By Thomas Wilson
TOKYO (Reuters) - Nomura Holdings Inc, Japan's biggest brokerage and investment bank, posted a 63 percent fall in fourth-quarter net profit on Thursday as risk appetite among retail clients fell amid volatile markets.
Nomura said in a statement its net profit for the three months ended March was 22.7 billion yen ($207.61 million), versus 61.3 billion yen a year earlier. The slowdown in growth was the steepest in almost four years.
Nomura's annual net profit fell 8 percent to 219.3 billion yen ($2.01 billion), from 239.6 billion yen a year ago. That was lower than an average forecast of 256.58 billion yen of five analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.
Pretax profit at Nomura's key retail division, which serves mostly individual Japanese investors, slid 17 percent in the fourth quarter as sales of stocks and investment trusts slowed amid falling markets and a rising yen.
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Nomura's overseas division recorded a pretax loss of 18.7 billion yen for the fourth quarter, dragged down by a 26 billion yen pretax loss in the Americas on reserve provisions for unspecified legal costs, a higher effective tax rate and fall in net income from a year earlier.
That performance pushed the overseas unit into an annual pretax loss of 0.7 billion yen, underscoring how closely the unit's fortunes are tied to factors beyond Nomura's control.
Pretax profit at Nomura's wholesale division, which includes markets trading and investment banking, rose 57 percent to 44.2 billion yen between January-March from a year earlier, helped by bouts of volatility that saw clients transact more in capital markets.
Nomura also said it would buy back its own shares worth up to 70 billion yen, or 2.7 percent of its outstanding shares.
($1 = 109.3500 yen)
(Editing by Himani Sarkar and Jacqueline Wong)
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