RNS Number:7807F
Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken
17 February 2000


BfG Bank AG - Press Conference 2000 on annual results


SEB:
Record results for 1999
Continued expansion as European e-bank
Asset management considerably expanded

BfG Bank:
Focus on growth areas
Asset management and Internet
Aiming at 15% return on equity
Financial statement for 1999 shows new orientation

At the press conference held by BfG Bank AG in Frankfurt on 17 February
2000 to publicise the annual results, Dr. Lars H Thunell, President  and
CEO of SEB, explained  the active expansion strategy pursued  by  the
Swedish  financial concern. Dr. Thunell: said "Nineteen ninety-nine  was
the  year in which a number of critical steps were taken to transform  SEB
from  Nordic to European, from a universal bank to a Group centred around
the  Internet, from being product orientated to being guided by  customer
needs  within  two  main  customer groups  -  business-intensive  private
customers and Nordic customers."  Since 1997 SEB has been concentrating on
the investment market and on asset management, as well as building up its
Internet  banking  side. The end of 2004 is planned  to  see  a  fivefold
increase in the  assets  managed by the SEB Group  and  the  number  of
Internet customers is planned to grow to five million.

In  the  financial  year just ended SEB enjoyed record results totalling
EUR 877  million (previous year: EUR 423 million). Operating  results
reached EUR 597 million (previous year: EUR 272 million).

Assets under management rose by 41 per cent or EUR 21 billion to EUR 83
billion. SEB, Dr. Thunell emphasised, is top of the international league
when it comes to Internet banking. Even now 25 percent of all SEB clients
in Sweden are using the Internet.  This high and rising number of Internet
clients -currently 380,000 in Sweden and a further 35,000 in Estonia - is
already having definite effects on client business. The number of  client
visits to branches is declining steeply; against this background, SEB has
announced  the closure of some 50 branches in Sweden (out of a  total  of
260) in the first six months of 2000. The Internet, said Dr. Thunell, was
leading not just to cost savings. Internet clients make more transactions
than  non-Internet  clients, thus creating higher  revenue.  Dr.  Thunell
announced  a  new  Internet  initiative for Europe  this  year.  The  new
Pan-European Internet bank will be starting up in Denmark at the  end  of
March, and in Germany in the third Quarter of 2000 - the latter under the
overall control of BfG Bank.

Karl-Heinz Hulsmann, Chairman of the Management Board of BfG  Bank  AG,
said  he was satisfied with the course of business in 1999. The bank,  he
said,  had  coped well with the strains imposed by speculation about  its
future - speculation which had been going on for nearly two years. It  had
been  announced  at  the  beginning of  1998  that  the  former  majority
shareholder,  Credit Lyonnaise, had to divest itself  from  BfG  Bank  in
pursuance of EU Commission rules. The purchase of BfG Bank by the Swedish
financial  group SEB at the end of October 1999, Hulsmann continued,  had
had  a liberating effect on the bank. Both staff and clients had welcomed
the change in shareholder.

Private-client  business  grew  again  last  year.  Growth leaders were
investment funds and loans for building and construction.  The volume  of
BfG  Invest's  public-access  funds grew by  52%  to  EURO  3.8  billion;
including special institutional funds, BfG Invest was managing  a  volume
of EUR 8 billion.

Fund  assets  of  BfG  Immolnvest reached EUR 2.0  billion.  Loans  for
building and construction showed an increase of 11 percent. The bank  has
made a successful start with its Internet service. The number of Internet
clients rose constantly over 1999, reaching nearly 29,000 at the  end  of
January  2000.  Last  autumn Teletrust Deutschland, which  includes  such
famous  companies as Microsoft and IBM, awarded the Bank  the  Innovation
Prize for early and successful implementation of the HBCI Standard.  BfG
Bank  was  the first cross-regional bank to have introduced this  security
standard.

Institutional business also showed satisfactory growth. Investment volume
grew  from EUR 8.8 billion to EURO 9.2 billion and the volume of managed
depositories from EUR 12.8 billion to EUR 13.9 billion.

Corporate-client business remained difficult, against a background of low
margins  and  continuing  high risks. The bank  divested  itself  of  any
further  commitments in 1999. Loan volume in this sector shrank  by  EUR
1.2  billion  to  EUR 3.1 billion. A conservative risk policy  was  also
maintained  for real-estate business. This sector showed moderate  growth
in loan volume from EUR 0.3 billion to EUR 4.5 billion.

The  repositioning of BfG Bank means that asset management  and  Internet
banking  are  undergoing targeted development in close co-operation  with
SEB.  Corporate-client  business will be oriented still  further  towards
clients   with  a  house-bank  function.  Considerable  cost  savings   -
especially  in the back-office area and in central functions  -  will  be
achieved  by  process optimisation, by exploiting new technology  and  by
using IT, as well as through integration into SEB activities.

Lars  Lundquist, Deputy Chairman of BfG Bank management Board, introduced
the annual financial statement for 1999.  This has been heavily influenced
by  the  bank's  continuing strategic re-orientation. In 1999  the  Group
balance-sheet total rose by EUR 1.7 billion to EUR 44.2 billion. Client
receivables  grew  by 3.2 percent to EUR 25.7 billion and  total  client
liabilities by 9.2 percent to EUR 32.0 billion. This growth was  due  in
particular to the dynamic expansion of BfG Hypothekenbank AG.

Interest  surplus fell slightly in comparison with the previous  year  to
EUR 581 million (previous year: EUR 601 million). The main reasons  for
this  were  pressure  an  margins  and  cessation  of  revenue  from  the
subsidiary WTB, which was sold at the end of 1998. The satisfactory  rise
in  commission surplus of 12.5 percent to EUR 180 million resulted  from
considerable improvement in securities transactions.

Trading profit is 51.7 percent higher than the previous year, standing at
EUR 44 million. The rise in administration costs of 7.4 percent is  due
to  higher staff expenditure and to project costs, particularly  for  the
Y2K  changeover- The balance for other operating revenue and  expenditure
showed  a  planned  decline  of  EUR  56  million.  1998  saw  increased
extraordinary revenue, resulting from the sale of two shareholdings.

Due   to   high   provisions  made  in  connection  with  the   strategic
re-orientation  and the restructuring measures which this  has  involved,
the  profit and loss account shows an annual deficit of EUR 168 million;
this  is  compensated by withdrawals from profit reserves.  Restructuring
costs  amount  to EUR 83 million. Further provisions, shown  under  Risk
Provisions  and  Shareholding Write Downs, amount in total  to  EUR  203
million.

Lars Lundquist further explained the measures being taken to raise return
on equity to 15 percent. These foresee increasing revenue by some EUR 80
-100   million,  such  increases  to  be  achieved  by  developing  asset
management  and  Internet banking. At the same  time  it is planned  to
implement cost savings of EUR 80-100 million. Non-strategic divisions
will be restructured,  sold  or  closed.  In  connection  with   this
re-orientation on the part of the Bank, Lundquist mentioned the  loss  of
at least 500 jobs and the closure of Deutsche Handelsbank AG of Berlin.

However,   as   Lundquist  summed  up,  BfG  Bank's  repositioning   was
concentrating on a clear growth strategy, focussing on asset  management.
For  BfG, a multi-channel  bank, the Internet would  become  increasingly
important as a marketing channel.

Communication and Economic Research
Your contact officer: Heinrich Schaumburg
Telephone: +49 69 258 6400, fax: +44 69 258 6409
e-Mail: hschaum@bfg.de
Frankfurt 17 February, 2000


                              (Provisional figures)
                    Breakdown of the profit and loss account
                                 of BfG Group
                    for the period January 1 to December 31, 1999

                                     1999      1998
                                                           Changes
                              EUR million EUR million EUR million   %

Net interest received                 581      601      -20      -3.3
Net commission received               180      160       20      12.5
Profit from leasing operations         21       26       -5     -19.2
Net income from financial operations   44       29       15      51.7
Administrative expenditure            694      646       48       7.4
Balance of other operating income
and expenditure                        29       85      -56     -65.9
Operating result before
provisions for risks                  161      255      -94     -36.9
Provisions for risks                  184       65      119     182.9
Operating result                      -23      190     -213       -
Depreciation on investments in
subsidiaries and associated companies -55        3      -58       -
Extraordinary items                   -85       -7      -78       -
Taxes                                  -5       -2       -3       -
Net loss for the year
(previous year: net profit)          -168      184     -352       -

                                      (Provisional figures)
                                   Balance sheet of BfG Group
                                    as at December 31, 1999


                                     1999      1998
                                                          Changes
                              EUR million EUR million EUR million   %

Cash reserves                      370            321     49      15.3
Due from credit institutions    11,822         11,602    220       1.9
Due from customers              25,713         24,916    797       3.2
Securities
 fixed-interest                  5,455          4,698    757      16.1
 non-fixed-interest                109            133    -24     -18.0
Fixed assets                       444            576   -132     -22.9
Other assets                       316            304     12       3.9
Total assets                    44,229         42,550  1,679       3.9
Due to credit institutions       9,106          9,990   -884      -8.8
Due to customers                19,378         19,144    234       1.2
Certificated liabilities        12,631         10,167  2,464      24.2
Contingency reserves               693            597     96      16.1
Subordinated liabilities
and participatory capital          662            606     56       9.2
Funds for general risks
in banking                         131            131      0         0
Shareholders' equity             1,302          1,491   -189     -12.7
Other liabilities                  326            424    -98     -23.1
Total assets                    44,229         42,550  1,679       3.9


          ANALYSIS OF PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNTS OF BfG GROUP 1999

                                        EUR million

"Normal" operating profit                  61
Brady Bonds income                        +62
Provision for Holzmann exposure           -23
Operating Profit                          100
One-offs and restructuring costs         -152
Reserve allocations                      -111
Taxes                                      -5
Net result 1999                          -168

END
MSCILFFEFAIDLII


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