Foreign Filer Report • Feb 18, 2022
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FORM 6-K
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington D.C. 20549
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
For February 18, 2022
Commission File Number: 001-10306
NatWest Group plc
RBS, Gogarburn, PO Box 1000
Edinburgh EH12 1HQ
(Address of principal executive offices)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
Form 20-F X Form 40-F ___
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1):___
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7):___
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Yes ___ No X
If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82- __
The following information was issued as Company announcements in London, England and is furnished pursuant to General Instruction B to the General Instructions to Form 6-K:
Annual Results
For the year ended 31 December 2021
natwestgroup.com
NatWest Group plc
2021 NatWest Group performance summary
Alison Rose, Chief Executive Officer, commented:
NatWest Group delivered a strong performance in 2021 as we returned to profitability, made progress against our strategy and distributed more than £3.8 billion of capital to our shareholders, including £1.7 billion to the taxpayer.
We are acutely aware of the challenges that many people, families and businesses continue to face up and down the country and are working alongside our customers to provide the support they need – whether that is managing their money better, saving for a house or retirement or starting or growing a new business – as well as playing a leading role in the transition to net zero.
As our economy recovers and the trend towards digital services accelerates, we are investing to deliver long term value in the bank and drive sustainable growth. We will do this by building closer and deeper relationships with our customers and by supporting their evolving needs and expectations at every stage of their lives.
Resilient financial performance in a challenging environment
-
Full year attributable profit of £2,950 million and a return on tangible equity of 9.4%.
-
anchor Income across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses, excluding notable items, increased by 1.4% compared with 2020 principally reflecting balance sheet growth although this was offset by a 61.5% reduction in NatWest Markets income.
-
Q4 2021 Bank NIM (1) of 2.38% was 3 basis points higher than Q3 2021 reflecting higher yield curve and higher unsecured balances partly offset by lower mortgage margins.
-
Other expenses, excluding operating lease depreciation and Ulster Bank RoI direct costs, were £256 million, or 4.0% lower than 2020, in line with our target for the year.
-
A net impairment release of £1,278 million, or 35 basis points of gross customer loans, principally reflects releases in non-default portfolios and the low levels of realised losses we have seen across the year.
-
A final dividend of 7.5p is proposed and we intend to commence an ordinary share buy-back programme of up to £750 million in the first half of the year, taking total distributions deducted from capital in the year to £3.8 billion.
Robust balance sheet with strong capital and liquidity levels
-
The CET1 ratio remains strong at 18.2%, reducing by 50 basis points in the quarter due to our proposed on market buybacks and dividends. On 1 January 2022, the proforma CET1 ratio was 15.9% following regulatory changes.
-
The liquidity coverage ratio of 172% increased by 6 percentage points in the quarter.
-
Across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses, net lending excluding UK Government support schemes increased by £7.8 billion, or 2.6%, including £10.8 billion of mortgage growth, and increased by £0.8 billion in Q4 2021.
-
Customer deposits increased by £48.1 billion during 2021 to £479.8 billion.
(1)
Excludes NatWest Markets, Liquid Asset Buffer and Ulster Bank RoI.
Our purpose in action
We champion potential, helping people, families, and businesses to thrive. By working to benefit our customers, colleagues, and communities, we will deliver long-term value and drive sustainable returns to our shareholders. Some key achievements in 2021 include:
People and families
-
Over one million customers have now grown their savings with us by £100 or more for the first time, including 471,000 in 2021.
-
60% of our active current account customers exclusively bank with us using digital channels (1) .
-
In Retail Banking, we have completed £728 million of Green Mortgages since their launch in Q4 2020, rewarding customers for choosing an energy efficient home.
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As part of our strategy to help families and young people manage their money more effectively, we acquired the fintech business RoosterMoney, whose pocket money app aims to build money confidence and financial capability from an early age.
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Our dedicated customer care line, which was set up as a result of the pandemic, has helped and supported 527,123 people in 2021.
-
Net lending grew by £7.8 billion (1) in 2021, primarily driven by growth in mortgages.
Businesses
-
Announced a target to provide an additional £100 billion Climate and Sustainable Funding and Financing to customers between the 1 July 2021 and the end of 2025, alongside plans to launch a new green loan product for small to medium-sized enterprise (SME) customers (3) .
-
We committed £6 billion to help SMEs grow, of which £4 billion has already been allocated, and we doubled our funding of female entrepreneurship to £2 billion.
-
We are the first major bank to join forces with a renewable energy supplier and, through our collaboration with Octopus, we offer our retail, business and wealth customers a tailored package that improves the cost and efficiency of owning and running an electric vehicle.
Colleagues
-
In 2021, we were listed as one of The Times Top 50 Employers for Women’ for the eleventh consecutive year and named by LinkedIn as one of the top 25 workplaces in the UK to grow a career.
-
For the fifth year, we’ve retained our place in Bloomberg’s ‘Global Gender Equality Index’.
-
We have been listed in the ‘Working Families Benchmark Top 10 Employers’, showing that we are among those leading the way in building a flexible, family-friendly workplace.
-
In 2021, we provided all colleagues with access to build future skills through the NatWest Group Learning Academy. This supports our commitment for all colleagues to be upskilled in future-focused skills by 2025.
Communities
-
Recognised by Good Business Pays for our commitment to paying our invoices promptly to suppliers.
-
In July 2021, Coutts became a certified B Corp, evidencing our commitment to balance people, profit and the planet.
-
Following a successful launch in Q1 2021, in Q4 2021 we extended our employability programme, CareerSense, to support 13-24-year-olds not in employment, education, or training with readiness for work.
-
Through our seven regional boards, we are uniquely positioned to champion the potential of our regions and communities throughout the UK, helping people, families, and businesses to thrive.
-
During the year we collaborated with the Centre for Social Justice to explore what government, business and the third sector can do to strengthen local communities as the UK recovers from the pandemic.
(1)
Retail Banking current account customers only as at 31 December 2021 - 87% of our retail customer needs are now met digitally, with 60% of our customers banking exclusively digitally. Only activity in the last quarter is considered.
(2)
Net lending to customers across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses, excluding UK Government lending schemes.
(3)
In October 2021, having surpassed our previous 2020-21 £20 billion target during H1 2021, NatWest Group announced an ambition to provide £100 billion Climate and Sustainable Funding and Financing between 1 July 2021 and the end of 2025.
Chief Executive’s Statement
We champion potential, helping people, families, and businesses to thrive.
Our future and our growth are built on this one, clear purpose. It’s what drives us, defines us, and guides us. Because getting this right means success – for ourselves and for everyone we serve.
NatWest Group’s execution is centred around our purpose, driving sustainable growth through our strategic priorities. We are a relationship bank for a digital world, building ever deeper and closer connections with our customers throughout their financial lives, enabling people, families and businesses to thrive.
As I look back on 2021, I’m filled with admiration for the resilience and adaptability that our colleagues and customers have demonstrated during the pandemic. Faced with unprecedented and constantly evolving challenges to the UK’s public health and economy, the collective response has been nothing short of extraordinary.
As it has been throughout the pandemic, the health and well-being of our colleagues and customers continues to be our highest priority. In particular, for the key workers who have remained in our offices and branches to provide the level of service and support our customers have needed to rebuild and thrive.
NatWest Group is the UK’s leading business bank. It is also a truly regional bank, serving 19 million customers throughout the UK. We are proud of the role we play and the relationships we already have across every part of the country. And we are well positioned to deepen these relationships and to help our customers, our economy and our bank to grow because of the actions we have taken in recent years.
Thrive together
In spite of the difficult economic environment and the pressure this continues to place on people, families and businesses up and down the country, the UK remains an attractive and entrepreneurial market, with small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) driving around half of UK turnover and employing 60% of the private sector workforce. It is also an increasingly competitive market, where banks have to maintain their relevance to earn their growth.
As the economy starts to recover and grow, customers’ expectations of banks are changing faster than ever. So too is the way people live and work. Customers want a simple, engaging experience, designed to anticipate particular needs and reflect their priorities, just as they have in other areas of their lives.
When I first took up my role as Chief Executive, we committed to a purpose that guides all of our decision-making – we champion potential, helping people, families and businesses to thrive. We also set out clear areas of strategic focus to deliver on this purpose in order to drive sustainable returns for our shareholders and build sustainable value in our bank. We are executing well against these areas of focus, delivering growth in key areas while controlling costs, better allocating our capital and accelerating our digital transformation.
As a relationship bank for a digital world, our focus now is on the opportunities we see for future growth. It is a simple principle: if our customers and economy thrive, so will we.
Sustainable growth will come from ever closer and deeper relationships with our customers at every stage of their lives. Relationships that are based on insight and shared goals, delivering a simpler customer experience that removes complexity and frustration. Relationships that reflect customers’ values and aspirations for themselves and society. Relationships that start earlier in our customers’ lives and which adapt to meet their evolving needs. All of which will be enabled by the strategic partnerships and acquisitions we have made, and by our efforts to simplify how customers interact with our bank so they can enjoy an easier, frictionless banking experience. It will also be driven by a better allocation of our capital – with £3 billion being invested in the business across a three-year period from 2021 to 2023, in addition to the sustainable returns we are delivering to shareholders.
Delivering on our strategy
Of course, we are building from strong foundations. Our operating profit for 2021 of £4.0 billion (£4.3 billion including operating profit from discounted operations (1) ) increased from a loss of £481 (£351 million including operating profit from discounted operations (1) ) million the year before. This included impairment releases of £1.3 billion, which reflected the low levels of realised losses we have seen across the year.
We also continued to make progress against our other financial targets. The bank’s net lending – excluding government schemes – grew by £7.8 billion in 2021, primarily driven by growth in mortgages. We removed a further £256 million of costs from the business and retain a capital ratio well above our target range.
At the same time, our digital transformation accelerated as our customers chose to interact with us in different ways. Around 60% of our retail current account holders now only interact with us digitally (2) and we have seen further strong growth in mobile payments and video banking. This digitalisation of customer journeys is crucial to our future growth, and our Net Promoter Scores are improving in key segments as a result. For example, our much-improved online process for renewing mortgages now takes as little as 10 minutes.
(1)
Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures section for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of Non-IFRS financial and performance measures.
(2)
Retail Banking current account customers only as at 31 December 2021 - 87% of our retail customer needs are now met digitally, with 60% of our customers banking exclusively digitally. Only activity in the last quarter is considered.
Chief Executive’s Statement continued
We are also using our digital capabilities to keep our customers safe and to build their financial capabilities, with credit scoring now available in our app, dedicated support lines available for customers in vulnerable situations and more than 1 million customers growing their savings with us by £100 or more for the first time.
As the UK’s leading business bank and a committed champion of start-ups, we are removing barriers to enterprise, tackling inequality and supporting growth by helping entrepreneurs achieve their ambitions. We offer the UK’s largest fully funded business accelerator network, with accelerator hubs across the country providing support for high-growth businesses, especially those led by under-represented groups. During the pandemic, we pivoted this support for entrepreneurs to be delivered digitally, as we did with our ‘Dream Bigger’ programme which helps 16-18-year-old girls develop transferable entrepreneurial skills. We also helped create the SME Transformation Taskforce to unlock the growth opportunity for the UK economy, identified in our ‘Springboard to Sustainable Recovery’ report.
Turning to our own business, the capital restructuring of NatWest Markets has made substantial progress. It is simpler, less capital intensive and better able to create opportunities for our commercial customers by meeting their financing and risk management needs, and by providing access to global markets as well as leadership in high-growth areas, such as the green and sustainable bond markets. As a result, we are creating a new franchise called Commercial and Institutional by bringing together our Commercial Banking, NatWest Markets and RBS International businesses. The creation of this new franchise is a further step in removing complexity and becoming a simpler bank for customers to deal with.
We continue to make good progress on our phased withdrawal from the Irish market, minimising job losses and protecting services while supporting our customers and colleagues to allow a smooth transition. During the year, we signed two agreements with Allied Irish Banks p.l.c. (AIB) and Permanent TSB p.l.c. (PTSB) which account for about 60% of the Ulster Bank loan book in the Republic of Ireland, including the transfer of colleagues, wholly or mainly supporting the relevant portfolios and 25 branch locations.
These structural changes, along with our strong capital position and continued capital generation, mean that we are well placed to invest for growth, to provide the support our customers need as the economy recovers and to drive sustainable returns to shareholders, with £3.8 billion shareholder distributions announced for 2021 through dividends and buybacks.
The bank’s financial performance in 2021 also included a fine following breaches of the Money Laundering Regulations 2007. NatWest Group takes its responsibility to prevent and detect financial crime extremely seriously. We deeply regret that we failed to adequately monitor one of our customers between 2012 and 2016 to prevent money laundering. And while the case has now come to an end, we continue to invest significant resources in the ongoing fight against financial crime and fraud.
We are delivering our strategy through four strategic priorities, with the aim of driving long-term sustainable value and delivering on our 2023 targets, which we are now updating. As the economy recovers, we feel more confident about income and so we are providing guidance for the first time. In 2022, we expect to deliver income excluding notable items of above £11.0 billion in the Go-forward group (1,2) . We are amending our cost reduction target to around 3% per annum for 2022 and 2023 (2,3) , reflecting higher inflation and our ongoing investment in the business. Nevertheless, we maintain a strong focus on continued cost discipline. We retain our 2023 CET1 ratio of 13–14%, and we have upgraded our return on tangible equity target in 2023 to comfortably above 10% for the Group.
Tackling climate change
One key area where our bank has a critical role to play is in helping to tackle climate change. It is the biggest challenge we face as a society, requiring collaboration and co-operation on a global scale, and NatWest Group was proud to sponsor the COP26 global climate conference which took place in Glasgow in October/November 2021.
Our industry has a responsibility to drive and influence positive change. As such, NatWest Group is committed to getting its own house in order, bringing to an end the most harmful activity and providing the support, advice and products our customers need in order to accelerate the transition to a net-zero economy.
We are one of the few banks to offer a Green Mortgage product, with £728 million of lending to retail customers since its launch in Q4 2020, and we established the Sustainable Homes and Buildings Coalition with British Gas, Worcester Bosch and Shelter to improve the energy efficiency of buildings in the UK. Working with the fintech company CoGo, we were also the first bank to introduce a carbon-tracking feature in our mobile banking app. And we are helping colleagues and customers to move to electric vehicles through a collaboration with Octopus Energy.
| (1) | Income
excluding notable items. |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | Go-forward
group excludes Ulster Bank RoI. |
| (3) | Go-forward
group other operating expenses defined as total expenses less
litigation and conduct costs. |
Chief Executive’s Statement continued
Our Springboard to Sustainable Recovery report found that the transition to net zero can create a huge opportunity for SMEs. Close to 40% of our accelerator hubs are dedicated to supporting sustainable businesses to help our most innovative start-ups to take advantage of this opportunity. There is a clear societal responsibility here, but also an obvious commercial imperative in helping our customers to thrive as we transition to net zero.
Building a culture to champion potential
In seeking to make a positive contribution to the communities we serve, we are also building an open, inclusive and progressive place to work, breaking down barriers for our customers and for our colleagues.
We are a learning organisation and our culture is critical to our future success. We have worked with our colleagues as well as with our customers, suppliers and communities to create a new set of values that reflect the organisation we are today. Values that match the ambition, optimism and energy our purpose has given us, and that we can all believe in.
This builds on the progress we have made in recent years as we consider the needs of all our colleagues and stakeholders. In 2021, we launched our global Talent Academy to help identify and develop colleague potential, with almost 4,000 accepted onto the programme. We also offered mental health workshops for our line managers and our 1,300 Wellbeing Champions, as well as seeing strong take up of our virtual GP and physiotherapy offers.
Outside the bank, we launched our CareerSense programme, providing more than 8,200 young people with free access to tools that will develop critical skills and support their employability prospects. We were also recognised by the Good Business Pays campaign for our commitment to paying our suppliers the day after receiving an invoice, in line with the Supplier Charter which we introduced in 2020.
In our top three layers globally, 38% of roles are currently filled by female colleagues, a 9% increase since we first introduced our target to have a full gender balance in these roles by 2030, but a 1% decrease from 31 December 2020. We know we have more to do and we continue to focus on the recruitment, retention and advancement of women to meet our 2030 target.
In 2020, we launched the Racial Equality Taskforce to listen, learn and better understand the barriers faced by colleagues, customers and communities from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic backgrounds. Of those who disclose their ethnicity, we have an aggregate of 11% Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic colleagues in our top four layers in the UK; a 3% increase since our 14% target was first introduced in 2018.
Living up to our purpose
Over the coming years, we will create a closer and deeper relationship with the people, families and businesses that we serve throughout the UK. From teenagers to retirees, from newlyweds to new homeowners and from start-ups to the largest multinationals, we will understand them better, provide more value to them and help them to thrive.
By playing such a central role throughout the lives of our customers, by taking action on the issues they care about and by retaining their business as their needs and aspirations change, our bank will go from strength to strength.
More than that, it will make a meaningful contribution to our society, helping to grow and transition our economy as we move towards net zero, sustainably growing our business by living up to our purpose.
Alison Rose
Group Chief Executive Officer
Outlook (1)
The economic outlook remains uncertain. We will monitor and react to market conditions and refine our internal forecasts as the economic position evolves. The following statements are based on current market interest rate and economic expectations.
-
In 2023, we expect to achieve a return on tangible equity of comfortably above 10% for the Group.
-
In 2022, we expect income excluding notable items to be above £11.0bn in the Go-forward group.
-
We plan to invest around £3 billion over 2021 to 2023 but, with continuing simplification, we plan to reduce Go-forward group operating expenses, excluding litigation and conduct costs, by around 3% in both 2022 and 2023.
-
As a result of positive actions to change the shape of our book in recent years, we expect our through-the-cycle impairment loss rate to be around 20 - 30 basis points. We expect our 2022 and 2023 impairment charge to be lower than our through the cycle loss rate.
-
Across 2022 and 2023, we expect movements in RWAs to largely reflect lending growth and our phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland.
Capital and funding
-
We aim to end 2022 with a CET1 ratio of around 14% and target a ratio of 13-14% by 2023.
-
We intend to maintain ordinary dividends of around 40% of attributable profit and to distribute a minimum of £1 billion in each of 2022 and 2023 via a combination of ordinary and special dividends.
-
We intend to maintain capacity to participate in directed buybacks of the UK Government stake, recognising 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.
-
We will consider further on-market buybacks, in addition to the £750 million announced today, as part of our overall capital distribution approach as well as inorganic opportunities provided they are consistent with our strategy and have a strong shareholder value case.
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As part of the NatWest Group capital and funding plans we intend to issue between £3 billion to £5 billion of MREL-compliant instruments in 2022, with a continued focus on issuance under our Green, Social and Sustainability Bond Framework. NatWest Markets plc’s funding plan targets £4 billion to £5 billion of public benchmark issuance.
Ulster Bank ROI
-
We have made good progress on our phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland and expect the majority of the Allied Irish Banks and Permanent TSB asset sales to be largely complete by the end of 2022 and deposits to reduce over a longer timescale.
-
We would expect income and RWAs to follow the balance sheet trajectory. We expect the cost base to reduce over time and anticipate other operating expenses, excluding withdrawal related costs, in 2023 will be around €200 million lower than 2021.
-
We expect to incur disposal losses through income of around €300 million in 2022 and withdrawal related costs of around €600 million across 2022-24, with around €500 million incurred by the end of 2023.
-
We expect the phased withdrawal to be capital accretive.
(1) The guidance, targets, expectations and trends discussed in this section represent NatWest Group plc management’s current expectations and are subject to change, including as a result of the factors described in the Risk Factors section on pages 406 to 426 of the 2021 NatWest Group plc Annual Report and Accounts and on pages 179 to 200 of the NatWest Markets Plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts These statements constitute forward-looking statements. Refer to Forward-looking statements in this document.
Business performance summary
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 (1) | 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (1) | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||
| Go-forward group income (2) | 10,284 | 10,286 | 2,579 | 2,629 | 2,404 |
| Total income | 10,512 | 10,508 | 2,622 | 2,708 | 2,462 |
| Operating expenses | (7,758) | (7,858) | (2,328) | (1,931) | (2,329) |
| Profit before impairment releases/(losses) | 2,754 | 2,650 | 294 | 777 | 133 |
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax | 4,032 | (481) | 635 | 1,010 | (6) |
| Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders | 2,950 | (753) | 434 | 674 | (109) |
| Excluding notable items within total income (3) | |||||
| Go-forward group income excluding notable items (2) | 10,074 | 10,670 | 2,517 | 2,511 | 2,485 |
| Total income excluding notable items (2) | 10,267 | 10,892 | 2,560 | 2,555 | 2,543 |
| Operating expenses | (7,758) | (7,858) | (2,328) | (1,931) | (2,329) |
| Profit before impairment releases/(losses) | |||||
| excluding notable | |||||
| items | 2,509 | 3,034 | 232 | 624 | 214 |
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax excluding notable | |||||
| items | 3,787 | (97) | 573 | 857 | 75 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial income | |||||
| excluding | |||||
| notable | |||||
| items (2) | 9,620 | 9,486 | 2,510 | 2,423 | 2,319 |
| Performance key metrics and ratios | |||||
| Bank net interest margin (2,4) | 2.39% | 2.46% | 2.38% | 2.35% | 2.44% |
| Bank average interest earning assets (2,4) | £314bn | £301bn | £318bn | £315bn | £306bn |
| Cost:income ratio (2) | 73.4% | 74.4% | 88.6% | 70.9% | 94.5% |
| Loan impairment rate (2) | (35bps) | 85bps | (38bps) | (26bps) | 15bps |
| Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary | |||||
| shareholders - | |||||
| basic | 25.4p | (6.2p) | 3.8p | 5.8p | (0.9p) |
| Go-forward return on tangible equity | 10.0% | (1.3%) | 5.6% | 8.6% | nm |
| Return on tangible equity (2) | 9.4% | (2.4%) | 5.6% | 8.6% | (1.4%) |
Go-forward group excludes Ulster Bank RoI and discontinued operations.
For the notes to this table, refer to the following page.
Business performance summary continued
| 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (1) | |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |
| Balance sheet | |||
| Total assets | 782.0 | 778.3 | 799.5 |
| Funded assets (2) | 675.9 | 674.5 | 633.0 |
| Loans to customers - amortised cost | 359.0 | 361.0 | 360.5 |
| Loans to customers and banks - amortised cost and | |||
| FVOCI | 369.8 | 374.0 | 372.4 |
| Go-forward group net lending | 352.3 | 347.8 | 342.5 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial net lending excluding UK | |||
| Government | |||
| support | |||
| schemes (2) | 305.7 | 304.9 | 297.9 |
| Impairment provisions - amortised cost | 3.8 | 4.3 | 6.0 |
| Total impairment provisions | 3.8 | 4.4 | 6.2 |
| Expected credit loss (ECL) coverage ratio | 1.0% | 1.2% | 1.7% |
| Assets under management and administration | |||
| (AUMA) (2) | 35.6 | 35.7 | 32.1 |
| Go-forward group customer deposits (2) | 461.4 | 457.8 | 412.1 |
| Customer deposits | 479.8 | 476.3 | 431.7 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial customer | |||
| deposits (2) | 443.4 | 437.2 | 403.2 |
| Liquidity and funding | |||
| Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) | 172% | 166% | 165% |
| Liquidity portfolio | 286 | 278 | 262 |
| Net stable funding ratio (NSFR) (5) | 157% | 155% | 151% |
| Loan:deposit ratio (2) | 75% | 76% | 84% |
| Total wholesale funding | 77 | 67 | 71 |
| Short-term wholesale funding | 23 | 22 | 19 |
| Capital and leverage | |||
| Common Equity Tier (CET1) ratio (6) | 18.2% | 18.7% | 18.5% |
| Total capital ratio | 24.1% | 24.6% | 24.5% |
| Pro forma CET1 ratio, pre dividend accrual (7) | 19.5% | 19.5% | 18.8% |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) | 157.0 | 159.8 | 170.3 |
| UK leverage ratio (8) | 5.8% | 5.9% | 6.4% |
| Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share | 272p | 269p | 261p |
| Number of ordinary shares in issues (millions) (9) | 11,272 | 11,436 | 12,129 |
| (1) | Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously
published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued
operations as described in Note 3 on page 34. |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | Refer
to Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of basis of
preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and
performance metrics. |
| (3) | Refer
to page 11 for details of notable items within total
income. |
| (4) | NatWest
Group excluding NWM, Ulster Bank RoI and liquid asset
buffer. |
| (5) | NSFR
reported in line with CRR2 regulations finalised in June
2019. |
| (6) | Based
on CRR end-point including the IFRS 9 transitional adjustment of
£0.6 billion (30 September 2021 - £1.0 billion; 31
December 2020 - £1.7 billion). Excluding this adjustment, the
CET1 ratio would be 17.8% (30 September 2021 - 18.1%; 31 December
2020 - 17.5%). |
| (7) | The pro
forma CET1 ratio at 31 December 2021 excludes foreseeable items of
£2.0 billion, £846 million for ordinary dividends and
£1,190 million foreseeable charges and pension contributions
(30 September 2021 excludes foreseeable items of £1.2 billion,
£402 million for ordinary dividends and £816 million
foreseeable charges and pension contributions; 31 December 2020
excludes foreseeable charges of £364 million for ordinary
dividend (3p per share) and £266 million pension
contribution). |
| (8) | Based
on UK end-point including the IFRS 9 transitional adjustment of
£0.6 billion (30 September 2021 - £1.0 billion; 31
December 2020 - £1.7 billion). Excluding this adjustment the
UK leverage ratio would be 5.7% (30 September 2021 - 5.8%; 31
December 2020 - 6.1%). |
| (9) | In
March 2021, there was an agreement with HM Treasury to buy 591
million ordinary shares in the Company from UK Government
Investments Ltd (UKGI). NatWest Group cancelled 391 million of the
purchased ordinary shares and transferred the remaining 200 million
to own shares held. The number of ordinary shares in issue excludes
own shares held which comprises the remainder of the shares
purchased and shares held by the NatWest Group 2001 Employee Share
Trust. In line with the announcement in July 2021, NatWest Group
plc repurchased and cancelled 310.8 million shares for total
consideration of £676.2 million excluding fees. Of the 310.8
million shares bought back, 2.8 million shares were settled and
cancelled in January 2022. The nominal value of the share
cancellations has been transferred to the capital redemption
reserve with the share premium element to retained
earnings. |
Business performance summary continued
Chief Financial Officer review
We have delivered a strong operating performance in 2021. Group RoTE was 9.4%, benefiting from a £1.3 billion net impairment release. We achieved our Group cost reduction target of 4.0% and lending growth across our UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses was 2.6%, excluding UK Government financial support schemes. Our capital and liquidity position remains strong after returning £3.8 billion to shareholders, and default levels have remained low across all our portfolios. The CET1 ratio was 18.2%, reducing to 15.9% on 1 January 2022 following regulatory RWA and capital changes. We have made good progress on our phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland and will focus the financial commentary below on the Group excluding Ulster Bank RoI (Go-forward group).
Financial performance
Total income, excluding notable items, in the Go-forward group was 5.6% lower than prior year. Across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses income increased by 1.4% reflecting strong balance sheet growth, principally in our mortgage book. NWM income was below expectations, down by 61.5%, compared with 2020, reflecting continued weakness in Fixed Income, impacted by subdued levels of customer activity and ongoing reshaping of the business, and exceptional levels of market activity in the prior year. Income in the Go-forward group was broadly in line with Q3 2021.
Bank NIM (1) of 2.39% was 7 basis points lower than 2020 impacted by reduced structural hedge income, yield curve movements and lower unsecured balances. Q4 2021 Bank NIM (1) of 2.38% was 3 basis points higher than Q3 2021 reflecting higher yield curve, higher unsecured balances partly offset by lower mortgage margins.
We delivered a cost reduction of £256 million, or 4.0%, in 2021, in line with our target for the year. This has been achieved by transformation across our customer journeys and NWM business, in line with the strategic announcement made in February 2020 and a £68 million reduction in the bank levy charge. Strategic costs of £787 million included £237 million in NWM related to transformation, £124 million of redundancy charges, £88 million of technology spend, and an £85 million goodwill impairment.
A net impairment release of £1,278 million reflects the low levels of realised losses we have seen across the year. Total
impairment provisions reduced by £2.4 billion to £3.8 billion during 2021 and as a result ECL coverage ratio decreased from
1.66% to 1.03%. Whilst we are comfortable with the strong credit performance of our book, we continue to hold economic
uncertainty post model adjustments (PMAs) of £0.6 billion, or 15.3% of total impairment provisions. We will continue to assess
this position throughout the year.
We are pleased to report a 2021 attributable profit of £2,950 million, with earnings per share of 25.4 pence and a RoTE of 9.4%. A final dividend of 7.5 pence per share is proposed, bringing our total 2021 paid and proposed capital distributions to £3.8 billion through a combination of ordinary dividends, directed buybacks of the UK Government stake and our on-market buyback programme.
Across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses, and excluding UK Government support schemes, net lending increased by 2.6%. Mortgage growth exceeded the market, however commercial lending was behind market as we have sought to reduce certain exposures, through targeted sector reductions and capital actions, whilst continuing to focus on supporting customers through sustainable lending. During the second half of the year we completed £8.1 billion Climate and Sustainable Funding and Financing against our £100 billion target.
Customer deposits in the Go-forward group increased by £49.3 billion, or 12.0%, in 2021 including £9.4 billion related to Treasury repo activity. Across the UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses customer deposits increased by 10.0%, as customers continued to build and retain liquidity.
TNAV per share increased by 3 pence in the quarter to 272 pence largely reflecting the attributable profit partially offset by movements in the cash flow hedging reserve.
Capital
The CET1 ratio remains strong at 18.2%, or 17.8% excluding IFRS 9 transitional relief. The 30 basis points reduction in the year includes capital distributions of c.240 basis points, partially offset by the reduction in RWAs, c.170 basis points, and the attributable profit net of IFRS 9 transitional relief and other capital movements. RWAs of £157.0 billion reduced by £13.3 billion in 2021 mainly reflecting business movements in Commercial Banking, including targeted sector reductions, improvement in risk parameters and active capital management.
On 1 January 2022, the proforma CET1 ratio was 15.9% including the impact of regulatory RWA inflation, 200 basis points, the removal of the software development costs capital benefit, 20 basis points, and the tapering of IFRS 9 transitional relief, 10 basis points. RWAs increased by £18.8 billion, including £14.8 billion associated with mortgage risk weight changes.
Funding and liquidity
The LCR increased by 6 percentage points to 172% in the quarter, representing £89.9 billion headroom above 100% minimum requirement, following a Term Funding Scheme with additional incentives for SMEs (TFSME) drawdown. Total wholesale funding increased by £10.0 billion in the quarter to £76.7 billion.
(3)
Excludes Natwest Markets, Liquid Asset Buffer and Ulster Bank RoI.
Business performance summary continued
Summary consolidated income statement for the period ended 31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 (1) | 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (2) | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Net interest income | 7,614 | 7,476 | 1,942 | 1,889 | 1,901 |
| Own credit adjustments | 6 | (24) | 4 | 2 | (43) |
| Other non-interest income | 2,892 | 3,056 | 676 | 817 | 604 |
| Non-interest income | 2,898 | 3,032 | 680 | 819 | 561 |
| Total income | 10,512 | 10,508 | 2,622 | 2,708 | 2,462 |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (466) | (113) | (190) | (294) | (194) |
| Strategic costs | (787) | (1,013) | (378) | (77) | (326) |
| Other expenses | (6,505) | (6,732) | (1,760) | (1,560) | (1,809) |
| Operating expenses | (7,758) | (7,858) | (2,328) | (1,931) | (2,329) |
| Profit before impairment losses | 2,754 | 2,650 | 294 | 777 | 133 |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 1,278 | (3,131) | 341 | 233 | (139) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax | 4,032 | (481) | 635 | 1,010 | (6) |
| Tax charge | (996) | (74) | (234) | (330) | (75) |
| Profit/(loss) from continuing operations | 3,036 | (555) | 401 | 680 | (81) |
| Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax | 276 | 121 | 97 | 64 | 61 |
| Profit/(loss) for the period | 3,312 | (434) | 498 | 744 | (20) |
| Attributable to: | |||||
| Ordinary shareholders | 2,950 | (753) | 434 | 674 | (109) |
| Preference shareholders | 19 | 26 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Paid-in equity holders | 299 | 355 | 58 | 63 | 83 |
| Non-controlling interests | 44 | (62) | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Notable items within total income (2) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retail Banking | |||||
| Retail | |||||
| Banking debt sale gain | - | 8 | - | - | 1 |
| Metro Bank | |||||
| mortgage portfolio acquisition loss | - | (58) | - | - | (58) |
| Private Banking | |||||
| Consideration on | |||||
| the sale of Adam & Company | |||||
| investment management business | 54 | - | 54 | - | - |
| Commercial Banking | |||||
| Commercial | |||||
| Banking fair value and disposal | |||||
| gain/(loss) | (22) | (37) | (4) | 4 | (27) |
| Commercial | |||||
| Banking tax variable lease repricing | 32 | - | - | - | - |
| NatWest Markets | |||||
| NatWest | |||||
| Markets asset disposals/strategic | |||||
| risk reduction (3) | (64) | (83) | (12) | (12) | (8) |
| Own credit | |||||
| adjustments (OCA) | 6 | (24) | 3 | 2 | (43) |
| Central items & other | |||||
| Loss on | |||||
| redemption of own debt | (138) | (324) | - | - | - |
| Liquidity | |||||
| Asset Bond sale gains | 120 | 113 | 50 | 45 | 2 |
| Share of | |||||
| associate profit/(loss) for Business | |||||
| Growth | |||||
| Fund | 219 | (22) | 11 | 79 | 8 |
| Property | |||||
| strategy update | (44) | (44) | - | ||
| FX recycling | |||||
| gain/(loss) in Central items & other | - | (40) | - | - | (1) |
| IFRS | |||||
| volatility in Central items & other (4) | 47 | 83 | 3 | - | 45 |
| Own credit | |||||
| adjustments (OCA) | - | - | 1 | - | - |
| Ulster Bank RoI | |||||
| Ulster Bank | |||||
| RoI gain arising from the restructuring of | |||||
| structural hedges | 35 | - | - | 35 | - |
| Total | 245 | (384) | 62 | 153 | (81) |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
(2)
Refer to page 1 of the Non-IFRS financial measures Appendix.
(3)
Asset disposals/strategic risk reduction relates to the cost of exiting positions, which includes changes in carrying value to align to the expected exit valuation, and the impact of risk reduction transactions entered into, in respect of the strategic announcement on 14 February 2020.
(4)
IFRS volatility relates to derivatives used for risk management not in IFRS hedge accounting relationships and IFRS hedge ineffectiveness.
Business performance summary
Retail Banking
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Total income | 4,445 | 4,181 | 1,164 | 1,131 | 974 |
| Operating expenses | (2,513) | (2,540) | (774) | (552) | (818) |
| of | |||||
| which: Other expenses | (2,250) | (2,295) | (605) | (543) | (566) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 36 | (792) | (5) | (16) | (65) |
| Operating profit | 1,968 | 849 | 385 | 563 | 91 |
| Return on equity | 26.1% | 10.2% | 19.7% | 29.9% | 3.8% |
| Net interest margin | 2.08% | 2.13% | 2.08% | 2.09% | 2.03% |
| Cost:income ratio | 56.5% | 60.8% | 66.5% | 48.8% | 84.0% |
| Loan impairment rate | (2)bps | 45bps | 1bps | 4bps | 15bps |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 182.2 | 180.5 | 172.3 | ||
| Customer deposits | 188.9 | 186.3 | 171.8 | ||
| RWAs | 36.7 | 36.6 | 36.7 |
| In
2021, Retail Banking continued to grow net lending with an measured
approach to risk, delivering a return on equity of 26.1% and
operating profit of £1,968 million. Lending growth was
supported by a strong performance in mortgages and a return to
unsecured lending growth in the second half of 2021. Retail Banking
completed £1.1 billion of Climate and Sustainable Funding and
Financing in 2021, which will contribute towards the new NatWest
Group target of £100 billion between 1 July 2021 and the end
of 2025. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £264 million, or 6.3%, higher than 2020 reflecting
mortgage balance and margin improvement, higher
transactional-related fee income and non-repeat of loss on
acquisition, partially offset by the impact of the lower interest
rate environment on deposit returns, lower average unsecured
balances and the annualised impact of regulatory changes on fee
income. |
| − | Net
interest margin was 5 basis points lower than 2020 reflecting lower
deposit returns and lower average unsecured balances, partly offset
by higher mortgage margins. |
| − | Other
expenses decreased by £45 million, or 2.0%, compared with 2020
primarily reflecting an 8.8% reduction in headcount as a result of
continued customer digital adoption, automation and improvement of
end-to-end customer journeys, including digitalising the customer
account opening processes, leading to an increase in straight
through processing within journeys from
45% in December 2020 to 70% in December 2021. |
| − | Strategic
costs of £117 million in Q4 2021 include an £85 million
impairment of goodwill, reflecting a legacy business in accelerated
run down within Retail Banking. |
| − | An
impairment release of £36 million primarily reflects ECL
provision releases in the non-defaulted portfolio. |
| − | Net
loans to customers increased by £9.9 billion, or 5.7%,
compared with 2020 as a result of strong gross new mortgage lending
and improved retention. Gross new mortgage lending was £36.0
billion with flow share of 11.5%, supporting mortgage balance
growth of £9.8 billion or 6.0%, representing a stock share of
11.0%. Cards were stable however; we have seen improved customer
spend and demand in the second half of 2021. Personal advances
reduced by £0.2 billion as customers made higher overdraft
repayments in H1 2021, reflecting the impact of UK Government
restrictions partly offset by growth in H2 2021 as customer demand
for personal loans increased as the UK economy
recovered. |
| − | Customer
deposits increased by £17.1 billion, or 10.0%, compared with
2020 as UK Government schemes combined with Covid-related
restrictions resulted in lower customer spend and increased savings
in H1 2021. |
| − | RWAs
were broadly stable compared with 2020 primarily reflecting lending
growth, offset by continued quality improvements. |
| Q4 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £33 million, or 2.9%, higher than Q3 2021
reflecting higher transactional-related fee income, higher mortgage
balances, higher unsecured balances and improved deposit returns,
partially offset by mortgage margin dilution as competition in the
market remained intense. Non-interest income in Q4 2021 benefitted
from the impact of movements in one-off items, including travel
related profit share, totaling around £9 million. Total income
was £190 million higher than Q4 2020, primarily reflecting
mortgage balance and margin improvements and the non-repeat of a
loss on acquisition. |
| − | Net
interest margin was 1 basis point lower than Q3 2021 reflecting
mortgage margin dilution, largely offset by the continued recovery
in unsecured balances and higher deposit returns, supported by the
December 2021 GBP base rate rise. Mortgage completion margins of
102 basis points were lower than the back book margin of 161 basis
points, with application margins of 60 basis points in the quarter,
reflecting a steep rise in swap rates, increasing to around 70
basis points in the latter part of Q4 2021. |
| − | Other
expenses were £62 million, or 11.4% higher than Q3 2021
largely due to the inclusion of the annual UK bank levy charge and
the timing of marketing, investment, and other non-staff
costs. |
| − | Impairment
losses of £5 million in Q4 2021 primarily reflects Stage 3
defaults, which remain at low levels, partially offset by ECL
provision releases from the improved economic outlook. |
| − | Net
loans to customers increased by £1.7 billion, or 0.9% compared
with Q3 2021 reflecting continued mortgage growth of £1.4
billion, with gross new mortgage lending of £8.4 billion
representing flow share of 12.3%. Both personal advances and cards
increased by £0.1 billion respectively as customer demand and
spend levels continued to increase. |
Business performance summary
Private Banking
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Total income | 816 | 763 | 253 | 195 | 184 |
| Operating expenses | (520) | (455) | (155) | (116) | (91) |
| o f which: Other | |||||
| expenses | (504) | (466) | (145) | (117) | (119) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 54 | (100) | 12 | 15 | (26) |
| Operating profit | 350 | 208 | 110 | 94 | 67 |
| Return on equity | 17.0% | 10.3% | 21.3% | 18.1% | 13.3% |
| Net interest margin | 1.76% | 2.05% | 1.75% | 1.76% | 1.86% |
| Cost:income ratio | 63.7% | 59.6% | 61.3% | 59.5% | 49.5% |
| Loan impairment rate | (29)bps | 58bps | (26)bps | (32)bps | 61bps |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 18.4 | 18.4 | 17.0 | ||
| Customer deposits | 39.3 | 35.7 | 32.4 | ||
| RWAs | 11.3 | 11.4 | 10.9 | ||
| Assets Under Management (AUMs) (1) | 30.2 | 30.5 | 27.0 | ||
| Assets Under Administration (AUAs) (1) | 5.4 | 5.2 | 5.1 | ||
| Assets Under Management and Administration | |||||
| (AUMA) (1) | 35.6 | 35.7 | 32.1 |
| (1) The definition of
AUMs/AUAs has been updated to provide clarity on assets where the
investment management is undertaken by Private Banking. AUMs now
comprise assets where the investment management is undertaken by
Private Banking irrespective of the franchise the customer belongs
to. AUAs now comprises third party assets held on an execution-only
basis in custody. Total AUMA remain as before. In
2021, Private Banking delivered strong growth across AUMA, lending
and deposits which has supported a 2021 return on equity of 17.0%
and operating profit of £350 million. Digital net new money
across NatWest Invest, Royal Bank Invest and Coutts Invest of
£0.8 billion in 2021 is more than double 2020. Approximately
2,114 new customers were onboarded into Private Banking, an
increase of around 29% compared to 2020. NatWest
Group completed the sale of Adam & Company’s investment
management business on 1 October 2021 for a total consideration of
£54 million, which has been recorded as a notable item in the
Q4 2021 results. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £53 million, or 6.9%, higher than 2020 reflecting a
£54 million consideration from the sale of the Adam &
Company investment management business in Q4 2021 and strong
balance growth partially offset by lower deposit returns in a lower
interest rate environment. |
| − | Net
interest margin decreased by 29 basis points reflecting lower
deposit returns and higher liquidity portfolio costs. |
| − | Other
expenses were £38 million, or 7.9%, higher than 2020
principally due to investment in digital infrastructure and an
increase in headcount related to the enhancement of AUMA growth
propositions. |
| − | A net
impairment release of £54 million in 2021 mainly reflects ECL
provision releases in non-default portfolios. |
| − | Net
loans to customers increased by £1.4 billion, or 8.2%,
compared with 2020 driven by continued strong mortgage lending
growth of £1.1 billion or 10.3%, including gross new lending
of £3.3 billion. RWAs increased by £0.4 billion, or
3.7%. |
| − | Customer
deposits increased by £6.9 billion, or 21.3%, compared with
2020 reflecting strong personal and commercial inflows as UK
Government restrictions resulted in clients continuing to build and
retain liquidity. |
| − | AUMAs
increased by £3.5 billion, or 10.9%, driven by an increase in
AUM net new money (NNM) of £3.0 billion and AUM positive
investment performance of £2.1 billion, partially offset by
the £1.8 billion impact of the sale of Adam &
Company’s investment management business and £0.2
billion EEA resident client outflows following the UK’s exit
from the EU. AUM NNM of £3.0 billion represents 9.3% of
opening AUMAs, which is double NNM in 2020. |
| Q4 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £58 million, or 29.7%, higher than Q3 2021 impacted
by the consideration from the sale of the Adam & Company
investment management business. |
| − | Net
interest margin decreased by 1 basis point in Q4 2021 as higher
funding costs were partially offset by an increase in deposit
income. Mortgage book margin was 182 basis points at Q4
2021. |
| − | Other
expenses were £28 million, or 23.9%, higher than Q3 2021
largely due to the annual bank levy charge and timing of marketing
spend. Other expenses were £26 million, or 21.8% higher than
Q4 2020 largely reflecting investment in digital infrastructure,
timing of marketing spend and a 4.2% increase in headcount related
to the enhancement of AUMA growth propositions. |
| − | Net
loans to customers were stable compared with Q3 2021 with mortgage
growth offset by lower commercial lending. |
| − | AUMAs
were broadly stable compared with Q3 2021 as an increase in NNM of
£0.7 billion and positive investment performance of £1.1
billion, was offset by the £1.8 billion impact from the sale
of Adam & Company’s investment management
business. |
Business performance summary
Commercial Banking
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Total income | 3,875 | 3,958 | 987 | 965 | 951 |
| Operating expenses | (2,354) | (2,430) | (646) | (556) | (656) |
| of which: Other expenses | |||||
| (excluding OLD) | (2,013) | (2,116) | (546) | (484) | (560) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 1,073 | (1,927) | 289 | 216 | (10) |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 2,594 | (399) | 630 | 625 | 285 |
| Return on equity | 22.0% | (4.5%) | 22.4% | 21.7% | 8.1% |
| Net interest margin | 1.54% | 1.68% | 1.52% | 1.49% | 1.56% |
| Cost:income ratio | 59.3% | 59.9% | 64.2% | 56.0% | 67.8% |
| Loan impairment rate | (104)bps | 173bps | (113)bps | (83)bps | 4bps |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 101.2 | 102.7 | 108.2 | ||
| Customer deposits | 177.7 | 178.3 | 167.7 | ||
| RWAs | 66.4 | 66.4 | 75.1 |
| Commercial
Banking delivered a resilient performance with a return on equity
of 22.0% and operating profit of £2,594 million including a
£1,073 million impairment release as the UK economy continued
to recover. Returns have improved through active capital
management, pricing discipline, and a targeted sector strategy
linked to our purpose. Growth
in Tyl, our innovative merchant acquiring platform, saw over
£1.5 billon of transactions in 2021, three times 2020 levels,
as transaction activity recovered and customers favoured digital
payment solutions and reduced their reliance on cash and
branch. Commercial
Banking completed £5.2 billion of Climate and Sustainable
Funding and Financing in 2021, including £2.7 billion in H2
2021 which will contribute towards the new NatWest Group target of
£100 billion between 1 July 2021 and the end of
2025. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £83 million, or 2.1%, lower than 2020 due to
reduced deposit returns in a low interest rate environment and
lower lending volumes, partially offset by a recovery in
transactional banking fee income in H2 2021 driven by the UK
economy. |
| − | Net
interest margin decreased by 14 basis points in 2021 reflecting
lower deposit returns. |
| − | Other
expenses, excluding OLD, decreased by £103 million, or 4.8%,
compared with 2020 reflecting cost efficiencies and simplifying our
operating model enabling better service to our customers including
building momentum in our digital service, whilst reducing our
headcount by 9.8%. |
| − | Impairment
release of £1,073 million primarily reflects ECL provision
releases related to the improved economic outlook with Stage 3
defaults remaining at low levels. |
| − | Net
loans to customers decreased by £7.0 billion, or 6.5%,
compared with 2020 primarily reflecting targeted sector reductions
including real estate, retail and leisure and active capital
management of £1.0 billion. Customer liquidity resulted in net
revolving credit facility (RCF) repayments of £1.7 billion
driven by large corporates & institutions and real estate as
well as UK Government financial support scheme repayments of
£1.3 billion. RCF utilisation was approximately 19% of
committed facilities in 2021, significantly below pre-COVID-19
levels of approximately 27%. These items were partially offset by
£1.4 billion lower loan provisions and growth in specialist
businesses of £0.7 billion. |
| − | Customer
deposits increased by £10.0 billion, or 6.0%, compared with
2020 reflecting customer behaviour to build and retain
liquidity. |
| − | RWAs
decreased by £8.7 billion, or 11.6%, compared with 2020 mainly
reflecting business movements including targeted sector reductions
in real estate and retail, improvement in risk parameters and
active capital management of £1.5 billion. |
| Q4 performance | |
| − | Total
income was £22 million, or 2.3%, higher than Q3 2021 due to
improved deposit returns supporting an increase in net interest
income and continued recovery in transactional banking payment
activity. |
| − | Net
interest margin improved by 3bps compared with Q3 2021 due to
higher deposit returns supported by the December 2021 GBP base rate
rise. |
| − | Other
expenses, excluding OLD, were £61 million, or 12.6%, higher
than Q3 2021 largely due to due to the inclusion of the annual UK
bank levy charge and the timing of marketing and other non-staff
costs. |
| − | Impairment
release of £289 million in Q4 2021 primarily reflects ECL
releases related to the improved economic outlook with Stage 3
defaults remaining at low levels. |
| − | Net
loans to customers were £1.5 billion, or 1.5%, lower than Q3
2021 primarily reflecting UK Government financial support scheme
repayments of £0.7 billion, further targeted sector reductions
including Real Estate £0.8 billion and working capital flows,
partly offset by an increase in specialist business activity of
£0.7 billion, and lower loan provision of £0.4
billion. |
| − | Customer
deposits were £0.6 billion, or 0.3%, lower than Q3 2021 in
part due to seasonal outflows. |
Business performance summary
RBS International
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Total income | 548 | 497 | 156 | 136 | 126 |
| Operating expenses | (242) | (291) | (70) | (60) | (112) |
| of which: Other | |||||
| expenses | (228) | (244) | (68) | (56) | (73) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 52 | (107) | 12 | 11 | (27) |
| Operating profit | 358 | 99 | 98 | 87 | (13) |
| Return on equity | 22.5% | 6.1% | 24.0% | 21.6% | (5.5%) |
| Net interest margin | 1.01% | 1.17% | 0.99% | 0.99% | 1.03% |
| Cost:income ratio | 44.2% | 58.6% | 44.9% | 44.1% | 88.9% |
| Loan impairment rate | (33)bps | 80bps | (31)bps | (28)bps | 81bps |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 15.5 | 15.6 | 13.3 | ||
| Customer deposits | 37.5 | 36.9 | 31.3 | ||
| RWAs | 7.5 | 8.1 | 7.5 | ||
| Depositary assets (1) | 479.4 | 463.8 | 427.5 |
(1)
Assets held by RBSI as an independent trustee and in a depositary service capacity.
| During
2021 RBS International (RBSI) delivered £358 million of
operating profit with return on equity of 22.5% through strong
lending and deposit volumes, an impairment release and continued
growth in our depositary offering. This was achieved while
continuing investment in our digital offering to customers
including new payment features on the mobile app for both personal
and business customers and the extension of our video banking
proposition delivered in 2021. RBSI
completed £1.5 billion of Climate and Sustainable Funding and
Financing in 2021, including £0.9 billion in H2 2021 which
will contribute towards the new NatWest Group target of £100
billion between 1 July 2021 and the end of 2025. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance | |
| − | Total
income increased by £51 million, or 10.3%, compared with 2020
as a result of higher average lending balances in Institutional
Banking, including higher non-utilisation fees, and higher
depositary fee income. |
| − | Net
interest margin decreased by 16 basis points in 2021 reflecting a
higher proportion of lower yielding assets with central banks due
to the higher volume of short term customer deposits in the
year. |
| − | Other
expenses decreased by £16 million, or 6.6%, compared with 2020
primarily reflecting the reduction in the bank levy charge for
2021. |
| − | An
impairment release of £52 million in 2021 largely reflects
releases across Stage 1 and 2 within the wholesale
sector. |
| − | Net
loans to customers increased by £2.2 billion, or 16.5%,
compared with 2020 as a result of higher Institutional Banking
sector volumes. |
| − | Customer
deposits increased by £6.2 billion, or 19.8%, compared with
2020 as a result of higher call balances in the Institutional
Banking sector throughout the year. |
| − | Depositary
assets were £51.9 billion, or 12.1%, higher than 2020
reflecting strong performance in the funds sector primarily in the
UK. |
| − | RWAs of
£7.5 billion are broadly stable compared with 2020 as a result
of lending volume growth primarily in the Institutional Banking
sector, offset by model updates in the period. |
| Q4 performance | |
| − | Total
income increased by £20 million, or 14.7%, compared with Q3
2021 reflecting higher fee income from higher arrangement and
account maintenance fees and higher volume growth. |
| − | Net
interest margin remained broadly stable in Q4 2021 as higher income
from higher average lending balances was offset by high levels of
short-term customer deposits placed with central banks at the start
of the quarter. |
| − | Other
expenses increased by £12 million, or 21.4%, million compared
to Q3 2021 primarily due to additional technology spend, annual
license fees and a £2 million charge relating to the annual
bank levy. |
| − | Net
loans to customers decreased by £0.1 billion, or 0.6% compared
with Q3 2021 primarily due to seasonal repayments in Institutional
Banking Fund balances. |
| − | Customer
deposits increased by £0.6 billion, or 1.6% compared with Q3
2021 as a result of higher call balances in the Institutional
Banking sector in the quarter. |
Business performance summary
NatWest Markets (1)
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Income before revenue share paid, asset disposals and | |||||
| OCA | 670 | 1,423 | 78 | 160 | 177 |
| Revenue share with other NatWest Group segments | (197) | (193) | (44) | (55) | (53) |
| Income excluding asset disposals and OCA | 473 | 1,230 | 34 | 105 | 124 |
| Asset disposals/strategic risk reduction (2) | (64) | (83) | (12) | (12) | (8) |
| Own credit adjustments (OCA) | 6 | (24) | 3 | 2 | (43) |
| Total income | 415 | 1,123 | 25 | 95 | 73 |
| Operating expenses | (1,161) | (1,310) | (343) | (258) | (301) |
| of which: Other | |||||
| expenses | (907) | (1,038) | (245) | (206) | (244) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 35 | (40) | 16 | 3 | (2) |
| Operating loss | (711) | (227) | (302) | (160) | (230) |
| Return on equity | (13.1%) | (3.8%) | (22.5%) | (12.1%) | (15.0%) |
| Cost:income ratio | 279.8% | 116.7% | nm | 271.6% | nm |
| £bn | £bn | £bn | |||
| Funded assets | 96.1 | 108.0 | 105.9 | ||
| RWAs | 24.2 | 25.4 | 26.9 |
(1)
The NatWest Markets operating segment is not the same as the NatWest Markets Plc legal entity (NWM Plc) or group (NWM or NWM Group) because the NatWest Markets segment excludes the Central items & other segment.
(2)
Asset disposals/strategic risk reduction relates to the cost of exiting positions, which includes changes in carrying value to align to the expected exit valuation, and the impact of risk reduction transactions entered into, in respect of the strategic announcement on 14 February 2020.
| NatWest
Markets has supported its customers’ evolving needs with
innovative solutions and continued to deliver a more integrated
customer proposition across NatWest Group. NatWest Markets has made
good progress on building a refocused, sustainable business from
which it can grow. NatWest Markets incurred an operating loss in
2021 but has largely completed its RWA reduction and continued to reduce operating
expenses, and in Q4 2021, introduced changes to Rates which will
improve the strategic alignment with the rest of the business and
drive income growth. NatWest Markets performance at the beginning
of 2022 has been in line with expectations. NatWest
Markets completed £9.7 billion of Climate and Sustainable
Funding and Financing in 2021, including £3.3 billion in H2
2021 which will contribute towards the new NatWest Group target of
£100 billion between 1 July 2021 and the end of
2025. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance | |
| − | Income
excluding asset disposals/strategic risk reduction and OCA was
£757 million, or 61.5% lower than 2020. The performance of
Fixed Income was weak in 2021 impacted by subdued levels of
customer activity and the reshaping of the business, in contrast to
the prior year which benefited from exceptional levels of market
activity generated by the initial spread of the COVID-19 virus.
Both Currencies and Capital Markets income were lower than 2020 but
performed broadly in line with expectations. |
| − | Other
expenses decreased by £131 million, or 12.6%, compared with
2020 reflecting continued reductions in line with the strategic
announcement in February 2020. |
| − | A net
impairment release of £35 million in 2021 reflects releases
against a number of cases throughout the year. |
| − | RWAs
decreased by £2.7 billion, or 10.0%, compared with 2020
reflecting lower levels of market risk and counterparty credit
risk, including the impact of capital optimisation actions taken
throughout the year. |
| Q4 performance | |
| − | Income
excluding asset disposals/strategic risk reduction and OCA was
£71 million lower than Q3 2021 and £90 million lower than
Q4 2020 reflecting continued weakness in Fixed Income, which was
further impacted by subdued levels of customer activity and ongoing
reshaping of the business. Disposal losses were £12 million,
in line with Q3 2021. An OCA increase of £46 million compared
with Q4 2020 was partially offset by £4 million higher
disposal losses. |
| − | Other
expenses were £39 million higher than Q3 2021 largely due to
higher back office operational costs, including the annual bank
levy charge. |
| − | RWAs
decreased by £1.2 billion, or 4.7%, compared with Q3 2021
primarily due to a seasonal reduction in counterparty credit risk
towards the end of the year. |
Business performance summary
Ulster Bank RoI
Continuing operations
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 (1) | 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (1) | |
| €m | €m | €m | €m | €m | |
| Total income | 265 | 250 | 50 | 93 | 63 |
| Operating expenses | (557) | (498) | (153) | (131) | (115) |
| of | |||||
| which: Other expenses | (487) | (462) | (111) | (121) | (100) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 33 | (157) | 15 | 9 | (7) |
| Operating loss | (259) | (405) | (88) | (29) | (59) |
| €bn | €bn | €bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 7.9 | 15.3 | 20.0 | ||
| Customer deposits | 21.9 | 21.6 | 21.8 | ||
| RWAs | 10.9 | 11.7 | 13.2 |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
Total UB RoI including discontinued operations
| Year ended and as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended and as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| €m | €m | €m | €m | €m | |
| Total income | 578 | 574 | 128 | 171 | 144 |
| Operating expenses | (609) | (548) | (166) | (144) | (127) |
| of | |||||
| which: Other expenses | (539) | (512) | (124) | (134) | (112) |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 99 | (281) | 67 | 19 | 3 |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 68 | (255) | 29 | 46 | 20 |
| €bn | €bn | €bn | |||
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 18.6 | 19.0 | 20.0 | ||
| Customer deposits | 21.9 | 21.6 | 21.8 | ||
| RWAs | 10.9 | 11.7 | 13.2 |
| Ulster
Bank RoI continues to make progress on its phased withdrawal from
the Republic of Ireland. On 17 December 2021 UBIDAC entered a
legally binding agreement with Permanent TSB p.l.c. (PTSB) for the
proposed sale of approximately €7.6bn of gross performing
loans as at 30 June 2021, comprising performing non-tracker
mortgages, performing loans in the micro-SME business, the UBIDAC
Asset Finance business, including its digital platform, and 25
Ulster Bank branch locations. Completion of the sale is subject to
obtaining competition, regulatory and other approvals, including
PTSB's holding company shareholder approval, and other conditions
being satisfied. The transaction is expected to occur in phases
between Q4 2022 and Q1 2023 with the majority of loans expected to
transfer by Q4 2022. Progress
continues with Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c. (AIB) for the transfer of
approximately €4.2bn, plus up to €2.8bn of undrawn
exposures, of performing commercial lending. A key part of the
process is to complete the regulatory approvals and the Competition
and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) has already carried out
an extended preliminary investigation and on 31 December 2021
announced its decision to carry out a Phase 2 investigation into
the proposed sale. There is no firm date for the completion of this
process. Discussions are ongoing with other counterparties about
their potential interest in other parts of the bank. Continuing
operations of Ulster Bank RoI include re-presented comparatives for
the income statement. The representation is in accordance with IFRS
5 Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued
Operations. | |
| --- | --- |
| 2021 performance (continuing operations) | |
| − | Total
income was €15 million, or 6.0%, higher than 2020 reflecting
gains arising from the adjustment of the swap hedging portfolio to
align the modelled maturity position of deposits and other balances
to the withdrawal plan, offset by lower lending levels and fee
income as a result of the decision to withdraw from the RoI
market. |
| − | Other
expenses were €25 million, or 5.4%, higher than 2020, due to
higher VAT costs and regulatory levies, partially offset by a 15%
reduction in headcount, lower advertising spend and back office
operational costs. |
| − | A net
impairment release of €33 million in 2021 reflects
improvements in the reducing loan portfolios and economic
forecasts. |
| − | Net
loans to customers decreased by €12.1 billion primarily due
to the reclassification of €10.7 billion of loans to the
disposal group. |
| Q4 performance (continuing operations) | |
| − | Total
income was €43 million, or 46.2%, lower than Q3 2021 mainly
due to the gain arising from the adjustment of the swap hedging
portfolio in Q3 2021. |
| − | Other
expenses were €10 million, or 8.3%, lower than Q3 2021
primarily due to lower back office operational costs. |
| − | Net
loans to customers decreased by €7.4 billion primarily due to
the reclassification of €7.0 billion of loans to the disposal
group. |
Business performance summary
Central items & other
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Central items not allocated | (301) | (653) | (211) | (173) | (153) |
− Central items not allocated represented a £301 million operating loss in 2021 principally reflecting litigation and conduct charges of £243 million, strategic costs of £201 million and losses on redemption of own debt of £138 million related to the repurchase of legacy instruments, partially offset by a £219 million share of gains under equity accounting for Business Growth Fund, and other Treasury income. 2020 included the day one loss on redemption of own debt of £324 million related to the repurchase of legacy instruments, property-related strategic costs and litigation and conduct charges.
Segment performance
| Year ended 31 December 2021 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
| Total | |||||||||
| excluding | Total | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | Central items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Income statement | |||||||||
| Net interest income | 4,074 | 480 | 2,582 | 383 | 9 | (14) | 7,514 | 100 | 7,614 |
| Own credit adjustments | - | - | - | - | 6 | - | 6 | - | 6 |
| Other non-interest income | 371 | 336 | 1,293 | 165 | 400 | 199 | 2,764 | 128 | 2,892 |
| Total income | 4,445 | 816 | 3,875 | 548 | 415 | 185 | 10,284 | 228 | 10,512 |
| Direct expenses - staff costs | (454) | (138) | (557) | (108) | (369) | (1,498) | (3,124) | (141) | (3,265) |
| - | |||||||||
| other costs | (225) | (52) | (264) | (57) | (113) | (2,397) | (3,108) | (132) | (3,240) |
| Indirect expenses | (1,571) | (314) | (1,332) | (63) | (425) | 3,853 | 148 | (148) | - |
| Strategic costs - | |||||||||
| direct | (126) | (10) | (60) | (8) | (237) | (327) | (768) | (19) | (787) |
| - | |||||||||
| indirect | (61) | (9) | (33) | (3) | (17) | 126 | 3 | (3) | - |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (76) | 3 | (108) | (3) | - | (243) | (427) | (39) | (466) |
| Operating expenses | (2,513) | (520) | (2,354) | (242) | (1,161) | (486) | (7,276) | (482) | (7,758) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before impairment releases | 1,932 | 296 | 1,521 | 306 | (746) | (301) | 3,008 | (254) | 2,754 |
| Impairment releases | 36 | 54 | 1,073 | 52 | 35 | - | 1,250 | 28 | 1,278 |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 1,968 | 350 | 2,594 | 358 | (711) | (301) | 4,258 | (226) | 4,032 |
| Income excluding notable items | 4,445 | 762 | 3,865 | 548 | 473 | (19) | 10,074 | 193 | 10,267 |
| Additional information | |||||||||
| Return on tangible equity (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 10.0% | na | 9.4% |
| Return on equity (1) | 26.1% | 17.0% | 22.0% | 22.5% | (13.1%) | nm | nm | nm | na |
| Cost:income ratio (1) | 56.5% | 63.7% | 59.3% | 44.2% | 279.8% | nm | 70.3% | nm | 73.4% |
| Total assets (£bn) | 210.0 | 29.9 | 184.6 | 40.6 | 200.7 | 93.4 | 759.2 | 22.8 | 782.0 |
| Funded assets (£bn) (1) | 210.0 | 29.8 | 184.6 | 40.6 | 96.1 | 92.0 | 653.1 | 22.8 | 675.9 |
| Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) | 182.2 | 18.4 | 101.2 | 15.5 | 7.5 | 27.5 | 352.3 | 6.7 | 359.0 |
| Loan impairment rate (1) | (2)bps | (29)bps | (104)bps | (33)bps | nm | nm | (35)bps | nm | (35)bps |
| Impairment provisions (£bn) | (1.5) | (0.1) | (1.5) | (0.1) | (0.1) | - | (3.3) | (0.5) | (3.8) |
| Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) | (0.9) | - | (0.6) | - | (0.1) | - | (1.6) | (0.4) | (2.0) |
| Customer deposits (£bn) | 188.9 | 39.3 | 177.7 | 37.5 | 2.3 | 15.7 | 461.4 | 18.4 | 479.8 |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) | 36.7 | 11.3 | 66.4 | 7.5 | 24.2 | 1.8 | 147.9 | 9.1 | 157.0 |
| RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) | 36.7 | 11.3 | 66.4 | 7.7 | 25.8 | 2.1 | 150.0 | 9.1 | 159.1 |
| Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) | 14.6 | 1.9 | 8.6 | 1.6 | 1.6 | 27.9 | 56.2 | 1.7 | 57.9 |
| Third party customer asset rate (2) | 2.66% | 2.36% | 2.71% | 2.26% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Third party customer funding rate (2) | (0.06%) | - | (0.01%) | 0.08% | nm | nm | nm | 0.02% | nm |
| Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1) | 196.0 | 27.2 | 168.1 | 37.8 | 32.7 | nm | nm | 15.9 | 524.9 |
| Net interest margin (1) | 2.08% | 1.76% | 1.54% | 1.01% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Bank net interest margin (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 2.39% | na | na |
For the notes to this table, refer to page 23. nm = not meaningful.
Segment performance
| Year ended 31 December 2020 (3) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
| Total | |||||||||
| excluding | Total | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | Central items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Income statement | |||||||||
| Net interest income | 3,868 | 489 | 2,740 | 371 | (57) | (57) | 7,354 | 122 | 7,476 |
| Own credit adjustments | - | - | - | - | (24) | - | (24) | - | (24) |
| Other non-interest income | 313 | 274 | 1,218 | 126 | 1,204 | (179) | 2,956 | 100 | 3,056 |
| Total income | 4,181 | 763 | 3,958 | 497 | 1,123 | (236) | 10,286 | 222 | 10,508 |
| Direct expenses - staff costs | (516) | (149) | (638) | (117) | (524) | (1,319) | (3,263) | (153) | (3,416) |
| - | |||||||||
| other costs | (208) | (52) | (284) | (53) | (152) | (2,481) | (3,230) | (86) | (3,316) |
| Indirect expenses | (1,571) | (265) | (1,339) | (74) | (362) | 3,781 | 170 | (170) | - |
| Strategic costs - | |||||||||
| direct | (52) | (2) | (40) | (45) | (237) | (625) | (1,001) | (12) | (1,013) |
| - | |||||||||
| indirect | (174) | (13) | (139) | (4) | (30) | 373 | 13 | (13) | - |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (19) | 26 | 10 | 2 | (5) | (120) | (106) | (7) | (113) |
| Operating expenses | (2,540) | (455) | (2,430) | (291) | (1,310) | (391) | (7,417) | (441) | (7,858) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before impairment losses | 1,641 | 308 | 1,528 | 206 | (187) | (627) | 2,869 | (219) | 2,650 |
| Impairment losses | (792) | (100) | (1,927) | (107) | (40) | (26) | (2,992) | (139) | (3,131) |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 849 | 208 | (399) | 99 | (227) | (653) | (123) | (358) | (481) |
| Income excluding notable items | 4,231 | 763 | 3,995 | 497 | 1,230 | (46) | 10,670 | 222 | 10,892 |
| Additional information | |||||||||
| Return on tangible equity (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 1.2% | na | (2.4%) |
| Return on equity (1) | 10.2% | 10.3% | (4.5%) | 6.1% | (3.8%) | nm | nm | nm | na |
| Cost:income ratio (1) | 60.8% | 59.6% | 59.9% | 58.6% | 116.7% | nm | 71.7% | nm | 74.4% |
| Total assets (£bn) | 197.6 | 26.2 | 187.4 | 34.0 | 270.1 | 57.6 | 772.9 | 26.6 | 799.5 |
| Funded assets (£bn) (1) | 197.6 | 26.2 | 187.4 | 34.0 | 105.9 | 55.3 | 606.4 | 26.6 | 633.0 |
| Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) | 172.3 | 17.0 | 108.2 | 13.3 | 8.4 | 23.3 | 342.5 | 18.0 | 360.5 |
| Loan impairment rate (1) | 45bps | 58bps | 173bps | 80bps | nm | nm | 86bps | nm | 85bps |
| Impairment provisions (£bn) | (1.8) | (0.1) | (2.9) | (0.1) | (0.2) | (0.1) | (5.2) | (0.8) | (6.0) |
| Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) | (0.8) | - | (1.1) | - | (0.1) | (0.1) | (2.1) | (0.5) | (2.6) |
| Customer deposits (£bn) | 171.8 | 32.4 | 167.7 | 31.3 | 2.6 | 6.3 | 412.1 | 19.6 | 431.7 |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) | 36.7 | 10.9 | 75.1 | 7.5 | 26.9 | 1.4 | 158.5 | 11.8 | 170.3 |
| RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) | 36.7 | 10.9 | 75.1 | 7.5 | 28.7 | 1.6 | 160.5 | 11.8 | 172.3 |
| Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) | 16.0 | 1.8 | 9.6 | 1.7 | 2.2 | 25.9 | 57.2 | 2.0 | 59.2 |
| Third party customer asset rate (2) | 2.89% | 2.53% | 2.86% | 2.51% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Third party customer funding rate (2) | (0.19%) | (0.11%) | (0.08%) | (0.01%) | nm | nm | nm | (0.04%) | nm |
| Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1) | 181.4 | 23.8 | 163.1 | 31.7 | 37.9 | nm | nm | 16.6 | 483.7 |
| Net interest margin (1) | 2.13% | 2.05% | 1.68% | 1.17% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Bank net interest margin (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 2.46% | na | na |
For the notes to this table, refer to page 23. nm = not meaningful.
Segment performance
| Quarter ended 31 December 2021 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
| Total | |||||||||
| excluding | Total | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | Central items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Income statement | |||||||||
| Net interest income | 1,057 | 126 | 645 | 106 | 13 | (28) | 1,919 | 23 | 1,942 |
| Own credit adjustments | - | - | - | - | 3 | 1 | 4 | - | 4 |
| Other non-interest income | 107 | 127 | 342 | 50 | 9 | 21 | 656 | 20 | 676 |
| Total income | 1,164 | 253 | 987 | 156 | 25 | (6) | 2,579 | 43 | 2,622 |
| Direct expenses - staff costs | (112) | (36) | (136) | (28) | (95) | (352) | (759) | (34) | (793) |
| - | |||||||||
| other costs | (64) | (22) | (68) | (21) | (20) | (737) | (932) | (35) | (967) |
| Indirect expenses | (429) | (87) | (376) | (19) | (130) | 1,067 | 26 | (26) | - |
| Strategic costs - | |||||||||
| direct | (105) | (3) | (17) | (1) | (96) | (147) | (369) | (9) | (378) |
| - | |||||||||
| indirect | (12) | (2) | (3) | - | (2) | 19 | - | - | - |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (52) | (5) | (46) | (1) | - | (59) | (163) | (27) | (190) |
| Operating expenses | (774) | (155) | (646) | (70) | (343) | (209) | (2,197) | (131) | (2,328) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before impairment | |||||||||
| (losses)/releases | 390 | 98 | 341 | 86 | (318) | (215) | 382 | (88) | 294 |
| Impairment (losses)/releases | (5) | 12 | 289 | 12 | 16 | 4 | 328 | 13 | 341 |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 385 | 110 | 630 | 98 | (302) | (211) | 710 | (75) | 635 |
| Income excluding notable items | 1,164 | 199 | 991 | 156 | 34 | (27) | 2,517 | 43 | 2,560 |
| Additional information | |||||||||
| Return on tangible equity | na | na | na | na | na | na | 5.5% | na | 5.6% |
| Return on equity (1) | 19.7% | 21.3% | 22.4% | 24.0% | (22.5%) | nm | nm | nm | na |
| Cost:income ratio (1) | 66.5% | 61.3% | 64.2% | 44.9% | nm | nm | 85.0% | nm | 88.6% |
| Total assets (£bn) | 210.0 | 29.9 | 184.6 | 40.6 | 200.7 | 93.4 | 759.2 | 22.8 | 782.0 |
| Funded assets (£bn) (1) | 210.0 | 29.8 | 184.6 | 40.6 | 96.1 | 92.0 | 653.1 | 22.8 | 675.9 |
| Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) | 182.2 | 18.4 | 101.2 | 15.5 | 7.5 | 27.5 | 352.3 | 6.7 | 359.0 |
| Loan impairment rate (1) | 1bps | (26)bps | (113)bps | (31)bps | nm | nm | (37)bps | nm | (38)bps |
| Impairment provisions (£bn) | (1.5) | (0.1) | (1.5) | (0.1) | (0.1) | - | (3.3) | (0.5) | (3.8) |
| Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) | (0.9) | - | (0.6) | - | (0.1) | - | (1.6) | (0.4) | (2.0) |
| Customer deposits (£bn) | 188.9 | 39.3 | 177.7 | 37.5 | 2.3 | 15.7 | 461.4 | 18.4 | 479.8 |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) | 36.7 | 11.3 | 66.4 | 7.5 | 24.2 | 1.8 | 147.9 | 9.1 | 157.0 |
| RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) | 36.7 | 11.3 | 66.4 | 7.7 | 25.8 | 2.1 | 150.0 | 9.1 | 159.1 |
| Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) | 14.6 | 1.9 | 8.6 | 1.6 | 1.6 | 27.9 | 56.2 | 1.7 | 57.9 |
| Third party customer asset rate (2) | 2.58% | 2.34% | 2.73% | 2.33% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Third party customer funding rate (2) | (0.05%) | - | - | 0.12% | nm | nm | nm | 0.05% | nm |
| Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1) | 201.5 | 28.5 | 168.4 | 42.7 | 33.7 | nm | 536.6 | 15.0 | 551.6 |
| Net interest margin (1) | 2.08% | 1.75% | 1.52% | 0.99% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Bank net interest margin (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 2.38% | na | na |
For the notes to this table, refer to page 23. nm = not meaningful.
Segment performance
| Quarter ended 30 September 2021 (3) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
| Total | |||||||||
| excluding | Total | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | Central items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Income statement | |||||||||
| Net interest income | 1,041 | 122 | 629 | 95 | (1) | (20) | 1,866 | 23 | 1,889 |
| Own credit adjustments | - | - | - | - | 2 | - | 2 | - | 2 |
| Other non-interest income | 90 | 73 | 336 | 41 | 94 | 127 | 761 | 56 | 817 |
| Total income | 1,131 | 195 | 965 | 136 | 95 | 107 | 2,629 | 79 | 2,708 |
| Direct expenses - staff costs | (110) | (35) | (141) | (28) | (86) | (378) | (778) | (35) | (813) |
| - | |||||||||
| other costs | (50) | (10) | (65) | (12) | (29) | (552) | (718) | (29) | (747) |
| Indirect expenses | (383) | (72) | (314) | (16) | (91) | 915 | 39 | (39) | - |
| Strategic costs - | |||||||||
| direct | (5) | (2) | (4) | (1) | (51) | (5) | (68) | (9) | (77) |
| - | |||||||||
| indirect | 11 | - | (7) | (1) | 1 | (3) | 1 | (1) | - |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (15) | 3 | (25) | (2) | (2) | (254) | (295) | 1 | (294) |
| Operating expenses | (552) | (116) | (556) | (60) | (258) | (277) | (1,819) | (112) | (1,931) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before impairment | |||||||||
| (losses)/releases | 579 | 79 | 409 | 76 | (163) | (170) | 810 | (33) | 777 |
| Impairment (losses)/releases | (16) | 15 | 216 | 11 | 3 | (3) | 226 | 7 | 233 |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 563 | 94 | 625 | 87 | (160) | (173) | 1,036 | (26) | 1,010 |
| Income excluding notable items | 1,131 | 195 | 961 | 136 | 105 | (17) | 2,511 | 44 | 2,555 |
| Additional information | |||||||||
| Return on tangible equity (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 8.6% | na | 8.5% |
| Return on equity (1) | 29.9% | 18.1% | 21.7% | 21.6% | (12.1%) | nm | nm | nm | na |
| Cost:income ratio (1) | 48.8% | 59.5% | 56.0% | 44.1% | 271.6% | nm | 68.8% | nm | 70.9% |
| Total assets (£bn) | 207.6 | 28.2 | 186.0 | 39.9 | 210.1 | 81.3 | 753.1 | 25.2 | 778.3 |
| Funded assets (£bn) (1) | 207.6 | 28.2 | 186.0 | 39.9 | 108.0 | 79.6 | 649.3 | 25.2 | 674.5 |
| Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) | 180.5 | 18.4 | 102.7 | 15.6 | 7.1 | 23.5 | 347.8 | 13.2 | 361.0 |
| Loan impairment rate (1) | 4bps | (32)bps | (83)bps | (28)bps | nm | nm | (26)bps | nm | (26)bps |
| Impairment provisions (£bn) | (1.6) | (0.1) | (1.9) | (0.1) | (0.1) | - | (3.8) | (0.5) | (4.3) |
| Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) | (0.8) | - | (0.8) | (0.1) | (0.1) | - | (1.8) | (0.4) | (2.2) |
| Customer deposits (£bn) | 186.3 | 35.7 | 178.3 | 36.9 | 2.2 | 18.4 | 457.8 | 18.5 | 476.3 |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) | 36.6 | 11.4 | 66.4 | 8.1 | 25.4 | 1.9 | 149.8 | 10.0 | 159.8 |
| RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) | 36.6 | 11.4 | 66.5 | 8.2 | 26.9 | 2.1 | 151.7 | 10.0 | 161.7 |
| Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) | 15.0 | 1.9 | 8.8 | 1.6 | 1.6 | 27.5 | 56.4 | 1.8 | 58.2 |
| Third party customer asset rate (2) | 2.64% | 2.36% | 2.65% | 2.24% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Third party customer funding rate (2) | (0.05%) | - | - | 0.07% | nm | nm | nm | 0.02% | nm |
| Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1) | 197.5 | 27.5 | 167.5 | 37.9 | 32.5 | nm | nm | 15.7 | 527.9 |
| Net interest margin (1) | 2.09% | 1.76% | 1.49% | 0.99% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Bank net interest margin (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 2.41% | na | na |
For the notes to this table, refer to the following page. nm = not meaningful.
Segment performance
| Quarter ended 31 December 2020 (3) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
| Total | |||||||||
| excluding | Total | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | Central items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Income statement | |||||||||
| Net interest income | 949 | 118 | 667 | 85 | (2) | 53 | 1,870 | 31 | 1,901 |
| Own credit adjustments | - | - | - | - | (43) | - | (43) | - | (43) |
| Other non-interest income | 25 | 66 | 284 | 41 | 118 | 43 | 577 | 27 | 604 |
| Total income | 974 | 184 | 951 | 126 | 73 | 96 | 2,404 | 58 | 2,462 |
| Direct expenses - staff costs | (117) | (32) | (141) | (25) | (90) | (385) | (790) | (37) | (827) |
| - | |||||||||
| other costs | (56) | (16) | (72) | (16) | (21) | (780) | (961) | (21) | (982) |
| Indirect expenses | (393) | (71) | (382) | (32) | (133) | 1,042 | 31 | (31) | - |
| Strategic costs - | |||||||||
| direct | (6) | 2 | (35) | (37) | (50) | (197) | (323) | (3) | (326) |
| - | |||||||||
| indirect | (36) | (3) | (28) | (1) | (6) | 77 | 3 | (3) | - |
| Litigation and conduct costs | (210) | 29 | 2 | (1) | (1) | (5) | (186) | (8) | (194) |
| Operating expenses | (818) | (91) | (656) | (112) | (301) | (248) | (2,226) | (103) | (2,329) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before impairment | |||||||||
| (losses)/releases | 156 | 93 | 295 | 14 | (228) | (152) | 178 | (45) | 133 |
| Impairment (losses)/releases | (65) | (26) | (10) | (27) | (2) | (1) | (131) | (8) | (139) |
| Operating profit/(loss) | 91 | 67 | 285 | (13) | (230) | (153) | 47 | (53) | (6) |
| Income excluding notable items | 1,031 | 184 | 978 | 126 | 124 | 42 | 2,485 | 58 | 2,543 |
| Additional information | |||||||||
| Return on tangibe equity (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 0.3% | na | (1.4%) |
| Return on equity (1) | 3.8% | 13.3% | 8.1% | (5.5%) | (15.0%) | nm | nm | nm | na |
| Cost:income ratio (1) | 84.0% | 49.5% | 67.8% | 88.9% | nm | nm | nm | nm | 94.5% |
| Total assets (£bn) | 197.6 | 26.2 | 187.4 | 34.0 | 270.1 | 57.6 | 772.9 | 26.6 | 799.5 |
| Funded assets (£bn) (1) | 197.6 | 26.2 | 187.4 | 34.0 | 105.9 | 55.3 | 606.4 | 26.6 | 633.0 |
| Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) | 172.3 | 17.0 | 108.2 | 13.3 | 8.4 | 23.3 | 342.5 | 18.0 | 360.5 |
| Loan impairment rate (1) | 15bps | 61bps | 4bps | 81bps | nm | nm | 15bps | nm | 15bps |
| Impairment provisions (£bn) | (1.8) | (0.1) | (2.9) | (0.1) | (0.2) | (0.1) | (5.2) | (0.8) | (6.0) |
| Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) | (0.8) | - | (1.1) | - | (0.1) | (0.1) | (2.1) | (0.5) | (2.6) |
| Customer deposits (£bn) | 171.8 | 32.4 | 167.7 | 31.3 | 2.6 | 6.3 | 412.1 | 19.6 | 431.7 |
| Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) | 36.7 | 10.9 | 75.1 | 7.5 | 26.9 | 1.4 | 158.5 | 11.8 | 170.3 |
| RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) | 36.7 | 10.9 | 75.1 | 7.5 | 28.7 | 1.6 | 160.5 | 11.8 | 172.3 |
| Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) | 16.0 | 1.8 | 9.6 | 1.7 | 2.2 | 25.9 | 57.2 | 2.0 | 59.2 |
| Third party customer asset rate (2) | 2.81% | 2.38% | 2.65% | 2.33% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Third party customer funding rate (2) | (0.10%) | (0.01%) | (0.01%) | 0.05% | nm | nm | nm | (0.01%) | nm |
| Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1) | 186.1 | 25.2 | 170.2 | 32.9 | 36.5 | nm | nm | 17.0 | 499.8 |
| Net interest margin (1) | 2.03% | 1.86% | 1.56% | 1.03% | nm | nm | nm | nm | nm |
| Bank net interest margin (1) | na | na | na | na | na | na | 2.44% | na | na |
nm = not meaningful
| (1) | Refer
to the appendix for details of basis of preparation and
reconciliation of non-IFRS performance measures where
relevant. |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | Third
party customer asset rate is calculated as annualised interest
receivable on third-party loans to customers as a percentage of
third-party loans to customers. This excludes assets of disposal
groups, intragroup items, loans to banks and liquid asset
portfolios. Third party customer funding rate reflects interest
payable or receivable on third-party customer deposits, including
interest bearing and non-interest bearing customer deposits.
Intragroup items, bank deposits, debt securities in issue and
subordinated liabilities are excluded for customer funding rate
calculation. Net interest margin is calculated as net interest
income as a percentage of the average interest-earning assets,
excluding assets of disposal groups and without these remaining
exclusions. |
| (3) | Comparative
results have been re-presented from those previously published to
reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as
described in Note 3 on page 34. |
Business performance summary
Capital and leverage ratios
The table below sets out the key capital and leverage ratios.
| 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| Capital adequacy | |||
| ratios (1) | % | % | % |
| CET1 | 18.2 | 18.7 | 18.5 |
| Tier 1 | 20.7 | 21.1 | 21.4 |
| Total | 24.1 | 24.6 | 24.5 |
| Capital | £m | £m | £m |
| Tangible equity | 30,689 | 30,769 | 31,712 |
| Prudential valuation adjustment | (274) | (264) | (286) |
| Deferred tax assets | (761) | (765) | (760) |
| Own credit adjustments | 21 | 27 | (1) |
| Pension fund assets | (465) | (385) | (579) |
| Cash flow hedging reserve | 395 | 254 | (229) |
| Foreseeable ordinary dividends | (846) | (402) | (364) |
| Foreseeable charges - on-market ordinary share buy back | |||
| programme | (825) | (462) | - |
| Foreseeable pension contributions | (365) | (354) | (266) |
| Prudential amortisation of software development costs | 411 | 476 | 473 |
| Adjustments under IFRS 9 transitional arrangements | 621 | 973 | 1,747 |
| Other adjustments for regulatory purposes | (5) | (5) | - |
| Total deductions | (2,093) | (907) | (265) |
| CET1 capital | 28,596 | 29,862 | 31,447 |
| AT1 capital | 3,875 | 3,875 | 4,983 |
| Tier 1 capital | 32,471 | 33,737 | 36,430 |
| Tier 2 capital | 5,402 | 5,522 | 5,255 |
| Total regulatory capital | 37,873 | 39,259 | 41,685 |
| Risk-weighted assets | |||
| Credit risk | 120,116 | 122,270 | 129,914 |
| Counterparty credit risk | 7,907 | 8,475 | 9,104 |
| Market risk | 7,917 | 7,979 | 9,362 |
| Operational risk | 21,031 | 21,031 | 21,930 |
| Total RWAs | 156,971 | 159,755 | 170,310 |
| Leverage | |||
| Cash and balances at central banks | 177,757 | 164,851 | 124,489 |
| Trading assets | 59,158 | 66,357 | 68,990 |
| Derivatives | 106,139 | 103,770 | 166,523 |
| Financial assets | 412,817 | 417,273 | 422,647 |
| Other assets | 17,106 | 26,027 | 16,842 |
| Assets of disposal groups | 9,015 | - | - |
| Total assets | 781,992 | 778,278 | 799,491 |
| Derivatives | |||
| - netting and | |||
| variation margin | (110,204) | (107,160) | (172,658) |
| - potential future | |||
| exposures | 35,035 | 36,382 | 38,171 |
| Securities financing transactions gross up | 1,397 | 1,903 | 1,179 |
| Other off balance sheet items | 44,240 | 44,292 | 45,853 |
| Regulatory deductions and other adjustments | (8,980) | (14,340) | (8,943) |
| Claims on central banks | (174,148) | (161,688) | (122,252) |
| Exclusion of bounce back loans | (7,474) | (7,845) | (8,283) |
| UK leverage exposure | 561,858 | 569,822 | 572,558 |
| UK leverage ratio (%) (2) | 5.8 | 5.9 | 6.4 |
| (1) | Based
on CRR end-point including an IFRS 9 transitional adjustment of
£0.6 billion (30 September 2021 - £1.0 billion, 31
December 2020 - £1.7 billion). Excluding this adjustment, the
CET1 ratio would be 17.8% (30 September 2021 – 18.1%, 31
December 2020 – 17.5%). The amended article for the
prudential treatment of software assets was implemented in December
2020. Excluding this adjustment the CET1 ratio would be 18.0% (30
September 2021 – 18.4%, 31 December 2020 –
18.2%). |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | The UK
leverage ratio excludes central bank claims from the leverage
exposure where deposits held are denominated in the same currency
and of contractual maturity that is equal or longer than that of
the central bank claims. Excluding an IFRS 9 transitional
adjustment, the UK leverage ratio would be 5.7% (30 September 2021
– 5.8%, 31 December 2020 – 6.1%). The amended article
for the prudential treatment of software assets was implemented in
December 2020. Excluding this adjustment the UK leverage ratio
would be 5.7% (30 September 2021 – 5.8%, 31 December 2020
– 6.3%. |
Business performance summary
Portfolio summary – segment analysis
The table below shows gross loans and ECL, by segment and stage, within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework.
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | |||||||||
| Central | excluding | Ulster | |||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | items | Ulster | Bank | ||
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | RoI | Total | |
| 2021 | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
| Loans - amortised cost | |||||||||
| and | |||||||||
| FVOCI | |||||||||
| Stage 1 | 168,013 | 17,600 | 82,893 | 16,185 | 8,290 | 32,283 | 325,264 | 5,560 | 330,824 |
| Stage 2 | 13,594 | 967 | 17,853 | 477 | 147 | 90 | 33,128 | 853 | 33,981 |
| Stage 3 | 1,884 | 270 | 1,820 | 162 | 99 | - | 4,235 | 787 | 5,022 |
| Of which: individual | - | 270 | 631 | 162 | 91 | - | 1,154 | 61 | 1,215 |
| Of which: collective | 1,884 | - | 1,189 | - | 8 | - | 3,081 | 726 | 3,807 |
| Subtotal excluding disposal group loans | 183,491 | 18,837 | 102,566 | 16,824 | 8,536 | 32,373 | 362,627 | 7,200 | 369,827 |
| Disposal group loans | 9,084 | 9,084 | |||||||
| Total | 16,284 | 378,911 | |||||||
| ECL provisions (1) | |||||||||
| Stage 1 | 134 | 12 | 116 | 7 | 6 | 17 | 292 | 10 | 302 |
| Stage 2 | 590 | 29 | 758 | 23 | 3 | 11 | 1,414 | 64 | 1,478 |
| Stage 3 | 850 | 37 | 651 | 25 | 75 | - | 1,638 | 388 | 2,026 |
| Of which: individual | - | 37 | 221 | 25 | 67 | - | 350 | 13 | 363 |
| Of which: collective | 850 | - | 430 | - | 8 | - | 1,288 | 375 | 1,663 |
| Subtotal excluding ECL | |||||||||
| provisions on disposal group loans | 1,574 | 78 | 1,525 | 55 | 84 | 28 | 3,344 | 462 | 3,806 |
| ECL on disposal group loans | 109 | 109 | |||||||
| Total | 571 | 3,915 | |||||||
| ECL provisions coverage (2) | |||||||||
| Stage 1 (%) | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.0 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.1 |
| Stage 2 (%) | 4.3 | 3.0 | 4.3 | 4.8 | 2.0 | 12.2 | 4.3 | 7.5 | 4.4 |
| Stage 3 (%) | 45.1 | 13.7 | 35.8 | 15.4 | 75.8 | - | 38.7 | 49.3 | 40.3 |
| ECL provisions coverage excluding disposal group loans | 0.9 | 0.4 | 1.5 | 0.3 | 1.0 | 0.1 | 0.9 | 6.4 | 1.0 |
| ECL provisions coverage on disposal group loans | 1.2 | 1.2 | |||||||
| Total | 3.5 | 1.0 | |||||||
| Impairment (releases)/losses | |||||||||
| ECL (release)/charge (3) | (36) | (54) | (1,073) | (52) | (35) | - | (1,250) | (28) | (1,278) |
| Stage 1 | (387) | (45) | (818) | (39) | (15) | (3) | (1,307) | (70) | (1,377) |
| Stage 2 | 157 | (15) | (272) | (16) | (11) | 3 | (154) | (33) | (187) |
| Stage 3 | 194 | 6 | 17 | 3 | (9) | - | 211 | 75 | 286 |
| Of which: individual | - | 6 | 19 | 3 | (6) | - | 22 | (2) | 20 |
| Of which: collective | 194 | - | (2) | - | (3) | - | 189 | 77 | 266 |
| Continuing operations | (36) | (54) | (1,073) | (52) | (35) | - | (1,250) | (28) | (1,278) |
| Discontinued operations | (57) | (57) | |||||||
| Total | (85) | (1,335) | |||||||
| Amounts written-off | 220 | 6 | 467 | 28 | 67 | - | 788 | 88 | 876 |
| Of which: individual | - | 6 | 378 | 28 | 43 | - | 455 | - | 455 |
| Of which: collective | 220 | - | 89 | - | 24 | - | 333 | 88 | 421 |
Business performance summary
Portfolio summary – segment analysis continued
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | |||||||||
| Central | excluding | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | items | Ulster | Ulster Bank | ||
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | RoI | Total | |
| 2020 | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
| Loans - amortised cost | |||||||||
| and | |||||||||
| FVOCI | |||||||||
| Stage 1 | 139,956 | 15,321 | 70,685 | 12,143 | 7,780 | 26,859 | 272,744 | 14,380 | 287,124 |
| Stage 2 | 32,414 | 1,939 | 37,344 | 2,242 | 1,566 | 110 | 75,615 | 3,302 | 78,917 |
| Stage 3 | 1,891 | 298 | 2,551 | 211 | 171 | - | 5,122 | 1,236 | 6,358 |
| Of which: individual | - | 298 | 1,578 | 211 | 162 | - | 2,249 | 43 | 2,292 |
| Of which: collective | 1,891 | - | 973 | - | 9 | - | 2,873 | 1,193 | 4,066 |
| 174,261 | 17,558 | 110,580 | 14,596 | 9,517 | 26,969 | 353,481 | 18,918 | 372,399 | |
| ECL provisions (1) | |||||||||
| Stage 1 | 134 | 31 | 270 | 14 | 12 | 13 | 474 | 45 | 519 |
| Stage 2 | 897 | 68 | 1,713 | 74 | 49 | 15 | 2,816 | 265 | 3,081 |
| Stage 3 | 806 | 39 | 1,069 | 48 | 132 | - | 2,094 | 492 | 2,586 |
| Of which: individual | - | 39 | 607 | 48 | 124 | - | 818 | 13 | 831 |
| Of which: collective | 806 | - | 462 | - | 8 | - | 1,276 | 479 | 1,755 |
| 1,837 | 138 | 3,052 | 136 | 193 | 28 | 5,384 | 802 | 6,186 | |
| ECL provisions coverage (2) | |||||||||
| Stage 1 (%) | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.4 | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.3 | 0.2 |
| Stage 2 (%) | 2.8 | 3.5 | 4.6 | 3.3 | 3.1 | 13.6 | 3.7 | 8.0 | 3.9 |
| Stage 3 (%) | 42.6 | 13.1 | 41.9 | 22.8 | 77.2 | - | 40.9 | 39.8 | 40.7 |
| 1.1 | 0.8 | 2.8 | 0.9 | 2.0 | 0.1 | 1.5 | 4.2 | 1.7 | |
| Impairment (releases)/losses | |||||||||
| ECL (release)/charge (3,4) | 792 | 100 | 1,927 | 107 | 40 | 26 | 2,992 | 139 | 3,131 |
| Stage 1 | (36) | 25 | (58) | 8 | (2) | 10 | (53) | (36) | (89) |
| Stage 2 | 619 | 60 | 1,667 | 71 | 54 | 15 | 2,486 | 115 | 2,601 |
| Stage 3 | 209 | 15 | 318 | 28 | (12) | 1 | 559 | 60 | 619 |
| Of which: individual | - | 15 | 166 | 28 | (3) | - | 206 | (12) | 194 |
| Of which: collective | 209 | - | 152 | - | (9) | 1 | 353 | 72 | 425 |
| Continuing operations | 792 | 100 | 1,927 | 107 | 40 | 26 | 2,992 | 139 | 3,131 |
| Discontinued operations | 111 | 111 | |||||||
| Total | 250 | 3,242 | |||||||
| Amounts written-off | 378 | 5 | 321 | 3 | 11 | - | 718 | 219 | 937 |
| Of which: individual | - | 5 | 172 | 3 | 11 | - | 191 | - | 191 |
| Of which: collective | 378 | - | 149 | - | - | - | 527 | 219 | 746 |
| (1) | Includes
£5 million (2020 - £6 million) related to assets
classified as FVOCI. |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | ECL
provisions coverage is calculated as ECL provisions divided by
loans – amortised cost and FVOCI. It is calculated on third
party loans and total ECL provisions. |
| (3) | Includes
a £3 million release (2020 – £12 million charge)
related to other financial assets, of which £2 million release
(2020 – £2 million charge) related to assets classified
as FVOCI; and £34 million release (2020 – £28
million charge) related to contingent liabilities. |
| (4) | Comparative
results have been re-presented from those previously published to
reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as
described in Note 3 on page 34. |
| (5) | The
table shows gross loans only and excludes amounts that are outside
the scope of the ECL framework. Refer to the Financial instruments
within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework section in the NatWest
Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts for further details.
Other financial assets within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework
were cash and balances at central banks totalling £176.3
billion (2020 – £122.7 billion) and debt securities of
£44.9 billion (2020 – £53.8 billion). |
Analysis of ECL provision
The table below shows gross loans and ECL provision analysis.
| 31 December 2021 | 30 September 2021 | 30 June 2021 | 31 December 2020 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Total loans | 369,827 | 374,000 | 375,592 | 372,399 |
| Personal | 207,380 | 211,902 | 209,699 | 204,188 |
| Wholesale | 162,447 | 162,098 | 165,893 | 168,211 |
| Value of loans in Stage 2 | 33,981 | 41,485 | 53,188 | 78,917 |
| Personal | 14,423 | 14,036 | 20,414 | 34,352 |
| Wholesale | 19,558 | 27,449 | 32,774 | 44,565 |
| ECL provisions in Stage 2 | 1,478 | 1,899 | 2,300 | 3,081 |
| Personal | 614 | 716 | 786 | 996 |
| Wholesale | 864 | 1,183 | 1,514 | 2,085 |
| ECL provision coverage in Stage 2 | 4.35% | 4.58% | 4.32% | 3.90% |
| Personal | 4.26% | 5.09% | 3.85% | 2.90% |
| Wholesale | 4.42% | 4.31% | 4.62% | 4.68% |
Condensed consolidated income statement for the period ended 31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 (1) | 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (1) | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Interest receivable | 9,313 | 9,798 | 2,345 | 2,319 | 2,299 |
| Interest payable | (1,699) | (2,322) | (403) | (430) | (398) |
| Net interest income | 7,614 | 7,476 | 1,942 | 1,889 | 1,901 |
| Fees and commissions receivable | 2,698 | 2,722 | 724 | 668 | 650 |
| Fees and commissions payable | (574) | (722) | (149) | (140) | (131) |
| Income from trading activities | 323 | 1,125 | (3) | 95 | 71 |
| Other operating income | 451 | (93) | 108 | 196 | (29) |
| Non-interest income | 2,898 | 3,032 | 680 | 819 | 561 |
| Total income | 10,512 | 10,508 | 2,622 | 2,708 | 2,462 |
| Staff costs | (3,676) | (3,878) | (915) | (881) | (975) |
| Premises and equipment | (1,133) | (1,222) | (368) | (263) | (320) |
| Other administrative expenses | (2,026) | (1,845) | (735) | (588) | (764) |
| Depreciation and amortisation | (923) | (913) | (310) | (199) | (270) |
| Operating expenses | (7,758) | (7,858) | (2,328) | (1,931) | (2,329) |
| Profit before impairment losses | 2,754 | 2,650 | 294 | 777 | 133 |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 1,278 | (3,131) | 341 | 233 | (139) |
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax | 4,032 | (481) | 635 | 1,010 | (6) |
| Tax charge | (996) | (74) | (234) | (330) | (75) |
| Profit/(loss) from continuing operations | 3,036 | (555) | 401 | 680 | (81) |
| Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax | 276 | 121 | 97 | 64 | 61 |
| Profit/(loss) for the period | 3,312 | (434) | 498 | 744 | (20) |
| Attributable to: | |||||
| Ordinary shareholders | 2,950 | (753) | 434 | 674 | (109) |
| Preference shareholders | 19 | 26 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Paid-in equity holders | 299 | 355 | 58 | 63 | 83 |
| Non-controlling interests | 44 | (62) | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Earnings per ordinary share - continuing operations | 23.0p | (7.2)p | 3.0p | 5.3p | (1.4)p |
| Earnings per ordinary share - discontinued operations | 2.4p | 1.0p | 0.8p | 0.5p | 0.5p |
| Total earnings per share attributable to | |||||
| ordinary | |||||
| shareholders | |||||
| - basic | 25.4p | (6.2)p | 3.8p | 5.8p | (0.9)p |
| Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted continuing | |||||
| operations | 22.9p | (7.2)p | 3.0p | 5.3p | (1.4)p |
| Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted | |||||
| discontinued | |||||
| operations | 2.4p | 1.0p | 0.8p | 0.5p | 0.5p |
| Total earnings per share attributable to | |||||
| ordinary | |||||
| shareholders | |||||
| - fully diluted | 25.3p | (6.2)p | 3.8p | 5.8p | (0.9)p |
| (1) | Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously
published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued
operations as described in Note 3 on page 34. |
| --- | --- |
| (2) | The results of discontinued operations, comprising the post-tax
profit is shown as a single amount on the face of the income
statement. An analysis of this amount is presented in Financial
statements note section in NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and
Accounts on pages 313 to 394. |
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the period ended
31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Profit/(loss) for the period | 3,312 | (434) | 498 | 744 | (20) |
| Items that do not qualify for reclassification | |||||
| Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes (1) | (669) | 4 | 71 | (6) | (50) |
| (Loss)/profit on fair value of credit in financial | |||||
| liabilities | |||||
| designated at FVTPL | |||||
| due to own credit risk | (29) | (52) | - | (4) | (72) |
| FVOCI financial assets | 13 | (64) | 2 | 3 | (21) |
| Tax (1) | 164 | 42 | (21) | 3 | 29 |
| (521) | (70) | 52 | (4) | (114) | |
| Items that do qualify for reclassification | |||||
| FVOCI financial assets | (100) | 44 | 45 | - | 81 |
| Cash flow hedges | (848) | 271 | (238) | (245) | (93) |
| Currency translation | (382) | 276 | (115) | 21 | (149) |
| Tax | 213 | (89) | 83 | 65 | (4) |
| (1,117) | 502 | (225) | (159) | (165) | |
| Other comprehensive (loss)/income after tax | (1,638) | 432 | (173) | (163) | (279) |
| Total comprehensive income/(loss) for the period | 1,674 | (2) | 325 | 581 | (299) |
| Attributable to: | |||||
| Ordinary shareholders | 1,308 | (338) | 261 | 512 | (389) |
| Preference shareholders | 19 | 26 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Paid-in equity holders | 299 | 355 | 58 | 63 | 83 |
| Non-controlling interests | 48 | (45) | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 1,674 | (2) | 325 | 581 | (299) |
(1)
Following the purchase of ordinary shares from UKGI in March 2021, NatWest Group contributed £500 million to its main pension scheme in line with the memorandum of understanding announced on 17 April 2018. After tax relief, this contribution reduced total equity by £365 million. There was also a pre-tax loss of £192 million (€224 million) in relation to the re-measurement of the Group’s Republic of Ireland pension schemes, primarily as a result of significant movements in underlying actuarial assumptions (2020: pre-tax gain of £72 million (€81 million)). In line with our policy, the present value of defined benefit obligations and the fair value of plan assets at the end of the reporting period, are assessed to identify significant market fluctuations and one-off events since the end of the prior financial year.
Condensed consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2021
| 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | |
| Assets | |||
| Cash and balances at central banks | 177,757 | 164,851 | 124,489 |
| Trading assets | 59,158 | 66,357 | 68,990 |
| Derivatives | 106,139 | 103,770 | 166,523 |
| Settlement balances | 2,141 | 8,140 | 2,297 |
| Loans to banks - amortised cost | 7,682 | 9,251 | 6,955 |
| Loans to customers - amortised cost | 358,990 | 361,022 | 360,544 |
| Other financial assets | 46,145 | 47,000 | 55,148 |
| Intangible assets | 6,723 | 6,723 | 6,655 |
| Other assets | 8,242 | 11,164 | 7,890 |
| Assets of disposal groups | 9,015 | - | - |
| Total assets | 781,992 | 778,278 | 799,491 |
| Liabilities | |||
| Bank deposits | 26,279 | 17,375 | 20,606 |
| Customer deposits | 479,810 | 476,319 | 431,739 |
| Settlement balances | 2,068 | 7,792 | 5,545 |
| Trading liabilities | 64,598 | 70,946 | 72,256 |
| Derivatives | 100,835 | 98,560 | 160,705 |
| Other financial liabilities | 49,326 | 47,857 | 45,811 |
| Subordinated liabilities | 8,429 | 8,675 | 9,962 |
| Notes in circulation | 3,047 | 3,037 | 2,655 |
| Other liabilities | 5,797 | 5,830 | 6,388 |
| Total liabilities | 740,189 | 736,391 | 755,667 |
| Equity | |||
| Ordinary shareholders' interests | 37,412 | 37,492 | 38,367 |
| Other owners' interests | 4,384 | 4,384 | 5,493 |
| Owners’ equity | 41,796 | 41,876 | 43,860 |
| Non-controlling interests | 7 | 11 | (36) |
| Total equity | 41,803 | 41,887 | 43,824 |
| Total liabilities and equity | 781,992 | 778,278 | 799,491 |
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period ended
31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Called-up share capital - at 1 January | 12,129 | 12,094 | 11,642 | 11,776 | 12,127 |
| Ordinary shares issued | 37 | 35 | - | (1) | 2 |
| Share cancellation (1) | (698) | - | (174) | (133) | - |
| At 31 December | 11,468 | 12,129 | 11,468 | 11,642 | 12,129 |
| Paid-in equity - at 1 January | 4,999 | 4,058 | 3,890 | 5,936 | 4,001 |
| Redeemed | - | (1,277) | - | - | - |
| Reclassified (2) | (2,046) | - | - | (2,046) | |
| Securities issued during the period | 937 | 2,218 | - | - | 998 |
| At 31 December | 3,890 | 4,999 | 3,890 | 3,890 | 4,999 |
| Share premium account - at 1 January | 1,111 | 1,094 | 1,161 | 1,161 | 1,110 |
| Ordinary shares issued | 50 | 17 | - | - | 1 |
| At 31 December | 1,161 | 1,111 | 1,161 | 1,161 | 1,111 |
| Merger reserve - at 1 January and 31 December | 10,881 | 10,881 | 10,881 | 10,881 | 10,881 |
| FVOCI reserve - | |||||
| at 1 January | 360 | 138 | 237 | 239 | (36) |
| Unrealised gains/(losses) | 32 | 76 | 97 | 48 | 55 |
| Realised (gains)/losses (3) | (122) | 152 | (51) | (48) | 367 |
| Tax | (1) | (6) | (14) | (2) | (26) |
| At 31 December | 269 | 360 | 269 | 237 | 360 |
| Cash flow hedging reserve - at 1 January | 229 | 35 | (254) | (77) | 300 |
| Amount recognised in equity | (687) | 321 | (186) | (178) | (75) |
| Amount transferred from equity to earnings | (161) | (50) | (52) | (67) | (18) |
| Tax | 224 | (77) | 97 | 68 | 22 |
| At 31 December | (395) | 229 | (395) | (254) | 229 |
| Foreign exchange reserve - at 1 January | 1,608 | 1,343 | 1,325 | 1,304 | 1,758 |
| Retranslation of net assets | (484) | 297 | (173) | 25 | (155) |
| Foreign currency gains/(losses) on hedges of net | |||||
| assets | 88 | (55) | 48 | (3) | 4 |
| Tax | (17) | 6 | (5) | (1) | - |
| Recycled to profit or loss on disposal of | |||||
| businesses (4) | 10 | 17 | 10 | - | 1 |
| At 31 December | 1,205 | 1,608 | 1,205 | 1,325 | 1,608 |
| Capital redemption reserve - at beginning of period | - | - | 548 | 414 | - |
| Share cancellation (1) | 698 | - | 174 | 134 | - |
| Redemption of preference shares | 24 | - | - | - | - |
| At end of period | 722 | - | 722 | 548 | - |
| Retained earnings - at 1 January | 12,567 | 13,946 | 12,835 | 12,632 | 13,071 |
| Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders | |||||
| and | |||||
| other equity | |||||
| owners | |||||
| - continuing | |||||
| operations | 2,992 | (493) | 400 | 678 | (82) |
| - discontinued | |||||
| operations | 276 | 121 | 97 | 64 | 61 |
| Equity preference dividends paid | (19) | (26) | (5) | (5) | (5) |
| Paid-in equity dividends paid | (299) | (355) | (58) | (63) | (83) |
| Ordinary dividends paid | (693) | - | - | (346) | - |
| Shares repurchased during the year (1,5) | (1,423) | - | (387) | (288) | - |
| Unclaimed dividend | - | 2 | - | - | - |
| Redemption of preference shares | (24) | - | - | - | - |
| Redemption/reclassification of paid-in equity (2,6) | 150 | (355) | - | 150 | - |
| Realised gains/(losses) in period on FVOCI equity | |||||
| shares | |||||
| - | |||||
| gross | 3 | (248) | 1 | 3 | (362) |
| - | |||||
| tax | - | - | - | - | 27 |
| Remeasurement of the retirement benefit schemes (4) | |||||
| - | |||||
| gross | (669) | 4 | 71 | (6) | (50) |
| - | |||||
| tax | 168 | 22 | (16) | 2 | (7) |
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period ended
31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Changes in fair value of credit in financial | |||||
| liabilities | |||||
| designated at FVTPL | |||||
| through profit or loss | |||||
| - | |||||
| gross | (29) | (52) | - | (4) | (72) |
| - | |||||
| tax | 3 | 8 | - | 1 | 9 |
| Shares issued under employee share schemes | 8 | (11) | 8 | - | - |
| Share-based payments (7) | (45) | 4 | 20 | 17 | 60 |
| At 31 December | 12,966 | 12,567 | 12,966 | 12,835 | 12,567 |
| Own shares held - at 1 January | (24) | (42) | (389) | (391) | (24) |
| Shares issued under employee share schemes | 36 | 95 | 18 | 1 | - |
| Own shares acquired (1) | (383) | (77) | - | 1 | - |
| At 31 December | (371) | (24) | (371) | (389) | (24) |
| Owners' equity at 31 December | 41,796 | 43,860 | 41,796 | 41,876 | 43,860 |
| Non-controlling interests - at 1 January | (36) | 9 | 11 | 10 | (38) |
| Currency translation adjustments and other movements | 4 | 17 | - | (1) | 1 |
| Profit/(losses) attributable to non-controlling | |||||
| interests | |||||
| - continuing operations | 44 | (62) | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| - discontinued operations | - | - | - | - | - |
| Dividends paid | (5) | - | (5) | - | - |
| At 31 December | 7 | (36) | 7 | 11 | (36) |
| Total equity at 31 December | 41,803 | 43,824 | 41,803 | 41,887 | 43,824 |
| Attributable to: | |||||
| Ordinary shareholders | 37,412 | 38,367 | 37,412 | 37,492 | 38,367 |
| Preference shareholders | 494 | 494 | 494 | 494 | 494 |
| Paid-in equity holders | 3,890 | 4,999 | 3,890 | 3,890 | 4,999 |
| Non-controlling interests | 7 | (36) | 7 | 11 | (36) |
| 41,803 | 43,824 | 41,803 | 41,887 | 43,824 |
(1)
In March 2021, there was an agreement with HM Treasury to buy 591 million ordinary shares in the Company from UK Government Investments Ltd (UKGI), at 190.5p per share for the total consideration of £1.13 billion. NatWest Group cancelled 391 million of the purchased ordinary shares, amounting to £744 million excluding fees, and held the remaining 200 million in own shares held, amounting to £381 million excluding fees. The nominal value of the share cancellation has been transferred to the capital redemption reserve.
(2)
In July 2021, paid-in equity reclassified to liabilities as the result of a call in August 2021 of US$2.65 billion AT1 Capital notes.
(3)
In 2020, the completion of 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 fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI).
(4)
Following the purchase of ordinary shares from UKGI in March 2021, NatWest Group contributed £500 million to its main pension scheme in line with the memorandum of understanding announced on 17 April 2018. After tax relief, this contribution reduced total equity by £365 million. There was also a pre-tax loss of £192 million (€224 million) in relation to the re-measurement of the Group’s Republic of Ireland pension schemes, primarily as a result of significant movements in underlying actuarial assumptions (2020: pre-tax gain of £72 million (€81 million)). In line with our policy, the present value of defined benefit obligations and the fair value of plan assets at the end of the reporting period, are assessed to identify significant market fluctuations and one-off events since the end of the prior financial year.
(5)
In line with the announcement in July 2021, NatWest Group plc repurchased and cancelled 310.8 million shares for total consideration of £676.2 million excluding fees. Of the 310.8 million shares bought back, 2.8 million shares were settled and cancelled in January 2022. The nominal value of the share cancellations has been transferred to the capital redemption reserve with the share premium element to retained earnings.
(6)
The redemption of paid-in equity includes a tax credit of £16 million.
(7)
Share-based payments includes a tax credit of £10 million.
Condensed consolidated cash flow statement for the period ended 31 December 2021
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | |
| Operating activities | ||
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax from continuing | ||
| operations (1) | 4,032 | (481) |
| Operating profit before tax from discontinued | ||
| operations (1) | 279 | 130 |
| Adjustments for non-cash items | 3,626 | 2,845 |
| Net cash flows from trading activities | 7,937 | 2,494 |
| Changes in operating assets and liabilities | 46,606 | 26,815 |
| Net cash flows from operating activities before tax | 54,543 | 29,309 |
| Income taxes paid | (856) | (214) |
| Net cash flows from operating activities | 53,687 | 29,095 |
| Net cash flows from investing activities | 3,065 | 7,547 |
| Net cash flows from financing activities | (2,604) | 90 |
| Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash | ||
| equivalents | (2,641) | 1,879 |
| Net increase in cash and cash equivalents | 51,507 | 38,611 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January | 139,199 | 100,588 |
| Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December | 190,706 | 139,199 |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
Notes
The condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with NatWest Group plc’s 2021 Annual Report and Accounts which were prepared in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS), International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and IFRS as adopted by the European Union.
Going concern
Having reviewed NatWest Group’s principal risks, forecasts, projections and other relevant evidence, the directors have a reasonable expectation that NatWest Group will continue in operational existence for a period of twelve months from the date the financial statements are approved. Accordingly, the results for the year ended 31 December 2021 have been prepared on a going concern basis (see the Report of the directors, page 183, NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts).
NatWest Group’s principal accounting policies are as set out on pages 307 to 312 of the NatWest Group plc’s 2021 Annual Report and Accounts.
Critical accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty
The judgments and assumptions that are considered to be the most important to the portrayal of NatWest Group’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 judgments are noted on page 311 of the NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts. Estimation uncertainty continues to be af fected by the COVID-19 pandemic . Management’s consideration of this source of uncertainty is outlined in the relevant sections of NatWest Group plc’s 2021 Annual Report and Accounts, including the ECL estimate for the period in the Risk and capital management section contained in the NatWest Group plc’s 2021 Annual Report and Accounts.
Information used for significant estimates
The COVID-19 pandemic continued to cause significant economic and social disruption during year ended 31 December 2021. Key financial estimates are based on management's latest five-year revenue and cost forecasts. Measurement of goodwill, deferred tax and expected credit losses are highly sensitive to reasonably possible changes in those anticipated conditions. Other reasonably possible assumptions about the future include a prolonged financial effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy of the UK and other countries or greater economic effect as countries and companies implement plans to counter climate risks. Changes in judgments and assumptions could result in a material adjustment to those estimates in the next reporting periods. (Refer to the NatWest Group plc Risk factors in the 2021 Annual Report and Accounts).
Notes
Two legally binding agreements for the sale of UBIDAC business were announced in 2021 as part of the phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland:
On 28 June 2021 NatWest Group announced it had agreed a binding sale agreement with Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c. for the transfer of c.€4.2 billion (plus up to €2.8 billion of undrawn exposures), of performing commercial loans as well as those c.280 colleagues that are wholly or mainly assigned to supporting that part of the business, with the final number of roles to be confirmed as the deal completes. The sale, subject to Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) approval, is expected to be completed in a series of transactions during 2022 and Q1 2023.
On the 17 December 2021 NatWest Group signed a legally binding agreement with Permanent TSB p.l.c. The proposed sale will include performing non-tracker mortgages, the performing loans in the micro-SME business; the UBIDAC Asset Finance business, including its Lombard digital platform, and a subset of Ulster Bank branch locations in the Republic of Ireland. The majority of loans are expected to transfer by Q4 2022. As part of the transaction it is anticipated that c.450 colleagues will have the right to transfer under the TUPE regulations, with the final number of roles to be confirmed as the deal completes.
The business activities relating to these sales that meet the requirements of IFRS 5 are presented as a discontinued operation and as a disposal group at 31 December 2021. The Ulster Bank RoI operating segment continues to be reported separately and reflects the results and balance sheet position of its continuing operations.
(a) Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| Interest receivable | 260 | 273 | 62 | 65 | 70 |
| Net interest income | 260 | 273 | 62 | 65 | 70 |
| Non-interest income | 9 | 15 | 4 | 1 | 3 |
| Total income | 269 | 288 | 66 | 66 | 73 |
| Operating expenses | (47) | (47) | (14) | (11) | (12) |
| Profit before impairment losses | 222 | 241 | 52 | 55 | 61 |
| Impairment releases/(losses) | 57 | (111) | 45 | 9 | 9 |
| Operating profit before tax | 279 | 130 | 97 | 64 | 70 |
| Tax charge | (3) | (9) | - | - | (9) |
| Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax | 276 | 121 | 97 | 64 | 61 |
(b) Assets and liabilities of disposal groups
| 2021 | |
|---|---|
| £m | |
| Assets of disposal groups | |
| Loans to customers - amortised cost | 9,002 |
| Derivatives | 5 |
| Other assets | 8 |
| 9,015 | |
| Liabilities of disposal groups | |
| Other liabilities | 5 |
| 5 | |
| Net assets of disposal groups | 9,010 |
(c) Operating cash flows attributable to discontinued operations
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| Net cash flows from operating activities | 1,290 | (895) |
| Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents | 1,290 | (895) |
Notes
| Customer | Litigation and | Financial — commitments | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| redress (1) | other regulatory | Property | and guarantees | Other (2) | Total | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| At 1 January 2021 | 749 | 365 | 271 | 178 | 289 | 1,852 |
| Expected credit losses impairment | ||||||
| release | - | - | - | (83) | - | (83) |
| Currency translation and other | ||||||
| movements | (5) | - | 2 | (2) | (7) | (12) |
| Charge to income statement | 173 | 307 | 113 | - | 196 | 789 |
| Release to income statement | (25) | (86) | (118) | - | (82) | (311) |
| Provisions utilised | (418) | (309) | (37) | - | (203) | (967) |
| At 31 December 2021 | 474 | 277 | 231 | 93 | 193 | 1,268 |
(1)
Includes payment protection insurance provision which reflects the estimated cost of PPI redress attributable to claims prior to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) complaint deadline of 29 August 2019. All pre-deadline complaints have been processed which removes complaint volume estimation uncertainty from the provision estimate. NatWest Group continues to conclude remaining bank-identified closure work and conclude cases with the Financial Ombudsmen Service.
(2)
Other materially comprises provisions relating to restructuring costs.
(3)
Property provision materially includes dilapidation provisions. Release in property provision includes the effect of purchase of freeholds for properties where the group was the primary leaseholder.
(4)
Majority of charge in the year and utilisation of litigation provisions relates to FCA investigation into money laundering.
Provisions are liabilities of uncertain timing or amount and are recognised when there is a present obligation as a result of a past event, the outflow of economic benefit is probable and the outflow can be estimated reliably. Any difference between the final outcome and the amounts provided will affect the reported results in the period when the matter is resolved.
NatWest Group plc and certain members of NatWest Group are party to legal proceedings and involved in regulatory matters, including as the subject of investigations and other regulatory and governmental action (Matters) in the United Kingdom (UK), the United States (US), the European Union (EU) and other jurisdictions. Note 27 in the NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts, issued on 18 February 2022 and available at natwestgroup.com (Note 27), discusses the Matters in which NatWest Group is currently involved and material developments. Other than the Matters discussed in Note 27, no member of NatWest 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 27 that have occurred since the Q3 2021 Interim Management Statement was issued on 29 October 2021, include, but are not limited to, those set out below.
Litigation
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and other rates litigation
NWM Plc and certain other members of NatWest Group, including NatWest Group plc, are defendants in several class actions, as well as more than two dozen non-class actions, relating to alleged historical artificial suppression of USD LIBOR, each of which is part of a co-ordinated proceeding in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY). In December 2021, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (US Court of Appeals), reversing a December 2016 decision of the SDNY, held that plaintiffs in these cases have adequately alleged the court’s personal jurisdiction over NWM Plc and other non-US banks, including with respect to antitrust class action claims on behalf of over-the-counter plaintiffs and exchange-based purchaser plaintiffs. In the same decision, the appellate court affirmed the SDNY’s prior decision that plaintiffs who purchased LIBOR-based instruments from third parties (as opposed to the defendants) lack antitrust standing to pursue such claims. The appellate court remanded these matters to the SDNY for further proceedings in light of its rulings.
In January 2019, a class action antitrust complaint was filed in the SDNY alleging that the defendants (USD ICE LIBOR panel banks and affiliates) have conspired to suppress USD ICE LIBOR from 2014 to the present by submitting incorrect information to ICE about their borrowing costs. The NatWest Group defendants are NatWest Group plc, NWM Plc, NWMSI and NWB Plc. The defendants made a motion to dismiss this case, which was granted by the court in March 2020. One plaintiff sought to appeal the dismissal, but on 14 February 2022, the US Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal because that plaintiff lacks standing to maintain the appeal.
FX litigation
NWM Plc, NWMSI and / or NatWest Group plc are defendants in several cases relating to NWM Plc’s foreign exchange (FX) business. In December 2021, a claim was issued in the Netherlands against NatWest Group plc, NWM Plc and NWM N.V. by Stichting FX Claims, seeking a declaration from the court that anti-competitive FX market conduct described in decisions of the European Commission of 16 May 2019 is unlawful, along with unspecified damages. The claimant has indicated that it may seek to amend its claim to also refer to the December 2021 decision by the EC (described below under “Foreign exchange related investigations”). A hearing is scheduled for June 2022.
Notes
Spoofing litigation
In December 2021, three substantially similar class actions complaints were filed in federal court in the United States against NWM Plc and NWMSI alleging Commodity Exchange Act and common law unjust enrichment claims arising from manipulative trading known as spoofing. The complaints refer to NWM Plc’s December 2021 spoofing-related guilty plea (described below under “US investigations relating to fixed-income securities”) and purport to assert claims on behalf of those who transacted in US Treasury securities and futures and options on US Treasury securities between 2008 and 2018. The three complaints are pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Regulatory matters
US investigations relating to fixed-income securities
In December 2021, NWM Plc pled guilty in United States District Court for the District of Connecticut to one count of wire fraud and one count of securities fraud in connection with historical spoofing conduct by former employees in US Treasuries markets between January 2008 and May 2014 and, separately, during approximately three months in 2018.
The 2018 trading occurred during the term of a non-prosecution agreement (NPA) between NWMSI and the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut (USAO CT), under which non-prosecution was conditioned on NWMSI and affiliated companies not engaging in criminal conduct during the term of the NPA. The relevant trading in 2018 was conducted by two NWM traders in Singapore and breached that NPA.
The plea agreement reached with the US Department of Justice and the USAO CT resolves both the spoofing conduct and the breach of the NPA.
As required by the resolution and sentence imposed by the court, NWM Plc is subject to a three-year period of probation and has paid a US$25.2 million criminal fine, approximately US$2.8 million in criminal forfeiture and approximately US$6.8 million in restitution out of existing provisions. The plea agreement also imposes an independent corporate monitor. In addition, NWM Plc has committed to compliance programme reviews and improvements and agreed to reporting and co-operation obligations.
Other material adverse collateral consequences may occur as a result of this matter, as further described in the Risk Factor relating to legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations set out on page 425 of the NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts.
Foreign exchange related investigations
In recent years, NWM Plc paid significant penalties to resolve investigations into its FX business by the FCA, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the US Department of Justice, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the European Commission (EC) and others. In December 2021, the EC announced that a settlement had been reached with NatWest Group plc, NWM Plc and other banks in relation to its investigation into past breaches of competition law regarding spot foreign exchange trading. NatWest Group plc and NWM Plc were fined EUR 32.5 million in total relating to conduct that took place between 2011 and 2012. The fine was covered by existing provisions. This concludes the EC’s investigations into NatWest Group’s past spot foreign exchange trading activity.
FCA investigation into NatWest Group’s compliance with the Money Laundering Regulations 2007
Following an FCA investigation, commenced in 2017, into potential breaches of the UK Money Laundering Regulations 2007 (‘MLR 2007’), NWB Plc pled guilty in October 2021 to three offences under regulation 45(1) of the MLR 2007 for failure to comply with regulation 8(1) between 7 November 2013 and 23 June 2016, and regulations 8(3) and 14(1) between 8 November 2012 and 23 June 2016. These regulations required the firm to determine, conduct and demonstrate risk sensitive due diligence and ongoing monitoring of its relationships with its customers for the purposes of preventing money laundering. The offences relate to operational weaknesses between 2012 and 2016, during which period NWB Plc did not adequately monitor the accounts of a UK incorporated customer. In December 2021, NWB Plc was fined £264.8 million, incurred a confiscation order and was ordered to pay costs. This was met by NWB Plc from existing provisions, with a small additional provision taken in Q4 2021.
Other material adverse collateral consequences may occur as a result of this matter, as further described in the Risk Factor relating to legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations set out on page 425 of the NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts.
Systematic Anti-Money Laundering Programme assessment
In December 2018, the FCA commenced a Systematic Anti-Money Laundering Programme assessment of NatWest Group. In August 2019, the FCA instructed NatWest Group to appoint a Skilled Person under section 166 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 to provide assurance on financial crime governance arrangements in relation to two financial crime change programmes. The Skilled Person’s final report was received in January 2022.
Notes
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 NatWest Group. NatWest 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).
Bank of England facilities
In the ordinary course of business, NatWest Group may from time to time access market-wide facilities provided by the Bank of England.
Other related parties
(a) In their roles as providers of finance, NatWest Group companies provide development and other types of capital support to businesses. In some instances, the investment may extend to ownership or control over 20% or more of the voting rights of the investee company.
(b) NatWest Group recharges The NatWest Group Pension Fund with the cost of administration services incurred by it. The amounts involved are not material to NatWest Group.
Full details of NatWest Group’s related party transactions for the year ended 31 December 2021 are included in the NatWest Group plc 2021 Annual Report and Accounts.
The company has announced that the directors have recommended a final dividend of £844 million, or 7.5p per ordinary share (2020 – £364 million, or 3.0p) subject to shareholder approval at the Annual General Meeting on 28 April 2022.
If approved, payment will be made on 4 May 2022 to shareholders on the register at the close of business on 18 March 2022. The ex-dividend date will be 17 March 2022.
On 27 January 2022, NatWest Group announced that we will create a new franchise, Commercial and Institutional, bringing together our Commercial, NatWest Markets and RBS International businesses to form a single franchise, with common objectives, to best support our customers across the full non-personal customer lifecycle. Our reporting will follow this new structure from Q1 2022.
Regulatory calls were announced as a result of the PRA determination that certain instruments can no longer be included as part of Tier 1 capital on a solo and/or consolidated basis after 31 December 2021:
On 1 February 2022, NatWest Group plc gave notice of redemption to holders of the USD Series U Non-Cumulative Dollar Preference Shares (ISIN US39057AA62). The notional outstanding of $1,013 billion plus dividends for the current period to, but excluding the redemption date of 31 March 2022 will be paid to noteholders at par.
On 1 February 2022, NatWest Group plc gave notice of redemption to holders of the $1,200 billion 7.648% dollar Perpetual Regulatory Tier One Security (ISIN US780097AH44). The notional outstanding of $67.5 million plus interest for the current period will be paid to noteholders at a make whole price calculated at least one business day prior to the redemption date of 3 March 2022.
On 11 February 2022, NatWest Group plc gave notice to noteholders of the redemption of its €1.5 billion Fixed to Floating Rate notes due 8 March 2023. The notes will be redeemed on the optional redemption date of 8 March 2022. Payment of principal and accrued interest will be settled upon redemption at par. The call is because the note will cease to be MREL eligible from 8 March 2022.
Other than as disclosed in the accounts, there have been no other significant events between 31 December 2021 and the date of approval of these accounts which would require a change or additional disclosure.
Statement of directors’ responsibilities
The responsibility statement below has been prepared in connection with NatWest Group’s full Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2021.
We, the directors listed below, confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
| − | The
financial statements, prepared in accordance with UK adopted
International Accounting Standards, International Financial
Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting
Standards Board and IFRS as adopted by the European Union, 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 |
17 February 2022
Board of directors
| Chairman | Executive directors | Non-executive directors |
|---|---|---|
| Howard | ||
| Davies | Alison | |
| Rose-Slade Katie | ||
| Murray | Frank | |
| Dangeard Patrick | ||
| Flynn Morten | ||
| Friis Robert | ||
| Gillespie Yasmin | ||
| Jetha Mike | ||
| Rogers Mark | ||
| Seligman Lena | ||
| Wilson |
Additional information
Presentation of information
‘Parent company’ refers to NatWest Group plc and ‘NatWest Group’ and ‘we’ refers to NatWest Group plc and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term ‘NWH Group’ refers to NatWest Holdings Limited (‘NWH’) and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term ‘NWM Group’ refers to NatWest Markets Plc (‘NWM Plc’) and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term ‘NWM N.V.’ refers to NatWest Markets N.V. The term ‘NWMSI’ refers to NatWest Markets Securities, Inc. The term ‘RBS plc’ refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland plc. The term ‘NWB Plc’ refers to National Westminster Bank Plc. The term ‘UBIDAC’ refers to Ulster Bank Ireland DAC. The term ‘RBSI Holdings Limited’ refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland International (Holdings) Limited. ‘Go-forward group’ excludes Ulster Bank RoI and discontinued operations.
NatWest Group publishes its financial statements in pounds sterling (‘£’ or ‘sterling’). The abbreviations ‘£m’ and ‘£bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of pounds sterling, respectively, and references to ‘pence’ represent pence where the amounts are denominated in pounds sterling (‘GBP’). Reference to ‘dollars’ or ‘$’ are to United States of America (‘US’) dollars. The abbreviations ‘$m’ and ‘$bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of dollars, respectively. The abbreviation ‘€’ represents the ‘euro’, and the abbreviations ‘€m’ and ‘€bn’ represent millions and thousands of millions of euros, respectively.
Statutory results
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 2019 have been filed with the Registrar of Companies and those for the year ended 31 December 2020 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.
Ulster Bank RoI
Continuing operations
Two legally binding agreements for the sale of the UBIDAC business were announced in 2021 as part of the phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland: The sale of commercial lending to Allied Irish Banks p.l.c. (AIB) and the performing non-tracker mortgages, performing micro-SME loans, UBIDAC’s asset finance business and 25 of its branch locations to Permanent TSB plc. (PTSB). The business activities relating to these sales that meet the requirements of IFRS 5 are presented as a discontinued operation and as a disposal group on 31 December 2021. The Business performance summary presents the results of the Group’s continuing operations. For further details refer to Note 3 on page 34.
MAR – Inside Information
This announcement contains information that qualified or may have qualified as inside information for NatWest Group plc, for the purposes of Article 7 of the Market Abuse Regulation (EU) 596/2014 (MAR) as it forms part of domestic law by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. This announcement is made by Alexander Holcroft, Head of Investor Relations for NatWest Group plc.
Contacts
| Analyst enquiries: | Alexander
Holcroft, Investor Relations | +44 (0)
20 7672 1758 |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Media enquiries: | NatWest
Group Press Office | +44 (0)
131 523 4205 |
| Management presentation | Fixed income presentation |
|---|---|
| Date: Friday 18 February 2022 | Date: Friday 18 February 2022 |
| Time: 9:00 am UK time | Time: 1:00 pm UK time |
| Zoom registration and dial in: www.natwestgroup.com/results |
Available on www.natwestgroup.com/results
| − | Announcement
and slides. |
| --- | --- |
| − | 2021
Annual Report and Accounts. |
| − | A
financial supplement containing income statement, balance sheet and
segment performance for the nine quarters ended 31 December
2021. |
| − | NatWest
Group and NWH Group Pillar 3 Report. |
| − | Climate-related
Disclosures Report 2021. |
| − | ESG
Supplement 2021. |
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’, ‘will’, ‘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 targets and guidance relating to financial performance measures, such as income growth, operating expense, cost reductions, RoTE, ROE, discretionary capital distribution targets, impairment loss rates, balance sheet reduction, including the reduction of RWAs, CET1 ratio (and key drivers of the CET1 ratio including timing, impact and details), Pillar 2 and other regulatory buffer requirements and MREL and non-financial performance measures, such as climate and ESG-related performance ambitions, targets and metrics, including in relation to initiatives to transition to a net zero economy, Climate and Sustainable Funding and Financing (CSFF) and financed emissions. In addition, this document includes forward-looking statements relating, but not limited to: the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on NatWest Group; planned cost reductions, disposal losses and strategic costs; implementation of NatWest Group’s purpose-led strategy and other strategic priorities (including in relation to: its phased withdrawal from ROI, the NWM Refocusing and investment programmes relating to digital transformation of its operations and services and inorganic opportunities); the timing and outcome of litigation and government and regulatory investigations; direct and on-market buy-backs; funding plans and credit risk profile; managing its capital position; liquidity ratio; portfolios; net interest margin and drivers related thereto; lending and income growth, product share and growth in target segments; impairments and write-downs, including with respect to goodwill; restructuring and remediation costs and charges; NatWest Group’s exposure to political risk, economic assumptions and risk, climate, environmental and sustainability risk, operational risk, conduct risk, financial crime risk, cyber, data and IT risk and credit rating risk and to various types of market risk, 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, expectations, estimates, targets and projections, and are subject to significant inherent risks, uncertainties and other factors, both external and relating to NatWest Group’s strategy or operations, which may result in NatWest Group being unable to achieve the current plans, expectations, estimates, targets, projections 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 results, gains or losses could differ materially from those that have been estimated. Accordingly, undue reliance should not be placed on these statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this document speak only as of the date we make them and we expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to update or revise any forward-looking statements contained herein, whether to reflect any change in our expectations with regard thereto, any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based, or otherwise, except to the extent legally required.
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 described in this document. These factors include, but are not limited to, those set forth in the risk factors and the other uncertainties described in NatWest Group plc’s Annual Report on Form 20-F and its other filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The principal risks and uncertainties that could adversely NatWest Group’s future results, its financial condition and prospects and cause them to be materially different from what is forecast or expected, include, but are not limited to: economic and political risk (including in respect of: the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on NatWest Group and its customers; political and economic risks and uncertainty in the UK and global markets; uncertainty regarding the effects of Brexit; changes in interest rates and foreign currency exchange rates; and HM Treasury’s ownership of NatWest Group plc); strategic risk (including in respect of the implementation of NatWest Group’s purpose-led Strategy; refocusing of its NWM franchise; and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on NatWest Group’s strategic objectives and targets); financial resilience risk (including in respect of: NatWest Group’s ability to meet targets and to make discretionary capital distributions; the competitive environment; impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the credit quality of NatWest Group’s counterparties; counterparty and borrower risk; prudential regulatory requirements for capital and MREL; the adequacy of NatWest Group’s resolution plans; liquidity and funding risks; changes in the credit ratings; the requirements of regulatory stress tests; goodwill impairment; model risk; sensitivity to accounting policies, judgments, assumptions and estimates; changes in applicable accounting standards; the value or effectiveness of credit protection; and the application of UK statutory stabilisation or resolution powers); climate and sustainability risk (including in respect of: risks relating to climate change and the transitioning to a net zero economy; the implementation of NatWest Group’s climate change strategy and climate change resilient systems, controls and procedures; climate-related data and model risk; the failure to adapt to emerging climate, environmental and sustainability risks and opportunities; changes in ESG ratings; increasing levels of climate, environmental and sustainability related regulation and oversight; and climate, environmental and sustainability-related litigation, enforcement proceedings and investigations); operational and IT resilience risk (including in respect of: operational risks (including reliance on third party suppliers); cyberattacks; the accuracy and effective use of data; complex IT systems (including those that enable remote working); attracting, retaining and developing senior management and skilled personnel; NatWest Group’s risk management framework; and reputational risk); and legal, regulatory and conduct risk (including in respect of: the impact of substantial regulation and oversight; compliance with regulatory requirements; the outcome of legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations; the transition of LIBOR other IBOR rates to alternative risk-free rates; and changes in tax legislation or failure to generate future taxable profits).
Climate and ESG disclosures
Climate and ESG disclosures in this report use a greater number and level of judgments, assumptions and estimates, including with respect to the classification of climate and sustainable funding and financing activities, than our reporting of historical financial information. These judgments, assumptions and estimates are highly likely to change over time, and, when coupled with the longer time frames used in these disclosures, make any assessment of materiality inherently uncertain. In addition, our climate risk analysis and net zero strategy remain under development, and the data underlying our analysis and strategy remain subject to evolution over time. As a result, we expect that certain climate and ESG disclosures made in this report are likely to be amended, updated, recalculated or restated in the future. This forward-looking statement should be read together with the ‘Climate-related and other forward-looking statements and metrics’ of the NatWest Group 2021 Climate-related Disclosures Report.
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 a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities or financial instruments or any advice or recommendation with respect to such securities or other financial instruments.
Appendix
RBS\
Non-IFRS financial measures
Non-IFRS financial measures
NatWest Group prepares its financial statements in accordance with 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 notable and other defined items which management believe are not representative of the underlying performance of the business and which distort period-on-period comparison. The non-IFRS measures provide users of the financial statements with a consistent basis for comparing business performance between financial periods and information on elements of performance that are one-off in nature. The non-IFRS measures also include the calculation of metrics that are used throughout the banking industry. These non-IFRS measures are not measures within the scope of IFRS and are not a substitute for IFRS measures.
Non-IFRS financial measures
Go-forward group income excluding notable items is calculated as total income excluding Ulster Bank RoI total income and excluding notable items. UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses total income excluding notable items c omprises income in the Retail Banking, Commercial Banking, Private Banking and RBS International operating segments excluding notable items.
The exclusion of notable items aims to remove the impact of one-offs which may distort period-on-period comparisons.
Refer to pages 8 and 11 for further details.
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| Continuing operations | |||||
| Total income (1) | 10,512 | 10,508 | 2,622 | 2,708 | 2,462 |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI total income | (228) | (222) | (43) | (79) | (58) |
| Go-forward group income | 10,284 | 10,286 | 2,579 | 2,629 | 2,404 |
| Less notable items | (210) | 384 | (62) | (118) | 81 |
| Go-forward group income excluding notable items | 10,074 | 10,670 | 2,517 | 2,511 | 2,485 |
| Total income | |||||
| Retail | |||||
| Banking | 4,445 | 4,181 | 1,164 | 1,131 | 974 |
| Private | |||||
| Banking | 816 | 763 | 253 | 195 | 184 |
| Commercial | |||||
| Banking | 3,875 | 3,958 | 987 | 965 | 951 |
| RBS | |||||
| International | 548 | 497 | 156 | 136 | 126 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses income | 9,684 | 9,399 | 2,560 | 2,427 | 2,235 |
| Less notable items (2) | (64) | 87 | (50) | (4) | 84 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses | |||||
| income | |||||
| excluding notable items | 9,620 | 9,486 | 2,510 | 2,423 | 2,319 |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
(2)
For details of UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses notable items refer to page 11.
NWM total income excluding asset disposals/strategic risk reductions and own credit adjustments (OCA) is calculated as total income of the NWM business less asset disposals/strategic risk reductions and OCA.
This aims to show underlying income generation in NWM excluding the impact of disposal losses and OCA.
Refer to pages 11 and 16 for further details.
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| NWM total income | 415 | 1,123 | 25 | 95 | 73 |
| Less asset disposals/strategic risk reduction | 64 | 83 | 12 | 12 | 8 |
| Less OCA | (6) | 24 | (3) | (2) | 43 |
| NWM total income excluding asset disposals/ strategic | |||||
| risk | |||||
| reductions and OCA | 473 | 1,230 | 34 | 105 | 124 |
Non-IFRS financial measures
The management analysis of operating expenses shows strategic costs and litigation and conduct costs in separate lines. Depreciation and amortisation, and other administrative expenses attributable to these costs are included in strategic costs and litigation and conduct costs lines for management analysis. These amounts are included in staff, premises and equipment and other administrative expenses in the statutory analysis.
Other expenses excludes strategic costs and litigation and conduct costs, which are more volatile and may distort comparisons with prior periods.
Refer to pages 11 and 27 for further details.
| Non-statutory analysis | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year ended | ||||||||
| 31 December 2021 | 31 December 2020 (1) | |||||||
| Litigation | Statutory | Litigation | Statutory | |||||
| Strategic | and conduct | Other | operating | Strategic | and conduct | Other | operating | |
| Operating expenses | costs | costs | expenses | expenses | costs | costs | expenses | expenses |
| Continuing operations | ||||||||
| Staff costs | 411 | - | 3,265 | 3,676 | 462 | - | 3,416 | 3,878 |
| Premises and equipment | 103 | - | 1,030 | 1,133 | 233 | - | 989 | 1,222 |
| Other administrative expenses | 133 | 466 | 1,427 | 2,026 | 197 | 113 | 1,535 | 1,845 |
| Depreciation and amortisation | 140 | - | 783 | 923 | 121 | - | 792 | 913 |
| Total | 787 | 466 | 6,505 | 7,758 | 1,013 | 113 | 6,732 | 7,858 |
| Quarter ended | ||||||||
| 31 December 2021 | ||||||||
| Litigation | Statutory | |||||||
| Strategic | and conduct | Other | operating | |||||
| Operating expenses | costs | costs | expenses | expenses | ||||
| Continuing operations | ||||||||
| Staff costs | 122 | - | 793 | 915 | ||||
| Premises and equipment | 73 | - | 295 | 368 | ||||
| Other administrative expenses | 65 | 190 | 480 | 735 | ||||
| Depreciation and amortisation | 118 | - | 192 | 310 | ||||
| Total | 378 | 190 | 1,760 | 2,328 | ||||
| 30 September 2021 (1) | ||||||||
| Litigation | Statutory | |||||||
| Strategic | and conduct | Other | operating | |||||
| Operating expenses | costs | costs | expenses | expenses | ||||
| Continuing operations | ||||||||
| Staff costs | 74 | - | 807 | 881 | ||||
| Premises and equipment | (2) | - | 265 | 263 | ||||
| Other administrative expenses | 4 | 294 | 290 | 588 | ||||
| Depreciation and amortisation | 1 | - | 198 | 199 | ||||
| Total | 77 | 294 | 1,560 | 1,931 | ||||
| 31 December 2020 (1) | ||||||||
| Litigation | Statutory | |||||||
| Strategic | and conduct | Other | operating | |||||
| Operating expenses | costs | costs | expenses | expenses | ||||
| Continuing operations | ||||||||
| Staff costs | 147 | - | 828 | 975 | ||||
| Premises and equipment | 63 | - | 257 | 320 | ||||
| Other administrative expenses | 54 | 194 | 516 | 764 | ||||
| Depreciation and amortisation | 62 | - | 208 | 270 | ||||
| Total | 326 | 194 | 1,809 | 2,329 |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
Non-IFRS financial measures
Our cost target for 2021 is based on this measure and we track progress against this.
Refer to page 4 for further details.
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 (1) | 2021 | 2021 (1) | 2020 (1) | |
| Continuing operations | |||||
| Total operating expenses | 7,758 | 7,858 | 2,328 | 1,931 | 2,329 |
| Less strategic costs | (787) | (1,013) | (378) | (77) | (326) |
| Less litigation and conduct costs | (466) | (113) | (190) | (294) | (194) |
| Other expenses | 6,505 | 6,732 | 1,760 | 1,560 | 1,809 |
| Less OLD | (140) | (145) | (34) | (36) | (35) |
| Other expenses excluding OLD | 6,365 | 6,587 | 1,726 | 1,524 | 1,774 |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI direct costs | (273) | (239) | (69) | (64) | (58) |
| Other expenses excluding OLD and Ulster | |||||
| Bank RoI | |||||
| direct costs | 6,092 | 6,348 | 1,657 | 1,460 | 1,716 |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
The cost:income ratio is calculated as total operating expenses less OLD divided by total income less OLD.
This is a common metric used to compare profitability across the banking industry.
Refer to pages 8, 12 to 16 and 19 to 23 for further details.
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | |||||||||
| Central | excluding | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| Year ended 31 December 2021 | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Operating expenses | (2,513) | (520) | (2,354) | (242) | (1,161) | (486) | (7,276) | (482) | (7,758) |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | 140 | - | - | - | 140 | - | 140 |
| Adjusted operating expenses | (2,513) | (520) | (2,214) | (242) | (1,161) | (486) | (7,136) | (482) | (7,618) |
| Total income | 4,445 | 816 | 3,875 | 548 | 415 | 185 | 10,284 | 228 | 10,512 |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | (140) | - | - | - | (140) | - | (140) |
| Adjusted total income | 4,445 | 816 | 3,735 | 548 | 415 | 185 | 10,144 | 228 | 10,372 |
| Cost:income ratio | 56.5% | 63.7% | 59.3% | 44.2% | 279.8% | nm | 70.3% | nm | 73.4% |
| Year ended 31 December 2020 (1) | |||||||||
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Operating expenses | (2,540) | (455) | (2,430) | (291) | (1,310) | (391) | (7,417) | (441) | (7,858) |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | 145 | - | - | - | 145 | - | 145 |
| Adjusted operating expenses | (2,540) | (455) | (2,285) | (291) | (1,310) | (391) | (7,272) | (441) | (7,713) |
| Total income | 4,181 | 763 | 3,958 | 497 | 1,123 | (236) | 10,286 | 222 | 10,508 |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | (145) | - | - | - | (145) | - | (145) |
| Adjusted total income | 4,181 | 763 | 3,813 | 497 | 1,123 | (236) | 10,141 | 222 | 10,363 |
| Cost:income ratio | 60.8% | 59.6% | 59.9% | 58.6% | 116.7% | nm | 71.7% | nm | 74.4% |
Non-IFRS financial measures
| Go-forward group | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | |||||||||
| Central | excluding | ||||||||
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | items | Ulster | Ulster | NatWest | |
| Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets | & other | Bank RoI | Bank RoI | Group | |
| Quarter ended 31 December 2021 | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Operating expenses | (774) | (155) | (646) | (70) | (343) | (209) | (2,197) | (131) | (2,328) |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | 34 | - | - | - | 34 | - | 34 |
| Adjusted operating expenses | (774) | (155) | (612) | (70) | (343) | (209) | (2,163) | (131) | (2,294) |
| Total income | 1,164 | 253 | 987 | 156 | 25 | (6) | 2,579 | 43 | 2,622 |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | (34) | - | - | - | (34) | - | (34) |
| Adjusted total income | 1,164 | 253 | 953 | 156 | 25 | (6) | 2,545 | 43 | 2,588 |
| Cost:income ratio | 66.5% | 61.3% | 64.2% | 44.9% | nm | nm | 85.0% | nm | 88.6% |
| Quarter ended 30 September 2021 (1) | |||||||||
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Operating expenses | (552) | (116) | (556) | (60) | (258) | (277) | (1,819) | (112) | (1,931) |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | 36 | - | - | - | 36 | - | 36 |
| Adjusted operating expenses | (552) | (116) | (520) | (60) | (258) | (277) | (1,783) | (112) | (1,895) |
| Total income | 1,131 | 195 | 965 | 136 | 95 | 107 | 2,629 | 79 | 2,708 |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | (36) | - | - | - | (36) | - | (36) |
| Adjusted total income | 1,131 | 195 | 929 | 136 | 95 | 107 | 2,593 | 79 | 2,672 |
| Cost:income ratio | 48.8% | 59.5% | 56.0% | 44.1% | 271.6% | nm | 68.8% | nm | 70.9% |
| Quarter ended 31 December 2020 (1) | |||||||||
| Continuing operations | |||||||||
| Operating expenses | (818) | (91) | (656) | (112) | (301) | (248) | (2,226) | (103) | (2,329) |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | 35 | - | - | - | 35 | - | 35 |
| Adjusted operating expenses | (818) | (91) | (621) | (112) | (301) | (248) | (2,191) | (103) | (2,294) |
| Total income | 974 | 184 | 951 | 126 | 73 | 96 | 2,404 | 58 | 2,462 |
| Operating lease depreciation | - | - | (35) | - | - | - | (35) | - | (35) |
| Adjusted total income | 974 | 184 | 916 | 126 | 73 | 96 | 2,369 | 58 | 2,427 |
| Cost:income ratio | 84.0% | 49.5% | 67.8% | 88.9% | nm | nm | 92.5% | nm | 94.5% |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
Return on tangible equity comprises annualised profit or loss for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by average tangible equity. Average tangible equity is average total equity excluding non-controlling interests (NCI) less average intangible assets and average other owners’ equity.
Go-forward group return on tangible equity is calculated as annualised profit or loss for the period less Ulster Bank RoI loss from continuing operations and less profit from discontinued operations divided by go-forward group total tangible equity.
This measure shows the return NatWest Group generates on tangible equity deployed. It is used to determine relative performance of banks and used widely across the sector.
Refer to pages 2, 8 and 19 to 23 for further details.
| Year ended or as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended or as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NatWest Group return on tangible | |||||
| equity | 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 |
| Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders | |||||
| (£m) | 2,950 | (753) | 434 | 674 | (109) |
| Annualised profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders | |||||
| (£m) | 1,736 | 2,696 | (436) | ||
| Average total equity (£m) | 42,727 | 43,774 | 41,887 | 42,507 | 43,648 |
| Adjustment for other owners equity and intangibles | |||||
| (£m) | (11,395) | (11,872) | (10,719) | (10,881) | (11,895) |
| Adjusted total tangible equity (£m) | 31,332 | 31,902 | 31,168 | 31,626 | 31,753 |
| Return on tangible equity (%) | 9.4% | (2.4%) | 5.6% | 8.5% | (1.4%) |
| Go-forward group return on tangible equity | |||||
| Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders | |||||
| (£m) | 2,950 | (753) | 434 | 674 | (109) |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI loss from continuing operations | |||||
| (£m) | 255 | 495 | 73 | 26 | 171 |
| Less profit from discontinued operations (£m) | (276) | (121) | (97) | (64) | (61) |
| Go-forward group profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary | |||||
| shareholders (£m) | 2,929 | (379) | 410 | 636 | 1 |
| Annualised go-forward group profit/(loss) | |||||
| attributable | |||||
| to ordinary | |||||
| shareholders (£m) | 1,640 | 2,544 | 4 | ||
| Average total equity (£m) | 42,727 | 43,774 | 41,887 | 42,507 | 43,648 |
| Adjustment for | |||||
| other owners equity and intangibles (£m) | (11,395) | (11,872) | (10,719) | (10,881) | (11,895) |
| Adjusted total tangible equity (£m) | 31,332 | 31,902 | 31,168 | 31,626 | 31,753 |
| Go-forward group RWAe applying factor (%) | 93% | 93% | 93% | 93% | 93% |
| Go-forward group total tangible equity (£m) | 29,139 | 29,669 | 28,986 | 29,412 | 29,530 |
| Return on tangible equity (%) | 10.0% | (1.3%) | 5.6% | 8.6% | nm |
Segmental return on equity comprises segmental operating profit or loss, adjusted for preference share dividends and tax, divided by average notional tangible equity, allocated at an operating segment specific rate of the period average segmental risk- weighted assets, incorporating the effect of capital deductions (RWAes).
This measure shows the return generated by operating segments on equity deployed.
Refer to pages 12 to 16 and 19 to 23 for further details.
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year ended 31 December 2021 | Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets |
| Operating profit/(loss) (£m) | 1,968 | 350 | 2,594 | 358 | (711) |
| Preference share cost allocation (£m) | (79) | (21) | (154) | (20) | (63) |
| Adjustment for tax (£m) | (529) | (92) | (683) | (59) | 217 |
| Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m) | 1,360 | 237 | 1,757 | 279 | (557) |
| Average RWAe (£bn) | 36.0 | 11.2 | 69.5 | 7.8 | 28.4 |
| Equity factor | 14.5% | 12.5% | 11.5% | 16.0% | 15.0% |
| RWAe applying equity factor (£bn) | 5.2 | 1.4 | 8.0 | 1.2 | 4.3 |
| Return on equity | 26.1% | 17.0% | 22.0% | 22.5% | (13.1%) |
| Year ended 31 December 2020 (1) | |||||
| Operating profit/(loss) (£m) | 849 | 208 | (399) | 99 | (227) |
| Preference share cost allocation (£m) | (88) | (22) | (153) | (20) | (68) |
| Adjustment for tax (£m) | (213) | (52) | 155 | (11) | 83 |
| Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m) | 548 | 134 | (397) | 68 | (212) |
| Average RWAe (£bn) | 37.2 | 10.4 | 76.4 | 7.0 | 37.3 |
| Equity factor | 14.5% | 12.5% | 11.5% | 16.0% | 15.0% |
| RWAe applying equity factor (£bn) | 5.4 | 1.3 | 8.8 | 1.1 | 5.6 |
| Return on equity | 10.2% | 10.3% | (4.5%) | 6.1% | (3.8%) |
Non-IFRS financial measures
| Retail | Private | Commercial | RBS | NatWest | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quarter ended 31 December 2021 | Banking | Banking | Banking | International | Markets |
| Operating profit/(loss) (£m) | 385 | 110 | 630 | 98 | (302) |
| Preference share cost allocation (£m) | (20) | (5) | (38) | (5) | (16) |
| Adjustment for tax (£m) | (102) | (29) | (166) | (16) | 89 |
| Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m) | 263 | 76 | 426 | 77 | (229) |
| Annualised adjusted attributable profit/(loss) | |||||
| (£m) | 1,052 | 304 | 1,704 | 308 | (916) |
| Average RWAe (£bn) | 36.9 | 11.3 | 66.3 | 8.0 | 27.2 |
| Equity factor | 14.5% | 12.5% | 11.5% | 16.0% | 15.0% |
| RWAe applying equity factor (£bn) | 5.3 | 1.4 | 7.6 | 1.3 | 4.1 |
| Return on equity | 19.7% | 21.3% | 22.4% | 24.0% | (22.5%) |
| Quarter ended 30 September 2021 | |||||
| Operating profit/(loss) (£m) | 563 | 94 | 625 | 87 | (160) |
| Preference share cost allocation (£m) | (20) | (5) | (38) | (5) | (16) |
| Adjustment for tax (£m) | (152) | (25) | (164) | (14) | 49 |
| Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m) | 391 | 64 | 423 | 68 | (127) |
| Annualised adjusted attributable profit/(loss) | |||||
| (£m) | 1,564 | 256 | 1,692 | 272 | (508) |
| Average RWAe (£bn) | 36.1 | 11.3 | 67.6 | 7.8 | 27.9 |
| Equity factor | 14.5% | 12.5% | 11.5% | 16.0% | 15.0% |
| RWAe applying equity factor (£bn) | 5.2 | 1.4 | 7.8 | 1.3 | 4.2 |
| Return on equity | 29.9% | 18.1% | 21.7% | 21.6% | (12.1%) |
| Quarter ended 31 December 2020 | |||||
| Operating profit/(loss) (£m) | 91 | 67 | 285 | (13) | (230) |
| Preference share cost allocation (£m) | (22) | (5) | (38) | (5) | (17) |
| Adjustment for tax (£m) | (19) | (17) | (69) | 3 | 69 |
| Adjusted attributable profit/(loss) (£m) | 50 | 45 | 178 | (15) | (178) |
| Annualised adjusted attributable profit/(loss) | |||||
| (£m) | 200 | 180 | 712 | (60) | (712) |
| Average RWAe (£bn) | 36.1 | 10.7 | 75.9 | 7.1 | 31.5 |
| Equity factor | 14.5% | 12.5% | 11.5% | 16.0% | 15.0% |
| RWAe applying equity factor (£bn) | 5.2 | 1.3 | 8.7 | 1.1 | 4.7 |
| Return on equity | 3.8% | 13.3% | 8.1% | (5.5%) | (15.0%) |
Tangible equity is ordinary shareholders’ interest less intangible assets. TNAV per ordinary share is calculated as tangible equity divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue.
This is a measure used by external analysts in valuing the bank and the starting point for calculating regulatory capital.
Refer to pages 9, 10 and 24 for further details.
| Year ended or as at — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| Ordinary shareholders’ interests (£m) | 37,412 | 38,367 |
| Less intangible assets (£m) | (6,723) | (6,655) |
| Tangible equity (£m) | 30,689 | 31,712 |
| Ordinary shares in issue (millions) | 11,272 | 12,129 |
| TNAV per ordinary share (pence) | 272p | 261p |
Bank net interest margin is defined as net interest income of the banking business of the Go-forward group less NatWest Markets (NWM) element and excluding liquid asset buffer, as a percentage of bank average interest-earning assets. Bank average interest earning assets are the average interest earning assets of the banking business of the Go-forward group less NWM element and excluding liquid asset buffer.
The exclusion of the NWM element aims to eliminate the impact of distorting volatility in NWM.
The term Go-forward group excludes Ulster Bank RoI and discontinued operations. The exclusion of the discontinued element from the average interest earning assets aims to align the basis of calculation with prior periods.
Liquid asset buffer consists of assets held by NatWest Group, such as cash and balances at central banks and debt securities in issue, that can be used to ensure repayment of financial obligations as they fall due.
The exclusion of liquid asset buffer has been introduced as a way to present net interest margin on a basis more comparable with UK peers and exclude the impact of regulatory driven factors.
Refer to pages 2, 8 and 10 for further details.
| Year ended or as at — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended or as at — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | |
| Continuing operations | |||||
| NatWest Group net interest income (1) | 7,614 | 7,476 | 1,942 | 1,889 | 1,901 |
| Less NWM net interest income | (9) | 57 | (13) | 1 | 2 |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI net interest income | (100) | (122) | (23) | (23) | (31) |
| Bank net interest income | 7,505 | 7,411 | 1,906 | 1,867 | 1,872 |
| Annualised NatWest Group net interest income | 7,705 | 7,494 | 7,563 | ||
| Annualised Bank net interest income | 7,562 | 7,407 | 7,447 | ||
| Average interest earning assets (IEA) | 524,886 | 483,719 | 551,577 | 527,886 | 499,793 |
| Less NWM average IEA | (32,730) | (37,929) | (33,718) | (32,497) | (36,515) |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI average IEA | (15,854) | (16,600) | (15,018) | (15,701) | (17,040) |
| Less liquid asset buffer average IEA (1) | (162,195) | (127,945) | (184,730) | (164,897) | (140,491) |
| Bank average IEA | 314,107 | 301,245 | 318,111 | 314,791 | 305,747 |
| Bank net interest margin | 2.39% | 2.46% | 2.38% | 2.35% | 2.44% |
(1)
Comparative results have been re-presented from those previously published to reclassify certain operations as discontinued operations as described in Note 3 on page 34.
Non-IFRS financial measures
NatWest Group net lending is calculated as total loans to customers less loan impairment provisions.
Go-forward group net lending is calculated as net loans to customers less Ulster Bank RoI net loans to customers.
UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses net lending excluding UK Government support schemes comprises customer loans in the Retail Banking, Commercial Banking, Private Banking and RBS International operating segments, excluding UK Government support schemes.
This is the basis of our lending target for our key retail and commercial businesses.
Refer to pages 2 ,5, 9 and 10 for further details.
| As at — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| £bn | £bn | |
| Total loans to customers (amortised cost) | 362.8 | 366.5 |
| Less loan impairment provisions | (3.8) | (6.0) |
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | 359.0 | 360.5 |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI net loans to customers (amortised | ||
| cost) | (6.7) | (18.0) |
| Go-forward group net lending | 352.3 | 342.5 |
| Net loans to customers (amortised cost) | ||
| Retail | ||
| Banking | 182.2 | 172.3 |
| Private | ||
| Banking | 18.4 | 17.0 |
| Commercial | ||
| Banking | 101.2 | 108.2 |
| RBS | ||
| International | 15.5 | 13.3 |
| UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses net loans to customers | ||
| (amortised cost) | 317.3 | 310.8 |
| Less UK Government support schemes | (11.6) | (12.9) |
| Total UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses | ||
| net lending | ||
| excluding UK Government support schemes | 305.7 | 297.9 |
Go-forward group customer deposits is calculated as total customer deposits less Ulster Bank RoI customer deposits.
UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses customer deposits comprises customer deposits in the Retail Banking, Commercial Banking, Private Banking and RBS International operating segments.
This metric is used to show underlying deposit movements across our key retail and commercial businesses.
Refer to pages 2, 9 and 10 for further details.
| As at — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| £bn | £bn | |
| Total customer deposits | 479.8 | 431.7 |
| Less Ulster Bank RoI customer deposits | (18.4) | (19.6) |
| Go-forward group customer deposits | 461.4 | 412.1 |
| Retail Banking | 188.9 | 171.8 |
| Private Banking | 39.3 | 32.4 |
| Commercial Banking | 177.7 | 167.7 |
| RBS International | 37.5 | 31.3 |
| Total UK and RBSI retail and commercial businesses customer | ||
| deposits | 443.4 | 403.2 |
Given the current progress of the phased withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland, UB RoI results are currently presented in both continuing and discontinued operations. Including operating profit before tax from discontinued operations provides a complete view of the NatWest Group operating profit in 2021.
Refer to page 4 for further details.
| Year ended — 31 December | 31 December | Quarter ended — 31 December | 30 September | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | 2021 | 2021 | 2020 | |
| Operating profit/(loss) before tax | 4,032 | (481) | 635 | 1,010 | (6) |
| Operating profit before tax from discontinued | |||||
| operations | 279 | 130 | 97 | 64 | 70 |
| Total operating profit including discontinued | |||||
| operations | 4,311 | (351) | 732 | 1,074 | 64 |
Performance metrics not defined under IFRS
Metrics based on GAAP measures, included as not defined under IFRS and reported for compliance with ESMA adjusted performance measure rules.
Loan:deposit ratio is calculated as net customer loans held at amortised cost divided by total customer deposits.
This is a common metric used among peers to assess liquidity.
Refer to page 9 for further details.
| As at — 31 December | 31 December | |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2020 | |
| £m | £m | |
| Loans to customers - amortised cost | 358,990 | 360,544 |
| Customer deposits | 479,810 | 431,739 |
| Loan:deposit ratio (%) | 75% | 84% |
Loan impairment rate is the annualised loan impairment charge divided by gross customer loans.
Refer to pages 8, 12 to 15 and 19 to 23 for further details.
Funded assets is calculated as total assets less derivative assets.
This measure allows review of balance sheet trends exclusive of the volatility associated with derivative fair values.
Refer to pages 9, 16 and 19 to 23 for further details.
AUMA comprises both assets under management (AUMs) and assets under administration (AUAs) serviced through the Private Banking franchise. AUMs comprise assets where the investment management is undertaken by Private Banking on behalf of Private Banking, Retail Banking and RBSI customers. AUAs comprise third party assets held on an execution-only basis in custody by Private Banking, Retail Banking and RBSI for their customers accordingly, for which the execution services are supported by Private Banking. Private Banking receives a fee for providing investment management and execution services to Retail Banking and RBSI franchises.
Private Banking is the Centre of Expertise for asset management across NatWest Group servicing all client segments across Retail, Premier and Private Banking.
Refer to pages 9 and 13 for further details.
Assets held by RBSI as an independent trustee and in a depositary service capacity.
Depositary assets are a closely monitored KPI for the RBS International business and its inclusion in commentary highlights the services that RBS International provides.
Refer to page 15 for further details.
Wholesale funding comprises deposits by banks, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities.
This is a closely monitored metric used across the banking industry to ensure capital requirements are being met.
Refer to pages 9 and 10 for further details.
Legal Entity Identifier: 2138005O9XJIJN4JPN90
Date: 18 February 2022
| NATWEST
GROUP plc (Registrant) |
| --- |
| By: /s/
Jan Cargill |
| Name:
Jan Cargill |
| Title:
Chief Governance Officer and Company Secretary |
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