Amundi: fourth-quarter and full-year 2021 financial results
FY 2021: Strong increase
of earnings: net income1
of €1,315m (+37%)Very robust business
momentum: +€75bn in MLT assets2
excl. JVs AuM of
€2,064bn with the consolidation of
Lyxor as of 2021 year end
An excellentQ4
20213 |
|
Net inflows of +€65.6bn,
driven by MLT assets, Retail, a recovery of treasury
products, and JVsAdjusted net income of €328m, up +13.9%
vs. Q4 2020 |
|
|
|
20213:High
inflows and better-than-targeted
results |
|
Very strong business momentum, with net
flows of +€60.2bn fuelled by:
- Record MLT inflows2,4
(+€75.5bn , particularly in active management)
- Robust Retail
business (+€43.5bn4)
- Continuing development of
JVs (+€11.4bn)
Excellent, above-target,
financial performances:
- Solid increase in
revenue1, driven by higher net management
fees (+15%) and the exceptional level of performance
fees5
- Excellent operational
efficiency (Cost/Income ratio1 of
47,9%)
- Net
income1 of €1,315m, up +37% vs.
2020
|
|
|
|
Dividend Solid financial structure
after Lyxor |
|
Significantly higher
dividend: €4.1 per share, i.e. +41% vs. 2020
Increased net
tangible equity (€3.5bn at end-2021 post-Lyxor
acquisition) CE1 ratio6
of 16.1% |
|
|
|
Major achievements and strategic initiatives |
|
Strong growth in Retail, driven largely by third-party
distributors Development of activities in Asia and
successful JV launch with BOC ESG: 2018-2021
targets exceeded and new 2025 targets
announced Ramping up of Amundi
Technology Lyxor acquisition
finalised |
Paris, 9 February 2022
Amundi’s Board of Directors, chaired by Yves
Perrier, convened on 8 February 2022 to approve the fourth-quarter
and full-year 2021 financial statements.
Yves Perrier,
Chairman, commented:
“By leveraging on initiatives in line with our
strategic objectives and identified growth drivers, Amundi
succeeded in amplifying its profitable growth trajectory in 2021:
creation of a subsidiary in China with Bank of China, launch of
Amundi Technology, acquisitions of Sabadell Asset Management and of
Lyxor“.
Commenting on the figures, Valérie
Baudson, CEO, added:
“Amundi surpassed in 2021 the €2Tn of assets
under management milestone, thanks to the acquisition of Lyxor and
to its strong commercial momentum, as evidenced by record asset
collection in MLT assets.
With the adjusted net income up 37% at 1.3 Bn€,
we have exceeded the targets of our medium-term 2018-2022 strategic
plan.
We have also met all the objectives of our ESG
plan, confirming our leadership in the field of responsible
investment. Thanks to its comprehensive range of investment
solutions, its technology as well as services and solutions, Amundi
is well-positioned to continue on its growth trajectory”.
I. 2021
Highlights
Strong growth in Retail business in Europe,
driven by distributors
Retail business in Europe over the year
underscored Amundi’s ability to expand in virtually all
distribution channels.
- Third-party distributor
inflows were especially high at +€23.5bn in the company’s
main markets (France, Italy, Germany, Benelux, Spain, etc.),
fuelled by both passive and active management. Assets managed for
third-party distributors (including Lyxor) totalled €326bn at
end-2021, i.e. 52% of total Retail AuM (excl. JVs).
With the distribution market facing new
challenges (pressure on margins, regulatory requirements,
sophistication and digitalisation of client relations, etc.),
giving rise to new needs (bespoke savings solutions, optimisation
of technological tools, development of ESG, etc.), Amundi has
everything it takes to support its distributors in an
open-architecture environment.
- International partner
networks also enjoyed strong momentum, particularly
UniCredit (+€4.4bn in Italy, Germany and Austria) and Banco
Sabadell (+€2.1bn in Spain).
Robust development of activities in Asia
and successful launch of the
subsidiary Amundi-BOC
In line with its strategic roadmap,
Amundi continued expanding its activities in Asia,
especially in India (AuM of €189bn7 and inflows of €26.0bn) and
China (AuM of €98bn8 and inflows of €25bn). Overall, AuM in Asia
amounted to €369bn at end-2021, up by 24% year-on-year.
- To be noted that
on 12 December 2021 SBI
FM announced its upcoming IPO, envisaged
to take place in 2022 on the Indian stock exchange9, and covering
10% of SBI’s capital. In this context, Amundi envisages to sell
around 4%.
- In China, the new subsidiary
Amundi-BOC WM had a very strong first year of operations, recording
inflows of +€10.1bn in the Bank of China networks.
2018-2021 ESG targets exceeded and new 2025
ESG targets defined
In ESG, Amundi confirmed its leadership
in Europe, with €847bn
of AuM at end-2021, o/w more than
€780bn classified under Articles 8 and 9 (SFDR10). Net inflows were
+€36.5bn11. Amundi met all its commitments in terms of the
2018-2021 ESG plan.
On 8 December 2021, Amundi presented its
new “Ambition 2025” ESG Plan, aimed at ramping up its
commitments, both in terms of savings and investment solutions
offered to its clients, and engagement initiatives targeting
corporate issuers. In the interest of alignment, Amundi also plans
to index the compensation paid to its top executives to the
achievement of ESG targets, and will present its overall climate
strategy to its shareholders.
Successful development of Amundi
Technology
Amundi Technology stepped up its
development (39 clients at end-2021, o/w 15 new clients),
as illustrated by the selection of ALTO12 Investment by Malakoff
Humanis (AuM of €54bn) and AG2R (AuM of €120bn). The ALTO range was
expanded to include two new modules (ESG and Asset Servicing).
Furthermore, the diversification and
internationalisation of the product range were reflected in the new
contract signed with Bank of New York Mellon, which chose the ALTO
Asset Servicing offer (latest innovation in the ALTO range with the
ESG-dedicated ALTO Sustainability module) for the global management
of its “depositary control” activity, making it the 3rd client in 2
years after Caceis and SGSS.
Amundi Technology boasted strong growth in
revenue, totalling €36m over 12 months.
Acquisition of Lyxor
On 31 December 2021, Amundi finalised the
acquisition of Lyxor for €825m. The deal, expected
to generate considerable value,
makes Amundi the European leader
in ETFs and completes
its range of active
management, particularly in liquid alternative
investments.
See Lyxor section on page 7 and in the appendix
on page 13.
Note: data on Q4 and FY inflows and results do
not include Lyxor, the acquisition of which was not finalised until
31 December 2021.
II. An
excellent Q4 2021
High net inflows of
+€65.6bn.
Adjusted net
income13 of €328m (+14% vs. T4
2020)
Strong business activity
Assets under management were
€1,916bn at 31 December 2021 (up +10.8% year-on-year and
+5.8% compared to end
of September 2021, with positive
market and forex effects). Including the
€148bn of assets managed by Lyxor
at 31 December 2021, AuM reached €2,064bn.
In a still
supportive market
environment14, net
inflows were +€65.6bn in Q4 2021,
driven by all client segments and asset
classes, and including the
positive contribution of treasury products
(+11€bn).
Excluding JVs, MLT inflows
(+€29.0bn) were balanced between Retail and
Institutional clients:
- Retail
clients held on to their risk appetite, once again driving strong
inflows (+€16.3bn) thanks to third-party distributors
(+€10.9bn) and international networks (+€5.2bn),
particularly in Italy (primarily in the Unicredit network) and
Spain (Banco Sabadell network); in China, the subsidiary
Amundi-BOC WM stepped up its growth, with
strong flows (+€3.3bn)
that boosted AuM to €11bn at end-December 2021. In the
French networks, inflows were slightly positive (+€0.1bn) despite
persistent outflows in structured product (-€1.4bn); business was
good in terms of other MLT assets (+€1.5bn, concentrated in
unit-linked).
- Business
with institutional clients was also solid (+€12.7bn) in
all client segments.
These MLT flows were driven by virtually
all areas of expertise and by ESG:
- Active
management expertise once again posted high inflows
(+€20bn), fuelled by all asset classes, including
Real Assets (+€1.2bn).
- Passive
management, ETFs and Smart Beta had a good fourth quarter with
inflows of +€9.5bn, bringing AuM to €208bn at end-December
2021. In ETFs/ETPs15, with inflows of +€4.6bn in Q4 2021, AuM were
€88bn at year-end.
- ESG MLT inflows
totalled +€23.7bn16.
JVs boasted very
positive momentum (+€25.5bn), especially in India and
China:
- Indian joint venture SBI
MF recorded high inflows of +€18.1bn, with steady momentum
in its open-ended funds and significant inflows in institutional
mandates.
- The business of the
JV with ABC in China was positive
(+€10.2bn inflows) excluding the expected Channel Business outflows
(low-margin products) of -€4.1bn.
- The JV with NH in South
Korea posted inflows of more than €1bn, driven by MLT
assets.
Significantly
growing earnings in Q4 2021
Adjusted
data17
Amundi maintained
a solid level of
adjusted net income in Q4 2021 (€328m), improving
sharply compared to Q4 2020
(+13.9%).
Net revenues (€794m, up +8.8%
vs. Q4 2020) were supported
by good market conditions and strong inflows:
- Net asset
management fees were up significantly year-on-year, partly
thanks to higher average equity market and partly to robust
business momentum, particularly in Retail and MLT assets since
several quarters.
-
Performance fees remained high
(€70m, compared to a quarterly average of €42m between 2017 and
2020). This exceptional level, largely reflecting not only the
year-on-year improvement on the equity markets but also the quality
of portfolio management, is expected to continue normalising over
the next quarters.18
Adjusted operating expenses were under
control (€388m). Their +4.8% rise year-on-year can be
attributed to ongoing development investments, provisioning for
variable remunerations (in line with the improvement in operating
income) and the year-on-year scope effect (+€20m)19.
As a result, the adjusted cost/income
ratio for the quarter was
48.8%. Excluding the exceptional level of
performance fees20, the cost/income ratio was around 50%.
Accounting dataNet accounting
net income was €304m (+€10.6% vs. Q4 2020) and included the first
costs associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m after tax) and
the usual amortisation of distribution agreements.
III. Full
Year 2021
Net
income21 of
€1.3bn, higher than
targeted
Very robust business
momentum
Amundi continued along its profitable
growth track in 2021, getting ahead of schedule on its 2018-2022
plan:
- adjusted net income of
€1,315m, up by an average +12%
per year from 2018 to 2021, versus a target of +5% per
year (guidance announced in 2018).
- Adjusted
Cost/Income
ratio of 47.9% in 2021 and roughly 50% in
2018-2021 (vs. target < 53%)
Robust activity in 2021
Business momentum was excellent in 2021,
driven in large part by MLT assets
(+€75.5bn excl. JVs),
consisting predominantly of active management strategies (+€55.8bn)
and MLT ESG assets (+€36.5bn22).
Overall 2021 inflows totalled
+€60.2bn, also thanks to strong business momentum
in JVs (+€29.7bn excluding Channel Business outflows23)
and despite treasury product outflows (-€26.6bn).
Retail net inflows (excl. JV)
did were strong at
+€43.5bn, primarily in MLT assets (+€41.2bn).
- Business
was especially good with third-party distributors
(+€23.8bn in MLT assets), very diversified by countries (strong
flows notably in France, Italy, Germany, Spain, Hong Kong and
Singapore). This business momentum is evenly balanced between
active and passive management expertise.
- In the
international partner networks (+€8.8bn in MLT
assets), UniCredit enjoyed particularly strong
momentum (+€4.4bn in MLT assets), driven by active
management, thematic funds and ESG. Inflows in Spain (Banco
Sabadell network) were on the high side at +€2.1bn, reflecting the
successful roll-out of Amundi offers.
In China, the
Amundi-BOC WM JV had a
strong first year, recording
inflows of +€10.1bn in the Bank of China networks.
- Business was more
contrasted in the French networks (-€0.2bn in MLT
assets) with positive inflows of +€4.1bn in multi-asset, equity and
fixed income products, offset by -€4.3bn of outflows in structured
products (before maturity) triggered by favourable market
conditions.
Institutional client inflows amounted to
+€5.4bn, with a high level of MLT inflows
(+€34.4bn) spanning all client segments,
and treasury product outflows (-€28.9bn).
JVs recorded robust inflows of
+€29.7bn, excluding Channel Business outflows24 in
China.
- 2021 was an
especially buoyant year in India (+€26.0bn), with
inflows predominantly spurred by institutional clients, and
resilient inflows in open-ended funds. SBI FM consolidated its
leadership in the
open-ended funds market in India with a
market share of
16.4%25.
- In
China, the JV with ABC delivered inflows of +€12.8bn
excluding Channel Business outflows (-€18.4bn) and excluding the
exceptional re-internalisation of assets by an institutional client
in Q3 2021 (-€11.6bn).
- In South
Korea, the JV with NH had a good year with inflows of
+€2.1bn, o/w +€2.7bn in MLT assets.
Active management posted record inflows
in 2021, amounting to +€55.9bn, helped by the quality and solid
positioning of our investment
management, particularly in ESG.
All investment
management platforms had
very good performances: nearly
74% of AuM in open-ended funds are ranked in the first 2 quartiles
over 5 years26. Furthermore, over 5 years, 86% of AuM have
outperformed their benchmark27.
ESG is still central to portfolio
management strategies and processes, undergoing constant
innovation (ESG Improvers range, Social Bonds, Emerging Market
Green Bonds, etc.).
High full-year inflows reflect
the good positioning of
the offers, adapted to client
expectations and major market trends, including in
particular:
- Diversified
solutions (open-ended funds, discretionary portfolio
management mandates) and bespoke offers (asset
allocation, portfolio construction, advisory, etc.), with inflows
totalling +€25.3bn28, in particular:
- The
ramping-up of new OCIO offers, meeting growing
institutional investor demand (16 mandates won and inflows of
+€8.3bn).
- The
commercial momentum of flagships Global Multi
Asset Conservative (+€2.3bn), Multi Asset Sustainable Future
(+€0.8bn).
- The success
of our Equity expertise: expertise in Value (+€1.7bn
inflows, for example in the European Equity Value fund +€0.8bn),
thematic funds (+€3.9bn, with the launch of new products such as
the CPR Hydrogen fund) and, more generally, ESG funds (Global
Ecology +€0.7bn, European ESG Improvers +€0.3bn).
-
In fixed income,
the acquisition of several institutional
mandates.
Passive management, ETFs and Smart Beta
all had another very good year, with inflows of +€19.7bn,
taking AuM to €208bn, higher than the objective set in 2019 (€200bn
projected in 2023).
In ETPs29, which posted net
inflows of +€11.9bn, Amundi is ranked No. 3 in terms of European
inflows30 and No. 5 in terms of AuM (€88bn), with market share
increasing again.
ESG represented more than 50% of the ETF
European market flows and nearly 90% of Amundi’s inflows,
underscoring its know-how and innovation capabilities in ESG.
Amundi Real
Assets benefited from its positioning and the
rapid expansion of the real and private assets market.
Inflows were +€4.6bn, evenly distributed among all areas of
expertise (+€1.8bn in Private Equity, +€1.6bn in Real Estate,
+€1.1bn in private debt). AuM totalled €62.1bn at end-2021,
reflecting substantial growth over the last 5 years (+11.1% average
annual growth).ESG innovation was another highlight of
2021 with the launch of ESG funds in impact private debt,
SRI-certified real estate funds, SRI certification obtained for
OPCIMMO, and the acquisition of multiple mandates for Prêts
Participatifs de Relance (recovery participatory loans),
Obligations Relance (recovery bonds) and the Fleurons des
Territoires programme (Recovery certification) contributing to the
recovery plan in France.
Record net earnings in 2021
Amundi posted record adjusted net
income31 of €1,315m in 2021, up
+37% compared to 2020.
Adjusted
data31
This excellent profitability can be
attributed to multiple factors:
High net revenue, up
by +23.5% Management fees
amounted to €2,786m (+14.5%), boosted by the market improvement and
momentum in inflows. The average margin32 (17.9 basis points)
increased on the back of a positive mix effect. The very high level
of performance fees in 2021 (€427m) is attributable on one hand to
the sharp equity market rally observed since mid-2020 and on the
other to the quality of Amundi strategies. Performance fees are
expected to continue normalising over the course of 2022.
Excellent operational efficiency
maintained The rise in operating expenses vs. 2020
(+14.4%) is attributable to:
- ongoing investments in
development for €65m: technology investments to improve
both the services provided to external clients and to meet internal
needs, the ramping-up of Amundi-BOC in China, brand promotion and
improvement of brand recognition for Retail customers, recruitments
in growing areas of expertise (real assets, thematic funds,
etc.).
- provisions for variable
compensation, in line with the growth of operating
income.
- the year-on-year scope
effect33.
Thanks to such positive
scissor effect, the
cost/income ratio
was 47.9% (roughly 50% excluding
the exceptional level of performance fees34) and gross
operating income climbed +33%.
The contribution from
equity-accounted entities (mostly Asian joint ventures)
rose significantly from 66m in 2020 to €84m in
2021, thanks to the contribution of JVs in China (€28m)
and India (€47m) to our results.
Accounting data
Net accounting income was €1,369m (+€50.5%
year-on-year) and included the initial costs associated with the
integration of Lyxor (€12m after tax) coupled with a non-recurring
tax gain (Affrancamento 35). Earnings per share reached €6.75, a
significant increase compared to 2020 (+50%).
IV. A
solid financial structure and significantly improved
dividend
The financial structure
remains strong at end-2021 after
the acquisition of Lyxor, with net tangible equity36 of €3.5bn
versus €3.2bn at end-2020, on the back of high generation of
tangible capital of €1.0bn and the impact of the Lyxor acquisition
of -€0.7bn37. The CET1 ratio38 was 16,1%, significantly above
regulatory requirements.
To be note that in May 2021, rating agency Fitch
reiterated Amundi’s A+ rating with a stable outlook, the best in
the sector.
The Board of Directors has decided to
propose a cash dividend of €4.10 per
share at the General Meeting to be held on 19 May
2022, i.e. an increase of +41% vs. the dividend for FY
2020.
This dividend represents a payout ratio of 65%
of net income Group share39 and a 6.1% return based on the share
price at 7 February 2022 (closing price of €67.5). Shares will be
designated ex-dividend on 23 May 2022 and the dividend will be paid
as from 25 May 2022.
Since listing, TSR40 (total shareholder return)
has reached 88%.
V. Lyxor: a
value-accretive acquisition
On 31 December 2021, Amundi finalised the
acquisition of Lyxor for a price of €825m.
Lyxor boasted solid performances in
2021, with inflows of
+€12.1bn, bringing AuM to €148bn at end-2021, o/w €101bn
in ETFs and €46bn in active management (including €25bn in liquid
alternative investments). Net income for the financial year
amounted to €42m41, significantly higher than the estimate at the
time of announcement in April 2021. See details on page 12.
Thanks to this value-accretive
deal, Amundi
becomes the European leader in
ETFs with a combined market share of 14%42, and
completes its active management
offer, particularly in liquid alternative investments,
advisory services and OCIO solutions43.
With scale being an important factor in the
index market, the new combined level of assets managed by Amundi’s
passive management platform (around €310bn at end-2021) gives it a
critical edge. Drawing on these factors and the growth outlook for
the passive management market, Amundi announced a
substantial growth target (+50%)
for passively managed AuM to €420bn by
end-202544.
In early January 2022, the
integration phase was launched
(combination of teams) and its implementation (IT migration, legal
mergers, etc.) should be realised quickly in Q2 and Q3 2022. The
resulting synergies are in line with the April 2021 guidance:
- full-year pre-tax cost synergies
are expected to reach €60m by 2024;
- full-year pre-tax
revenues synergies of €30m by 2025.
Given such strong potential for
synergies, the deal will be highly value-accretive:
- an acquisition price representing a
2021e P/E multiple of approximately 9x45 (with cost synergies
alone).
- a Return on Investment of more than
10% over 3 years (taking into considerations cost synergies
alone).
***
Financial disclosure schedule
- Publication of Q1 2022 results: 29
April 2022
- AGM for the 2021 financial year: 18
May 2022
- Publication of H1 2022 results: 29
July 2022
- Publication of 9M 2022 results: 28
October 2022
Dividend schedule
- Detachment: 23 May 2022
- Payout: as from 25 May 2022
***
APPENDICES
Income statements (full-year and
Q4)
€m |
2021 |
|
2020 |
|
Δ 2021/020 |
|
Q4 2021 |
|
Q3 2021 |
|
Δ Q4/Q3 |
|
Q4.2020 |
|
Δ Q4/Q4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted net revenue 1 |
3,204 |
|
2,595 |
|
23.5% |
|
794 |
|
791 |
|
0.4% |
|
730 |
|
8.8% |
Net asset management revenue |
3,213 |
|
2,634 |
|
22.0% |
|
797 |
|
797 |
|
0.0% |
|
722 |
|
10.3% |
o/w net management fees |
2,786 |
|
2,434 |
|
14.5% |
|
727 |
|
707 |
|
2.8% |
|
628 |
|
15.7% |
o/w performance fees |
427 |
|
200 |
|
113,3% |
|
70 |
|
90 |
|
-22.3% |
|
94 |
|
-25.4% |
Net financial income and other net income 1 |
(8) |
|
(38) |
|
-78.2% |
|
(3) |
|
(6) |
|
-49.3% |
|
7 |
|
- |
Operating expenses 1 |
(1,534) |
|
(1,341) |
|
14.4% |
|
(388) |
|
(383) |
|
1.4% |
|
(370) |
|
4.8% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted gross operating income 1 |
1,670 |
|
1,255 |
|
33.1% |
|
406 |
|
409 |
|
-0.6% |
|
360 |
|
12.9% |
Adjusted cost/income ratio |
47.9% |
|
51.7% |
|
-3.8 pts |
|
48.8% |
|
48.4% |
|
0.5 pts |
|
50.7% |
|
-1.8 pts |
Cost of risk & Other |
(12) |
|
(23) |
|
-46.1% |
|
1 |
|
7 |
|
-82.9% |
|
(3) |
|
- |
Equity-accounted entities |
84 |
|
66 |
|
27.7% |
|
21 |
|
25 |
|
-14.2% |
|
20 |
|
4.7% |
Adjusted income before taxes1 |
1,742 |
|
1,298 |
|
34.2% |
|
429 |
|
440 |
|
-2.6% |
|
377 |
|
13.6% |
Corporate tax1 |
(430) |
|
(338) |
|
27.0% |
|
(99) |
|
(108) |
|
-8.8% |
|
(92) |
|
7.6% |
Minority interests |
3 |
|
3 |
|
20.0% |
|
(1) |
|
1 |
|
- |
|
3 |
|
- |
Adjusted net income, Group share 1 |
1,315 |
|
962 |
|
36.7% |
|
328 |
|
333 |
|
-1.3% |
|
288 |
|
13.9% |
Amortisation of distribution agreements after tax |
(49) |
|
(52) |
|
-7.1% |
|
(12) |
|
(12) |
|
0.0% |
|
(13) |
|
-5.5% |
Consolidation costs net of tax |
(12) |
|
0 |
|
- |
|
(12) |
|
0 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
Affrancamento impact ² |
114 |
|
0 |
|
- |
|
0 |
|
0 |
|
- |
|
0 |
|
- |
Net income, Group share including Affrancamento |
1,369 |
|
910 |
|
50.5% |
|
304 |
|
321 |
|
-5.1% |
|
275 |
|
10.6% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Book EPS (€) |
6.75 |
|
4.50 |
|
50.1% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EPS1
(€) |
6.49 |
|
4.76 |
|
36.3% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1- Adjusted data: excluding amortisation of
distribution agreements and, in 2021, excluding costs associated
with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in Q4 2021 after tax and €16m
before tax) and excluding the impact of Affrancamento (€114m in Q2
2021). See page 13 for definitions and methodology. 2- Net
accounting income for 2021 includes a non-recurring tax gain (net
of a substitution fee) of +€114m (no cash flow impact):
“Affrancamento” mechanism under the 2021 Italian Finance Act for
2021 (Act No. 178/2020), resulting in the recognition of Deferred
Tax Assets on intangible assets (goodwill), which were excluded
from Adjusted Net Income.
Change in assets under
management1 from end-2019 to
end-2021
|
(€bn) |
Assets under management |
Net inflows |
Market and forex effect |
Scope effect |
|
Change in AuM vs. previous quarter |
At 31/12/2019 |
1,653 |
|
|
|
|
+5.8% |
Q1 2020 |
|
-3.2 |
-122.7 |
|
/ |
|
At 31/03/2020 |
1,527 |
|
|
|
|
-7.6% |
Q2 2020 |
|
-0.8 |
+64.9 |
|
/ |
|
At 30/06/2020 |
1,592 |
|
|
|
|
+4.2% |
Q3 2020 |
|
+34.7 |
+15.2 |
|
+20.746 |
|
At 30/09/2020 |
1,662 |
|
|
|
|
+4.4% |
Q4 2020 |
|
+14.4 |
+52.1 |
|
/ |
|
At 31/12/2020 |
1,729 |
|
|
|
|
+4.0% |
Q1 2021 |
|
-12.7 |
+39.3 |
|
/ |
|
At 31/03/2021 |
1,755 |
|
|
|
|
+1.5% |
Q2 2021 |
|
+7.2 |
+31.4 |
|
/ |
|
At 30/06/2021 |
1,794 |
|
|
|
/ |
+2.2% |
Q3 2021 |
|
+0.2 |
+17.0 |
|
/ |
|
At 30/09/2021 |
1,811 |
|
|
|
/ |
+1.0% |
Q4 2021 |
|
+65.6 |
+39.1 |
|
+14847 |
|
At 31/12/2021 |
2,064 |
|
|
|
/ |
|
Total 2021:
- Net inflows
+€60.2bn
- Market and forex effects
+€126.8bn
- Scope effect (Lyxor):
+€148bn
Breakdown of AuM and net inflows by
client segment1
(Amundi)
|
AuM |
AuM |
% chg. |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
(€bn) |
31/12/2021 |
31/12/2020 |
vs. 31/12/2020 |
Q4 2021 |
Q4 2020 |
12M 2021 |
12M 2020 |
French networks |
128 |
118 |
8.7% |
3.6 |
4.0 |
0.9 |
7.7 |
International networks |
174 |
146 |
19.2% |
5.1 |
1.5 |
18.9 |
-1.4 |
o/w Amundi BOC WM |
11 |
0 |
/ |
3.3 |
|
10.1 |
|
Third-party distributors |
232 |
185 |
25.6% |
11.3 |
3.0 |
23.6 |
5.3 |
Retail (excl. JVs) |
534 |
449 |
19.1% |
19.9 |
8.5 |
43.5 |
11.7 |
Institutionals2 and sovereigns |
444 |
414 |
7.4% |
5.5 |
6.7 |
0.4 |
14.5 |
Corporates |
100 |
96 |
4.6% |
14.9 |
16.0 |
3.3 |
17.8 |
Employee Savings |
78 |
67 |
16.4% |
0.1 |
0.6 |
2.5 |
3.9 |
CA & SG insurers |
472 |
464 |
1.7% |
-0.3 |
-2.0 |
-0.8 |
-8.2 |
Institutionals |
1,095 |
1,041 |
5.2% |
20.2 |
21.3 |
5.4 |
28.1 |
JVs3 |
286 |
239 |
19.8% |
25.5 |
-15.4 |
11.4 |
5.4 |
TOTAL |
1,916 |
1,729 |
10.8% |
65.6 |
14.4 |
60.2 |
45.1 |
Average AuM excl. JVs |
1,552 |
1,398 |
11.0% |
/ |
/ |
/ |
/ |
1: AuM and inflows including Sabadell AM as of
Q3 2020 include assets under advisory and assets marketed and take
into account 100% of the Asian JVs’ inflows and assets under
management. For Wafa in Morocco, assets are reported on a
proportional consolidation basis. 2: Including funds of funds. 3:
including Channel Business outflows in China for -€18.4bn in 2021
and a re-internalisation for -€11.6bn in Q3 2021.
Breakdown of AuM and net inflows by asset
class1 (Amundi)
|
AuM |
AuM |
% chg. |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
(€bn) |
31/12/2021 |
31/12/2020 |
vs. 31/12/2020 |
Q4 2021 |
Q4 2020 |
12M 2021 |
12M 2020 |
Equities |
366 |
277 |
32.0% |
9.7 |
9.3 |
22.8 |
19.3 |
Multi-asset |
316 |
263 |
19.9% |
11.6 |
3.0 |
38.0 |
-1.0 |
Bonds |
656 |
635 |
3.3% |
8.2 |
-1.0 |
14.9 |
-11.3 |
Real, alternative and structured assets |
96 |
92 |
3.9% |
-0.5 |
1.0 |
-0.2 |
4.5 |
MLT ASSETS excl. JVs |
1,433 |
1,267 |
13.0% |
29.0 |
12.3 |
75.5 |
11.5 |
Treasury Products excl. JVs |
197 |
222 |
-11.5% |
11.1 |
17.5 |
-26.6 |
28.2 |
ASSETS excl. JVs |
1,629 |
1,490 |
9.4% |
40.1 |
29.8 |
48.8 |
39.8 |
JVs2 |
286 |
239 |
19.8% |
25.5 |
-15.4 |
11.4 |
5.4 |
TOTAL |
1,916 |
1,729 |
10.8% |
65.6 |
14.4 |
60.2 |
45.1 |
o/w MLT Assets |
1,685 |
1,477 |
14.1% |
51.7 |
-4.5 |
83.6 |
17.7 |
o/w Treasury products |
230 |
252 |
-8.5% |
13.9 |
18.9 |
-23.4 |
27.5 |
1: AuM and inflows including Sabadell AM as of
Q3 2020 include assets under advisory and assets marketed and take
into account 100% of the Asian JVs’ inflows and assets under
management. For Wafa in Morocco, assets are reported on a
proportional consolidation basis. 2: including Channel Business
outflows in China for -€18.4bn in 2021 and a re-internalisation for
-€11.6bn in Q3 2021.
Breakdown of AuM and net inflows by
geographic segment1
(Amundi)
|
AuM |
AuM |
% chg. |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
Inflows |
(€bn) |
31/12/2021 |
31/12/2020 |
vs. 31/12/2020 |
Q4 2021 |
Q4 2020 |
12M 2021 |
12M 2020 |
France2 |
957 |
932 |
2.7% |
10.1 |
13.6 |
-16.0 |
26.7 |
Italy |
200 |
180 |
11.2% |
5.2 |
0.7 |
12.0 |
-2.0 |
Europe excl. France and Italy |
278 |
225 |
23.8% |
15.0 |
16.1 |
31.7 |
28.3 |
Asia3 |
369 |
298 |
23.9% |
33.7 |
-13.0 |
30.4 |
1.2 |
Rest of world4 |
112 |
95 |
18.1% |
1.6 |
-2.9 |
2.0 |
-9.0 |
TOTAL |
1,916 |
1,477 |
29.7% |
65.6 |
14.4 |
60.2 |
45.1 |
TOTAL excl. France |
958 |
545 |
75.9% |
55.5 |
0.8 |
76.2 |
18.4 |
1 AuM and inflows including Sabadell AM as from
Q3 2020, including assets under advisory and assets marketed, and
100% of Asian JV inflows and assets under management; for Wafa in
Morocco, assets are reported on a proportional consolidation basis.
2: o/w €472 for insurers CA and SG. 3 including Channel Business
outflows in China for -€18.4bn in 2021 and a re-internalisation for
-€11.6bn in Q3 2021. 4 Mainly United States.
Lyxor
Lyxor posted AuM of €148bn at end-2021,
broken down as follows:
- €101bn in passive
management; No. 3 player in Europe with a market share of
7.1%48
- €46bn in active
management, o/w 25bn in alternative investments
- 62% Retail AuM and
38% Institutional AuM
High inflows in 2021
of +€12.1bn:
- +€8.3bn in
ETFs
- +€2.4bn in liquid
alternative investments
- +€1.4bn in
traditional active investments
Normalised key figures49
for Lyxor in 2021 (higher than originally
estimated):
- revenue of €216m ow
which €203m of net management fees
- a Cost/Income ratio
of 72%
- net income of
€42m
Methodology
appendix
I. Accounting and adjusted
data
- Accounting data:
in 12M 2020 and 2021, data after amortisation of intangible assets
(distribution agreements); in 2021, costs associated with the
integration of Lyxor in Q4 (€12m after tax and €16m before tax) and
the impact of Affrancamento (€114m in Q2).
- Adjusted data
To present an income statement that is closer to
economic reality, the following adjustments have been made:
restatement of amortisation of intangible assets, deducted from net
income (distribution agreements with SG, Bawag, UniCredit and Banco
Sabadell), Lyxor integration costs and Affrancamento
impact.Note: amortisation of the SG contract (per
year: €10m after tax, €14m before tax) ended
as of 1 November 2020.
In the accounting data, amortisation of
distribution agreements:
- Q4 2020: €18m before tax and €13m
after tax; Q4 2021: €17m before tax and €12m after tax
- 12M 2020: €74m before tax and €52m
after tax; 12M 2021: €68m before tax and €49m after tax
II. Acquisition of
Lyxor
-
In accordance with IFRS3, recognition on Amundi’s balance sheet as
of 31/12/2021 of:
-
a goodwill in the amount of €652m;
-
an intangible asset, representing client contracts, of €40m before
tax (€30m after tax);
-
In the Group income statement the above intangible asset will be
amortised on a straight-line basis over 3 years starting in 2022
and the full-year impact of such amortisation will be €10m net of
tax (i.e. €13m before tax). This amortisation will be recognised as
a deduction from net income and will be added to the existing
amortisation of distribution agreements.
-
Note: €70m in pre-tax integration costs are expected, o/w €16m
before tax already recognised in Q4 2021 (see above).
accounting dataadjusted data
€m |
|
12M 2021 |
|
12M 2020 |
|
Q4 2021 |
|
Q3 2021 |
|
Q4 2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net income (a) |
|
3136 |
|
2521 |
|
777 |
|
774 |
|
711 |
+ Amortisation of distribution agreements before tax |
|
68 |
|
74 |
|
17 |
|
17 |
|
18 |
Adjusted net revenues (b) |
|
3204 |
|
2595 |
|
794 |
|
791 |
|
730 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating expenses (c) |
|
-1550 |
|
-1341 |
|
-404 |
|
-383 |
|
-370 |
+ Integration costs before tax |
|
16 |
|
0 |
|
16 |
|
0 |
|
0 |
Adjusted operating expenses
(d) |
|
-1534 |
|
-1341 |
|
-388 |
|
-383 |
|
-370 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross operating income (e) = (a)+(c) |
|
1586 |
|
1180 |
|
373 |
|
392 |
|
342 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted gross operating income (f) =
(b)+(d) |
|
1670 |
|
1255 |
|
406 |
|
409 |
|
360 |
Cost/Income ratio (c)/(a) |
|
49.4% |
|
53.2% |
|
52.0% |
|
49.4% |
|
52.0% |
Adjusted cost/income ratio (d)/(b) |
|
47.9% |
|
51.7% |
|
48.8% |
|
48.4% |
|
50.7% |
Cost of risk & Other (g) |
|
-12 |
|
-23 |
|
1 |
|
7 |
|
-3 |
Equity-accounted entities (h) |
|
84 |
|
66 |
|
21 |
|
25 |
|
20 |
Income before tax (i) =
(e)+(g)+(h) |
|
1658 |
|
1224 |
|
396 |
|
423 |
|
359 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted income before tax (j) = (e)+(f)+(g) |
|
1742 |
|
1298 |
|
429 |
|
440 |
|
377 |
Taxes (k) |
|
-292 |
|
-317 |
|
-90 |
|
-103 |
|
-86 |
Adjusted taxes (l) |
|
-430 |
|
-338 |
|
-99 |
|
-108 |
|
-92 |
Minority interests (m) |
|
3 |
|
3 |
|
-1 |
|
1 |
|
3 |
Net income, Group share
(i)+(k)+(m)-(p) |
|
1255 |
|
910 |
|
304 |
|
321 |
|
275 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted net income, Group share (n) =
(j)+(l)+(m) |
|
1315 |
|
962 |
|
328 |
|
333 |
|
288 |
Affrancamento impact (p) |
|
114 |
|
0 |
|
0 |
|
0 |
|
0 |
Net income, Group share
(i)-(l)+(m) incl.
Affrancamento |
|
1369 |
|
910 |
|
304 |
|
321 |
|
275 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholder
structure
|
31 December 2019 |
31 December 2020 |
31 December 2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
Number of shares |
% of capital |
Number of shares |
% of capital |
Number of shares |
% of capital |
Crédit Agricole Group |
141,057,399 |
69.8% |
141,057,399 |
69.7% |
141,057,399 |
69.7 % |
Employees |
969010 |
0.5% |
1,234,601 |
0.6% |
1,527 064 |
0.75 % |
Treasury shares |
1,333,964 |
0.7% |
685,055 |
0.3% |
255 745 |
0.13 % |
Free float |
58,802,932 |
29.1% |
59,608,898 |
29.4% |
60,234,443 |
29.66 % |
Number of shares at end of period |
202,163,305 |
100.0% |
202,585,953 |
100.0% |
203,074,651 |
100.0 % |
Average number of shares for the period |
201,765,967 |
/ |
202,215,270 |
/ |
202,793,482 |
/ |
- Employee ownership
increased in 2021 due to the capital increase reserved to employees
implemented on 29 July 2021(0.5m new shares were issued)
- Average number of
shares on a pro-rata basis
About AmundiAmundi, the leading
European asset manager, ranking among the top 10 global players50,
offers its 100 million clients - retail, institutional and
corporate - a complete range of savings and investment solutions in
active and passive management, in traditional or real assets.With
its six international investment hubs51, financial and
extra-financial research capabilities and long-standing commitment
to responsible investment, Amundi is a key player in the asset
management landscape.Amundi clients benefit from the expertise and
advice of 5,300 employees52 in more than 35 countries. A subsidiary
of the Crédit Agricole group and listed on the stock exchange,
Amundi currently manages more than €2.0 trillion of assets53.
Amundi, a trusted partner, working every
day in the interest of its clients and society.
www.amundi.com
Press contact: |
Investor contacts: |
Natacha Andermahr |
Anthony
Mellor Thomas
Lapeyre |
Tel. +33 1 76 37 86 05 |
Tel. +33 1 76 32 17
16 Tel. +33 1 76 33
70 54 |
natacha.andermahr-sharp@amundi.com |
anthony.mellor@amundi.com thomas.lapeyre@amundi.com |
DISCLAIMER:
This document may contain projections concerning
Amundi's financial situation and results. The figures given do not
constitute a “forecast” as defined in Article 2.10 of Commission
Regulation (EC) No. 809/2004 of 29 April 2004.
This information is based on scenarios that
employ a number of economic assumptions in a given competitive and
regulatory context. As such, the projections and results indicated
may not necessarily come to pass due to unforeseeable
circumstances. The reader should take all of these uncertainties
and risks into consideration before forming their own opinion.
The figures presented were prepared in
accordance with IFRS guidelines as adopted by the European Union
and applicable as of this date. Statutory auditors are carrying out
audit procedures on the consolidated financial statements for
2021.
The information contained in this document, to
the extent that it relates to parties other than Amundi or comes
from external sources, has not been independently verified, and no
representation or warranty has been expressed as to, nor should any
reliance be placed on, the fairness, accuracy, correctness or
completeness of the information or opinions contained herein.
Neither Amundi nor its representatives can be held liable for any
negligence or loss that may result from the use of this document or
its contents, or anything related to them, or any document or
information to which the document may refer.
1 Net income, Group share. Adjusted data:
excluding amortisation of distribution agreements and, in 2021,
excluding costs associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in
Q4 2021 after tax and €16m before tax) and excluding the impact of
Affrancamento (€114m Q2 2021, see note
35). 2
Medium/Long-Term Assets; excluding Joint Ventures. Lyxor data not
included.3 Q4 and FY data do not include Lyxor figures, the
acquisition of which was not finalised until 31 December 2021.4
Excl. JVs5Exceptional level of performance fees =
higher-than-average performance fees per quarter in 2017-2020
(€42m).6 CET 1: Core Equity Tier 17 End 2021.8 End 2021. AuM
generated by JVs with ABC and BOC, and AuM in Hong Kong and
Taiwan.9 Subject to obtaining the necessary regulatory
authorisations and market conditions. SBI FM is currently
62.6%-owned by SBI, 36.8% by Amundi and 0.6% by employees.10The new
European Sustainable Financial Disclosure Regulation (SFDR)
requires fund managers to rank their European assets by degree of
ESG integration.11 Net inflows excluding treasury products, CA
Assurances and Sogecap.12 Amundi Leading Technologies &
Operations13 Net income, Group share. Adjusted data: excluding
amortisation of distribution agreements and, in 2021, costs
associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in Q4 2021 after tax
and €16m before tax).14 Equity markets up +25% on average vs. Q4
2020 and +2% vs. Q3 2021.15 Exchange Traded Products.16 Inflows
excl. insurers CA Assurances and Sogecap.17 Adjusted data:
excluding amortisation of distribution agreements and, in 2021,
excluding costs associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in
Q4 2021 after tax and €16m before tax) and excluding the impact of
Affrancamento (€114m in Q2 2021).18 Note: Under the new ESMA
regulations ("Guidelines on Performance Fees,” applicable mainly to
UCITS funds) and implemented in July 2021 for existing funds, the
reference period will be five years if the funds underperform their
benchmark. These new regulatory provisions should result in a
partial and gradual decline in performance fees from 2022.19 Due to
the creation of Amundi BOC WM, consolidated from Q4 2020, and the
full consolidation of Fund Channel and Anatec starting in Q1
2021;20Exceptional performance fees = higher-than-average
performance fees per quarter in 2017-2020 (€42m)21 Adjusted data:
excluding amortisation of distribution agreements and, in 2021,
excluding costs associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in
Q4 2021 after tax and €16m before tax) and excluding the impact of
Affrancamento (€114m in Q2 2021).22 Inflows excl. Group insurers.23
Low margin products outflows for -€18,4bn in 2021; outflows
stemming from regulatory developments24 Low-margin products
(Channel Business for -€18,4bn in 2021); outflows stemming from
regulatory developments,25 Source: AMFI India at end-December
2021.26 Gross performances. Source: Morningstar Direct, open-ended
funds and ETFs, global scope, excluding feeder funds, end-December
2021. 621 funds, i.e. €478bn. A total of 183 Amundi funds have a 4-
or 5-star Morningstar rating.27 At 31/12/2021, source: internal
data, scope: €1,129bn (excl. JV and scope Lyxor), active
management. 28 Excl. Amundi-BOC WM.29 ETPs: Exchange Traded
Products, including ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) and ETCs (Exchange
Traded Commodities).30 Source: ETF GI.31 Adjusted data: excluding
amortisation of distribution agreements and, in 2021, excluding
costs associated with the integration of Lyxor (€12m in Q4 2021
after tax and €16m before tax) and excluding the impact of
Affrancamento (€114m in Q2 2021).32 Net management fees/average
AuM.33 Scope effect of +€28m: acquisition of Sabadell AM,
consolidated from Q3 2020, full consolidation of Fund Channel and
Anatec starting in Q1 2021.34Exceptional performance fees =
higher-than-average performance fees per quarter in 2017-2020
(€42m)35 Non-recurring tax gain (net of a substitution tax) of
+€114m (with no cash impact): “Affrancamento” mechanism under the
2021 Italian Finance Act for 2021 (Act No. 178/2020), resulting in
the recognition of Deferred Tax Assets on intangible assets
(goodwill), which were excluded from Adjusted Net Income.36 Net
Shareholders Equity excluding goodwill and intangible
assets. 37 See page
12.38 CET 1: Core Equity Tier 1.39 The dividend payout ratio is
calculated based on 2021 accounting net income Group share
(€1,369m), excluding the impact of Affrancamento (€114m) and Lyxor
integration costs
(-€12m). 40 TSR
includes the rise in the share price + dividends paid from 2016 to
2021 + dividend proposed to the GM to be held in May 2022 +
pre-emptive subscription rights detached in May 2017.41 Estimated
data on the Lyxor perimeter acquired (based on internal data and
with assumptions regarding the exclusion of certain activities
retained by SG). Estimated net income of the acquired perimeter of
€40m and normalized net income of €42m after adjustment of ~€3m of
pre-tax one-off costs related to the acquisition by Amundi.42
Source: Amundi, Lyxor, ETFGI at end-December 2021.43 OCIO:
Outsourced Chief Investment Officer.44 Target announced on 4/1/2022
based on combined assets of €282bn at end-September 2021.45 On the
basis of an acquisition price of €755, excluding excess capital46
Sabadell AM47 Lyxor48 Source: ETFGI, December 2021.49 Estimated
data on the Lyxor perimeter acquired (based on internal data and
with assumptions regarding the exclusion of certain activities
retained by SG). Estimated net income of the acquired perimeter of
€40m and normalized net income of €42m after adjustment of ~€3m of
pre-tax one-off costs related to the acquisition by Amundi.50
Source: IPE “Top 500 Asset Managers” published in June 2021, based
on assets under management as at 31/12/202051 Boston, Dublin,
London, Milan, Paris and Tokyo52 Consolidated internal Amundi and
Lyxor workforce as at 01/01/202253 Amundi data including Lyxor as
at 31/12/2021
Amundi (EU:AMUN)
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