Banco Itaú Chile ($ITAUCL)
Earnings Call Transcript · May 7, 2026
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Operator
OperatorLadies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Banco Itaú Chile First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. This presentation and the 1Q '26 earnings release are available on our Investor Relations website. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Matias Valenzuela, Head of Planning and Corporate Strategy. You may proceed.
Matias Valenzuela
ExecutivesGood morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2026 conference call. My name is Matias Valenzuela, Head of Planning and Corporate Strategy at Itau Chile. I'm here today with our CEO, Andre Gailey; our CFO, Emiliano Muratore; and our Chief Economist, Andrés Perez. We are pleased to present our results for the first quarter of 2026. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that this presentation may include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from those discussed. As always, we report under our managerial model, which reflects how we allocate capital, manage risk and evaluate performance internally. This framework provides a transparent and consistent view of underlying earnings quality and align management's decisions with shareholders' value. For more details, please refer to our management commentary report. With that, I will now turn it over to our CEO, Andre Gailey, to continue the presentation. Good morning, Andre.
Andre Carvalho Gailey
ExecutivesGood morning, everyone, [Foreign Language], and thank you for joining us today. Let me begin with the key messages from the first quarter. During the quarter, we continued to deliver a strong commercial execution, particularly in Chile. Loan growth remained solid across our main portfolios, especially in commercial and mortgage lending, while deposits continue to expand at a strong pace. This performance reinforces the progress we are making in deepening client relationships, increasing primary banking activity and strengthening the quality of our franchise even in a more demanding macroeconomic environment. At the same time, our results reflected short-term revenue pressures. Operating revenues were affected by higher market volatility, spread compression in a competitive lending environment and a higher comparison base in fees and commissions following one-off effects recorded in previous quarters. Importantly, these effects were partially mitigated by lower cost of credit and disciplinated expenses management, reflecting the strength of our risk and cost discipline. On the strategic front, we made important progress in strengthening our financial profile. In April, S&P Global Ratings upgraded Banco Itaú Chile long-term credit rating from BBB+ to A- with a stable outlook also applying to our New York branch. This recognition reflects our stronger capitalization, improved profitability outlook following the refocusing of our operations in Colombia, a solid franchise in Chile and robust risk management. We also continued to diversify our funding sources. During April, we accessed international markets through our inaugural issuance under the MTN program and our first placement under the U.S. commercial paper program, both through our New York branch. These transactions represent important milestones in expanding our investor base and strengthening our access to medium, long and short-term funding in international markets. In addition, shareholders approved a historic dividend distribution equivalent to 60% of 2025 net income, the highest payout in recent years. This decision is consistent with the strength of our capital position, our discipllineated approach to capital management and our confidence in the bank's long-term outlook. Finally, I would like to highlight that our culture remains a key competitive advantage. Itau Chile was recognized by Great Place to Work as the best place to work in Chile, while employees' engagement continued to improve. A strong culture is essential to sustain execution, attract and retain talent and deliver a better experience to our clients. In summary, the quarter reflected solid commercial momentum, short-term revenue pressure and a meaningful strategic progress. Despite a softer and more volatile beginning of the year in Chile, we entered the rest of the year with a stronger franchise, a clear strategic focus and a more diversified funding profile. With that, I will now hand over to Andrés Perez, who will talk us through the macroeconomic outlook for Chile and Colombia. Good morning, Andrés.
Andrés Perez
ExecutivesGood morning, Andre. Good morning, everyone. In this slide, I will provide a brief overview of Chile's recent economic performance and the outlook. Towards the latter part of 2025, the economy's momentum slowed, driven partly by a sequential deceleration in gross fixed capital formation growth and a contraction in government consumption in the context of a favorable external backdrop. Slower economic momentum continued into the first quarter of the year with monthly GDP for the period pointing to a moderate sequential contraction, partly driven by one-off supply factors that are projected to dissipate. Our forecast considers an important sequential acceleration in economic activity throughout the course of the year, leading to an annual expansion of GDP of 2.1% in 2026, mainly driven by positive investment fundamentals and still supportive terms of trade. Short-term downside risks to activity are mainly linked to the breadth and depth of the ongoing strikes in the Middle East. After surprising to the downside at the start of the year, inflation jumped in March, starting to reflect the swift rise in domestic fuel prices. Our inflation forecast has inflation remaining above 4% throughout the rest of 2026 and ending the year at 4.3%. Then we project inflation to gradually converge back to the Central Bank's 3% target over the forecast horizon. We view the Central Bank maintaining the policy rate at 4.5% throughout the rest of 2026, already in neutral territory. Anchored medium-term inflation expectations reflect the institution's credibility even as short-term inflation is projected to rise. From a currency perspective, the Chilean peso showed volatility and depreciated towards the end of the quarter, in line with other EM currencies. In summary, while activity has been somewhat weaker than anticipated, partly due to sector-specific shocks and higher international oil prices moderate the economy's favorable terms of trade, investment fundamentals are strong, suggesting the growth outlook remains positive. Short-term inflation is seen edging higher, yet should be transitory. In this context, the monetary policy rate is seen unchanged, steady at neutral. Turning now to Colombia. The macroeconomic environment remains more challenging with inflationary pressures and tighter monetary conditions shaping the outlook. Economic activity also slowed in early 2026, with data indicating weaker-than-expected momentum despite some resilience in consumption. Inflation continued to increase during the first quarter of the year, driven mainly by services inflation and the impact of a significant minimum wage increase. As a result, the Central Bank has adopted a more restrictive stance, increasing the policy rate and signaling further tightening. We now expect the policy rate to reach a terminal rate of 12.5% later this year. Looking forward, GDP growth is projected to moderate to roughly 2.1% in 2026 as higher rates and inflation weigh on domestic demand. At the same time, the exchange rate is seen ending the year at CLP 3,600 per dollar, supported by high interest rate differentials. Overall, Colombia's macro scenario is defined by persistent inflation, tighter financial conditions and a slower growth outlook, reinforcing the importance of our strategic repositioning toward more resilient and capital-efficient businesses in the country. Now Emiliano Muratore, our CFO, will continue the presentation. Good morning, Emiliano.
Emiliano Muratore Raccio
ExecutivesThank you, Andrés, and good morning, everyone. Before I begin, I would like to let you know that my voice in this presentation has been generated using artificial intelligence. Let me now briefly address some of our key highlights of the period across culture, strategy and sustainability. Starting with Slide 5, I would like to highlight some of the key structural drivers of our long-term value creation. Starting with culture, we continue to see very robust organizational engagement with employee satisfaction reaching 89% in our eNPS, improving 4 percentage points year-on-year. This reflects a highly aligned organization, which is critical to successfully executing our strategy and delivering consistent client experience. In this context, as Andre mentioned before, we are proud to announce that we were recognized by Great Place to Work as Chile's top employer among companies with more than 1,000 employees. We were also recognized by EFY Fem as the Best Place to Work while for women under 35. These recognitions reinforce our position as a top employer and support our long-term talent strategy. Additionally, I would like to highlight our continued progress in ESG. In 2026, Itau Chile was once again included as a constituent of 2 Dow Jones best-in-class indices, DJBIC Mila Pacific Alliance and DJBIC Chile. This means that we are currently included in 100% of the indices to which we are invited, reflecting the consistency of our sustainability performance and the strength of our ESG management. The 2026 rebalancing of the Dow Jones best-in-class indices is based on the results of the 2025 Corporate Sustainability Assessment, S&P Global's annual evaluation of environmental, social and governance practices. For Itau Chile, this recognition reinforces our positioning not only in Chile, but also at a regional level. Finally, on digital, we continue to make progress in leveraging technology as a key differentiator. Our Itau X platform was recognized with the Financial Innovators Award by the LatAm Marketing Association, highlighting our capabilities in data, AI and omnichannel solutions to enhance client engagement. These developments, culture, sustainability and digital capabilities are not stand-alone initiatives, but fundamental enablers of our strategy, supporting long-term growth and value creation. On Slide 6, we show that we have maintained a sustained focus on brand penetration in Chile through high visibility initiatives, particularly leveraging strategic sports sponsorships that position Itau in relevant high-impact moments for our clients. In this context, campaigns such as -- no [indiscernible] developed around our sponsorship of the Santiago Marathon, together with our presence in the Ironman Puerto Varas reflect a deliberate strategy to connect the brand with effort, ambition and personal achievement. At the same time, we continued to build on the Hecho Contigo campaign, reinforcing a consistent message. Itau grows alongside its clients and is present in their most important milestones. This continuity strengthens brand coherence and reinforces long-term positioning. Together, these initiatives are not only enhancing visibility, but also driving relevance, emotional connection and client loyalty. Turning to the next slide, our corporate and investment banking platform remains a key pillar of our business model. In recent years, we have strengthened our role as a strategic partner to the main players in Chile's infrastructure sector, supporting them across a broad range of transactions. During several periods, we maintained strong activity in debt capital markets, corporate lending and financial advisory with active participation in large-scale infrastructure deals. A key milestone worth highlighting is our participation as an adviser in the first sustainable bond in Chile's infrastructure sector, along with Ruta del Maipo, which reflects both our structuring capabilities and our commitment to sustainable finance. Additionally, we hold the second position year-to-date in local debt capital markets advisory by amount issued, reinforcing our strong position in this segment. This performance is consistent with our strategic focus on high-value corporate relationships where we can leverage our regional platform, advisory capabilities and balance sheet strength. Let's now move to Slide 8 and review loan growth dynamics. During the first quarter, after a softer January and February, we saw a rebound in March with resilient activity and origination. As a result, we achieved a solid loan expansion of 7.3% year-on-year and 1.9% quarter-on-quarter in Chile, clearly outperforming the industry. This growth was broad-based across all segments, reflecting both improved demand conditions and disciplined commercial execution. Let's now look at the breakdown. In commercial lending, we grew 7.1% year-on-year and 1.5% quarter-on-quarter, outperforming the industry for the second consecutive quarter with higher activity and client engagement, again, with the first 2 months of the year with a slower dynamism and a clear pickup during March. In consumer loans, we saw a recovery in growth, reaching positive year-on-year expansion for the first time since 2024. This reflects the success of our portfolio repositioning strategy carried out in recent periods focused on better risk-adjusted returns with focus on new money origination and a reduction in refinanced and renegotiated loans. In mortgages, we continue to be one of the best performers in the market with growth of 9.7% year-on-year and 2.7% quarter-on-quarter, supported by sustained demand and our active participation in the [indiscernible] program. Continuing the tendency of last year, we remain well positioned to sustain growth across segments even in a more challenging macro environment, supported by our strong franchise and disciplined underwriting. Let's now move to Slide 9. On the funding side, we continue to show very robust performance, particularly in deposits, which remain a key pillar of our strategy. In Chile, demand deposits grew 15.5% year-on-year, significantly outperforming the system, where growth was closer to mid-single digits, gaining market share, reflecting deeper client relationships and continued progress in our principality strategy. Growth was resilient across segments with individuals growth of 7.5% and companies with a 19.2% growth year-on-year. Time deposits also showed solid expansion, growing 19.2% year-on-year, supported by our disciplined pricing strategy and balanced funding mix. In addition, assets under management increased 9% year-on-year, reflecting steady growth and reinforcing the expansion of our noncredit businesses. We are also proud to announce that S&P Global Ratings upgraded our long-term credit rating from BBB+ to A- with a stable outlook, an action that also applies to our New York branch. This upgrade reflects the bank's healthy capitalization and a favorable profitability outlook following the refocusing of our operations in Colombia, our solid presence in Chile and robust risk management. It also strengthens our access to international funding markets and supports our long-term growth strategy. In line with this and from a strategic perspective, we also made important progress in diversifying our funding sources with our first international issuances under the MTN and USCP programs. These transactions expand our investor base and strengthen our funding flexibility. On the next slide, you can see a summary of our key consolidated results for the quarter. Our consolidated loan portfolio totaled CLP 29.8 trillion, representing an 8.9% increase year-over-year. In Chile, the portfolio reached CLP 24.6 trillion, up 7.3% compared to first quarter 2025. Our consolidated financial margin with clients reached CLP 317.5 billion, down 4.7% year-over-year. Commissions and fees revenues totaled CLP 50.4 billion, showing an increase of 2.9% compared to first quarter 2025. Consolidated cost of credit reached CLP 75.4 billion, broadly in line with first quarter 2025. In Chile, cost of credit decreased by 0.8%. Overall, consolidated recurring net income totaled CLP 76.7 billion, representing a 29.6% year-over-year decrease. As a result, return on tangible equity reached 8.0% at the consolidated level and 9.2% in Chile. Moving to the next slide. Our financial margin with clients showed a decrease in the quarter, down 5.6% quarter-over-quarter and 5.4% decrease year-over-year, reaching a 3.3% margin. This quarter's decrease was mainly explained by fewer accrual days and a lower average loan portfolio in first quarter 2026, reflecting weaker credit dynamics in January and February. Additionally, a lower average monetary policy rate during the period negatively impacted capital margin. These effects were partially offset by positive results from derivatives management and FX transactions with clients. The year-over-year decrease was mainly due to a lower average monetary policy rate during the period and tighter spreads amid a more competitive lending environment. This was partially offset by a positive volume effect. On the next slide, we analyze financial margin with the market, which posted a negative result of CLP 8.9 billion this quarter. This result was consistent with elevated market volatility in recent months amid the global backdrop, which weighed on trading desk performance and resulted in losses on interest rate positions managed by the unit. Looking ahead, the recent S&P rating upgrade is expected to provide tailwinds for the bank's cost of funding, supporting tighter spreads in future issuances and reinforcing the structural strength of our financial margin. Also, our inflation exposure is largely hedged during the first half of the year, aiming to minimize volatility from this effect. This is supported by the structural balance between assets and liabilities, helping to stabilize earnings. Looking ahead to the second half, we retain flexibility to adjust our positioning and modify our exposure as our macro views evolve. Moving to the next slide, we will review our commission and fees revenues. Performance during the first quarter was impacted by a high comparison base from fourth quarter of 2025, which included one-off effects as well as seasonal factors, resulting in a 15.4% decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2025. Insurance brokerage decreased 28.4% quarter-on-quarter, explained mainly by one-offs recorded during the fourth quarter of 2025 in addition to lower commercial activity in credit-related insurance. On the credit and contingent operations side, we observed a 12.1% decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2025, mainly explained by a seasonal effect with higher activity in the final part of the year in the contingent Comex segment. The quarter-on-quarter increase in current account services and overdraft fees was supported by higher line availability fees and increased transactional activity in the corporate segment, in line with our efforts to deepen client engagement. Fees from assets under management declined by 2.5% quarter-on-quarter due to lower average assets under management during the period. Meanwhile, fees increased 19.1% year-over-year, in line with a 9.1% increase in assets under management. Lastly, the financial advisory and others line declined during the period, primarily reflecting seasonality in this business as well as lower credit card fees after an extraordinary effect in fourth quarter of 2025 linked to the release of provisions from loyalty program redemptions. Turning to cost of credit. In the first quarter, it reached CLP 57.9 billion, down 11.4% quarter-over-quarter, mainly because of lower provisions associated with rating adjustments of specific corporate clients, Cost of credit ratio closed the period at 1.0%. On a year-over-year basis, cost of credit decreased slightly by 0.8%, reflecting higher recoveries, partially offset by CVA impacts. This improvement should not be seen as one-off effects for the quarter, but rather as a reflection of a structural enhancement in the bank's cost of credit. This trend is consistent with our disciplined risk management approach and stable portfolio dynamics. Asset quality trends remained positive with a decline in nonperforming loans. This trend was supported by lower NPL levels in the consumer portfolio, driven by mix recomposition and a reduction in refinanced and renegotiated loans. In mortgages, some normalization is expected given their longer delinquency cycle. Finally, our coverage ratio increased by 4 percentage points during the period, aligned with lower levels of NPLs and stable provisioning levels. Let's now move to noninterest expenses. In the first quarter, noninterest expenses totaled CLP 134.7 billion, representing a 3.3% decrease compared to the previous quarter. This decline was mainly explained by efficiency measures in personnel expenses, partially offset by higher costs related to our long-term incentive program, impacted by a higher average stock price during the period. Administrative expenses decreased by 7.1% compared to fourth quarter 2025, mainly reflecting lower extraordinary 2030 transformation expenses, along with IT-related efficiencies. On a year-on-year basis, noninterest expenses remained under strict control, increasing by only 0.6%, well below the inflation rate for the period. This limited increase was driven by higher employee benefits, offset by lower IT expenses and reduced operational losses. Despite strong cost discipline, our efficiency ratio increased by 6.9 percentage points versus fourth quarter 2025 and by 4.3 percentage points year-over-year, mainly driven by lower revenues rather than higher costs. Moving to the next slide regarding our Colombian operation. Our transformation plan continues to advance aligned with the strategic positioning of our franchise. During the quarter, we made further progress in headcount adjustments, aligning the organization with our focus on corporate, capital markets and treasury businesses. In terms of the sale of our retail assets and liabilities, we are advancing through the relevant regulatory approval processes. Regarding performance in the first quarter, we observed improved trends in financial margin. Financial margin with clients increased mainly driven by higher funding volumes, particularly demand deposits alongside a rising monetary policy rate environment, which had a positive impact on capital margin. This was further supported by a stronger performance in financial margin with markets. As a result, the growth in revenues, combined with tightly controlled recurring expenses supported the continued positive trend in efficiency. The efficiency ratio reached 64.4% at quarter end, representing an improvement of 3.1 percentage points compared to fourth quarter '25 and 7.4 percentage points versus first quarter '25. Cost of credit increased during the quarter, primarily reflecting a comparative base effect from the previous period, which benefited from rating upgrades and lower charge-offs. Despite this increase, the ratio remains at sound levels and consistent with historical trends. In light of the above, recurring net income reached CLP 4.8 billion with an ROE of 2.9% for the period. Let's now move to capital and dividends on Slide 17. We continue to maintain one of the strongest capital positions in the system. As of the end of the quarter, our CET1 ratio stood at 12%, well above regulatory requirements and the median of our peers, which stood at 11%. This solid capital position allowed us to approve in April a 60% payout of our 2025 net income, the highest in recent years, implying in a dividend yield of 5%. We do not expect the dividend payment to affect the strength of our capital base, which is projected to remain with a CET1 of around 11.5%, comfortably in line with our internal targets and risk appetite. In terms of regulatory requirements, we are once again classified as a systemically important bank by our regulator with an unchanged additional core capital requirement of 1% for the period. It is also worth mentioning that the CMF has launched a public consultation on proposed changes to the measurement of market risk-weighted assets with implementation starting in July 2026. According to market analysis, this measure is expected to result in an approximately 23% reduction in market risk-weighted assets and an average increase of around 28 basis points in CET1 ratios for Chilean banks. Finally, let's move to guidance for our Chilean operation. For 2026, we are making targeted adjustments to our guidance, reflecting first quarter performance and updated expectations for the remainder of the year. Starting with what remains on track with no changes to previous guidance. Loan growth is expected to remain between 6% and 8%, supported by a gradual recovery in credit demand mainly during the second half of the year, while financial margin with clients is projected to range between 3.3% and 3.5% by year-end. Regarding cost of credit, we are revising our guidance following better-than-expected performance and a healthier portfolio, reflecting a structural improvement in asset quality. As a result, we are narrowing our guidance range from 1.0% to 1.2% to 1.0% to 1.1%, consistent with stable risk dynamics. Noninterest expenses also have had a better performance than initially expected, reflecting our continued cost discipline despite inflationary movements. So we are adjusting the guidance for the year to around 2%. Also, the managerial effective tax rate is being revised from previous 18% to around 15%, reflecting our assumptions of higher inflation towards 2026 and its impact on the monetary correction of our tax equity. On the other hand, we revised our initial guidance for commissions and fees to a range between 12% to 14% as this line came slightly below initial expectations in the first quarter of 2026. Given the above, we have also revised our ROTE range to 12% to 13%, reflecting the impact of market volatility on our financial margin as well as lower-than-expected commissions and fees. Overall, the results of the first quarter of 2026 confirm Itau Chile's ability to grow its franchise, deepen client relationships and strengthen its credit profile. While quarterly earnings were affected by revenue volatility, the bank enters the rest of 2026 with positive momentum in loans, deposits, asset quality and funding diversification with a continued focus in execution. With that, we conclude the presentation that we have for you today. Thank you for your attention and continued trust in Itau Chile. We will now gladly take any questions that you might have.
Operator
Operator[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from [indiscernible] from Santander.
Unknown Analyst
AnalystsJust one from my side on interest income. We were wondering how should we think about the outlook for margins through the rest of 2026, like through the next 3 quarters? I mean, as rates stabilize? And what are the main levers you could use to protect your profitability? And on the funding side, I mean, funding was positive this quarter with strong growth in demand deposits. But how much of this is improvement from market share gains? And how much is from a broader system liquidity trend?
Unknown Executive
Executives[indiscernible], thank you for your question. I mean first, regarding interest income, going forward, we expect to stay in the range we guided between the 3.3% and 3.5% in terms of NIM with clients. First quarter was on the lower part of that range. We think we can stay around there. And then you will have the volume effect that as you saw the first 2 months of the year were really slow, but March began to improve and considering the expectations we have for loan growth between 6% to 8% for the year. Going forward, the NIM with clients and the NIM with loans will go more on the volume side and on the spread that might be around the one you saw in first quarter. And regarding the deposits and funding in general, basically, the latest figures showed us gaining market share, the same trend that we saw last year. I mean, especially March was a very strong month for us in terms of commercial activity in retail and also in corporates on the assets and also liabilities. So checking accounts have some seasonality or some kind of end of month effect that we would like, but it's difficult to keep the year-over-year growth we have seen in checking account for us. But in any case, we do expect and foresee to be growing above market share and going with that. Nominal GDP will be still in the 5% to 6% and with us growing above market share should take us with volume growth closer to double digits for deposits, too.
Operator
OperatorOur next question comes from Diego Marcus from JPMorgan.
Unknown Analyst
AnalystsJust a quick question regarding your U.S. inflation hedges. So you mentioned that you are hedged until first half '26. But just wanted to get a sense on if you plan on increasing these hedges for the coming quarters or if you plan on maintaining given the expected higher inflation?
Unknown Executive
ExecutivesOkay. Thank you, Diego, for the questions. Yes, as you said, I mean, originally, we had hedges for the first half, but that's kind of a dynamic hedging strategy where we keep like rolling over the the tenures of the different hedges. So if we look at the last part of the year, we have some open risk there. But at the end, when you look at what the inflation expectations are for that last part of the year, they haven't changed much because what we have in Chile is a very front-loaded inflation expectations hike. I mean, basically, we have seen March, April figures really high. But when you leave those first month aside, then the second half CPI, it's kind of normal, I mean, a bit maybe higher than before, but not extremely higher. And we will capture that either by letting the hedges mature or by rolling over the different hedges. So all in all, you can expect us to have kind of low sensitivity to inflation from the current market prices. So we are rolling over at current prices that will give us some pickup in the -- considering the inflation we had in the hedges before the war and all the oil price surge. But -- and then we keep the sensitivity on taxes where that's the positive effect you are seeing in our guidance that the effective tax rate will go down considering the current inflation expectation for the year. But we don't expect to to increase the sensitivity to inflation that we have significantly at least. I mean we prefer to have a more stable NIM and NII going forward, and you should expect that for the future, too.
Operator
OperatorOur next question comes from Juan Sanchez from CrediCorp Capital.
Daniel Mora
AnalystsDaniel Mora from CrediCorp Capital. I have 2 questions. The first one is regarding fees. I would like to understand if you experienced a negative one-off in fees during the first quarter because I would like to understand what will be the drivers to accelerate fees in the coming quarters, considering also the the slower growth in assets under management compared to the industry that you show in the presentation. And my second question is regarding loan growth. Do you expect the new inflation scenario or the weaker economic activity that we already observed in the first part of the year to impact the loan demand during the year? Or do you expect the government measures and packages that they are discussing right now to offset these pressures and stimulate growth?
Andrés Perez
ExecutivesThank you. Beginning by the loan growth, we currently expect -- we had a change of present in the first quarter and the war, which really impacted our clients' plans to do more CapEx and to -- we saw an impact that we're not foreseeing in loan demand. But talking to investors and our -- to the clients and to our economic team, we really believe there will be a pickup on the second semester, and we will be able to get in line with the loan growth that we have shared here. So we expect a lower first semester, but a much more demand on the second semester. And of course, that will depend on how the war evolves. And if the macro situation outside really getting to a much worse situation, it might change. But currently, all the indicators point to a stronger second semester. And our fees, much of our fees are linked to our loan growth because we are insurance related to loans and the part of structuring fees and syndicated financing fees are also related to to loan growth. So even though AUM fees may not grow as much as expected in the beginning, we believe that our overall new guidance here for commissions and fees is within that macro scenario that I just described.
Operator
OperatorOur next question is a written question by Gonzalo [indiscernible]. Regarding the downward revision in commission and fees guidance from 13% to 15% to 12% to 14%, what is driving this reduction? Is it temporary competitive pressure, lower client activity or a structural change in your fee-generating businesses? And how does this impact your confidence in achieving the 12% to 13% ROTE target for 2026?
Andrés Perez
ExecutivesOur new ROTE target already considers this new range that we we share. And the main impact is the lower activity in macroeconomic activity in the first semester in Chile and this pickup in the second semester that I just mentioned. We don't see -- we don't have a material change in our line of business or our strategy. It's much more a macroeconomic temporary impact, remembering that our fees and commissions are in line with our first quarter of 2025, and we see a lot of seasonality when we look at this line every year.
Operator
Operator[Operator Instructions] Thank you. This concludes today's presentation. You may disconnect now, and have a nice day.
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