Ad hoc announcement pursuant to Art. 53 LR
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Julius Baer Group Ltd. / Key word(s): Annual Results
Ad hoc announcement pursuant to Art. 53 LR
Stefan Bollinger, Chief Executive Officer of Julius Baer Group Ltd., said: “We delivered a strong business performance in 2025, which is testament to our resilience, the continued trust of our clients, and the great commitment of our people. We are now fully focused on delivering profitable growth and the execution of our strategic transformation. I am very pleased with the positive momentum created throughout the organisation and the tangible progress made on multiple fronts; from simplifying our operating model and sharpening client focus to strengthening governance and renewing our leadership team. All in all, 2025 was a successful transition year, setting us well on course to achieve our medium-term targets.”
Alternative performance measures and reconciliations
Overall improved underlying business performance year on year
On the Group’s usual adjusted basis (where only M&A-related items are excluded), profit before taxes declined by 2% to CHF 1,053 million and the pre-tax margin decreased by 2 basis points (bp) to 21 bp. As adjusted income taxes increased to CHF 175 million (2024: CHF 32 million), adjusted net profit and adjusted EPS decreased by 16% to CHF 878 million and CHF 4.27, respectively. On the same basis, the adjusted return on CET1 capital (RoCET1) declined to 23% (2024: 32%). Excluding the impact of net credit losses on the 2025 adjusted results, underlying profit before taxes increased by 17% to CHF 1,266 million, and the underlying pre-tax profit margin improved by 2 bp to 25 bp. As the underlying tax rate normalised from 3% in 2024 to 17% in 2025, underlying net profit rose by CHF 1 million to CHF 1,048 million, underlying EPS remained at CHF 5.10, and (following a substantial year-on-year increase in CET1 capital) the underlying RoCET1 decreased to 28%.
Rising equity markets and continued net new money inflows drove 5% growth in AuM
The positive impacts of continued net inflows and rising global equity market valuations more than offset the impact of the stronger Swiss franc (particularly versus the US dollar) and the sale and deconsolidation of Julius Baer Brazil (with AuM of CHF 8 billion). As a result, AuM grew by 5% to a record CHF 521 billion. Monthly average AuM increased by 7% to CHF 499 billion. Including assets under custody of CHF 93 billion, total client assets rose by 4% to a record CHF 614 billion.
IFRS operating income impacted by net credit losses and Brazil sale, but underlying operating income rises due to AuM growth
Excluding the M&A-related impact on operating income, adjusted operating income was unchanged at CHF 3,861 million, resulting in an adjusted gross margin of 77 bp (2024: 83 bp). Excluding the impact of CHF 213 million of net credit losses on adjusted operating income, underlying operating income grew by 6% to CHF 4,073 million, largely on the back of the 7% year-on-year increase in monthly average AuM. The corresponding underlying gross margin decreased by 1 bp to 82 bp. Net commission and fee income grew by 5% to CHF 2,314 million, with recurring income (the sum of advisory and management fees and commission and fee income on other services) rising by 5% to CHF 1,822 million . Higher client activity drove a 12% increase in brokerage commissions and income from securities underwriting to CHF 802 million, while commission expense rose by 23% to CHF 310 million. As the interest-driven revenue components shifted further towards net income from financial instruments measured at FVTPL, net interest income declined by CHF 252 million to CHF 125 million. Despite a 1% year-on-year increase in loans, the combination of a further decrease in interest rates, a relative shift to Swiss franc-denominated loans that are subject to lower interest rates, as well as a weaker US dollar, resulted in interest income on loans declining by 29% to CHF 1,159 million. Income from the treasury portfolio (the sum of interest income on debt instruments at fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI) and interest income on debt instruments at amortised cost) declined by 11% to CHF 530 million, and interest income on amounts due from banks decreased by 51% to CHF 139 million. Partly on the back of lower interest rates and exchange rate impacts, interest expense on amounts due to customers decreased by 23% to CHF 1,398 million, while interest expense on amounts due to banks fell by 22% to CHF 147 million. A net increase in bond issuance in combination with a relative shift to euro- and US dollar-denominated debt drove a 22% rise in interest expense on debt issued, to CHF 144 million. Net income from financial instruments measured at FVTPL grew by CHF 326 million, or 25%, to CHF 1,608 million. This reflects a meaningful increase in treasury swap income, driven by higher volumes and a wider average spread between US and Swiss interest rates. Income related to structured products and FX trading rose in the first four months of 2025, especially during the market volatility spike following the US tariff announcements in early April, before subsiding during the remainder of the year. Adjusted other ordinary results improved by CHF 14 million to CHF 26 million.
Improved underlying cost/income ratio after exceeding gross cost savings target
As in previous years, in the analysis and discussion of the results in the media release, as well as in the Management Report section of the Extract of the Annual Report 2025, adjusted operating expenses exclude M&A-related expenses (CHF 15 million, down from CHF 24 million in 2024). On this basis, adjusted operating expenses increased by 1% to CHF 2,808 million. Expense measures resulted in gross cost savings of CHF 130 million on a run-rate basis by the end of 2025, exceeding the original target of CHF 110 million by CHF 20 million. These savings were realised against a total cost-to-achieve of CHF 40 million. As previously communicated, in the 2026–2028 strategic cycle, the Group aims to achieve a further CHF 130 million in gross structural efficiency improvements on a run-rate basis by the end of 2028, against a currently estimated cost-to-achieve of approximately CHF 65 million. Adjusted personnel expenses grew by 4% to CHF 1,848 million, partly on the back of a rise in incentive- and performance-related costs, an increase in pension-fund-related expenses, and higher severance payments. At the end of 2025, the Group employed 7,390 full-time equivalents (FTEs), a decline of 205 from end-2024, as the increase of 184 FTEs from the internalisation of formerly external staff was more than offset by the decrease related to Julius Baer Brazil (-250 FTEs) and other measures. At the end of 2025, a total of 1,262 FTEs were employed as relationship managers (RMs), a year-to-date decrease of 118, of which 28 RMs were connected with the sale of Julius Baer Brazil. Adjusted general expenses fell by 7% to CHF 714 million, despite a 28% increase in provisions and losses to CHF 56 million. Excluding provisions and losses, adjusted general expenses fell by 9% to CHF 658 million, mainly reflecting a reduction in consulting charges and legal fees, as well as lower spend on external staff. While adjusted depreciation of property and equipment declined by 3% to CHF 96 million, adjusted amortisation and impairment of intangible assets rose by 8% to CHF 150 million, mainly reflecting higher IT-related investments in recent years. The adjusted cost/income ratio (excluding adjusted provisions and losses) increased to 71.3% (2024: 70.9%). Excluding the impact of CHF 213 million of net credit losses on adjusted operating income in 2025, the underlying cost/income ratio improved by 3 percentage points to 67.6%.
Strong and liquid balance sheet
As loans increased by 1% to CHF 42.1 billion, comprising CHF 33.8 billion of Lombard loans (+2%) and CHF 8.3 billion of mortgages (-2%), the loan-to-deposit ratio rose to 63% (end-2024: 61%). While cash and balances at central banks decreased by 12% to CHF 7.2 billion, receivables from securities financing transactions rose by 70% to CHF 9.8 billion. The total treasury portfolio, included in financial assets measured at FVOCI (down 18% to CHF 8.7 billion) and other financial assets measured at amortised cost (up 24% to CHF 6.5 billion), decreased by 4% to CHF 15.3 billion. Equity attributable to shareholders of Julius Baer Group Ltd. rose by 6% to CHF 7.2 billion. The balance sheet remains highly liquid, with a liquidity coverage ratio of 261% (end-2024: 292%, or 282% on a pro forma B3F-equivalent basis).
Solid capitalisation
Risk-weighted assets (RWA) amounted to CHF 22.7 billion, comprising CHF 11.0 billion of credit risk positions, CHF 9.3 billion of operational risk positions, CHF 1.8 billion of market risk positions, and CHF 0.6 billion of non-counterparty-related risk positions. This compares to total RWA of CHF 20.2 billion, or CHF 25.2 billion on a pro forma B3F-equivalent basis, at the end of 2024. These developments resulted in a CET1 capital ratio of 17.4% (end-2024: 17.8%, or 14.2% on a pro forma B3F-equivalent basis) and a total capital ratio of 24.7% (end-2024: 26.4%, or 21.1% on a pro forma B3F-equivalent basis). As the leverage exposure increased by 3% to CHF 111 billion, the tier 1 leverage ratio was stable at 4.9%. The Group’s capitalisation therefore remains robust: the CET1 and total capital ratios are well above the Group’s own floors of 11% and 15%, respectively, and far exceed the regulatory minimums of 8.3% and 12.5%, respectively, applicable at the end of 2025. The tier 1 leverage ratio remains comfortably above the 3.0% regulatory minimum.
Proposed ordinary dividend unchanged at CHF
2.60 per share
Return to solid foundation and positive momentum to deliver on 2026–2028 targets
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| Language: | English |
| Company: | Julius Baer Group Ltd. |
| Bahnhofstrasse 36 | |
| 8010 Zurich | |
| Switzerland | |
| Phone: | +41 58 888 11 11 |
| E-mail: | info@juliusbaer.com |
| Internet: | www.juliusbaer.com |
| ISIN: | CH0102484968 |
| Listed: | SIX Swiss Exchange |
| EQS News ID: | 2269282 |
| End of Announcement | EQS News Service |
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2269282 02-Feb-2026 CET/CEST