Piraeus Bank S.A. (ATH:TPEIR)
Greece flag Greece · Delayed Price · Currency is EUR
8.28
-0.10 (-1.24%)
At close: Apr 24, 2026
← View all transcripts

Earnings Call: Q3 2024

Nov 1, 2024

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. I am Mina, your call's call operator. Welcome, and thank you for joining the Piraeus Financial Holdings conference call and live webcast to present and discuss the Piraeus nine months 2024 financial results. All participants will be in a listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a question-and-answer session. Should anyone need assistance during the conference call, you may signal an operator by pressing star and zero on your telephone. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Piraeus Financial Holdings CEO, Mr. Christos Megalou. Mr. Megalou, you may now proceed.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and good morning to all of you joining us from the US. This is Christos Megalou, Chief Executive Officer, and I'm joined today by our CFO, Theodore Gnardellis, Chryssanthi Berbati, and Xenofon Damalas. Piraeus has delivered a quarter of superior results with the best 9-month performance ever. We generated EUR 320 million normalized net profit in the third quarter, adding to EUR 932 million for the 9-month period. Our strong operating performance in the 9 months 2024 paves the way for the upgrade of our full-year targets. I'm proud of our results and thankful to our people for their hard work. Let's start our presentation with slide four for the key achievements of our performance. We achieved NII growth in the quarter driven by increasing volumes that outpaced the June 2024 rate cut.

We generated normalized earnings of EUR 0.25 per share in the quarter, up 16% year- on- year, and EUR 0.72 per share in the nine months, which leads us to update the target for 2024 to over EUR 0.90. We achieved return on average tangible book of 18% in the third quarter, which brings the nine-month figure at 18%, driving us to update the target for 2024 to higher than 17%. We delivered 9% net revenue growth year-on-year in the nine-month period, benefiting from strong growth of client balances with fees growing at 3x the annual rate over NII. In the nine-month period, we increased our assets under management to EUR 11 billion, driven by the number one position in net mutual fund sales.

Operating expenses remain stable year-on-year, with cost- to- core income ratio at 29%, a best-in-class figure in Greece and among the best in Europe. Importantly, cost of risk was maintained at low levels, standing at 23 basis points in the nine-month period, excluding NPE servicer fees and synthetic securitization costs, an outcome of the successful management of NPE inflows. Overall, our asset quality dynamics remain solid, with NPE ratio further down to 3.2%. Our updated target is for an NPE ratio of below 3% by year-end. We expanded our performing loan book by EUR 2 billion in the 9-month period, with solid growth in the business book. The target for December 2024 is now upgraded to EUR 33 billion, an impressive 10% year-on-year growth. Our CET1 ratio increased by 150 basis points year- to- date and reached 14.7%.

The total capital ratio stands at 20%, and our MREL ratio is the highest in Greece at 29%. On the back of our solid financial performance, we upgraded our distribution accrual to 35% for 2024, while our recently updated distribution policy provides for a 50% payout ratio in 2025. Slide five depicts the financial KPIs that summarize our results. We have sustained high performance on all KPIs over multiple quarters, which leads to a strong finish for 2024 as well as for 2025. Slide six covers our earnings results in further detail. As you can see, the record earnings performance in the nine-month period resulted in tangible book value per share reaching EUR 5.69, up 15% annually, enhancing further the value proposition to our shareholders.

Slide seven presents the trajectory of the core P&L lines, showcasing solid net interest income and net fee income dynamics supported by growth, cost discipline, and resilient asset quality. cost of risk remains stable to cycle low levels. Slides eight to 11 present the detailed information regarding net interest income intrinsics, with net interest margin at 2.7%, loan pass-through stable at the level of 80%, and deposit beta settling at 16%. On slide nine, we discuss net interest income dynamics for 2025. We now expect EUR 50 million-EUR 100 million upside to the current guidance of EUR 1.8 billion, driven by higher loan volumes, lower time deposit mix, and earlier bond IRS monetization that should more than offset the effects of lower interest rates. Slide 12 outlines the impressive evolution of our net fee income, which has been supported by loan expansion, the cards business, funds transfer, and asset management.

Net fee income over assets stood at the best-in-class level of 83 basis points in the nine months. On slide 13, you can see how our new wealth and asset management strategy continues to produce strong results, with assets under management reaching EUR 11 billion at the end of September 2024, recording a 29% increase year-on-year. Our pursuit of operating efficiency bears fruit despite the inflationary headwinds. We have managed to maintain discipline in cost efficiency in the third quarter, as shown on slide 14. Cost- to- core income ratio shaped at a best-in-class 30% in Q3. Slide 15 provides a summary of our asset quality indicators. Our NPE ratio dropped to 3.2%, with zero net NPE formation. Meanwhile, third quarter organic cost of risk was maintained at historic low levels, shaping at 54 basis points or 33 basis points excluding NPE servicer fees and synthetic securitization costs.

NPE coverage remained at a prudent level of 61%. On slides 16 to 18, we present the dynamics of our performing loan book. Credit expansion was strong in Q3, with performing loans rising by EUR 700 million, supported by all business lending segments, adding to EUR 1.9 billion credit expansion in the nine months, exceeding our full-year target. On slide 19, we present our growth expectations for retail credit next year. We anticipate the youth-supporting state schemes and the retrofitting programs, our diversified sectoral model, and nationwide branch network, as well as our e-loans and auto loans to drive growth in mortgages, small business, and consumer loans.

Piraeus has a superior liquidity profile presented on slide 20. Our liquidity ratios remain solid post-TLTRO repayments, as evidenced by 244% liquidity coverage ratio and the 63% loan-to-deposit ratio, both in the top range of the European spectrum.

Turning to our capital base on slide 21, our CET1 ratio rose to 14.7% in September 2024, while accounting for increased distribution payout of 35%, already meeting the end-2024 target. Also, important to note that we are working to bring our 2025 AGM sooner in early Q2 to pave the way for earlier dividend payment and share buy back program initiation. On slide 22, we present details of our plan to accelerate DTC amortization, aiming at zero DTC by 2034 versus the 2041 schedule before. Our DTC over CET1 ratio is now planned to fall to 30% by 2027. On slide 23, we illustrate the strong capital accretion capacity of Piraeus under the context of our profitability, growth, and distribution assumptions, including the new treatment for DTC. On slide 24, we present our strong MREL position.

On slide 25, we present the latest developments for Snappi, including the European banking license that was received in June 2024, being the first Greek neobank with a relevant license. Snappi's commercial launch is expected in the second quarter of 2025. Its ambition calls for more than EUR 200 million revenues and presence in three to four countries in the next five years, reaching a client base of 2.5 million. Based on our 2024 performance to date, we upgrade our full-year guidance as depicted on slide 26. The key elements comprise normalized return of more than 17%, EPS of more than EUR 0.90, further growth of CET1 ratio to 15%, expansion of performing loans to EUR 33 billion, and non-performing exposures ratio of less than 3%. Also, we now aim at a payout ratio of 35% out of our 2024 profits.

On slides 27-31, you can see analytically the digital journeys and transformational projects that we delivered in the third quarter of 2024. Namely, we are proud of our successful rebranding that signals a new era for Piraeus, our plan on the transition to a modern retail bank model, as well as the strategic actions towards building energy efficiency and sustainability in the agri-food sector. Finally, on slide 32, we summarize the elements that make us the leading bank in Greece. Our strong results position Piraeus well among the broader group of regional peers. To give you some context, on slide 34-42, we present the key metrics for Piraeus versus domestic and regional peers.

We benchmark ourselves in terms of return on average tangible book value, credit expansion, net interest margin, deposit beta, net fee margin, cost- to- core income ratio, NPE ratio, cost of risk, and capital ratio. In all KPIs, we are either at par or best-in-class, while we are growing at an accelerated pace. We expect to generate significant value for our shareholders. And with that, let's now open the floor to your questions.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star followed by one on their telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, then you may press star and two. Those participating via the webcast, please review related information in the Q&A live session tab, should you wish to ask a question.

For those participating in the question-and-answer session, please raise your hand when asking your question for better quality. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. One moment for the first question, please. The first question comes from the line of Nida Iqbal with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Nida Iqbal
Head of EEMEA Financials and Fintech, Morgan Stanley

Hi. Thank you for the presentation and congratulations on the great set of results. I have a few questions. I'll start off on the NII. So NII resilience is quite impressive despite the lower rates. You've upgraded your NII guidance for 2025 as well with the lower rate assumption versus before. Are you able to detail the assumptions in terms of term deposit share and the loan growth that you have for 2025 that drives this revised NII upside for 2025? I also see that NIM sensitivity to rates is now lower versus before.

So if you could please provide the drivers behind that as well. Just link to this. I know my questions are a bit long on this, but just link to obviously guided to flat 2026 NII versus 2025. Are you able to comment on whether that flat year-on-year guidance still holds for 2026? And finally, just to wrap up on the upside to 2025 NII, does that flow through to the bottom line in terms of net income guidance for 2025 as well? Thank you very much.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Nida. Okay. I think I've noted everything down. I think it's four questions. Okay. So the term deposit share and the loan growth, the assumption is basically a static, I would say, term deposit volume going forward. So we don't expect any major migrations. We believe we've reached kind of a static situation.

As far as the mix goes, there is a slight expectation for growth on the site and current deposit level, but nothing to write home about in terms of the drivers on the term deposit mix. On loan growth, the major change, I would say, is the higher loan volumes, and we've got that on page nine, that are primarily coming from the 2024 outperformance, right? So the 2025 is, for the time being, pretty much where we thought it would land as per the previous plan, but 2024 gives it a big tailwind, and that's what we've got kind of there in the plan. The NIM sensitivity reduction, two things really. One is the monetization of the swaps and the conversion of the bond book, reducing the hedge ratio that we've got there.

So the sensitivity of the bond book has been reduced with substantial swap monetization that happened throughout 2024, so that reduced the sensitivity. And also a bit of the assumption on the term deposit cost pass-through that it's actually going to stay at 60% on the way down, so that also kind of reduces the sensitivity on the NIM. We're not going to comment anything on 2026, Nida, right now. I mean, even 2025, we put it out there. We put out page nine simply to help you guys understand how all of the pieces are working together rather than just the risk-free. So give us, I would say, a few weeks or months to complete the new plan and come out and help you out there. On net income, again, on 2025, budget 2025 is currently underway.

There's no real major reason for assumption on the other lines to change, but right now, let's just stick to the NII communication that we're putting out.

Nida Iqbal
Head of EEMEA Financials and Fintech, Morgan Stanley

Thank you very much. Can I ask another follow-up question, please?

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Sure.

Nida Iqbal
Head of EEMEA Financials and Fintech, Morgan Stanley

Just on the DTC amortization acceleration, just wanted to get a better understanding of, are there any sort of further regulatory approvals required around this? And secondly, I mean, how much confidence does this give you in terms of getting SSM approvals for higher dividend payouts, including the 50% for 2025? I guess I'm trying to understand if there are any other potential risks around the dividend payouts. Thank you.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Nida. It's Christos Megalou . There is no further regulatory approval, and essentially, this whole acceleration paves the way for higher dividend payout as we are showcasing in our results.

Nida Iqbal
Head of EEMEA Financials and Fintech, Morgan Stanley

Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Mehmet Sevim with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.

Mehmet Sevim
Executive Director and Head of CEEMEA Financials Equity Research, JP Morgan

Good afternoon. Thanks very much for the presentation. I'd also like to thank you for all the clarity provided on the DTC amortization. I think your disclosures are really best-in-class. So just one more maybe follow-up on this. Can we read this as a signal that you've received green light from the regulator now for higher payouts in the coming years, say in 2026, potentially to go above 50% if you wanted? Because as far as I remember, you really didn't have plans to go above 50%. You wanted to utilize all your excess capital, building it, and then dividends at 50%. So how should we maybe think about it for 2026 also? And from also the intro comments, I understood there may be a buyback component to the payouts next year.

Did I hear that correctly? That would be great to understand. And then just one question maybe on the loan growth. The 10% is very formidable indeed. And I was just trying to understand where the outperformance is coming from relative to the initial guidance. And do you think this would have implications on 2025 for the better, or how should we maybe think about it at this stage? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Mehmet. Well, when we discuss supervisory green lights, it's a bit of a different world to the actual reality. Supervisors give green lights as per process and particular rules. Obviously, there have been consultations. We believe that what we're putting out there in terms of a new distribution policy and DTC acceleration, I would say, takes away the remainder balance sheet health question that Piraeus Bank kind of had.

So obviously, it lifts a question that was there that is not something subject- to- approval, but it does help with the discussion, and consultations have happened. So obviously, we are upgrading this year from 25% originally at the start of the year to 35% and reconfirming 50% for 2025 with a lot of confidence. Now, for 2026, going above 50%, we've explained that even with this DTC acceleration as well as a 50% assumption, the bank will still be remaining capital accretive. How one deploys that extra capital is to be discussed. We would like to think that there is room for extra growth, and we're going to use that extra capital to deploy it in accelerating the growth. You saw the 10% year-on-year this year. So that is, I would say, the primary objective for this extra capital that will be coming in.

The base scenario is that we want to stay at 50% and deploy in a productive way the extra capital that will be coming our way. In terms of buyback, yes, there will be a substantial buyback element even in the 2024 distribution plan. The cash element, there will be a mix between cash and buyback right now, and depends, of course, on share prices right now. Share buybacks for shareholder value seem very attractive. So I would say that there will be a substantial buyback element in the 2024 distribution.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

And coming to your question on loan growth, we put our guidance out for performing balances of EUR 33 billion by the end of the year. This is an impressive rate of growth. It is reflecting on the power of the Piraeus Franchise in corporate and SME markets. It makes us confident about the years to come.

And of course, looking at 2025, it's also good to start from a performing balance, which is much higher than what you were planning at the beginning of the year. So we are confident that this is a trend reflecting also the growth of the Greek economy on GDP and underlying credit. We will come early in the year, probably by February, with our updated Business Plan 2025 to 2027. And there, of course, we will be giving the numbers in more detail.

Mehmet Sevim
Executive Director and Head of CEEMEA Financials Equity Research, JP Morgan

Okay. That's very clear. Thanks very much.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Eleni Ismailou with Axia Ventures. Please go ahead.

Eleni Ismailou
VP of Research Division, AXIA Ventures

Hello, and congratulations for this great set of results. I've got two questions from my side. My first question is on the 2025 new assumptions for NII.

So on slide eight in the selected sensitivities, we see that the improved impact from a 25 basis point Euribor change is between EUR 20 million to EUR 25 million. But on slide nine, the change in rate assumptions for 2025 is at approximately 80 basis points from 3.10 to 2.30, yet the impact from the rates ranges between EUR 100 million to EUR 125 million. That is larger than EUR 30 million per 25 basis points rate cut. Could you speak to this difference, please? And my second question is staying on slide nine on the earlier bond IRS monetization. Could you explain what this means and whether it is a one-off for 2025, or we're expected to see more of that coming? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Eleni. Yeah, the impact that we're quoting on page nine is really a nominal, I would say, delta that is affected also by the timing of the actual cuts.

On a like-for-like basis, the sensitivity is indeed 2025. Actually, I think the actual number that we've got on the model is around EUR 23 million right now. But what's going on is that the timing of the cuts and the repricing is such that creates kind of a headwind effect, which is higher in the 2025 result. In terms of the swap monetization, yeah, that was a strategy that was executed throughout the year. We've monetized about EUR 2.5 billion of such swaps. We're currently holding EUR 3 billion. The hedge ratio has dropped from the 60s, around 65% to something around 35% on a DV01 basis. And that reduces sensitivity a lot. I got to say this also is creating the tailwind as we've got on page nine, as the previous guidance was running at a higher sensitivity than what we've got right now.

And the monetization happened at an effective interest rate effect, which is, again, higher than we thought. So all of those elements, including the positive carry that we've got from the NMDs, are creating this kind of solid result for NII and, of course, the loan volumes that we discussed before.

Eleni Ismailou
VP of Research Division, AXIA Ventures

Thank you very much. And just a follow-up, if I may, on the impairment. If you could clarify what the impairment of other assets is, as it seems that it has cost the group approximately EUR 50 million year- to- date. Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

It's impairments that we do across all the, I would say, the non-loan parts of the balance sheet. There are other assets there, including state guarantees, state-guaranteed exposures, some inventories that are there that are taking that you need to book a loss upon kind of sales approval pending the completion of the sale.

So it's a little bit of everything over there. Anything that is non-lending, we're putting it in outline.

Eleni Ismailou
VP of Research Division, AXIA Ventures

Okay. Thank you very much. And again, congratulations for this great set of results.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Thanks.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Mikhail Butkov with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Mikhail Butkov
Equity Research Analyst in CEEMEA Financials, Goldman Sachs

Good day. Thank you very much for the presentation and congratulations on very strong results. I have a couple of questions. Firstly, also on NII outlook. When you discussed the guidance previously, sometimes you also referred to potential upside areas related to lower time deposit mix, which is now incorporated into the guidance. So my question is, are there any still surprise areas which can help, which you think can help NII to get even to higher levels, maybe some unknowns either related to lower realized sensitivity or anything else? So that's the first question on NII.

On asset quality, if we look at your revised cost of risk guidance of 60 basis points, it is basically in line with your medium-term outlook. So do you think with the current progress on NPE, the leveraging low formations, you can actually get to the levels of average European levels on the cost of risk, which are like, I think, in the area of 40-45 basis points? Lastly, on the capital allocation and the remaining EUR 400 million. So you mentioned EUR 3.5 billion of additional volumes. Where potentially these volumes can come from? Do you see potential from the core market, or it also takes into account some reperforming loans or retail loans? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Mikhail. Yeah. So indeed, the lower TD mix is giving a lot of tailwind on the previous assumption, the previous guidance on the NII by EUR 100 million to EUR 125 million.

Imagine that this is a lower TD balance by about EUR 6 billion-EUR 7 billion than what we had before. The previous guidance was assuming EUR 20 billion, and right now we're at EUR 13 billion, and we believe we're going to stay there. There's no commercial pressure to increase it, as you can understand, on dropping interest rates. So there you have it, right? EUR 6 billion-EUR 7 billion at whatever the cost is, 2%, that's kind of your benefit. On further upside, what we can say is that the expansion right now of 2025 has not baked in what the 2024 outperformance means, right? So so far, we were saying kind of EUR 1.6 billion for 2024, somewhere in that vicinity, maybe a little bit higher in 2025. Now, when your EUR 1.6 billion in one year becomes EUR 3 billion, what does that mean for 2025?

That extra expansion and where it could come from has not been baked in. So I would say if there is upside risk to this guidance, it has to do not only for 2025, but also, I would say, longer term, it has to do with a potential accelerated rate expansion in the balance sheet and overall in the market. cost of risk, yeah, absolutely. I mean, those 60 basis points, and remember that they are baking in substantial synthetic and servicer fees that we are working on as well to bring them down. Yeah, definitely, we can be looking at European levels of cost of risk sooner than we thought. As we've said many times, the most important operational metric that we look at to manage cost of risk for the future are inflows.

And the fact that we've got kind of a zero net formation on NPEs for us is everything that gives us room to continue bringing down the book. As we've said, we're guiding for less than 3% NPE ratio, approximating, I would say, beating, if I'm right, the Spanish banks, which are on average at 3%, approximating the Italians with a 2.5%. So that in itself can give you some extra confidence. It gives us confidence that we can get to these cost o f r isk levels sooner. Now, in terms of capital allocation, that page 23 is an illustrative page simply to show that as we're running right now with a kind of base case assumption of a year of EUR 1 billion profit and EUR 2 billion loan expansion with everything baked in, the bank is still capital accretive, substantially capital accretive on an organic basis.

This is basically to take away some of the noise that we have spotted, that there are questions as to whether TLTRO acceleration will hurt the CET1 position and what will that mean for dividends, etc., etc. So this is simply an illustration. And what could we do with that extra capital? Yes, we could grow. By how much? By up to EUR 3.5 billion. Is that a commercial reality? No, it is not a commercial reality right now. We would like it to be, and if it came, we can afford it. And as we've said before, this is our number one priority as to deploying this extra capital by discovering new pockets of growth in the market, in the retail and SME space.

Also look at the reperforming space and see whether we can onboard extra loans without increasing the risk profile of the balance sheet, as we've said before. And then we'll see kind of what we do with the rest. But it is not an indication that we believe that there's an extra EUR 3.5 billion right now. This is not what we've got in the plan.

Mikhail Butkov
Equity Research Analyst in CEEMEA Financials, Goldman Sachs

Good. Yeah. Thank you very much for the clarifications and the answers. Yeah, very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Gabor Kemeny with Autonomous Research. Please go ahead.

Gabor Kemeny
Senior Analyst of CEEMEA Financials, Autonomous Research

Yes. Hi. I had a few follow-up questions on the previous topics, please. Firstly, on the DTCs. Firstly, can you help us understand the nature of this proposal?

I mean, is this like a new regulation which requires the Greek banks to accelerate the DTC amortization as you proposed, or is this a fully discretionary decision to Piraeus? That's the first question. The second question, I would like to come back to this topic of how could the accelerated DTC amortization drive higher payouts? I guess, in other words, what are you expecting in return for accelerating the DTC amortization? I mean, the 50% payout was part of the previous business plan before the accelerated amortization plan. I guess the consequence or the implication of this would have to be more than 50% at some stage. Interested to hear your thoughts on that. And just the final question would be, if you could please walk us through again on what you did with the hedges.

The latest information I recall was that you had EUR 10 billion of notional hedges and how you changed that amount recently. Thank you.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Gabor. Let me answer your question, and then I will pass on to Theo Gnardellis. This is a fully discretionary idea that we have been working on, and that's how you should take it. It's paving the way for taking out the last few items of legacy that Greek banks had from the years of the crisis. And of course, the acceleration of DTC by a number of years from 2041 to 2034 and the reduction even by 2027, it's a very positive effect for the Greek banks and for Piraeus in particular, and naturally paves the way for higher dividend payouts. Theo?

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

I think your second question is, what do we get in return? This is not a negotiation.

The SSM and general supervisory authorities are not a counterparty with which one negotiates. There are four particular pillars that any banking institution is assessed against when it comes to distribution, and it starts with self-assessment and has to do with sustainable profitability, capital buffers, governance, and overall balance sheet health. Now, among the investor community and also the analyst community, the DTC has been treated, and recently more so, I have to say, as an issue of balance sheet health, as an emerging issue of balance sheet health. Now, what we're doing here is simply to exemplify that this is not a long-term balance sheet issue that the bank needs to suffer and explain and discuss over the coming many years.

What we're doing is voluntarily putting to bed, once- and- for- all, the question as to whether Piraeus Bank, and we can discuss about the Greek sector overall because I'm sure other banks will also be announcing their own plans, that this is not an issue. We're done with this issue, and therefore, going forward, any discussion that has to do with distribution will have to do with all of the elements overall. We don't want to go necessarily above 50% if we can actually deploy the extra capital in an accretive way, so we don't want to be a cash cow where we distribute all of our profit because we can't deploy it.

We would like to see more years of 2024 and even accelerate it where we can deliver superior growth to other European economies and still be able to deliver our 50% distribution. This is what we've got right now. So any insinuation that this was an exchange that we're doing for somebody to give us a permission for something, this is not what's real. This is not the reality. Now, to your question about hedges, what we discussed before, whether hedges on the asset side that have to do with the floating conversion of the bond book and the hedge ratio of the bond book. The NMDs that are sitting on the other side, and they are reverse swaps, are pretty much where we're at EUR 10 billion. There was EUR 1 billion of expirations.

We're currently around nine, but they're pretty much there to stay, and they are giving us a tailwind on the NII mitigating the risk-free rate drop. So within that EUR 100 million-EUR 125 million euro rate impact that you've got on the page, I think there's a positive carry of EUR 40 million for those NMDs.

Gabor Kemeny
Senior Analyst of CEEMEA Financials, Autonomous Research

Okay. That's helpful color. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Alexandros Boulougouris with Euroxx Securities. Please go ahead.

Alexandros Boulougouris
Equity Research Analyst, Euroxx Securities

Yes. Hello. Thank you for the presentation. Congratulations on the numbers. Most of my questions have been answered. Just a quick follow-up on the cost of risk. You mentioned the reduction and the new guidance, but again, the 2024 guidance at 60 basis points, given the trends in the nine-month period, look a bit conservative, I would assume. It would imply, I think, 80 basis points in Q4. Isn't that a bit too aggressive?

That's my first question. And regarding the other impairments that there was a question earlier, should we consider these as largely one-off for when we model 2025, 2026 going forward? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Alex. Yeah, indeed. Q4 is a particular quarter. I mean, we do have an extra synthetic that we're doing right now that will increase, I would say, the cost by a little bit. But indeed, I would say 60 basis points is kind of a roundup as to what we're actually expecting. Overall, 2024 has done so well in terms of its profitability on the nine months that Q4 gives us leeway to, I would say, do further cleanup. We've also announced an inorganic trade that we're planning on doing. There will also be some organic charges that we're expecting to do a little bit more.

The capital is still going to hold great, as I said, 15% high, the return very, very high. So Q4 is a quarter where we want to have some room to pave the way for a stronger 2025. And hence, the guidance, I would say, generally rounded up versus what it could be. We're not pushing the envelope to its extreme. We're giving it some room to help also the coming years.

Alexandros Boulougouris
Equity Research Analyst, Euroxx Securities

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone. The next question is from the line of Sharada Patel with Citi. Please go ahead.

Sharada Patel
AVP Financials Credit Analyst, Citi

Hi. Congratulations on the results. And just one from me, please. Obviously, looking at the performing loan book, it's showing great growth, 9% on the year.

But when I just break that down in between the type of loans, that's largely driven by large corporates, and actually, mortgages are down 1% over the year. Can you just give some color on the dynamics in the mortgage market in Greece and your expectations going forward, please?

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi. Hi, Sharada. Look, the mortgages market is a puzzle for us and for many. We are working on many fronts to solve that puzzle. The reality is that we have seen retail real estate prices growing and not many mortgages being produced. It's more with own equity and cash, the transactions that are taking place.

This, at least for this year, 2024, has been a little bit helped by the program that the state has been producing, the My Home Program, which, by and large, will help mitigate the negative numbers of the past and therefore pave the way for what is the outlook for 2025. For 2025, we will have another EUR 2 billion headline number Spiti Mou program, which we believe that is going to be deployed in the market. We are having the biggest market share in that particular segment. This year, the running year was around 30%-35%. We expect that to continue next year. And with the natural, we believe, acceleration of the mortgage market with interest rates going down, we expect that most likely next year mortgages will be flat. But we do see some growth on the SB business and on consumer.

So all in all, we have calculated some EUR 300 million, let's call it, positive growth from retail for next year, which we think is going to be the beginning of at least some acceleration in the retail segment. The bulk of our growth up to now is corporate and SME and will continue to be so also in the years to come.

Sharada Patel
AVP Financials Credit Analyst, Citi

Thank you. That's helpful.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Osman Memisoglu with Ambrosia Capital. Please go ahead.

Osman Memisoglu
Head of Research, Ambrosia Capital

Hi, many thanks. Quite a bit of my questions have been asked, but just qualitatively, how are the conditions on spreads evolving over Europe, and what are you assuming, again, just very roughly for 2025? So when we see the lower rates, is there a bit coming from spread compression there, or do you think it has stabilized now?

Apologies if I missed it, but in 2025, are you including any benefit from reperforming loans being purchased back, or that's a story for a later date? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Osman. Well, the new production is coming in right now lower than the stock, and we are budgeting for that effect. So a slight erosion on the stock spread of a few tens of basis points, I would say, is kind of baked into the guidance that we're giving. So it's not a static spread situation. There was a slight drop quarter- on- quarter. We think with the current profile of production that will continue, but I would say in a contained manner. We're not looking at the collapse of spread, but we're looking at a, I would say, rationalization.

There is a question as to what will happen with the accelerated risk-free rate cuts and whether that erosion will really materialize. But for the time being, we have not touched it as an assumption. We believe that that will be there. We've not baked in anything spectacular on RPLs in terms of expansion. As I said before, the 2025 expansion has not even baked in the 2024 outperformance, right? So right now, it is a lower expansion of what 2024 is delivering. So we're still kind of educating ourselves and making up our mind as to what that means for 2025 going forward. And we will be explaining that when we come out and announce the plan over the coming few weeks or months.

Osman Memisoglu
Head of Research, Ambrosia Capital

Understood. Thank you.

If I can follow up on the, I guess, linking the SME aspirations with the network, the big footprint, you should be quite capable with that. Should we expect a pickup in OpEx, or are you already set up with what you have?

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

We are already set up, Osman. The network is at a, let's call it, by and large, optimal shape. We don't expect further rationalization. We have been working on reducing the number of employees per branch, and by and large, this is done. We are, of course, continuing our investment in systems and investing about EUR 150 million a year in digitizing our offering both on the front end and the back end.

But we are geared to take more business as we expect that there will be some more business, especially next year in the SB segment, where a lot of the government and EU-driven programs are going to come underway and also including the RRF program. But we don't anticipate significant OpEx, let's say, increases. Of course, we are doing our rationalization in raising the salaries of our full-time employees, and this is a policy that will continue. But we were coming from a very low base comparing to the competition. But we'll give full guidance on the numbers in our presentation of our 2025, 2026, 2027 Business Plan early next year.

Osman Memisoglu
Head of Research, Ambrosia Capital

Perfect. Thank you, Christos.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Alberto Nigro with Mediobanca. Please go ahead.

Alberto Nigro
Equity Research Analyst, Mediobanca

Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one is on capital allocation.

As you want to grow more and deploy your extra capital generation, would you consider some bolt-on acquisition in the future to strengthen the loan growth or the fee income? And if yes, what kind of targets? And just a few follow-ups on this quarter. Can you remind me how many restructuring costs we should expect in the cost line in Q4 for the new VES that you announced? And finally, what should we expect in terms of trading income in the coming quarters? Thank you.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Alberto. On capital allocation, look, we are looking at the next few years and at the back of a very strong 2024. And we are ticking some boxes here that are very important. Number one, we believe that we are in a position to deliver sustainable profitability over the cycle, and we will prove that.

We are already proving this in this quarter, and we will prove that in the next quarter to come. So we have been talking in the past for about EUR 1+ billion net income after tax over the next three years, and we stand by that number. And of course, we'll give further guidance in our planning. If we assume that we will be distributing something like 50% of our net income after tax, we generate enough excess capital to cater for the growth of the book as well as for acquisitions. We are right now, I can tell you, looking at various ideas or possible transactions in the areas mostly that will be add-ons in our fees and commissions pool. So we are looking at asset management. We are looking at transaction banking. We are looking in the area of factoring, forfaiting, and leasing.

And we are looking for platforms that could possibly be used for adding on in our platform and delivering on synergies. We are mainly focusing in the Eurozone. This is what we believe makes more sense for us. Of course, when we have something to announce, we will, but it's driven by RAROC, is driven by return to our shareholders, and we will be very disciplined in whatever we're doing, deploying this excess capital that we see building up over the years. We think that in the medium term, even having any CET1 above 15% and total capital above 20% is, let's call it, too much. And we want to be productive in our use of capital in our balance sheet and liability structure and deliver on the results for our shareholders.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

And Alberto, in terms of restructuring costs, we recently run a program that's kind of public.

It's out there. That's going to cost a probably EUR 40 million charge in Q4. It's being finalized kind of these days. So around EUR 40 million, you should think, restructuring cost. Trading, it's been a good year. Q3 has also been a very good quarter. Generally, we're working on the assumption of about EUR 50 million-EUR 60 million per annum. Q4, and we'll see where it lands. Of course, the markets are still kind of open and volatile. But overall, this is what you should be expecting from this franchise.

Alberto Nigro
Equity Research Analyst, Mediobanca

Thank you so much.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Simon Nellis with Citi. Please go ahead.

Simon Nellis
Managing Director of Equity Research, Citi

Oh, thanks very much for the opportunity. Two quick last ones from me. How are you going to get to below 3% NPE?

Is there any inorganic actions that you'll take in the fourth quarter as well, or is there something else going on? And then just on Snappi, could you confirm what the costs associated with that venture are? And are you still on track to, I think you said it was going to cost around EUR 15 million in investment in OpEx this year? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Hi, Simon. Yeah, the below 3% NPE is indeed linked with an inorganic trade that we're doing. Somewhere in the vicinity of EUR 250 million of NPEs we're working on the trade right now. We had very good experience with the previous one, so we went ahead with another one. We're using some of the extra capital to clean up further, but it's all working. The reduction of the ratio, it is founded on the net zero formation, right?

Only if you have net zero formation organically, does a trade help you in bringing down this ratio? So yes, there is a play, but it's based on the net zero formation we've been experiencing. Yeah, on Snappi, the burn this year has been kind of mediocre as a setup situation. It's pretty much what we're expecting around the 10 million mark is what Snappi will be contributing to the overall cost base of the group. 2025 will be a higher burn year as we're expecting because it's launch year for Snappi. So obviously, there will be a substantial one-off cost that Snappi will be taking. But all of that has been and will be part of the 2025 budget and overall 2025, 2027 plan that we'll be coming out with. So Snappi will be a burn case of capital, and that's the way it needs to be.

But it will be contained, I would say, well monitored by the group and making sure that the burn is consistent with meeting its customer growing and overall commercial aspirations.

Simon Nellis
Managing Director of Equity Research, Citi

Okay. And any steer on the kind of additional provisions that you'd have to make to get that NPE transaction done?

Theo Gnardellis
CFO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Well, we're still working even on the perimeter. It's in play. Similar, I would say, to the loss rates that we've experienced in the previous two transactions we've done, the non-HAPS ones. So generally, I would say good loss rates, nothing extravagant, and the capital of 15% expected for year-end incorporates that.

Simon Nellis
Managing Director of Equity Research, Citi

Got it. Okay. Thanks very much.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Megalou for any closing comments. Thank you.

Christos Megalou
CEO, Piraeus Financial Holdings

Thank you. Thank you all for participating in our nine-month 2024 results conference call.

Just, we want to let you know that we will be in London in November and December, and we are looking forward to discussing with you all of our developments. In the meantime, our IR team will be available for any follow-up from today's announcement. Have all a very relaxing weekend, and thank you very much for participating.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now concluded, and you may disconnect your telephone. Thank you for calling and have a good afternoon.

Powered by