Belfius
Belfius Bank SA/NV is a wholly state-owned Belgian banking and insurance group focused on serving domestic customers across retail, self-employed professionals, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), public institutions, and corporate clients.[1][2] It emerged in 2012 from the nationalization and restructuring of Dexia Bank Belgium, the domestic arm of the Dexia Group, which collapsed due to heavy losses from sovereign debt exposures and required multibillion-euro bailouts from Belgian, French, and Luxembourg governments during the 2008-2011 financial turmoil.[3][4] As Belgium's third-largest bank by assets, Belfius holds a leading position in public sector financing and serves approximately 50% of Belgian companies through its commercial banking operations.[5][6] With over 3.8 million customers and a balance sheet exceeding €179 billion as of December 2023, the institution emphasizes long-term financing for the Belgian economy, granting €14.1 billion in new loans to businesses in that year alone.[1][7]
Overview
Corporate Profile and Rebranding
Belfius operates as a bank-insurer in Belgium, providing integrated banking and insurance services to over 3.8 million customers across retail, public sector, and corporate segments as of December 2024.[8][9] Headquartered in Brussels at Rogier Tower, the institution employs approximately 7,000 staff members and maintains a network of branches focused on domestic operations.[10][11] As the third-largest bank in Belgium by total assets, Belfius holds significant market positions, including leading shares in public sector financing and strong presence in mortgages and corporate lending.[12][13] The rebranding to Belfius occurred on March 1, 2012, when the Belgian state acquired Dexia Bank Belgium amid the Dexia Group's resolution, renaming it to emphasize national identity and stability.[14][15] The name "Belfius" combines "Bel" from Belgium, "fi" from finance, and "us" to represent the institution, signaling a shift toward a purely Belgian-oriented entity detached from international exposures.[16] This transition involved gradual implementation of the new branding across operations, culminating in full adoption by mid-2012, and reinforced Belfius's role as a stable provider for local economies without venturing into prior cross-border risks.[17][18]Mission and Strategic Focus
Belfius's mission is to be "Meaningful & Inspiring for Belgian Society. Together," emphasizing support for customers and stakeholders in contributing to a sustainable Belgian economy through integrated banking and insurance services.[19] This objective prioritizes long-term value creation for retail, corporate, public sector, and non-profit clients, with a focus on customer satisfaction as the foundation for profitability and economic impact.[20] The strategy aligns operations with empirical demands of the Belgian market, where Belfius holds leading positions in public and corporate banking while expanding in retail insurance and wealth management.[21] Key strategic pillars include strengthening public and corporate banking to finance infrastructure and enterprises, alongside growth in retail and insurance for individual and SME clients, and targeted expansion in wealth management to capture higher-value segments.[21] Under the Inspire 2025 plan, priorities encompass digital transformation for enhanced customer touchpoints, such as mobile banking and portals, and integration of sustainability criteria into financing decisions to support risk-adjusted economic contributions rather than unsubstantiated mandates.[22] Commitments for 2025-2030 include directing investments toward future-proof infrastructure and ensuring operational sustainability, evidenced by €7.5 billion in new long-term loans to Belgian enterprises in the first half of 2025, demonstrating alignment between stated goals and measurable lending activity.[19][23] This focus on Belgian-centric financing underscores causal links to domestic stability, with ESG factors applied selectively to prioritize ventures yielding verifiable returns, such as renewable infrastructure, over broader ideological pursuits.[19] Belfius positions itself as the sole fully Belgian integrated bank-insurer, aiming to embed services across all regions and segments for comprehensive economic support.[21]Historical Origins
Crédit Communal de Belgique Era
The Crédit Communal de Belgique was established on November 24, 1860, as a specialized financial institution tasked with providing loans to Belgian municipalities for public investments and infrastructure projects.[24] Modeled on principles of public finance stability, it operated as a public limited company with a conservative lending framework centered on low-risk municipal bonds and deposits, leveraging the implicit sovereign guarantee of local government borrowers to minimize defaults.[25] This approach prioritized long-term funding for essential public works over speculative activities, ensuring operational resilience through empirical evidence of near-zero default rates among backed municipal obligations.[26] Throughout the 20th century, the institution expanded regionally by establishing branch networks, gradually increasing its share of municipal financing from under 20% in the late 19th century to a dominant position in local government debt markets.[27] Its growth was anchored in a risk-averse model that avoided private sector exposure, relying instead on diversified bond issuances and deposit mobilization from public entities, which sustained profitability amid economic fluctuations.[24] This structure fostered stability, as municipal revenues—tied to taxation and state transfers—provided reliable repayment streams, contrasting with more volatile commercial banking practices. Following World War II, Crédit Communal de Belgique played a pivotal role in financing reconstruction efforts through targeted loans for public infrastructure, such as rebuilding utilities and communal facilities devastated by occupation.[27] The institution maintained its conservative ethos by channeling funds exclusively to government-backed projects, eschewing high-yield but risky ventures, which enabled rapid recovery support without compromising its low-default profile.[26] This era underscored the efficacy of its public finance specialization, as Belgium's postwar economic resurgence benefited from the bank's steady provision of capital for essential, non-speculative developments.[27]BACOB and Artesia Developments
BACOB originated as a cooperative banking institution tied to Belgium's Christian Social Workers' Movement (ACW), focusing on savings and life insurance products tailored to the Flemish middle class and working population.[28][29] Initially operating through local affiliated cooperatives, it emphasized mutual support and conservative financial services, distinguishing itself from state-backed entities like Crédit Communal by prioritizing private-sector member-driven growth over public guarantees. This structure fostered steady expansion in retail savings amid post-World War II economic recovery, with BACOB serving as a vehicle for community-based capital accumulation rather than aggressive lending. In the 1990s, amid Belgium's alignment with EU banking deregulation and the push for a single financial market, BACOB underwent significant transformation, rebranding elements of its operations toward Artesia Banking Corporation (Artesia BC) by acquiring a majority stake in Banque Paribas Belgium in 1997, which facilitated the introduction of broader retail banking products including mortgages and consumer loans. This shift marked a departure from its cooperative roots, demutualizing in the late 1990s to adopt a commercial orientation that expanded its customer base and asset portfolio through innovative consumer-facing services, though it heightened exposure to retail credit risks such as household debt in a deregulated environment. Pre-merger data indicated robust growth, with BACOB's integration into Artesia contributing to a diversified retail footprint serving millions of individual clients by the late 1990s, reflecting private-sector adaptability contrasted against the more cautious, municipally oriented strategies of public banks.[30] This evolution underscored BACOB's role in democratizing access to credit for middle-class households while introducing vulnerabilities from increased lending volumes without the buffering of state oversight.Integration into Dexia Group
In 1996, Crédit Communal de Belgique merged with Crédit Local de France to form Dexia, marking the initial cross-border integration that laid the foundation for expanded operations beyond Belgium.[26] This was followed by Dexia's acquisition of Artesia Banking Corporation in 2001, which incorporated retail and cooperative banking activities previously under BACOB into the group structure, creating a more diversified entity spanning public finance, retail banking, and asset management.[31] The integration shifted focus from domestic municipal lending to a multinational model, ostensibly enhancing scale economies and risk dispersion through geographic and product diversification.[32] By 2008, the group's balance sheet had ballooned to €651 billion, reflecting aggressive expansion via acquisitions and lending growth, which proponents argued provided stability through diversified revenue streams across Europe and beyond.[26] However, this scale came at the cost of heightened vulnerability, as cross-border ventures—such as the 2000 acquisition of U.S.-based Financial Security Assurance for €2.7 billion—exposed the group to American municipal debt and structured finance risks, undermining claims of effective diversification by concentrating exposures in correlated asset classes.[33] Empirical data on balance sheet growth from €258 billion in 2000 to €651 billion in 2008 illustrates how integration prioritized volume over prudent risk assessment, with limited evidence that geographic spread mitigated systemic liquidity dependencies.[32] Dexia achieved notable issuance volumes in structured products, leveraging its public finance expertise to underwrite complex securities, yet this success masked structural fragilities including over-reliance on short-term funding markets, which covered over 40% of the balance sheet and amplified rollover risks in volatile conditions.[34] Critics, including post-crisis analyses, contend that the merger's causal push toward international scale eroded the conservative risk profile of pre-integration entities like Crédit Communal, fostering a funding model vulnerable to market disruptions without commensurate hedging or capital buffers to validate diversification benefits.[26] Overall, while integration delivered short-term growth metrics, it arguably sowed seeds of imbalance by prioritizing expansion over resilient funding structures.Financial Crisis and State Intervention
Dexia Collapse and Bailout Mechanics
Dexia's vulnerabilities during the 2008 global financial crisis stemmed primarily from its exposure to U.S. subprime mortgages through structured financial products and guarantees issued by its subsidiaries, including financial security arms that insured municipal bonds backed by subprime assets. This exposure led to writedowns exceeding €3.65 billion as mortgage defaults surged, eroding investor confidence and triggering a liquidity freeze in wholesale funding markets following the September 15, 2008, collapse of Lehman Brothers. Market data indicated Dexia's short-term financing needs reached €260 billion, with interbank lending effectively halting amid counterparty risk aversion, amplifying the bank's inability to roll over debts despite a relatively low direct subprime holding of around 1-2% of assets.[35][36][37] In response, on September 30, 2008, the governments of Belgium, France, and Luxembourg injected €6.4 billion in capital—approximately €3 billion each from Belgium and France, plus €376 million from Luxembourg via a convertible loan—to stabilize Dexia and prevent systemic contagion. This initial bailout was accompanied by state guarantees covering up to €90 billion in liabilities, structured with Belgium assuming 60.5%, France 36.5%, and Luxembourg 3% of the risk, underscoring the too-big-to-fail dynamics of Dexia's cross-border operations and public-sector lending focus, which had fostered reliance on implicit sovereign backing. Empirical evidence from funding market indicators, such as elevated credit default swap spreads and plummeting share prices (Dexia's stock fell over 30% in days), highlighted how interconnected banking froze liquidity independently of regulatory oversight, revealing causal fragilities in leveraged entities dependent on short-term wholesale finance.[38][39][40] The 2011 European sovereign debt crisis exacerbated these issues, as Dexia's €21 billion portfolio of peripheral eurozone bonds (including Greek and Italian debt) incurred write-downs exceeding 21% on select holdings, reigniting funding strains amid renewed market panic over sovereign defaults. On October 10, 2011, Belgian authorities recapitalized and nationalized Dexia Bank Belgium (the precursor to Belfius) for €4 billion, absorbing direct taxpayer costs for the local operations while governments extended guarantees totaling up to €150 billion across Dexia entities to facilitate orderly wind-down. This second intervention laid bare moral hazard risks in state-proximate banks, where public guarantees had incentivized mismatched long-term asset holdings funded by volatile short-term markets, culminating in cumulative guarantor exposures and resolution costs that strained fiscal balances—Belgium alone faced ongoing liabilities from its €4 billion outlay and proportional shares of broader unwind expenses.[41][42][43]Belgian Acquisition and Renaming to Belfius
In response to the Dexia Group's liquidity crisis and sovereign debt exposures, the Belgian government announced on October 10, 2011, its acquisition of Dexia Bank Belgium for €4 billion, nationalizing the subsidiary to safeguard domestic banking operations.[43][44][38] This move, approved by the European Commission as temporary rescue aid on October 16, 2011, preserved the unit's focus on Belgian retail, corporate, and public finance activities while isolating them from the parent company's international risks.[45] The transaction facilitated a carve-out of Dexia Bank Belgium's healthier assets, enabling the Belgian state to retain operations serving primarily local customers and municipalities, in contrast to Dexia SA's assumption of impaired sovereign debt and cross-border portfolios as a dedicated resolution entity.[42][46] Belgian authorities justified the purchase as essential for financial stability and social continuity, providing implicit guarantees against short-term losses during the transition.[47] On March 1, 2012, the rebranded entity launched as Belfius Bank & Insurance, adopting a name derived from elements of "Belgium," "finance," and "us" to underscore its national orientation and distance itself from Dexia's tarnished reputation.[14][15] This rebranding coincided with state-backed recapitalization measures, allowing Belfius to stabilize under government ownership and prioritize core domestic services amid ongoing group liquidation.[4]Business Operations
Core Banking and Insurance Services
Belfius provides retail banking services including current accounts, savings accounts, term deposits, debit and credit cards, and consumer loans with interest rates ranging from 6.89% to 9.39%.[48] These offerings facilitate everyday payments, personal financing, and asset accumulation for individuals in Belgium.[21] Complementing these, Belfius Insurance distributes life insurance products such as mixed life policies, pension savings, guaranteed income plans, and savings-linked options, alongside non-life coverage for property, vehicles, and liability risks, all integrated through bank branches for bundled distribution.[49][50] This bancassurance model supports risk mitigation and long-term financial planning tailored to Belgian households' needs for stability amid economic fluctuations.[51] In public sector financing, Belfius maintains a legacy from Crédit Communal de Belgique by issuing municipal bonds and pandbrieven, primarily funding loans to Belgian municipalities, provinces, and other public entities for infrastructure and operational needs.[52] In 2023, the bank extended €3.2 billion in new long-term financing to this segment, leveraging specialized debt instruments to support local government borrowing at competitive rates, which aids fiscal decentralization in Belgium's federal structure.[53] For corporate clients, Belfius offers trade finance solutions, treasury management, and credit lending focused on small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) integral to Belgium's regional economies.[1] These services include cash management tools and export financing, enabling SMEs to handle international transactions and liquidity amid supply chain dependencies, with an emphasis on domestic firms in sectors like manufacturing and services.[54]Customer Segments and Market Position
Belfius primarily serves 3.8 million customers across Belgium, encompassing retail individuals, businesses, and public institutions as of mid-2025.[23] The retail segment forms the core, with a focus on private clients and wealth management, where the bank attracted over 14,000 new customers in the Private & Wealth category during the first half of 2024 alone.[55] Corporate lending targets small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) alongside mid-cap firms, emphasizing domestic Belgian operations with turnover exceeding €10 million for larger entities.[56] In the public sector, Belfius holds a leading position, serving approximately 12,000 customers including local governments and social housing providers, supported by a market share exceeding 45% in basic banking services.[57] This segmentation reflects a balanced regional footprint, with historical roots enabling equitable coverage in both Flanders and Wallonia despite its state-linked origins.[58] As the third-largest bank in Belgium by overall scale, Belfius commands a near-20% market share across key domestic segments, bolstered by a stable deposit base comprising roughly 74% retail and business funds.[59] [25] Its competitive standing derives from a strong franchise in retail, SMEs, mid-caps, and public finance, where it outperforms in niche areas like municipal lending amid a fragmented market led by BNP Paribas Fortis and KBC.[56] Belfius's predominantly Belgian-centric model—lacking the substantial foreign loan exposure seen in KBC (38% in Central and Eastern Europe as of early 2023)—enhances portfolio stability by minimizing cross-border risks, though it may cap upside in global expansion relative to internationally diversified peers.[60] This domestic emphasis aligns with its state ownership, fostering reliability in core markets while navigating competitive pressures from more agile or broader-reach rivals.[5]Digital Transformation and Innovations
Belfius has prioritized mobile banking through its Belfius Mobile app, which enables customers to manage accounts, transfers, payments, and insurance via smartphones or tablets. By the end of 2023, the app had 1.98 million active users, representing a 5.5% increase from the prior year, with users averaging 39 log-ins per month and reporting a 98% satisfaction rate alongside a 4.7 app store rating.[1] This adoption facilitated 70% of pension savings plans, 44% of new credit cards, and 47% of new savings accounts being completed digitally in 2023, shifting transaction volumes from branches to self-service channels and contributing to operational streamlining.[1] In fraud detection, Belfius employs Microsoft Azure Machine Learning to analyze transaction patterns and compute risk scores, processing hundreds of millions of operations annually. Implemented as an early adopter, this system automates false positive closures and prioritizes high-risk alerts for analysts, reducing manual review burdens and enabling faster model development through feature reuse and versioning.[61] Complementing this, AI integration in the mobile chatbot handled 51.2% of interactions with a 64% success rate since November 2023, enhancing customer self-service without proportional staff increases.[1] These tools correlate with efficiency gains, as evidenced by shortened coding times and lower materialization costs in machine learning workflows.[61] Belfius supports open banking via its developer portal, providing APIs for secure data transmission and third-party integrations compliant with PSD2 regulations. Partnerships include a 2023 collaboration with IBM to modernize infrastructure using z16 mainframes, yielding higher availability, performance, and cost efficiency through hybrid AI capabilities.[62] Additionally, the 2021 launch of Banx, a digital app powered by Belfius and Proximus, targeted sustainable banking features like carbon tracking, though it emphasized fintech interoperability over proprietary lock-in.[63] Post-2011 financial crisis restructuring, Belfius invested in cybersecurity, including a security operations center (SOC) with IBM for 24/7 threat surveillance and incident response.[62] This aligns with an Information Security Management System (ISMS) adopting a risk-based approach and preparations for the European Central Bank's 2023 cyber resilience stress test, focusing on fraud prevention packages for public sector clients.[1] Such measures supported a cost-income ratio improvement to 43% in 2023, despite 7% expense growth from digital investments, as cloud migrations reduced idle IT capacity and energy use.[1][64]Ownership and Governance
State Ownership Structure
Belfius Bank SA/NV has been wholly owned by the Belgian federal government since November 2011, when the state acquired 100% of its shares from the Dexia Group amid the European sovereign debt crisis resolution.[9] The ownership is structured through the Federal Holding and Investment Company (FHIC), formerly known as the Special Finance and Investment Company (SFPI), which acts as the sole shareholder to manage the state's stake.[65] This full public holding eliminates minority investor pressures, allowing decisions to prioritize long-term stability over short-term shareholder returns, as evidenced by the absence of dividend payments in the initial years following nationalization to rebuild capital buffers amid post-crisis losses.[66] Dividend distributions to the state resumed only after profitability stabilized, with the first payments occurring around 2016 and cumulative payouts reaching nearly €3 billion by the end of 2024, reflecting a cautious approach to fiscal prudence under state oversight.[67] This structure has empirically supported operational resilience, as the implicit sovereign guarantee—stemming from 100% state control—has contributed to lower funding costs and maintained access to capital markets, evidenced by Belfius's ability to issue green bonds and sustain solvency ratios above regulatory minima without private equity dilution.[66] [68] The board of directors, comprising 12 members as of 2024, is appointed by the FHIC as the sole shareholder, ensuring direct alignment with federal priorities such as economic support for Belgian households and public sector clients, which constitute a significant portion of the bank's portfolio.[69] This mechanism introduces state nominees with public policy expertise alongside independent directors from banking and finance sectors, fostering a governance model where national interests guide strategic choices like lending to regional governments and infrastructure projects.[70] However, full state ownership has been associated with potential inefficiencies, as political influences on board selections may delay agile responses to market shifts compared to privately held peers, though empirical data shows Belfius maintaining competitive return on equity post-stabilization without systemic governance failures.[9]Management and Board Composition
Marc Raisière has served as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Chairman of the Management Board of Belfius Bank SA/NV since January 2014.[71] Prior to this, he joined Belfius in 2012 as CEO of Belfius Insurance, following a career in actuarial sciences and marketing, including roles at AXA Group where he led global offer, marketing, and distribution efforts from 2006 to 2009.[72] Raisière holds degrees in mathematics and actuarial sciences from Université catholique de Louvain (1985 and 1987) and completed marketing studies at INSEAD (2006).[71] The Management Board, responsible for day-to-day operations and strategy execution, comprises seven members as of mid-2025, including Raisière, Chief Financial Officer Olivier Onclin, Chief Risk Officer Bram Somers, and others focused on business lines such as private banking and insurance.[73] A restructuring effective January 1, 2025, assigned Dirk Gyselinck to oversee Private, Wealth, and Retail Banking within the board.[22] The Board of Directors, which sets overall strategy and supervises management, consists of 17 members as of June 30, 2025, with a majority being non-executive directors to ensure independent oversight.[52] Key figures include Chairman Christiaan Sunt, alongside members such as Lutgart Van den Berghe (professor of governance), Rudi Vander Vennet (financial expert), and Lieve Mostrey (public sector background), blending private-sector financial expertise with representatives from the Belgian state's holding company, FPIM-SFPI, which holds majority ownership.[69] This composition reflects the bank's partial state ownership, incorporating nominees who may prioritize national economic policy alongside commercial objectives, though empirical data under Raisière's tenure shows sustained profitability and post-crisis stabilization, with record profits reported since 2014.[74] Specialized committees support board functions, including the Audit Committee for financial reporting integrity, the Risk Committee for oversight of solvency and compliance risks, the Nomination Committee for director selection, and the Remuneration Committee for executive compensation alignment with performance.[75] These bodies, drawn from board members with relevant expertise, have facilitated Belfius' risk management framework, evidenced by adherence to regulatory solvency requirements amid economic recoveries.[76] Criticisms from internal reviews highlight occasional political influences in senior appointments, potentially favoring connections over merit in a state-influenced entity, though no verified instances of policy subordination over shareholder value have impaired operational metrics.[77]Privatization Debates and Proposals
Debates over the privatization of Belfius, fully state-owned since its acquisition amid the 2011 Dexia collapse, have centered on balancing public interest mandates with potential efficiency gains from private involvement. Proponents argue that retaining full state ownership exposes taxpayers to ongoing risks, including implicit guarantees that foster moral hazard, while partial privatization could inject capital for growth and enhance competitiveness without relinquishing control.[78] Opponents, often from labor unions and left-leaning groups, contend that privatization undermines Belfius's role in serving public missions like regional financing and stable lending, prioritizing short-term shareholder returns over long-term societal benefits.[79] Left-leaning perspectives, such as those from the CSC union, emphasize that privatization shifts Belfius toward immediate profitability pressures, potentially eroding its capacity for counter-cyclical lending and public-oriented services, as evidenced by post-privatization behaviors in other European financial institutions where profit maximization led to reduced focus on underserved segments.[79] These views highlight moral hazard in reverse: state retention ensures accountability to citizens rather than distant investors, preserving dividends as a stable revenue stream estimated at hundreds of millions annually for the treasury.[80] Right-leaning arguments, aligned with liberal economic principles, counter that state ownership stifles innovation and efficiency due to bureaucratic inertia and lack of market discipline, advocating partial sales to attract strategic investors who could improve return on equity (ROE) through better risk management and technological upgrades.[78] Empirical evidence from European bank privatizations supports efficiency gains, with studies showing privatized institutions achieving higher profitability and managerial efficiency post-sale, particularly when sold to foreign strategic investors, without commensurate losses in systemic stability. For instance, analysis of global bank privatizations indicates improved ROE and reduced return volatility, attributing these to alleviated principal-agent problems under state control.[81] [82] In cases like partial divestments in Italian and Spanish banks following the 2008 crisis, ROE rose by 2-4 percentage points on average within three years, driven by private capital enhancing lending portfolios and operational streamlining, while z-score metrics confirmed sustained stability.[82] These precedents suggest that for Belfius, a minority stake sale could similarly boost competitiveness, reducing taxpayer exposure to potential future bailouts estimated at billions in the original Dexia rescue.[83] However, critics note that such gains often correlate with broader market recoveries rather than privatization per se, and public banks like Germany's Sparkassen have maintained high stability through regional mandates without private dilution.[84]Financial Performance
Historical Profitability and Key Metrics
Following its establishment in 2012 as the successor to Dexia Bank Belgium after the Belgian state's acquisition amid the Dexia bailout, Belfius prioritized balance sheet stabilization and domestic operations, marking a recovery from prior losses tied to Dexia's sovereign debt exposures.[37] Net profit after tax trended upward from low bases in the early post-bailout years, reflecting improved cost controls and revenue diversification. By 2023, consolidated net income reached €1.115 billion, up from €932 million in 2022, driven by higher interest margins and insurance contributions.[85] This culminated in a record €1.127 billion for 2024, supported by resilient lending and asset recovery efforts.[67] Key revenue streams underscored banking dominance, with net interest income forming the core, estimated at around €2 billion annually by recent periods amid elevated rates, while insurance premiums grew steadily—life premiums hit €1.444 billion in 2024, a 7.5% rise year-over-year from strong product demand.[67] Belfius resumed dividend payments to the Belgian state as profitability solidified, distributing record amounts for the fourth consecutive year in 2024 to recoup bailout costs, with cumulative payouts exceeding €3.5 billion by mid-2025.[86] Capital strength remained robust, with the CET1 ratio at 15.4% as of December 2024, exceeding regulatory minima and providing buffers against economic cycles—down slightly from 16.0% in 2023 but well above the 10.9% requirement.[67] [9] Return on equity hovered around 9-10% in recent half-years, trailing the 12% average for Belgian banks in 2024, partly due to state-imposed conservative lending mandates limiting aggressive expansion relative to private peers like KBC.[87] [52]| Year | Net Profit (€ million) | CET1 Ratio (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 932 | N/A |
| 2023 | 1,115 | 16.0 |
| 2024 | 1,127 | 15.4 |