of changes to methodology, the rebooking of the TLAs, which is now done. Should we expect additional model changes to impact H2 here? Or would you rather expect that 90% to 100% of going forward risk provisions is rather coming from actual underlying business trends?
So for the outlook, we kept actually the guidance or the subject still when you look on Page 28, we still have it in because Russia is something we can't foresee on the FX loan provisions, I think we have shown pretty nicely that we are always able to absorb the burden quite sufficient. And it is -- it stays what we said before that we really want to end the story this year to not talk about it anymore next year. And this is a clear target, and that has not changed. So if there are numbers, they will be so small next year that they are not really worth to talk about.
And then when it comes to your third question, additional model changes, I mean, the models will be reviewed every quarter. So you can't exclude up and downs, but overall, we feel pretty comfortable in the moment with what we have now put into the models. And for NII, I hand over to Carsten.
And with regards to your second question concerning NII on our way to our EUR 8 billion target for the year '25. The changes since beginning of the year mainly stem from a move in the ECB or improvement in the ECB rate sensitive positions with the movement there. We are now only expecting a EUR 600 million negative impact that was higher at the beginning of the year.
Then secondly, the beta, actually starting from the beginning of the year, we had a EUR 200 million higher burden anticipated. So that's an improvement in that line. And on the other hand, on loans and deposits, given the constitution of the business coming in and also looking at the cost of deposits into the second half, we've taken that down slightly by EUR 0.1 billion.
So that in sum actually gives you the move, which brings us up from the EUR 7.8 billion originally to the EUR 8 billion for the end of the year. And for us, this is the floor for '25. And then on our path to '28, you will see that the -- especially the replication portfolios and the stabilization there will give us an additional EUR 1.2 billion compared to '25.
Maybe any indication, which kind of these 5 levers like could provide the most upside for H2 in your view?
Sorry, I didn't catch that in your original question. If we're looking into this, then I would definitely say looking at the ECB rate sensitive position and continuing working on our loan and deposit combination is certainly what we're looking at.
The next question is from Tarik El Mejjad, Bank of America.
This is Tarik El Mejjad from Bank of America. Just 2 quick questions left from my side. First, on the dividend. I know your policy is 100% payout, but no indication on the split. Could you give us some indication how you see the split given that your valuation has materially improved since the CMD and earnings grew actually quite fast as well. So would there be another tranche of buyback potentially with Q3? And how do you see the mix versus last year? And also on UniCredit stake, I mean, I would be really curious to know, Bettina, how do you deal with a large shareholder same time, I would say, the main competitor in Germany, given the Mittelstand market share. I'd be interesting to see how you compose with that and also discussion about the Board seat as well.
Thank you, Tarik. So on the dividend policy, so we have paid out last year a dividend in the size of EUR 700 million. And we clearly want to increase dividend year-on-year, and we said that. And also given that we had a capital return of EUR 1.7 billion last year, and if you now take the numbers which we are guiding, which is a net income before restructuring costs, but after AT1 of EUR 2.6 billion, and we say we have 100% payout, you can assume that everything will go up. So we have now applied for the first tranche of up to EUR 1 billion. We will indeed apply for a second tranche in the third quarter. And then we will also know better what the concrete split will be, but you can assume that dividend will also nicely increase.
When it comes to UniCredit, there has been no reach out on anything with respect to Board seats or something like that. And I think from the statement at least we learned that there is also no wish to ask for that in the moment. And indeed, the situation is difficult because UniCredit is not only an investor, but also a competitor. So our expectation is clearly that they act as investor and nothing else. And then it doesn't really make a difference whether someone has 5%, 10%, 15% or 25%. But it is important that we share the same objective, and that is creating value and maximizing value for Commerzbank. And that's basically our key focus. Our focus is also on clients and employees so that we make sure that there is stability, that there's trust in the actions we have. I think we have proven in the past months that we are very able to manage the situation, and we intend to continue that.
Okay. Very clear. And just a follow-up on the dividend, please. I think in the CMD, you had this extra paragraph mentioning that if the plan goes well, which is the case so far, you would be inclined to ask for a payout even above 100%, which is the case this year given the restructuring charges adjustment. But beyond even the restructuring charge and given your strong capital build and no expectations to have any hit on capital in the second half, would that apply only for this year or you want to see more development of the plan in next year or so?
Well, Tarik, I mean, we take it slow. I mean you know that we have consequently increased our payout. Last year, it was 71%. Now it is even above 100% given that we exclude the restructuring costs from the net income. And everything else will show in the coming years. We really take it year-on-year, and I think that is also wise to do.
The next question is from Riccardo Rovere, Mediobanca.
Three, if I may. The first one is on risk cost. Carsten, the EUR 142 million that you have taken this quarter related to, I guess, recalibration of models, I guess it's something that you will not do every single quarter. You recalibrate the model, but then they should stay more or less as they are for a while. Is that a fair assumption, a fair way of seeing what you have done in Q2?
The second question I have is on tax rate. You mentioned it was 22%, but you didn't give any particular explanation why that was so low. So I was wondering if you could add a little bit of color here.
Then the other thing I wanted to be sure I understood it correctly, Bettina, at the beginning of the call, if I'm not mistaken, you mentioned something that the employees or maybe all the employees, I'm not sure, will become shareholders of the bank. And I heard a number like EUR 500 per employee or something like that. But I'm not sure I got it correctly. So if you can explain.
And the last, maybe the very, very, very last one, the restructuring charges, are they, just for me to know, just fiscally deductible? Or do they go straight to the bottom line?
Yes. Thank you. So on cost of risk, I mean, we said that we have done now the recalibration of the models. We also have done the change between the models and the top level adjustment. And as said, I mean, we have the obligation to also review that every quarter. But as long as the external conditions stay, I would say, as stable as they can be, then you will also see not a lot of changes. So it's very much dependent on what happens outside because it's novel risk, it's macroeconomic risk, it's climate risk. But I would say, for the moment, we expect stability on that.
And I take your last question, restructuring charges, I mean, they are tax deductive, and that explains also the low tax rate in the second quarter.
And then on the third point, with respect to the employee share program, indeed, we announced this share program already during the Capital Markets Day. It is part of the story that we really want to create value for all our stakeholders, meaning clients first, but then clearly shareholders, but also employees. And this is part to increase also commitment among our staff to be more connected to the bank. So therefore, we agreed on this plan. It is also, in Germany at least, supported by the government because it comes tax-free. For the employees, it has also the additional benefit that really everybody has a securities account after this exercise. And it has been always embedded also in our plans on the cost side, and we will continue that also in the years to come. And it's exactly EUR 500 or around EUR 500, dependent on the share price when we implement the program.
And all the employees will be given EUR 500.
Yes, in the AG. It's AG, Commerzbank AG. But that is for Germany and in all the international locations. What is not yet part is mBank and not yet part are our service units in Germany. We are still in discussions there, but there's also something to come in the coming quarters.
And if you had to throw a ballpark, how much at the very end of the day employees will own the bank?
Well, I mean, you can make the math. It's EUR 500. So we're talking about EUR 15 million to EUR 20 million.
The next question is from Borger Ramirez, Citi.
Can you hear me?
Yes.
Perfect. I have 2. Firstly, on the cost guidance. I understand it is EUR 6.9 billion this year because of the share-based compensation due to the better share price performance. I understand this is only 2025. So assuming that the share price, I mean, hopefully, will continue to re-rate, but assuming there's no effect from this variable compensation in 2026 and onwards, this additional cost in 2025 should not be modeled going forward. Is this correct?
Yes. I can make that short. That is correct. It's a one-off effect this year due to the increase of the share price, and we will not see the same effect from this in the next years. But clearly, we have to see what market movements are, et cetera, but we stick to the guidance for the next years.
Perfect. And then I would also like to ask, on the NII guidance, looking beyond this year, I think it's very helpful that you provide the NII waterfall. Looking at various lines, I think that you're one of the most detailed disclosure among banks, which is great. I would like to ask, on the guidance beyond this year, so I think if I understood well, compared to your CMD targets, the replication portfolio is EUR 300 million more than before. The ECB rate sensitivity is EUR 100 million lower than before because of the increased replication portfolio. And then I would like to ask if there's any other changes that we should think about?
So when looking at the NII beyond '25, then you're right, we're seeing EUR 300 million more coming from the replication portfolios given the stabilization effect that we are seeing. But also in the following years, we see countering effects of around EUR 200 million, which are coming from the rate-sensitive positions. So we will see bits and pieces that are working against this. You saw that we kept our NII guidance for '28 stable exactly for these reasons. But as also mentioned before, the stabilization effect out of the replication portfolio should give us a tailwind. What we're seeing at the moment is there are, of course, better forward curves in the market, observable as well, which also allows us to rather approach this from the conservative side.
The next question is from Stefan Stalmann, Autonomous.
I actually just wanted to ask about the Aquila impairment, please. Can you give us a rough sense of what share of the intangibles that existed has been impaired? And is it correct to assume that these are amortizing intangibles in normal times? And also maybe a little bit more strategically, do these have any impact on the net commission income trajectory that you have in mind for coming years? And also, does it have any impact on more broadly your appetite for external growth in asset management-type companies?
Thank you, Stefan. So strategically, no, it doesn't change anything with respect to our appetite, number one. And number two, it does not change anything on our guidance of the 7% per annum growth rate, which we target. We want to be really an attractive -- or we want to provide an attractive offering for our clients with respect to asset management that contains all different areas. So we also keep looking on potential M&A opportunities. That has not changed.
And on the details on the impairment, Carsten.
The EUR 65 million we're seeing as a cost item here are roughly 1/4 of the overall goodwill and intangibles for Aquila, and it would have been a regular depreciation over 15 years. So we're basically pulling this path forward. So the EUR 65 million would have been depreciated in any case over a longer period of time. So we're adjusting for current market environment and are monitoring this.
And the next question is a follow-up from Tobias Lukesch, Kepler Cheuvreux.
Quickly, to get that right on the tax rate guidance, so you mentioned the 22%, I didn't catch that earlier. With regards to the initial 25% to 30% guidance, could you please elaborate again like how we should see that for the full year?
And then I was wondering on the fees for the current accounts. you mentioned that there was progress. Could you please again like tell us about the status quo, how many million you basically converted and what you still have on your agenda and how you expect that to continue in H2 and next year? Or would stay -- some clients without fees going forward?
And lastly, I discovered this other financial result of EUR 69 million, which was quite big actually in contributing to Q2 results. I was wondering what is behind that? And if this is a kind of recurring part we see over some quarters or if this was a kind of one-off booking?
So let me just start with the fee topic on the current account. So I mean, we have reached out to 2.4 million clients who have been on a 0 cost account so far. So far, we have got feedback from over 1 million agreeing to pay the EUR 4.90. Then there are some clients who have decided to leave us. I mean that is also part of the deal that there is some attrition, but it's lower attrition than we originally thought. And then there are also clients who basically decided to fulfill the requirements, i.e., having more than EUR 50,000 on their accounts because then you also get a for-free account. And that leaves us still with half of the clients that need to be agreed with or find an agreement with. And this is what we're currently doing. So we're sending out letters and trying to get in contact with the clients. And we always know that the second half takes a little bit more time, but we are very committed to be done with the whole exercise by the end of the year.
And then let me get back to the tax question. So I think, first of all, we should start with saying that Q2 has clearly a low mark in the tax rate with 22%, especially coming from this quarter's effects from restructuring expenses. So when we're looking into the year, we stick to the guidance of 25% to 30%. When making a reference also to mBank, this is mostly because the tax rate in Germany inherently is slightly higher, while tax rate from our international location income is usually taxed at a slightly lower rate, which is also why the mix then makes a difference. So we're sticking to the 25% to 30% for the year and starting with a low 24% out of the first half of the year.
Then secondly, on other income, your question was whether this was a one-off. So the other income was predominantly moved by hedge result and realization gains that we had from derivatives, partially running against net fair value, but that's what it is.
That's an interesting one. I mean, because the net fair value result was way lower than expected by consensus. So you say this kind of realization gain is a kind of offsetting of the net fair value. Has that to be read together kind of?
Yes. So the net fair value and the hedge result, you always have to see a bit in conjunction. Also, we are seeing offsetting effects in this. When you're looking at the full year and also the consensus we're seeing for the net fair value, and if you actually combine that with what we're seeing in the other result, then we're sticking to what we're seeing there.
But here, I'm not talking about the hedge accounting, EUR 41 million, I'm really meaning the EUR 69 million you have in other financial result. I was just wondering you said realization gains. I was wondering, is that selling investment security portfolios at a decent price? Or is that something, as you say, which is kind of recurring and has to be read together with the net fair value and ultimately, the NII development?
So that particular EUR 69 million is mostly coming from realization gains, as mentioned earlier. So this is coming out of our activity to also hedge market movements that we're anticipating. So it is part of our ongoing business model to manage the risk position of the bank. but clearly is yes, changing from quarter-to-quarter.
And we have another follow-up question from Riccardo Rovere, Mediobanca.
You mentioned at the start of the call, if I'm not mistaken, that you have launched new initiatives to grab new deposits. I was wondering why is that and what those initiatives refer to. I mean, are they particularly expensive? This is what I'm hinting to.
And the other question I wanted to have an idea about is you mentioned the Polish FX provisions for 2025 expected to be less than 50% of what you charged in '24. Once '25 is gone, should you -- would you expect this to be kind of 0 in '26 and '27 or much, much even -- or maybe a very, very small amount. What do you expect here?
Yes. So on the new initiatives, I mean, you have seen that also in the past years, we also have been out there with attacker products. I mean we are also part of the market, and we have stayed away from that in Q1. But at the end of Q2, we also started to test a little bit the market on comdirect, but also for the smaller businesses in Commerzbank. And that's what we are doing. And I think we have proven also in the past years that we are doing it wisely. They are pretty aggressive, and we have been also very successful with that. But it's testing the market basically, testing how much client demand we can attract with that and then seeing how much of the client volumes also stay with us. So that's a normal business thing, which we always do. And it also helps us actually clearly to attract new clients on the contract side, but also on the SME side.
When it comes to the FX effects in Poland, yes, I mean, we said quarter-on-quarter, we will see less provisions, and that is what you see. And we also said that we would like to put an end to the story by 2025. We can't exclude that from the passive population, there will be someone still coming out in the next years, but it should be so small that it's not worth talking about.
Yes, that's very clear. Just to get back one second on the deposits. Those initiatives, is that something that you have done throughout the quarter? Or were they concentrated toward the end of the quarter? And are we talking about kind of call money, call deposits as you did before in the previous second quarter?
It was very focused only for a couple of weeks. We started end of the quarter, and I think it has even ended already, and it's for core money.
At the moment, we have no further questions. [Operator Instructions]
Okay. Then I would say we call it an end. Thank you very much for your questions. And I wish you a great day and a great summer holiday if it's still ahead of you. Thank you very much.
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Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Umsatz: Gesamtumsatz H1 +30% YoY; Q2 gegenüber Vorjahr +13%.
- Operatives Ergebnis: €2,4 Mrd. H1 (Rekord, +23% YoY; +36% vs. 2023).
- NII (Net Interest Income): Guidance angehoben von €7,8 Mrd. auf €8,0 Mrd. (Management bezeichnet €8,0 Mrd. als Floor).
- NCI (Net Commission Income): +8% H1; Wachstum in allen drei Kundensegmenten (PSBC DE +10%, mBank +14%, Corporate +4%).
- Kapital & Kosten: CET1 14,6% (−50 bp vs Q1), Cost/Income H1 56% (Ziel FY 57%); Restrukturierungskosten H1 €534m, Gesamt ~€600m erwartet.
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Momentum‑Strategie: Management sieht Strategie als bewiesen; Ziel RoTE (Return on Tangible Equity) 15% bis 2028 und vollständige Gewinnausschüttung jährlich.
- Restrukturierung: Verhandlungen mit Betriebsrat laufen planmäßig, Detailabstimmungen bis September; Kostenziel C/I 50% bis 2028.
- Kapitalrückfluss: Antrag für Share‑Buyback bis zu €1 Mrd. Mitte Juli gestellt; plante zweite Tranche in Q3; Dividendenerhöhung erwartet.
- Digitale & Produktinitiativen: Neue Kontogebühr (€4,90), Online‑Geldmarktlösungen und Ausbau FX/IR‑Trading; Replikationsportfolio auf €147 Mrd. erhöht.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- NII 2025: Erhöht auf ~€8,0 Mrd.; H2 NII leicht unter H1, €8,0 Mrd. als Mindestwert.
- Ergebnis 2025: Net result erhöht auf €2,5 Mrd. (€2,9 Mrd. exkl. Restrukturierung); C/I Ziel 57%; CET1 ≥14,5% Ende 2025.
- Risiko & Provisionen: Risk‑Result Guidance ~€850m für 2025; Modellanpassungen führten zu Q2‑Effekt, Überprüfungen quartalsweise.
- Langfristig: Replikationsportfolio soll bis 2028 zusätzlichen NII‑Uplift ~€1,2 Mrd. bringen.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Deposit Beta: Nachfrage zu Auswirkungen von Einwerbungskampagnen auf Beta; Management: Beta H2 ~40% (vs 39% in Q2), erwartete Volumenzunahme, Kampagnen liefen wie geplant.
- Risk‑Methodik & FX‑Loans: Kritik an Modellrekalibrierungen (Q2 Sondereffekt €142m) und mBank‑FX‑Lasten; Management betont konservative Haltung, Ziel: deutlich geringere FX‑Lasten 2025 vs 2024 und „Story Ende 2025“.
- Kapitalrückfluss & Großaktionär: Nachfrage zur Dividendensplit/Buyback; Zusage: erste Tranche beantragt, zweite in Q3 geplant; zu UniCredit‑Beteiligung: Management erwartet reines Investor‑Verhalten, keine Board‑Ansprüche.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Implikation: Starke operative Dynamik und gezielte Kapitalrückflüsse stützen Aktie kurzfristig; Guidance‑Erhöhung bestätigt Resilienz. Risiken bleiben: Deposit‑beta, Modellanpassungen bei Risikovorsorge, mBank‑FX‑Altlasten und Governance‑Fragen rund um UniCredit.
Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Hello, and welcome to the Commerzbank AG conference call regarding the second quarter results 2025. Please note that this call is being transmitted as well as recorded by audio webcast and will subsequently be made available for replay in the Internet. [Operator Instructions] The floor will be open for questions following Bettina Orlopp's and Carsten Schmitt's presentation. Let me now turn the floor over to our CEO, Bettina Orlopp.
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our earnings call. In the first half of this year, we have achieved the best operating result in the history of Commerzbank. Based on this excellent performance and the momentum we have created, we raised our targets and expectations for 2025. Hence, Carsten and I look forward to walking you through the numbers and performance drivers, including our outlook. I will concentrate on H1 and the overall strategic and macro picture. Carsten will focus on the performance of the second quarter.
The financial dynamics and earnings momentum continue, and our teams have developed the best ever operating result in the first half of the year. The 23% increase is, especially in light of the macro impacts, a strong proof for the commitment of our staff at Commerzbank and mBank as well as for the trust of our clients. The second point of my summary addresses the very good progress in the implementation of our momentum strategy. I will come back to this in a moment, let me highlight that we are running according to plan regarding the negotiations of our restructuring program. This is, thanks, to an extremely good cooperation with the Works Council, which demonstrates a high degree of common interest.
Third point of my summary is about capital return. Already in mid-July, we have applied for the next share buyback of up to EUR 1 billion. This demonstrates our unchanged strong focus on returning capital to our shareholders. The fourth point is about macro. The investment program of the German government will provide us with ample business opportunities. It translates into a tailwind for our financial development going forward, especially combined with a somewhat more hawkish outlook of ECB. And this leads me to my last point, we raised our outlook in 2025 for net interest income and net result. Let's have a closer look at the key financials of the first half of 2025.
Based on 13% higher revenues, including less burdens from the provisions for FX loans in mBank, we have reached a record operating result of EUR 2.4 billion. This is 23% higher than last year and 36% higher than in 2023. This strong result comes with unchanged high cost discipline. With our cost/income ratio of 56% in the first 6 months of the year, we are well on track towards our full year target of 57%. Bottom line, and when you exclude the restructuring charges, our very good performance is reflected in a return of 11.1% on tangible equity. Hence, we are very confident to meet our target of 9.6% for the full year.
The strong revenue development is also visible when looking at net interest income and fee income. NII again has proven to be very resilient in the decreasing rate environment. We managed to keep it at a high level and increase our full year guidance from EUR 7.8 billion to EUR 8 billion. And in anticipation of your foreseeable question, I would say yes, EUR 8.0 billion is probably the floor of our NII expectation for 2025. On net commission income, we are very satisfied with the strong 8% growth we have achieved in the first 6 months of the year. Driven by the strong securities business in PSBC Germany, this outstanding growth makes us very confident that we will achieve our growth target of 7% in NCI for the full year.
Strong client business, which is in particular reflected in NCI forms the backbone of our momentum strategy. All 3 customer divisions grew significantly in fee income, 4% in Corporate Clients, 10% in PSBC Germany and 14% in mBank lead to the overall 8% growth in the first half of the year. I'm also very pleased with the 8% loan growth in Corporate Clients. This clearly helped to mitigate the impact from lower rates on deposit NII. The lower reported revenues from the net fair value result in Corporate Clients [indiscernible] from legacy positions and are offset in net interest income.
So many Mittelstand clients are still hesitant when it comes to the deployment of investments in Germany, client interactions are at a higher level, which provides a good pipeline for future revenues. And this leads me to the recent achievements with our momentum strategy. With our value-accretive growth strategy, we are heading towards 15% return on tangible equity in 2028 and plan the full distribution of profits for every year. On this journey, we have made further tangible progress in the execution of strategic measures. First, we are completely on track with the restructuring negotiations. This is a further milestone to reach our targeted cost/income ratio of 50% by 2028.
All remaining negotiations with the workers' council about the detail of the restructuring should be finalized by September. Then we will enter the next phase of strategy implementation and value creation. Second, we have successfully introduced a new account fee structure for private customers in Germany. From overall 2.4 million free of charge accounts, already more than 1 million customers agreed to the new fee of EUR 4.90 per month. Through the second half of -- though the second half of consensus is always harder to get, this is already a significant and tangible contribution to fee income of PSBC.
Third, we have further enhanced our digital trading platform in corporate clients. For example, we have introduced online money market deposits for international clients. With targeted investments in technology, we have increased our market share in FX and interest rate derivatives, which contributes to the revenue growth case of corporate clients. Of course, the high customer focus, especially in the German Mittelstand is highly appreciated by our clients. According to Finance Magazine's Banking Survey 2025, Commerzbank was once again signaled out as best Mittelstand Bank. Around 75% of respondents view Commerzbank as a leading bank for the German mid-market sector, which is seen as a backbone of the German economy.
Furthermore, Euro-Magazin awarded comdirect as best direct bank and Commerzbank as best branch-based bank, both for the eighth time in a row. Fifth, we have finalized the negotiations with the Works Council regarding our employee share program. We now plan for the rollout of the program in autumn this year. By then, every Commerzbank employee will receive shares with a value of around EUR 500 and become shareholder of the bank. Follow-ups for 2026 are also already agreed. These successful initiatives are complemented by strong efforts to make further use of AI, which has the potential to be a real game changer also in banking.
Now let me briefly update you on our capital return program. With a dividend of EUR 0.65 approved at our AGM in May, we successfully concluded the capital return of EUR 1.7 billion for 2024. For 2025, we target to fully distribute the net result of EUR 2.6 billion before restructuring expenses and after AT1 coupon payments. To ensure a smooth execution of the share buybacks for 2025, we have already applied for a first tranche of up to EUR 1 billion mid-July. Overall, we are fully on track to deliver on our capital return targets with a steadily increasing dividend every year. I also feel very comfortable with our targets for the year 2026 to 2028 and see potential for further tailwind. So we have made very good progress strategically and financially.
Our stand-alone momentum strategy works and pays off. We remain firmly committed to creating value for all our stakeholders, and this includes our new largest shareholder. However, the shareholding situation with UniCredit is, to put it mildly, not ideal, as UniCredit is a direct competitor in the German market. We are convinced that the ongoing successful execution of our stand-alone strategy is the right focus. And now let's move to macro. The German investment programs are on everyone's lips. Our view is clear. Things are moving in the right direction. The government has already tackled important topics like energy costs, corporate taxes and depreciation.
While defense spending is already increasing, it is now about preparation for the deployment of the infrastructure funds. German corporates demonstrate their strong support with their initiative made for Germany and an investment spend of more than EUR 600 billion. We, at Commerzbank, are happy to be part of this important joint effort of Corporate Germany. All these activities are clearly positive for Germany and for Commerzbank as a leading bank for the Mittelstand. Also, the sentiment in the German Mittelstand is improving, and we have seen the fifth upward revision of the business climate with the recent EFO data from July. However, the Mittelstand remains cautious regarding their investment plans in Germany.
We do not expect a very visible increase in 2025, but there is great potential for 2026, assuming that issues like bureaucracy and the shortage of skilled workers are addressed. On a net basis, we expect the stimulus to push GDP growth to 1.4% in 2026 despite the expected impact from the tariffs imposed by the U.S. This growth provides us with good tailwinds for our business in 2026. At the same time, we would also benefit from the slightly more hawkish view of the ECB. Our economists now expect ECB rates to bottom out at 2%, which would further increase the confidence in our NII trajectory towards 2028. And this leads me to the raised outlook for 2025.
Based on the strong performance in H1, we increased our outlook for net interest income from EUR 7.8 billion to EUR 8 billion. We also increased our target for the net result from EUR 2.4 billion to EUR 2.5 billion, which translates into EUR 2.9 billion when excluding the restructuring charges. We stick to our cost/income ratio target of 57%. Regarding capital return, we plan for 100% payout based on the net result before restructuring charges and after AT1 coupon payments. And we maintain our expectation for the CET1 ratio of at least 14.5% at the end of this year.
Now let me hand over to Carsten, who will walk you through the detailed financials of the second quarter. Over to you, Carsten.
Thank you, Bettina, and good morning, everyone. It is also my pleasure to present you record results. The double-digit return on tangible equity before restructuring expenses is a clear proof of the excellent performance of the business. We are clearly well on our way to reach our financial targets for the year, which we have raised again. The CET1 ratio of 14.6% is around 50 basis points lower than in Q1 and fully in line with our target of at least 14.5% by year-end. It reflects our commitment to return more than the net result to our shareholders via share buybacks and dividends for this fiscal year.
The quarter's performance is based on 13% higher revenues compared to last year, reaching broadly the same level as the record Q1 of this year. Net interest income has held up very well and is only slightly lower despite the ECB rate cuts. Net commission income has grown strongly. The net fair value result is slightly negative and on the same level as last year. Positive valuation effects from investments compensated FX effects from our U.S. dollar AT1 instrument and derivatives valuations. As in Q1, the relatively high other income, excluding FX loan provisions stems largely from a positive hedge result.
Now to net commission income in more detail. Net commission income grew by 10.3% year-on-year with good contributions from all customer segments. Following on an already strong Q1, Corporate Clients further improved revenues in the FX and bond businesses. Lending grew fee income from the loan origination business. Even trade finance managed a slight increase compared to last year despite the sluggish German economy. This is a clear testament to our close client relationships. Private and small business customers in Germany grew net commission income by a healthy 8.8% compared to last year. All product areas contributed.
Again, the securities business was the biggest contributor. In particular, wealth management performed well and higher transaction volumes in a volatile market helped at comdirect. In the payments business, we see the first effect of the higher account fees, which started to meaningfully contribute to revenues in June. Let's move on to interest income. In Q2, ECB rates were on average 50 basis points and Polish rates 25 basis points lower than in Q1. Nevertheless, the net interest income is only slightly reduced, demonstrating the resilience of our business model. In Corporate Clients, net interest income is up slightly compared with Q1. Lower funding costs and higher income from loans more than compensated reduced contributions from deposits.
The lower funding costs are, however, offset in net fair value from connected hedging derivatives. In PSBC Germany, net interest income was slightly lower. The reason are early mortgage repayments, which are always highest in the second quarter. This is an internal effect with corresponding gains shown in others and consolidation. Otherwise, the interest income was basically on the same level as in Q1. In mBank, the lower NII results mainly from a weaker Polish zloty. Lower interest rates were largely compensated by volume growth. In others and consolidation, NII is slightly lower. There is, however, an offset in the net fair value result from derivatives.
Looking at loan volumes, CC has continued to increase the business with all customer groups. In total, CC managed to grow the loan book by 8% in the first half. There's been a pickup in investment loan demand in Mittelstand. This is encouraging and includes growing demand from the public sector. PSBC Germany has again slightly grown the mortgage book. In the deposit businesses, we have seen stable volumes and only a small increase of the beta to around 39%, as we have offset the effect of lower ECB rates with strict margin management. At the end of the quarter, we have launched new initiatives to acquire additional deposits in PSBC Germany. This brings me to the next slide with the outlook for NII and related net fair value result in 2025.
We raised our baseline NII outlook from EUR 7.8 billion to around EUR 8 billion for the year. I will now go through the drivers. The replication portfolio has been marginally adjusted by an increase of EUR 2 billion to EUR 147 billion in June, further stabilizing our future interest income. This has no big impact in 2025, where we continue to expect around EUR 400 million uplift from the replication portfolio, but will stabilize NII in later years. Looking at the ECB rate sensitive positions for 2025, we now assume around EUR 600 million less contribution than last year due to the lower rates. This is based on an average ECB rate of 2.17% for the year and is EUR 100 million improved from our expectations in Q1.
Current forwards are higher, and there is, therefore, further upside potential. With 39%, the Q2 deposit beta was only around 1 percentage point higher than in Q1, thanks to our continued successful margin management. While we expect a higher beta in H2, also due to our attractive offers for new money, we improved our outlook for the full year to 40%. This would then lead to an NII reduction of around -- of only around EUR 100 million from the deposit beta compared to last year, while we were originally expecting a drag of EUR 300 million. Concerning volumes, we continue to plan for moderate growth in deposits towards the end of the year.
Due to the composition of new loans and deposits, we lower the expected contribution from volume growth from EUR 200 million to around EUR 100 million NII. For mBank, we continue to plan with around EUR 100 million lower NII offset in net fair value. Given all these factors, we expect NII in H2 to be somewhat below H1, but adding up to at least EUR 8 billion NII for the financial year 2025. When also considering the net fair value result, where we have offsetting positive effects from lower ECB rates, the total rates-related revenues should be on the same level as last year. This would be an excellent result and a good starting point from which we can grow in subsequent years. So looking beyond 2025 and assuming no further changes in volumes and the current forward rates, we now expect an additional EUR 1.2 billion NII from the replication portfolios in 2028 versus 2025.
Most of the EUR 1.2 billion uplift in 2028 comes from the deposit models, but the equity models are also contributing more than EUR 150 million. In total, the outlook for the contribution from the replication portfolios in 2028 is now around EUR 300 million ahead of our original plan. But please keep in mind that part of this is offset by lower interest rates -- by lower interest income from ECB rate sensitive positions, which is correspondingly reduced when deposits are moved to the replication portfolio. This reduction in volume leads to around EUR 200 million less contribution from these deposits. So we clearly see a potential tailwind, but stick to our outlook for 2028 for the time being.
Now to costs on Slide 19. Operating expenses have been managed in line with our target of a cost/income ratio of around 57% for the year. The cost increase in the group ex mBank results from generally -- general salary increases and the effect of a higher share price on equity-based variable compensation. The cost increases were partially offset by the cost savings we have realized from our ongoing restructuring and cost optimization measures. mBank's costs increased by 16% from investments in business growth and FX effects from the stronger zloty compared to the last year. Furthermore, there was a significant increase in the compulsory contributions in Poland already in Q1.
We have concluded the detailed cost and FTE planning for the Momentum strategy in the quarter. This has confirmed our cost targets and has resulted in lower required restructuring expenses for the FTE reductions than initially estimated. So far, we have booked restructuring expenses of EUR 534 million in the first half. The total required restructuring expenses are now expected around EUR 600 million with the remainder to be booked in the second half. The next slides cover the risk result. The risk result comes in at EUR 176 million. Overall, the portfolio has been resilient and developed in line with our expectations. We, therefore, stick to our guidance of a risk result of approximately EUR 850 million in 2025. This quarter's risk result includes the effects of some methodology improvements. In 2020, with COVID, we introduced top-level adjustments as an overlay to the risk result and have used this approach since then.
In 2024, we have started to complement the top-level adjustments with collective staging for novel risks. This quarter, we implemented changes in our risk methodology that lead to a higher sensitivity to macroeconomic effects. These include in-model adjustments for macro effects, mainly due to U.S. tariffs and the recalibration of our rating methodology for small- and medium-sized corporate customers in PSBC and Corporate Clients. This has resulted in a EUR 142 million increase of the risk result. At the same time, we have released the remaining EUR 182 million top level adjustment since the covered issues were either resolved or are now addressed by the updated methodology. So net, we have a release of EUR 40 million.
On the next slide, I will give you an overview of the total stock of overlays. Overall, we have built up additional provisions of EUR 270 million for novel risks since Q2 2024. Around half are covering macroeconomic or sector-related risks. The other half is for climate and environmental risks as well as a one-off effect stemming from rating recalibrations. As with the TLA, the additional provisions will be reviewed on a quarterly basis and adjusted if required. This concludes the view on the key line items. I've already covered the main drivers of the excellent operating results and will, therefore, only briefly touch the tax rate. The tax rate was 22% in Q2 and 24% for the first half at the low end of our expected range of 25% to 30% for the year. For now, we stick to this guidance as the tax rate also depends to some degree on future developments in Russia and Poland.
The next slides cover the results of the operating segments, starting with Corporate Clients. Corporate Clients has increased loan volumes and grown capital markets revenues by 7% year-on-year. Also, trade finance has held up well. Nevertheless, overall revenues are 7% lower compared to Q2 last year due to the impact of lower ECB rates on the deposit business. With no significant change in ECB rates expected in the next quarters, income from deposits should stabilize at the current level. This is already visible in the comparison with Q1, where customer revenues were relatively stable overall.
Lower revenues in others mainly reflect the lower net fair value results in comparison to the strong first quarter and includes effects from legacy positions. PSBC Germany has again grown its fee business year-on-year. This has come from private customers, while net commission income from small business customers was stable. During the quarter, we have made progress in our asset management strategy and are now reporting our asset management subsidiaries, Commerz Real, Yellowfin and Aquila Capital together. In Q2, we have impaired intangibles of EUR 65 million of Aquila Capital, which is reflected in the cost line. The impairment results from a shift in the market for early-stage solar projects in Southern Europe in the first half of the year. This has reduced the operating result to EUR 262 million. Before impairments, PSBC Germany's operating result was on last year's level.
mBank, again, performed extremely well on an operating level, more than doubling the operating result to EUR 300 million. Revenues before burdens from FX loans and credit holidays were on the same level as last year. Burdens from FX loans are nearly half the level of last year. For the whole year, we expect the burdens to be less than half of what we have seen in 2024, as mBank continues to manage to make very good progress on settlements, reaching about 30,000 by the end of July. Next year, we should benefit from the strong performance of mBank's core business, no longer weighed down by FX loan provisions.
Others and consolidation delivered a positive result of EUR 109 million in the quarter. While net interest income was slightly lower, the net fair value result was improved compared to the previous quarter. It also includes a EUR 51 million valuation effect related to the IPO of eToro in which CommerzVentures has a stake. Revenues were further boosted by a positive hedge result and realization gains. For the year overall, we expect a neutral result from others and consolidation. I will now move to the group RWA and capital development on the next slide.
The CET1 ratio was 14.6% at the end of the quarter, down around 50 basis points from Q1. There are 3 drivers. First, we will return the full net result before restructuring expenses and after AT1 coupon payments to shareholders. We have, therefore, deducted the restructuring charges after tax from CET1 capital and not accrued the net result. This has reduced the CET1 ratio. Second, RWA have increased by around EUR 2 billion in the quarter, mainly from higher credit risk RWA from growth and higher market risk RWA due to the extreme market volatility in April. Third, there have been other CET1 capital changes, mainly FX effects and regulatory adjustments.
With a CET1 ratio of 14.6%, we are now close to our target of at least 14.5% for the year. For H2, we expect modest growth of risk-weighted assets when considering the SRTs planned for the second half and do not anticipate a significant change in capital. This brings me to the end of the presentation and the outlook for 2025.
As Bettina has already mentioned, we have raised our outlook for NII and the net result. We confirm all other targets. We continue to expect growth of net commission income of around 7% compared to last year, a risk result of around EUR 850 million and the aforementioned CET1 ratio of at least 14.5%. Thank you very much for your attention. Bettina and I are now looking forward to taking your questions.
[Operator Instructions] And the first question is from Benjamin Goy, Deutsche Bank.
2. Question Answer
Two questions, please. So first, on the net interest income and the deposit beta in particular. Maybe you can give a bit more color on how much of this potential increase in deposit beta in the second half is accompanied by higher volumes given comdirect and other campaigns you're running at the moment?
And then secondly, coming back to the risk result, now EUR 300 million in H1 and your momentum seems to be improving, macro seems to be improving. Just maybe you can explain a bit more detail why you expect actually EUR 550 million and reiterate your full year guidance?
So on the risk result, I mean, we are a conservative group. So it's still a second half. I mean, we have seen now 3 years of limited or no growth in Germany. So we just stay cautious. And we all remember that the fourth quarter is always a long quarter because it goes once until mid-February, and that's the whole reason that we haven't seen any indication why we now should adjust our guidance. That is the simple story, not that we see anything specific moving here. And for NII, I hand over to Carsten.
Benjamin, on NII, you asked how the deposit beta in the second half will be impacted by the offers we had out in comdirect. As you've seen end of June into July, we started offering promotional rates to customers to attract deposits, which we've done over the course of July. We have attracted actually the volume we were anticipating and planning for. So from that offer, you can expect a slight impact to the beta, which is also why we are seeing a mild increase to 40% in the second half of the year from the current 39%.
And the next question is from Jeremy Sigee, BNP Paribas Exane.
Two questions, please. I thought it's very encouraging to see the loan growth. And I just wanted to get you to talk about that a little bit more, particularly in the Corporate Clients. We're seeing an acceleration here and quite a nice pickup, which is what you were relying on in your plan. So is this the beginning of that trend coming through? Is this all good now and this is a growth rate that we can expect to continue?
And then my other question was just on costs. I thought costs were a little whisker heavy in the operating divisions in the quarter. And I just wondered -- you've reiterated the 57% cost income for the full year. I just wondered what you're expecting in absolute terms, what the EUR 1 billion cost number is you're expecting for the full year?
So thank you, Jeremy. On loan growth, yes, I mean, we are very optimistic that the positive trend will continue. As I said in my speech, we really see sentiment improving, not only among the large corporates, but also among the medium-sized corporates, the so-called Mittelstand. And we see a lot of activity, a lot of discussions about investment plans. So there is a pipeline. How fast this will show off, we will see, but it's clearly a tailwind for our 8% growth, which we have predicted year-on-year for the coming years, and we are absolutely confident to achieve that. And on the cost side, I mean, it's where the costs come from, inflation and other things, but I hand over for Carsten.
Yes. On the cost side, we confirm our 57% cost/income ratio. But for the absolute target, as I also mentioned in the speech, we are also seeing increased costs from our equity-based long-term incentives, which are trending in line with the share price. So we're seeing an additional pickup of cost there. So we're heading towards EUR 6.9 billion-ish towards end of the year, slight increase from EUR 6.8 billion. But again, the 57% cost income ratio stands, and we are keen to manage the cost down. First half has been encouraging on that path.
The next question is from Tobias Lukesch, Kepler Cheuvreux.
Also 3 questions from my side, please. First, touching on the Swiss loan provisions. So I was wondering now you also adjusted the guidance in a way that you no longer say it's subject to potential Swiss loan provisions and also Russia. So I was wondering, can we here really calculate with a 0 basically for '26? And would you also expect hardly anything to happen in H2?
Secondly, on the NII floor statement, so you provided Page 18, very helpful. If you say EUR 8 billion is the floor, and we understood that the moving parts you described about the deposit beta basically, the EUR 200 million delta. How should we think about what's giving the upside if you look at that Page 18? Is it the replication portfolio? Is it the loans and deposits? Is it coming from mBank? So this would also be helpful.
And on the risk provisions, there are -- you have seen model adjustments. So you stick to that guidance, which gives you a big ballpark number basically for H2 still to provisions. I was wondering, you have seen a couple of changes to methodology, the rebooking of the TLAs, which is now done. Should we expect additional model changes to impact H2 here? Or would you rather expect that 90% to 100% of going forward risk provisions is rather coming from actual underlying business trends?
So -- I mean for the outlook, we kept actually the guidance or the subject still. When you look on Page 28, we still have it in because Russia is something we can't foresee on the FX loan provisions. I think we have shown pretty nicely that we are always able to absorb the burden quite sufficient. And it is -- it stays what we said before that we really want to end the story this year to not talk about it anymore next year. And this is a clear target, and that has not changed.
So if there are numbers, they will be so small next year that they are not really worth to talk about. And then when it comes to your third question, additional model changes, I mean, the models will be reviewed every quarter, so you can't exclude up and downs, but overall, we feel pretty comfortable in the moment with what we have now put into the models. And for NII, I hand over to Carsten.
Yes. And with regard to your second question concerning NII on our way to our EUR 8 billion target for the year '25. The changes since beginning of the year mainly stem from a move in the ECB or improvement in the ECB rate sensitive positions with the movement there. We're now only expecting a EUR 600 million negative impact that was higher at the beginning of the year. Then secondly, the beta, actually starting from the beginning of the year, we had a EUR 200 million higher burden anticipated. So that's an improvement in that line.
And on the other hand, on loans and deposits, given the constitution of the business coming in and also looking at the cost of deposits into the second half, we've taken that down slightly by EUR 0.1 billion. So that in sum actually gives you the move, which brings us up from the EUR 7.8 billion originally to the EUR 8 billion for the end of the year. And for us, this is the floor for '25. And then on our path to '28, you will see that the -- especially the replication portfolios and the stabilization there will give us an additional EUR 1.2 billion compared to '25.
Maybe any indication which kind of these 5 levers like could provide the most upside for H2 in your view?
Sorry, I didn't catch that in your original question. If we're looking into this, then I would definitely say looking at the ECB rate sensitive position and continuing working on our loan and deposit combination is certainly what we're looking at.
The next question is from Tarik El Mejjad, Bank of America.
This is Tarik El Mejjad from Bank of America. Just 2 quick questions left from my side. First, on the dividend. I know your policy is 100% payout, but no indication on the split. Could you give us some indication how you see the split, given that your valuation has materially improved since the CMD and earnings grew actually quite fast as well. So would there be another tranche of buyback potentially with Q3? And how do you see the mix versus last year?
And also on UniCredit stake, I mean, I would be really curious to know, Bettina, how do you deal with a large shareholder at same time, I would say, the main competitor in Germany, given the Mittelstand market share. It'd be interesting to see how you compose with that and also discussion about the Board seat as well.
Thank you, Tarik. So on the dividend policy, so we have paid out last year a dividend of -- in the size of EUR 700 million. And we clearly want to increase dividend year-on-year, and we said that. And also given that we had a capital return of EUR 1.7 billion last year. And if you now take the numbers which we are guiding, which is a net income before restructuring costs, but after AT1 of EUR 2.6 billion, and we say we have a 100% payout, you can assume that everything will go up. So we have now applied for the first tranche of up to EUR 1 billion. We will indeed apply for a second tranche in the third quarter. And then we will also know better what the concrete split will be, but you can assume that dividend will also nicely increase.
When it comes to UniCredit, there has been no reach out on anything with respect to Board seats or something like that. And I think from the statements, at least we learned that there's also no wish to ask for that in the moment. And indeed, the situation is difficult because UniCredit is not only an investor, but also a competitor. So our expectation is clearly that they act as investor and nothing else. And then it doesn't really make a difference whether someone has 5%, 10%, 15% or 25%. But it is important that we share the same objective, and that is creating value and maximizing value for Commerzbank. And that's basically our key focus.
Our focus is also on clients and employees so that we make sure that there is stability, that there's a trust in the actions we have. I think we have proven in the past months that we are very able to manage the situation, and we intend to continue that.
Okay. Very clear. And just a follow-up on the dividend, please. I think in the CMD, you had this extra paragraph mentioning that if the plan goes well, which is the case so far, you would be inclined to ask for a payout even above 100%, which is the case this year, given the restructuring charges adjustment. But beyond even the restructuring charge and given your strong capital build and no expectations to have any hit on capital in the second half, would that apply already for this year? Or you want to see more development of the plan in next year or so?
Well, Tarik -- I mean, we take it slow. I mean you know that we have consequently increased our payout. Last year, it was 71%. Now it is even above 100% given that we exclude the restructuring costs from the net income. And everything else will show in the coming years. We really take it year-on-year, and I think that is also wise to do.
The next question is from Riccardo Rovere, Mediobanca.
Two questions, if I may. The first one is on risk cost. Carsten, the EUR 142 million that you have taken this quarter related to, I guess, recalibration of models, I guess it's something that you will not do every single quarter. You recalibrate the model, but then they should stay more or less as they are for a while. Is that a fair assumption, a fair way of seeing what you have done in Q2?
The second question I have is on the -- on tax rate. You mentioned it was 22%, but you didn't give any particular explanation why that was so low. So I was wondering if you could add a little bit of color here. Then the other thing I wanted to be sure I understood it correctly, Bettina, at the beginning of the call, if I'm not mistaken, you mentioned something that the employees -- or maybe all the employees, I'm not sure, will become shareholder of the bank. And I heard a number like EUR 500 per employee or something like that. But I'm not sure I got it correctly. So if you can explain. And the very -- And the last -- maybe the very, very, very last one, the restructuring charges, are they -- just for me to know, just fiscally deductible or do they go straight to the bottom line?
Yes. Thank you. So on cost of risk, I mean, we said that we have done now the recalibration of the models. We also have done the change between the models and the top level adjustment. And as said, I mean, we have the obligation to also review that every quarter. But as long as the external conditions stay, I would say, as stable as they can be, then you will also see not a lot of changes. So it's very much dependent on what happens outside because it's novel risk, it's macroeconomic risk, it's climate risk. But I would say, for the moment, we expect stability on that.
When I take your last question, restructuring charges, I mean, they are tax deductive, and that explains also the low tax rate in the second quarter. And then on the third point with respect to the employee share program, indeed, we announced the share program already during the Capital Markets Day. It is part of the story that we really want to create value for all our stakeholders, meaning clients first, but then clearly shareholders, but also employees. And this is part to increase also commitment among our staff to more connected to the bank so, therefore we agreed on this plan. It is also in Germany, at least supported by the government because it comes tax-free for the employees.
It has also the additional benefit that everybody -- really everybody has a securities account after this exercise. And it is -- has been always embedded also in our plans on the cost side, and we will continue that also in the years to come. And it's exactly EUR 500 or around EUR 500 dependent on the share price when we implement the program.
And all the employees will be given EUR 500...
Yes. In the AG -- in the moment, AG. It's AG -- Commerzbank AG and -- but that is for Germany and in all the international locations. What is not yet part is mBank and not yet part of our service units in Germany. We are still in discussions there, but there's also something to come in the coming quarters.
And if you had to throw a ballpark, how much at the very end of the day employees will own the bank, if you have any idea?
Well, I mean, you can make the math. It's EUR 500. So we talk about EUR 15 million to EUR 20 million.
The next question is from Borja Ramirez, Citi.
I have 2. Firstly, on the cost guidance, I understand it is EUR 6.9 billion this year because of the share-based compensation due to the better share price performance. I understand this is only 2025. So I'm assuming that the share price, I mean, hopefully, will continue to rerate. But assuming there's no effect from this variable compensation in 2026 and onwards. This additional cost in 2025 should not be modeled going forward. Is this correct?
Yes. I can make that short. That is correct. It's a one-off effect this year due to the increase of the share price, and we will not see the same effect from this in the next years. But clearly, we have to see what market movements are, et cetera, but we stick to the guidance for the next years.
Perfect. And then I would also like to ask on the NII guidance looking beyond this year. I think it's very helpful that you provide the NII waterfall looking at various lines. I think that you're one of the most detailed disclosure among banks, which is great. I would like to ask on the guidance beyond this year. So I think if I understood well, compared to your CMD targets, the replication portfolio is EUR 300 million more than before. The ECB rate sensitive is EUR 100 million lower than before because of the increased replication portfolio. And then I would like to ask if there's any other changes that we should think about?
So when looking at the NII beyond '25, then you're right, we're seeing EUR 300 million more coming from the replication portfolios, given the stabilization effect that we are seeing. But also in the following years, we see countering effects of around EUR 200 million, which are coming from the rate-sensitive positions. So we will see bits and pieces that are working against this. You saw that we kept our NII guidance for '28 stable, exactly for these reasons. But as also mentioned before, the stabilization effect out of the replication portfolio should give us a tailwind. What we're seeing at the moment is there are, of course, better forward curves in the market observable as well, which also allows us to rather approach this from the conservative side.
The next question is from Stefan Stalmann, Autonomous.
I actually just wanted to ask about the Aquila impairment, please. Can you give us a rough sense of what share of the intangibles that existed has been impaired? And is it correct to assume that these are amortizing intangibles in normal times? And also maybe a little bit more strategically, do you think this will have any impact on the net commission income trajectory that you have in mind for coming years? And also, does it have any impact on more broadly your appetite for external growth in asset management type companies?
Thank you, Stefan. So strategically, no, it doesn't change anything with respect to our appetite, number one. And number two, it does not change anything on our guidance of the 7% per annum growth rate, which we target. We want to be really an attractive or we want to provide an attractive offering for our clients with respect to asset management and contains all different areas. So we also keep looking on potential M&A opportunities that has not changed. And on the details on the impairment, Carsten?
The EUR 65 million, we're seeing as a cost item here, are roughly 1/4 of the overall goodwill and intangibles for Aquila, and it would have been a regular depreciation over 15 years. So we're basically pulling this part forward so the EUR 65 million would have been depreciated in any case over a longer period of time. So we're adjusting for current market environment and are monitoring this.
And the next question is a follow-up from Tobias Lukesch, Kepler Cheuvreux.
Quickly to get that right on the tax rate guidance. So you mentioned the 22%. I didn't catch that earlier with regards to the initial 25% to 30% guidance. Could you please elaborate again like how we should see that for the full year? And then I was wondering on the fees for the current accounts. You mentioned that there was progress. Could you please again like tell us well the status quo? How many million you basically converted and what you still have on your agenda and how you expect that to continue in H2 and next year? Or would stay some clients without fees going forward?
And lastly, I discovered this, other financial result of EUR 69 million, which was quite big actually in contributing to Q2 results. I was wondering what is behind that? And if this is kind of recurring part we see over some quarters or if this was a kind of one-off booking?
So let me just start with the fee topic on the current account. So -- I mean, we have reached out to 2.4 million clients who have been on 0 cost account so far. So far, we have got feedback from over 1 million agreeing to pay the EUR 4.90. Then there are some clients who have decided to leave us. I mean that is also part of the deal that there is some attrition, but it's lower attrition than we originally thought.
And then there are also clients who basically decided to fulfill the requirements, i.e., having more than EUR 50,000 on their accounts because then you also get for free account. And that leaves us still with half of the clients that need to be agreed with or find an agreement with. And this is what we're currently doing. So we're sending out letters and trying to get in contact with the clients. And we always know that the second half takes a little bit more time, but we are very committed to be done with the whole exercise by the end of the year.
And then let me get back to the tax question. So I think, first of all, we should start with seeing that Q2 has clearly a low mark in the tax rate with 22%, especially coming from this quarter's effects from restructuring expenses. So when we're looking into the year, we stick to the guidance of 25% to 30%. When making a reference also to mBank, this is mostly because the tax rate in Germany inherently is slightly higher, while tax rate from our international location income is usually taxed at a slightly lower rate, which is also why the mix then makes a difference. So we're sticking to the 25% to 30% for the year and starting with a low 24% out of the first half of the year.
Then secondly, on other income, your question was whether this was a one-off. So the other income was predominantly moved by hedge result and realization gains that we had from derivatives, partially running against net fair value, but that's what it is.
That's an interesting one, I mean, because the net fair value result was way lower than expected by consensus. So you say this kind of realization gain is a kind of offsetting of the net fair value. Has that to be read together kind of?
Yes. So the net fair value and the hedge result, you always have to see a bit in conjunction. Also, we are seeing offsetting effects in this. When you're looking at the full year and what also the consensus is seeing for the net fair value. And if you actually combine that with what we're seeing in the other result, then we're sticking to what we're seeing there.
But here, I'm not talking about the hedge accounting, EUR 41 million. I'm really meaning the EUR 69 million you have in other financial results. I was just wondering, you said realization gains. I was wondering, is that selling an investment security portfolios at a decent price? Or is that something, as you say, which is kind of recurring and has to be read together with the net fair value and ultimately, the NII development?
So that particular EUR 69 million is mostly coming from realization gains, as mentioned earlier. So this is coming out of our activity to also hedge market movements that we're anticipating. So it is part of our ongoing business model to manage the risk position of the bank, but clearly is, yes, changing from quarter-to-quarter.
And we have another follow-up question from Riccardo Rovere, Mediobanca.
You mentioned in the start of the call, if I'm not mistaken, that you have launched new initiatives to grab new deposits. I was wondering why is that and what those initiatives refer to? I mean, are they particularly expensive? This is what I'm hinting to.
And the other question I wanted to have an idea about is you mentioned the Polish FX provisions 2025 expected to be less than 50% of what you charged in '24. Once '25 is gone, should you -- would you expect this to be kind of 0 in '26 and '27 or much, much even or maybe a very, very small amount. What do you expect here?
Yes. So on the new initiatives, I mean, you have seen that also in the past years, we also have been out there with -- attract our products. I mean we are also part of the market, and we have stayed away from that in Q1. But at the end of Q2, we also started to test a little bit the market on comdirect, but also for the smaller businesses in Commerzbank. And that's what we are doing.
And I think we have proven also in the past years that we are doing it rightly. They are pretty aggressive, and we have been also very successful with that. But it's testing the market basically, testing how much client demand we can attract with that and then seeing how much of the client volumes also stay with us. So that's a normal business thing, which we always do. And it also helps us actually clearly to attract new clients on the contract side, but also on the SME side.
When it comes to the FX effects in Poland, yes. I mean, we said quarter-on-quarter, we will see less provisions, and that is what you see. And we also said that we would like to put an end to the story by 2025. We can't exclude that from the passive population, there will be someone still coming out in the next years, but it should be so small that it's not worth talking about.
Yes, that's very clear. Just to get back one second on the deposits. Those initiatives, is that something that you have done throughout the quarter? Or were they concentrated toward the end of the quarter? And are we talking about kind of call money, call deposits as you did before in the previous quarter or last year?
It was very focused only for a couple of weeks. We started end of the quarter, and it's -- I think it has even ended already and it's for core money.
At the moment, we have no further questions [Operator Instructions].
Okay. Then I would say we call it an end. Thank you very much for your questions. And I wish you a great day and a great summer holiday, if it's still ahead of you. Thank you very much.
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Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
Commerzbank — Q2 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Operatives Ergebnis: EUR 2,4 Mrd. H1 (Rekord; +23% YoY)
- Umsatz: Gesamterträge +13% YoY; Net interest income (NII) resilient, Guidance 2025 auf EUR 8,0 Mrd. erhöht
- Cost/Income: 56% H1; Ziel 57% für das Geschäftsjahr und 50% bis 2028
- Kapital: Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) 14,6% Ende Q2; Antrag für Aktienrückkauf bis zu EUR 1 Mrd. gestellt
- Restrukturierung & Risiko: Restrukturierungsaufwand H1 EUR 534m (Erwartung ~EUR 600m); Risikoergebnis Q2 EUR 176m; Guidance Risiko ~EUR 850m
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Momentum-Strategie: Ziel 15% Return on tangible equity (RoTE) bis 2028; Stand‑alone‑Fahrplan wird umgesetzt; Betriebsratsverhandlungen sollen bis September abgeschlossen sein
- Kapitaleinsatz: Klare Priorität auf Kapitalrückfluss: 100% Payout‑Policy (vor Restrukturierung, nach AT1); erste Rückkauftranche beantragt, weitere in Q3 geplant
- Operative Maßnahmen: Kontogebühren: >1 Mio. von 2,4 Mio. Free‑Accounts akzeptieren EUR 4,90/Monat; Mitarbeiter‑Aktienprogramm ~EUR 500 pro Mitarbeiter (Rollout Herbst); Ausbau digitaler Handelsprodukte
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- NII 2025: Angehoben auf EUR 8,0 Mrd.; H2 etwas unter H1, Jahresfloor aber gesichert
- Ergebnis: Nettoergebnis 2025 erhöht auf EUR 2,5 Mrd. (EUR 2,9 Mrd. ex. Restrukturierung)
- Kosten & Kapital: C/I Ziel 57% FY; CET1 ≥14,5% Ende 2025; erwartete Restrukturierungsausgaben ~EUR 600m
- Langfristig: Replikationsportfolio stabilisiert NII – zusätzlich bis zu EUR 1,2 Mrd. NII bis 2028 vs. 2025
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Deposit‑Beta / NII: Beta steigt moderat von 39% auf ~40% in H2; comdirect‑Kampagnen bringen Volumen, NII‑Treiber bleiben Beta, Replikation und Volume‑Mix
- Risikovorsorge: Modellrecalibration verursachte Q2‑Aufwand EUR 142m; Guidance ~EUR 850m bekräftigt; mBank‑FX‑Lasten <50% von 2024, Ziel: Ende der Belastung 2025
- Kapitalrückfluss & Kosten: Erste Buyback‑Tranche beantragt (bis EUR 1bn), zweite in Q3 geplant; Kosten 2025 leicht erhöht (≈EUR 6,9 Mrd.) durch einmalige aktienbasierte Vergütung
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit für Aktionäre: Starke operative Dynamik und höhere Guidance stützen die Aktie; zentrale Risiken sind Modell‑/Provisionsunsicherheiten (mBank FX, makro) und die Umsetzung der Restrukturierung. Kapitalrendite, Dividende und Buybacks sind klare Prioritäten.
Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 29th Annual European Financials Conference
1. Question Answer
Okay. Thank you, everybody, for joining us. And for the final session of this year's European Financials Conference in Berlin, it's my pleasure to be joined on stage by Bettina Orlopp, CEO of Commerzbank. And I think done this discussion together over a year since I've been looking at the sector. So thank you for the continued support. I think it's fair to say it's been a busy period for Commerzbank. So Bettina appreciate you taking time to come up and speak with all of us today. As per the other sessions, 35 minutes, we've got a lot to run through. We'll have some time for audience Q&A towards the end.
I think let's just start by discussing the UniCredit topic right at the beginning. The German government has expressed -- clearly expressed its favor of an independent Commerzbank. That was in a letter to your workers' council. I guess what's your position as CEO? And there are any changes?
No, actually not really any changes actually. But as you have now referred to this topic, let me just do the 3 key remarks on that, which I think are important from our standpoint. And one and the most important thing is that we are absolutely committed as a management team to implement our strategy and to create value for our shareholders. That is our first and most important priority.
And we are convinced that the equity story is compelling and is nicely reflected also in our share price, and it justifies our share price. And you can see that also when you take our NII and NCI prospects, which are very attractive and are getting more and more attractive also by the potential effects of the German stimulus package. And actually, you can also see that in the target price developments of analysts since our announcement of the strategy momentum. I think the second point I would like to do is that we are guardians of all our shareholders' interest. And that includes all shareholders and we remain open and are absolutely ready to consider all our shareholders.
But it's also important to state that there is one important shareholder, and that is the German government and we respect their interest in Commerzbank, being a very strong and independent Commerzbank. And the third point I would like to make is that, we do not like and we do not accept any approach, which basically undermines our strategy and our share price development because we think that it's in our interest and in the interest of our shareholders, specifically that our strong performance, which we have shown over the past quarters is also fairly reflected in the share price, instead of repeatedly trying and luckily only trying to talk our share price down just because there might be also some other interests in the play.
Okay. So I'm sure we're going to maybe come back a topic in Q&A later, but given that we are sat here in Berlin in Germany and you mentioned in your comments there, just the outlook for the German economy, which has changed is dynamic, particularly in the context of the new government and the new fiscal approach. In your view, in your mind, is the German economy now set up to win? Or are there further structural reforms that need to be enacted?
We are very positive on German development. And I think the German government had a good start. I think the stimulus package is important. It's now also important that it really comes to action, which means we need to have a budget and all the things and we definitely also need some more reforms to come, but they are currently also on the agenda of the government, be it energy prices, be it the tax environment and be it deregulation.
So many important things that need to be implemented. But you also see it and feel it in the numbers. If you look on the latest EFO data, if you look at the latest production data, everything is getting more positive. And we also see that when we talk to our corporate clients that there are -- the sentiment is getting more positive. And we all know that lots is about sentiment, and sentiment is getting much more positive. So we also see that they are really working on their investment plans, and we should really see more activities, specifically on the loan side, in the coming months.
And you see it also when I look at our own economic research department, which was basically decreasing the outlook after the Liberation Day to 0% GDP growth for this year that at least have already increased it a little bit, but still it's the right trend to a more positive outlook. And then specifically for next year, the expectation is that the improved sentiment, combined with necessary steps from the government, combined with the stimulus package will have a very important and positive input on the German economy.
And you referenced there some of the discussions you've been having with corporate clients in recent months, they're, I guess, increased enthusiasm. Are you seeing any tangible changes in actual activity or readiness to transact amongst that client base? Or is this still -- it's coming?
It's coming. If you take my own legal department, they would say there is more activity because they have more work. So paper work is at least unprepared. So it's a good early indicator, I would say, but it's not yet that you really see a lot is happening, but it's a good activity. And hopefully, we also get a deal done between Europe and U.S. on the tariff situation, we should not forget that this date is also approaching and that could be also a good positive, hopefully, positive catalyst.
And so that's a good segue to the next question because you began the year with a better-than-expected performance in the first quarter, but a lot has happened since the end of the first quarter, particularly on tariffs, trade tensions, as you referred to. So maybe just a quick mark-to-market on how the group is currently performing in light of some of that recent macro turbulence.
Yes. I mean we are very happy also with the second quarter so far and the quarter finished. So it's absolutely developing according to plan. We -- I mean, interest rate development is exactly as we have forecasted it and also high cost discipline, net commission income developing nicely. So therefore, very much tick mark to our guidance. So no changes here.
And you might have seen that we have had already our agreement on the frame contract with the Workers Council shortly before our AGM, which also means that we are ready to book the restructuring costs in the second quarter. It will be a little bit less than we indicated. First of all, there might be still some things coming in the years to come because the foreign locations are always a little bit behind. And some of the things might happen in the foreign locations, but we also did the bottom-up calculation, et cetera. So -- but you will see the booking as planned in the second quarter.
And then if we look at NII, your base case for NII, EUR 7.8 billion for this year, if I add the net fair value of EUR 8.1 million. Q1 performance was strong. You've got tailwinds from the replication portfolio. Rates, I guess, were a little bit more hawkish than we were a few weeks ago. So given all of that, how confident are you on delivering on your ambition for this year, particularly, I guess, the main outstanding issue being around deposit betas?
I'm very confident. I mean, we said it already between -- during the Q1 call that I think we used the phrase floor. So we see the EUR 7.8 billion as a floor. I'm confident that it is the floor and as said at the beginning, we -- the interest rates are developing as we have forecasted it. We foresee another rate cut by September and I think that is also when you take the language of the ECB, what you can expect in the moment, I mean change is always possible, but we feel very comfortable on it. Deposit beta is also developing as planned. We have been a little bit conservative on that, and it's good. So we have no reason to adjust anything on this guidance.
Can we talk a little bit about hedging? Maybe if you could just remind us your approach with regards to the replication portfolio. If you think about making any changes to that approach, maybe if deposit growth were, in fact, to accelerate here in Germany and maybe also what a steeper yield curve really means for Commerz.
So I mean, we are reviewing clearly the replication portfolio on a very regular basis. We have just increased on the size of the replication portfolio, as you know, in April so it's now more than EUR 140 billion, and that will create -- it's very neutral for this year because it's basically changing NII from overnight to NII from the replication portfolio. But for the years to come, it will create also additional benefits, specifically if the yield curve stays as it is and/or it gets even steeper and we all know that, I mean, our average yield in the moment is a little bit above 1%, which means every reinvestment at the moment is a positive.
So we expect a lot for the years to come. And we will definitely review also the size of the deposits -- the model deposits dependent on how overall the deposits are developing, but also, I mean, the portfolio of deposits so how much call, how much term, how much site deposits is an important one.
And then if we look at the other revenue items, you've talked about or your expectation for lower FX provisions in 2025 fading, I think, effectively in 2026, given everything that's happened in the last few years, what gives you the confidence around legal and settlement risks specifically on that line item?
Well, just if you look at the portfolio, the mBank management team has done a very fine job in doing a lot of settlements. They still settle 1,000 settlements or have 1,000 settlements per month. So the problem basically gets smaller and smaller as we speak, with the provisions we now have booked we basically have covered all active clients. So everybody who still has an FX mortgage with us is basically covered.
The only unknown are the ones who were passive. So who have repaid their loans years ago. And there, one needs also to keep in mind that many of them have already repaid years ago and never had a disadvantage in comparison to a Polish zloty mortgage. And so therefore, our goal is clearly to book as much as needed for this year to clarify the situation. And then there might be still some incoming lawsuits and settlements but that should be so small quarter-by-quarter, that is not worth to talk about.
Good. Let's talk about fees or net commission income. Consensus has around EUR 4 billion of NCI. For this year, you grew it by 6% or so in the first quarter, a 6% target for the full year. Can you walk us through what's driving that growth? And how would you break down what you see within NCI between sort of sticky fees and maybe some of the more episodic, more volatile items?
I mean the big benefit we have is that the net commission income and specifically, the growth comes really from 3 different areas. It's private clients, corporate clients and then clearly, mBank. Let me start with mBank. MBank, the net commission income so far is mainly -- primarily on payments that is pretty sticky. But there, the growth potential clearly for the years to come is also in asset and wealth management because the whole Polish market is developing and clients are much more focused now on wealth creation than before.
So that is a big advantage. But for now, it's, specifically payments. And then you have the corporate client side, where you have parts, which is clearly volatile when it comes to capital markets, you have a quarter with lot of bonds issuance, and then you have a quarter with less. But then you also have a big part with respect to payments, which is rather sticky. So it's also a good mixture on that.
And then clearly, also the lending provides you with some part, which is related to net commission income. And on the private client side, again, we have lots of different levers, we have the comdirect side, which is clearly at the moment driven by volatility. That's for sure. Number of transactions is driven by the volatility of the market. There, you see up and downs. And you can also see it we get frequently asked the question, how much of the NCI from securities comes from the transactions, how much comes from the fees for the volumes, the securities volumes in the deposits and that changes dramatically quarter-by-quarter.
Last quarter because there was so much volatility. It was approximately 60% were related to transactions, only 40% related to fees on securities volumes, but there are also quarters where it's the other way around 60% on volumes, 40% on transactions. And then I want to not forget that the fees on securities volume again depend on the DAX development. So as long as the DAX is going up, apparently, we are also benefiting from it, but it also means DACs coming down specifically DAX, but also other indices, then volumes come down and then fees come down. That is 1 part.
But then there is the other part, which is again, payments related, which is a very constant fee income and we have just introduced by May 1, a new fee model for our accounts. So when you're a customer with Commerzbank and you're no longer a student or you have to basically pay for your account a certain fee, a monthly fee. We have approached more than 2 million clients, the basic account is EUR 4.90 per month, you can multiply that with 12 and that is something which is coming in very steadily, except if clients terminate their account, but luckily attrition is so far very low.
And maybe you referenced earlier that the targets you talked about in February and if you think about operating efficiency, how are you progressing on those cost optimization measures you mentioned before the framework agreement, which I think is due to be concluded now. At that point, how should we expect restructuring costs, I guess, to sequence into phase through to 2028 from 57% as a starting point down to the 50% target.
First of all, we said that it will be really a steady development downwards. So for 2027, we said it will be a 53% and then 50% in 2028. As said, we have the frame contracts, the social plan we have in place. What's happening as we speak. This is a week of negotiations, now every executive area who has head count reduction is in negotiations with the workers' council for the respective area, and we want to conclude these negotiations by September, and then there will be the adjustments in structure.
We have already an offer out to staff with respect to a part-time retirement program that is already happening. And given the structure of this instrument, you basically still work 1 to 3 years on average with us and then you leave and you're in a passive time, 1 to 3 years, you will see and the cost reduction will be seen in the moment where the passive phase starts, you will see now constantly basically a reduction in the head count related costs. And we also make very nice progress on the procurement side with respect to on the non headcount-related costs.
And then on loan losses, you've maintained the EUR 850 million guidance for this year. That's inclusive of some TLA usage. I guess the backdrop is reasonably benign. So what would need to change for you maybe to revise down that number? And then I think you used EUR 40 million or so of the TLA in the first quarter. Is that sort of the right run rate to assume for the rest of the year?
Yes. I mean let me start with the top level adjustment. I mean, the top level adjustment is something we're -- which we now have for quite a long time. Luckily, we didn't really use it. And so -- it's also a time where the arguments getting thinner and thinner, how you can argue that you have this type of buffer.
So you will see over time this one released and what we currently look at is also given the situation and the requirements from the regulator how we can bring that into the models. So I always explain it untechnically how to move 1 buffer in another buffer, but this buffer then as part of the modeling.
With respect to our guidance, I get the question quite often at the moment, but I think we stay conservative and we will keep the guidance for the time being because we have seen a time lag when we were waiting actually for defaults to increase because we always thought this was not a normal number, and it had a time lag on that. And I think now also we have to expect that there is a time lag of recovery because we have been now basically in the third year of no growth and that has an impact.
And also what I said at the beginning, we really see a positive improvement in sentiment. We expect some more cases to come in the upcoming quarters. So we feel super comfortable with our guidance of the EUR 850 million, but we think it's too early to reduce that already today.
And then on return on tangible equity, you delivered 11% in the first quarter. You reaffirmed the 9.6% for the full year. What are the key sensitivities that will push you higher or lower that level for this year?
And if you look at the 400 basis points of improvement, you sort of have embedded in the plan, remind us the kind of key blocks that take you from around about the double-digit level today to the medium-term target.
I mean, lower -- we have 2 main risk factors, which we always also refer to, one is clearly, if there would be any surprise on the FX side, which we do not really expect but that would be one and then we still also have our Russia subsidiary, which is always also out there, and we don't know -- I mean, it's in hibernation mode, but we also know that there might be some impact coming from that.
So that's on the -- I would say, the key factors driving -- which might drive it down, but I'm not really expecting that, but that could be the case. The other way is, take, for example, we do not see another interest rate cut in September that will clearly automatically have a positive effect. Also, if you see a continued volatility, if you see basically sentiment improving even more rapidly than we thought and credit demand going up even more than we thought. Things like that could improve this year.
For the years to come, and I think you referred to 2027, we expect a cost income ratio of 53%, and that will clearly also drive the profitability up. And that is very much driven by the revenue increase. That is one that comparison to today. This year, you will not have any provisions anymore for FX, you will have a nice recovery of the NII also due to the replication portfolio, and you will have continued NCI growth of 7%. So that's driving clearly, the revenues up and improving the cost income ratio and therefore, improving the profitability.
Another factor, which you need to take into account is that we have the EUR 850 million this year in our plan and in our guidance. And we expect definitely for 2027 the normalized level, which will be then well below the EUR 850 million that improves profitability additionally. And then thirdly, we have quite ambitious capital return plans to release our CET1 ratio, which has been 15.1% by the end of the quarter -- first quarter and we definitely target our 13.5%. That means substantial capital return. That means also lowering of the capital basis, and that will also have a positive impact on the [ royalty ].
And then what are the items in the plan that I thought was particularly interesting is the EUR 13 billion RWA reduction via SRTs. Can you talk us through the approach that you haven't used owing to some business trends?
Yes. We think it's a good instrument to further improve our RWA efficiency. EUR 13 billion is the total number, EUR 10 billion is allocated to corporate clients, EUR 3 billion to mBank, the current plan for this year is EUR 4 billion, whether we really execute that this year to be seen. I mean the basal effect has been much less than we thought. And our CET1 ratio is very convenient.
So we will see how much we do. And we always do things which makes a lot of sense, which reduce RWA density and we are also cost conscious. So we do not want to spend too much on that to still keep it profitable.
And I want to ask about CET1. You talked a little bit about where you're going in the medium term. So 14% near term, that number reduces as you laid out, there's a distribution flow of 13.5%. How did you decide that, that was the right level at which to run the bank and how would the discussions go with supervisors both here in Germany and at the European level.
So the 13.5% is basically when you take our MDA, which is around 10.3%, then you clearly have the P2G. And then we have included additional buffers for certain macro events and yes, specifically macro events and regulatory requirements and stuff like that. And then there's always a discussion which you have with your supervisory board, your supervisory authorities, how much additional buffer they need.
And then finally, we came up with a number, which is also now part of our capital return policy of the 13.5%, and we feel super comfortable with this. And as said, I mean, we want to reach the 13.5%, but it's quite a challenge given where we are with our CET1 ratio now at 15.1%, the guidance for this year and is now 14.5%. It was originally 14%. But now given all the effects which we have seen, it's rather 14.5% despite the fact that we really want to return 100% of our net income and that before restructuring costs, which means we basically, we have a payout ratio above 100%. But even that doesn't bring us more down than the 14.5%.
Okay. That distribution topic is my last question before I open up to the audience. As you said, you've confirmed this 100% payout based on pre-restructuring net income. Can you elaborate maybe just on how you're thinking about the split of that between dividends and buybacks, not only for this year but also through the medium term?
Yes. I mean it's clear that we have also a number of shareholders who are very interested in dividend and they expect a dividend, which is increasing and which is not too much volatile. So what we try to achieve is constant and decent increase of the dividends over time, which means that also this year, it should be higher than last year. But overall, we want to increase our capital return, which also means that our share buyback plans -- our share buyback plans go up. And then it's very much also dependent on our own share price. How much makes sense, at the moment, we think both instruments are very attractive for our shareholders. So for this year, we said that we will ask for the first -- or we will start the approval process for the first share buyback beginning of the third quarter based basically on the preliminary first half year results. And then we will continue the story and then the final decision on dividend will be taking place as always, beginning of next year. But our goal is clearly to have a constant and very attractive increase of both dividend and share buybacks.
Okay. Very clear. With that, I'm going to see if anybody in the audience wants to ask anything to Bettina. Otherwise, I have 1 last follow-up question. So I guess my little follow-up question before we could draw this to a close, you've obviously spent a lot of time since February talking through the medium-term plan with investors and also with your team since then. I guess, as you've walk through those moving parts, how do you see or where do you see the greatest phasing risk, let's say, around the 2028 ambitions that we get to the right outcome but that different parts of the plan are phased differently further to the right that we might expect as you've broken down the different parts of the plan, where do you feel more and slightly less confident, if anywhere?
First of all, we think that this is -- I mean, there are aspirational targets but absolutely achievable. Otherwise, we would have not written it down. I think we were -- we did the right thing by being rather conservative on the GDP and interest assumptions, which helps us now. And I mean it's a lot of work because you always start at the beginning of the year with a clean sheet and specifically on the net commission income side, yes, you also start with some volumes -- security volumes in the books.
But otherwise, you really have to go out and showing the 7% per annum is getting increasingly also aspirational because the basis is increasing also. One should not forget that. And also the 8% loan growth for corporate clients, we think it's absolutely achievable. And also when you look into the investment needs of our clients, I think it's something which can be absolutely done, but it needs to be delivered.
And therefore, I would say, things which can really prevent us are big macroeconomic crisis and then a recession as a consequence out of it, or any geopolitical event, which we haven't foreseen, which again stops activity, things like that, that are really the things or breakdown of capital markets whatever that odds is more outside risk which we have than really inside management risk where we feel uncomfortable about, I would say.
Great. Well, look, I think on behalf of myself and everyone in the room, sincere thanks for coming here and sharing your perspectives on the situation and the outlook as well. Great. Thank you.
Thank you very much.
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Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 29th Annual European Financials Conference
Commerzbank — Goldman Sachs 29th Annual European Financials Conference
📣 Kernbotschaft
- Kern: CEO Bettina Orlopp bekräftigt Strategiefokus und die Absicht, Commerzbank als unabhängige, wertschöpfende Bank zu führen. Guidance bleibt unverändert: Net Interest Income (NII) von mindestens EUR 7,8 Mrd. gilt als „Floor“. Positiver Ausblick für Deutschland stützt Kreditnachfrage, gleichzeitig Bereitschaft zu Kapitalrückführungen (Dividende & Buybacks).
🎯 Strategische Highlights
- Unabhängigkeit: Management respektiert Staatsinteresse an einer starken, unabhängigen Bank, bleibt aber offen für alle Aktionäre.
- Ertragsarchitektur: Ausbau des Replikationsportfolios (>EUR 140 Mrd. seit April) zur Stabilisierung und langfristigen Ertragssteigerung; Net Commission Income (NCI) wird durch Privat-, Firmen- und mBank-Geschäft getrieben.
- Kost- & Kapitalplan: Ziel Cost‑Income‑Ratio 53% (2027) → 50% (2028). Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) mittelfristig ~13,5% Ziel; FY‑Guidance eher ~14,5%.
🔭 Neue Informationen
- Konkretes: Rahmenvereinbarung mit Betriebsrat steht, somit Umbaukosten werden im zweiten Quartal eingebucht (leicht unter vorheriger Schätzung).
- Kapitalmaßnahmen: Genehmigungsprozess für ersten Aktienrückkauf soll Anfang Q3 gestartet werden; finale Dividendenentscheidung beginnt wie üblich zu Jahresanfang.
- Sonstiges: Keine Änderung der EUR 850 Mio. Kreditverlust‑Guidance; FX‑Provisionen bei mBank werden weiter reduziert durch laufende Vergleiche.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Unicredit/Thema: Frage nach Übernahmerisiko und Regierungseinfluss—Management betont Commitment zur Strategie, vermeidet aber detaillierte Szenarien.
- NII‑Risiken: Deposit‑Beta, Zinspfad und Hedging (Replikationsportfolio) wurden intensiv diskutiert; Management sieht EUR 7,8 Mrd. als konservativen Floor, prüft Portfolio laufend.
- Rechtsrisiken & RWA: FX‑Fälle bei mBank gehen zurück; SRTs (Risk‑Transfer‑Instrumente) für RWA‑Reduktion (EUR13 Mrd. Ziel) werden selektiv eingesetzt – Umsetzung 2024/25 offen.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Für Aktionäre bestätigt der Auftritt ein klares, umsetzbares Strategiepaket: stabiler NII‑Floor, aktive Kapitalrückführungsperspektive und Kostendisziplin. Kurzfristig entscheiden Makrorisiken (Konjunktur, Handelsstreit) sowie verbleibende Rechts‑/Geopolitik‑Risiken über Upside/Pullback; die Bewertung bleibt stark von Ausführung und Dividenden-/Buyback‑Timing abhängig.
Finanzdaten von Commerzbank
Umsatz
Der Umsatz stellt die Summe aller Einnahmen eines Unternehmens z. B. für dessen Produkte oder Dienstleistungen dar.
Umsatz (TTM) einfach erklärtDirekte Kosten
Direkte Kosten sind die Kosten, die direkt im Zusammenhang mit der Herstellung des Produkts oder der Dienstleistung entstehen.
Bruttoertrag
Der Bruttoertrag gibt an, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug der direkten Herstellkosten im Unternehmen verbleibt. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von der Bruttomarge (engl. Gross Margin).
Brutto Marge einfach erklärtVertriebs- und Verwaltungskosten
Die Vertriebs- & Verwaltungskosten (engl. Selling, General & Administrative expenses, kurz SG&A) beinhalten alle Aufwände für Marketing und den Verkauf sowie die allgemeine Verwaltung des Unternehmens.
Forschungs- und Entwicklungskosten
Die Forschungs- und Entwicklungskosten (engl. research & development costs, kurz R&D) geben Auskunft darüber, wie viel das Unternehmen in die Forschung und die Entwicklung seiner Produkte investiert. Vor allem prozentual vom Umsatz und im Vergleich zu direkten Wettbewerbern sind die Kosten interessant.
EBITDA
Das EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) ist der Gewinn des Unternehmens vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von der EBITDA-Marge.
Abschreibungen
Abschreibungen stellen Wertminderungen von Vermögensgegenständen des Unternehmens dar (z.B. durch Abnutzung von Maschinen).
EBIT (Operatives Ergebnis)
Das EBIT (engl. Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) ist der Gewinn des Unternehmens vor Zinsen und Steuern, das auch als operatives Ergebnis bezeichnet wird. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von
der EBIT-Marge.
Nettogewinn
Der Nettogewinn stellt den Gewinn oder Verlust nach Abzug aller Kosten dar.
Nettogewinn einfach erklärtaktien.guide Basis
| Mär '26 |
+/-
%
|
||
| Umsatz | 3.466 3.466 |
8 %
8 %
100 %
|
|
| - Zinsertrag | 2.047 2.047 |
1 %
1 %
59 %
|
|
| - Zinsunabhängige Erträge | 1.419 1.419 |
25 %
25 %
41 %
|
|
| Zinsaufwand | 2.596 2.596 |
8 %
8 %
75 %
|
|
| Nichtzinsaufwand | -1.967 -1.967 |
4 %
4 %
-57 %
|
|
| Risikovorsorge für Kredite | 142 142 |
15 %
15 %
4 %
|
|
| Nettogewinn | 913 913 |
9 %
9 %
26 %
|
|
Angaben in Millionen EUR.
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Commerzbank Aktie News
Firmenprofil
Die Commerzbank AG erbringt kommerzielle Bankdienstleistungen. Sie ist in den folgenden Geschäftsbereichen tätig: Privat- und Mittelstandskunden, Firmenkunden, Sonstige und Konsolidierung sowie Asset & Kapitalrückgewinnung. Das Segment Privat- und Geschäftskunden umfasst die Universalbankdienstleistungen für Privat- und Geschäftskunden, Online-Wertpapiertransaktionen und die Vermögensverwaltung. Das Segment Firmenkunden umfasst Kreditprodukte und Finanzierungslösungen für mittelständische Firmenkunden, internationale Konzerne und Finanzinstitute. Das Segment "Sonstige und Konsolidierung" umfasst die Stabs-, Management- und Supportfunktionen des Unternehmens. Das Segment Asset & Capital Recovery betreut die Positionen der Portfolios in den Bereichen gewerbliche Immobilien- und Schiffsfinanzierung sowie komplexe Finanzierungen aus dem Bereich der Staatsfinanzierung. Das Unternehmen wurde am 26. Februar 1870 gegründet und hat seinen Hauptsitz in Frankfurt, Deutschland.
aktien.guide Basis
| Hauptsitz | Deutschland |
| CEO | Dr. Orlopp |
| Mitarbeiter | 40.144 |
| Gegründet | 1870 |
| Webseite | www.commerzbank.de |


