RSA Insurance Group Plc’s Stephen Hester delivered a full-year profit, restored dividends and stepped up cost cuts that will result in more job losses. The shares still tumbled more than 5 percent in London.

“RSA’s results are on balance disappointing,” Thomas Seidl, an analyst at Sanford C Bernstein Ltd., said in a note to clients. “The key driver for that is the outlook.” He said the company’s plans for additional cost cuts don’t resolve uncertainty over its capital.

Pretax profit for 2014 was 275 million pounds ($427 million) from a loss of 244 million pounds in 2013, RSA said Thursday. The company declared a final dividend of 2 pence a share, after canceling payouts in 2013. It also raised its 2016 cost-cutting target by at least 30 million pounds and set a fresh 2017 target of more than 250 million pounds.

Shares fell 5.3 percent to 426.4 pence by 12:47 p.m. local time, the biggest selloff since June. The insurer also announced that Chief Financial Officer Richard Houghton is stepping down in May, the latest of senior executives to depart since joined Hester joined a year ago.

“It’s the first year of the big turnaround that we had needed to make and we can say quite clearly that the ship is turning,” Hester, 54, said in an interview. “The cleanup of past weaknesses has been extensive. There are headwinds, but we feel RSA is making much better progress.”

In the past year, Hester has carried out a $1.3 billion share sale and reversed a decade of acquisitions to rebuild capital after three profit warnings and an Irish accounting scandal cost former CEO Simon Lee his job.

Job Cuts

The former CEO of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc said the new cost targets would inevitably lead to more job losses across the group, including in Ireland, which could “run into the thousands.” That follows a 6 percent headcount reduction in 2014.

More asset disposals are planned in 2015, including its Middle East business after the insurer raised more than 800 million pounds from sales across Europe and Asia.

Its Irish unit cost RSA another 100 million pounds in 2014, taking its total bill since the accounting irregularities were first reported to about 300 million pounds, Hester said. The CEO sees further losses in 2015 before RSA Ireland returns to profitability in 2016.

The insurer is still awaiting the results of a probe by Ireland’s central bank that may result in a fine. It’s also fighting a constructive dismissal case filed by the former head of its Irish unit, Philip Smith, who resigned last year saying he was made the “fall guy.”