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Itaú Unibanco Holding (ITUB -0.64%)
Q1 2021 Earnings Call
May 04, 2021, 10:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Itau Unibanco Holding conference call to discuss 2021 first-quarter results. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session.

[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded and broadcasted live on the investor relations website at www.itau.com.br/investor-relations. A slide presentation is also available on this site. Before proceeding, let me mention that forward-looking statements are being made under the safe harbor of the Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1996. Actual performance could differ materially from that anticipated in any forward-looking comments as a result of macroeconomic conditions, market risks, and other factors.

With us today in this conference call in Sao Paulo are Mr. Milton Maluhy Filho, president; Alexsandro Broedel, chief financial officer; and Renato Lulia Jacob, group head of investor relations and marketing intelligence. First, Mr. Milton Maluhy will comment on the 2021 first-quarter results.

Afterward, management will be available for a question-and-answer session. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mr. Milton Maluhy.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Hello. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for attending our first-quarter 2021 earnings conference call. I'll start with Slide 2. We can jump straight into our highlights for the quarter, OK? The recurring net income 18.7% and reached 6.4 billion reals.

And these important roles were supported by a sound overall performance of our business despite the volatile macroeconomic environment. When we look at the loan book, we had a solid gross of 4.2% in the quarter. Three of the most important contributors to this performance were mortgage and auto loans and growing respectively in both of them, 12.1% and 4.5% in the quarter as well as our renewed focus on the agribusiness sector. The increasing demand for this product is directly correlated with a new approach toward this segment with the new and specific product being launched.

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Looking at our P&L, the financial margins with clients continued to its positive trend for the second quarter in a row despite the negative seasonal effects of the first quarter. Cost of credit contracted by 31.9% in the period, reflecting here the positive credit quality trends in the portfolio. Noninterest expenses decreased 6.6% in the period, which is a result of constant investment in technology, boosting our operational efficiency. And lastly, we managed to navigate this high volatile environment very well generating 51.7% growth in the financial margin with the market.

I also would like to update you about our digitalization efforts as they continue to generate positive results. We opened more than 3.7 million relationships with new clients through our digital channels only in this first quarter alone. And finally, I would like to highlight the important changes in our strategy in Iti, which was born originally as a digital wallet, as you remember, and evolved through this life cycle into a full-fledged 100% digital banking operation. Through Iti, we opened more than 2 million new relationships this quarter.

We will deliver deeper into all those topics as we move along this presentation. When we move here to Slide 3, I'd like to say a few words some statements before we go into the next slide. First of all, I'd like to talk about what we believe it means to be a digital company. For us, to be digital is essential to have an absolute focus on the needs, demand, and real pain points for our clients.

The way to achieve it is naturally through the use of technology but this does not mean interacting with your customers entirely remotely or just view a super app. Being digital, in our view, goes far beyond that. Truly digital companies have cultural and operational characteristics that set them apart. For us, being digital means we should be able to serve our clients where, when, and how they wish to be served.

For some, this will mean taking care of all their banking needs via our super app on their mobiles. And to others, it will mean having face-to-face discussions with a financial advisor who will help them make the best decision supported by data and state-of-the-art products and services. We have this objective in mind, several aspects are essential for the digital transformation of the company. The first one is, of course, the intensive use of technology in all areas of the operations.

From new ways of interacting with customers to process automation. The application of technological solutions increases our ability to create new products and truly differentiate the experience for our customers. Second, innovation must be part of everyone's daily life and not a task confined to a group of team. And third, we need to be fast in developing and implementing new solutions, reducing the time to market, and adjusting and adapting whenever needed.

And for us, we must organize ourselves into multidisciplinary teams using new ways of working as part of these. We need to have a passion for efficiency using technology to leverage our commercial potential and increasing our ability to offer more competitive products and solutions to our customers. And finally, having the ability to use the huge amount of data we have accumulated throughout the years. We will always offer products that are more intelligently and intuitively fit our client's needs.

Throughout this presentation, we will address several of the points I have just mentioned in order to shed some light on the important advances we are making in our operation. Moving to Slide 3, we present some of the KPIs of the migration of our customers to our digital platform. As we showed previously, we opened new relationships with more than 3.7 million customers entirely through our digital channels. This is a trend that still accelerating.

We open one 1.5 million new relationships on our digital platform. In April alone, more than just opening new accounts, we noticed a growing engagement with our clients through digital channels and 54% of the products are acquiring entirely digitally. Even more important has been our customers' feedback. We chose excellent levels of satisfaction, which is NPS.

The first time we release NPS figures reaching close to 80 points. This is only a fraction of what we are developing and delivering to our customers but it already shows some of the results of our strategy. On Slide 4, you can see Iti. We present the evolution of Iti.

As I mentioned before, it was boring 2019 as a digital wallet. But over time, closely listened to our clients' demands and paying close attention to market developments. We notice that is a potential way to becoming a completely digital banking operation for clients with a simplified, of course, free of charge and fully digital banking platform. Over the last year, we work very diligently by voting the initial business model and improving upon the initial MVP.

We increased the product availability to offer things such as debit and credit cards, personal loans, and the possibility to withdraw money in our ATM network. Not only that but the clients also have access to an ever-growing list of benefits that are tailored to the geographic locations and profile. These changes already showed that we seem to be moving in the right direction. We reach 6 million clients, half of them were acquired in 2021 alone, giving this strong performance and the continuous improvement of this platform.

We have a goal of reaching 15 million clients by the end of this year. This is our ambition. We believe this is -- Iti is a platform with a great appeal in attracting new younger clients. Eighty-four of the clients don't have an active bank -- account in the bank when roughly 70% are between 18 and 35 years old.

We chose the potential that this platform has to reach this important demographic. Lastly, it's important to mention that Iti, in addition to being a business by itself, is also a relevant technology platform to support our other businesses. This is true for both monoline products such as credit cards and the other banking services. All in all, I believe this operation shows our capacity to listen to our clients' demands and learn from our experiences pivot and evolve.

Talking to -- now on mortgage and financing. We would discuss some of the dynamics behind two important portfolios within the retail bank: mortgages and auto loans. As you know, mortgage is an extremely important product for our clients, probably one of the most relevant financial decisions families will take. It's one of the key products to increase the lifetime value of banking relationships.

But for historical reason, it is still underpenetrated in the country and represents only 10% of the Brazilian GDP. If you put those two things together, it's easy to understand why this segment is so competitive. In 2020, we positioned ourselves and brought an important innovation to the Brazilian mortgage market when we launched a product in which interest rates linked to the saving deposit which, at the time, were the lowest interest rates available in the market. We were able to do that onto a unique funding structure, which allows us to be more competitive in pricing without eroding the product's profitability.

And our operation reacted to this stimulus as the origination more than tripled in the first quarter when comparing to the same period from 2020, reaching a record-breaking of 10.3 billion reals. This resulted in a 12.1% portfolio growth in this quarter alone. This extremely fast expansion, unfortunately, brought us a negative side effect in the form of below ideal customer service. This resulted in a negative hit on our transactional NPS score for the operation.

Throughout the first quarter, we worked tirelessly to improve our product line and expand our teams, and we feel that in the next quarters, we should see a marked improvement in client satisfaction with the product as the new vintages already show 50 points NPS score coming from 30 points, as you can see in this slide. As for auto loans, the pandemic brought an important change in our clients' perspectives about the benefits of owning, which in turn foster demand for auto loans. This led to an important year-over-year growth of 25.6%, as you can see when looking at our retail operation. And last but not least, the demand for heavy-duty vehicles and trucks was also quite strong.

And with bespoke financing lines, we were able to grow more than 30% over the last 12 months and became leaders in this segment. Moving to Slide 6, agribusiness. I would like to share that what we have been doing, especially in the agribusiness sector despite the fact we have been catering to this very important industry. We lacked an integrated strategy to serve all the different actors with specific developed products and teams.

This started to change when we recently created an agribusiness division within the corporate banking operation. We developed a completely new platform and hired a specialist to explain the commercial team and geographic coverage to offer a product tailored to each clients' needs. And we are already reaping positive results. Client satisfaction is among the highest in the bank, while this credit portfolio grew 11.2% over the last quarter and 20.5% over the last 12 months, reaching 46.5 billion reals at the end of the period.

This growth was reached with a strong source of environment analysis as we are working side-by-side with meat producers to ensure the production chain, traceability, and preventive legal deforestation. I'm confident that this segment will continue to be an important driver for our growth in the quarter to come as we aim to end 2021 with approximately 2,400 clients as a fivefold increase in relation to 2019. Moving to the next slide, Slide 7. The credit portfolio grew 4.2% in the quarter.

And this growth was driven not only by the mortgage vehicle loans I just mentioned but also by the large corporate and LatAm credit portfolio. The latter mainly a result of the Brazilian real devaluation. As for the large corporate portfolio, we had an expectation that the debt markets would be already at a normalized level in this first quarter, which did not happen. On the other hand, the good news is that we managed to put good debt operations on our balance sheet that can distribute it over time, which boosted our credit growth in the period.

The credit card portfolio decreased 4% in the quarter mainly due to seasonal effect and also due to a lesser extent, a deceleration of the economic activity in the country. Lastly, the personal loans book grew 1.6%. Despite this somewhat uninspiring growth at the first glance, there was an important mix changing in its composition. As you can see on the table at the bottom right corner of this slide, that both the overdraft portfolio and the traditional unsecured personal locals grew mid-teens while the reprofiling loans decline almost 10% in the same period.

And this trend materialized mostly at the end of the quarter so it was not yet meaningful enough to impact our NII in the quarter, but it paints a positive picture for the next quarters nonetheless. Moving to Slide 8, financial margin with clients. We show that our financial margins grew around 1% in the quarter despite the seasonal effect from the lower amount of calendar days. This growth was mainly driven by the higher average credit portfolio as well by the remuneration of our capital, and these trends resulted in a flat NIM in the quarter.

Looking ahead, we expect to see an acceleration of our NII, not only as an effect of the credit growth but also due to higher utilization of revolving loans and consumer loans as already depicted on the previous slide. Moving to Slide 9. We show the evolution of our asset management platform. Over the past few years, with the structural reduction of interest rates in Brazil, we began to observe more and more customers yearn for more sophisticated and differentiated products in order to invest their money.

This demand led us to make profound changes in our asset management area, seeking to offer the most complete portfolio of investment products in the country, implementing the concept of an open platform in the bank. Therefore, we started offering third-party products and services in addition to our product. This strategy was a resounding success as we already have almost 330 billion reals in assets under custody in this platform alone. Not only that, but we strive to diversify our own asset management products, aiming to bring more added value in line with our client's demands and expectations.

A good example lies in the asset management products that are alpha-focused. We used to have 9 billion reals in assets under management from such a product. And now, we have more than 60 billion reals under management, which is exactly the type of product that our customers have been demanding the most. Additionally, to support this movement, we changed our own asset management division, creating independent asset management teams within the bank, which attracted more than 40 of the most telling portfolio managers in the country.

Seeking to expand our products' capillarity and reach, we also started offering them on third-party platforms, and we already distribute our products on 16 different platforms and banks in addition to Itau itself. We also invested a lot in transforming our clients' investment journey by launching our new investment platform, which is called Ion, and this platform brought us a completely new user experience for our clients. We are also investing heavily in our new investment advisory model, bringing transparency regarding our advisors' incentives. More than that, we are hiring more than 1,200 new investment advisors to help our clients better understand the products offer and make the best choices in line with their profile, of course.

And I believe these changes will further leverage our customer's perception of value. Moving to Slide 10. Now, I'm going through fees and insurance revenues. We can see that it declined 1.9% in the quarter and this performance was largely expected as a result of two factors.

The first one is related to credit and debit cards. Seasonally, these revenues declined in the first quarter of every year due to lower economic activity in the period. But it's fair to say that this effect was further deepened by the deterioration of the pandemic in Brazil and its negative effect on the economic activity. And the second one is our current account fees, which declined 3.5% in the quarter.

As we mentioned in the previous quarter earnings call, since the implementation of the new fast payment solution PIX, we took the opportunity to exempt our clients to pay any fee in wire transfers despite their preferred method. In this quarter, we have the full effect of this movement. It's also important to mention that the asset management fees declined 7.2 in the period despite the continuous growth of the assets under management I just mentioned, and this was mainly a result of lower performance fees and I expect to see better performance in the next quarter. Also, it's important to say that our investment banking continues to be an important source of revenue and retain the leadership position in the market.

Despite the macroeconomic volatility, the capital markets continue to show resiliency. And the pipeline of transactions for the next quarter is as strong, if not better, than what we saw last year. Lastly, our insurance revenues grew 5.5% in the quarter as a result of better financial margins in our private pension plans business. Now moving to Slide 11.

Switching gears here. I'll tell you about the credit quality KPIs. As you know, every year, we see a pickup in short-term delinquency in the first quarter, especially driven by the individual's portfolio. This is due to a higher concentration of expenses in the period that range from the holiday season expenses to annual property taxes.

In line with the previous year, this quarter, we saw the same movement as the NPL 15 to 90 days ratio increased 35 basis points. But even more important was this portfolio, the NPL 90 days ratio, which decreased 30 basis points and reached the lowest level in our recent history. As for the SME portfolio, we saw an increase of 80 basis points in the NPL 90 days ratio, and this movement was expected and it's related to the end of the grace period of the reprofiled loans portfolio. Despite this increase, the NPL ratio is still in line with pre-COVID levels.

And if we strip the reprofiled loans from this ratio, we can see that the remaining portfolio continues to improve the credit quality ratio. Also, it's important to mention that this portfolio's short-term delinquency declined 20 basis points, which reinforces our review that the worst might be behind this. As a result of the positive credit quality trains on the retail cost of credit was 39.9% lower in the quarter. Lastly, our coverage ratio declined 22 percentage points in the previous mainly as a result of the wholesale segment both in Brazil as in LatAm.

These positive KPIs despite the negative macroeconomic context we are going through, are a direct result of the strategy we put in place last year when we launched a program with a wide range of customized solutions that includes grace periods, extended low in terms, and additional credit offers. This initiative thought to offer more breathing room to individual customers and micro-small companies helping them transverse -- travel through this crisis with greater tranquility. As we mentioned at the time, it was a trade-off where we ended temporarily giving up a part of our NII in order to support our clients and therefore our credit quality. On Slide 12, IT.

A very relevant part of the digital transformation is what's happening behind the scenes or inside the bank, which is not easily captured by looking at KPIs from our digital channels and client acquisition. Here at Itau Tech, knowledge is not an internal service provided an area that silo then detach it from the business. It's now another key element on the teams that work is toward serving our clients and developing, of course, products and business within the firm. On Slide 12, but also on the next one, we'll try to give you some insights on the major developments within our technology teams and how it's translating into superior KPIs with direct impacts on our business.

Firstly, we managed more than doubled the investment in new solutions while reducing infrastructure spending by 28%. This is a much more efficient way of spending money, and it's a trend we should see moving forward. But it goes without saying that people and culture is what drives real transformation. In that sense, we have been reorganizing our teams around community and squads operation in Agile methodology.

We have progressed well so far in that aspect. And some of our most important business teams such as credit card, cash management, and mortgage are already working under this new set as well roughly 50% of the eligible technology operation business and products teams. The benefits are very tangible already, as you can see in this slide. This is why our goal is to reach 100% by the end of 2022.

Now, moving to the next slide, Slide 13, talking about the digital platform and DevOps. We continue to show other aspects of our digital transformation that I believe are very important here. We are looking at our cloud migration effort. Our goal is to reach 50% of our services in the public cloud by 2022.

But please note, it's not just simply copying and paste of the current systems to a new remote data center. We are rewriting code and updating the solutions, breaking down monolithic systems, and using microservices architectures so we can maximize the benefits from this movement. This allows us to have a more autonomous speed, productivity, and efficiency in our operations. And in parallel, we are considering expanding the deployment of codes, which we're reducing -- which are reducing, in fact, the amount of time spent on business complexity points.

And finally, in terms of quality, we already see ourselves as benchmarks as our digital platforms have the highest availability rates in the market. What's behind our digital transformation is our obsession with improving the customer experience and satisfaction. Now moving to Slide 14. We conceptually detail here our efficiency program.

The bank always had a strong focus on cost management and efficiency, but we understand that we need to go beyond what we have already achieved for that is what's necessary to strengthen our efficiency culture throughout an institution at all levels. We needed to question ourselves tirelessly about opportunities to optimize, of course, and optimize our activities and process. Additionally, we implemented a transversal efficiency program covering the entire bank. Currently, just to give an idea, we have 16 efficiency fronts.

Each of those fronts counts with the presence and the sponsorship of one of our senior management and we have bi-weekly work meetings to measure its evolution. Moreover, we standardize the work methodology with detailed KPIs and planning structure in a meticulous work that's already beginning to show results as we have 1,200 initiatives being planned, out of which more than 400 are already in the implementation phase. These are of several types from a small initiative to reduce waste to a large restructuring project to major one or structure one. In fact, as you may notice, we have made a large known recording provision this quarter related to the restructure of our operations within the retail bank, which we will implement over the next two years and will bring great benefits in terms of quality of service and efficiency.

I'm confident that we follow the changes and transformation we implemented so far. We are on track to achieve our goal, which is to sequentially reduce our core expectation over the next three years. Talking about the noninterest expenses. The financial results now on Slide 15, that what I have just presented over the last three slides, can already be seen on this slide as are our noninterest expenses declining 6.6% in the quarter while we continue to invest in our business and in IT.

These investments generate more room in our expenses, opening the opportunity for further investment in our saying self-funding themselves. At the end of this, how we will fund future investments in the bank over the next few years. Now moving to Slide 16. We showed that our Tier 1 capital ratios decreased 20 basis points on the quarter.

This contraction was largely due to the FX impact, both in our credit portfolio and in our overhead strategy. These negative impacts were partially offset by our financial performance with a higher net income and profitability in the quarter. Now on Slide 17, talking about the guidance. Well, I think despite the deterioration of the sanitary crisis in Brazil and its negative impacts over the economic activity, we still believe that the guidance for 2021 is to express our best expectation for the year.

And now on the last one, finally, on Slide 18, I end this presentation, and I would like to invite you all for a public meeting on June 2nd when we will bring all the members of our new executive committee to present our vision for the future of the bank. These will be a fully digital event and we will send further details in the next few days. With these, I conclude the presentation, and we may start the Q&A session. Thank you.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Mario Pierry with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Mario Pierry -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Congratulations on the quarter. Thank you for a very detailed presentation.

It really helps us understand the bank's strategy better. Milton, I have two questions. The first one is on Iti, right? You show that you're growing your Iti clients quite fast. You're able to attract clients.

They're not clients of the bank. So I would like to understand here, how do you think about monetizing on these clients, right? You talked about some products there but if you think about your ability to monetize on these clients, how do you think you will compare to the level of monetization of your regular bank clients? And then on that topic, how do you see the threat of competition from fintechs? How do you rank that as a threat to the profitability of Itau? And then, my second question is related to operating expenses, right? As you talked about, you had another onetime provision charge for restructuring. We see that your employee base in Brazil is declining excluding all of the hires that you're making in IT. Well, how do you see your branch network over the next couple of years? Is there room for you to be reducing branches quite aggressively? Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you, Mario. Thank you very much for your question. I will start with the first one. Of course, when you mentioned about the platform, Iti platform.

So the first thing is that we had to do a major change in the way we were approaching the market and approaching the clients. At the very beginning, it was conceived to be a payment platform. But at the very end, we started to migrate to full banking -- digital banking offer. This is a way to compete and to attract clients.

As you can see on the numbers we showed, we are not -- we are bringing new clients to the bank at the end. So 84% of the clients are new clients in the bank. And also, we have a very important approach with young people and nonbanking clients, which are the major public coming to this platform. So this is a different way.

It's completely different from doing a business plan as we used to do in the past that you know that in the second, third, fourth, and fifth year, what will happen and what will be the profitability. So the idea here is to change the mechanic. So we bring clients -- we do -- we bring them to a very unique experience. So in the coming quarters, we will understand their needs and how to monetize the platform.

So this is the way we are approaching. Of course, one of the best ways of monetizing this platform will be credit in the mid to long term, so this is our view on credit cards and personal loans. This will be, of course, the strategy. We don't have a product roadmap.

We have a need for client's roadmap, which is very important, it's a different approach again. And so we'll be enhancing and creating new products together with the clients as they need for different features and products. So it's difficult to give you a number right now, but we do believe that by bringing those clients with a very good user experience and level of service and a very unique technology platform, we'll find ways to monetize those clients in the future. So this is the most important way.

Talking about fintech, yes, we see some companies that are not fintech anymore. They grew a little, so they have an important size. They are, of course, fighting for some markets, but they are opening new markets as well. And we see some complementary new markets coming.

As you can see here, Iti is opening new markets for Itau as well. And Iti competes with these fintechs and platforms in the open market. We believe that we have the balance sheet, the capability to approve credit, and to manage credit in the midterm with the data that we have, with the models that we already have, and this could be differentiation in the long term, the capability to increase credit in the platform even though we recognize there is still a tough competition coming from fintechs in the market. And it's part of our job here to compete and to deliver a better experience to our client.

This is a mandate inside the bank. Now, talking about the provisions you asked. It's nonrecurrent. And the reason why it's nonrecurrent because this is a new structural project that we define in these last 3 months.

It doesn't have anything to do with the regular course of the opex of the bank. And in the other hand, this is not recurring, so we don't believe we won't be seeing provisions like that in the coming quarters. This is a very specific one made for the simplification of the way we deliver services to our clients throughout the branches. So there is a merge going on through the various types of team, and this, of course, will generate those effects.

That's the reason why we made and anticipate the provisions in a nonrecurrent. So we are very comfortable with that, and it doesn't have an impact with our costs in the first quarter, OK? So our two unrelated lines. Talking about the future of branches, some information that I believe will be constructive here is the following. When we look the banking clients on the system, there was an important improvement in the last 10 years of 16% of banking clients, new banking clients to the system.

Even though the market share of mobile reached 45%, 50% of the transactions, on a nominal basis, today, we have more payments throughout the branches than we used to have in the past years. So even though there is the share of the channels has changed a lot, we still see a very important role playing and coming from the branches. When you look in Brazil, the bank city of branches per 100,000 inhabitants, you will see that we have the lower figures when compared to very -- countries that have gone through the digitalization, I won't tell of their currency, but of their payments. And that means that nowadays, we have a good density when compared to developed markets where much more payments are digitalized than in Brazil.

Having said that, we are going through a very relevant transformation in our branch area. And if you look five years to now, we closed around 1,000 branches in this period. And the reason why is because we had an important redundancy of branches. And nowadays, we are much more comfortable with the one we have.

Of course, there is an important migration to digital channels, and the pandemic moves a lot of clients to digital channels. We need to see how will be the flow of people going to branches after this period, but we kept even reducing 1,000 branches in the period, the 84% GDP penetration that we have throughout our branches. And we are very comfortable about that. I believe that our -- after the pandemic, we may see a reduction in branches, it's expected to.

But we are changing a lot the way our branches are restructured. We have what we call the hubs, the full branches that we have, and also the satellite branches that will have a very specific ambition to serve clients in specific regions with a very specific demand. And this is a major change in our model, and I can go about -- and I can give you more information about that in the next call and an idea to bring you more information about this. So we do believe that the remote and the physical presence, and that's why we say phygital here, it is still very important.

And for more complex products, in general, we see a huge demand from the clients to talk and to be -- having a face-to-face experience. It could be remotely or it could be a presence in the physical branch. So we do believe that the physical branches still have an important role in our strategy.

Mario Pierry -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

That's very clear, Milton. I appreciate your answers. Let me just follow up on Iti then really quickly. When we think about all of the other digital banks in Brazil, it seems like we have a new digital bank popping up every week, what do you think makes people choose to download an account on Iti? And you can talk a little bit about your acquisition cost of -- your customer acquisition cost at Iti.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Perfect. Look, first of all, the client, he wants a simple payment account. He doesn't want to go through that process that you have on a regular current account. He wants a free-of-charge experience and a digital one.

And it's to be somehow sexy for the client when he looks and sees he did find himself with the brain with the appeal of the product and I think he has an important role. Something youth, something that brings new opportunities for that client. So when you go to Iti, you can see that in four minutes you open an account, and this is very impressive. And when we see some information that it's provided to the market, some interviews that they make to clients, you see that Iti nowadays leads very well in a lot of rankings, in surveys that they make specific surveys the experience to open an account in Iti.

But it's free of charge, so this is basically what the client wants. He wants an account, a payment account, he wants to pay bills, he wants to put in some cash and he wants to have a prepaid card. But then we can, as we understand the behavior of the client, start to provide credit. And this is something that most of those clients -- they don't have a credit score or they don't have a credit experience in the market.

And this is very important for us to provide them some financial education, gamification as well and also to provide a lot of discounts and cash backs and things that for him is very important for his own income generation. So this is basically what they look for. What we made here is that we couldn't go to market if we didn't have a very, very competitive cost of acquisition because, at the end of the day, if we're not able to monetize in the long term, that will be a huge cost for the bank. And nowadays, we are working with 24 reals, 25 reals per account.

This is the cost of acquisition, which is more percentage of what we have when acquiring a client through a physical branch or any other channel. So Iti has been a way to make and to bring a CAC, cost of our client -- client acquisition cost, very, very competitive. And this is why we are achieving a very important amount of people.

Mario Pierry -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

It's very, very clear. Thank you very much.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you. Thank you, Mario.

Operator

Our next question comes from Tito Labarta with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Tito Labarta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, Milton and everyone. Thank you for calling and taking my questions. Also, a couple of questions, if I may. I guess, first, on your revenue growth outlook, you know, both on the financial margin with clients.

I know it has impacted a bit by seasonality, but even looking on a year-over-year basis, the financial margin with clients was down despite the good loan growth. And then also on the fee income side, right? And also some seasonality there, but cards are down, the asset management fees, you know, despite the growth in asset and the management, are also down supported by the advisory business, which can be cyclical. But I just want to think in terms of sort of a longer-term, sort of revenue growth outlook, how should we think about the competitive environment? You're talking about the fintech and everything going on, movements in rates. And I know you have the guidance, which you expect so is the best guidance for the year.

But how much pressure do you see on revenue growth going forward? Do you think the worst is behind and your revenue growth can begin to pick up? If you can help us just think about that, you know, given all the competitive dynamics. And then my second question is on the cost of credit, you know, good performance there. But the cost of credit is now below historical levels, and I know you have plenty of excess reserves, which you could perhaps use. But also again, on a more recurring basis, once you get back to normal, is this a new level of cost of credit given the changing mix, or should this go back up as things normalize? If you can help us think about sort of a longer-term level for that cost of credit would be helpful.

Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you for the question, Tito. So first of all, talking with the margin with clients. The main topic that I would like to reinforce here is that we had two major effects last year. Somehow we had the revolving credit price, pricing discussions with the central bank regulating, and these had an important impact for us in the financial margin with clients last year.

We had a pandemic, which was very strong and hit very strong our activity. But I also would like to reinforce that we made some self-inflicted decisions here, that in the short term, we say it's an investment in the relationship and the lifetime value of the client. But on the order hand, we had a huge impact on our revenues last year when we migrate clients from revolving credit and for clean portfolios with a much better spread to long-term credit lines with a grace period and a very -- I wouldn't say very low, but a lower interest rate on the portfolio. So we've been paying that for three quarters in a row.

We still have the impact of that. This is -- we'll be reducing at a slow pace in the coming quarters. And last year, we had as well the government credit lines, which we made an important amount again, very focused on our clients how to help them to go throughout the crisis. And this has also an impact on the financial margin with clients.

Even though in terms of return on equity and a return on the expected loss of this portfolio, it's very positive because it's a very well-protected credit line due to the guarantees that we have from the government on those credit lines. So having said that, we've been seeing an acceleration in the last quarter. On the balance of those credit lines, we see an improvement. Talking about the first quarter of 2021, we expect that coming on a positive trend from the coming quarters.

So we still believe that we are able to deliver the guidance looking at what we see coming ahead. It will depend, of course, on the credit environment and the capability to increase credit lines with the clients that are going through a tough moment here with the pandemic, but we are positive about that, and I think we have the capability to catch up. But on the other hand, I'm talking about here NII, we see that we grew the portfolio, the big company's portfolio as well as we have seen a market -- the local market, capital market. It's not open as we've seen in the past, so we grew not only in 2020 but also in 2021, the portfolio of large companies, putting in the balance sheet credits that have a good return.

But of course, when compared to the retail credit lines, it won't help in the mix. So it put pressure on the NIM, but it brings profitability here, not only on the NII, which is very important, but also on the fee side that we are able to cross-sell those credit lines with the corporate clients and large corporates in general. So we see a positive trend. But again, part of that is self-inflicted.

And our view here is that we cannot look only at the short term, but we have to look at the lifetime value of the client. It's very difficult for you to make this calculation if you don't have the information, but we do have and we've been seeing very positive outcomes about this decision we made not only on the credit cost but also on the NPS and the capability to cross-sell with those clients, especially when they go out of this difficult and tough moments, OK? Talking about the cost of credit, yes, we had a very, very good cost of credit in this first quarter. I would say this is not our expectation in terms of level. We do believe that in the coming quarters, we will come above that, which is, well, our expectation.

I've been saying that we do believe that we'll be more close to the bottom of the range of the guidance we provided to you, and we still believe that we can do and deliver below that. And the reason for that is that in this quarter, we have not consumed part of the expected loss provision that we made last year, but we do have the expectation to consume. I'm using the word consume, I'm not seeing a revert provision -- reversing provisions, I'm talking about consumption because those provisions were done in the toughest moment of the pandemic last year. And looking at our NPL formation, we were provisioning much more than 100% in the last quarter, so we do believe we have the expectation to consume.

You look at this cost of credit and compared to 2019, you will see that it's a very similar level. When you look at the overall cost of credit, we are having a very good performance on the large corporate and mid companies as well. We believe this is very positive for this scenario that we are living in. It's difficult to project 2022.

But as we have been seeing the portfolio growing for four years in a row, we expect that the nominal cost of credit grows as well in the coming quarters.

Tito Labarta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

All right. Thank you, Milton. That's very helpful very thorough. Maybe one follow-up, if I can.

On the lifetime value of clients, as you mentioned, right? You're very focused on that. Any initial data you can provide on what kind of LTV to CAC? You might be getting or targeting to eventually monetize these clients?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

CAC and which? I'm sorry, I missed the first part. You said that --

Tito Labarta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Like a lifetime -- yeah, sorry, like a lifetime value to -- LTV to CAC.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Oh, LTV. Sorry, I didn't understand it. OK. No, we are not releasing that because it's calculated for different segments in different ways.

But this is a metric that we are pursuing and looking and guaranteeing that it's implied here in all the KPIs that we have for all the businesses. So we don't have one figure to release, we have many different figures that we follow. What we are seeing is that on the clients that we have, a proactive approach in helping them going throughout the crisis, we have been seeing a lot of benefits of doing that, especially on the NPS, which is very well correlated with the lifetime value of the client. So this is the way we've been seeing that.

Tito Labarta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

OK, great. Thank you, Milton.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much, Tito.

Operator

Our next question comes from Henrique Navarro with Santander. Please go ahead.

Henrique Navarro -- Banco Santander -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking the time. My first question is on the -- I'd like to come back on the provision for a restructuring. I understand -- I mean, really when we do this kind of provision, normally there's a long-term plan where both tips are higher than the provision itself.

I saw through your presentation that you have to go to personally reduce the bank core cost over the next two years. So I would like to understand the relations between the provision toward Iti and this, you know, three years ago. I mean, what kind of savings shall we expect for, you know, for the next two years based on this provision? And that's my first question. Then I'll jump to the second one.

Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

OK. Thank you, Henrique. So to go through that, I can tell you that we've been seeing to the market that we are pursuing a reduction -- nominal reduction in costs. This is the second year in a row and this has to do with our efficiency program that we've been leading here and dealing for two years now.

So the idea here is to separate what its core cost, what is investment, and to separate and say, look, we went to reduce the core costs of the bank to open room for new investment. This provision, it's not why we want to achieve these three years in a row. Three years is to give you a horizon here to say that's what we can see looking from now, things can change in the meanwhile. So that's why with that three years would be a good positive message to give you from where we can see what we can deliver.

And of course, this is part of this is structured efficiency program. This is one of the initiatives as you saw before. We have more than 1,600 initiatives, 400 are in place right now. And this is a moving target.

So every day we are discussing what else we can do. So this is not why we will achieve, but of course, it may help us because we are simplifying the way we deliver the relationship with our clients in the branches, on the operation and commercial team. There is a huge investment on this front over here. So this is part of the transformation we are making on the bank.

But this is not what explains this reduction in the coming years. This is one of the initiatives but there are many orders as we were seeing here in these previous slides.

Henrique Navarro -- Banco Santander -- Analyst

OK. Thank you. My second question is on Iti. You mentioned that you have 6 million clients and 84% of clients without an active account, which basically means 16% of our clients are coming from Itau.

So we're talking about 1 million clients. I would like to understand, how do you see this cannibalization looking forward? I mean it's something that shall increase, decrease? I mean, your target is 15 million clients until the end of 2020. How many of those clients might come from Itau? I would like to hear from you how do you see this cannibalization between Itau and Iti? And when do you believe Iti will reach breakeven? Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Perfect. Henrique, so coming to this cannibalization question, we have a very simple view, either we do or someone will. So as we have many offers nowadays in the market and we have an important churn in our client base and this is something that we follow on our regular basis, it's expected that clients, especially the ones that have this profile. They migrate for the regular current account to the product, that's for them and for the bank is better because most of those clients, if you allocate the cost of the branch you will see that they are not profitable at all for the bank.

So they have cost somehow. And when they migrate to a very digital platform with a very small cost of acquisition and a cost of maintenance, we can serve this client in a much better way with a very more correct cost to serve the client. So this is positive at the end of the bank when you have the true view of the clients that keep using your products, your current account in the branches. So I see that as a positive migration, not as a negative migration.

And also, today, or in the coming -- in the past years, we were losing those clients to someone else. So I didn't have a very economic way, intelligent technology way to serve those clients. So I was aware I was losing those clients to the market. Now I can capture, bring new clients and also retain clients that would be losing to the market.

So I see that in a positive way. About the breakeven on Iti, we are not giving any release on that. And the reason why, we are pivoting here and investing and seeing what is the size, how many clients, how we monetize. So we don't see that at a five-year business plan, we see more on a quarterly review to understand if the OKRs and the KPIs that we had planned for this quarter were achieved.

And if yes, we will invest three more quarters and keep doing like that. So we don't have a specific metric in terms of P&L. And this is the way that the new market, the new competition works. And this is the same way we are approaching Iti in a completely different way than we used to approach all our business lines in the bank.

So we are learning as well the way to understand what are the success metric relating to client cost of acquisition, engagement, NPS, those are the most relevant metrics that we are following now.

Henrique Navarro -- Banco Santander -- Analyst

OK. That was very clear. Thank you very much.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you, Henrique.

Operator

Your next question comes from Jorge Kuri with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Jorge Kuri -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, everyone. Thanks for the call and congrats on the numbers. I wanted to go back to the net interest margin outlook and mainly understand the relationship between SELIC rates and your margin. And evidently, there is a lot of moving parts over the last 12 months, as you pointed out, Milton, in how your margin with clients fared.

But there is one big item there which is rates which were very different a year ago. So your Brazil annualized average margin was 11% in the first quarter of last year with average SELIC rates of 4%. It was 8.5% in the first quarter of this year, with average SELIC significantly below around 2.5% average for the quarter. If consensus is right and SELIC rates go back up to around 5% to 6% a year from today, what do you think your annualized margin will be? Would it be fair to say that you should be above what you did in the first quarter of last year? And just in general, so you know, forget about what it was back then, where do you think that will be in an environment where rates are 5% to 6%? And I have a second question which is similar which is your asset management business.

I think there's a bit of confusion there. You know, your volumes did really well, but your margins didn't. And it also, I think, is impacted by the average SELIC rates where your fixed income products, which is a really big part of what you have under custody and management, can generate the same amount of fees for you. Where do you think -- should we see an acceleration in those fees over the next year as a result of rates moving back up to 5% to 6%? Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you. Thank you very much, Jorge. So beginning here with the financial margin we have clients, I would tell you that when you look back a few years ago you will see that our large corporate portfolio was not growing the same way it grew last year in this year. And this, of course, has a direct impacting the NIM.

So we have to go back into the mix that we had in the first quarter of 2001 and compare to the mix we have now. So on the NII side, we will be growing the NII due to this increasing portfolio. But we have a mix that when you go back to the first quarter of 2013, it was a riskier mix not only on the retail side. Compared to the wholesale side, we have more credit card personal loans and less mortgage, less vehicle auto loans, and also you had a lower portfolio of large corporate companies.

So having said that, I don't believe we will be going back now to this 9.2% that we saw. I believe we were going to be improving our financial margin with clients. But I think we found a different mix, OK? This is one of the issues. The second one, yes, you're right, you will have the impact of the increase in the interest rate.

We were seeing the first quarter, a low-interest rate scenario but now we expect by the year-end of 5.5% SELIC interest rate and these, of course, will bring impact here to financial market margin with the client, especially older working capital of the bank. But also there is, of course, a pass-through to some credit lines depending on the competition, depending on our capability to pass through those impacts. So I believe our mix will bring us things we believe to be a little bit below what you see here of 9.2%. I don't believe we'll go back there easily.

I think it's a long run to get back there for the many reasons I mentioned, OK? So this is one of the points. The second one, on asset management, it's very important to understand what happened, and I think it's our responsibility here to be very clear about this. What happened -- first of all, with the reduction of the interest rate, we saw clients asking to change products for simple products, so simple money market funds to deposits and to treasury products within the bank. So just to give you an idea, what we lost in this traditional product on the asset management, 75%, we're recovering deposits in the bank.

So if you look at our deposit, you'll see major growth, and the reason why was because everybody was very concerned about the crisis and the pandemic. We saw some effect on those credit portfolio assets product. We had a lot of volatility in a mark-to-market that was hitting a lot the profitability of those assets, of those funds. And there is a huge migration to fixed income products within the bank.

So this was the first topic. On the second hand, we've been increasing products in our asset management to deliver more alpha to our clients. And as we deliver more alpha, we have more performance fees, and we bring more volatility to this income line. What happened, when we look this quarter compared to the third -- last quarter of last year and first quarter of 2020, we lost around 40 million reals, a little bit less in performance fees that we had in the last quarter and then we had in the first quarter of 2020.

And this explains a little bit about why we had this reduction here on our income statement. Our expectation is that in the coming quarters, we will be able to deliver better performance fees. Of course, it depends on the market, it depends on our alpha generation, but we are positive about the teams, and we do believe that we make an important recovery. So first, migration from asset to the bank fixed income.

And of course, we lose income when we do this migration, it is expected to be like that. Whenever we have an increase in the interest rate and we expect this by the year-end, we may see, again, a migration from this product to traditional asset product even though clients are looking for riskier products. And that is why we grew a lot our capacity to deliver those type of funds that will generate more volatility, but more performance fees in the coming quarters. This is our expectation.

I'm not sure if I made myself clear.

Jorge Kuri -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Yeah. Thanks, Milton. And I guess, let me go back to the first question. If we quantify this and then I think you were looking at the consolidated margin, which is fine I was looking at Brazil but let's do it on the consolidated margin.

So you're at 7.3% now, you said it would be difficult to go back to 9.2% even if rates more than double from the current level. But you know, say rates at the end of 2022 are at 6% and that means that your margins, you know, maybe you pick up 100 basis points, you'll go from 7.3% to 8.3% or 8.5%, it's still below the 9.2%. That on prices -- on an improvement in prices is up roughly a 15% improvement in prices. And if your volumes next year grow on average 10%, which seems pretty plausible under a recovery scenario.

I mean, right there you're talking potentially about 25% NII growth. Is that within expectations, is it realistic? Where we're in these numbers you think I'm over or understating the math?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

No, I think the math is correct. I cannot say anything about the math. The only thing is that will depend on the way our portfolio will improve in terms of mix in the coming quarters. So I have difficulty to tell you now what is the projection but I do believe that the math set to these variables.

That means if we maintain the same level of mix that we have, you are correct. The question is how the mix will improve in the coming quarters. And we don't have the answer now but we'll keep track on that.

Jorge Kuri -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

But from up from just a top-down perspective, with COVID behind significantly lower interest rates today, hopefully, the economy growing, wouldn't a risk on mode be justified over the next 12 months versus the last 12 months?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Sure, sure. But we have to put in perspective the competition as well and how the market will evolve. I do believe so that we have the opportunity -- we may be able to increase the margin in the coming quarters but, again, we have to think a lot about the mix and the competition. So I'm positive, but we have to keep this on track.

Jorge Kuri -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you, Milton. Very clear. Thanks.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much. Thank you, Jorge.

Operator

Our next question comes from Carlos Gomez with HSBC. Please go ahead.

Carlos Gomez-Lopez -- HSBC -- Analyst

Hello, Milton, good morning. Two brief questions from me, and one is if you could give us an update on the XP transaction. If there is anything new that we should know or dates that you have for the closing? And second, we noticed that there was an increase in provisions for labor claims, they almost doubled from last year. Any particular reasons for it and what should we expect going forward? Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you, Carlos. Talking about XP, we had the expectation by the end of January to have the approval of the Fed so we could make the spinoff. We didn't have the approval yet, we may have in the short term but I cannot control this process so this is something that we are expecting here a decision, OK? Let's see that we have any news by the end of this month or maybe so. We already sent all the information we needed for many months, and now we have to wait for their approval.

So we don't have any new specifics on that. On the labor side, the reason why it's exactly the restructuring nonrecurrent provision that we made within the balance sheet and where we reinforced as we are simplifying the way we serve our clients on the retail side. We may have an impact on the labor side that's why we made more provisions. But this is completely related to the nonrecurrent provision we made in this quarter.

Carlos Gomez-Lopez -- HSBC -- Analyst

OK. That's very clear. And on XP, there is an approval from the Fed, but also your negotiation with XP itself regarding the transaction, any news there?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

No. On the XP side, they made a communication to the market. This is a negotiation among the stakeholders. We are not involved anymore after the spinoff.

So it's our shareholders with XP shareholders. This is a negotiation that doesn't have to do directly with us. I think they made this communication to the market that they're willing to make an incorporation offer in market conditions, but we have to expect that to be materialized. But this, again, is a discussion about between shareholders.

We are not involved in that. The only part of the process that we are involved in is with Fed approval.

Carlos Gomez-Lopez -- HSBC -- Analyst

Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much.

Operator

Your next question comes from Geoffrey Elliott with Autonomous. Please go ahead.

Geoffrey Elliott -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Hi, thank you. It's Geoffrey Elliott with Autonomous. A couple of questions. Firstly, on Iti.

What you're doing in terms of the digital bank, a separate brand trying to go after different clients sounds a bit like what Bradesco has been doing with Next the last few years. I know that you've been critical of that strategy in the past and said it wouldn't be right for Itau. So can you help us understand what you're doing that is different?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

OK. Thank you very much, Geoffrey, for your question. As we said at the very beginning, our strategy was to have an account -- payment account platform. We evolved to a fully digital bank experience to our clients.

This is something that it's made within the bank. So this is not separate from the bank. And this is one of our offers and business model to deliver a different experience to the clients that have the profile that I mentioned before. So this doesn't mean that we decided to have a fully digital bank separate from the bank because it's inside the bank.

This is somehow the evolution of our transformation process where we can deliver platforms and businesses like this. And we kept very focused, as you saw in the previous slide, on our digital transformation. And we'll be delivering, if necessary, if there is demand from clients, different digital platforms and businesses in the future the same way we did with Iti. But this is something -- a specific way and a value proposition for young and no-banking clients.

This is basically that. So this is a business inside Itau that has this profile and characteristics.

Geoffrey Elliot -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Thank you. And then the second question, current account fees, obviously down during the quarter. You mentioned there the impact of money transfers becoming free. Are you seeing any evidence of customers downgrading their checking account packages because of the dock and techy transfers, they can get them free anyway so they don't have to pay for a more expensive package to access those?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Perfect. I think there are two answers to your question here. First of all, we are changing the packages we have and trying to bring new features that are much more aligned with the needs of the clients as we have the capability to buy on a wholesale side and somehow embed on those packages a much more interesting feature for the client. So we are changing if stock and hedge was something very relevant.

We are bringing new features so the client can serve and keep the package if they wish. On the other hand, we have a very, very clear suitability view to our clients, and this is the approach. So we will be migrating clients that don't fit a specific package even though we lose revenues in the short term. So the idea here, again, it's investing the lifetime value of the client, suitability, and migrate package that is not confirmed with the usage of the clients.

We will try to reinvent some packages, and we are doing that in a very positive way. And if the client at the end is not a user of that package, of that features, we'll be migrating him to different packages, cheaper ones. So suitability and the needs of the client is the most important metric that we look when we make this decision. So this is our approach.

So we expect, yes, pressure in this line in the coming years, and we are working toward this view.

Geoffrey Elliot -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you, Geoffrey. Thank you very much.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Thiago Batista with UBS. Please go ahead.

Thiago Batista -- UBS -- Analsyt

Hi, guys. It's Thiago Batista. Hi, Milton. I have two questions, actually one is a follow-up.

But on the first one, on the Portuguese call, you mentioned that an ROE back to '19 levels is very difficult or not feasible. At that time, the ROE was about 24%. Looking for the first quarter, your ROE was, let's say, 18.5%. So do you believe that this type of profitability should be recurring in the near future? The second one is, again, about the restructuring plan.

Can you give a little bit more of details of this plan? Honestly, I didn't get correctly the plan. I'm not sure if this is, let's say, a simplification of your back office, if this is a change in the way of the branch. So if you can give a little bit more details on this plan?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

OK, Thiago, let me try to answer both of your questions. On the first one, I won't give you our guide in terms of return on equity. We are, of course, working toward -- if you look our guidance and if you've looked at something that we released last quarter, the midpoint of our guidance had implied the 17.6% return on equity. This is what we gave in terms of guidance.

In this quarter, we had a better performance than that. Of course, as you can see but we don't guide on a quarterly basis. So in the end, I will say that I will keep the guidance as to the best available information now. And if you look to the midpoint of the guidance again, we are talking about 17.6% return on equity, this is what we guided for the year.

We may have different geographic positions by the year-end but I can give you this is the best information I can provide you right now, which is very much different from what we had in 2019, as you just mentioned, OK? And on the second -- on your second question, we are integrating the operational and commercial teams off the branches and this is something that we announced, internally including. And the idea here is to have an owner. In the past, we used to have two owners here at the branches, the one that was responsible for all the operational area and the one responsible for the commercial area. And we don't believe that this is the best way to take care of our clients.

We want someone to own this store. We want someone to be focused here in the attention of the client and this, of course, the merge of teams have an impact and this is the decision we made and this is why we made the provisions here. Most of it is explained by these decisions. This is what I can give you in terms of information.

Thiago Batista -- UBS -- Analsyt

Very clear. Thanks, Milton.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much.

Operator

Your next question comes from Natalia Corfield with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Hi, all, and thank you for taking my question. I have two questions. The first one relates to your dividend. I'd like to know what is the plan for this year? And if you could also just remind me of what's going on in Brazil right now in terms of dividend because last year, you were restricted to distribute more than your minimum statutory, so an update on that? And also in terms of issuance in the international capital markets, what are your plans for 2021? You have one of your AT1s with a call for next year, so your thoughts on that would be very helpful.

Thank you.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much, Natalia. So let me go through your first question. The way we release our dividend policy, it's the same, we didn't change it. We don't have any restriction from the central bank now to pay dividends but we still keep with the same policy of being what exceeds the 13.5% of level one capital.

So the payment that we made in this first quarter was 25%, which is the minimum regulatory and statutory dividend payment and it will depend on how fast do we reach the 13.5% to pay the exceeding amount. So the idea here is to keep this 25% until we reach the 13.5% so then we can distribute more than that. So this is the policy, we kept the policy, and we kept the risk appetite for the capital at 13.5% for now. So this is basically that.

I don't think --

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

A follow-up on the -- when you mean the 13.5%, is 13.5% Tier 1 or 13.5% CET1?

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Level one.

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

OK, so --

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

So that includes the AT1 as well, OK?

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

All right.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

So on the second question here on the international market, we don't have planning anticipation for what will be our approach. It depends on market conditions. We are always looking for hybrid instruments on the -- of the foreign and local market as well. So it will depend on price, it will depend on conditions, our teams are always talking to the market having here propositions, understanding where the market is.

We like to diverse -- diversify our investors base. I think it's important to have a balance in the local market and in the offshore market. But it will depend on market conditions so our debt capital market team will be following up on every opportunity. If there is an opportunity to do something in the international market, we'll be doing that.

But it's difficult to anticipate it now. It will, again, depend on market conditions.

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Thank you, very clear.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Thank you very much, Natalia.

Operator

This concludes today's question-and-answer session. Mr. Milton Maluhy, at this time, you may proceed with your closing statement.

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Well, thank you all for the questions, for the interest in participating in our conference call. As you saw, we changed a lot and we provide a lot of new information here. I hope to catch up sooner. Stay well, stay safe.

Thank you very much. Bye-bye.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 83 minutes

Call participants:

Milton Maluhy Filho -- President

Mario Pierry -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Tito Labarta -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Henrique Navarro -- Banco Santander -- Analyst

Jorge Kuri -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Carlos Gomez-Lopez -- HSBC -- Analyst

Geoffrey Elliott -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Geoffrey Elliot -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Thiago Batista -- UBS -- Analsyt

Natalia Corfield -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

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