Itaú Unibanco reports R$ 46.8 billion profit in 2025 and renews record

Itaú Unibanco announced a net profit of R$ 46.8 billion in 2025, a 13.1% increase from the previous year, renewing the historical record for the highest profit by a Brazilian bank adjusted for inflation. The result reflects delinquency control and credit portfolio growth, with profitability at 23.4%. In the fourth quarter, profit was R$ 12.3 billion.

Itaú Unibanco released its 2025 financial results, achieving a net profit of R$ 46.8 billion, 13.1% higher than in 2024. This surpasses the previous record of R$ 41.4 billion (R$ 43.4 billion adjusted for IPCA) set by the bank itself in 2024, solidifying its lead in inflation-adjusted profits, according to Elos Ayta data.

In the fourth quarter, recurrent profit was R$ 12.3 billion, aligning with market expectations of R$ 12.265 billion per Bloomberg analysts. Profitability, measured by ROAE, reached 23.4%, up from 22.2% in 2024. The annual financial margin totaled R$ 124.4 billion, a 10.6% increase.

The credit portfolio ended the year at R$ 1.49 trillion, up 6%, driven by real estate lending (12.8%), credit cards (8%), and micro, small, and medium enterprises (8.7%). Delinquency over 90 days fell to 1.9%, the lowest historical level, below the national average of 4.1% from the Central Bank. Credit costs decreased to R$ 36.6 billion.

Itaú CEO Milton Maluhy Filho emphasized risk discipline and investment management: "We administer, manage, and custody about R$ 4.1 trillion in assets, supported by transparency, integrity, suitability, and multiple layers of control."

The bank also announced a share buyback program for up to 200 million preferred shares, aimed at shareholder and employee remuneration. For 2026, it projects credit portfolio growth between 5.5% and 9.5%, with financial margin advancing 5% to 9%. These results position Itaú ahead of competitors like Bradesco and Santander, thanks to a high-income client base with lower risk.

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Photorealistic illustration of banker Daniel Vorcaro displaying R$570M income declaration, R$28K tax refund, and asset surge amid Banco Master fraud probes.
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Vorcaro declared R$570 million income in 2024

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Banker Daniel Vorcaro, owner of Banco Master, declared R$570 million income to Brazil's Federal Revenue in 2024, receiving a R$28,000 income tax refund. The data, obtained by Folha and sent to the joint INSS CPI, show a R$1.23 billion asset jump during the period, amid probes into frauds at the liquidated bank.

Bradesco reported a recurring net profit of R$ 24.6 billion in 2025, a 26% increase from the previous year, in line with market expectations. In the fourth quarter, profit reached R$ 6.5 billion, up 20.6%. The bank kept delinquency at 4.1% while growing its credit portfolio by 11%.

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Banco do Brasil disclosed a 45.4% drop in adjusted net profit for 2025, totaling R$ 20.7 billion, affected by new accounting rules and rising default rates. In the fourth quarter, profit reached R$ 5.7 billion, down about 45% to 47% year-over-year. The bank forecasts recovery in 2026, with profit between R$ 22 billion and R$ 26 billion.

Commercial International Bank-Egypt (CIB) reported consolidated net income of EGP 20.1bn in the fourth quarter of 2025, up 57% year on year. Full-year 2025 consolidated net income reached EGP 82.2bn, marking a 49% increase compared with 2024.

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SAIB Bank's 2025 results showed strong growth in its loans and credit facilities portfolio, reaching EGP 79.1bn. Total customer deposits rose to EGP 140.6bn, while total assets increased by 15% to EGP 172bn.

Hijra Bank ended its 2024/25 financial year strongly, with profit before tax surging nearly eightfold to 721 million Br amid a credit-starved market. Assets grew by 79 percent to 14.6 billion Br, while earnings per share rose 196 percent to 73.84 Br. Management attributes the success to a disciplined Sharia-compliant model and targeted outreach efforts.

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The Supreme Federal Court released depositions in the Banco Master inquiry, revealing serious irregularities such as only R$ 4 million in cash despite R$ 80 billion in assets. Meanwhile, INSS blocked R$ 2 billion in payments due to unproven loan contracts, and the Credit Guarantee Fund continues reimbursements to investors.

 

 

 

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