Losses fall at Danske Bank’s Irish arm

Pretax loss for first quarter of 2013 shrinks to €8.8m as loan impairments decline

Danske Bank’s Irish arm reported a loss of ¤8.8 million as narrowing loan impairment charges boosted the company’s performance. Photograph: Ulrik Jantzen/Bloomberg
Danske Bank’s Irish arm reported a loss of ¤8.8 million as narrowing loan impairment charges boosted the company’s performance. Photograph: Ulrik Jantzen/Bloomberg

Pretax losses at Danske Bank’s Irish arm fell to €8.8 million in the first quarter of 2013, as impairment charges narrowed compared with the previous quarter.

That compared with a loss of €15 million in the final quarter of 2012.

The financial group said loan losses at Danske Bank Ireland shrank to €5.5 million, from €15.7 million in the preceding three-month period. However, the bank also booked a loss of €3.3 million before loan impairment charges were taken into account, compared with a profit of €700,000 in the preceding quarter.

Although underlying costs were 5 per cent lower, Danske Bank Ireland saw overall costs rise to €17.9 million as the impact of the reorganisation of its retail business announced last year was felt.

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Country manager Terry Browne said the performance was in line with expectations, and reflected the rebranded core business in Ireland.

“ While costs remain elevated, the underlying costs trend is moving in the right direction as is the case with impairments which continue their downward trajectory as previously guide,” he said. “ Non interest income and deposits have both performed well on the back of key business wins within our Corporate and Institutional businesses.”

Total income was slightly higher at €14.6 million, with non interest income up 12 per cent as customer deposits rose to €3.4 billion. The bank has a total loan book of €3.2 billion.

Ciara O'Brien

Ciara O'Brien

Ciara O'Brien is an Irish Times business and technology journalist