
MADRID, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Spain's Santander SAN.MC on Wednesday said it aimed to book a profit above 20 billion euros ($23.61 billion) by 2028 after lifting its profitability ratio by almost four percentage points to above 20%, helped by synergies from recent deals in the U.S. and Britain.
The goals are part of a 2026-2028 investor update it will hold in London following the proposed $12.2 billion acquisition of Webster WBS.N earlier this month and of TSB in July last year.
"Our strategic plan sets a new standard for profitable growth, with the aim to serve more than 210 million customers across Europe and the Americas," Executive Chair Ana Botin said in a statement.
Botin added that customer growth, together with disciplined execution of the bank's global business model, would drive higher revenues and structurally lower costs.
For end of 2028, it targeted a cost-to-income ratio of around 36% from 41.2% in 2025, or from 45.3% when taking into account additional costs such as the banking tax and other recurring operating costs, thanks to improved efficiencies from its IT transformation.
As part of its remuneration policy, the bank has a 50% payout ratio, which it distributes half in cash and half in shares.
From 2027 onwards, however, Santander said it would increase its cash proportion to 35%, with around 15% in shares, adding it expected to operate in 2028 with a core tier-1 capital ratio of around 13%.
($1 = 0.8472 euros)