Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Banco Itaú Chile Q4 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. This presentation and the Q4 2025 earnings release are available on our investor relations website. During the company's presentation, all microphones will be disabled. Later, we will begin the Q&A session. To ask questions on audio, click on Raise Hand and state your name and company. You will then receive, w e are having some technical issues. Please hold.
Good morning, everyone and thank you for joining our Q4 2025 Conference Call. My name is Matías Valenzuela, Head of Planning and Corporate Strategy at Itaú Chile. I'm here today with our CEO, André Gailey, our CFO, Emiliano Muratore, and our Chief Economist, Andrés Pérez. We are pleased to present our results for the Q4 of 2025. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this presentation may include forward-looking statements.
Actual results may differ materially from those discussed. As always, we report under our managerial model, which reflects how we allocate capital, manage risk, and evaluate performance internally. This framework provides a transparent and consistent view of underlying earnings quality and align management decisions with shareholder value. For more details, please refer to our management commentary report.
With that, I will now turn it over to our CEO, André Gailey, to continue the presentation. Good morning, André.
Thank you, Matias. Good morning, everyone and thank you for joining us today. We delivered a strong Q4 , closing 2025 with solid profitability, disciplined growth and a reinforced capital position. For the full year, recurring net income reached CLP 430 billion, up 11.8% year-on-year with a margin of 11.8%, improving 40 basis points versus last year.
In the Q4 alone, net income increased 23% year-on-year, supported by stronger fee generation and a lower credit cost. Our performance continues to be driven by healthier revenue mix. Fees grew 13% during the year, gaining relevance within total revenues, while cost of credit declined 15%, reflecting product risk management and improved portfolio quality. At the same time, non-interest expenses remain well contained, reinforcing our long-term efficiency focus.
In terms of business activity in Chile, we closed the quarter and the year growing above the industry in both lending and deposits. Credit expanded 3.5% year-on-year, supported by strong mortgage origination and a clear recovery in commercial activity during the second half of the year. Demand deposits increased 7.5% in Chile, the strongest growth within our peer group, strengthening our funding mix and deepening primary client relationships.
During the quarter, we announced the acquisition of Klap, a well-established player in Chile's acquiring industry. This transaction marks our entry into the acquiring market, expanding our participation in the payments value chain beyond issuing. It enables us to build a more integrated and scalable transactional platform, supporting our strategy to grow non-credit revenues and deepen relationships with merchants and corporate clients. In Colombia, we accelerated our strategic rate positioning.
During December, we announced the sale of the retail portfolio to Banco de Bogotá. This decision allow us to simplify our structure and to concentrate resources on corporate and treasury business, where we have scale and clear competitive advantages. It represents a decisive step toward a more focused and structurally more profitable regional model.
Finally, our capital position remains one of the strongest in the system. We closed the year with a total capital ratio of 17.7% and a CET1 ratio of 12.2%, well above regulatory requirements. This capital strength allow the board to propose a 60% dividend payout for the 2025 earnings, balancing shareholder returns with future growth capabilities. Overall, 2025 confirms the consistency of our strategy.
We are delivering profitable growth, improving the quality of earnings, strengthening capital, and taking decisive strategic action to position Itaú for the next phase of sustainable growth. Now, Emiliano Muratore, our CFO, will continue the presentation. Buenos días, Emiliano.
Thank you, Andrés, and good morning, everyone. Before I begin, I would like to let you know that my voice in this presentation has been generated using Artificial Intelligence. Let me now briefly address our corporate governance and leadership updates. Starting with the board of directors as part of our ongoing renewal process and commitment to strong governance standards, Gustavo Ortiz joined the board as an independent director, replacing Kevin Cowan effective January 1, 2026, subject to approval at the next annual general meeting.
In addition, Azucena Arbeleche joined as alternate director, effective January 1, 2026. These appointments further strengthen the board's independence and expertise. At the executive committee level, we implemented important enhancements to our governance and risk structure. First, we separated the credit granting function from the broader CRO mandate, creating a dedicated corporate credit officer position within the executive committee.
Adriano Fernandes has been appointed to this role. Adriano brings more than 24 years of international experience within Itaú and will lead wholesale and retail credit teams across Chile, Colombia, and Peru, reinforcing underwriting discipline, consistency, and regional alignment. Second, effective January 12, 2026 , Julio Cubillos joined as Regional Chief Risk Officer, overseeing risk management across Chile and Colombia.
His mandate is to consolidate an integrated regional view of risk and strengthen execution across all risk dimensions. In addition, Eduardo Martins joined the executive committee as Chief Treasury Officer in December 2025 .
Eduardo brings deep expertise in treasury and capital markets, and his appointment further strengthens our balance sheet management capabilities, funding strategy, and alignment with Itaú Unibanco's treasury framework. In the next slide, I would like to highlight some of the key highlights of the period across strategy, client experience, culture, service excellence, and sustainability.
First, during December, we announced the acquisition of Klap, one of the most relevant players in Chile's acquiring market with an 8.4% market share. Klap has built a solid national presence, operating close to 30,000 affiliated points of sale and processing approximately 80 million transactions per month, giving us immediate scale in the acquiring business.
Beyond scale, the strategic value lies in integration. By combining Klap's robust operating platform with Itaú's client base, funding capabilities, and product suite, we can accelerate growth, deep merchant relationships, and expand cross-selling opportunities in cash management, current accounts, working capital, and financing solutions.
Payments become a natural entry point to strengthen client principality, enhance data-driven underwriting and build a more diversified fee-based revenue stream. Second, we launched the new Itaú Corporate digital platform, designed to deliver a best-in-class digital experience for corporate clients.
This initiative strengthens our transactional capability and enhances our integrated service model for companies. On client experience, we continue to lead in satisfaction metrics according to ServiTest by Ipsos. We ranked number one in retail NPS for the fourth consecutive year, number one in high net worth for the second consecutive year, and number one in SMEs for the first time.
These recognitions confirm the consistency of our value proposition across segments. Internally, our culture remains a key differentiator. We achieved a historic eNPS level during the year and were recognized in Top Employer, Great Place to Work, Best Place to Work, and by Merco Talento. These recognitions reflect a strong organization aligned behind our transformation and long-term strategy.
In addition, our business performance continues to be recognized as best in class across several areas, ranking among the top 3 banks in fixed income mutual fund profitability, and once again, receiving recognition at the Premio Salmón, both in the general public category and in the APB segment.
Within our corporate and investment banking segment, we closed the year ranked second in the local debt capital markets league table for financial advisory. In addition, we're recognized by LatinFinance with the local currency corporate deal of the year for our advisory role in the Vespucio Sur bond issuance. Finally, on sustainability, we were ranked in the top 15% of the global banking industry in the S&P Sustainability Yearbook, reflecting the maturity of our ESG framework and our commitment to responsible and sustainable growth.
On the next slide, we highlight the strength of our brand as a core driver of sustainable growth. Itaú remains one of the most valuable financial brands in Latin America, a position built on trust, consistency, and long-term relationships. This brand strength enables us to expand our reach, deepen client engagement and enhance our value proposition.
During the year, we focused on increasing brand penetration in Chile through high-visibility initiatives, including major sports sponsorships, reinforcing our presence in moments that matter to our clients. With the Hecho Contigo campaign, we communicated a clear message, we grow alongside our clients and are present in their most important milestones.
In parallel, the launch of Personal Bank reflects our commitment to more personalized client-centric banking. Together, these initiatives strengthen relevance, deepen loyalty, and support long-term value creation. Let me now provide additional context on our strategic decision in Colombia.
The divestment of retail banking operations in Colombia and Panama is part of a broader strategic adjustment that Itaú has been executing in the country over several years. The objective is to reinforce our focus on Itaú Corporate, capital markets, fiduciary services, and treasury, areas where we have a differentiated value proposition and clear competitive advantages.
This transaction allows us to concentrate on segments where Itaú already has scale and a strong regional platform across Latin America. By allocating resources to corporate and wholesale banking, we are better positioned to serve clients with cross-border needs while simplifying the overall structure of the operation. This strategy is complemented by a capital increase of $60 million in the Colombian operation, aimed at strengthening competitiveness and supporting the next stage of growth under this more focused business model.
Naturally, the transaction involves relevant one-off transformation and execution costs associated with the separation and transfer of the retail portfolio. These are non-recurring in nature and reflect the transition toward a simpler, more focused, and capital-efficient structure. Now, let's turn to the next slide to have an overview of our loan growth in Chile.
The key message this quarter is that we regained growth momentum in the second half of the year. After a softer start in early 2025, activity accelerated meaningfully from July onward. During the Q4 total loans in Chile increased 2.6% quarter-on-quarter, reflecting stronger commercial traction and improved demand conditions. On a 12-month basis, total loans grew 3.5%, consistent with our objective of growing above the market.
Looking at this performance by segment, in commercial lending, we saw a meaningful recovery in the second half of the year. After a weak first half, growth accelerated from July onward and in the Q4 we expanded above the market on a quarterly basis, regaining market share. On a 12-month basis, commercial loans increased 1.3%, marking a clear improvement versus earlier trends.
In consumer lending, our portfolio repositioning strategy continued to shape results. While total consumer loans remained broadly stable year on year, growth in new originations supported performance during the second half of the year, while refinanced and re-renegotiated exposures continued to decline. This selective approach strengthens portfolio quality and lays solid foundations for 2026. Finally, in mortgages, we were the clear growth leaders among our peer group.
Our mortgage portfolio expanded 3.2% quarter-on-quarter and 9.1% year-on-year, well above the industry average. This sustained outperformance throughout the year allowed us to rank first among peers in growth and gain 35 basis points of market share during 2025. This performance reflects sustained demand, competitive execution and our active participation in the FOGAES program.
We closed the year ranked second in the system in terms of mortgage originations under the program, reinforcing our strong positioning in this segment. Let's now move to funding and assets under management. During the quarter, we continued to reinforce our funding structure while expanding our asset management platform. Starting with demand deposits, balances increased 7.9% quarter-on-quarter, making us the fastest-growing bank within our peer group during the period.
On a 12-month basis, demand deposits expanded 7.5%, again outperforming our peers and reflecting stronger client engagement and consistent execution of our principality strategy. Regarding time deposits, volumes increased 5.5% during the quarter, outperforming the market and despite the lower rate environment. This reflects a balanced funding strategy and disciplined pricing while maintaining a healthy liability mix.
Turning to assets under management, AUM increased 2.9% during the quarter and 15.1% over the past 12 months, outperforming the industry. More importantly, if we look at the longer-term trend shown in the chart, AUM has grown consistently above the industry over the past several years, with a CAGR of 37.3% since 2022. This sustained outperformance has allowed us to steadily gain market share and strengthen our positioning in asset management.
On the next slide, you can see a summary of our key consolidated results for the quarter. Our consolidated loan portfolio totaled CLP 28.9 trillion, representing a 3.6% increase year- over- year. In Chile, the portfolio reached CLP 24.2 trillion, up 3.5% compared to the Q4 of 2024. This performance reflects a more dynamic and active market environment during the period, especially during the second half of the year.
Our consolidated financial margin with clients reached CLP 329.3 billion, down 1.8% year over year. Commissions and fees totaled CLP 66.3 billion, showing an increase compared to the Q4 of 2024, mainly explained by higher asset management commissions and insurance brokerage.
In a more dynamic environment in terms of credit. Consolidated cost of credit reached CLP 80.5 billion, slightly higher than in the Q4 of 2024. Primarily due to the comparative base effect in Colombia. In Chile, cost of credit declined 3.8%, continuing the positive trend observed throughout 2025.
Overall, consolidated recurring net income totaled CLP 112 billion, representing a 23.3% year-over-year increase. This performance reflects solid execution across our businesses and resulted in a return on tangible equity of 11.9% at the consolidated level and 14.0% in Chile, in line with our 2025 guidance.
Moving to the next slide, our financial margin with clients showed a slight increase during the quarter, up 0.3% quarter-over-quarter and 1.2% decrease year-over-year, reaching a 3.5% margin. This represents an 8 basis point decrease compared to the same period last year. This quarter's increase was mainly driven by stronger commercial activity during the period, along with a positive spread effect across the loan portfolio, particularly within the corporate segment.
In addition to positive results in derivatives management and FX transactions with clients. This was partially offset by lower liability margin, reflecting spread compression in a lower rate environment. On a year-over-year basis, the decrease is explained due to a volume effect in the consumer segment and spread pressure resulting from the natural repricing process in a declining interest rate environment.
This was partially offset by higher revenues from derivatives and affects transactions with clients. On the next slide, we take a closer look at financial margin with the market, which once again delivered a positive result, reaching CLP 27.2 billion.
The decrease compared to the previous quarter was mainly driven by a strong comparative base from the previous period, as well as lower results from the trading desk in both rates and FX management, together with a smaller positive contribution from the bond repo repurchases transactions executed by banking during the period.
Year-over-year, the positive performance reflects stronger results in trading and ALM, consistent with our strategy to build a more client-focused treasury platform. This approach aims to improve the quality, stability, and consistency of solutions delivered to clients while reducing volatility within this line of business.
In addition, the local credit rating upgrades obtained during 2025 have already translated into tighter spreads in our recent bond issuances. This improvement in funding spreads has had a positive impact on our cost of funding, reinforcing the structural strength of our financial margin and supporting greater stability going forward.
Let me also emphasize that our inflation sensitivity continues to be well contained, reflecting the structural match between assets and liabilities. This balanced profile protects earnings from inflation swings while preserving upside from the current rate environment.
Turning to the next slide, commissions and fees closed the year with strong momentum. For 2025, total commissions increased 16.0% year- over- year, surpassing our initial guidance range of 10%-15%. This performance reflects continued diversification of our revenue mix and stronger contribution from non-credit businesses.
In this line, commissions continue to represent a higher share of operating revenues, reinforcing the structural shift toward more recurring and less capital-intensive income streams. Looking at key drivers, insurance brokerage revenues increased 18.7% year-over-year. This growth was supported by improved credit activity and stronger client penetration, particularly across retail segment.
Another driver was assets under management. AUM commissions costs continued to expand during the year, supporting higher management and distribution fees. The sustained growth in AUM reflects both net inflows and market performance, as well as the strength of our investment platform and advisory capabilities.
In addition, our advisory and deal-related commissions remained solid during the year. Despite some quarterly volatility driven by timing and a strong comparative basis, year-to-date advisory activity benefited from the continued development of our regional platform and deeper engagement with corporate clients.
Let's now turn to cost of credit. For the full year 2025, our cost of credit ratio reached 1.1% compared to 1.3% in 2024. Importantly, we closed the year within our guidance range, reflecting disciplined risk management and stable portfolio dynamics throughout the period. As shown in the chart below, we achieved the largest reduction in the cost of credit ratio among our peer group during 2025, underscoring the strength of our risk framework and the improvement in portfolio quality.
In the Q4 , cost of credit totaled CLP 65.3 billion, representing a 6.8% increase compared to the previous quarter, mainly explained by higher provisions related to rating adjustments of specific corporate clients.
Compared to Q4 of 2024, cost of credit decreased 3.8%, consistent with the positive trend observed during 2025. Turning to asset quality, non-performing loans continued their downward trend during the quarter. While some upward pressure is expected in certain portfolios, particularly in mortgages given their longer delinquency cycle. We are not observing a structural deterioration in credit quality. Retail delinquency remains contained and wholesale performance continues to reflect solid underwriting standards.
Turning to coverage levels, the decline in the coverage ratio during the year has been primarily driven by the release of provisions associated with the cleanup of the consumer portfolio, a reduction in exposure to refinanced and re-renegotiated segments and improvements in risk ratings within the corporate portfolio, reflecting better underlying client quality. Importantly, there has been no change in methodology or risk appetite.
The reduction in coverage is a natural consequence of improved asset quality rather than a relaxation of provisioning standards. Let's now move to non-interest expenses. In the Q4 , expenses increased sequentially, mainly reflecting seasonal effects and specific provisions. Compared to the third quarter, same personnel expenses rose due to seasonality and higher employee benefit accruals during year-end.
Administrative expenses also increased quarter-on-quarter. Primarily driven by higher marketing and commercial expenses, as well as provisions associated with our 2030 transformation plan. On a full year basis, non-interest expenses increased 4.0% compared to 2024, slightly above inflation of 3.5%.
This deviation from our initial guidance is explained by the provisions related to the 2030 transformation plan. Excluding these one-off transformation expenses, underlying cost growth would have remained below inflation, consistent with our structural cost discipline.
Despite these temporary impacts, our efficiency ratio remains at solid levels, supported by revenue growth and an ongoing progress in our structural efficiency program. Moving to the next slide regarding our Colombian operation. Our transformation plan continues to advance in line with the strategic repositioning of the franchise. During the quarter, we maintained progress in branch optimization and headcount adjustments, aligning the organization with our focus on corporate capital markets and treasury businesses.
These structural measures are designed to simplify the operation, enhance productivity and improve long-term efficiency. Regarding credit performance, cost of credit reached its lowest level of the year in the Q4 . This improvement was driven by rating adjustments in specific corporate clients, and more importantly, by a meaningful reduction in charge-offs within the retail portfolio. These factors reflect a more stable risk environment and improving portfolio dynamics.
As a result of these structural actions, efficiency levels closed the year at their best point of 2025. Continued cost discipline, together with stable operating revenues, allowed us to consolidate the positive trend observed over the past quarters. Finally, the combined effect of improved cost of credit and better efficiency translated into the highest recurring net income and ROE of 2025 in Colombia during the Q4 .
This marks another step forward in stabilizing and strengthening the profitability profile of the operation. Let's now move to capital and dividends. We closed 2025 with the highest capital levels in our history, reflecting disciplined balance sheet management and strong internal capital generation. Our CET1 fully loaded ratio reached record levels, reinforcing the structural strength of our capital base.
Most importantly, for the third consecutive year, we did not receive any additional Pillar Two capital charge from the regulator, highlighting the robustness of our risk framework and capital planning discipline. In terms of capital generation, during 2025, we generated more than 4 times the capital of the peer group median, consolidating our leadership in capital accretion within the Chilean banking system.
This strong capital generation has allowed us to grow efficiently while maintaining a conservative buffer over regulatory requirements. As a result of this performance, the board has proposed a dividend to be approved at the annual general meeting in April 2026, equivalent to 60% of 2025 earnings. This represents a significant increase in dividend per share compared to the prior years, reflecting our confidence in the sustainability of earnings and the strength of our capital position while preserving flexibility to support future growth.
Let's now turn to our stock performance. Our stock ended 2025 with a 96.3% return, clearly outperforming both the IPSA index and the weighted average of our peer group. To date, cumulative return has reached 115.4%, highlighting the strong appreciation in shareholder value. Importantly, this performance reflects increasing investor confidence in our execution.
Throughout 2025, we delivered stronger profitability, improved capital levels, disciplined risk management, and decisive strategic actions, including the acquisition of Klap and the repositioning of our Colombia operation. The evolution of our valuation metrics reinforces this trend. At the end of 2024, our stock traded at 0.6 times price to tangible book value. By December 2025, that multiple expanded to 1.1 times, and as of the end of February 2026, it reached 1.3 times.
Now, Andrés Pérez, our Chief Economist, who will walk us through the macroeconomic outlook for Chile and Colombia.
Good morning, Emiliano. Good morning, everyone. In this slide, I will provide a brief overview of Chile's macro scenario and outlook. According to the monthly GDP proxy, the economy grew 2.3% in 2025, down slightly from 2.6% in 2024, supported by an investment recovery and a favorable external backdrop.
Looking ahead, we expect GDP growth to accelerate modestly to 2.6% in 2026, driven by stronger private investment, improved business confidence, and lower average interest rates supporting household consumption. Our forecast pencils in a sequential acceleration in economic activity over the following quarters. On inflation, the disinflation process has progressed faster than expected. Headline inflation ended 2025 at 3.5% and we expect it to hover slightly below 3% during most of 2026, ending the year at 2.8%.
Currency appreciation and lower global energy prices should continue to contain tradable inflation, although services inflation remains somewhat persistent. In this context, we expect the central bank to deliver one final 25 basis point rate cut, bringing the policy rate to 4.25 in March, the center of the neutral rate range, accompanied by a neutral forward guidance implying an extended pause. In our view, future moves will depend on the evolution of services inflation and domestic demand dynamics.
On the currency side, the Chilean peso has appreciated in line with regional peers, supported by improved terms of trade, capital inflows, and a projected swing towards pro-market policies. We project the exchange rate at 860 pesos per dollar by year-end of 2026, close to current trading levels. Copper prices should remain elevated from a historical perspective.
Now, on the fiscal accounts, Chile faces ongoing fiscal consolidation challenges following repeated deviations from structural balance targets w hile fiscal adjustments are expected, financing needs remain elevated in the near term. However, sovereign spreads remain stable, suggesting continued market confidence. We expect fiscal consolidation to continue this year based on revenue recovery and expenditure cuts.
Now, in the next slide, we present our main macro forecast for Colombia. Economic activity closed 2025 somewhat stronger than expected, supported by resilient private consumption and a tight labor market. GDP ended the year rising in 2025 by 2.6%, up from 1.5% in 2024, driven by public and private consumption in the context of subdued private investment. The unemployment rate in Colombia is well below estimates of the natural rate. Looking ahead, we expect a moderate deceleration in economic activity to 2.3%.
The significant increase in the minimum wage is expected to put additional pressure on inflation, which ended 2025 at 5.1%. As a result, inflation is likely to remain elevated during 2026, edging up further from the 3% inflation target. In this environment, monetary policy is expected to turn more restrictive. While the policy rate was held at 9.25% in December, rising inflation expectations in the context of resilient demand led the central bank to raise the policy rate by 100 basis points in January.
We forecast additional rate hikes to a terminal rate of 12%, aimed at re-anchoring inflation expectations. Fiscal accounts remain under pressure with elevated primary spending and ongoing structural challenges. We forecast a nominal fiscal deficit at 7.4% of GDP in 2026, and then down to 5.6% in 2027.
Together, tighter financial conditions and persistent inflation are likely to weigh on private consumption growth in 2026. Now, Emiliano will take you through our 2026 guidance for the Chilean operation. Thank you.
Thanks, Andrés. Starting with loan growth, we expect loan expansion between 6% and 8% in nominal terms, supported by a gradual recovery in credit demand and improved macro conditions. We will continue to grow selectively, focusing on risk-adjusted returns and capital efficiency while maintaining our discipline underwriting standards.
Regarding financial margin with clients, we expect a range between 3.3% and 3.5%. This outlook reflects the current rate environment, ongoing repricing dynamics and the strength of our funding mix, which helps preserve margin resilience. In commissions and fees, we project growth between 13% and 15%, driven by continued expansion in non-credit revenues and deeper client engagement across our transactional and advisory platforms.
For cost of credit, we expect a range between 1.0% and 1.2%, consistent with stable credit dynamics and aligned with our current portfolio risk profile. On expenses, we expect non-interest expense growth of approximately 3%, reflecting continued cost discipline alongside targeted strategic investments.
We expect our managerial effective tax rate to be around 18%. Bringing all these elements together, we are targeting a ROTE of approximately 13% for 2026, reflecting balanced growth, disciplined risk management and sustained profitability. With that, we conclude the presentation that we have for you today. Thank you for your attention and continued trust in Itaú Chile. We will now gladly take any questions that you might have.
To ask questions on audio, click on raise hand and state your name and company you'll then receive a request to activate your microphone please activate your microphone. To ask a question in writing, just queue the question in the Q&A button please be aware there are company's name should be visible for your questions to be taken. Our first question comes from Yuri Fernandes with JP Morgan. The first question is, why the NIM and ROE guidance for Chile appears conservative?
Yes. Hello, Yuri. Thank you for your question. I wouldn't call it conservative. I think we think it's our, like, balanced guidance r emember that in financial margin with the clients, we have a downward pressure from interest rates going down, because part of that margin is the carry we get from the capital allocated to those businesses. There, we have some downward pressure. Also the trend in terms of spreads in the market has also been very kind of competitive. We have those two big downward pressure. It's true that
All the job we are doing on the funding cost, you know, improving the funding mix by growing more in in demand deposits and lower-yielding deposit time deposits, helps that line. All that put together, if you see the 2025 numbers, the full year was like 3.5%. It was 3.6% for the full year, but closing at 3.5% so t hat shows the kind of trend we have seen and th at's why we think that the 3.3%-3.5% range for 2026 is kind of balanced, and we think we will be in that range, but we don't call it conservative.
If you factor in all the different guidance in different lines, this year we always say that our long-term range for ROE is 13%-15% so d efinitely the guidance for 2026 is to be in the lower part of that range. That is because it's a year where we have different pressure. First, the one in margins that you are pointing out, that it's coming from interest rates going down and then the upwards trend in the tax rate because inflation is normalizing. Last year we had inflation higher than what we are going to have this year, so that put some pressure on the tax rate.
When you factor in those 2 elements, that takes us to the lower part of the ROE range. Then also we have the pressure on margin because of the peso appreciating. I mean, that's also putting pressure on the translation to pesos of all the business we do in our dollar portfolio, in assets and also in liabilities so t hat's why we guide this year to be in the lower part, even though we keep the 13%-15% as long-term ROE range.
But we expect this year to be in the lower part and starting the year like even below that full year guidance and building up during the year and conversion to that around 13% ROE for the full year.
Next question, also from Yuri Fernandes with JP Morgan. How is the U.S. sensitivity for 2026?
We keep on the top line sensitivity, we are still neutral. I mean, we don't have any significant exposure to U.S. in terms of revenues. I mean, we have already built the second semester hedge for that exposure, so in that sense, we are neutral. We still keep the sensitivity on the tax rate because we have basically, like, $1.5 million of sensitivity to every 10 basis points in inflation.
So that explains the upwards guidance on the effective tax rate, so that the only sensitivity we keep, which is kind of contained and it's hurting us in this context. Going forward, we don't expect further deterioration coming from inflation in that line.
Next question from Alonso Aramburu with BTG. You can open your microphone, sir.
Yes. Hi, good morning. Thank you. Thank you for the call. Also on guidance, it seems that you were gaining some momentum in loan growth towards the end of last year. Just curious if you're seeing some deceleration early this year. It seems like that the momentum you had probably called for a little bit higher loan growth. Then on your ROTE guidance, which is for Chile, 15%, can you give us a sense of what, you know, consolidated ROTE would be, especially on a pro forma basis once you finalize the adjustments in Colombia? Thank you.
The loan growth, we keep the momentum that we saw last half of 2025. Basically we still expect that the second half of 2026 will be stronger than the first half. What we think is that we will stay growing in the above 5% year-over-year loan growth and accelerating through the year so w e are very confident on that part. I mean, in general, the expectation from us on the market is that in the second half, activity will be stronger than the first half and that will help on the loan growth for the full year.
Regarding consolidated ROTE, it's a bit like too early to give that guidance because we are in Colombia in the middle of the execution of the transaction, so there will be different moving parts in recurrent and non-recurrent effects so I think we can provide more clarity during the year, but at this moment we feel more comfortable giving guidance on Chile while we execute the transaction in Colombia.
I want to add to context about macroeconomic context. We believe that Chile in general will have a slower credit growth in this first semester, and we will have a pickup on the second semester. Part of our guidance is a reflection of our view on how the market will perform in Chile. Regarding Colombia, we have to consider the macroeconomic environment.
It's very tough during the first semester, but we have elections by the middle of the year, and we believe there will be an important change in the second half. That will depend on the final results of the election so w e want to see how that plays out before providing any guidance in addition to the aspects of our restructuring that Emiliano just commented.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Daniel Mora with Credicorp Capital. You can open your microphone.
Good morning and thank you for the presentation. I have two questions. The first one is regarding Colombia. How long it will take to the Colombian operation to reach the structure that you want, considering reduction in branches and also reduction in headcount? If you could provide more details of what will be the restructuring costs and what could be the normalized ROE just considering the corporate segment.
That will be the first question. The second one is what are the drivers that should take the return of tangible equity from the current 13% that you are guiding for this year to the upper band of 15%? It will be a better financial margin with clients, more fees. What should change to see the 15% return of tangible equity? Thank you so much.
Regarding Colombia, we have stated that we believe this will be a 2-year execution transaction. We should probably be able to finish executing this transaction by the end of 2027. That's our expectation, because we depend on regulatory approvals first and then on implementing our deficiencies that will follow the closing of the transaction.
If that changed, we will go updating our perspective as it goes forward and o nce that's done for 2028, we believe we'll be able to capture an ROTE in line or a little bit above our cost of equity in Colombia. That's how we are planning or seeing the operation in Colombia looking forward.
With respect to the ROTE Chile, we have a lot of good news for Chile, but they have an impact on the financial market as a whole in the short term, which is FX valuation appreciation that when we convert into Chilean pesos, decreases the size of our offshore portfolio. We have lower interest rate, we have lower inflation. All of those aspects have impacts on our results. The expectation is that they will be compensated with future growth in all the different lines of business looking forward, but it's not simultaneously.
We believe we have a lot of pressure in the first semester and once growth picks up in the second semester, we'll start to grow our ROTE again and w e believe that looking at 2027, we'll have those pressure will be neutral and growth will be an important factor of increasing revenues in general and t hat's why we believe there is a positive trend in terms of ROTE when you look at 2 years ahead. Okay.
Right. Thank you much. Very clear.
Thank you. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please click on raise hand and state your name and company. Please activate your microphone to ask the questions. To ask questions in writing, just queue the question in the Q&A button. Please hold while we poll for questions.
Next question from Daniel Valeña with Moneda. Two questions on Colombia. One, could you remind us the timeframe for the U.S. $100 million capital raise you announced last December? Second, you mentioned some one-offs regarding strong fees printed in the Q4 2025 in Colombia from advisory plus assignment on Helm Insurance portfolio according to the release. Could you quantify such one-offs?
Well, first of all, the capital increase that is planning. Once we know what will be the one-off costs for other restructuring of the Colombia operation, we'll determine the capital increase and that will happen close to our closing of the transaction that we expect to be in the second semester of 2026 a nd it would be up to $100 million, as we mentioned, before. With respect to the one-offs about costs, that's what I mentioned about the restructuring of the bank after the sale of the retail operation. I don't remember the one-off in fees, Emiliano.
Yeah. I don't have the number here in mind, but we can share it with you, Daniela, after the call. I mean, I don't have it now at hand.
Our next question from Pietro Nobile with BTG. What would be the impact of the monetary policy rate hikes in Colombia? Why is your cost of funding in NIM?
The increase in rates in Colombia is bad for our NIMs because, I mean, we have some pressure on funding costs so t hat's part of the moving parts that are today difficult for us to build the full guidance for the year in Colombia, but are like negative for us in Colombia.
This concludes the question and answer section in today's presentation. Thank you. You may disconnect now and have a nice day.