Cristian Vicuna
Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Your line is now open
Thanks, Andres. On Slide 7, we highlight our key messages for the first quarter of this year. During the quarter, the net profits of the bank reached CLP 278 billion, a 131% increase compared to the same quarter last year. And our return on average equity reached 25.6% with a best-in-class efficiency ratio of 35%. Our fees and financial transactions grew very strongly, 17% and 40% year-on-year, respectively, thanks to the success of our digital strategy, where we have seen a strong demand for our products such as mutual funds, which have grown 20% year-over-year. With this, our recurrence levels reached 61.9%. Also, our NII increased 42% with a NIM of 4.1%, thanks to our balance sheet structure and relatively high inflation in the quarter. Furthermore, on April 22, our shareholders approved a dividend distribution of 70% of our 2024 profits at CLP 3.19 per share and a dividend yield of 5.4%. Behind this success is our strategy that we have been implementing over the last few years. Thanks to our digital products, we now have over 2.3 million digital clients and 4.3 million total clients, and we are very well regarded for customer service among peers, where we obtained a Net Promoter Score of 57 points over the last six months. This quarter, we migrated our core banking systems to the cloud through the Gravity project, and we are now operating 100% on the Cloud, an important stepping stone for the digital transformation of our bank. Furthermore, we were recognized as the best private bank in Chile by Euromoney. On Slide 8, we can see the advantages with our strategy of being a digital bank with Work/Cafe. As you can see, we have continued optimizing our branch network with 34% of our branches without human sellers. Recently, we have been launching Santander in Europe community, simple branches facilitating access to depository ATMs and other banking services such as daily bill payments on top-up phones and metro cards as well as opening accounts in a coffee area. We continue to simplify our products, reducing the total number of products in our system by 31%. The simplification of our product offering aims to provide simpler products to our clients, but also reduce system complexities and standardized operations. Here in the graph on the bottom, you can see how the digital transformation is leading to strong client acquisition since 2019. We have gained some 900,000 clients, while our digital clients have increased by 1.2 million clients, driven of our digital initiatives such as Life and Mas Lucas. 60% of our customers are active users, meaning that they use their account on a monthly basis. These active users and our digital customers are growing 7% year-over-year, while our total clients grew 9%. As of March 2025, we are ranked first for customer service. On Slide 9, we can see how our strategy is translating into results through higher fee generation, which grew 17% year-over-year. Getnet, our acquiring business, continued to show strong growth, attracting more clients with over 200,000 customers, an increase of 25% in the last 12 months with over 20% market share in numbers of transactions. There is a strong incentive for our Getnet clients to open an account with us. Such as having their sales deposited up to 5 times per day, a differentiating feature in the payment systems in Chile. With this, we have quickly become market leaders in business current accounts, increasing 25% year-on-year. The larger client base is leading to important increases in other products as well. Our current accounts have been increasing 10% year-over-year with growth in dollar accounts, particularly strong as it is easy to contract through our APP, reaching a market share of almost 40% where these new clients comply with our risk appetite, they are given credit cards. So this, along with a reduction of cash in the Chilean economy is leading to the 10% growth in credit card transactions in the last year. We are first for volume of credit card purchases in the Chilean market. Also, with the lower interest rates and a simple straightforward investment platform available for all our clients, we have seen a shift from our time deposits to mutual funds that we broker. Here, our diesel mutual funds are best in the industry and the overall AUMs we broker have increased 20% year-over-year. Our fees generated from clients represent more than 60% of our core expenses. Compared to the rest of the Chilean banking industry, we are far above the average. Our efficiency was also at first-class levels of 35%, best among our peers. Let us review the financial results. On Slide 11, we can see the impressive improvement in our results over the last 12 months. Our quarterly ROAE which is 25.6%, marking the fourth consecutive quarter above 20% and a historic high for quarterly net income. Our net income attributable to shareholders increased by 131% year-on-year, mainly due to higher income growth from a lower cost of funding and higher fees on financial transactions. Compared to the fourth quarter, net income grew 0.5% despite lower inflation and higher provisions that were more than offset by higher fees and lower operating expenses, all managing to sustain these impressive levels of profitability. On Slide 12, our net -- our noninterest income is growing 23.4% year-over-year as a result of continuing expansion of the client base and the usage of digital products and platforms. Our main products continue to grow very strongly. Of note, our card fees show an annual growth of 37.6%. he second interchange fee cap is on hold until the commission concludes their review and makes a decision, which we would expect to be later on the year. Here, we can also see the financial impact of Getnet that continues to do very well, attracting more business clients and also larger corporate clients with greater transactional volume. Income from financial transactions increased strongly year-on-year, mainly due to gains from exposure to foreign currency and local and offshore client pressure. On Slide 13, we review the evolution of our net interest margin over the last 12 months. As you can see, the recovery of our NIM has been driven by the improvement in the cost of funding. Compared to the fourth quarter, the slightly lower U.S. variation affected our income for U.S. readjustment, leading to the slightly lower margin and NIM in the quarter. Given our current macro expectation, we expect our net interest margin to stay around these levels for the rest of the year. We also displayed the growth of our funding base. Our total deposits remained stable year-on-year and decreased quarter-on-quarter after high liquidity of our corporate clients that then drain on the first week of the year. As interest rates fall, clients are moving to more attractive mutual funds managed by Santander Asset Management. With the growth in customer deposits, we have improved our loan-to-deposit ratio in the recent years, reaching 130% as of March 2025 and 97% when adjusted for the portion of our mortgage loan financed through long-term bonds. Our liquidity coverage ratio and net stable funding ratio remained well above regulatory limits. On Slide 15, we can see our loan book. Our loans contracted slightly in the quarter compared to December 2024. In large part, this is due to the appreciation of the Chilean peso in the quarter, which contributed to a contraction of commercial loans and slower dynamics in the mortgage market. Consumer lending continued to grow well through though affected by the high growth at year-end due to the seasonality of credit card loans, which was -- has now normalized. Our loan-to-loan book continues to grow more robustly with our Santander Consumer subsidiary benefiting from the growth of alliances with dealerships over the last year. In terms of segment growth, the Retail segment growth was led by consumer lending with the slower mortgage growth affecting the total overall growth of this segment. Our Wealth Management and Insurance segment saw an impressive growth over the last 12 months with high wealth clients increasing their demand for credit. Our middle market segment saw a slight pickup in demand, while our Corporate Investment Bank loan book has contracted due to our -- to less of a demand from the general macro environment. On Slide 16, we review our efficiency that has been consistently improving, reaching 35% in the first quarter with recurrence levels of 62%. Total operating expenses are decreasing 1.8% year-on-year and 3.3% in the quarter. All of this is supported by a decrease in other operating expenses as costs incurred last year related to branch restructuring were not repeated in '25 and we had lower fraud expenses due to the change in the law in May 2024. Core support expenses, salaries, administration and amortization grew 9% year-on-year, driven by the 5.9% quarterly increase. This pickup was particularly in administrative expenses, where we recognized greater costs related to technology as we reach the final stages of our migration of our mainframe to the cloud. All in all, efficiency in the quarter is within our guidance and one of the best in the industry. On Slide 17, we show our cost of risk and payment behavior of our clients. In the first graph, we can see the evolution of our card fully provision expense and cost of risk. As shown in the graph on the right, our NPLs that are 90 days overdue increased during 2024, mainly in our mortgage and commercial loan books, while our consumer loan book remained relatively stable. Our Impaired loan portfolio, which includes NPLs plus restructured loans has also been increased significantly in the same portfolios, especially mortgages. It is important to note that asset quality ratios are affected by weaker loan growth. However, the graphs also indicate that the increase in volumes is starting to slow down. And during the first quarter of 2024, we started to see early signs of asset quality stabilizing with improvements in our commercial loan book. On Slide 18, we can see how we maintain strong capital ratios well above our regulatory minimum. Our capital ratios as of March 2025 include a provision for a dividend payment of 70% of the 2024 earnings and 60% of the 2025 earnings year-to-date. In April 2025, the CMF announced that we are now required to establish 25 basis points for Pillar 2 requirements. We have to have half of this established by June '25 and the remaining half in the next two years that will be reviewed to the results of the evaluation of the patrimonial adequacy of each year carried out by the CMF. 56.3% of this charge has to be composed by core equity Tier 1. And therefore, our all-in fully loaded requirement for December 2025 will be 9.08%. As you can see, we have more than sufficient capital to cover this, and so it has not affected any strategic decisions. In fact, on April 22, our shareholders approved the 70% dividend payout. So our latest dividend payment was CLP 3.19 per share, our historic high with a dividend yield of 5.4%. So now let's move to our current expectations for the rest of 2025 on Slide 20. Firstly, we are considering a macro scenario of GDP growth of around 2.1% with the U.S. variation of 3.6% and average monetary policy rate of 4.8%. With this, we expect our loan book to grow mid-single digits, adjusting for the effects of our generate-to-distribute model. With our current macro expectations, our NIMs should remain around 4% throughout the year. Given the delay in the interchange fee regulation, we have increased our non-NII guidance to growth of high single digits. Our efficiency levels should remain around the current levels, so around mid-30s. Considering where we are in the credit cycle and the initial slowdown in the creation of non-payments, we are guiding a stable cost of risk of around 1.3% with the second semester improving compared to the first semester of this year. With this, we are increasing our guidance for 2025 to returns over average equities of above 21%. With this, I finish my presentation. So now let's start with the Q&A session.