Banking, finance, and taxes

The Vatican Bank Annual Report Now Open, a True First

Pope Francis has been working towards a pledge of greater and greater transparency in the Catholic Church. This pledge also includes financial transparency. For the first time ever, the Vatican’s bank has released its annual report disclosing its assets and liabilities. The bank is technically called the Institute of Religious Works, or the IOR. Its 2012 annual report was released on October 1, 2013, and has some eye-opening figures for the world to now see.

What will stand out first is that the IOR’s net income quadrupled to about 86.6 million euro, or about $117 million U.S. dollars, in 2012 from 20.2 million euro in 2011. The gains were tied to high interest income and trading and assets price gains. We would note that figures released here will only be stated in euros hereafter.

This income allowed a distribution of some 54.7 million euro to the Holy See in order for the pope to give to Catholic charities. It was also disclosed that the bank transferred some 31.9 million euro to the general operating risk reserve as retained earnings. Unfortunately, the bank also disclosed that 2013 was suffering from transition (reform and remediation) and rising interest rates. Other figures for 2012 were as follows compared to 2011:

  • 52.2 million euro in Net Interest Result, -19.6%;
  • 12.2 million euro in Net Fees and Commissions on asset management and transactions, +19.6%;
  • 51.1 million in net trading income (versus -38.2 million Euro in 2011) – value of securities sold as well as the unrealized profit and loss in the total value of securities;
  • Operating Expenses of 23.9 million euro, up 12%, including staff expenses, pension
    contributions, general maintenance and professional fees.
  • Equity grew by 3.6% from 741 million euro to 769 million euro;
  • and the IOR said that it ended 2012 with a solid equity ratio of 15.4%.

Another disclosure was that the IOR was entrusted with 6.3 billion euro in customers’ assets in 2012. These were 2.3 billion euro in deposits, 3.2 billion euro managed by the IOR under asset management agreements, and also 800 million euro in assets held for customers. Under IFRS accounting standards, 4.1 billion euro of those assets are on the balance sheet and the remaining 2.2 billion euro are disclosed as off-balance assets.

We have also included a snapshot of the assets and liabilities from the annual report as well. The figures are in euro (000) and are below:

We do have more than just a few questions about the balance sheet of the Vatican. These questions or points may sound rhetorical or prodding, but they are not intended to be. Is it fair to ask about the value of the historical assets and documents? How would you account for Goodwill, such as having the gateway or path to God? How would you value collections from churches all over the world? These issues are certainly too complex but would be interesting to see in real terms even if the calculations may be highly subjective or simply impossible.

Some will praise the openness of the report. Others will likely be critical of it. What we can say is that this is the first time that we have ever seen a balance sheet and income statement from the Vatican. The full PDF summary is here.

Take Charge of Your Retirement In Just A Few Minutes (Sponsor)

Retirement planning doesn’t have to feel overwhelming. The key is finding expert guidance—and SmartAsset’s made it easier than ever for you to connect with a vetted financial advisor.

Here’s how it works:

  1. Answer a Few Simple Questions. Tell us a bit about your goals and preferences—it only takes a few minutes!
  2. Get Matched with Vetted Advisors Our smart tool matches you with up to three pre-screened, vetted advisors who serve your area and are held to a fiduciary standard to act in your best interests. Click here to begin
  3. Choose Your  Fit Review their profiles, schedule an introductory call (or meet in person), and select the advisor who feel is right for you.

Why wait? Start building the retirement you’ve always dreamed of. Click here to get started today!

 

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.