Crédit Agricole set to complete Emporiki sale

CRÉDIT AGRICOLE, the French bank heavily exposed to the euro zone crisis, says it aims to complete the sale of its Greek subsidiary…

CRÉDIT AGRICOLE, the French bank heavily exposed to the euro zone crisis, says it aims to complete the sale of its Greek subsidiary within weeks as it reports a hefty slide in quarterly net profits driven in large part by losses in both Greece and Italy.

Chief executive Jean-Paul Chifflet said a deal could be reached “in a matter of weeks” on the sale of Emporiki, although the bank said no decision had been made on entering advanced talks with any of the three local bidders, National Bank of Greece, Alpha Bank and Eurobank.

Crédit Agricole said it was in discussions with the Bank of Greece, the Greek financial stability fund and the European Commission on terms for the disposal of Emporiki. The French lender bought it for €2.2 billion in 2006 but it has cost it €6 billion in writedowns.

Net profits at France’s third-largest bank by market value tumbled 67 per cent in the second quarter, compared with the same period a year ago, to €111 million. The decline included €370 million in losses at Emporiki, to which Crédit Agricole said its net funding remained stable at €4.6 billion.

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The bank was also hit by a €427 million loss from its stake in the Italian bank Intesa Sanpaolo, in which it has now reduced its holding to less than 2 per cent.

Italy is Crédit Agricole’s second-largest market after France and it also has stakes in banks in Spain and Portugal. It said net losses in its international retail operations were reduced to €271 million in the period from €695 million a year ago.

Retail subsidiary Cariparma, the French lender’s main arm in Italy, was showing “good resilience”, posting 9 per cent revenue growth in the second quarter.

Overall revenues at Crédit Agricole, a co-operative bank majority owned by its mutual shareholders, were down 14 per cent at €4.7 billion in the second quarter, with operating expenses pegged back by 1.8 per cent to €3.3 billion.

Like its bigger French peers BNP Paribas and Société Générale, Crédit Agricole is retrenching, including downsizing its corporate and investment banking operations.

Net profits in corporate and investment banking were down 58 per cent in the quarter to €295 million, on revenues down 20 per cent at €1.35 billion. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012