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01.31.2020
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Net attributable profit in 4Q19 was negative:
-155 million. Excluding the U.S. goodwill impairment, the quarters attributable profit stood at 1.16 billion, up 14.9 percent yoy (+14.5 percent at constant exchange rates). It
is worth noting that this result is 10 percent above analysts consensus estimates for this quarter, as a result of higher income and lower loan-loss provisions.
In terms of value creation for shareholders, tangible book value per share plus dividends stood at 6.53 as of December 2019, a figure that
represents an 11.5 percent increase compared to the same period a year earlier. Excluding the impact of the U.S. goodwill adjustment, BBVA posted near double-digit profitability metrics, with ROE of 9.9 percent (compared to 5.9 percent in
average for comparable European peers as of September 2019), and ROTE of 11.9 percent (vs. a 7.0 percent average for European peers, also as of Sept. 2019). The bank is to propose for the consideration of the competent governing bodies a
gross cash dividend of 0.16 per share, to be paid in April 2020, maintaining the same amount as the year before. Last October, BBVA paid an interim gross dividend of 0.10 per share, which would result in a total dividend for 2019 of
0.26 per share.
The fully loaded CET1 capital ratio stood at 11.74 percent at the end of 2019, growing 40 basis points during the year,
driven by the Groups ability to generate organic capital. This allowed it to absorb 25 basis points resulting from regulatory impacts. The ratio thus remains within the Groups target range of
11.5-12 percent.
Asset quality indicators remained solid during the quarter: The NPL ratio stood at
3.8 percent at the end of the year (the lowest of the past ten years), while the coverage ratio reached 77 percent (the highest during the same period).
As for the balance sheet and business activity, loans and advances to customers grew 2.2 percent in 2019, to 382.36 billion, with
significant growth in Mexico, and, to a lesser extent, in the U.S. and South America. Customer funds had a good performance in 2019, growing 2.2 percent to 384.22 billion, driven by a solid evolution of demand deposits (+7.6 percent
yoy, +2.8 percent in the quarter). Off-balance sheet funds increased 9.8 percent compared to the previous year, driven by a positive evolution of both mutual and pension funds.
Progress in transformation and sustainability
BBVA has
achieved significant progress in its transformation over the past few years, including a much broader customer base. Customers are also more satisfied and engaged. This has resulted in better earnings, both in absolute and relative terms, allowing
BBVA to reach leadership positions in profitability and efficiency among comparable European peers.