
Swiss Life's positive fee result not enough to hold up highly valued stock
March 14 (Reuters) - Insurer Swiss Life (SLHN.S), opens new tab posted a higher fee result for 2024 on Friday, boosted by strong performance of its asset management business, but its shares fell in early trading weighed down by their already high price.
"Swiss Life has delivered solid results," analysts at Vontobel wrote, but stuck to their "hold" recommendation for the stock partly due to its high valuation compared to European and Swiss peers.
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Swiss Life's shares were down 5.8% by 0921 GMT, among worst performers on Europe's benchmark STOXX 600 index (.STOXX), opens new tab and on track for their biggest one-day drop since November 2023. They had gained 12.5% year-to-date as of Thursday's close.
"The company needs to beat expectations more strongly, in our view," the Vontobel analysts said.
Switzerland's largest life insurance provider reported a net fee result of 875 million Swiss francs ($990.5 million) for the year, compared with a result of 658 million francs in 2023.
Swiss Life, a major owner of real estate in Europe, said it recorded a fee income of 541 million francs in France and 821 million francs in Germany. The two countries together contributed to roughly 56% of its total fee income in 2024.
The company said it would pay out a dividend of 35 francs per share for the 2024 financial year, matching an LSEG consensus estimate.
($1=0.8834 Swiss francs)

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Reuters
9 minutes ago
- Reuters
Exclusive: US-China trade truce leaves military-use rare earth issue unresolved, sources say
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That marked a new twist in trade talks that began with opioid trafficking, tariff rates and China's trade surplus, but have since shifted to focus on export controls. In addition, U.S. officials also signalled they are looking to extend existing tariffs on China for a further 90 days beyond the August 10 deadline agreed in Geneva last month, both sources said, suggesting a more permanent trade deal between the world's two largest economies is unlikely before then. The two people who spoke to Reuters about the London talks requested not to be named because both sides have tightly controlled disclosure. The White House, State Department and Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to requests for comment. China's Foreign and Commerce ministries did not respond to faxed requests for comment. 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That prompted the Trump administration to respond with export controls preventing shipments of semiconductor design software, jet engines for Chinese-made planes and other goods to China. At the London talks, China promised to fast-track approval of rare-earth export applications from non-military U.S. manufacturers out of the tens of thousands currently pending, one of the sources said. Those licenses will have a six-month term. Beijing also offered to set up a "green channel" for expediting license approvals from trusted U.S. companies. Initial signals were positive, with Chinese rare-earths magnet producer JL MAG Rare-Earth ( opens new tab, saying on Wednesday it had obtained export licences that included the United States, while China's Commerce Ministry confirmed it had approved some "compliant applications" for export licences. 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Scottish Sun
11 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Bayern Munich's Club World Cup rivals missing several players as they didn't have enough annual leave left from day jobs
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South Wales Guardian
11 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Duke and Duchess of Sussex hire new agency in PR staff shake-up
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