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UPDATE 2-Standard Life CEO predicts tough markets after profit fall

Fri, 07th Aug 2020 08:02

* Fee-based revenue down 13%

* Assets under management, administration down 6%

* Shares steady at 264 pence
(Recasts with CEO comments, adds shares, analyst)

By Carolyn Cohn

LONDON, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Standard Life Aberdeen's
clients switched to more defensive assets in the first half and
the coronavirus pandemic meant tough times ahead, its outgoing
CEO Keith Skeoch said after the asset manager's profit dropped
30%.

A swift return to economic growth was not guaranteed, with
the shape of any recovery dependent on whether a vaccine can be
found to halt COVID-19, Skeoch said on Friday after SLA's first
half pre-tax profit fell to 195 million pounds ($255 million).

This was above expectations of 179 million pounds and
followed a 10% fall in first-half profit reported by SLA's rival
Schroders last week.

"The outlook for markets is tough. I don't think this
recovery without a vaccine is going to be V-shaped, it's going
to be W-shaped," he told a media call, adding that the success
of vaccines for some strains of flu was only around 40%.

SLA said it would pay an interim dividend of 7.3 pence per
share, unchanged from a year ago but above a forecast 6.8 pence.

KBW analysts described the results as a "mixed bag" but
highlighted the retention of the dividend, retaining their
"market perform" rating on the stock.

SLA's shares were steady at 264 pence at 0748 GMT, against a
0.2% gain in the FTSE 100.

Skeoch also said the importance of responsible investing was
"something the COVID crisis is going to accelerate".

SLA's fee-based revenue dropped 13% to 706 million pounds
due to 2019 outflows, clients switching to lower-fee assets, and
a scheduled withdrawal of assets by Lloyds Banking Group. This
was below analyst forecasts of 717 million pounds.

The firm's assets under management and administration fell
6% to 512 billion pounds, above a forecast 506 billion.
($1 = 0.7635 pounds)
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn
Editing by Rachel Armstrong and Alexander Smith)

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