$Native Mineral Resources Holdings Ltd (NMR.AU)$ Nomura Holdings Inc. posted a 95% slump in second-quarter profit due to a one-off provision in the Americas and announced plans to buy back 50 billion yen ($440 million) of shares.
Net income at Japan’s biggest brokerage totaled 3.21 billion yen in the three months ended Sept. 30 after it booked a 39 billion yen provision that dates back to before the global financial crisis, it said in a statement Friday. The firm said it plans to buy back as much as 2.5% of its outstanding shares.
In earnings that Chief Financial Officer Takumi Kitamura called “very disappointing,” a 26% jump in investment banking revenue and a 14% rise in revenue from investment management weren’t enough to offset the provision. Revenue from retail fell 8% year on year, while revenue from wholesale dropped 22%.
The results deal a further blow to Nomura following the collapse of Archegos, an obscure investment firm set up to manage the fortune of trader Bill Hwang, that cost the brokerage $2.9 billion. Only Credit Suisse Group AG suffered a bigger hit at $5.5 billion.
Nomura said it would set up a board risk committee comprising outside directors and a non-executive director to enhance risk management and conduct “rigorous” controls and business oversight.
Article excerpted from yahoo.