Final Results

RNS Number : 0305D
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC
14 February 2020
 

Annual Results

For the year ended 31 December 2019

 

 

The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc

2019 RBS performance summary

 

RBS reported an operating profit before tax of £4,232 million and an attributable profit of £3,133 million and proposes a final ordinary dividend of 3 pence and a 5 pence special dividend.

 

In a challenging market RBS has exceeded all of its 2019 financial targets: cost reduction above target; net lending growth ahead of target; RWAs below guidance; and 22 pence of total distributions to shareholders in 2019, while maintaining a CET1 ratio of 16.2%.

 

Return on tangible equity of 9.4% for 2019 and 4.7% excluding FX recycling gains.

Q4 2019 operating profit before tax of £1,546 million and an attributable profit of £1,410 million, or £176 million excluding FX recycling gains.

FY 2019 attributable profit of £3,133 million, or £1,561 million excluding FX recycling gains.

 

Supporting our customers through continued lending growth

We continue to achieve net lending growth at attractive returns in a challenging market. Across UK Personal Banking, Ulster Bank RoI, Commercial Banking and Private Banking, net loans to customers increased by 3.7% in 2019, exceeding our 2-3% growth target.

UK Personal Banking gross new mortgage lending was £33.3 billion in 2019 compared with £30.4 billion in 2018. Commercial Banking gross new lending was £19.5 billion in 2019.

2019 net impairment losses of £696 million equate to 21 basis points of gross customer loans, compared with 13 basis points in 2018. The cost of risk remains below our view of a normalised blended long term loss rate of 30-40 basis points.

 

 

Continuing competitive market

Reflecting challenging market conditions and ongoing margin pressure, across the retail and commercial businesses income, excluding notable items, decreased by 2.6% compared with 2018.

2019 Bank net interest margin (NIM) of 1.99% decreased by 10 basis points compared with 2018. Q4 2019 Bank NIM of 1.93% was 4 basis points lower than Q3 2019 primarily reflecting competitive pressures in the mortgage business as front book margins remain lower than back book.

Natwest Markets core income of £1,082 million was £177 million, or 14.1%, lower than 2018 largely reflecting a challenging third quarter in the Rates business.

A cost reduction of £310 million was achieved during 2019, ahead of our £300 million target for the year.

 

 

Capital generation

The Bank maintained a CET1 ratio of 16.2% despite accruing £2.7 billion of distributions to shareholders and a £0.4 billion post tax charge in respect of foreseeable pension contributions. Excluding the impact of the Alawwal bank merger and PPI, the Bank generated c.110 basis points of capital from attributable profits and c.60 basis points from a reduction in RWAs and other capital movements.

RWAs reduced by £9.5 billion during 2019 to £179.2 billion, below our £185 -190 billion guidance, in part reflecting a £4.7 billion reduction associated with the Alawwal bank merger.

 

Parent Company name change

Today, we have announced that we plan to rename our parent company. The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc is intended to be renamed NatWest Group plc later this year.

 

 

 

Outlook(1)

RBS, like all companies, continues to deal with a range of significant risks and uncertainties in the external economic, political and regulatory environment. Our central economic forecast, which supports our corporate plan, is in line with consensus as at the end of December 2019 and shows average UK GDP growth of around 1.6% from 2019 to 2023 and continued low interest rates; we expect a base rate cut in the short term and then flat thereafter. Given the current uncertainties we will continue to actively monitor and react to market conditions.

 

2020 Outlook

In the current environment, and recognising ongoing market uncertainty, we continue to expect challenges on income. In addition, we anticipate that regulatory changes will adversely impact income in our personal business by around £200 million.

 

We plan ongoing operating cost take out by reducing operating expenses excluding strategic costs, litigation and conduct costs and operating lease depreciation costs by £250 million in 2020 compared with 2019. We expect to incur £0.8-1.0 billion of strategic costs during 2020 resulting from a refocussing of NatWest Markets and the continued resizing of the Group's cost base. We anticipate that NatWest Markets exit, restructuring and disposal costs will be around £0.6 billion in 2020, with around £0.4 billion as disposal losses through income and £0.2 billion through strategic costs.

 

We expect to remain below our through-the-cycle impairment loss rate assumption of 30-40 basis points, although the potential impact on the real economy of ongoing political uncertainties and geopolitical tensions could affect our credit loss outcome. The threat from single name and sector driven events remains.

 

We are targeting lending growth of greater than 3% across our retail and commercial franchises.

 

We expect to end 2020 with risk weighted assets (RWAs) of around £185-190 billion including an estimated £10.5 billion increase associated with the implementation of Bank of England mortgage floors, with NatWest Markets RWAs reducing by around £6-8 billion in the year.

 

RBS Group (RBSG) capital and funding plans focus on issuing £2-4 billion of MREL-compliant instruments, of which we would expect around £1 billion to be issued under our Green, Social and Sustainable Bond Framework, up to £1.5 billion of AT1 and up to £2.5 billion of Tier 2 instruments. As in prior years, we will continue to target other funding sources to diversify our funding structure, including senior secured from NatWest Bank subject to funding and liquidity considerations.

 

Medium term outlook

We expect to achieve a return on tangible equity of 9-11% in the medium to long term. In addition, we expect ongoing operating cost take-out.

 

Within NatWest Markets franchise, we anticipate that RWAs will reduce to around £20 billion in the medium term, which, after accounting for strategic costs and disposal losses, is expected to be capital ratio accretive in year one and over the course of the transition plan period.

 

We anticipate that the overall RWA impact of Basel 3 amendments to be around 5-10% and phased across 2021 to 2023, with the details still subject to regulatory uncertainty on both quantum and timing.

 

RBS Group capital distributions

We expect to maintain ordinary dividends of around 40% of attributable profit. We retain our guidance of CET1 ratio to be approximately 14% at the end of 2021, and we will target a reduction to 13-14% in the medium to long term. We have shareholder and regulatory approval to carry out directed buybacks of the UK government stake in RBS but recognise that any exercise of this authority would be dependent upon HMT's intentions and is limited to 4.99% of issued share capital in any 12 month period. As a reminder, we have also committed to make further pre-tax contributions to the pension scheme of up to £1.5 billion in aggregate from 1 January 2020 linked to future distributions to RBS shareholders.

 

NatWest Markets Plc

Whilst we have announced a refocusing of the business, NatWest Markets Plc remains a regulated entity and is targeting to maintain a CET1 ratio above 15%, MREL ratio of at least 30%, leverage ratio of at least 4%, and to reduce RWAs by around £14-18 billion in the medium term.

 

NatWest Markets Plc, as a standalone bank, plans to issue £3-5 billion of term senior unsecured instruments in 2020.

 

Note:

 (1)

The targets, expectations and trends discussed in this section represent RBS Group's and NatWest Markets Plc's management current expectations and are subject to change, including as a result of the factors described in the "Risk Factors" section on pages 281 to 295 of RBS Group's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts and pages 143 to 156 of NatWest Markets Plc's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts. These statements constitute forward-looking statements; refer to Forward-looking statements in this document.

 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

Performance key metrics and ratios

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

Operating profit/(loss) before tax

£4,232m

£3,359m

 

£1,546m

(£8m)

£572m

Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders

£3,133m

£1,622m

 

£1,410m

(£315m)

£286m

Bank net interest margin (RBS NIM excluding NWM) (1)

1.99%

2.09%

 

1.93%

1.97%

2.07%

Bank average interest earning assets (RBS excluding NWM) (1)

£413bn

£409bn

 

£420bn

£416bn

£412bn

Cost:income ratio (1)

65.1%

71.7%

 

59.4%

92.9%

80.5%

Loan impairment rate (2)

21bps

13bps

 

19bps

26bps

2bps

Earnings per share

 

 

 

 

 

 

  - basic

 26.0p

13.5p

 

 11.7p

(2.6p)

2.4p

  - basic fully diluted

 25.9p

13.4p

 

 11.6p

(2.6p)

2.3p

Return on tangible equity (1)

9.4%

4.8%

 

17.7%

(3.8%)

3.5%

Average tangible equity

£33bn

£33bn

 

£32bn

£33bn

£33bn

Average number of ordinary shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 outstanding during the period (millions)

 

 

 

 

 

 

   - basic

12,067

12,009 

 

12,078

12,075

12,040 

  -  fully diluted (3)

12,102

12,061 

 

12,114

12,106

12,081 

 

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

Balance sheet related key metrics and ratios

2019

2019

2018

Total assets

£723.0bn

£776.5bn

£694.2bn

Funded assets (1)

£573.0bn

£600.7bn

£560.9bn

Loans to customers - amortised cost

£326.9bn

£319.5bn

£305.1bn

Impairment provisions

£3.7bn

£3.8bn

£3.8bn

Customer deposits

£369.2bn

£369.7bn

£360.9bn

 

 

 

 

Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR)

152%

148%

158%

Liquidity portfolio

£199bn

£193bn

£198bn

Net stable funding ratio (NSFR) (4)

141%

140%

141%

Loan:deposit ratio (1)

89%

86%

85%

Total wholesale funding

£75bn

£78bn

£74bn

Short-term wholesale funding

£19bn

£19bn

£15bn

 

 

 

 

Common Equity Tier (CET1) ratio

16.2%

15.7%

16.2%

Total capital ratio

21.2%

20.5%

21.8%

Pro forma CET 1 ratio, pre dividend and charges (5)

17.0%

15.9%

16.9%

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs)

£179.2bn

£189.5bn

£188.7bn

CRR leverage ratio

5.1%

5.0%

5.4%

UK leverage ratio

5.8%

5.7%

6.2%

 

 

 

 

Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share

268p

272p

287p

Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share - fully diluted (1,3)

267p

272p

286p

Tangible equity

£32,371m

£32,930m

£34,566m

Number of ordinary shares in issue (millions)

12,094

12,094

12,049 

Number of ordinary shares in issue (millions) - fully diluted (3,6)

12,138

12,124

12,088 

 

 

Notes:

(1)

Refer to the Appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-financial and performance measures.

(2)

Refer to Note 2 for details of the representation of interest in suspense provisions. The loan impairment rates for 2018 were recalculated and there was no impact on the rates.

(3)

Includes the effect of dilutive share options and convertible securities. Dilutive shares on an average basis for Q4 2019 were 36 million shares and for the year ended 31 December 2019 were 35 million shares; (year ended 31 December 2018 - 52 million shares, Q3 2019 - 31 million shares, Q4 2018 - 41 million shares), and as at 31 December 2019 were 44 million shares (30 September 2019 - 30 million shares; 31 December 2018 - 39 million shares).

(4)

NSFR reported in line with CRR2 regulations finalised in June 2019.

(5)

The pro forma CET 1 ratio at 31 December 2019 excludes a foreseeable charge of £365 million, £362 million (3p per share) for a final dividend and £606 million (5p per share) for a special dividend (30 September 2019 - £362 million (3p per share)). 31 December 2018 excluded a charge of £422 million (3.5p per share) for the final dividend and £904 million (7.5p per share) for the special dividend.

(6)

Includes 15 million shares by the Employee Benefit Trust (30 September 2019 - 16 million shares; 31 December 2018 - 8 million shares).

 

 

 

 

Chief Executive's Statement

 

We champion potential, helping people, families and businesses to thrive.  

 

Dear shareholders,

It is a privilege to be writing to you as CEO of the company that I joined as a graduate more than 25 years ago. I am truly excited by the opportunity to lead the Bank as we set out a new commitment to become a Purpose-led organisation, which will champion the potential of people, families and businesses across the communities we serve.

 

A period of unprecedented disruption

We, like our customers, are living in a period of unprecedented disruption - whether it is the struggle to get on the housing ladder or starting a business, the rapid growth of disruptive technology, an ageing population, the emergence of the gig economy or the existential impact of climate change. The way people live is changing, and their expectations of companies are changing too. I firmly believe in response, we have to adopt a new approach that moves away from a view that is defined by products and transactions, and uses the strength of the relationships we have with all of our stakeholders as the real test of our progress.

 

This disruption is happening against the backdrop of a highly uncertain economic environment. UK economic growth remains subdued, compared to its historic trend, and interest rates are likely to be lower for longer. This has an impact on our ability to generate net interest income. Business confidence continues to be affected by the UK's departure from the EU as our customers await certainty over the future terms of trade. Consumer confidence on the other hand continues to be supported by a relatively strong UK employment market and we are seeing good volumes in our mortgage business as a result. We still see opportunities to grow in our key target markets despite some of these challenging trends.

 

Purpose-led organisation - Building more sustainable returns

Today marks a new era, as we provide an update to our plans and a new Purpose for the Bank that will help us become a more sustainable business, delivering better outcomes for our customers and our shareholders.

 

We are privileged to play a central role in the UK economy. That brings with it, a deep responsibility to the communities we serve and to wider society. That is why we have a refreshed Purpose:

 

We champion potential, helping people, families and businesses to thrive.

 

We won't get everything right every time, but this simple expression will be the standard to which we will hold ourselves.

 

Sustainable returns, however, can only come from a sustainable business model and building a Purpose-led bank must underpin the services we provide. It also means we must play our role in tackling the issues which hold people, families and businesses back.

 

The Board and management team have worked together to define an approach to becoming a Purpose-led organisation based on balancing the interests of all our stakeholders. As part of this, we have worked with the not-for-profit organisation a Blueprint for Better Business.

 

We have informed our approach using their framework that identifies the need to be: Honest and Fair with Customers and Suppliers; A Good Citizen; A Guardian for Future Generations; and A Responsible and Responsive Employer as key drivers to becoming a more sustainable business. In addition, we have analysed what is driving the changes in our own customer behaviours and the subsequent trends borne from their experiences. This forms the building blocks for the plans we are setting out today.  

 

It is essential that our Purpose underpins our strategy and the decisions we make on the future direction of the business. At a practical level, we have been reviewing how to embed Purpose within Board forums and processes to ensure it is a central part of how we work. We are very clear that our Purpose must apply across the whole organisation and to everything we do. We are also clear that getting this right will take time.

 

Three initial areas of focus where we can make a substantial impact

We have identified three areas of focus where we can make a substantial impact in addressing challenges that threaten to hold people, families and businesses back:

 

Enterprise, and the barriers that too many face to starting a business;

Learning, and what we can do to improve financial capability and confidence for our customers, as well as establishing a dynamic learning culture for our employees; and

Climate, and the role we can play in accelerating the transition to a low carbon economy.

 

We have set out some significant ambitions across these three areas that will deliver important benefits for our customers and the wider economy.  

 

 

Chief Executive's Statement continued

 

An ambition to take the lead in combating the causes of climate change

Today, we are setting a bold new ambition - to be a leading bank in the UK & Republic of Ireland helping to address the climate challenge; by making our own operations net carbon zero in 2020 and climate positive by 2025, and by driving material reductions in the climate impact of our financing activity. We are setting ourselves the challenge to at least halve the climate impact of our financing activity by 2030, and intend to do what is necessary to achieve alignment with the 2015 Paris Agreement.

 

This will be a significant challenge as we, like others, do not yet fully understand what this will require and how it will be achieved, not least as there is currently no standard industry methodology or approach. Solving this will require UK and international industry, regulators and experts to come together and find solutions. We are determined to not just play our part, but to lead on the collaboration and co-operation that is so critical to influencing the transition to a low carbon economy.

 

As a systemic UK bank, we must play an active role and these market leading ambitions underline our position. This is not only the right thing to do, it will give us the opportunity to do more business with our customers, as they transition to a low carbon economy.

 

We are already taking positive steps in the right direction. This year we became one of the Founding Signatories of the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI) Principles for Responsible Banking, committing to begin strategically aligning our business with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the 2015 Paris Agreement. We have been reviewing specific SDGs with relevance to our Purpose focus areas of Climate Change, Enterprise and Learning.

 

The Bank continues to support the Financial Stability Board's Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) - a voluntary set of guidelines encouraging consistent climate-related disclosures in annual reporting. In 2019, we were one of the first companies worldwide to commit to all the Climate Group initiatives on electric vehicles (EV100), energy productivity (EP100), and renewable power (RE100).

 

In November 2019 we issued the first exclusively social bond under ICMA's Social Bond Principles in the UK by any financial institution. The impact of the lending funded by this bond will be reported 12 months after issuance, measuring the number of jobs created and retained in some of the UK's most deprived areas.

 

This is good progress, but we can, and will, do more.

 

Improving financial confidence and becoming a learning organisation

We also know that we have a responsibility to help our customers improve their financial confidence. Our UK-wide financial education programme, MoneySense has now been running for 25 years. We can help children in schools and at home understand the value and importance of finance from an early age. We will target reaching 2.5 million people through financial capability interactions each year. The more confidence our customers have, the more opportunity we will have to provide services to them.

 

I also want to build the confidence and capability of our employees. We already have one of the most qualified workforces in the UK. Today I am setting a target to have all front-line staff professionally accredited within the first twelve months of being in role.

 

Removing barriers to enterprise

As the largest supporter of UK business, we already offer a wide range of support to those who want to start a new business. But we also know that for many, it remains harder than it should be. We are committed to helping create an additional 50,000 new businesses across the UK by 2023, through inspiring and supporting over 500,000 people to consider enterprise as a career option.

 

Our focus will be on under-represented populations, with women making up at least 60% of those we support and more than 20% being Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic-led businesses. We will also make sure that at least 75% of the people we support are in regions outside of London and the South East. By helping to tackle the barriers to starting a business, there will be more opportunities to help companies grow.

 

Starting with strong foundations, but with much more to do

We have built strong foundations, but our performance doesn't yet match its full potential and we need to support our customers better at the key moments in their lives. This means running a bank that is safe, simple and smart - supporting our customers with what they need and also making some tough choices in order to deliver for shareholders and colleagues.

 

Safe

Safety and soundness must underpin everything we do. Intelligent risk-taking is why banks exist - to find valuable and sustainable uses for the resources in the economy, and to help customers achieve their ambitions. We have strong capital and liquidity positions and are well placed to help our customers succeed. In today's digital world, our operational resilience and keeping our customers' data safe are top priorities. We can never lose sight of this, even as we look to grow. We have announced today that we will reduce our Common Equity Tier 1 ratio (CET 1) over the medium to long-term to around 13-14%. This will ensure that the Bank remains safe, and also allow room for further capital distributions. 

 

 

Chief Executive's Statement continued

 

Simple

We are still too complicated for our customers. Much of the potential value in this Bank is locked in business lines and business models that are too complex and generating too little return. This complexity also creates 'bad costs' - costs that provide no benefit to customers.

 

This applies to parts of our NatWest Markets business, where we have shrunk over time but we could do more to increase its focus on our corporate and institutional customers and their needs.

 

Today we are announcing that we will reduce the size of this business by around half, as measured by Risk Weighted Assets, managing down and optimising low-returning capital and inefficient activities. We will build a much smaller and simpler part of the business which will bring customers closer to the services they need, reduce costs and release capital for shareholders.

 

This action will refocus our NatWest Markets products and services on our corporate and institutional customers. We estimate that for 2019, our corporate and institutional customers represented around £75 billion of Risk Weighted Asset equivalents but only generated returns of around 2% on an underlying basis and excluding strategic costs and litigation and conduct costs. We believe that as we refocus NatWest Markets, corporate and institutional customers in the medium to long term will represent around £60 billion of Risk Weighted Asset equivalents and returns will improve to around 8%.

 

Driving out bad costs also means simplifying our core customer journeys, like our account opening and lending application processes. Aligning and accelerating the transformation of these with more automation and less manual processing will save money, deliver better controls and improve service. 

 

We are targeting an overall cost reduction this year of £250 million.

 

Smart

Taking a disciplined approach to cost means we can make smart investment choices, investing to improve our services across our retail and commercial customer bases. We will continue to explore the potential for partnerships across industries, and within banking, that can help us innovate faster and ensure our investment is wisely spent.

 

We already have strong relationships with millions of customers in this country, but we can deepen them even further by building propositions that provide support throughout their financial lives. This may mean looking to increase our presence in certain areas including through partnerships, where relevant, to ensure we are helping our customers meet their needs and ambitions.

 

In recent years we have dramatically increased the focus on innovation across the Bank. This has positioned us well with partners, opened up new income lines and helped improve our time-to-market in a number of critical areas. There is an amazing opportunity for NatWest to use its brand and market presence to connect new technology solutions with the problems that hold back potential in the personal, professional and business lives of our customers. 

 

This must, however, also be matched by the financial discipline to call time on ventures that don't deliver and that can't deliver a big enough impact for our customers and investors.

 

By simplifying our innovation focus, and being disciplined on the internal allocation of capital, we will strengthen the core of the Bank. By making smarter investments in services for our customers we will deepen our leading positions in personal, business, commercial and corporate banking. 

 

Delivering sustainable returns

Championing the potential of people, families and businesses is not an add-on to our strategy, it is our strategy. I firmly believe this new Purpose-led approach is what will deliver reliable returns for our shareholders, year in, year out. 

 

We will target a return on tangible equity of 9%-11% from a CET 1 ratio of 13%-14% in the medium to long-term. Subject to shareholder approval of our 2019 final and special dividends, we will have returned £4.2 billion to shareholders, with £2.6 billion returned to UK taxpayers since 2018. We have a clear plan to continue to return capital to our shareholders over time.

 

I know from experience, that we only succeed when our customers and wider communities succeed. I am confident that the strategy I have outlined will deliver sustainable long-term shareholder returns and will also build a Bank that the UK and Republic of Ireland can be proud of. We will create lasting value when we champion the potential of those we serve. That is our Purpose and our Strategy.

 

 

 

Business performance summary

Our ambition is to build the best bank for customers in the UK and Republic of Ireland

 

Customer Advocacy and Trust Scores

 

Our brands are our main connection with customers. Each takes a clear and differentiated position with the aim of helping us strengthen our relationship with them. For this reason we track customer advocacy for our key brands using the net promoter score (NPS) - a commonly used metric in banking and other industries across the world.

 

We are seeing early signs of improvement, but we still have much to do.  We are determined to make a difference with the things that matter most to our customers.  We listen to customer feedback and, via our closed-loop feedback programme, respond to any issues that they identify. Through fixing our core processes we will get our core service right first time more consistently while at the same time innovating to deliver better solutions.

 

The tables below show NPS and Trust scores for our key brands.

 

Personal Banking

 

Q4 2019

Q3 2019

Q2 2019

Q1 2019

Q4 2018

NatWest

15

13

11

11

11

Royal Bank of Scotland

(14)

(9)

(10)

(14)

(17)

Ulster Bank Northern Ireland

(10)

(5)

1

(3)

(10)

Ulster Bank Republic of Ireland

(18)

(15)

(11)

(7)

(6)

 

Source: Ipsos MORI FRS 6 month rolling data. Latest base sizes: 2,829 for NatWest (England & Wales); 451 for Royal Bank of Scotland (Scotland). Based on the question: "How likely is it that you would recommend (brand) to a relative, friend or colleague in the next 12 months for current account banking?" Base: Claimed main banked current account customers.

 

Source: Coyne Research 12 month rolling data. Question: "Please indicate to what extent you would be likely to recommend (brand) to your friends or family using a scale of 0 to 10 where 0 is not at all likely and 10 is extremely likely".  Latest base sizes: 352 Northern Ireland; 1,424 Republic of Ireland.   

 

             

 

Business Banking

 

Q4 2019

Q3 2019

Q2 2019

Q1 2019

Q4 2018

NatWest

(7)

(9)

(9)

(8)

(9)

Royal Bank of Scotland

(25)

(31)

(36)

(36)

(36)

 

Source: Savanta MarketVue Business Banking, YE Q4 2019.  Based on interviews with businesses with an annual turnover up to £2 million. Latest base sizes: 1104 for NatWest (England & Wales), 416 for Royal Bank of Scotland (Scotland). Question: "How likely would you be to recommend (bank)". Base: Claimed main bank. Data weighted by region and turnover to be representative of businesses in Great Britain.

 

Commercial Banking

 

Q4 2019

Q3 2019

Q2 2019

Q1 2019

Q4 2018

NatWest

23

23

20

20

21

Royal Bank of Scotland

9

16

21

18

20

 

Source: Savanta MarketVue Business Banking, YE Q4 2019.  Based on interviews with businesses with an annual turnover over £2 million. Latest base sizes: 586 for NatWest (England & Wales), 100 for Royal Bank of Scotland (Scotland). Question: "How likely would you be to recommend (bank)". Base: Claimed main bank. Data weighted by region and turnover to be representative of businesses in Great Britain.

 

             

 

Trust

We also use independent experts to measure our customers' trust in the bank. Each quarter we ask customers to what extent they trust or distrust their bank to do the right thing. The score is a net measure of those customers that trust their bank (a lot or somewhat) minus those that distrust their bank (a lot or somewhat).

 

 

Q4 2019

Q3 2019

Q2 2019

Q1 2019

Q4 2018

NatWest

62

62

61

60

56

Royal Bank of Scotland

39

47

38

28

27

 

Source: Populus. Latest quarter's data. Measured as a net % of those that trust Royal Bank of Scotland/NatWest to do the right thing, less those that do not. Latest base sizes: 531 for NatWest (England & Wales), 214 for Royal Bank of Scotland (Scotland).

 

             

 

 

Summary consolidated income statement for the period ended 31 December 2019

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018*

 

2019

2019

2018*

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Net interest income

8,047

8,656 

 

2,037

2,006

2,176 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Own credit adjustments

(80)

92 

 

(22)

(12)

33 

Strategic disposals

1,035

 

-

-

Other non-interest income

5,251

4,654 

 

2,218

909

849 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Non-interest income

6,206

4,746 

 

2,196

897

882 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total income

14,253

13,402 

 

4,233

2,903

3,058 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Litigation and conduct costs

(895)

(1,282)

 

(85)

(750)

(92)

Strategic costs

(1,381)

(1,004)

 

(537)

(215)

(355)

Other expenses

(7,049)

(7,359)

 

(1,905)

(1,733)

(2,022)

Operating expenses

(9,325)

(9,645)

 

(2,527)

(2,698)

(2,469)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profit before impairment losses

4,928

3,757 

 

1,706

205

589 

Impairment losses

(696)

(398)

 

(160)

(213)

(17)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating profit/(loss) before tax

4,232

3,359 

 

1,546

(8)

572 

Tax charge

(432)

(1,208)

 

(37)

(201)

(118)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profit/(loss) for the period

3,800

2,151

 

1,509

(209)

454

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attributable to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinary shareholders

3,133

1,622 

 

1,410

(315)

286 

Other owners

406

537

 

99

105

182

Non-controlling interests

261

(8)

 

-

1

(14)

 

Notable items within total income

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alawwal bank merger gain in NatWest Markets

444

-

 

-

-

-

FX recycling gain in Central items & other (1)

1,459

-

 

1,169

-

-

Legacy liability release in Central items & other

256

-

 

-

-

-

Insurance indemnity

-

357

 

-

-

85

of which:

 

 

 

 

 

 

    NatWest Markets

-

165

 

-

-

-

    Central items & other

-

192

 

-

-

85

IFRS volatility in Central items & other (2)

9

(59)

 

43

(51)

(25)

UK Personal Banking debt sale gain

49

61

 

31

16

35

FX gains/(losses) in Central items & other

21

(46)

 

(1)

2

(39)

Commercial Banking fair value and disposal (loss)/gain

(16)

169

 

1

-

(10)

NatWest Markets legacy business disposal (loss)/gain

(35)

(86)

 

-

(8)

(43)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notable items within operating expenses

 

 

 

 

 

 

Push payment fraud costs

(38)

-

 

(13)

(7)

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(895)

(1,282)

 

(85)

(750)

(92)

of which:

 

 

 

 

 

 

    US RMBS

169

(823)

 

-

162

-

    PPI

(900)

(200)

 

-

(900)

-

 

*Restated for IAS 12 'Income taxes', refer to Note 2 for further details.

 

Notes:

(1)

Includes £290 million arising on the completion of the Alawwal bank merger in June 2019, £1,102 million arising on the liquidation of RFS Holdings and £67 million in relation to dividends in UBI DAC.

(2)

IFRS volatility relates to loans which are economically hedged but for which hedge accounting is not permitted under IFRS.

 

 

 

Business performance summary

Income statement overview

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income increased by £851 million, or 6.3%. Excluding notable items, income decreased by £813 million, or 6.3%, due to a reduction in retail and commercial income, lower NatWest Markets income and increased Treasury funding costs, reflecting increased MREL costs and lower structural hedge income. Across the retail and commercial businesses, income decreased by £301 million, or 2.6%, excluding notable items, principally reflecting margin pressure in a challenging market.

Bank NIM of 1.99% was 10 basis points lower than 2018, principally reflecting competitive pressures within the personal business and a flattening yield curve.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses reduced by £310 million, ahead of target, despite incurring an additional £38 million of authorised push payment fraud costs in line with new industry practice. In line with the reduction in costs, headcount was c.3,100, or 4.6%, lower than 2018. 

Strategic costs of £1,381 million included: a £470 million charge relating to the reduction in our property portfolio; £299 million of technology costs; a £178 million charge in NatWest Markets relating to both the wind-down of the legacy business and ongoing development of the core business infrastructure; with the remaining charge largely relating to restructuring costs to achieve cost efficiencies across front and back book operations.

Litigation and conduct costs included a £900 million PPI charge and a £169 million reimbursement under indemnification agreements relating to US residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS).

The net impairment loss of £696 million, 21 basis points of gross customer loans, increased by £298 million compared with 2018, transitioning from a very benign period towards a more normalised external credit environment, as well as the impact of a small number of large individual commercial charges. The cost of risk remained below the view of our normalised blended long term loss rate of 30 to 40 basis points.

The tax charge for 2019 is lower than the UK statutory rate reflecting the impact of the Alawwal bank merger gain on disposal, the FX recycling gain on the liquidation of RFS Holdings, a £206 million deferred tax credit on the recognition of tax losses following the transfer of business under the ring-fencing regulations and adjustments in respect of prior periods. These factors have been partially offset by the impact of conduct charges, the banking surcharge and a £144 million reduction in the carrying value of deferred tax assets in respect of losses in the UK and Ireland.

Non-controlling interests includes a charge of £274 million in relation to the minority share of the gain recognised on completion of the Alawwal bank merger.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Q4 2019 income includes £1,169 million of FX recycling gains largely associated with the transfer of NatWest Markets N.V. ownership to NatWest Markets Plc. Excluding notable items, retail and commercial income was £55 million lower whilst NatWest Markets core income increased by £12 million to £196 million.  

Bank NIM of 1.93% was 4 basis points lower than Q3 2019 primarily reflecting competitive pressures in the mortgage business as front book margins remain lower than back book.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses increased by £172 million primarily reflecting the annual UK bank levy charge. Headcount reduced by c.1,700, or 2.6%.

The Q4 2019 tax charge includes an £86 million charge relating to reducing the carrying value of the deferred tax asset in respect of losses in the UK and a £65 million credit associated with FX recycling gains.

.

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Across the retail and commercial businesses, income decreased by £114 million, or 4.0%, excluding notable items, principally reflecting margin pressure in a challenging market. NatWest Markets core income was 2.0% lower at £196 million.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses reduced by £117 million, or 5.8%.

 

 

Business performance summary

UK Personal Banking

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

Total income

4,866

5,054

 

1,195

1,224

1,246

 

Operating expenses

(3,618)

(2,867)

 

(788)

(1,601)

(757)

 

Impairment losses

(393)

(339)

 

(81)

(131)

(142)

 

Operating profit/(loss)

855

1,848

 

326

(508)

347

 

Return on equity

9.6%

24.7%

 

14.9%

(26.8%)

17.2%

 

Net interest margin

2.47%

2.67%

 

2.32%

2.44%

2.60%

 

Cost:income ratio

74.4%

56.7%

 

65.9%

130.8%

60.8%

 

Loan impairment rate

25bps

23bps

 

20bps

34bps

38bps

 

 

 

 

 

£bn

£bn

£bn

 

Net loans to customers (amortised cost)

 

 

 

158.9

154.6

148.9

 

Customer deposits

 

 

 

150.3

147.9

145.3

 

RWAs

 

 

 

37.8

37.5

34.3

 

 

Almost three quarters of our current account customers are now digitally active, with growing engagement and continued improvements to their digital experience making it easier for our customers everyday. Total digital sales volumes increased by 30% compared with 2018, representing 53% of all sales. 63% of personal unsecured loan sales, 66% of credit card accounts and 56% of current accounts opened were via the digital channel.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income was £188 million, or 3.7%, lower than 2018, impacted by lower overall mortgage margins, an IFRS 9 accounting change for interest in suspense recoveries of £29 million and a £12 million decrease in debt sale gains, partially offset by strong lending growth.

Net interest margin decreased by 20 basis points reflecting mortgage margin pressure, as front book margins remain lower than back book margin and the book re-prices to the current rate.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £25 million, or 1.0%, reflecting a 6.5% reduction in headcount from digital process simplification and back office rationalisation and lower property costs, partially offset by increased fraud costs due to a revised customer refund approach for authorised push payment scams, annual pay award, and increased investment and technology costs.

Litigation and conduct costs include a £900 million charge in respect of PPI claims following greater than predicted complaints volumes in the lead up to the 29 August 2019 deadline.

Impairment losses were £54 million higher than 2018 reflecting lending growth and lower debt sale recoveries, partially offset by interest in suspense recoveries following an IFRS 9 accounting change and a £25 million lower charge for economic uncertainty than in 2018. Default rates increased slightly since 2018, but, the overall trend flattened in the second half of the year as a result of unsecured risk appetite tightening.

Net loans to customers increased by £10.0 billion, or 6.7%, to £158.9 billion. The business has maintained a prudent approach to risk and pricing in a very competitive market, with gross new mortgage lending in 2019 of £33.3 billion, 9.6% higher than 2018. Mortgage new business market share increased to approximately 12.5%, supporting a stock share of around 10.2% up from 9.8% in 2018. Momentum also continued in personal advances and credit cards, increasing by 11.8% and 7.5% respectively.

Customer deposits increased by £5.0 billion, or 3.4%, as growth continued across current accounts and savings.

RWAs increased by £3.5 billion, or 10.2%, principally due to strong lending, £2.2 billion, mortgage predictive loss adjustments, £0.6 billion, and an increase linked to IFRS 16 changes, £0.7 billion.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income was £29 million lower than Q3 2019 reflecting a £19 million charge following an annual review of mortgage customer repayment behaviour, lower seasonal debit and credit card fee income and the implementation of certain overdraft fee changes, partly offset by £15 million higher debt sale gains. Strong volume growth in Q4 2019 largely offset product margin dilution. Net interest margin decreased by 12 basis points reflecting mortgage margin pressure and the mortgage customer repayment behaviour charge.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses were £33 million higher than Q3 2019, largely reflecting the inclusion of the annual bank levy charge.

Gross new mortgage lending was £10.4 billion, the highest quarter of new mortgage lending in 2019, representing approximately 15% new business market share.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income was £51 million lower than Q4 2018, primarily driven by mortgage margin pressure, interest in suspense recoveries and lower debt sale gains.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses were £18 million lower than Q4 2018 due to headcount reductions, partially offset by increased fraud costs.

                 
 

Business performance summary

Ulster Bank RoI

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

€m

€m

 

€m

€m

€m

Total income

647

689

 

162

161

165

Operating expenses

(630)

(657)

 

(162)

(146)

(184)

Impairment releases/(losses)

38

(17)

 

(5)

19

21

Operating profit/(loss)

55

15

 

(5)

34

2

Return on equity

2.3%

0.5%

 

(1.0%)

5.8%

0.4%

Net interest margin

1.59%

1.79%

 

1.57%

1.55%

1.73%

Cost:income ratio

97.4%

95.6%

 

100.7%

90.3%

111.6%

Loan impairment rate

(17)bps

8bps

 

9bps

(34)bps

(38)bps

 

 

 

 

€bn

€bn

€bn

Net loans to customers (amortised cost)

 

 

 

21.4

21.4

21.0

Customer deposits

 

 

 

21.7

21.3

20.1

RWAs

 

 

 

15.3

15.0

16.4

 

Ulster Bank RoI continued to strengthen its digital proposition in 2019 through enhancements to digital and mobile customer offerings. 70% of active current account customers are now on digital channels, with 48% using the mobile app which now includes new app services to enable customers to lock and unlock their debit cards, create savings goals and explore how they are spending their money.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income was €42 million, or 6.1% lower than 2018 primarily reflecting reduced income from non-performing loans (NPLs) following the sale of a portfolio of assets, largely completed in 2018, and an income reduction from an IFRS 9 accounting change in 2019 for interest in suspense recoveries of €23 million, with an offsetting impact in impairments. These movements contributed to a 20 basis points decrease in net interest margin compared with 2018.

Excluding strategic, conduct and litigation costs, operating expenses decreased by €16 million, or 2.9%, due to reduced project and pension costs and other efficiencies which resulted in a headcount reduction of 6.5%, partially offset by higher levies and increased risk and compliance costs.

A net impairment release of €38 million reflects improvements in the performance of the loan portfolio and the accounting change for interest in suspense recoveries, partially offset by a charge for economic uncertainty.

Net loans to customers increased by €0.4 billion, or 1.9%, reflecting strong lending in both the personal and commercial sectors, partially offset by concluding the sale of a portfolio of NPLs, €0.1 billion, and a continued reduction in the tracker mortgage book. Tracker mortgage balances reduced by €0.7 billion, or 8.4% compared with 2018, with Tracker balances accounting for 38.2% of total net loans at the end of 2019. The business maintained a prudent approach to risk and pricing in a competitive market, with gross new lending of €3.0 billion in 2019, 13.0% higher than 2018.

Customer deposits increased by €1.6 billion, or 8.0%, supporting a reduction in the loan:deposit ratio to 98% from 105%.

RWAs reduced by €1.1 billion, or 6.7%, principally reflecting an improvement in credit metrics and the impact of the NPL sale.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income remained broadly stable at €162 million and net interest margin increased two basis points to 1.57% compared with Q3 2019.

Total operating expenses increased by €16 million, or 11.0%, primarily reflecting an increase in strategic costs relating to a restructuring programme, partly offset by one-off credits to the pension charge.

Impairment losses of €5 million reflect the impact of mortgage model recalibration, partially offset by the net impact of an improvement in the performance of the NPL portfolio.

RWAs increased by €0.3 billion largely due to model recalibrations.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income decreased by €3 million, or 1.8%, reflecting lower income on NPLs and the IFRS 9 accounting change, partially offset by higher other income.

Total operating expenses decreased by €22 million, or 12.0%, primarily reflecting lower conduct and pension costs and the benefits from cost saving initiatives.

 

 

Business performance summary

Commercial Banking

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Total income

4,318

4,602

 

1,076

1,077

1,116

Operating expenses

(2,600)

(2,487)

 

(700)

(638)

(764)

Impairment losses

(391)

(147)

 

(81)

(108)

(5)

Operating profit

1,327

1,968

 

295

331

347

Return on equity

8.4%

12.1%

 

7.6%

8.4%

8.3%

Net interest margin

1.95%

1.96%

 

1.94%

1.90%

1.96%

Cost:income ratio

58.9%

52.8%

 

63.9%

57.9%

67.5%

Loan impairment rate

38bps

14bps

 

32bps

42bps

2bps

 

 

 

 

£bn

£bn

£bn

Net loans to customers (amortised cost)

 

 

 

101.2

101.5

101.4

Customer deposits

 

 

 

135.0

135.7

134.4

RWAs

 

 

 

72.5

77.0

78.4

 

Notes:

(1)   New drawn lending and any re-financing resulting in a new facility or the opening of a new account, excluding Overdrafts and Supplier Finance.

(2)   RWA intensity is defined as total risk weighted assets divided by total loans to customers (amortised cost).

 

Commercial Banking continues to focus on increasing customer interactions through digital channels. In 2019, NatWest became the first UK bank to launch biometric secure authentication for all business payments via Bankline mobile. Conversation volumes with our chat bot Cora have increased to c.16,500 per month since inception in December 2018.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income decreased by £284 million, or 6.2%, reflecting asset disposal and fair value gains of £169 million in 2018, compared with a £16 million loss in 2019, combined with lower deposit income and lower non-interest income. Net interest margin decreased by 1 basis point in comparison to 2018 as a result of lower deposit income, with lending margins broadly stable.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £51 million, or 2.2%, reflecting lower back office operations costs and VAT recoveries, partially offset by £17 million higher operating lease depreciation, £9 million authorised push payment fraud costs in line with new industry practice, and higher remediation, innovation and technology spend.

Impairment losses of £391 million include a small number of single name charges, IFRS 9 modelling adjustments and charges in respect of increased economic uncertainty.

Commercial Banking gross new lending(1) was £19.5 billion in 2019. Net loans to customers decreased by £0.2 billion as planned reductions in EU divestment and Large Corporates & Institutions Western European transfers to NatWest Markets of £0.6 billion were partially offset by growth across the business. Lending across Business Banking, SME & Mid-Corporate and Specialised business increased by £1.1 billion, or 2.1%.

RWAs decreased by £5.9 billion due to model improvements, active capital management and business transfers of £2.4 billion, resulting in a RWA intensity(2) of 70.7% in comparison to 76.3% in 2018.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income remained stable, whilst net interest margin increased by 4 basis points in comparison to Q3 2019, mainly due to an annual review related to customer repayment behaviour changes, partially offset by lower deposit income.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses increased by £15 million, or 2.7%, as the annual UK bank levy charge was partially offset by VAT recoveries.

Impairment losses decreased by £27 million reflecting charges in respect of increased economic uncertainty in Q3 2019.

Net loans to customers decreased by £0.3 billion mainly due to reductions in EU Divestment.

RWAs decreased by £4.5 billion due to model improvements, active capital management and business transfers of £0.3 billion.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income decreased by £40 million, or 3.6%, mainly due to lower deposit income and lower non-interest income.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £88 million, or 13.2%, due to VAT recoveries and lower back office operations costs.

Impairment losses increased by £76 million, principally due to higher single name charges and IFRS 9 modelling adjustments.

     
 

Business performance summary

Private Banking

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Total income

777

775

 

195

198

198

Operating expenses

(486)

(478)

 

(135)

(119)

(143)

Impairment releases

6

6

 

1

2

8

Operating profit

297

303

 

61

81

63

Return on equity

15.4%

15.4%

 

12.0%

16.8%

12.3%

Net interest margin

2.40%

2.52%

 

2.30%

2.35%

2.49%

Cost:income ratio

62.5%

61.7%

 

69.2%

60.1%

72.2%

 

 

 

 

£bn

£bn

£bn

Net loans to customers (amortised cost)

 

 

 

15.5

15.2

14.3

Customer deposits

 

 

 

28.4

28.2

28.4

RWAs

 

 

 

10.1

10.0

9.4

Assets Under Management (AUMs)

 

 

 

23.2

22.5

19.8

Assets Under Administration (AUAs) (1)

 

 

 

7.2

7.1

6.6

Assets Under Management and Administration (AUMA)

 

 

 

30.4

29.6

26.4

 

Note:

(1)   Private Banking manages assets under management portfolios on behalf of UK Personal Banking and RBSI. Prior to Q4 2018, the assets under management portfolios of UK Personal Banking and RBSI were not included. Private Banking receives a management fee from UK Personal Banking and clients of RBSI in respect of providing this service.

 

Private banking offers a service-led, digitally enabled experience for its clients, with approximately 75% of eligible clients banking with us digitally. Our client servicing model utilises both digital and telephony through Coutts24 and Adam24, which have client satisfaction ratings of 96% and 92% respectively. Coutts Connect, our social platform which allows clients to network and build working relationships with one another, now has over 1,700 active users since launching in 2018.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income increased by £2 million, or 0.3%, as volume growth and one-off benefits were partially offset by lower deposit income. Net interest margin decreased by 12 basis points compared with 2018 primarily due to deposit margin pressure.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £17 million, or 3.7%, primarily reflecting lower back office operations costs.

A net impairment release of £6 million reflected a number of one-off releases.

Net loans to customers increased by £1.2 billion, or 8.4%, mainly due to mortgage lending, relative to an increase in RWAs of £0.7 billion, or 7.4%.

Total assets under management in Private Banking increased by £3.4 billion, or 17.2%, reflecting positive investment performance of £2.7 billion and net new business inflows of £0.7 billion.

Total assets under management and administration overseen by Private Banking increased by £4.0 billion, or 15.2%, reflecting positive investment performance of £3.2 billion and net new business inflows of £0.8 billion.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income decreased by £3 million, or 1.5%, as one-off benefits related to hedging income gains recognised in Q3 2019 were partially offset by volume growth in Q4 2019. Net interest margin decreased by 5 basis points compared to Q3 2019 primarily due to lower deposit funding benefits.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses increased by £14 million, or 13.2%, primarily due to the annual UK bank levy charge.

Net loans to customers increased by £0.3 billion, or 2%, reflecting mortgage lending.

Total assets under management in Private Banking increased by £0.7 billion, or 3.1%, reflecting positive investment performance of £0.4 billion and net new business inflows of £0.3 billion.

Total assets under management and administration overseen by Private Banking increased by £0.8 billion, or 2.7%, reflecting positive investment performance of £0.4 billion and net new business inflows of £0.4 billion.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income decreased by £3 million, or 1.5%, as lower deposit income was partially offset by volume growth.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £13 million, or 9.8%, reflecting lower back office operations costs and a number of one-off items.

 

 

Business performance summary

RBS International

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Total income

610

594

 

150

150

155

Operating expenses

(264)

(260)

 

(83)

(62)

(86)

Impairment (losses)/releases

(2)

2

 

(5)

-

2

Operating profit

344

336

 

62

88

71

Return on equity

25.7%

24.4%

 

17.3%

26.0%

20.0%

Net interest margin

1.60%

1.71%

 

1.47%

1.55%

1.81%

Cost:income ratio

43.3%

43.8%

 

55.3%

41.3%

55.5%

 

 

 

 

£bn

£bn

£bn

Net loans to customers (amortised cost)

 

 

 

14.1

13.8

13.3

Customer deposits

 

 

 

30.1

29.1

27.5

RWAs

 

 

 

6.5

6.5

6.9

 

RBS International's existing personal customers can now open individual savings accounts in an average time of 8 minutes rather than 14 days, with over 3,000 new accounts opened this year using the automated process. Digital adoption in personal banking has increased by more than 17%. Over 90% of non-personal customers who provided feedback find our electronic banking platform, eQ easy or extremely easy to use, with 18 new features introduced into eQ through 2019 as part of our ongoing investment in the platform.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income increased by £16 million, or 2.7%, due to increased customer lending and deposits in Institutional and Local Banking. Institutional Banking contributed 63% to income in 2019, with Local Banking 31% and Depositary Services 6%. Net interest margin decreased by 11 basis points compared with 2018 as deposit margins reduced due to falling interest rates in the second half of the year along with mortgage margin pressure.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased £16 million, or 6.2%, reflecting a £24 million reduction in back office operations costs, partially offset by higher investment spend relating to the digital proposition.

Net loans to customers increased by £0.8 billion, or 6.0%, reflecting a Funds business transfer of £0.5 billion from NatWest Markets and higher volumes in Institutional and Local Banking.

Customer deposits increased by £2.6 billion primarily reflecting activity in the Funds sector and £1.1 billion growth in term and notice deposits.

RWAs decreased by £0.4 billion as the impact of model updates was partially offset by increased lending and business transfers.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income was stable at £150 million as higher non utilisation fees were offset by lower deposit funding margins. Net interest margin decreased by 8 basis points compared with Q3 2019 primarily due to lower interest rates in the US and Europe reducing deposit margins.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses increased by £21 million, or 36.8%, primarily due to the bank levy charge and increased project costs relating to building the business' digital proposition.

Net loans to customers increased by £0.3 billion reflecting a Funds business transfer of £0.5 billion from NatWest Markets, partially offset by short term customer activity in the Funds Sector.

Customer deposits increased by £1.0 billion primarily due to activity in the Funds Sector.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income decreased by £5 million, or 3.2%, reflecting margin compression as a result of US and European Central Bank rate reductions.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased £4 million, or 4.9%, primarily due to lower back office operations costs.

 

 

Business performance summary

NatWest Markets(1)

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended and as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Total income

1,342

1,442

 

250

150

152

Of which: Core income excluding own credit adjustments

1,082

1,259

 

196

184

200

Of which: Legacy income

340

91

 

76

(23)

(81)

Of which: Own credit adjustments (OCA)

(80)

92

 

(22)

(11)

33

Operating expenses

(1,418)

(1,604)

 

(392)

(348)

(455)

Impairment releases

51

92

 

10

5

100

Operating loss

(25)

(70)

 

(132)

(193)

(203)

Return on equity

(3.2%)

(2.0%)

 

(6.5%)

(8.7%)

(9.2%)

Cost:income ratio

105.7%

111.2%

 

156.8%

232.0%

299.3%

 

 

 

 

£bn

£bn

£bn

Funded assets

 

 

 

116.2

142.7

111.4

RWAs

 

 

 

37.9

43.8

44.9

 

Note:

(1)

 

The NatWest Markets operating segment is not the same as the NatWest Markets Plc legal entity or group. For 2019, NatWest Markets Plc entity includes NatWest Markets N.V. from the 29 November 2019 only, whereas the NatWest Markets franchise excludes the Central items & other segment. For periods prior to Q4 2019, NatWest Markets N.V. was also excluded from the NatWest Markets Plc entity.

 

NatWest Markets continued to play a leading role in market structural reform. We were first-to-market with our Realised Rate calculator and we acted as the sole solicitation agent for the first ever LIBOR to SONIA bond amendment issued in the market.

 

2019 compared with 2018

Total income decreased by £100 million, or 6.9%, reflecting lower core income and own credit adjustments (OCA), partially offset by increased legacy income following the £444 million gain on the merger of Alawwal bank with SABB.

A core income reduction of £177 million, or 14.1%, was due to challenging market conditions, most significantly in Q3 2019 when the business was impacted by weak performance in the Rates business.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £35 million, or 2.9%.

A net impairment release of £51 million compared with a release of £92 million in 2018, both reflecting a small number of legacy cases.

RWAs decreased by £7.0 billion driven by the £4.7 billion reduction following the merger of Alawwal bank with SABB and other legacy reductions.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q3 2019

Total income increased by £100 million, or 66.7%, primarily reflecting higher legacy income from a release following the closure of a specific exposure.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses increased by £14 million, or 5.0%, reflecting the annual UK bank levy charge and the timing of one-off expense items.

RWAs decreased by £5.9 billion due to a £2.5 billion reduction in market risk and a £2.4 billion decrease in counterparty risk, primarily in the core business.

 

Q4 2019 compared with Q4 2018

Total income increased by £98 million, or 64.5%, primarily reflecting higher legacy income due to a release following the closure of a specific exposure.

Excluding strategic, litigation and conduct costs, operating expenses decreased by £20 million, or 6.3%, driven by the timing of one-off expense items.

An impairment release of £10 million compared with a release of £100 million in Q4 2018. The Q4 2018 release was driven by a small number of legacy cases.

 

Central items & other

 

Year ended and as at

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Central items not allocated

1,385

(1,038)

 

939

162

(55)

Of which: Litigation and conduct costs

141

(809)

 

(43)

(171)

(2)

Of which: FX recycling gain (1)

1,459

-

 

1,169

-

-

 

Note:

(1)   Includes £290 million arising on the completion of the Alawwal bank merger in June 2019, £1,102 million arising on the liquidation of RFS Holdings and £67 million in relation to dividends in UBI DAC.

 

Central items not allocated include £1,459 million of FX recycling gains, a £169 million reimbursement under indemnification agreements relating to US residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) and strategic costs of £450 million. FY 2018 included a litigation and conduct charge of £809 million, principally in respect of the settlement with the US Department of Justice.

 

Business performance summary

 

 

End-point CRR basis

 

31 December 

30 September 

31 December 

 

2019

2019

2018

Risk asset ratios

 

 

 

 

CET1

16.2

15.7

16.2 

Tier 1

18.5

17.9

18.4 

Total

21.2

20.5

21.8 

 

 

 

 

Capital

£m

£m

£m

Tangible equity

32,371

32,930

34,566 

 

 

 

 

Expected loss less impairment provisions

(167)

(620)

(654)

Prudential valuation adjustment

(431)

(466)

(494)

Deferred tax assets

(757)

(732)

(740)

Own credit adjustments

(118)

(234)

(405)

Pension fund assets

(474)

(401)

(394)

Cash flow hedging reserve

(35)

(336)

191 

Foreseeable ordinary and special dividends

(968)

(362)

(1,326)

Foreseeable charges

(365)

-

-

Other adjustments for regulatory purposes

(2)

(6)

(105)

 

 

 

 

Total deductions

(3,317)

(3,157)

(3,927)

CET1 capital

29,054

29,773

30,639 

AT1 capital

4,051

4,051

4,051 

Tier 1 capital

33,105

33,824

34,690 

Tier 2 capital

4,900

4,980

6,483 

 

 

 

 

Total regulatory capital

38,005

38,804

41,173 

 

 

 

 

Risk-weighted assets

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Credit risk

131,000

136,200

137,900 

Counterparty credit risk

12,600

15,000

13,600 

Market risk

13,000

15,700

14,800 

Operational risk

22,600

22,600

22,400 

 

 

 

 

Total RWAs

179,200

189,500

188,700 

 

 

 

 

Leverage (1)

 

 

 

Cash and balances at central banks

77,900

84,300

88,900 

Trading assets

76,700

91,600

75,100 

Derivatives

150,000

175,800

133,300 

Financial assets

399,100

396,400

377,500

Other assets

19,300

28,400

19,400

 

 

 

 

Total assets

723,000

776,500

694,200 

Derivatives

 

 

 

  - netting and variation margin

(157,800)

(189,800)

(141,300)

  - potential future exposures

43,000

47,200

42,100 

Securities financing transactions gross up

2,200

1,700

2,100 

Undrawn commitments

42,500

43,900

50,300 

Regulatory deductions and other adjustments

(9,000)

(9,400)

(2,900)

 

 

 

 

CRR Leverage exposure

643,900

670,100

644,500 

 

 

 

 

CRR leverage ratio%

5.1

5.0

5.4 

 

 

 

 

UK leverage exposure (2)

570,300

589,500

559,500 

 

 

 

 

UK leverage ratio% (2)

5.8

5.7

6.2 

 

Notes:

(1)

Based on end-point CRR Tier 1 capital and leverage exposure under the CRR Delegated Act.

(2)

Based on end-point CRR Tier 1 capital and UK leverage exposures reflecting the post EU referendum measures announced by the Bank of England in the third quarter of 2016.

 

 

 

 

Segment performance

 

Year ended 31 December 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Central

 

 

UK Personal

Ulster

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

 

NatWest

 items &

Total

 

Banking

Bank RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

 

Markets

other (1)

RBS

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income

4,130

400

 

2,842

521

478

 

(188)

(136)

8,047

Non-interest income

736

167

 

1,476

256

132

 

1,166

1,318

5,251

Own credit adjustments

-

-

 

-

-

-

 

(80)

-

(80)

Strategic disposals

-

-

 

-

-

-

 

444

591

1,035

Total income

4,866

567

 

4,318

777

610

 

1,342

1,773

14,253

Direct expenses - staff costs

(612)

(197)

 

(748)

(162)

(120)

 

(626)

(1,102)

(3,567)

                           - other costs

(360)

(96)

 

(296)

(66)

(57)

 

(202)

(2,405)

(3,482)

Indirect expenses

(1,431)

(177)

 

(1,193)

(211)

(67)

 

(350)

3,429

-

Strategic costs  - direct

(17)

(33)

 

(63)

(2)

(12)

 

(178)

(1,076)

(1,381)

                          - indirect

(273)

(27)

 

(238)

(36)

(8)

 

(44)

626

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(925)

(22)

 

(62)

(9)

-

 

(18)

141

(895)

Operating expenses

(3,618)

(552)

 

(2,600)

(486)

(264)

 

(1,418)

(387)

(9,325)

Operating profit/(loss) before impairment (losses)/releases

1,248

15

 

1,718

291

346

 

(76)

1,386

4,928

Impairment (losses)/releases

(393)

34

 

(391)

6

(2)

 

51

(1)

(696)

Operating profit/(loss)

855

49

 

1,327

297

344

 

(25)

1,385

4,232

Additional information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return on equity (2)

9.6%

2.3%

 

8.4%

15.4%

25.7%

 

(3.2%)

nm

9.4%

Cost:income ratio (2)

74.4%

97.4%

 

58.9%

62.5%

43.3%

 

105.7%

nm

65.1%

Total assets (£bn)

182.3

25.4

 

165.4

23.3

31.7

 

263.9

31.0

723.0

Funded assets (£bn)

182.3

25.4

 

165.4

23.3

31.7

 

116.2

28.7

573.0

Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)

158.9

18.2

 

101.2

15.5

14.1

 

8.4

10.6

326.9

Loan impairment rate (2)

25bps

(18)bps

 

38bps

nm

nm

 

nm

nm

21bps

Impairment provisions (£bn)

(1.4)

(0.8)

 

(1.3)

-

-

 

(0.1)

(0.1)

(3.7)

Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn)

(0.8)

(0.7)

 

(1.0)

-

-

 

(0.1)

(0.1)

(2.7)

Customer deposits (£bn)

150.3

18.5

 

135.0

28.4

30.1

 

3.7

3.2

369.2

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)

37.8

13.0

 

72.5

10.1

6.5

 

37.9

1.4

179.2

RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)

38.2

13.2

 

72.8

10.1

6.7

 

40.5

1.7

183.2

Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)

20.3

2.9

 

10.2

1.9

1.8

 

5.0

21.9

64.0

Average interest earning assets (£bn)

167.2

25.1

 

145.9

21.7

29.9

 

35.4

nm

448.6

Net interest margin

2.47%

1.59%

 

1.95%

2.40%

1.60%

 

(0.53%)

nm

1.79%

Third party customer asset rate (3)

3.22%

2.27%

 

3.16%

2.91%

2.89%

 

nm

nm

nm

Third party customer funding rate (3)

(0.38%)

(0.16%)

 

(0.43%)

(0.43%)

(0.13%)

 

nm

nm

nm

 

For the notes to this table, refer to page 22. nm = not meaningful.

 

 

 

Segment performance

 

Year ended 31 December 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Central

 

 

UK Personal

Ulster

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

 

NatWest

 items &

Total

 

Banking

Bank RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

 

Markets

other (1)

RBS

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income

4,283

444

 

2,855

518

466

 

112

(22)

8,656

Non-interest income

771

166

 

1,747

257

128

 

1,238

347

4,654

Own credit adjustments

-

-

 

-

-

-

 

92

-

92

Total income

5,054

610

 

4,602

775

594

 

1,442

325

13,402

Direct expenses - staff costs

(698)

(202)

 

(739)

(161)

(102)

 

(557)

(1,190)

(3,649)

                         - other costs

(266)

(103)

 

(255)

(66)

(67)

 

(241)

(2,712)

(3,710)

Indirect expenses

(1,464)

(185)

 

(1,294)

(229)

(91)

 

(415)

3,678

-

Strategic costs  - direct

(41)

(2)

 

(33)

-

(3)

 

(195)

(730)

(1,004)

                         - indirect

(185)

(20)

 

(122)

(21)

(6)

 

(43)

397

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(213)

(71)

 

(44)

(1)

9

 

(153)

(809)

(1,282)

Operating expenses

(2,867)

(583)

 

(2,487)

(478)

(260)

 

(1,604)

(1,366)

(9,645)

Operating profit/(loss) before impairment (losses)/releases

2,187

27

 

2,115

297

334

 

(162)

(1,041)

3,757

Impairment (losses)/releases

(339)

(15)

 

(147)

6

2

 

92

3

(398)

Operating profit/(loss)

1,848

12

 

1,968

303

336

 

(70)

(1,038)

3,359

Additional information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return on equity (2)

24.7%

0.5%

 

12.1%

15.4%

24.4%

 

(2.0%)

nm

4.8%

Cost:income ratio (2)

56.7%

95.6%

 

52.8%

61.7%

43.8%

 

111.2%

nm

71.7%

Total assets (£bn)

171.0

25.2

 

166.4

22.0

28.4

 

244.5

36.7

694.2

Funded assets (£bn)

171.0

25.2

 

166.4

22.0

28.4

 

111.4

36.5

560.9

Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)

148.9

18.8

 

101.4

14.3

13.3

 

8.4

-

305.1

Loan impairment rate (2)

23bps

8bps

 

14bps

nm

nm

 

nm

nm

13bps

Impairment provisions (£bn)

(1.2)

(1.0)

 

(1.4)

-

-

 

(0.2)

-

(3.8)

Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn)

(0.7)

(0.8)

 

(1.1)

-

-

 

(0.2)

-

(2.8)

Customer deposits (£bn)

145.3

18.0

 

134.4

28.4

27.5

 

2.6

4.7

360.9

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)

34.3

14.7

 

78.4

9.4

6.9

 

44.9

0.1

188.7

RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)

35.5

14.7

 

79.7

9.5

6.9

 

50.0

0.2

196.5

Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)

21.7

3.1

 

10.3

1.9

1.7

 

4.8

23.6

67.1

Average interest earning assets (£bn)

160.6

24.8

 

145.3

20.5

27.3

 

27.9

nm

437.0

Net interest margin

2.67%

1.79%

 

1.96%

2.52%

1.71%

 

0.40%

nm

1.98%

Third party customer asset rate (3)

3.36%

2.41%

 

3.02%

2.89%

2.88%

 

nm

nm

nm

Third party customer funding rate (3)

(0.31%)

(0.20%)

 

(0.30%)

(0.25%)

(0.09%)

 

nm

nm

nm

 

For the notes to this table, refer to page 22. nm = not meaningful.

 

 

Segment performance

 

Quarter ended 31 December 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Central

 

UK Personal

Ulster

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

 

NatWest

 items &

Total

 

Banking

Bank RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

 

Markets

other (1)

RBS

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income

1,012

98

 

715

130

117

 

(4)

(31)

2,037

Non-interest income

183

42

 

361

65

33

 

276

1,258

2,218

Own credit adjustments

-

(1)

 

-

-

-

 

(22)

1

(22)

Total income

1,195

139

 

1,076

195

150

 

250

1,228

4,233

Direct expenses - staff costs

(142)

(38)

 

(180)

(40)

(31)

 

(118)

(286)

(835)

                                    - other costs

(101)

(26)

 

(67)

(14)

(20)

 

(74)

(768)

(1,070)

Indirect expenses

(399)

(46)

 

(330)

(66)

(27)

 

(104)

972

-

Strategic costs  - direct

(9)

(21)

 

(26)

(2)

(3)

 

(74)

(402)

(537)

                                    - indirect

(130)

(8)

 

(85)

(6)

(2)

 

(7)

238

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(7)

(1)

 

(12)

(7)

-

 

(15)

(43)

(85)

Operating expenses

(788)

(140)

 

(700)

(135)

(83)

 

(392)

(289)

(2,527)

Operating profit before impairment (losses)/releases

407

(1)

 

376

60

67

 

(142)

939

1,706

Impairment (losses)/releases

(81)

(4)

 

(81)

1

(5)

 

10

-

(160)

Operating profit/(loss)

326

(5)

 

295

61

62

 

(132)

939

1,546

Additional information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return on equity (2)

14.9%

(1.0%)

 

7.6%

12.0%

17.3%

 

(6.5%)

nm

17.7%

Cost:income ratio (2)

65.9%

100.7%

 

63.9%

69.2%

55.3%

 

156.8%

nm

59.4%

Total assets (£bn)

182.3

25.4

 

165.4

23.3

31.7

 

263.9

31.0

723.0

Funded assets (£bn)

182.3

25.4

 

165.4

23.3

31.7

 

116.2

28.7

573.0

Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)

158.9

18.2

 

101.2

15.5

14.1

 

8.4

10.6

326.9

Loan impairment rate (2)

20bps

8bps

 

32bps

nm

nm

 

nm

nm

19bps

Impairment provisions (£bn)

(1.4)

(0.8)

 

(1.3)

-

-

 

(0.1)

(0.1)

(3.7)

Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn)

(0.8)

(0.7)

 

(1.0)

-

-

 

(0.1)

(0.1)

(2.7)

Customer deposits (£bn)

150.3

18.5

 

135.0

28.4

30.1

 

3.7

3.2

369.2

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)

37.8

13.0

 

72.5

10.1

6.5

 

37.9

1.4

179.2

RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)

38.2

13.2

 

72.8

10.1

6.7

 

40.5

1.7

183.2

Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)

20.3

2.9

 

10.2

1.9

1.8

 

5.0

21.9

64.0

Average interest earning assets (£bn)

172.9

24.8

 

146.4

22.4

31.6

 

36.6

nm

456.2

Net interest margin

2.32%

1.57%

 

1.94%

2.30%

1.47%

 

(0.04%)

nm

1.77%

Third party customer asset rate (3)

3.09%

2.23%

 

3.15%

2.86%

2.79%

 

nm

nm

nm

Third party customer funding rate (3)

(0.38%)

(0.15%)

 

(0.43%)

(0.40%)

(0.09%)

 

nm

nm

nm

 

For the notes to this table, refer to page 22. nm = not meaningful.

 

 

Segment performance

 

Quarter ended 30 September 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Central

 

 

UK Personal

Ulster

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

 

NatWest

 items &

Total

 

Banking

Bank RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

 

Markets

other (1)

RBS

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income

1,034

102

 

703

130

119

 

(62)

(20)

2,006

Non-interest income

190

43

 

374

68

31

 

223

(20)

909

Own credit adjustments

-

-

 

-

-

-

 

(11)

(1)

(12)

Total income

1,224

145

 

1,077

198

150

 

150

(41)

2,903

Direct expenses - staff costs

(157)

(53)

 

(194)

(40)

(30)

 

(159)

(258)

(891)

                           - other costs

(95)

(22)

 

(74)

(17)

(14)

 

(42)

(578)

(842)

Indirect expenses

(357)

(43)

 

(294)

(49)

(13)

 

(81)

837

-

Strategic costs  - direct

(12)

(3)

 

(5)

-

(4)

 

(55)

(136)

(215)

                          - indirect

(68)

(9)

 

(67)

(13)

(1)

 

(7)

165

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(912)

(1)

 

(4)

-

-

 

(4)

171

(750)

Operating expenses

(1,601)

(131)

 

(638)

(119)

(62)

 

(348)

201

(2,698)

Operating (loss)/profit before impairment (losses)/releases

(377)

14

 

439

79

88

 

(198)

160

205

Impairment (losses)/releases

(131)

17

 

(108)

2

-

 

5

2

(213)

Operating (loss)/profit

(508)

31

 

331

81

88

 

(193)

162

(8)

Additional information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return on equity (2)

(26.8%)

5.8%

 

8.4%

16.8%

26.0%

 

(8.7%)

nm

(3.8%)

Cost:income ratio (2)

130.8%

90.3%

 

57.9%

60.1%

41.3%

 

232.0%

nm

92.9%

Total assets (£bn)

176.7

26.1

 

166.6

22.6

31.2

 

318.3

35.0

776.5

Funded assets (£bn)

176.7

26.0

 

166.6

22.6

31.2

 

142.7

34.9

600.7

Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)

154.6

19.0

 

101.5

15.2

13.8

 

9.1

6.3

319.5

Loan impairment rate (2)

34bps

(34)bps

 

42bps

nm

nm

 

nm

nm

26bps

Impairment provisions (£bn)

(1.4)

(0.8)

 

(1.3)

-

-

 

(0.2)

(0.1)

(3.8)

Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn)

(0.8)

(0.8)

 

(1.0)

-

-

 

(0.2)

-

(2.8)

Customer deposits (£bn)

147.9

18.8

 

135.7

28.2

29.1

 

3.3

6.7

369.7

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)

37.5

13.3

 

77.0

10.0

6.5

 

43.8

1.4

189.5

RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)

38.4

13.6

 

78.1

10.0

6.6

 

48.9

1.7

197.3

Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)

21.0

3.0

 

10.4

1.9

1.8

 

5.1

22.5

65.7

Average interest earning assets (£bn)

168.1

26.2

 

146.7

22.0

30.4

 

38.6

nm

454.4

Net interest margin

2.44%

1.55%

 

1.90%

2.35%

1.55%

 

(0.64%)

nm

1.75%

Third party customer asset rate (3)

3.22%

2.23%

 

3.11%

2.87%

2.91%

 

nm

nm

nm

Third party customer funding rate (3)

(0.38%)

(0.15%)

 

(0.43%)

(0.43%)

(0.14%)

 

nm

nm

nm

 

For the notes to this table, refer to the following page. nm = not meaningful.

 

 

Segment performance

 

Quarter ended 31 December 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Central

 

 

UK Personal

Ulster

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

 

NatWest

 items &

Total

 

Banking

Bank RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

 

Markets

other (1)

RBS

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Income statement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income

1,061

110

 

724

133

123

 

30

(5)

2,176

Non-interest income

185

37

 

392

65

32

 

89

49

849

Own credit adjustments

-

-

 

-

-

-

 

33

-

33

Total income

1,246

147

 

1,116

198

155

 

152

44

3,058

Direct expenses - staff costs

(166)

(53)

 

(185)

(39)

(25)

 

(128)

(263)

(859)

                         - other costs

(80)

(27)

 

(77)

(22)

(22)

 

(65)

(870)

(1,163)

Indirect expenses

(414)

(52)

 

(403)

(72)

(35)

 

(123)

1,099

-

Strategic costs  - direct

(27)

(3)

 

(5)

-

(1)

 

(89)

(230)

(355)

                         - indirect

(63)

(12)

 

(57)

(10)

(2)

 

(22)

166

-

Litigation and conduct costs

(7)

(17)

 

(37)

-

(1)

 

(28)

(2)

(92)

Operating expenses

(757)

(164)

 

(764)

(143)

(86)

 

(455)

(100)

(2,469)

Operating profit/(loss) before impairment (losses)/releases

489

(17)

 

352

55

69

 

(303)

(56)

589

Impairment (losses)/releases

(142)

19

 

(5)

8

2

 

100

1

(17)

Operating profit/(loss)

347

2

 

347

63

71

 

(203)

(55)

572

Additional information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return on equity (2)

17.2%

0.4%

 

8.3%

12.3%

20.0%

 

(9.2%)

nm

3.5%

Cost:income ratio (2)

60.8%

111.6%

 

67.5%

72.2%

55.5%

 

299.3%

nm

80.5%

Total assets (£bn)

171.0

25.2

 

166.4

22.0

28.4

 

244.5

36.7

694.2

Funded assets (£bn)

171.0

25.2

 

166.4

22.0

28.4

 

111.4

36.5

560.9

Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)

148.9

18.8

 

101.4

14.3

13.3

 

8.4

-

305.1

Loan impairment rate (2)

38bps

(38)bps

 

2bps

nm

nm

 

nm

nm

2bps

Impairment provisions (£bn)

(1.2)

(1.0)

 

(1.4)

-

-

 

(0.2)

-

(3.8)

Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn)

(0.7)

(0.8)

 

(1.1)

-

-

 

(0.2)

-

(2.8)

Customer deposits (£bn)

145.3

18.0

 

134.4

28.4

27.5

 

2.6

4.7

360.9

Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)

34.3

14.7

 

78.4

9.4

6.9

 

44.9

0.1

188.7

RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)

35.5

14.7

 

79.7

9.5

6.9

 

50.0

0.2

196.5

Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)

21.7

3.1

 

10.3

1.9

1.7

 

4.8

23.6

67.1

Average interest earning assets (£bn)

161.7

25.2

 

146.7

21.2

26.9

 

30.4

nm

442.1

Net interest margin

2.60%

1.73%

 

1.96%

2.49%

1.81%

 

0.39%

nm

1.95%

Third party customer asset rate (3)

3.33%

2.43%

 

3.19%

2.94%

2.98%

 

nm

nm

nm

Third party customer funding rate (3)

(0.36%)

(0.18%)

 

(0.42%)

(0.38%)

(0.09%)

 

nm

nm

nm

nm = not meaningful

 

Notes:

(1)   Central items and other include unallocated transactions, including volatile items under IFRS, items related to Alawwal bank merger and a US RMBS related reimbursement.

(2)   Refer to the Appendix for further details of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS performance measures where relevant.

(3)   UBI DAC and RBS International manage their funding and liquidity requirements locally. Their liquidity asset portfolios and non-customer related funding sources are included within their net interest margin, but excluded from their third party asset and liability rates.

 

Condensed consolidated income statement for the period ended 31 December 2019 

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

2019

2018*

 

2019

2019

2018*

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interest receivable

11,375

11,049 

 

2,901

2,921

2,825 

Interest payable

(3,328)

(2,393)

 

(864)

(915)

(649)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest income (1)

8,047

8,656 

 

2,037

2,006

2,176 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fees and commissions receivable

3,359

3,218 

 

789

808

785 

Fees and commissions payable

(848)

(861)

 

(175)

(186)

(190)

Income from trading activities

932

1,507 

 

138

195

161 

Other operating income

2,763

882 

 

1,444

80

126 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Non-interest income

6,206

4,746 

 

2,196

897

882 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total income

14,253

13,402 

 

4,233

2,903

3,058 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Staff costs

(4,018)

(4,122)

 

(990)

(1,000)

(1,014)

Premises and equipment

(1,259)

(1,383)

 

(436)

(265)

(411)

Other administrative expenses

(2,828)

(3,372)

 

(743)

(1,222)

(851)

Depreciation and amortisation

(1,176)

(731)

 

(323)

(232)

(187)

Impairment of other intangible assets

(44)

(37)

 

(35)

21

(6)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating expenses

(9,325)

(9,645)

 

(2,527)

(2,698)

(2,469)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profit before impairment losses

4,928

3,757 

 

1,706

205

589 

Impairment losses

(696)

(398)

 

(160)

(213)

(17)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating profit/(loss) before tax

4,232

3,359 

 

1,546

(8)

572 

Tax charge

(432)

(1,208)

 

(37)

(201)

(118)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profit/(loss) for the period

3,800

2,151

 

1,509

(209)

454

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attributable to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinary shareholders

3,133

1,622 

 

1,410

(315)

286 

Other owners

406

537

 

99

105

182

Non-controlling interests

261

(8)

 

-

1

(14)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share

26.0p

13.5p

 

11.7p

(2.6p)

2.4p

Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share - fully diluted

25.9p

13.4p

 

11.6p

(2.6p)

2.3p

 

*Restated for IAS12 'income taxes'. Refer to Accounting policy 1, Other amendments to IFRS, for further details.  

 

Note:

(1)

Negative interest on loans is reported as interest payable. Negative interest on customer deposits is reported as interest receivable.

 

 

 

Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the period ended 31 December 2019 

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

2019

2018*

 

2019

2019

2018*

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Profit/(loss) for the period

3,800

2,151

 

1,509

(209)

454

Items that do not qualify for reclassification

 

 

 

 

 

 

Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 - contributions in preparation for ring-fencing (1)

-

(2,053)

 

-

-

(53)

 - other movements

(142)

86 

 

(46)

(28)

14 

(Loss)/profit on fair value of credit in financial liabilities

 

 

 

 

 

 

  designated at FVTPL due to own credit risk

(189)

200 

 

(74)

(19)

91 

FVOCI financial assets

(71)

48 

 

21

(130)

(13)

Tax

28

502 

 

4

(2)

15 

 

(374)

(1,217)

 

(95)

(179)

54 

Items that do qualify for reclassification

 

 

 

 

 

 

FVOCI financial assets

(14)

 

(11)

9

(24)

Cash flow hedges

294

(581)

 

(394)

286

241 

Currency translation

(1,836)

310 

 

(1,538)

(57)

190 

Tax

(170)

189 

 

23

(71)

(35)

 

(1,726)

(75)

 

(1,920)

167

372 

Other comprehensive (loss)/income after tax

(2,100)

(1,292)

 

(2,015)

(12)

426 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total comprehensive income/(loss)  for the period

1,700

859

 

(506)

(221)

880

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total comprehensive income/(loss) is attributable to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinary shareholders

1,044

305 

 

(580)

(326)

709 

Preference shareholders

39

182 

 

9

10

88 

Paid-in equity holders

367

355

 

90

95

94

Non-controlling interests

250

17 

 

(25)

-

(11)

 

1,700

859

 

(506)

(221)

880

 

*Restated for IAS12 'income taxes'. Refer to Accounting policy 1, Other amendments to IFRS, for further details.  

 

Note:

(1)

On 17 April 2018, RBS agreed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Trustees of the RBS Group Pension Fund in connection with the requirements of ring-fencing. NatWest Markets Plc could not continue to be a participant in the Main section and separate arrangements were required for its employees. Under the MoU, NWB Plc made a contribution of £2 billion on 9 October 2018 to strengthen funding of the Main section in recognition of the changes in covenant. Also under the MoU, NWM Plc made a £53 million contribution to the NWM section in Q1 2019.

 

 

Condensed consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2019 

 

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m 

£m 

Assets

 

 

 

Cash and balances at central banks

77,858

84,252

88,897 

Trading assets

76,745

91,605

75,119 

Derivatives

150,029

175,760

133,349 

Settlement balances

4,387

12,962

2,928 

Loans to banks - amortised cost

10,689

12,440

12,947 

Loans to customers - amortised cost

326,947

319,493

305,089 

Other financial assets

61,452

64,488

59,485 

Intangible assets

6,622

6,646

6,616 

Other assets

8,310

8,861

9,805 

 

 

 

 

Total assets

723,039

776,507

694,235 

 

 

 

 

Liabilities

 

 

 

Bank deposits

20,493

22,095

23,297 

Customer deposits

369,247

369,708

360,914 

Settlement balances

4,069

11,862

3,066 

Trading liabilities

73,949

87,374

72,350 

Derivatives

146,879

173,750

128,897 

Other financial liabilities

45,220

47,508

39,732 

Subordinated liabilities

9,979

10,200

10,535 

Other liabilities

9,647

9,864

8,954 

Total liabilities

679,483

732,361

647,745 

 

 

 

 

Equity

 

 

 

Ordinary shareholders' interests

38,993

39,576

41,182 

Other owners' interests

4,554

4,554

4,554 

Owners' equity

43,547

44,130

45,736 

Non-controlling interests

9

16

754 

 

 

 

 

Total equity

43,556

44,146

46,490 

Total liabilities and equity

723,039

776,507

694,235 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period ended 31 December 2019

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Called-up share capital - at 1 January

12,049

11,965 

 

12,094

12,091

12,048 

Ordinary shares issued

45

84 

 

-

3

At 31 December

12,094

12,049 

 

12,094

12,094

12,049 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Paid-in equity - at 1 January and 31 December

4,058

4,058 

 

4,058

4,058

4,058 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share premium account - at 1 January

1,027

887 

 

1,094

1,089

1,026 

Ordinary shares issued

67

140 

 

-

5

At 31 December

1,094

1,027 

 

1,094

1,094

1,027 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Merger reserve - at 1 January and 31 December

10,881

10,881 

 

10,881

10,881

10,881 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FVOCI reserve  - at 1 January

343

255 

 

125

265

361 

Implementation of IFRS 9 on 1 January 2018

-

34 

 

-

-

Unrealised (losses)/gains

(107)

97 

 

(11)

(141)

(11)

Realised (gains)/losses

(90)

(42)

 

27

16

(20)

Tax

(8)

(1)

 

(3)

(15)

13 

At 31 December

138

343 

 

138

125

343 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cash flow hedging reserve - at 1 January

(191)

227 

 

336

117

(370)

Amount recognised in equity (1)

573

(63)

 

(285)

334

231 

Amount transferred from equity to earnings (2)

(279)

(518)

 

(109)

(48)

10 

Tax

(68)

163 

 

93

(67)

(62)

At 31 December (3)

35

(191)

 

35

336

(191)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Foreign exchange reserve - at 1 January

3,278

2,970 

 

2,924

2,982

3,073 

Retranslation of net assets

(428)

195 

 

(381)

(77)

196 

Foreign currency losses on hedges of net assets (2)

83

(33)

 

61

21

(43)

Tax

(110)

23 

 

(116)

(2)

19 

Recycled to profit or loss on disposal of businesses (4)

(1,480)

123 

 

(1,145)

-

33 

At 31 December (3)

1,343

3,278 

 

1,343

2,924

3,278 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Retained earnings - at 1 January

14,312

17,130 

 

12,663

14,784

16,823 

Implementation of IFRS 9 on 1 January 2018

-

(105)

 

-

-

Implementation of IFRS 16 on 1 January 2019 (5)

(187)

 

 

 

 

 

Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders and

 

 

 

 

 

 

  other equity owners

3,539

2,159

 

1,509

(210)

468

Equity preference dividends paid

(39)

(182)

 

(9)

(10)

(88)

Paid-in equity dividends paid

(367)

(355)

 

(90)

(95)

(94)

Ordinary dividends paid

(3,018)

(241)

 

-

(1,691)

Redemption of equity preference shares (6)

-

(2,805)

 

-

-

(2,805)

Realised gains in period on FVOCI equity shares

112

 

(6)

4

Remeasurement of the retirement benefit schemes

 

 

 

 

 

 

  - contributions in preparation for ring-fencing (7)

-

(2,053)

 

-

-

(53)

  - other movements

(142)

86 

 

(46)

(28)

14 

  - tax

24

539 

 

(1)

7

23 

Changes in fair value of credit in financial liabilities

 

 

 

 

 

 

  designated at fair value through profit or loss

 

 

 

 

 

 

  - gross

(189)

200 

 

(74)

(19)

91 

  - tax

20

(33)

 

6

4

(13)

Shares issued under employee share schemes

(6)

(2)

 

(2)

-

Share-based payments

(113)

(32)

 

(4)

(83)

(55)

At 31 December

13,946

14,312 

 

13,946

12,663

14,312 

 

 

 

 

Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period ended 31 December 2019

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

2019

2018

 

2019

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Own shares held - at 1 January

(21)

(43)

 

(45)

(46)

(24)

Shares issued under employee share schemes

39

87 

 

5

1

Own shares acquired

(60)

(65)

 

(2)

-

(2)

At 31 December

(42)

(21)

 

(42)

(45)

(21)

Owners' equity at 31 December

43,547

45,736 

 

43,547

44,130

45,736 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Non-controlling interests - at 1 January

754

763 

 

16

16

791 

Currency translation adjustments and other movements

(11)

25 

 

(25)

(1)

(Loss)/profit attributable to non-controlling interests

261

(8)

 

-

1

(14)

Dividends paid

(5)

(5)

 

(5)

-

(5)

Equity raised (8)

45

-

 

-

-

 

Equity withdrawn and disposals (9)

(1,035)

(21)

 

23

-

(21)

At 31 December

9

754 

 

9

16

754 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total equity at 31 December

43,556

46,490 

 

43,556

44,146

46,490 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total equity is attributable to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinary shareholders

38,993

41,182 

 

38,993

39,576

41,182 

Preference shareholders

496

496 

 

496

496

496 

Paid-in equity holders

4,058

4,058 

 

4,058

4,058

4,058 

Non-controlling interests

9

754 

 

9

16

754 

 

43,556

46,490 

 

43,556

44,146

46,490 

 

Notes:

(1)

The amount credited to the cash flow hedging reserve comprised £585 million (2018 - £166 million debit) in relation to interest rate hedges lesser debit of £12 million (2018 - £103 million credit) in relation to foreign exchange hedges.

(2)

The cash flow hedging reserve was reduced by £243 million in relation to interest rate hedges (2018 - £493 million) credited net interest income and reduced by £36 million (2018 - £25 million) in relation to foreign exchange hedging which was credited to net interest income.

(3)

The hedging element of the cash flow hedging reserve and foreign exchange reserve relates mainly to de-designated hedges.

(4)

Includes £290 million recycled on completion of the Alawwal bank merger in June 2019 (with a further £48m shown in Tax), £1,102 million recycled on the subsequent liquidation of RFS Holdings B.V. (with a further £65m shown in Tax), and £67m attributable to the capital repayment by UBI DAC.  The Alawwal bank merger resulted in the derecognition of the associate investment in Alawwal bank and recognition of a new investment in SABB held at FVOCI.  The recycling gains arising from the liquidation of RFS Holdings BV and capital repayment by UBIDAC have been calculated using the step-by-step method in IFRIC 16 'Hedges of a Net Investment in a Foreign Operation' and by reference to the proportion of capital repaid. Amount recycled also includes £2,661 million related with historical hedge relationship taken to non interest income.

(5)

Refer to Note 2 for further information on the impact of IFRS 16 implementation.

(6)

During 2018, non-cumulative US dollar, Euro and Sterling preference shares were redeemed.

(7)

On 17 April 2018 RBS agreed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Trustees of the RBS Group Pension Fund in connection with the requirements of ring-fencing. NWM Plc cannot contribute to be a participant in the Main section and separate arrangements are required for its employees. Under the MoU, NWB Plc made a contribution of £2 billion on 9 October 2018 to strengthen funding of the Main section in recognition of the changes in covenant. Also under the MoU, NWM Plc made a £53 million contribution to the NWM section in Q1 2019.

(8)

Capital injection from RFS Holdings B.V Consortium members.

(9)

Distributed to RFS Holding B.V. Consortium members on completion of the Alawwal bank merger.

 

 

 

 

Condensed consolidated cash flow statement for the period ended 31 December 2019  

 

Year ended

 

31 December

31 December

2019

2018

 

£m

£m

Operating activities

 

 

Operating profit before tax

4,232

3,359

Adjustments for non-cash items

3,282

1,937

 

 

 

Net cash outflow from trading activities

7,514

5,296

Changes in operating assets and liabilities

(10,929)

(11,537)

 

 

 

Net cash flows from operating activities before tax

(3,415)

(6,241)

Income taxes paid

(278)

(466)

 

 

 

Net cash flows from operating activities

(3,693)

(6,707)

 

 

 

Net cash flows from investing activities

(716)

(7,994)

 

 

 

Net cash flows from financing activities (1)

(1,956)

356

 

 

 

Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

(1,983)

676

 

 

 

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

(8,348)

(13,669)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

108,936

122,605

 

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

100,588

108,936

 

Note:

(1)

2018 has been re-presented to align the balance sheet classification. MREL was previously presented in Operating activities and is now presented in Financing activities.

 

 

 

 

Notes

1. Basis of preparation

The condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts which were prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and interpretations issued by the IFRS Interpretations Committee of the IASB as adopted by the European Union (EU) (together IFRS).

 

Going concern

Having reviewed RBS's forecasts, projections and other relevant evidence, the directors have a reasonable expectation that RBS will continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. Accordingly, the results for the period ended 31 December 2019 have been prepared on a going concern basis.

 

Re-segmentation

Effective from 1 January 2019, Business Banking was transferred from UK Personal & Business Banking (UK PBB) to Commercial Banking as the nature of the business, including distribution channels, products and customers, are more closely aligned to the Commercial Banking business. Concurrent with the transfer, UK PBB was renamed UK Personal Banking and the previous franchise combining UK PBB (now UK Personal Banking) and Ulster Bank RoI was renamed Personal & Ulster. Reportable segmental comparatives have been re-stated.

 

Franchises

RBS continues to deliver on its plan to build a strong, simple and fair bank for both customers and shareholders. To help develop and deliver this strategy, in the fourth quarter of 2019, Commercial & Private Banking (CPB), combining the reportable segments of Commercial Banking and Private Banking ceased to operate as one business area and the franchise Personal & Ulster, combining the reportable segments of UK Personal Banking and Ulster Bank RoI was also disbanded. The reportable operating segments remain unchanged and no comparatives have been restated.

 

2. Accounting policies

RBS's principal accounting policies are as set out on pages 208 to 212 of the 2019 Annual Report and Accounts. From 1 January 2019, the accounting policies have been updated to reflect the adoption of the below.

 

Adoption of new accounting standard - Leases

RBS has adopted IFRS 16 'Leases' with effect from 1 January 2019, replacing IAS 17 'Leases'. RBS has applied IFRS 16 on a modified retrospective basis without restating prior years. For further details, see Accounting policy 9 and Note 22 of RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Amendments to existing accounting standards

IAS 12 'Income taxes' was amended with effect from 1 January 2019. The income statement now includes any tax relief on the servicing cost of instruments classified as equity. For further details, see Note 7 of RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Revised accounting policy - Presentation of interest in recoveries

In March 2019 the IFRS Interpretations Committee (IFRIC) issued an agenda decision on the presentation of unrecognised interest when a credit-impaired financial asset (commonly referred to as a 'Stage 3' financial asset) is subsequently paid in full or is no longer credit-impaired. This concluded that the difference arising from the additional interest recovered must be recognised as a reversal of impairment rather than within interest revenue. This affects both recognition and the reversal of the ECL allowance.

 

RBS Group changed its accounting policy in line with the IFRIC decision. Hence, the gross carrying amount of the financial assets within the scope of the provisions of the decision, as well as the associated ECL allowance on the statement of financial position, have been adjusted by £460 million and the comparative period restated by £455 million with no effect on equity. The coverage ratio for the current and comparative periods have been adjusted and restated accordingly.

 

In addition, until 1 January 2019, interest in suspense recoveries were presented as a component of interest receivable within Net interest income. From 1 January 2019 interest in suspense recoveries are presented within Impairment losses. It amounted to £64 million for the year ended 31 December 2019. Comparatives have not been rested on the grounds of materiality.

 

For further details see Accounting policies of RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

IAS 39 'Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement', IFRS 9 'Financial Instruments' and IFRS 7 'Financial Instruments: Disclosures' - In September 2019, the IASB published amendments to address the issues arising from the replacement of existing IBOR based interest rate benchmarks with alternative nearly risk-free interest rates (RFRs) in the context of hedge accounting. These amendments allow hedging relationships affected by the IBOR reform to be accounted for as continuing hedges. RBS has early adopted these amendments for the annual reporting period ending on 31 December 2019.

 

The amendments provide relief on key areas of hedge accounting most notably the hedge effectiveness assessment and the ability to identify LIBOR-based cash flows for the purpose of designation (re-designation) during the period of the Reform. Additional disclosures are shown in note 10 of RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Critical accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty

The judgements and assumptions that are considered to be the most important to the portrayal of RBS's financial condition are those relating to deferred tax, fair value of financial instruments, loan impairment provisions, goodwill, and provisions for liabilities and charges. These critical accounting policies and judgements are described on page 212 of RBS's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.
 

 

Notes

3. Provisions for liabilities and charges

 

Payment

Other

Litigation and

 

 

 

protection

 customer

other regulatory

 

 

 

insurance (1)

 redress

(incl. RMBS)

Other (2)

Total

 

£m

£m

£m

£m

£m

At 1 January 2019

695

536

783

990

3,004

Implementation of IFRS 16 on 1 January 2019 (3)

-

-

-

(170)

(170)

Other movements

-

(11)

(6)

(18)

(35)

Charge to income statement

-

17

5

33

55

Releases to income statement

-

(12)

(9)

(16)

(37)

Provisions utilised

(136)

(81)

(6)

(114)

(337)

At 31 March 2019

559

449

767

705

2,480

Other movements

-

7

3

25

35

Charge to income statement

-

64

18

100

182

Releases to income statement

-

(11)

(33)

(70)

(114)

Provisions utilised

(116)

(90)

(28)

(79)

(313)

At 30 June 2019

443

419

727

681

2,270

Other movements

-

(6)

19

30

43

Charge to income statement

900

29

14

69

1,012

Releases to income statement

-

(14)

(32)

(25)

(71)

Provisions utilised

(99)

(70)

(227)

(66)

(462)

At 30 September 2019

1,244

358

501

689

2,792

Other movements

-

(8)

(22)

(12)

(42)

Transfer

-

35

(35)

-

-

Charge to income statement

-

31

51

232

314

Releases to income statement

-

(11)

(37)

(50)

(98)

Provisions utilised

(88)

(91)

(32)

(78)

(289)

At 31 December 2019

1,156

314

426

781

2,677

 

Notes:

(1)   The balance at 31 December 2019 includes provisions held in relation to offers made in 2018 and earlier years of £97 million.

(2)   Materially comprises provisions relating to property closures and restructuring costs.

(3)   Refer to Note 2 for further information on the impact of the implementation of IFRS 16.

 

There are uncertainties as to the eventual cost of redress in relation to certain of the provisions contained in the table above. Assumptions relating to these are inherently uncertain and the ultimate financial impact may be different from the amount provided.

 

Payment protection insurance

An additional provision of £0.9 billion was taken during Q3 2019, reflecting greater than predicted complaints volumes in the lead up to the 29 August 2019 deadline for making new PPI complaints. RBS Group has made provisions totalling £6.2 billion to date for PPI claims, of which £5.0 billion had been utilised by 31 December 2019.

 

The table below shows the sensitivity of the provision to reasonable changes in the principal assumptions in relation to claims which are still being processed, all other assumptions remaining the same. RBS Group have received 4.9m claims as at the 29th August 2019 deadline.

 

 

 

 

Sensitivity

 

 

 

 

 

Consequential

Claims

 

 

 

 

change in

Processed as at

 

 

Claims still

Change in

provision

Assumption

31 December 2019

 

 

to process

assumption

£m

Average redress (1)

£1,631

 

 

£1,552

+/-£150

+/-74

No PPI % (2)

28%

 

 

60%

+/-3%

+/-13

Uphold rate (3)

85%

 

 

94%

+/-2%

+/-16

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notes:

(1)    Average redress for PPI (mis-sale) and Plevin (commission) pay outs

(2)    No PPI % relates to cases where no PPI policy exists.  Submissions submitted close to the statutory deadline have shown a much higher incidence of no product with the Group.

(3)    Average uphold rate per customer initiated claims received directly by RBS, including those received via CMCs, to end of timebar for both PPI (mis-sale) and Plevin (commission), excluding those for which no PPI policy exists.

 

Notes

4. Material developments in litigation, investigations and reviews

RBSG plc and certain members of RBS Group are party to legal proceedings and the subject of investigation and other regulatory and governmental action ("Matters") in the United Kingdom (UK), the United States (US), the European Union (EU) and other jurisdictions. Note 26 in the 2019 Annual Report and Accounts, issued on 14 February 2020 and available at RBS.com ("Note 26"), discusses the Matters in which RBS Group is currently involved and developments to those matters. Other than the Matters discussed in Note 26, no member of RBS Group is or has been involved in governmental, legal, or regulatory proceedings (including those which are pending or threatened) that are expected to be material, individually or in aggregate. Recent developments in the Matters identified in Note 26 that have occurred since the Q3 2019 Interim Management Statement was issued on 24 October 2019, include, but are not limited to, those set out below.

 

Litigation

FX antitrust litigation

On 11 December 2019, an application seeking an opt-out collective proceedings order was filed in the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal ('the CAT') against RBSG plc, NWM Plc and other banks. The application has been brought on behalf of persons who, between 18 December 2007 and 31 January 2013, entered into a relevant FX spot or outright forward transaction in the EEA with a relevant financial institution or on an electronic communications network. A similar application was filed in the CAT on 29 July 2019 and which was previously disclosed. It is anticipated that the CAT will determine which of the two opt-out applications should be permitted to represent the class.

 

Investigations and reviews

Investment advice review

As previously disclosed, RBS Group undertook a past business review of investment advice provided during 2010 to 2015. During October 2019, the FCA notified RBS Group of its intention to appoint a Skilled Person under section 166 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 to conduct a review of whether that past business review was subject to appropriate governance and accountability and led to appropriate customer outcomes. RBS Group is co-operating with the Skilled Person's review, which is expected to conclude during Q1 2020.

 

US investigations relating to fixed-income securities

In the US, RBS Group companies have in recent years been involved in investigations relating to, among other things, issuance, underwriting and trading in RMBS and other mortgage-backed securities and collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). Investigations by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) and several state attorneys general relating to the issuance and underwriting of RMBS were previously resolved. Certain other state attorneys general have sought information regarding similar issues, and RBS Group is aware that at least one such investigation is ongoing.

 

In October 2017, NWMSI entered into a non-prosecution agreement (NPA) with the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut (USAO) in connection with alleged misrepresentations to counterparties relating to secondary trading in various forms of asset-backed securities. In the NPA, the USAO agreed not to file criminal charges relating to certain conduct and information described in the NPA, conditioned on NWMSI and affiliated companies complying with the NPA's reporting and conduct requirements during its term, including by not engaging in conduct during the NPA that the USAO determines was a felony under federal or state law or a violation of the anti-fraud provisions of the United States securities law.

 

The RBS Group's NatWest Markets business is currently responding to a separate criminal investigation by the USAO concerning unrelated securities trading in 2018 by certain former traders of NWM Plc, involving alleged spoofing, which was reported in connection with the NPA. In January 2020, the NPA was extended for a fourth time (for three additional months) to

accommodate advanced discussions with the USAO and the DoJ concerning potential resolution of the criminal investigation into alleged spoofing as well as the impact of that conduct and any such resolution on the status of the NPA and the potential consequences thereof. The duration and outcome of these matters remain uncertain, including in respect of whether settlement may be reached. Material adverse collateral consequences, in addition to further substantial costs and the recognition of further provisions may occur depending on the outcome of the investigation, as further described in the Risk Factor relating to legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations set out in the Annual Report & Accounts on page 293.

 

US/Swiss tax programme

As previously disclosed, in December 2015, Coutts & Co Ltd., a member of RBS Group, incorporated in Switzerland, entered into a four-year non-prosecution agreement (the NPA) with the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) that required it to pay a penalty of US$78.5million. This was entered into as part of the DoJ's programme for Swiss banks, related to its investigations of the role that Swiss banks played in concealing the assets of US tax payers in offshore accounts (US related accounts). On 20 December 2019, Coutts & Co. Ltd. agreed to pay an additional $US27.9 million penalty relating to additional US related accounts that is had not identified and disclosed to DoJ at the time the NPA was executed in 2015. The additional penalty amount has been paid. The four-year term of the NPA has now expired, though certain document preservation and cooperation obligations continue.

 


 

 

Notes

5. Related party transactions

UK Government

The UK Government and bodies controlled or jointly controlled by the UK Government and bodies over which it has significant influence are related parties of RBS Group. RBS Group enters into transactions with many of these bodies on an arm's length basis.

 

Bank of England facilities

In the ordinary course of business, RBS Group may from time to time access market-wide facilities provided by the Bank of England. RBS Group's other transactions with the UK Government include the payment of taxes, principally UK corporation tax and value added tax; national insurance contributions; local authority rates; and regulatory fees and levies (including the bank levy and FSCS levies).

 

Other related parties

(a)  In their roles as providers of finance, RBS Group companies provide development and other types of capital support to businesses. These investments are made in the normal course of business and on arm's length terms. In some instances, the investment may extend to ownership or control over 20% or more of the voting rights of the investee company. However, these investments are not considered to give rise to transactions of a materiality requiring disclosure under IAS 24.

(b)  RBS Group recharges The Royal Bank of Scotland Group Pension Fund with the cost of administration services incurred by it. The amounts involved are not material to RBS Group.

 

Full details of RBS Group's related party transactions for the year ended 31 December 2019 are included in the 2019 Annual Report and Accounts.  

 

 

6. Dividends

In 2019 RBS paid an interim dividend of £241 million, or 2.0p per ordinary share and a special dividend of £1,449 million, or 12.0p per share. In addition, the company proposes a final dividend of £364 million, or 3.0p per ordinary share and a further special dividend of £606 million, or 5.0p per ordinary share.

 

The final and special dividends recommended by directors are subject to shareholders' approval at the Annual General Meeting on 29 April 2020. If approved, payment will be made on 4 May 2020 to shareholders on the register at the close of business on 27 March 2020. The ex-dividend date will be 26 March 2020.

 

 

7. Post balance sheet events

RBS Group intends to refocus the NatWest Markets business and estimates it will incur exit, restructuring and disposal costs of around £0.6 billion in 2020.  This estimate may be revised as plans to refocus the business are finalised.

 

 

 

Statement of directors' responsibilities

 

The responsibility statement below has been prepared in connection with RBS Group's full Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2019.

 

We, the directors listed below, confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 

The financial statements, prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the company and the undertakings included in the consolidated taken as a whole; and

The Strategic Report and Directors' report (incorporating the Business review) include a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the company and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that they face.

 

By order of the Board

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Howard Davies

 

Alison Rose-Slade

 

Katie Murray

Chairman

Group Chief Executive Officer

Group Chief Financial Officer

 

13 February 2020

 

Board of directors

Chairman

Executive directors

Non-executive directors

Howard Davies

Alison Rose

Katie Murray

 

 

Frank Dangeard

Alison Davis

Patrick Flynn

Morten Friis

Robert Gillespie

Baroness Noakes

Mike Rogers

Mark Seligman

Lena Wilson

 

 

 

 

Additional information

 

Presentation of information

In this document, 'RBSG plc' or the 'parent company' refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, and 'RBS' or 'RBS Group' refers to RBSG plc and its subsidiaries.

 

Financial information contained in this document does not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of section 434 of the Companies Act 2006 ('the Act'). The statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2018 have been filed with the Registrar of Companies and those for the year ended 31 December 2019 will be filed with the register of companies following the Annual General Meeting. The report of the auditor on those statutory accounts was unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis and did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Act.

 

MAR - Inside Information

This announcement contains information that qualified or may have qualified as inside information for the purposes of Article 7 of the Market Abuse Regulation (EU) 596/2014 (MAR) for The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc.  For the purposes of MAR and Article 2 of Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1055, this announcement is made by Alexander Holcroft, Head of Investor Relations for The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc.

 

Non-IFRS financial information

RBS prepares its financial statements in accordance with IFRS as issued by the IASB and as adopted by the European Union, which constitutes a body of generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). This document contains a number of adjusted or alternative performance measures, also known as non-GAAP or non-IFRS performance measures. These measures are adjusted for certain items which management believe are not representative of the underlying performance of the business and which distort period-on-period comparison. These non-IFRS financial measures are not measures within the scope of IFRS and are not a substitute for IFRS financial measures. Refer to the Appendix Non-IFRS financial measures for further information and calculations of non-IFRS financial measures included throughout this document, and, where relevant, the most directly comparable IFRS financial measures.

 

Contacts

Analyst enquiries:

Alexander Holcroft, Investor Relations

+44 (0) 20 7672 1982

Media enquiries:

RBS Press Office

+44 (0) 131 523 4205

 

 

Analyst and investor meeting and call

Fixed income call

Webcast and dial in details

Date:

Friday 14 February 2020

Friday 14 February 2020

www.rbs.com/results

Time:

9:00 am UK time

1:00 pm UK time

International: +44 (0) 203 057 6566

Conference ID:

5394186

1075557

UK Free Call: 0800 279 5995

US Local Dial-In, New York: +1 646 741 2115

 

Available on www.rbs.com/results

Announcement and slides.

2019 Annual Report and Accounts.

A financial supplement containing income statement, balance sheet and segment performance for the nine quarters ended 31 December 2019.

Pillar 3 Report.

 

 

 

 

Forward looking statements

Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements

Certain sections in this document contain 'forward-looking statements' as that term is defined in the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, such as statements that include the words 'expect', 'estimate', 'project', 'anticipate', 'commit', 'believe', 'should', 'intend', 'plan', 'could', 'probability', 'risk', 'Value-at-Risk (VaR)', 'target', 'goal', 'objective', 'may', 'endeavour', 'outlook', 'optimistic', 'prospects' and similar expressions or variations on these expressions.

 

In particular, this document includes forward-looking statements relating, but not limited to: future profitability and performance, including financial performance targets such as return on tangible equity; cost savings and targets; implementation of the RBS Group's strategy; litigation and government and regulatory investigations, including the timing and financial and other impacts thereof; the implementation of the Alternative Remedies Package; the continuation of the RBS Group's balance sheet reduction programme, including the reduction of risk-weighted assets (RWAs) and the timing thereof; capital and strategic plans and targets; capital, liquidity and leverage ratios and requirements, including CET1 Ratio, RWA equivalents (RWAe), Pillar 2 and other regulatory buffer requirements, minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities, and other funding plans; funding and credit risk profile; capitalisation; portfolios; net interest margin; customer loan and income growth; the level and extent of future impairments and write-downs, including with respect to goodwill; restructuring and remediation costs and charges; the RBS Group's exposure to political risk, economic risk, climate change risk, operational risk, conduct risk, cyber and IT risk and credit rating risk and to various types of market risks, including interest rate risk, foreign exchange rate risk and commodity and equity price risk; customer experience including our Net Promotor Score (NPS); employee engagement and gender balance in leadership positions.

 

Limitations inherent to forward-looking statements

These statements are based on current plans, estimates, targets and projections, and are subject to significant inherent risks, uncertainties and other factors, both external and relating to the RBS Group's strategy or operations, which may result in the RBS Group being unable to achieve the current targets, predictions, expectations and other anticipated outcomes expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In addition, certain of these disclosures are dependent on choices relying on key model characteristics and assumptions and are subject to various limitations, including assumptions and estimates made by management. By their nature, certain of these disclosures are only estimates and, as a result, actual future gains and losses could differ materially from those that have been estimated. Accordingly, undue reliance should not be placed on these statements. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date we make them and we expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in the RBS Group's expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.

 

Important factors that could affect the actual outcome of the forward-looking statements

 

We caution you that a large number of important factors could adversely affect our results or our ability to implement our strategy, cause us to fail to meet our targets, predictions, expectations and other anticipated outcomes or affect the accuracy of forward-looking statements we describe in this document, including in the risk factors and other uncertainties set out in the RBS Group's 2019 Annual Report and Accounts and other risk factors and uncertainties discussed in this document. These include the significant risks for the RBS Group presented by: strategic risk (including in respect of: the implementation and execution of the RBS Group's Purpose-led Strategy, including as it relates to the re-alignment of the NWM franchise and the RBS Group's climate ambition and the risk that the RBS Group may not achieve its targets); operational and IT resilience risk (including in respect of: the RBS Group being subject to cyberattacks; operational risks inherent in the RBS Group's business; exposure to third party risks including as a result of outsourcing and its use of new technologies and innovation, as well as related regulatory and market changes; the RBS Group's operations being highly dependent on its IT systems; the RBS Group relying on attracting, retaining and developing senior management and skilled personnel and maintaining good employee relations; the RBS Group's risk management framework; and reputational risk), economic and political risk (including in respect of: prevailing uncertainty regarding the terms of the UK's withdrawal from the European Union; increased political and economic risks and uncertainty in the UK and global markets; climate change and the transition to a low carbon economy; HM Treasury's ownership of RBSG plc and the possibility that it may exert a significant degree of influence over the RBS Group; changes in interest rates and changes in foreign currency exchange rates), financial resilience risk (including in respect of: the RBS Group's ability to meet targets and make discretionary capital distributions; the highly competitive markets in which the RBS Group operates; deterioration in borrower and counterparty credit quality;  the ability of the RBS Group to meet prudential regulatory requirements for capital and MREL, or to manage its capital effectively; the ability of the RBS Group to access adequate sources of liquidity and funding; changes in the credit ratings of RBSG plc, any of its subsidiaries or any of its respective debt securities; the RBS Group's ability to meet requirements of regulatory stress tests; possible losses or the requirement to maintain higher levels of capital as a result of limitations or failure of various models; sensitivity of the RBS Group's financial statements to underlying accounting policies, judgments, assumptions and estimates; changes in applicable accounting policies; the value or effectiveness of any credit protection purchased by the RBS Group; the level and extent of future impairments and write-downs, including with respect to goodwill; and the application of UK statutory stabilisation or resolution powers) and legal, regulatory and conduct risk (including in respect of: the RBS Group's businesses being subject to substantial regulation and oversight; the RBS Group complying with regulatory requirements; legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations (including the final number of PPI claim and their amounts); the replacement of LIBOR, EURIBOR and other IBOR rates to alternative risk free rates; heightened regulatory and governmental scrutiny (including by competition authorities); implementation of the Alternative Remedies Package and the costs related thereto; and changes in tax legislation).

 

The forward-looking statements contained in this document speak only as at the date hereof, and the RBS Group does not assume or undertake any obligation or responsibility to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.

 

The information, statements and opinions contained in this document do not constitute a public offer under any applicable legislation or an offer to sell or solicit of any offer to buy any securities or financial instruments or any advice or recommendation with respect to such securities or other financial instruments.

 

 

 

Appendix

 

Non-IFRS financial measures

 

Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures

As described in Note 1, RBS prepares its financial statements in accordance with IFRS as issued by the IASB which constitutes a body of generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). This document contains a number of adjusted or alternative performance measures, also known as non-GAAP or non-IFRS performance measures. These measures are adjusted for certain items which management believe are not representative of the underlying performance of the business and which distort period-on-period comparison. These non-IFRS measures are not measures within the scope of IFRS and are not a substitute for IFRS measures. These measures include:

 

Measure

Basis of preparation

Additional analysis or reconciliation

RBS return on tangible equity

Annualised profit for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by average tangible equity. Average tangible equity is total equity less intangible assets and other owners' equity.

Table I

RBS return on tangible equity excluding PPI and FX recycling gains.

Annualised profit for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders, adjusted for the PPI charge and FX recycling gains, for the period divided by average tangible equity. Average tangible equity is total equity less intangible assets and other owners' equity.

Table I

Segmental return on tangible equity

Annualised segmental operating profit adjusted for tax and for preference share dividends divided by average notional equity, allocated at an operating segment specific rate, of the period average segmental risk-weighted assets incorporating the effect of capital deductions (RWAes).

Table I

Operating expenses analysis - management view

The management analysis of strategic disposals in other income and operating expenses shows strategic costs and litigation and conduct costs in separate lines. These amounts are included in staff, premises and equipment and other administrative expenses in the statutory analysis.

Table II

Cost:income ratio

Total operating expenses less operating lease depreciation divided by total income less operating lease depreciation.

Table III

Commentary - adjusted periodically for specific items

RBS and segmental business performance commentary have been adjusted for the impact of specific items such as the Alawwal bank merger, FX recycling gains, push payments fraud costs, strategic, litigation and conduct costs (detailed on pages 17 to 21).

Notable items within total income and operating expenses on page 8,

Strategic, litigation and conduct costs - pages 17 to 21.

Bank net interest margin (NIM)

Net interest income of the banking business less the NatWest Markets (NWM) element as a percentage of interest-earning assets of the banking business less the NWM element.

Table IV

 

Performance metrics not defined under IFRS(1) 

Measure

Basis of preparation

Additional analysis or reconciliation

Loan:deposit ratio

Net customer loans held at amortised cost divided by total customer deposits.

Table V

Tangible net asset value (TNAV)

Tangible equity divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue. Tangible equity is ordinary shareholders' interest less intangible assets.

Page 3

NIM

Net interest income of the banking business as a percentage of interest-earning assets of the banking business.

Page 3

Funded assets

Total assets less derivatives.

Pages 17 to 21

ECL loss rate

The annualised loan impairment charge divided by gross customer loans.

Pages 17 to 21

 

Note:

(1)

Metric based on GAAP measures, included as not defined under IFRS and reported for compliance with ESMA adjusted performance measure rules.

 

In Q1 2019,  RBS introduced a new adjusted performance metric, Bank NIM, which is calculated as RBS net interest income and interest-earning assets less NWM net interest income and interest-earning assets. Bank NIM is believed by management to more accurately reflect the performance of the business as net interest income is not considered a main income stream for the NWM segment.

 

 

Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures

I. Return on tangible equity

 

 

Year ended or as at

 

Quarter ended or as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

RBS return on tangible equity

2019 

2018 

 

2019 

2019 

2018 

Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders (£m)

3,133

1,622

 

1,410

(315)

286

Annualised profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders (£m)

 

 

 

5,640

(1,260)

1,144

Adjustment for PPI provision for Q3 2019 (£m)

 

 

 

 

900

 

Adjustment for FX recycling gains (£m)

(1,572)

 

 

 

 

 

Adjusted profit attributable to ordinary shareholders (£m)

1,561

 

 

 

585

 

Annualised adjusted profit attributable to ordinary

 

 

 

 

 

 

  shareholders (£m)

 

 

 

 

2,340

 

Average total equity (£m)

45,160

48,483

 

43,860

45,579

47,667

Adjustment for other owners equity and intangibles (£m)

(11,960)

(14,997)

 

(11,952)

(12,226)

(14,765)

Adjusted total tangible equity (£m)

33,200

33,486

 

31,908

33,353

32,902

Return on tangible equity (%)

9.4%

4.8%

 

17.7%

(3.8%)

3.5%

Return on tangible equity adjusting for impact of:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 - PPI provision  (%)

 

 

 

 

7.0%

 

 - FX recycling gains (%)

4.7%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UK

Ulster

 

 

 

 

 

 

Personal

 Bank

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

NatWest

Year ended 31 December 2019

Banking

RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

Markets

Operating profit (£m)

855

49

 

1,327

297

344

(25)

Adjustment for tax  (£m)

(236)

-

 

(372)

(83)

(48)

7

Preference share cost allocation (£m)

(74)

-

 

(163)

(18)

(11)

(64)

Adjusted attributable profit (£m)

545

49

 

792

196

285

(82)

Adjustment for Alawwal bank merger gain (£m)

-

-

 

-

-

-

(150)

Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m)

545

49

 

792

196

285

(232)

Average RWAe (£bn)

37.7

14.0

 

78.2

9.8

6.9

48.0

Equity factor

15.0%

15.0%

 

12.0%

13.0%

16.0%

15.0%

RWAe applying equity factor (£bn)

5.7

2.1

 

9.4

1.3

1.1

7.2

Return on equity

9.6%

2.3%

 

8.4%

15.4%

25.7%

(3.2%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended 31 December 2018*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating profit (£m)

1,848

12

 

1,968

303

336

(70)

Adjustment for tax (£m)

(510)

-

 

(549)

(85)

(47)

20

Preference share cost allocation (£m)

(80)

-

 

(188)

(23)

(18)

(108)

Adjusted attributable profit (£m)

1,258

12

 

1,231

195

271

(158)

Average RWAe (£bn)

34.0

17.0

 

85.0

9.4

7.0

53.8

Equity factor

15.0%

14.0%

 

12.0%

13.5%

16.0%

15.0%

RWAe applying equity factor (£bn)

5.1

2.4

 

10.2

1.3

1.1

8.1

Return on equity

24.7%

0.5%

 

12.1%

15.4%

24.4%

(2.0%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Prior period data has been restated for the business re-segmentation completed in Q1 2019. Refer to Note 1 for further details.

 

 

 

 

Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures

I. Return on tangible equity

 

UK

Ulster

 

 

 

 

 

 

Personal

 Bank

 

Commercial

Private

RBS

NatWest

Quarter ended 31 December 2019

Banking

RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

Markets

Operating profit/(loss) (£m)

326

(5)

 

295

61

62

(132)

Adjustment for tax (£m)

(91)

-

 

(83)

(17)

(9)

37

Preference share cost allocation (£m)

(18)

-

 

(41)

(4)

(6)

(14)

Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m)

217

(5)

 

171

40

47

(109)

Annualised adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m)

868

(20)

 

684

160

188

(436)

Average RWAe (£bn)

38.7

13.2

 

74.9

10.1

6.9

45.0

Equity factor

15.0%

15.0%

 

12.0%

13.0%

16.0%

15.0%

RWAe applying equity factor (£bn)

5.8

2.0

 

9.0

1.3

1.1

6.7

Return on equity

14.9%

(1.0%)

 

7.6%

12.0%

17.3%

(6.5%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quarter ended 30 September 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating (loss)/profit (£m)

(508)

31

 

331

81

88

(193)

Adjustment for tax (£m)

142

-

 

(92)

(23)

(12)

54

Preference share cost allocation (£m)

(18)

-

 

(41)

(4)

(5)

(20)

Adjusted attributable (loss)/profit (£m)

(384)

31

 

198

54

71

(159)

Annualised adjusted attributable (loss)/profit (£m)

(1,536)

124

 

792

216

284

(636)

Average RWAe (£bn)

38.2

14.2

 

78.8

9.9

6.8

48.7

Equity factor

15.0%

15.0%

 

12.0%

13.0%

16.0%

15.0%

RWAe applying equity factor (£bn)

5.7

2.1

 

9.5

1.3

1.1

7.3

Return on equity

(26.8%)

5.8%

 

8.4%

16.8%

26.0%

(8.7%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quarter ended 31 December 2018*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating profit/(loss) (£m)

347

2

 

347

63

71

(203)

Adjustment for tax (£m)

(97)

-

 

(97)

(18)

(10)

57

Preference share cost allocation (£m)

(20)

-

 

(47)

(6)

(4)

(27)

Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m)

230

2

 

203

39

57

(173)

Annualised adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m)

920

8

 

812

156

228

(692)

Average RWAe (£bn)

35.6

15.7

 

81.1

9.6

7.1

50.2

Equity factor

15.0%

14.0%

 

12.0%

13.5%

16.0%

15.0%

RWAe applying equity factor (£bn)

5.3

2.2

 

9.7

1.3

1.1

7.5

Return on equity

17.2%

0.4%

 

8.3%

12.3%

20.0%

(9.2%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Prior period data has been restated for the business re-segmentation completed in Q1 2019. Refer to Note 1 for further details.

 

 

 

Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures

II. Operating expenses analysis

 

Statutory analysis (1,2)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019 

2018 

 

2019 

2019 

2018 

Operating expenses

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Staff expenses

(4,018)

(4,122)

 

(990)

(1,000)

(1,014)

Premises and equipment

(1,259)

(1,383)

 

(436)

(265)

(411)

Other administrative expenses

(2,828)

(3,372)

 

(743)

(1,222)

(851)

Administrative expenses

(8,105)

(8,877)

 

(2,169)

(2,487)

(2,276)

Depreciation and amortisation

(1,176)

(731)

 

(323)

(232)

(187)

Impairment of other intangible assets

(44)

(37)

 

(35)

21

(6)

Total operating expenses

(9,325)

(9,645)

 

(2,527)

(2,698)

(2,469)

 

Non-statutory analysis

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended

 

Quarter ended

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019 

2018 

 

2019 

2019 

2018 

Operating expenses

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

Staff expenses

(3,567)

(3,649)

 

(835)

(891)

(859)

Premises and equipment

(1,020)

(1,241)

 

(290)

(237)

(369)

Other administrative expenses

(1,638)

(1,787)

 

(560)

(405)

(623)

Strategic costs (1)

(1,381)

(1,004)

 

(537)

(215)

(355)

Litigation and conduct costs (2)

(895)

(1,282)

 

(85)

(750)

(92)

Administrative expenses

(8,501)

(8,963)

 

(2,307)

(2,498)

(2,298)

Depreciation and amortisation

(824)

(645)

 

(204)

(221)

(165)

Impairment of other intangible assets

-

(37)

 

(16)

21

(6)

Total

(9,325)

(9,645)

 

(2,527)

(2,698)

(2,469)

 

Notes:

(1)   On a statutory, or GAAP, basis, strategic costs are included within staff, premises and equipment, depreciation and amortisation, impairment of other intangible assets and other administrative expenses. Strategic costs relate to restructuring provisions, related costs and projects that are transformational in nature.

(2)   On a statutory, or GAAP, basis, litigation and conduct costs are included within other administrative expenses.

 

III. Cost:income ratio

 

 

UK

Ulster

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Personal

 Bank

Commercial

Private

RBS

NatWest

Central items

RBS

 

Banking

RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

Markets

& other

Group

Year ended 31 December 2019

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

£m

£m

£m

Operating expenses

(3,618)

(552)

 

(2,600)

(486)

(264)

(1,418)

(387)

(9,325)

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

138

-

-

-

-

138

Adjusted operating expenses

(3,618)

(552)

 

(2,462)

(486)

(264)

(1,418)

(387)

(9,187)

Total income

4,866

567

 

4,318

777

610

1,342

1,773

14,253

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

(138)

-

-

-

-

(138)

Adjusted total income

4,866

567

 

4,180

777

610

1,342

1,773

14,115

Cost:income ratio

74.4%

97.4%

 

58.9%

62.5%

43.3%

105.7%

nm

65.1%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year ended 31 December 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating expenses

(2,867)

(583)

 

(2,487)

(478)

(260)

(1,604)

(1,366)

(9,645)

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

121

-

-

-

-

121

Adjusted operating expenses

(2,867)

(583)

 

(2,366)

(478)

(260)

(1,604)

(1,366)

(9,524)

Total income

5,054

610

 

4,602

775

594

1,442

325

13,402

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

(121)

-

-

-

-

(121)

Adjusted total income

5,054

610

 

4,481

775

594

1,442

325

13,281

Cost:income ratio

56.7%

95.6%

 

52.8%

61.7%

43.8%

111.2%

nm

71.7%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Prior period data has been restated for the business re-segmentation completed in Q1 2019. Refer to Note 1 for further details.

 


 

 

Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures

III. Cost:income ratio

 

 

UK

Ulster

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Personal

 Bank

Commercial

Private

RBS

NatWest

Central items

RBS

 

Banking

RoI

 

Banking

Banking

International

Markets

& other

Group

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

£m

£m

£m

Quarter ended 31 December 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating expenses

(788)

(140)

 

(700)

(135)

(83)

(392)

(289)

(2,527)

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

35

-

-

-

-

35

Adjusted operating expenses

(788)

(140)

 

(665)

(135)

(83)

(392)

(289)

(2,492)

Total income

1,195

139

 

1,076

195

150

250

1,228

4,233

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

(35)

-

-

-

-

(35)

Adjusted total income

1,195

139

 

1,041

195

150

250

1,228

4,198

Cost:income ratio

65.9%

100.7%

 

63.9%

69.2%

55.3%

156.8%

nm

59.4%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quarter ended 30 September 2019

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating expenses

(1,601)

(131)

 

(638)

(119)

(62)

(348)

201

(2,698)

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

35

-

-

-

-

35

Adjusted operating expenses

(1,601)

(131)

 

(603)

(119)

(62)

(348)

201

(2,663)

Total income

1,224

145

 

1,077

198

150

150

(41)

2,903

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

(35)

-

-

-

-

(35)

Adjusted total income

1,224

145

 

1,042

198

150

150

(41)

2,868

Cost:income ratio

130.8%

90.3%

 

57.9%

60.1%

41.3%

232.0%

nm

92.9%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quarter ended 31 December 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating expenses

(757)

(164)

 

(764)

(143)

(86)

(455)

(100)

(2,469)

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

32

-

-

-

-

32

Adjusted operating expenses

(757)

(164)

 

(732)

(143)

(86)

(455)

(100)

(2,437)

Total income

1,246

147

 

1,116

198

155

152

44

3,058

Operating lease depreciation

-

-

 

(32)

-

-

-

-

(32)

Adjusted total income

1,246

147

 

1,084

198

155

152

44

3,026

Cost:income ratio

60.8%

111.6%

 

67.5%

72.2%

55.5%

299.3%

nm

80.5%

 

IV. Net interest margin

 

Year ended or as at

 

Quarter ended or as at

 

31 December

31 December

 

31 December

30 September

31 December

 

2019 

2018 

 

2019 

2019 

2018 

 

£m

£m

 

£m

£m

£m

RBS net interest income

8,047

8,656

 

2,037

2,006

2,176

NWM net interest income

188

(112)

 

4

62

(30)

Net interest income excluding NWM

8,235

8,544

 

2,041

2,068

2,146

Annualised net interest income

 

 

 

8,082

7,959

8,633

Annualised net interest income excluding NWM

 

 

 

8,097

8,205

8,514

Average interest earning assets (IEA)

448,556

436,957

 

456,164

454,429

442,116

NWM average IEA

35,444

27,851

 

36,594

38,616

30,407

Bank average IEA excluding NWM

413,112

409,106

 

419,570

415,813

411,709

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net interest margin

1.79%

1.98%

 

1.77%

1.75%

1.95%

Bank net interest margin (RBS NIM excluding NWM)

1.99%

2.09%

 

1.93%

1.97%

2.07%

 

V. Loan:deposit ratio

 

 

As at

 

31 December

31 December

 

2019 

2018

 

£bn

£bn

Loans to customers - amortised cost

326,947

305,089

Customer deposits

369,247

360,914

Loan:deposit ratio (%)

89%

85%

 

Legal Entity Identifier: 2138005O9XJIJN4JPN90

 


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