(Bloomberg) -- Nomura Holdings Inc.’s first-quarter profit plunged to the lowest in two years as its wholesale business lost money thanks to a slump in fixed-income trading, while the domestic retail operation lost steam.
Net income fell 91 percent to 5.2 billion yen ($47 million) in the three months ended June 30 from a year earlier, Japan’s biggest brokerage said Thursday.
The firm posted its second consecutive quarterly loss overseas, led by Europe, undermining Chief Executive Officer Koji Nagai’s efforts to sustain profits outside of Japan. At home, a stagnating equity market is clouding prospects for the retail securities business.
“Retail clients remained on the sidelines on concerns over U.S.-China trade friction,” Nomura said in a presentation. “Fixed-income revenues declined due to uncertain market conditions and an adjustment in emerging markets.”
Results breakdown
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The company’s wholesale business -- which includes investment banking and global markets -- had a 7.4 billion yen pretax loss, the first since the three months ended March 2016. Profit at the retail division fell 20 percent to 19.9 billion yen.
“Nomura’s retail business is growing at a sluggish pace, while its global share of the wholesale business is a case of one step forward, two steps back,” Citigroup Inc. analyst Koichi Niwa said before the results were announced.
To trim costs, Nagai has been cutting jobs overseas. The brokerage is eliminating at least 50 positions in London, including some of its most senior traders, Bloomberg reported earlier this month. It also dismissed more than two dozen sales and trading staff in the U.S. last month.
Shares of Nomura have fallen 16 percent this year, more than the benchmark Topix index’s 2.9 percent decline.
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