Report of Foreign Private Issuer

 

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of

the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

 

26 April 2024

 

Commission file number: 001-10306

 

Form 6-K

 

NatWest Group plc

 

Gogarburn

PO Box 1000

Edinburgh EH12 1HQ

Scotland

United Kingdom

 

(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    

 

This report on Form 6-K, except for any information contained on any websites linked or documents referred to in this report, shall be deemed incorporated by reference into the company’s Registration Statement on Form F-3 (File No. 333-261837) and to be a part thereof from the date on which this report is filed, to the extent not superseded by documents or reports subsequently filed or furnished.

 

 

 

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, 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 NatWest Group’s initial area of focus, climate and sustainability-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: implementation of NatWest Group’s strategy (including in relation to:, cost-controlling measures, the Commercial & Institutional segment and achieving a number of various targets within the relevant timeframe); 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; 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 Promoter Score; 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 affect NatWest Group’s future results, its financial condition and/or 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: political and economic risks and uncertainty in the UK and global markets, including due to GDP growth, inflation and interest rates, political uncertainty and instability, supply chain disruption and geopolitical tensions and armed conflict); changes in foreign currency exchange rates; uncertainty regarding the effects of Brexit; and HM Treasury’s ownership as the largest shareholder of NatWest Group plc); strategic risk (including in respect of the implementation of NatWest Group’s strategy; future acquisitions and divestments (including the phased withdrawal from ROI), and the transfer of its Western European corporate portfolio); financial resilience risk (including in respect of: NatWest Group’s ability to meet targets and to make discretionary capital distributions; the competitive environment; counterparty and borrower risk; liquidity and funding risks; prudential regulatory requirements for capital and MREL; reductions in the credit ratings; the requirements of regulatory stress tests; model risk; sensitivity to accounting policies, judgments, estimates and assumptions (and the economic, climate, competitive and other forward looking information affecting those judgments, estimates and assumptions); changes in applicable accounting standards; the value or effectiveness of credit protection; the adequacy of NatWest Group’s future assessments by the Prudential Regulation Authority and the Bank of England; and the application of UK statutory stabilisation or resolution powers); climate and sustainability risk (including in respect of: risks relating to climate-related and sustainability-related risks; both the execution and reputational risk relating to NatWest Group’s climate change-related strategy, ambitions, targets and transition plan; climate and sustainability-related data and model risk; the failure to implement climate change resilient governance, systems, controls and procedures; increasing levels of climate, environmental, human rights and sustainability-related regulation and oversight; increasing anti-greenwashing regulations; climate, environmental and sustainability-related litigation, enforcement proceedings investigations and conduct risk; and reductions in ESG ratings); 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; attracting, retaining and developing diverse 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; the outcome of legal, regulatory and governmental actions, investigations and remedial undertakings; and changes in tax legislation or failure to generate future taxable profits).

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20242 

 

 

Forward-looking statements continued

 

Climate and sustainability-related disclosures

Climate and sustainability-related disclosures in this document are not measures within the scope of International Financial Reporting Standards (‘IFRS’), 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 in accordance with IFRS. These judgments, assumptions and estimates are highly likely to change materially 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, net zero strategy, including the implementation of our climate transition plan remain under development, and the data underlying our analysis and strategy remain subject to evolution over time. The process we have adopted to define, gather and report data on our performance on climate and sustainability-related measures is not subject to the formal processes adopted for financial reporting in accordance with IFRS and there are currently limited industry standards or globally recognised established practices for measuring and defining climate and sustainability-related metrics. As a result, we expect that certain climate and sustainability-related disclosures made in this document are likely to be amended, updated, recalculated or restated in the future. Please also refer to the cautionary statement in the section entitled ‘Climate-related and other forward-looking statements and metrics’ of the NatWest Group 2023 Climate-related Disclosures Report.

 

Cautionary statement regarding Non-IFRS financial measures and APMs

NatWest Group prepares its financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). This document may contain financial measures and ratios not specifically defined under GAAP or IFRS (‘Non-IFRS’) and/or alternative performance measures (‘APMs’) as defined in European Securities and Markets Authority (‘ESMA’) guidelines. Non-IFRS measures and APMs are adjusted for notable and other defined items which management believes are not representative of the underlying performance of the business and which distort period-on-period comparison. 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. Any Non-IFRS measures and/or APMs included in this document, are not measures within the scope of IFRS, are based on a number of assumptions that are subject to uncertainties and change, and are not a substitute for IFRS measures.

 

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.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20243 

 

 

Introduction

 

Presentation of information

Unless otherwise specified herein, ‘Parent company’ refers to NatWest Group plc, and ‘NatWest Group’, ‘Group’ or ‘we’ refers to NatWest Group plc and its subsidiaries. The term ‘NWH Group’ refers to NatWest Holdings Limited (‘NWH Limited’) 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 ‘NWM N.V. Group’ refers to NatWest Markets N.V. and its subsidiary and associated undertakings 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 Ltd’ refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited.

 

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 (‘GBP’), respectively, and references to ‘pence’ represent pence where amounts are denominated in pounds sterling. 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.

 

To aid readability, this document contains references to EU legislative and regulatory provisions in effect in the UK before 1 January 2021 that have now been implemented in UK domestic law. These references should be read and construed as including references to the applicable UK implementation measures with effect from 1 January 2021.

 

Any information contained on websites linked or reports referenced in this interim results report for the three month period ended 31 March 2024 on Form 6-K is for information only and will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference herein.

 

Non-IFRS financial information

 

NatWest Group prepares its financial statements in accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). This document contains a number of non-IFRS measures, also known as alternative performance measures, defined under the European Securities and Markets Authority guidance or non-GAAP financial measures in accordance with SEC regulations. These measures are adjusted for notable and other defined items which management believes 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 a calculation of metrics that are used throughout the banking industry.

 

These non-IFRS measures are not a substitute for IFRS measures and should not be considered in isolation. A reconciliation to the closest IFRS measure is presented where appropriate. For details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation where appropriate refer to appendix ‘Non-IFRS financial measures’ on page 37.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20244 

 

 

NatWest Group Q1 2024 results on Form 6-K Page
Highlights 6
Business performance summary  
Chief Financial Officer’s review 8
Retail Banking 9
Private Banking 10
Commercial & Institutional 11
Central items & other 12
Segment performance 13
Risk and capital management  
Credit risk 17
Capital, liquidity and funding risk 25
Condensed consolidated financial statements 30
Notes to the financial statements 34
Additional information 35
Appendix - Non-IFRS financial measures 37

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20245 

 

  

Q1 2024 performance summary

Chief Executive, Paul Thwaite, commented:

“NatWest Group has delivered a strong set of results for the first quarter - with an operating profit of £1.3 billion - as we remain focused on the priorities we set out in February, which will help us shape the future of this bank.

 

Our performance is grounded in the vital role we play in the economy and in the lives of our 19 million customers. Though macro-uncertainty continues, customer confidence and activity is improving, with both lending(1) and deposits up in the quarter, and impairments remaining low, reflecting our well-diversified business.

 

We are ambitious for this bank, and by succeeding for our customers, we will succeed for our shareholders. Our first priority is delivering disciplined growth across our three businesses by serving our customers well. At the same time, we are becoming simpler, more productive and easier to deal with. As a result, we aim to generate returns that allow us to support our customers, invest in our business and deliver attractive distributions to shareholders.

 

We are also pleased with the recent momentum in the reduction of HM Treasury’s stake in the bank. Returning NatWest Group to private ownership is a shared ambition and we believe it is in the best interests of both the bank and all our shareholders.”

 

Strong Q1 2024 performance

Q1 2024 attributable profit of £918 million and a return on equity of 9.8%. Return on tangible equity (RoTE) was 14.2%.
Total income of £3,475 million was £62 million, or 1.8%, lower compared with Q4 2023 and £401 million, or 10.3%, lower compared with Q1 2023. Total income excluding notable items was £3,414 million. The reduction of £28 million, or 0.8%, compared with Q4 2023, was due to the impact of one day fewer, with mortgage margin pressure largely offset by higher markets income in Commercial & Institutional, and £406 million lower than Q1 2023 principally reflecting lower deposit balances and mix changes, and lending margin pressure.
Net interest margin (NIM) of 2.05% was 6 basis points higher than Q4 2023 principally reflecting notable items and changes within central items, while NIM across the three businesses was stable.
Operating expenses of £2,052 million were £102 million, or 4.7%, lower than Q4 2023 and £64 million, or 3.2%, higher compared with Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were broadly stable compared with Q4 2023 (£13 million lower), and £96 million, or 5.0%, higher than Q1 2023 principally reflecting the Bank of England Levy and increased staff costs due to inflation and severance costs, partially offset by ongoing simplification of our business and lower costs in relation to our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland.
A net impairment charge of £93 million, or 10 basis points of gross customer loans, principally reflected the continued strong performance of our lending book. Levels of default remain stable and at low levels across the portfolio.

 

Robust balance sheet with strong capital and liquidity levels

Net loans to customers of £378.0 billion decreased by £3.4 billion, or 0.9%, during Q1 2024. Net loans to customers excluding central items increased by £1.4 billion, or 0.4% in the quarter, to £357.0 billion primarily reflecting growth in Corporate & Institutions partially offset by increased mortgage redemptions in the quarter within Retail Banking.

 

Up to 31 March 2024 we have provided £68.5 billion of our target to provide £100 billion climate and sustainable funding and financing between 1 July 2021 and the end of 2025.

 

Customer deposits of £432.8 billion were £1.4 billion, or 0.3% higher than Q4 2023. Customer deposits excluding central items increased by £0.9 billion, or 0.2%, in the quarter primarily reflecting growth of £2.0 billion in Retail Banking partially offset by a £1.2 billion reduction in Commercial & Institutional due to active management of our commercial deposits and reduced liquidity in the market. Term balances now account for 17% of our book, up from 16% at the end of 2023.

 

The loan:deposit ratio (LDR) was 87% at Q1 2024. The LDR (excl. repos and reverse repos) was 84% at Q1 2024, with customer deposits exceeding net loans to customers by around £66 billion.

 

The liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) of 151%, representing £53.8 billion headroom above 100% minimum requirement, increased by 7 percentage points compared with Q4 2023 primarily due to increased issuance and customer deposits coupled with the replacement of the Cash Ratio Deposit scheme with a Bank of England Levy.

 

Net asset value per share increased by 11 pence in the quarter to 389 pence. TNAV per share increased by 10 pence in the quarter to 302 pence primarily reflecting the attributable profit for the period.

 

Shareholder return supported strong capital generation

Common Equity Tier (CET1) ratio of 13.5% was 10 basis points higher than Q4 2023 as the attributable profit for the quarter, c.50 basis points, was largely offset by a £3.3 billion increase in RWAs, c.25 basis points, and a £367 million ordinary dividend deduction, c.20 basis points.

 

RWAs increased by £3.3 billion in the quarter to £186.3 billion largely reflecting a £1.6 billion increase associated with the annual update to operational risk and lending growth within Commercial & Institutional.

 

Outlook (2)

We retain the outlook guidance provided in the 2023 Annual Report and Accounts with the exception of full year 2024 Group operating costs (excluding litigation and conduct costs) which is now expected to be broadly stable compared with 2023 excluding around £0.1 billion increase in bank levies.

 

(1)Loans to customers excluding central items.
(2)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 NatWest Group plc Risk Factors in the 2023 Annual Report on Form 20-F. These statements constitute forward-looking statements. Refer to Forward-looking statements in this announcement.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20246 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
Summary consolidated income statement £m  £m  £m 
Net interest income 2,651 2,638 2,902
Non-interest income 824 899 974
Total income 3,475 3,537 3,876
Litigation and conduct costs (24) (113) (56)
Other operating expenses (2,028) (2,041) (1,932)
Operating expenses (2,052) (2,154) (1,988)
Profit before impairments 1,423 1,383 1,888
Impairment losses (93) (126) (70)
Operating profit before tax 1,330 1,257 1,818
Tax (charge)/credit (339) 5 (512)
Profit from continuing operations 991 1,262 1,306
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax (4) 26 35
Profit for the period 987 1,288 1,341
       
Performance key metrics and ratios      
Notable items within total income (1) £61m £95m £56m
Total income excluding notable items (1) £3,414m £3,442m £3,820m
Net interest margin (2) 2.05% 1.99% 2.25%
Average interest earning assets (2) £521bn £525bn £522bn
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 58.4% 57.7% 49.8%
Loan impairment rate (1) 10bps 13bps 7bps
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders £918m £1,229m £1,279m
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - basic 10.5p 13.9p 13.2p
Return on tangible equity (RoTE) (1) 14.2% 20.1% 19.8%
Climate and sustainable funding and financing (3) £6.6bn £8.7bn £7.6bn
  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn 
Balance sheet      
Total assets 697.5 692.7 695.6
Loans to customers - amortised cost 378.0 381.4 374.2
Loans to customers excluding central items (1,4) 357.0 355.6 352.4
Loans to customers and banks - amortised cost and FVOCI  387.7 392.0 385.8
Total impairment provisions (5) 3.6 3.6 3.4
Expected credit loss (ECL) coverage ratio 0.94% 0.93% 0.89%
Assets under management and administration (AUMA) (1) 43.1 40.8 35.2
Customer deposits  432.8 431.4 430.5
Customer deposits excluding central items (1,4) 420.0 419.1 421.8
Liquidity and funding      
Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) 151% 144% 139%
Liquidity portfolio (6) 229 223 216
Net stable funding ratio (NSFR) 136% 133% 141%
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) (1) 84% 84% 83%
Total wholesale funding 87 80 79
Short-term wholesale funding 31 28 25
Capital and leverage      
Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio (7) 13.5% 13.4% 14.4%
Total capital ratio (7) 18.8% 18.4% 19.6%
Pro forma CET1 ratio (excl. foreseeable items) (8) 14.3% 14.2% 15.7%
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) 186.3 183.0 178.1
UK leverage ratio 5.1% 5.0% 5.4%
Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share (1,9) 302p 292p 278p
Number of ordinary shares in issue (millions) (9) 8,727 8,792 9,581

 

(1) Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
(2) Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.
(3) NatWest Group uses its climate and sustainable funding and financing inclusion (CSFFI) criteria to determine the assets, activities and companies that are eligible to be included within its climate and sustainable funding and financing target. This includes both provision of committed (on and off-balance sheet) funding and financing, including provision of services for underwriting issuances and private placements.
(4) Central items includes Treasury repo activity and Ulster Bank Republic of Ireland.
(5) Includes £0.1 billion relating to off-balance sheet exposures (31 December 2023 – £0.1 billion; 31 March 2023 - £0.1 billion).
(6) Comparative period for March 2023 has been re-presented on an LCR basis in line with the Liquidity portfolio definition as of 31 December 2023.
(7) Refer to the Capital, liquidity and funding risk section for details of the basis of preparation.
(8) The pro forma CET1 ratio at 31 March 2024 excludes foreseeable items of £1,633 million: £1,380 million for ordinary dividends and £253 million foreseeable charges (31 December 2023 excludes foreseeable items of £1,538 million: £1,013 million for ordinary dividends and £525 million foreseeable charges; 31 March 2023 excludes foreseeable items of £2,351 million: £1,479 million for ordinary dividends and £872 million foreseeable charges).
(9) The number of ordinary shares in issue excludes own shares held.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20247 

 

 

Business performance summary

Chief Financial Officer’s review

We delivered an operating profit of £1,330 million in the first quarter with a return on equity of 9.8% for Q1 2024 and a RoTE of 14.2%. Total income of £3,475 million was £62 million, or 1.8%, lower than Q4 2023. Total income excluding notable items was broadly stable on Q4 2023, and we continue to see low levels of default across our portfolio, with a net impairment charge of 10 basis points of gross customer loans.

 

Net lending across the three businesses has increased in the quarter, as growth in Corporate & Institutions was partially offset by higher mortgage redemptions, and we have seen growth in customer deposits. Our robust balance sheet means that we remain in a strong liquidity position, with an LCR of 151%, representing £53.8 billion headroom above 100% minimum requirement, an LDR of 87% and an LDR (excl. repos and reverse repos) of 84%. Our CET1 ratio remains within our targeted range at 13.5%.

 

Financial performance

Total income decreased by 1.8% to £3,475 million compared with Q4 2023 and was 10.3% lower than Q1 2023. Total income excluding notable items was £3,414 million, a reduction of £28 million, or 0.8%, compared with Q4 2023, due to the impact of one day fewer, with mortgage margin pressure largely offset by higher markets income in Commercial & Institutional, and £406 million lower than Q1 2023 principally reflecting lower deposit balances and mix changes, and lending margin pressure.

 

NIM of 2.05% was 6 basis points higher than Q4 2023 principally reflecting notable items and changes within central items, while NIM across the three businesses was stable.

 
Total operating expenses were £102 million lower than Q4 2023 and £64 million higher than Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were broadly stable compared with Q4 2023 (£13 million lower), and £96 million, or 5.0%, higher than Q1 2023 principally reflecting the Bank of England Levy and increased staff costs due to inflation and severance costs, partially offset by simplification in our business and lower costs in relation to our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland. We remain committed to deliver on our full year cost guidance, excluding the impact of increased bank levies.
 
A net impairment charge of £93 million principally reflected the continued strong performance of our lending book. Levels of default remain stable and at low levels across the portfolio despite inflationary pressures and the higher interest rate environment. Compared with Q4 2023, our ECL provision remained flat at £3.6 billion and our ECL coverage ratio has increased from 0.93% to 0.94%. We retain post model adjustments of £0.4 billion related to economic uncertainty, or 11.3% of total impairment provisions. Whilst we are comfortable with the strong credit performance of our book, we will continue to assess this position regularly and are closely monitoring the impacts of inflationary pressures on the UK economy and our customers.
 
As a result, we are pleased to report an attributable profit for Q1 2024 of £918 million, with earnings per share of 10.5 pence, return on equity of 9.8% and a RoTE of 14.2%.
 

Net loans to customers of £378.0 billion decreased by £3.4 billion in Q1 2024. Net loans to customers excluding central items increased by £1.4 billion in the quarter to £357.0 billion primarily reflecting a £3.4 billion increase in Commercial & Institutional partially offset by £1.7 billion reduction in Retail Banking due to higher mortgage redemptions. Total gross new mortgage lending was £5.2 billion in the quarter, compared with £9.9 billion in Q1 2023 and £5.6 billion in Q4 2023, representing flow share of c.10.5%. Within Commercial & Institutional, growth was largely within Corporate & Institutions, partly offset by UK Government Scheme repayments of £0.6 billion.

 

Up to 31 March 2024 we have provided £68.5 billion against our target to provide £100 billion climate and sustainable funding and financing between 1 July 2021 and the end of 2025. As part of this we aim to provide at least £10 billion in lending for EPC A and B rated residential properties between 1 January 2023 and the end of 2025. During Q1 2024 we provided £6.6 billion climate and sustainable funding and financing, which included £0.5 billion in lending for EPC A and B rated residential properties.

 

Customer deposits increased by £1.4 billion during Q1 2024 to £432.8 billion. Customer deposits excluding central items increased by £0.9 billion in the quarter to £420.0 billion reflecting £2.0 billion growth in Retail Banking partially offset by a £1.2 billion reduction in Commercial & Institutional primarily as a result of active management of our commercial deposits and reduced liquidity in the market. Deposit mix was more stable in the quarter than the levels of migration observed in 2023; term balances now account for 17% of our book, up from 16% at Q4 2023.

 

Net asset value per share increased by 11 pence in the quarter to 389 pence. TNAV per share increased by 10 pence in the quarter to 302 pence primarily reflecting the attributable profit for the period.

 

Capital and leverage

The CET1 ratio was 13.5%, or 13.4% excluding IFRS 9 transitional relief, and increased by 10 basis points in the quarter as the attributable profit, c.50 basis points, was largely offset by a £3.3 billion increase in RWAs, c.25 basis points, and a £367 million ordinary dividend deduction, c.20 basis points. NatWest Group’s minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL) was 30.7%.

 

RWAs increased by £3.3 billion in the quarter to £186.3 billion largely reflecting a £1.6 billion increase associated with the annual update to operational risk and lending growth within Commercial & Institutional. 

 

Funding and liquidity

The LCR increased by 7 percentage points to 151%, representing £53.8 billion headroom above 100% minimum requirements primarily due to increased issuance and customer deposits coupled with the replacement of the Cash Ratio Deposit scheme with a Bank of England Levy. Our primary liquidity at Q1 2024 was £158.4 billion and £112.8 billion, or 71%, of this was cash at central banks. Total wholesale funding increased by £7.0 billion in the quarter to £86.6 billion.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20248 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

Retail Banking

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Total income 1,325 1,369 1,604
Operating expenses (773) (681) (696)
   of which: Other operating expenses (767) (647) (693)
Impairment losses (63) (103) (114)
Operating profit 489 585 794
       
Return on equity (1) 16.5% 20.2% 30.0%
Net interest margin (2) 2.22% 2.23% 2.75%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 57.9% 47.3% 43.2%
Loan impairment rate (1) 12bps 20bps 22bps

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost) 203.5 205.2 201.7
Customer deposits 190.0 188.0 184.0
RWAs 62.5 61.6 55.6

 

(1)

(2)

Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.

Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

During Q1 2024, Retail Banking continued to take a measured approach to risk, whilst delivering an operating profit of £0.5 billion and a return on equity of 16.5%.

 

Retail Banking provided £0.5 billion of climate and sustainable funding and financing in Q1 2024 from lending on properties with an EPC rating of A or B.

 

- Total income was £44 million, or 3.2%, lower than Q4 2023 due to continued mortgage margin dilution and the impact of one day fewer in the quarter. Total income was £279 million, or 17.4%, lower than Q1 2023 reflecting mortgage margin dilution, impact of the deposit balance mix shift from non-interest bearing to interest bearing balances and higher funding costs, partly offset by lending growth.
- Net interest margin was 1 basis point lower than Q4 2023 largely reflecting mortgage margin dilution partly offset by increasing structural hedge benefit.
- Operating expenses of £773 million were £92 million, or 13.5%, higher than Q4 2023 and £77 million, or 11.1%, higher than Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were £120 million, or 18.5%, higher than Q4 2023 reflecting the Bank of England Levy, increased severance costs as well as branch and property exit costs. Other operating expenses were £74 million, or 10.7%, higher than Q1 2023 reflecting the Bank of England Levy, increased severance costs and branch and property exit costs partly offset by savings from a 7.1% reduction in headcount.
- An impairment charge of £63 million in Q1 2024 with stage 3 inflows reflecting normalisation of risk parameters, partly offset by good book releases related to model updates.
- Net loans to customers were £1.7 billion, or 0.8%, lower than Q4 2023 reflecting lower mortgage balances of £1.8 billion with higher redemptions only partly offset by gross new mortgage lending of £5.0 billion. Cards balances increased by £0.3 billion partly offset by £0.2 billion lower personal advances.
- Customer deposits increased by £2.0 billion, or 1.1%, in Q1 2024 reflecting growth in savings and current account balances.
- RWAs increased by £0.9 billion, or 1.5%, in Q1 2024 primarily due to the annual update for operational risk calculation.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 20249 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

Private Banking

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Total income 208 209 296
Operating expenses (181) (206) (155)
   of which: Other operating expenses (180) (208) (152)
Impairment releases/(losses) 6 (5) (8)
Operating profit/(loss) 33 (2) 133
       
Return on equity (1) 6.7% (1.8%) 28.5%
Net interest margin (2) 2.06% 2.07% 3.31%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 86.5% 99.5% 51.4%
Loan impairment rate (1) (13)bps 11bps 17bps
AUM net flows (£bn) (1) 0.4 0.3 0.6

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost) 18.2 18.5 19.2
Customer deposits 37.8 37.7 37.3
RWAs 11.3 11.2 11.4
Assets Under Management (AUMs) (1) 33.6 31.7 29.6
Assets Under Administration (AUAs) (1) 9.5 9.1 5.6
Total Assets Under Management and Administration (AUMA) (1) 43.1 40.8 35.2

 

(1) Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
(2)  Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

During Q1 2024, Private Banking delivered a return on equity of 6.7% and an operating profit of £33 million, reflecting the impact of 2023 sharp changes in deposit volume and mix adversely impacting hedge returns. Q1 2024 has seen a strong performance in deposits given seasonal tax outflow impact and good AUMA growth setting a strong foundation for improved profitability.

 

Private Banking provided £0.07 billion of climate and sustainable funding and financing in Q1 2024 from lending on properties with an EPC rating of A or B.

 

- Total income was broadly flat compared to Q4 2023 as deposit balances and mix continued to stabilise with the impact of one day fewer largely offset by higher investment fee income from increased AUMA. Total income was £88 million, or 29.7%, lower than Q1 2023 reflecting lower deposit balances and a change in product mix as customers migrated to savings products offering higher returns, combined with a reduction in lending volumes and mortgage margin dilution.   
- Net interest margin was 1 basis point lower than Q4 2023 reflecting mortgage margin dilution.
- Operating expenses of £181 million were £25 million, or 12.1%, lower than Q4 2023 and £26 million, or 16.8%, higher than Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were £28 million, or 13.5%, lower than Q4 2023 reflecting the annual Bank Levy charge in Q4 2023, and a one-off additional VAT charge catch up along with lower strategic severance costs. Other operating expenses were £28 million, or 18.4%, higher than Q1 2023 primarily reflecting the Bank of England Levy, an additional VAT charge and higher strategic spend to increase operational efficiency.
- A net impairment release of £6 million, compared with an £8 million charge in Q1 2023, largely reflects good book releases and lower stage 3 charges.
- Net loans to customers decreased by £0.3 billion, or 1.6%, in Q1 2024 driven by higher mortgage redemptions, only partly offset by mortgage gross new lending of £0.2 billion.
- Customer deposits increased by £0.1 billion, or 0.3%, compared with Q4 2023 with increases due to overall personal market growth offsetting tax outflows.
-

AUMA increased by £2.3 billion in Q1 2024 to £43.1 billion, primarily driven by £1.9 billion positive market movements and £0.4 billion AUM net inflows.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202410 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

Commercial & Institutional

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Net interest income 1,246 1,269 1,261
Non-interest income 613 563 692
Total income 1,859 1,832 1,953
       
Operating expenses (1,051) (1,092) (1,003)
   of which: Other operating expenses (1,020) (1,014) (959)
Impairment (losses)/releases (39) (15) 44
Operating profit 769 725 994
       
Return on equity (1) 14.6% 13.5% 19.5%
Net interest margin (2) 2.07% 2.05% 2.08%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 54.9% 55.3% 49.1%
Loan impairment rate (1) 11bps 4bps (13)bps

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost) 135.3 131.9 131.5
Customer deposits 192.2 193.4 200.5
Funded assets (1) 321.7 306.9 320.4
RWAs 109.9 107.4 104.8

 

(1)

(2)

Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.

Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

In Q1 2024, Commercial & Institutional continued to support customers with an increase in lending of 2.6% and delivered a strong performance in income and operating profit supporting a return on equity of 14.6%.

 

Commercial & Institutional provided £6.0 billion of climate and sustainable funding and financing in Q1 2024 to support customers investing in the transition to net zero.  

 

- Total income was £27 million, or 1.5%, higher than Q4 2023 primarily reflecting higher markets income, partially offset by the impact of one day fewer. Total income was £94 million, or 4.8%, lower than Q1 2023 primarily due to lower deposit returns reflecting lower volumes and continued deposit mix shift from non-interest bearing to interest bearing balances, partially offset by strong capital markets and lending growth in Corporate & Institutions.
- Net interest margin was 2 basis points higher than Q4 2023 reflecting higher deposit hedge returns and liquidity benefits, partially offset by lower deposit volumes.  
- Operating expenses of £1,051 million were £41 million, or 3.8%, lower than Q4 2023 and £48 million, or 4.8%, higher than Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were £6 million, or 0.6%, higher than Q4 2023 reflecting increased staff costs partially offset by a reduction in bank levies. Other operating expenses were £61 million, or 6.4%, higher than Q1 2023 reflecting the impact of inflationary increases in staff costs, continued investment in the business and the introduction of the Bank of England Levy.
- An impairment charge of £39 million in Q1 2024 remains at low levels with an increase in stage 3 inflows, partly offset by good book releases.
- Net loans to customers increased by £3.4 billion, or 2.6%, in Q1 2024 largely reflecting a strong performance within Corporate & Institutions, partly offset by continued UK Government scheme repayments of £0.6 billion.
- Customer deposits decreased by £1.2 billion, or 0.6%, in Q1 2024 largely reflecting reductions within Commercial Mid-market and Business Banking due to active management of our deposits and reduced liquidity in the market.
- RWAs increased by £2.5 billion, or 2.3%, in Q1 2024 primarily due to lending book growth and the annual update for operational risk.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202411 

 

 

Business performance summary

 

Central items & other

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Continuing operations      
Total income 83 127 23
Operating expenses (1) (47) (175) (134)
   of which: Other operating expenses (61) (172) (128)
   of which: Ulster Bank RoI direct expenses (25) (69) (100)
Impairment releases/(losses) 3 (3) 8
Operating profit/(loss) 39 (51) (103)
   of which: Ulster Bank RoI (47) (124) (159)
       
  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost) (2) 21.0 25.8 21.8
Customer deposits 12.8 12.3 8.7
RWAs 2.6 2.8 6.3

 

(1) Includes withdrawal-related direct program costs of £8 million for the quarter ended 31 March 2024 (31 December 2023 - £17 million; 31 March 2023 - £49 million).
(2) Excludes £0.3 billion of loans to customers held at fair value through profit or loss (31 December 2023 - £0.3 billion; 31 March 2023 - £0.5 billion).

 

- Total income was £44 million lower than Q4 2023 primarily reflecting foreign exchange recycling gains in Q4 2023, not repeated in Q1 2024, partly offset by higher gains on interest and foreign exchange risk management derivatives not in accounting hedge relationships in Q1 2024. Total income was £60 million higher than Q1 2023 primarily reflecting Business Growth Fund gains, gains on liquidity asset bond sales and a loss on surrender of leases in Q1 2023 partially offset by lower gains on interest and foreign exchange risk management derivatives not in accounting hedge relationships.
- Operating expenses of £47 million were £128 million, or 73.1%, lower than Q4 2023 and £87 million, or 64.9%, lower than Q1 2023. Other operating expenses were £111 million, or 64.5%, lower than Q4 2023 primarily reflecting lower costs in relation to the withdrawal from our operations in the Republic of Ireland, and were £67 million, or 52.3%, lower than Q1 2023.
- Customer deposits increased by £0.5 billion, or 4.1% in Q1 2024 primarily reflecting repo activity in Treasury. Ulster Bank RoI customer deposit balances were £0.2 billion as at Q1 2024.
- Net loans to customers decreased £4.8 billion to £21.0 billion in Q1 2024 mainly due to reverse repo activity in Treasury.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202412 

 

 

 

Segment performance

 

  Quarter ended 31 March 2024
  Retail Private Commercial & Central items Total NatWest
  Banking Banking Institutional & other Group
  £m £m £m £m £m
Continuing operations          
Income statement          
Net interest income 1,216 134 1,246 55 2,651
Non-interest income 109 74 613 28 824
Total income 1,325 208 1,859 83 3,475
Direct expenses (189) (61) (384) (1,394) (2,028)
Indirect expenses (578) (119) (636) 1,333 -
Other operating expenses (767) (180) (1,020) (61) (2,028)
Litigation and conduct costs (6) (1) (31) 14 (24)
Operating expenses (773) (181) (1,051) (47) (2,052)
Operating profit before impairment losses/releases 552 27 808 36 1,423
Impairment (losses)/releases (63) 6 (39) 3 (93)
Operating profit 489 33 769 39 1,330
           
Total income excluding notable items (1) 1,325 208 1,864 17 3,414
           
Additional information          
Return on tangible equity (1) na na na na 14.2%
Return on equity (1) 16.5% 6.7% 14.6% nm na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 57.9% 86.5% 54.9% nm 58.4%
Total assets (£bn) 226.4 26.5 388.8 55.8 697.5
Funded assets (£bn) (1) 226.4 26.5 321.7 54.7 629.3
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) 203.5 18.2 135.3 21.0 378.0
Loan impairment rate (1) 12bps (13)bps 11bps nm 10bps
Impairment provisions (£bn) (1.9) (0.1) (1.5) (0.1) (3.6)
Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) (1.2) - (0.8) - (2.0)
Customer deposits (£bn) 190.0 37.8 192.2 12.8 432.8
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) 62.5 11.3 109.9 2.6 186.3
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) 62.6 11.3 111.1 3.1 188.1
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) 13.1 2.2 12.7 33.3 61.3
Third party customer asset rate (1) 3.79% 4.97% 6.81% nm nm
Third party customer funding rate (1) (2.05%) (3.14%) (1.93%) nm nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (2) 220.6 26.2 241.9 na 521.1
Net interest margin (2) 2.22% 2.06% 2.07% na 2.05%

 

nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable

 

(1)

(2)

Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.

Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202413 

 

 

Segment performance

 

  Quarter ended 31 December 2023
  Retail Private Commercial & Central items Total NatWest
  Banking Banking Institutional & other Group
  £m £m £m £m £m
Continuing operations          
Income statement          
Net interest income 1,254 138 1,269 (23) 2,638
Non-interest income 115 71 563 150 899
Total income 1,369 209 1,832 127 3,537
Direct expenses (211) (74) (392) (1,364) (2,041)
Indirect expenses (436) (134) (622) 1,192 -
Other operating expenses (647) (208) (1,014) (172) (2,041)
Litigation and conduct costs (34) 2 (78) (3) (113)
Operating expenses (681) (206) (1,092) (175) (2,154)
Operating profit/(loss) before impairment losses 688 3 740 (48) 1,383
Impairment losses (103) (5) (15) (3) (126)
Operating profit/(loss) 585 (2) 725 (51) 1,257
           
Total income excluding notable items (1) 1,369 209 1,834 30 3,442
           
Additional information          
Return on tangible equity (1) na na na na 20.1%
Return on equity (1) 20.2% (1.8%) 13.5% nm na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 47.3% 99.5% 55.3% nm 57.7%
Total assets (£bn) 228.7 26.9 385.0 52.1 692.7
Funded assets (£bn) (1) 228.7 26.9 306.9 51.3 613.8
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) 205.2 18.5 131.9 25.8 381.4
Loan impairment rate (1) 20bps 11bps 4bps nm 13bps
Impairment provisions (£bn) (1.9) (0.1) (1.5) (0.1) (3.6)
Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) (1.1) - (0.9) - (2.0)
Customer deposits (£bn) 188.0 37.7 193.4 12.3 431.4
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) 61.6 11.2 107.4 2.8 183.0
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) 61.6 11.2 108.6 3.6 185.0
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) 13.3 2.3 12.5 33.1 61.2
Third party customer asset rate (1) 3.50% 4.88% 6.65% nm nm
Third party customer funding rate (1) (1.94%) (3.02%) (1.87%) nm nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (2) 223.2 26.5 245.2 na 524.7
Net interest margin (2) 2.23% 2.07% 2.05% na 1.99%

 

nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable

 

(1)

(2)

Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.

Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202414 

 

 

Segment performance

 

  Quarter ended 31 March 2023
  Retail Private Commercial & Central items Total NatWest
  Banking Banking Institutional & other Group
  £m £m £m £m £m
Continuing operations          
Income statement          
Net interest income 1,492 229 1,261 (80) 2,902
Non-interest income 112 67 692 103 974
Total income 1,604 296 1,953 23 3,876
Direct expenses (211) (60) (360) (1,301) (1,932)
Indirect expenses (482) (92) (599) 1,173 -
Other operating expenses (693) (152) (959) (128) (1,932)
Litigation and conduct costs (3) (3) (44) (6) (56)
Operating expenses (696) (155) (1,003) (134) (1,988)
Operating profit/(loss) before impairment losses/releases 908 141 950 (111) 1,888
Impairment (losses)/releases (114) (8) 44 8 (70)
Operating profit/(loss) 794 133 994 (103) 1,818
           
Total income excluding notable items (1) 1,604 296 1,947 (27) 3,820
           
Additional information          
Return on tangible equity (1) na na na na 19.8%
Return on equity (1) 30.0% 28.5% 19.5% nm na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1) 43.2% 51.4% 49.1% nm 49.8%
Total assets (£bn) 227.2 28.1 399.0 41.3 695.6
Funded assets (£bn) (1) 227.2 28.1 320.4 40.5 616.2
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn) 201.7 19.2 131.5 21.8 374.2
Loan impairment rate (1) 22bps 17bps (13)bps nm 7bps
Impairment provisions (£bn) (1.7) (0.1) (1.5) (0.1) (3.4)
Impairment provisions - stage 3 (£bn) (1.0) - (0.7) (0.1) (1.8)
Customer deposits (£bn) 184.0 37.3 200.5 8.7 430.5
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn) 55.6 11.4 104.8 6.3 178.1
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn) 56.4 11.4 106.2 6.9 180.9
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands) 14.1 2.3 12.5 32.9 61.8
Third party customer asset rate (1) 2.94% 4.07% 5.38% nm nm
Third party customer funding rate (1) (0.83%) (1.15%) (0.87%) nm nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (2) 220.3 28.1 246.0 na 522.4
Net interest margin (2) 2.75% 3.31% 2.08% na 2.25%

 

nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable

 

(1)

(2)

Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.

Refer to page 40 of the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202415 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

  Page
Credit risk  
Segment analysis – portfolio summary 17
Segment analysis – loans 18
Movement in ECL provision 18
ECL post model adjustments 19
Sector analysis – portfolio summary 20
Capital, liquidity and funding risk 25

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202416 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk

 

Segment analysis – portfolio summary

 

The table below shows gross loans and expected credit loss (ECL), by segment and stage, within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework.

 

  Retail Private Commercial & Central items  
  Banking Banking Institutional & other Total
31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m £m
Loans - amortised cost and FVOCI (1,2)          
Stage 1 178,692 17,288 123,704 24,679 344,363
Stage 2 23,145 769 13,661 2 37,577
Stage 3 3,291 284 2,188 - 5,763
Of which: individual - 222 946 - 1,168
Of which: collective 3,291 62 1,242 - 4,595
Subtotal excluding disposal group loans 205,128 18,341 139,553 24,681 387,703
Disposal group loans       - -
Total       24,681 387,703
ECL provisions (3)          
Stage 1 294 19 336 20 669
Stage 2 473 13 425 2 913
Stage 3 1,162 37 845 - 2,044
Of which: individual - 37 302 - 339
Of which: collective 1,162 - 543 - 1,705
Subtotal excluding ECL provisions on disposal group loans 1,929 69 1,606 22 3,626
ECL provisions on disposal group loans       - -
Total       22 3,626
ECL provisions coverage (4)          
Stage 1 (%) 0.16 0.11 0.27 0.08 0.19
Stage 2 (%) 2.04 1.69 3.11 100.00 2.43
Stage 3 (%) 35.31 13.03 38.62 - 35.47
ECL provisions coverage excluding disposal group loans 0.94 0.38 1.15 0.09 0.94
ECL provisions coverage on disposal group loans       - -
Total       0.09 0.94

 

31 December 2023          
Loans - amortised cost and FVOCI (1,2)          
Stage 1 182,297 17,565 119,047 29,677 348,586
Stage 2 21,208 906 15,771 6 37,891
Stage 3 3,133 258 2,162 10 5,563
Of which: individual - 186 845 - 1,031
Of which: collective 3,133 72 1,317 10 4,532
Subtotal excluding disposal group loans 206,638 18,729 136,980 29,693 392,040
Disposal group loans       67 67
Total       29,760 392,107
ECL provisions (3)          
Stage 1 306 20 356 27 709
Stage 2  502 20 447 7 976
Stage 3 1,097 34 819 10 1,960
Of which: individual - 34 298 - 332
Of which: collective 1,097 - 521 10 1,628
Subtotal excluding ECL provisions on disposal group loans 1,905 74 1,622 44 3,645
ECL provisions on disposal group loans       36 36
Total       80 3,681
ECL provisions coverage (4)          
Stage 1 (%) 0.17 0.11 0.30 0.09 0.20
Stage 2 (%) 2.37 2.21 2.83 nm 2.58
Stage 3 (%) 35.01 13.18 37.88 100.00 35.23
ECL provisions coverage excluding disposal group loans 0.92 0.40 1.18 0.15 0.93
ECL provisions coverage on disposal group loans       53.73 53.73
Total       0.27 0.94

 

nm = not meaningful

 

(1) The table shows gross loans only and excludes amounts that were outside the scope of the ECL framework. Other financial assets within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework were cash and balances at central banks totalling £115.8 billion (31 December 2023 – £103.1 billion) and debt securities of £49.0 billion (31 December 2023 – £50.1 billion).
(2) Fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI). Includes loans to customers and banks.
(3) Includes £7 million (31 December 2023 – £9 million) related to assets classified as FVOCI and £0.1 billion (31 December 2023 – £0.1 billion) related to off-balance sheet exposures.
(4) ECL provisions coverage is calculated as ECL provisions divided by loans – amortised cost and FVOCI. It is calculated on loans and total ECL provisions, including ECL for other (non-loan) assets and unutilised exposure. Some segments with a high proportion of debt securities or unutilised exposure may result in a not meaningful (nm) coverage ratio.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202417 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Segment analysis – loans

 

Retail Banking – Loans to customers were lower than Q4 2023, mainly due to a reduction in mortgage balances where higher redemptions were only partly offset by new mortgage lending. Unsecured lending grew overall, with growth in credit cards offset by a decrease in personal advances. New lending and portfolio credit quality was maintained with limited increases in arrears in line with expectations. Total ECL coverage increased slightly during the quarter, reflective of Stage 3 ECL growth on unsecured portfolios, mainly due to ongoing subdued write-off and debt sale activity. There was a modest reduction in good book coverage, reflective of continued stable portfolio performance alongside unsecured probability of default modelling updates.

 

Commercial & Institutional – While overall Wholesale exposure reduced in the quarter, there was Commercial & Institutional growth within multiple sectors. Sector appetite continues to be reviewed regularly, with particular focus on sector clusters and sub-sectors that are vulnerable to challenges in the external environment or deemed to represent a heightened risk. There was a marginal reduction in total ECL coverage during the quarter, due to a decrease in performing ECL, resulting from positive portfolio performance and the unwind of some PMAs. Stage 3 ECL increased due to a small increase in defaults, although still lower than historic trends, and was partially offset by write-off activity. There was a modest decrease in good book coverage, reflective of continued stable portfolio performance alongside PMA reductions.

 

Movement in ECL provision

 

The table below shows the main ECL provision movements during the quarter.

 

  ECL provision
  £m
At 1 January 2024 3,645
Transfers to disposal groups and reclassifications (16)
Changes in risk metrics and exposure: Stage 1 and Stage 2 (84)
Changes in risk metrics and exposure: Stage 3 219
Judgemental changes: changes in post model adjustments for Stage 1, Stage 2 and Stage 3 (23)
Write-offs and other (115)
At 31 March 2024 3,626

 

ECL decreased marginally in Q1 2024, with increases in Stage 3 linked to ongoing subdued write-offs and debt sales in the Personal portfolios. This was offset by good book ECL reductions relating to stable portfolio performance, reductions in post model adjustments and personal unsecured probability of default modelling updates.

 

For the Wholesale portfolios, there was an increase in Commercial & Institutional Stage 3 charges in the quarter, mainly due to a small number of individual charges, but charges were still lower than historic trends.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202418 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

ECL post model adjustments

 

The table below shows ECL post model adjustments.

 

  Retail Banking Private Commercial & Central items    
  Mortgages Other Banking Institutional & other   Total
31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m £m   £m
Deferred model calibrations - - 1 20 -   21
Economic uncertainty 120 45 10 233 3   411
Other adjustments - - - 7 -   7
Total 120 45 11 260 3   439
               
Of which:              
- Stage 1 72 16 5 108 3   204
- Stage 2 36 29 6 150 -   221
- Stage 3  12 - - 2 -   14
               
31 December 2023  
Deferred model calibrations - - 1 23 -   24
Economic uncertainty 118 39 13 256 3   429
Other adjustments 1 - - 8 23   32
Total 119 39 14 287 26   485
               
Of which:              
- Stage 1 75 14 6 115 10   220
- Stage 2 31 25 8 167 9   240
- Stage 3  13 - - 5 7   25

 

Retail Banking – The post model adjustments for economic uncertainty increased slightly to £165 million at 31 March 2024, from £157 million at 31 December 2023. Sustained inflationary pressure alongside high interest rates continues to put pressure on consumer affordability risks. This economic context, coupled with modelled ECL reductions, prompted a modest uplift in the cost of living post model adjustment (up from £144 million to £153 million) to maintain adequate provision levels on this higher risk segment of the portfolio. The cost of living post model adjustment captures the risk on segments in the Retail Banking portfolio that are more susceptible to the effects of cost of living rises. It focuses on key affordability lenses, including customers with lower income in fuel poverty, over-indebted borrowers and customers vulnerable to a potential mortgage rate shock.

 

Commercial & Institutional – The post model adjustments for economic uncertainty decreased to £233 million at 31 March 2024, from £256 million at 31 December 2023. It still includes an overlay of £39 million (£50 million at 31 December 2023) to cover the residual risks from COVID-19, including the risks surrounding associated debt to customers that have utilised government support schemes. The inflation, supply chain and liquidity post model adjustment was maintained for lending prior to 1 January 2024, with a sector-level downgrade being applied to the sectors that were considered most at risk from the ongoing pressures from inflation being higher for longer, supply chain challenges and broader concerns around reducing cash reserves across many sectors. The £16 million reduction was a result of a mechanistic refresh reflecting portfolio changes. The impact of the sector-level downgrades was a post model adjustment decrease to £193 million at 31 March 2024 from £206 million at 31 December 2023.

 

The £20 million judgemental overlay for deferred model calibrations relates to refinance risk with the existing modelling approach not fully capturing the risk on deteriorated exposures.

 

Central items & other The £23 million post model adjustment in other adjustments was removed in the quarter, reflecting the withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202419 

 

 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Sector analysis – portfolio summary

 

The table below shows financial assets and off-balance sheet exposures gross of ECL and related ECL provisions, impairment and past due by sector, asset quality and geographical region.

 

  Personal   Wholesale   Total
    Credit                    
  Mortgages (1) cards Other Total   Property Other FI Sovereign Total    
31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m   £m £m £m £m £m   £m
Loans by geography 206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,993 77,521 55,058 1,232 165,804   387,703
  - UK 206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,448 64,611 37,221 549 133,829   355,728
  - RoI - - - -   10 953 217 - 1,180   1,180
  - Other Europe - - - -   415 5,017 8,462 365 14,259   14,259
  - RoW - - - -   120 6,940 9,158 318 16,536   16,536
 Loans by asset quality (2) 206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,993 77,521 55,058 1,232 165,804   387,703
  - AQ1-AQ4 114,923 113 862 115,898   15,993 27,032 51,413 948 95,386   211,284
  - AQ5-AQ8 87,895 5,704 7,646 101,245   15,295 48,621 3,557 129 67,602   168,847
  - AQ9  947 69 183 1,199   74 331 72 133 610   1,809
  - AQ10 2,381 147 1,029 3,557   631 1,537 16 22 2,206   5,763
Loans by stage  206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,993 77,521 55,058 1,232 165,804   387,703
  - Stage 1 183,705 3,916 7,284 194,905   28,608 65,458 54,312 1,080 149,458   344,363
  - Stage 2 20,060 1,970 1,407 23,437   2,753 10,527 730 130 14,140   37,577
  - Stage 3 2,381 147 1,029 3,557   632 1,536 16 22 2,206   5,763
  - Of which: individual 137 - 21 158   283 700 5 22 1,010   1,168
  - Of which: collective 2,244 147 1,008 3,399   349 836 11 - 1,196   4,595
Loans - past due analysis (3) 206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,993 77,521 55,058 1,232 165,804   387,703
  - Not past due 203,223 5,863 8,647 217,733   31,222 74,304 53,938 1,210 160,674   378,407
  - Past due 1-30 days 1,185 41 82 1,308   337 2,289 1,111 - 3,737   5,045
  - Past due 31-90 days 599 42 113 754   151 226 2 22 401   1,155
  - Past due 90-180 days 388 34 107 529   61 125 2 - 188   717
  - Past due >180 days 751 53 771 1,575   222 577 5 - 804   2,379
Loans - Stage 2 20,060 1,970 1,407 23,437   2,753 10,527 730 130 14,140   37,577
  - Not past due 18,994 1,916 1,292 22,202   2,534 9,858 724 130 13,246   35,448
  - Past due 1-30 days 787 26 44 857   100 518 4 - 622   1,479
  - Past due 31-90 days 279 28 71 378   119 151 2 - 272   650
Weighted average life                        
   - ECL measurement (years) 9 4 6 6   6 6 2 1 6   6
Weighted average 12 months PDs                        
  - IFRS 9 (%) 0.51 3.38 5.10 0.76   1.32 1.54 0.19 1.25 1.04   0.88
  - Basel (%) 0.70 3.47 3.35 0.88   0.91 1.26 0.19 5.60 0.86   0.87
ECL provisions by geography 445 357 1,171 1,973   399 1,172 65 17 1,653   3,626
  - UK 445 357 1,171 1,973   388 1,018 37 13 1,456   3,429
  - RoI - - - -   - 2 1 - 3   3
  - Other Europe - - - -   4 104 9 - 117   117
  - RoW - - - -   7 48 18 4 77   77
ECL provisions by stage  445 357 1,171 1,973   399 1,172 65 17 1,653   3,626
  - Stage 1 87 71 142 300   95 220 40 14 369   669
  - Stage 2 70 188 216 474   78 341 19 1 439   913
  - Stage 3 288 98 813 1,199   226 611 6 2 845   2,044
  - Of which: individual 21 - 15 36   81 220 - 2 303   339
  - Of which: collective 267 98 798 1,163   145 391 6 - 542   1,705
ECL provisions coverage (%) 0.22 5.92 12.05 0.89   1.25 1.51 0.12 1.38 1.00   0.94
  - Stage 1 (%) 0.05 1.81 1.95 0.15   0.33 0.34 0.07 1.30 0.25   0.19
  - Stage 2 (%) 0.35 9.54 15.35 2.02   2.83 3.24 2.60 0.77 3.10   2.43
  - Stage 3 (%) 12.10 66.67 79.01 33.71   35.76 39.78 37.50 9.09 38.30   35.47
                         

 

For the notes to this table refer to page 23.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202420 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Sector analysis – portfolio summary continued

 

  Personal   Wholesale   Total
    Credit                    
  Mortgages (1) cards Other Total   Property Other FI Sovereign Total    
31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m   £m £m £m £m £m   £m
Loans by residual maturity 206,146 6,033 9,720 221,899   31,993 77,521 55,058 1,232 165,804   387,703
  - <1 year  3,291 3,353 3,257 9,901   5,765 25,205 40,698 333 72,001   81,902
  - 1-5 year 9,541 2,680 5,459 17,680   18,063 32,297 12,105 551 63,016   80,696
  - >5< 15 year 45,751 - 996 46,747   5,605 14,744 2,221 311 22,881   69,628
  - >15 year 147,563 - 8 147,571   2,560 5,275 34 37 7,906   155,477
Other financial assets by                        
  asset quality (2) - - - -   1 2,912 27,208 134,631 164,752   164,752
  - AQ1-AQ4 - - - -   1 2,910 26,463 134,631 164,005   164,005
  - AQ5-AQ8 - - - -   - 2 745 - 747   747
Off-balance sheet 10,293 18,043 8,355 36,691   14,215 60,200 21,039 259 95,713   132,404
  - Loan commitments 10,293 18,043 8,311 36,647   13,858 57,410 19,234 259 90,761   127,408
  - Financial guarantees - - 44 44   357 2,790 1,805 - 4,952   4,996
Off-balance sheet by                        
  asset quality (2) 10,293 18,043 8,355 36,691   14,215 60,200 21,039 259 95,713   132,404
  - AQ1-AQ4 9,597 449 7,119 17,165   10,909 36,856 19,413 166 67,344   84,509
  - AQ5-AQ8 679 17,278 1,201 19,158   3,284 23,037 1,588 30 27,939   47,097
  - AQ9  1 6 7 14   3 19 37 63 122   136
  - AQ10 16 310 28 354   19 288 1 - 308   662

 

For the notes to this table refer to page 23.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202421 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Sector analysis – portfolio summary continued

 

  Personal   Wholesale   Total
    Credit                    
  Mortgages (1) cards Other Total   Property Other FI Sovereign Total    
31 December 2023 £m £m £m £m   £m £m £m £m £m   £m
Loans by geography 208,275 5,904 9,595 223,774   31,207 77,339 57,087 2,633 168,266   392,040
  - UK 208,275 5,893 9,592 223,760   30,703 65,033 39,906 2,016 137,658   361,418
  - RoI - 11 3 14   9 888 279 - 1,176   1,190
  - Other Europe - - - -   375 5,096 7,865 399 13,735   13,735
  - RoW - - - -   120 6,322 9,037 218 15,697   15,697
 Loans by asset quality (2) 208,275 5,904 9,595 223,774   31,207 77,339 57,087 2,633 168,266   392,040
  - AQ1-AQ4 118,266 124 914 119,304   15,366 26,851 53,367 2,488 98,072   217,376
  - AQ5-AQ8 86,868 5,577 7,552 99,997   15,145 48,673 3,686 123 67,627   167,624
  - AQ9  860 63 150 1,073   75 311 18 - 404   1,477
  - AQ10 2,281 140 979 3,400   621 1,504 16 22 2,163   5,563
Loans by stage 208,275 5,904 9,595 223,774   31,207 77,339 57,087 2,633 168,266   392,040
  - Stage 1 188,140 3,742 6,983 198,865   27,316 63,690 56,105 2,610 149,721   348,586
  - Stage 2 17,854 2,022 1,633 21,509   3,270 12,145 966 1 16,382   37,891
  - Stage 3 2,281 140 979 3,400   621 1,504 16 22 2,163   5,563
  - Of which: individual 122 - 20 142   240 625 2 22 889   1,031
  - Of which: collective 2,159 140 959 3,258   381 879 14 - 1,274   4,532
Loans - past due analysis (3) 208,275 5,904 9,595 223,774   31,207 77,339 57,087 2,633 168,266   392,040
  - Not past due 205,405 5,743 8,578 219,726   30,264 74,052 56,735 2,633 163,684   383,410
  - Past due 1-30 days 1,178 41 71 1,290   491 2,222 332 - 3,045   4,335
  - Past due 31-90 days 518 38 112 668   179 437 12 - 628   1,296
  - Past due 90-180 days 445 32 103 580   42 71 2 - 115   695
  - Past due >180 days 729 50 731 1,510   231 557 6 - 794   2,304
Loans - Stage 2 17,854 2,022 1,633 21,509   3,270 12,145 966 1 16,382   37,891
  - Not past due 16,803 1,971 1,529 20,303   3,071 11,287 932 1 15,291   35,594
  - Past due 1-30 days 765 27 40 832   100 516 24 - 640   1,472
  - Past due 31-90 days 286 24 64 374   99 342 10 - 451   825
Weighted average life                        
   - ECL measurement (years) 9 3 6 6   6 6 2 - 6   6
Weighted average 12 months PDs                      
  - IFRS 9 (%) 0.50 3.45 5.29 0.75   1.45 1.59 0.19 0.37 1.07   0.89
  - Basel (%) 0.67 3.37 3.15 0.84   0.94 1.25 0.17 0.37 0.81   0.83
ECL provisions by geography 420 376 1,168 1,964   398 1,201 66 16 1,681   3,645
  - UK 420 365 1,163 1,948   384 999 38 13 1,434   3,382
  - RoI - 11 5 16   - 6 1 - 7   23
  - Other Europe - - - -   7 146 12 - 165   165
  - RoW - - - -   7 50 15 3 75   75
ECL provisions by stage  420 376 1,168 1,964   398 1,201 66 16 1,681   3,645
  - Stage 1 88 76 152 316   102 234 44 13 393   709
  - Stage 2 61 207 238 506   98 356 15 1 470   976
  - Stage 3 271 93 778 1,142   198 611 7 2 818   1,960
  - Of which: individual 12 - 14 26   60 242 2 2 306   332
  - Of which: collective 259 93 764 1,116   138 369 5 - 512   1,628
ECL provisions coverage (%) 0.20 6.37 12.17 0.88   1.28 1.55 0.12 0.61 1.00   0.93
  - Stage 1 (%) 0.05 2.03 2.18 0.16   0.37 0.37 0.08 0.50 0.26   0.20
  - Stage 2 (%) 0.34 10.24 14.57 2.35   3.00 2.93 1.55 100.00 2.87   2.58
  - Stage 3 (%) 11.88 66.43 79.47 33.59   31.88 40.63 43.75 9.09 37.82   35.23
                         

 

For the notes to this table refer to the following page.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202422 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Sector analysis – portfolio summary continued

 

   
  Personal   Wholesale   Total
    Credit                    
  Mortgages (1) cards Other Total   Property Other FI Sovereign Total    
31 December 2023 £m £m £m £m   £m £m £m £m £m   £m
Loans by residual maturity 208,275 5,904 9,595 223,774   31,207 77,339 57,087 2,633 168,266   392,040
  - <1 year  3,375 3,398 3,169 9,942   5,696 25,312 43,497 489 74,994   84,936
  - 1-5 year 9,508 2,506 5,431 17,445   17,216 32,573 11,616 1,872 63,277   80,722
  - >5< 15 year 46,453 - 993 47,446   5,701 14,167 1,939 199 22,006   69,452
  - >15 year 148,939 - 2 148,941   2,594 5,287 35 73 7,989   156,930
Other financial assets by                        
  asset quality (2) - - - -   1 2,689 26,816 123,683 153,189   153,189
  - AQ1-AQ4 - - - -   1 2,689 26,084 123,683 152,457   152,457
  - AQ5-AQ8 - - - -   - - 732 - 732   732
Off-balance sheet 9,843 17,284 8,462 35,589   14,205 59,716 22,221 227 96,369   131,958
  - Loan commitments 9,843 17,284 8,417 35,544   13,861 57,081 20,765 227 91,934   127,478
  - Financial guarantees - - 45 45   344 2,635 1,456 - 4,435   4,480
Off-balance sheet by                        
  asset quality (2) 9,843 17,284 8,462 35,589   14,205 59,716 22,221 227 96,369   131,958
  - AQ1-AQ4 9,099 448 7,271 16,818   10,916 36,380 20,644 165 68,105   84,923
  - AQ5-AQ8 721 16,518 1,162 18,401   3,266 23,030 1,574 45 27,915   46,316
  - AQ9  7 6 4 17   3 12 - - 15   32
  - AQ10 16 312 25 353   20 294 3 17 334   687

 

 

(1)Includes a portion of Private Banking lending secured against residential real estate, in line with ECL calculation methodology. Private Banking and RBS International mortgages are reported in UK, reflecting the country of lending origination and includes crown dependencies.

(2)AQ bandings are based on Basel PDs and mapping is as follows:

 

Internal asset quality band Probability of default range Indicative S&P rating
AQ1 0% - 0.034% AAA to AA
AQ2 0.034% - 0.048% AA to AA-
AQ3 0.048% - 0.095% A+ to A
AQ4 0.095% - 0.381% BBB+ to BBB-
AQ5 0.381% - 1.076% BB+ to BB
AQ6 1.076% - 2.153% BB- to B+
AQ7 2.153% - 6.089% B+ to B
AQ8 6.089% - 17.222% B- to CCC+
AQ9 17.222% - 100% CCC to C
AQ10 100% D

 

£0.3 billion (31 December 2023 – £0.3 billion) of AQ10 Personal balances primarily relate to loan commitments, the drawdown of which is effectively prohibited.

 

(3)30 DPD – 30 days past due, the mandatory 30 days past due backstop as prescribed by the IFRS 9 guidance for a SICR.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202423 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Credit risk continued

 

Sector analysis – portfolio summary continued

 

The table below shows ECL by stage, for the Personal portfolio and selected sectors of the Wholesale portfolio including those that contain an element of exposure classified as heightened climate-related risk.

 

    Off-balance sheet    
  Loans - amortised cost and FVOCI Loan   Contingent   ECL provisions 
  Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Total commitments   liabilities   Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Total
31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m £m   £m   £m £m £m £m
Personal 194,905 23,437 3,557 221,899 36,647   44   300 474 1,199 1,973
  Mortgages (1) 183,705 20,060 2,381 206,146 10,293   -   87 70 288 445
  Credit cards 3,916 1,970 147 6,033 18,043   -   71 188 98 357
  Other personal 7,284 1,407 1,029 9,720 8,311   44   142 216 813 1,171
Wholesale 149,458 14,140 2,206 165,804 90,761   4,952   369 439 845 1,653
   Property 28,608 2,753 632 31,993 13,858   357   95 78 226 399
   Financial institutions (2) 54,312 730 16 55,058 19,234   1,805   40 19 6 65
   Sovereign 1,080 130 22 1,232 259   -   14 1 2 17
   Corporate 65,458 10,527 1,536 77,521 57,410   2,790   220 341 611 1,172
   Of which:                        
      Agriculture 3,934 918 107 4,959 957   21   17 35 36 88
      Airlines and aerospace 2,073 359 3 2,435 2,056   162   3 6 2 11
      Automotive 7,314 690 52 8,056 4,187   154   18 19 19 56
      Building materials 1,417 244 19 1,680 1,391   67   6 8 7 21
      Chemicals 293 124 4 421 765   13   1 9 4 14
      Industrials 2,342 473 70 2,885 2,843   141   9 16 30 55
      Land transport and logistics 4,515 452 76 5,043 2,980   195   11 14 21 46
      Leisure 5,053 1,880 291 7,224 1,873   122   31 70 99 200
      Mining and metals 263 37 5 305 531   7   - - 5 5
      Oil and gas 697 52 55 804 1,909   240   3 2 46 51
      Power utilities 5,457 323 79 5,859 8,054   593   14 8 29 51
      Retail 5,969 1,152 211 7,332 4,314   475   20 32 80 132
      Shipping 198 34 1 233 60   29   - 2 1 3
      Water and waste 3,562 160 48 3,770 1,879   135   4 4 7 15
Total 344,363 37,577 5,763 387,703 127,408   4,996   669 913 2,044 3,626
                         
                         
31 December 2023                        
Personal 198,865 21,509 3,400 223,774 35,544   45   316 506 1,142 1,964
  Mortgages (1) 188,140 17,854 2,281 208,275 9,843   -   88 61 271 420
   Credit cards 3,742 2,022 140 5,904 17,284   -   76 207 93 376
   Other personal 6,983 1,633 979 9,595 8,417   45   152 238 778 1,168
Wholesale 149,721 16,382 2,163 168,266 91,934   4,435   393 470 818 1,681
   Property 27,316 3,270 621 31,207 13,861   344   102 98 198 398
   Financial institutions (2) 56,105 966 16 57,087 20,765   1,456   44 15 7 66
   Sovereign 2,610 1 22 2,633 227   -   13 1 2 16
   Corporate 63,690 12,145 1,504 77,339 57,081   2,635   234 356 611 1,201
   Of which:                        
      Agriculture 3,851 1,011 90 4,952 950   21   19 35 34 88
      Airlines and aerospace 1,525 454 3 1,982 1,788   178   4 7 2 13
      Automotive 7,223 1,008 76 8,307 3,844   103   18 18 26 62
      Building materials 1,204 282 72 1,558 1,475   72   6 9 8 23
      Chemicals 354 62 4 420 785   13   1 9 1 11
      Industrials 2,269 543 70 2,882 2,896   148   10 18 23 51
      Land transport and logistics 4,231 578 61 4,870 3,025   184   11 14 18 43
      Leisure 4,394 2,245 288 6,927 1,887   145   31 74 91 196
      Mining and metals 241 32 4 277 545   7   - - 4 4
      Oil and gas 915 125 27 1,067 1,959   237   3 2 29 34
      Power utilities 5,604 418 40 6,062 8,257   554   13 13 24 50
      Retail 5,846 1,318 224 7,388 4,717   429   23 35 118 176
      Shipping 207 35 3 245 71   31   - 1 2 3
      Water and waste 3,536 173 13 3,722 1,904   84   4 5 4 13
Total 348,586 37,891 5,563 392,040 127,478   4,480   709 976 1,960 3,645
                         

(1) As at 31 March 2024, £138.1 billion, 67.0%, of the total residential mortgages portfolio had Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) data available (31 December 2023 – £140.8 billion, 67.6%). Of which, 44.6% were rated as EPC A to C (31 December 2023 – 44.1%).
(2) Includes transactions, such as securitisations, where the underlying assets may be in other sectors.
   

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202424 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Capital, liquidity and funding risk

 

Introduction

 

NatWest Group takes a comprehensive approach to the management of capital, liquidity and funding, underpinned by frameworks, risk appetite and policies, to manage and mitigate capital, liquidity and funding risks. The framework ensures the tools and capability are in place to facilitate the management and mitigation of risk ensuring that NatWest Group operates within its regulatory requirements and risk appetite.

 

Key developments since 31 December 2023

 

CET1 ratio

 

 

13.5%

 

(as at 31 December 2023 – 13.4%)

 

Total RWAs

 

 

£186.3bn

 

(as at 31 December 2023 – £183.0bn)

The CET1 ratio increased by 10 basis points to 13.5%. The increase in the CET1 ratio was due to a £0.6 billion increase in CET1 capital, partially offset by a £3.3 billion increase in RWAs.

 

The CET1 capital increase was mainly driven by an attributable profit for ordinary shareholders of £0.9 billion partially offset by a foreseeable ordinary dividend accrual of £0.4 billion.

 

 

 

 

Total RWAs increased by £3.3 billion to £186.3 billion mainly reflecting:

 

       an increase in credit risk RWAs of £1.7 billion, primarily due to drawdowns and new facilities within Commercial & Institutional in addition to an increase in unsecured lending within Retail Banking. There was also an increase in IRB Temporary Model Adjustment related to mortgages within Retail Banking.

 

       an increase in operational risk RWAs of £1.6 billion following the annual recalculation and higher income compared to 2020.

 

 

     

UK leverage ratio

 

 

5.1%

 

(as at 31 December 2023 – 5.0%)

 

LCR

 

 

151%

 

(as at 31 December 2023 – 144%)

The leverage ratio increased by 10 basis points to 5.1% mainly due to a £0.6 billion increase in Tier 1 capital while the leverage exposure remained static during the period.

 

 

The Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) increased to 151%, during the quarter driven by increased issuance and customer deposits coupled with replacement of the Cash Ratio Deposit scheme with a Bank of England Levy.

 

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202425 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued

 

Maximum Distributable Amount (MDA) and Minimum Capital Requirements

 

NatWest Group is subject to minimum capital requirements relative to RWAs. The table below summarises the minimum capital requirements (the sum of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2A), and the additional capital buffers which are held in excess of the regulatory minimum requirements and are usable in stress.

 

Where the CET1 ratio falls below the sum of the minimum capital and the combined buffer requirement, there is a subsequent automatic restriction on the amount available to service discretionary payments (including AT1 coupons), known as the MDA. Note that different requirements apply to individual legal entities or sub-groups and that the table shown does not reflect any incremental PRA buffer requirements, which are not disclosable.

 

The current capital position provides significant headroom above both our minimum requirements and our MDA threshold requirements.

 

Type CET1 Total Tier 1 Total capital
Pillar 1 requirements 4.5% 6.0% 8.0%
Pillar 2A  requirements 1.8% 2.4% 3.2%
Minimum Capital Requirements 6.3% 8.4% 11.2%
Capital conservation buffer 2.5% 2.5% 2.5%
Countercyclical capital buffer (1) 1.7% 1.7% 1.7%
MDA threshold (2) 10.5% n/a n/a
Overall capital requirement 10.5% 12.6% 15.4%
Capital ratios at 31 March 2024 13.5% 15.5% 18.8%
Headroom (3,4) 3.0% 2.9% 3.4%

 

(1) The UK countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) rate is currently being maintained at 2%. The rate may vary in either direction in the future, depending on how risks develop. Foreign exposures may be subject to different CCyB rates depending on the rates set in those jurisdictions.
(2) Pillar 2A requirements for NatWest Group are set as a variable amount with the exception of some fixed add-ons.
(3) The headroom does not reflect excess distributable capital and may vary over time.
(4) Headroom as at 31 December 2023 was CET1 2.9%, Total Tier 1 2.9% and Total Capital 3.0%.

 

 

 

Leverage ratios

 

The table below summarises the minimum ratios of capital to leverage exposure under the binding PRA UK leverage framework applicable for NatWest Group.

 

Type CET1 Total Tier 1
Minimum ratio 2.44% 3.25%
Countercyclical leverage ratio buffer (1) 0.6% 0.6%
Total 3.04% 3.85%

 

(1)The countercyclical leverage ratio buffer is set at 35% of NatWest Group’s CCyB.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202426 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued

 

Capital and leverage ratios

 

The tables below set out the key capital and leverage ratios. NatWest Group is subject to the requirements set out in the UK CRR therefore capital and leverage ratios are being presented under these frameworks on a transitional basis.

 

  31 March 31 December
  2024 2023
Capital adequacy ratios (1) % %
CET1 13.5 13.4
Tier 1 15.5 15.5
Total 18.8 18.4
     
Capital £m £m
Tangible equity 26,360 25,653
     
Prudential valuation adjustment (249) (279)
Deferred tax assets (919) (979)
Own credit adjustments 16 (10)
Pension fund assets (160) (143)
Cash flow hedging reserve 1,944 1,899
Foreseeable ordinary dividends (1,380) (1,013)
Adjustment for trust assets (2) (365) (365)
Foreseeable charges (253) (525)
Adjustments under IFRS 9 transitional arrangements 74 202
Total regulatory adjustments (1,292) (1,213)
     
CET1 capital 25,068 24,440
     
Additional AT1 capital 3,875 3,875
Tier 1 capital 28,943 28,315
     
End-point Tier 2 capital  6,037 5,317
Tier 2 capital 6,037 5,317
     
Total regulatory capital 34,980 33,632
     
Risk-weighted assets    
Credit risk 149,313 147,598
Counterparty credit risk 7,709 7,830
Market risk 7,452 7,363
Operational risk 21,821 20,198
Total RWAs 186,295 182,989

 

(1) Based on current PRA rules, includes the transitional arrangements for the capital impact of IFRS 9 expected credit loss (ECL) accounting. The impact of the IFRS 9 transitional adjustments at 31 March 2024 was £0.1 billion for CET1 capital, £24 million for total capital and £3 million RWAs (31 December 2023 - £0.2 billion CET1 capital, £54 million total capital and £17 million RWAs). Excluding this adjustment, the CET1 ratio would be 13.4% (31 December 2023 – 13.2%). Tier 1 capital ratio would be 15.5% (31 December 2023 – 15.4%) and the Total capital ratio would be 18.8% (31 December 2023 – 18.4%).
(2) Prudent deduction in respect of agreement with the pension fund.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202427 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued

 

Capital and leverage ratios continued

 

  31 March 31 December
  2024 2023
Leverage £m £m
Cash and balances at central banks            116,916  104,262
Trading assets              50,277  45,551
Derivatives              68,133  78,904
Financial assets            434,344  439,449
Other assets              26,974  23,605
Assets of disposal groups                   808  902
Total assets 697,452  692,673
Derivatives    
- netting and variation margin (67,625) (79,299)
- potential future exposures 17,064 17,212
Securities financing transactions gross up 1,645 1,868
Other off balance sheet items 51,260 50,961
Regulatory deductions and other adjustments (20,028) (16,043)
Claims on central banks (113,504) (100,735)
Exclusion of bounce back loans (3,433) (3,794)
UK leverage exposure 562,831 562,843
UK leverage ratio (%) (1) 5.1 5.0

 

(1) The UK leverage exposure and transitional Tier 1 capital are calculated in accordance with current PRA rules. Excluding the IFRS 9 transitional adjustment, the UK leverage ratio would be 5.1% (31 December 2023 – 5.0%).

 

Capital flow statement

The table below analyses the movement in CET1, AT1 and Tier 2 capital for the three months ended 31 March 2024. It is presented on a transitional basis based on current PRA rules.

 

  CET1 AT1 Tier 2 Total
  £m £m £m £m
At 31 December 2023 24,440 3,875 5,317 33,632
Attributable profit for the period 918 - - 918
Foreseeable ordinary dividends (367) - - (367)
Foreign exchange reserve (32) - - (32)
FVOCI reserve 26 - - 26
Own credit 26 - - 26
Share capital and reserve movements in respect of employee share schemes 68 - - 68
Goodwill and intangibles deduction 16 - - 16
Deferred tax assets 60 - - 60
Prudential valuation adjustments 30 - - 30
Net dated subordinated debt instruments - - 764 764
Foreign exchange movements - - (4) (4)
Adjustment under IFRS 9 transitional arrangements (128) - - (128)
Other movements 11 - (40) (29)
At 31 March 2024 25,068 3,875 6,037 34,980

 

For CET1 movements refer to the key points on page 25.

 

Tier 2 instrument movements include £0.8 billion in relation to $1.0 billion 6.475% Fixed to Fixed Reset Tier 2 Notes 2034 issued in March 2024, partially offset by amortisation and foreign exchange movements.

 

Within Tier 2, there was also a decrease in the Tier 2 surplus provisions.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202428 

 

 

Risk and capital management

 

Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued

 

Risk-weighted assets

 

The table below analyses the movement in RWAs during the period, by key drivers.

 

    Counterparty   Operational  
  Credit risk credit risk Market risk  risk Total
  £bn £bn £bn £bn £bn
At 31 December 2023 147.6 7.8 7.4 20.2 183.0
Foreign exchange movement (0.1) - - - (0.1)
Business movement 1.6 (0.1) 0.2 1.6 3.3
Risk parameter changes (0.1) - - - (0.1)
Model updates 0.3 - (0.1) - 0.2
At 31 March 2024 149.3 7.7 7.5 21.8 186.3

 

The table below analyses segmental RWAs.

 

          Total
  Retail Private Commercial & Central items NatWest
  Banking Banking Institutional & other (1) Group
Total RWAs £bn £bn £bn £bn £bn
At 31 December 2023 61.6 11.2 107.4 2.8 183.0
Foreign exchange movement - - (0.1) - (0.1)
Business movement 0.7 0.1 2.7 (0.2) 3.3
Risk parameter changes  - - (0.1) - (0.1)
Model updates 0.2 - - - 0.2
At 31 March 2024 62.5 11.3 109.9 2.6 186.3
           
Credit risk 54.0 9.7 83.5 2.1 149.3
Counterparty credit risk 0.3 0.1 7.3 - 7.7
Market risk 0.1 - 7.4 - 7.5
Operational risk 8.1 1.5 11.7 0.5 21.8
Total RWAs 62.5 11.3 109.9 2.6 186.3

 

(1) £1.0 billion of Central items & other relates to Ulster Bank RoI.

 

Total RWAs increased by £3.3 billion to £186.3 billion during the period mainly reflecting:

 

An increase in business movements totalling £3.3 billion, primarily driven by increased drawdowns and new facilities within Commercial & Institutional in addition to increased RWAs following the annual recalculation of operational risk due to higher income when compared to 2020.

 

A decrease in risk parameter changes of £0.1 billion, reflecting customers moving into default within Commercial & Institutional which is partially offset by PD deterioration within Commercial & Institutional.

 

An increase in model updates of £0.2 billion reflecting an increase in IRB Temporary Model Adjustment related to mortgages within Retail Banking.

 

Liquidity portfolio

 

The table below shows the composition of the liquidity portfolio with primary liquidity aligned to high-quality liquid assets on a regulatory LCR basis. Secondary liquidity comprises of assets which are eligible as collateral for local central bank liquidity facilities and do not form part of the LCR eligible high-quality liquid assets.

 

  Liquidity value
  31 March 2024   31 December 2023
  NatWest   NatWest
  Group (1)   Group
  £m   £m
Cash and balances at central banks  112,774   99,855
High quality government/MDB/PSE and GSE bonds (2) 32,581   36,250
Extremely high quality covered bonds 4,113   4,164
LCR level 1 Eligible Assets 149,468   140,269
LCR level 2 Eligible Assets (3) 8,949   7,796
Primary liquidity (HQLA) (4) 158,417   148,065
Secondary liquidity 70,786   74,722
Total liquidity value 229,203   222,787

 

(1) NatWest Group includes the UK Domestic Liquidity Sub-Group (NWB Plc, RBS plc and Coutts & Co), NatWest Markets Plc and other significant operating subsidiaries that hold liquidity portfolios. These include The Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited and NatWest Markets N.V. who hold managed portfolios that comply with local regulations that may differ from PRA rules.
(2) Multilateral development bank abbreviated to MDB, public sector entities abbreviated to PSE and government sponsored entities abbreviated to GSE.
(3) Includes Level 2A and Level 2B.
(4) High-quality liquid assets abbreviated to HQLA.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202429 

 

 

Condensed consolidated income statement

 

for the period ended 31 March 2024 (unaudited)

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m  £m  £m 
Interest receivable 6,055 5,955 4,501
Interest payable (3,404) (3,317) (1,599)
Net interest income 2,651 2,638 2,902
Fees and commissions receivable 770 770 740
Fees and commissions payable (177) (169) (157)
Trading income 129 185 333
Other operating income 102 113 58
Non-interest income 824 899 974
Total income 3,475 3,537 3,876
Staff costs (1,062) (977) (1,040)
Premises and equipment (293) (308) (286)
Other administrative expenses (424) (618) (450)
Depreciation and amortisation (273) (251) (212)
Operating expenses (2,052) (2,154) (1,988)
Profit before impairment losses 1,423 1,383 1,888
Impairment losses (93) (126) (70)
Operating profit before tax 1,330 1,257 1,818
Tax (charge)/credit (339) 5 (512)
Profit from continuing operations 991 1,262 1,306
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax  (4) 26 35
Profit for the period 987 1,288 1,341
       
Attributable to:      
Ordinary shareholders 918 1,229 1,279
Paid-in equity holders 60 60 61
Non-controlling interests 9 (1) 1
  987 1,288 1,341
       
Earnings per ordinary share - continuing operations 10.5p 13.6p 12.8p
Earnings per ordinary share - discontinued operations - 0.3p 0.4p
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - basic  10.5p 13.9p 13.2p
Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted continuing operations 10.4p 13.6p 12.8p
Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted discontinued operations - 0.3p 0.4p
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - fully diluted 10.4p 13.9p 13.2p

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202430 

 

 

Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income

 

for the period ended 31 March 2024 (unaudited)

 

    Quarter ended
    31 March 31 December 31 March
    2024 2023 2023
    £m £m £m
Profit for the period   987 1,288 1,341
Items that do not qualify for reclassification        
Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes    (36) (175) (39)
Changes in fair value of financial liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL) due to changes in credit risk   (23) (12) (6)
Fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI) financial assets   (13) (19) 43
Tax    31 59 (2)
    (41) (147) (4)
Items that do qualify for reclassification         
FVOCI financial assets   45 (16) 40
Cash flow hedges   (66) 1,416 298
Currency translation   (25) (218) (59)
Tax   3 (345) (98)
    (43) 837 181
Other comprehensive (loss)/income after tax   (84) 690 177
Total comprehensive income for the period   903 1,978 1,518
         
Attributable to:        
Ordinary shareholders   834 1,919 1,456
Paid-in equity holders   60 60 61
Non-controlling interests   9 (1) 1
    903 1,978 1,518

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202431 

 

 

Condensed consolidated balance sheet as at 31 March 2024 (unaudited)

 

  31 March 31 December
  2024 2023
  £m £m 
Assets    
Cash and balances at central banks 116,916 104,262
Trading assets 50,277 45,551
Derivatives 68,133 78,904
Settlement balances 10,724 7,231
Loans to banks - amortised cost 6,051 6,914
Loans to customers - amortised cost 378,010 381,433
Other financial assets 50,283 51,102
Intangible assets 7,598 7,614
Other assets 8,652 8,760
Assets of disposal groups 808 902
Total assets 697,452 692,673
     
Liabilities    
Bank deposits 21,614 22,190
Customer deposits 432,793 431,377
Settlement balances 10,758 6,645
Trading liabilities 56,696 53,636
Derivatives 61,689 72,395
Other financial liabilities 61,340 55,089
Subordinated liabilities 6,487 5,714
Notes in circulation 3,289 3,237
Other liabilities 4,898 5,202
Total liabilities 659,564 655,485
     
Equity    
Ordinary shareholders' interests 33,958 33,267
Other owners' interests 3,890 3,890
Owners' equity 37,848 37,157
Non-controlling interests 40 31
Total equity 37,888 37,188
Total liabilities and equity 697,452 692,673

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202432 

 

 

Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity

 

for the period ended 31 March 2024 (unaudited)

 

  Share             
  capital and       Total Non  
  statutory Paid-in Retained Other owners' controlling Total 
  reserves (1) equity earnings reserves* equity  interests equity
  £m £m £m £m £m £m £m
At 1 January 2024 12,848 3,890 10,645 9,774 37,157 31 37,188
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders and other equity owners              
- continuing operations     982   982 9 991
- discontinued operations     (4)   (4) - (4)
Other comprehensive income              
- Realised gains in period on FVOCI equity shares      1 (1) -   -
- Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes      (36)   (36)   (36)
- Changes in fair value of financial liabilities designated at FVTPL due to changes in credit risk       (23)   (23)   (23)
- Unrealised gains: FVOCI       30 30   30
- Amounts recognised in equity: cash flow hedges       (499) (499)   (499)
- Foreign exchange reserve movement       (25) (25) - (25)
- Amount transferred from equity to earnings       435 435   435
- Tax      25 9 34   34
Paid-in equity dividends paid     (60)   (60)   (60)
Shares repurchased during the period (2) -   (235)   (235)   (235)
Share-based payments  71   21   92   92
At 31 March 2024 12,919 3,890 11,316 9,723 37,848 40 37,888
               
              31 March
              2024
Attributable to:         £m
Ordinary shareholders             33,958
Paid-in equity holders             3,890
Non-controlling interests             40
              37,888
*Other reserves consist of:            
Merger reserve             10,881
FVOCI reserve             (23)
Cash flow hedging reserve             (1,944)
Foreign exchange reserve             809
              9,723

 

(1) Share capital and statutory reserves includes share capital, share premium, capital redemption reserve and own shares held.
(2) NatWest Group plc repurchased and cancelled 100.19 million shares for a total consideration of £225.53 million excluding fees in Q1 2024 as part of the On Market Share Buyback Programme; additionally, 2.25 million shares repurchased in December 2023 for a total consideration of £4.93 million excluding fees were settled and cancelled in January 2024. Of the 100.19 million shares bought back, 0.64 million shares were settled and cancelled in April 2024. The nominal value of the share cancellations has been transferred to the capital redemption reserve.  

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202433 

 

 

Notes

 

1. Presentation of condensed consolidated financial statements

 

The condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with NatWest Group plc’s 2023 Annual Report on Form 20-F. The accounting policies are the same as those applied in the consolidated financial statements.

 

The directors have prepared the condensed consolidated financial statements on a going concern basis after assessing the principal risks, forecasts, projections and other relevant evidence over the twelve months from the date they are approved.

 

Amendments to IFRS effective from 1 January 2024 had no material effect on the condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

2. Litigation and regulatory matters

 

NatWest Group plc’s 2023 Annual Report on Form 20-F, issued on 16 February 2024, included disclosures about NatWest Group's litigation and regulatory matters in Note 26. Set out below are the material developments in those matters (all of which have been previously disclosed) since publication of the 2023 Annual Report on Form 20-F.

 

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 a number of claims pending in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) with respect to the setting of USD LIBOR. In March 2024, NatWest Group companies reached an agreement in principle, subject to documentation and court approval, to settle the USD LIBOR class action that asserts claims on behalf of lenders who made LIBOR based loans. In April 2024, NatWest Group companies reached an agreement, subject to court approval, to settle the USD LIBOR class action that asserts claims on behalf of persons who transacted futures and options on exchanges. The settlement amounts are covered in full by existing provisions.

 

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 February 2024, NWM Plc executed an agreement to settle the claim in the Tel Aviv District Court in Israel, subject to court approval. The settlement amount is covered in full by an existing provision.

 

Government securities antitrust litigation

 

Class action antitrust claims commenced in March 2019 are pending in the SDNY against NWM Plc, NWMSI and other banks in respect of Euro-denominated bonds issued by various European central banks. In March 2024, NatWest Group companies reached an agreement in principle, subject to final documentation and court approval, to settle the class action. The settlement amount is covered in full by an existing provision.

 

Swaps antitrust litigation

 

NWM Plc and other members of NatWest Group, including NatWest Group plc, as well as a number of other interest rate swap dealers, are defendants in several cases pending in the SDNY alleging violations of the US antitrust laws in the market for interest rate swaps. There is a consolidated class action complaint on behalf of persons who entered into interest rate swaps with the defendants, as well as non-class action claims by three swap execution facilities. In March 2024, NatWest Group companies reached an agreement in principle, subject to documentation and court approval, to settle the class action. The settlement amount is covered in full by an existing provision.

 

1MDB litigation

 

A Malaysian court claim was served in Switzerland in November 2022 by 1MDB, a sovereign wealth fund, in which Coutts & Co Ltd was named, along with six others, as a defendant in respect of losses allegedly incurred by 1MDB. It is claimed that Coutts & Co Ltd is liable as a constructive trustee for having dishonestly assisted the directors of 1MDB in the breach of their fiduciary duties by failing (amongst other alleged claims) to undertake due diligence in relation to a customer of Coutts & Co Ltd, through which funds totalling c.US$1 billion were received and paid out between 2009 and 2011. The claimant seeks the return of that amount plus interest. Coutts & Co Ltd filed an application in January 2023 challenging the validity of service and the Malaysian court’s jurisdiction to hear the claim, and a hearing took place in February 2024. In March 2024, the court granted that application. The claimant has filed a Notice of Appeal.

 

Coutts & Co Ltd (a subsidiary of RBS Netherlands Holdings B.V., which in turn is a subsidiary of NWM Plc) is a company registered in Switzerland and is in wind-down following the announced sale of its business assets in 2015.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202434 

 

 

Notes continued

 

3. Related party transactions

 

The UK Government’s shareholding in NatWest Group plc is managed by UK Government Investments Limited, a company wholly owned by the UK Government. At 31 March 2024 HM Treasury’s holding in NatWest Group plc’s ordinary shares was 29.82% (31 December 2023 - 37.97%). As a result, the UK Government through HM Treasury is no longer the controlling shareholder of NatWest Group plc as per UK listing rules. The UK Government and UK Government-controlled bodies remain related parties of the NatWest Group. We are supporting the UK Government plans for a possible retail offer of its shareholding.

 

4. Post balance sheet events

 

As part of the ongoing on-market share buyback programme, NatWest Group plc has repurchased and cancelled a further 15.5 million shares since 31 March 2024 for a total consideration (excluding fees) of £42.4 million.

 

 

Other than as disclosed there have been no significant events between 31 March 2024 and the date of approval of these accounts that would require a change to or additional disclosure in the condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Additional information

 

Other financial data

 

The following table shows NatWest Group’s issued and fully paid share capital, owners’ equity and indebtedness on a consolidated basis in accordance with IFRS as at 31 March 2024.

 

  As at
31 March
2024
£m
Share capital - allotted, called up and fully paid  
Ordinary shares of £1 9,574
Retained income and other reserves 28,274
Owners’ equity 37,848
   
NatWest Group indebtedness  
Trading liabilities - debt securities in issue 546
Other financial liabilities – debt securities in issue 59,730
Subordinated liabilities 6,487
Total indebtedness 66,763
Total capitalisation and indebtedness 104,611

 

Under IFRS, certain preference shares are classified as debt and are included in subordinated liabilities in the table above.

 

The information contained in the table above has not changed materially since 31 March 2024.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202435 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appendix

 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures

 

 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures

NatWest Group prepares its financial statements in accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). This document contains a number of non-IFRS measures, also known as alternative performance measures, defined under the European Securities and Markets Authority guidance or non-GAAP financial measures in accordance with SEC regulations. These measures are adjusted for notable and other defined items which management believes 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 a calculation of metrics that are used throughout the banking industry.

 

These non-IFRS measures are not a substitute for IFRS measures and should not be considered in isolation. A reconciliation to the closest IFRS measure is presented where appropriate.

 

1. Total income excluding notable items

Total income excluding notable items is calculated as total income less notable items.

 

The exclusion of notable items aims to remove the impact of one-offs and other volatile items which may distort period-on-period comparisons.

 

  Quarter ended 
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Continuing operations      
Total income 3,475 3,537 3,876
Less notable items      
   Commercial & Institutional       
      Own credit adjustments (OCA) (5) (5) 6
      Tax interest on prior periods - 3 -
   Central items & other      
      Liquidity Asset Bond sale losses - (10) (13)
      Share of associate profits/(losses) for Business Growth Fund 7 1 (12)
      Interest and FX risk management derivatives not in accounting hedge relationships 59 (21) 75
      FX recycling gains - 162 -
      Tax interest on prior periods - (35) -
  61 95 56
Total income excluding notable items 3,414 3,442 3,820

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202437 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

2. Operating expenses - management view

The management analysis of operating expenses shows litigation and conduct costs on a separate line. These amounts are included within staff costs and other administrative expenses in the statutory analysis. Other operating expenses excludes litigation and conduct costs, which are more volatile and may distort period-on-period comparisons.

 

  Quarter ended
  31 March 2024
  Litigation and Other Statutory
  conduct operating operating
  costs expenses expenses
  £m £m £m
Continuing operations      
Staff costs 15 1,047 1,062
Premises and equipment 293 293
Other administrative expenses 9 415 424
Depreciation and amortisation 273 273
Total  24 2,028 2,052
       
  Quarter ended
  31 December 2023
  Litigation and Other Statutory
  conduct operating operating
  costs expenses expenses
  £m £m £m
Continuing operations      
Staff costs 16 961 977
Premises and equipment 308 308
Other administrative expenses 97 521 618
Depreciation and amortisation 251 251
Total  113 2,041 2,154
       
  Quarter ended
  31 March 2023
  Litigation and Other Statutory
  conduct operating operating
  costs expenses expenses
  £m £m £m
Continuing operations      
Staff costs 14 1,026 1,040
Premises and equipment 286 286
Other administrative expenses 42 408 450
Depreciation and amortisation 212 212
Total  56 1,932 1,988

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202438 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

3. Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct)

The cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) is calculated as other operating expenses (operating expenses less litigation and conduct costs) divided by total income.

 

Litigation and conduct costs are excluded as they are one-off in nature, difficult to forecast for Outlook purposes and distort period-on-period comparisons. The calculation of the cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) is shown below, along with a comparison to cost:income ratio calculated using operating expenses.

 

          Total
  Retail Private Commercial &  Central items  NatWest
  Banking Banking Institutional & other Group
Quarter ended 31 March 2024 £m £m £m £m £m
Continuing operations          
Operating expenses 773 181 1,051 47 2,052
Less litigation and conduct costs (6) (1) (31) 14 (24)
Other operating expenses 767 180 1,020 61 2,028
           
Total income 1,325 208 1,859 83 3,475
           
Cost:income ratio  58.3% 87.0% 56.5% nm 59.1%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) 57.9% 86.5% 54.9% nm 58.4%
           
Quarter ended 31 December 2023          
Continuing operations          
Operating expenses 681 206 1,092 175 2,154
Less litigation and conduct costs (34) (78) (3) (113)
Other operating expenses 647 208 1,014 172 2,041
           
Total income 1,369  209  1,832  127  3,537 
           
Cost:income ratio  49.7% 98.6% 59.6% nm 60.9%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) 47.3% 99.5% 55.3% nm 57.7%
           
Quarter ended 31 March 2023          
Continuing operations          
Operating expenses 696 155 1,003 134 1,988
Less litigation and conduct costs (3) (3) (44) (6) (56)
Other operating expenses 693 152 959 128 1,932
           
Total income 1,604  296  1,953  23  3,876 
           
Cost:income ratio  43.4% 52.4% 51.4% nm 51.3%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) 43.2% 51.4% 49.1% nm 49.8%

 

4. NatWest Group return on tangible equity

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 average non-controlling interests, average other owners equity and average intangible assets.

 

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, although different banks may calculate the rate differently. A reconciliation is shown below including a comparison to the nearest GAAP measure: return on equity. This comprises profit attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by average total equity.

 

  Quarter ended or as at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
NatWest Group return on tangible equity  £m £m £m
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders  918 1,229 1,279
Annualised profit attributable to ordinary shareholders  3,672 4,916 5,116
       
Average total equity  37,490 36,134 37,195
Adjustment for average other owners' equity and intangible assets  (11,684) (11,686) (11,319)
Adjusted total tangible equity  25,806 24,448 25,876
       
Return on equity 9.8% 13.6% 13.8%
Return on tangible equity 14.2% 20.1% 19.8%

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202439 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

5. Segmental return on equity

Segmental return on equity comprises segmental operating profit or loss, adjusted for paid-in equity and tax, divided by average notional equity. Average RWAe is defined as average segmental RWAs incorporating the effect of capital deductions. This is multiplied by an allocated equity factor for each segment to calculate the average notional equity.

 

This measure shows the return generated by operating segments on equity deployed.

 

  Quarter ended or as at
  Retail Private Commercial & 
Quarter ended 31 March 2024 Banking Banking Institutional
Operating profit (£m) 489 33 769
Paid-in equity cost allocation (£m) (16) (4) (40)
Adjustment for tax (£m) (132) (8) (182)
Adjusted attributable profit (£m) 341 21 547
Annualised adjusted attributable profit (£m) 1,362 84 2,187
Average RWAe (£bn) 61.7 11.2 109.0
Equity factor 13.4% 11.2% 13.8%
Average notional equity (£bn) 8.3 1.3 15.0
Return on equity 16.5% 6.7% 14.6%
       
Quarter ended 31 December 2023      
Operating profit (£m) 585  (2) 725 
Paid-in equity cost allocation (£m) (12) (6) (40)
Adjustment for tax (£m) (160) (171)
Adjusted attributable profit (£m) 413  (6) 514 
Annualised adjusted attributable profit (£m) 1,650  (23) 2,055 
Average RWAe (£bn) 60.5  11.4  109.0 
Equity factor 13.5% 11.5% 14.0%
Average notional equity (£bn) 8.2  1.3  15.3 
Return on equity 20.2% (1.8%) 13.5%
       
Quarter ended 31 March 2023      
Operating profit (£m) 794  133  994 
Paid-in equity cost allocation (£m) (15) (5) (44)
Adjustment for tax (£m) (218) (36) (238)
Adjusted attributable profit (£m) 561  92  713 
Annualised adjusted attributable profit (£m) 2,244  369  2,850 
Average RWAe (£bn) 55.4  11.2  104.0 
Equity factor 13.5% 11.5% 14.0%
Average notional equity (£bn) 7.5  1.3  14.6 
Return on equity 30.0% 28.5% 19.5%

 

6. Net interest margin and average interest earning assets (IEA)

Net interest margin is net interest income, as a percentage of average IEA.

 

NatWest Group has previously reported Bank net interest margin, calculated as net interest income as a percentage of average IEA, excluding the liquid asset buffer. 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.

 

Bank net interest margin is a less relevant measure now that interest rates have increased. Going forward we will report net interest margin as net interest income as a percentage of average IEA, which we see as a more useful measure of how we manage spreads between our interest earning assets, including the liquid asset buffer, and interest bearing liabilities.

 

Average IEA are average IEA of the banking business of NatWest Group. This primarily consists of cash and balances at central banks, loans to banks, loans to customers and other financial assets mostly comprising of debt securities. Average IEA shows the average asset base generating interest over the period and is used in the calculation of net interest margin.

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202440 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

7. Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share

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 allows for comparison with other per ordinary share metrics including the share price. A reconciliation is shown below including a comparison to the nearest GAAP measure: net asset value (NAV) per ordinary share. This comprises ordinary shareholders’ interests divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue.

 

  Quarter ended or as at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
Ordinary shareholders’ interests (£m) 33,958 33,267 33,817
Less intangible assets (£m) (7,598) (7,614) (7,171)
Tangible equity (£m) 26,360 25,653 26,646
       
Ordinary shares in issue (millions) (1) 8,727 8,792 9,581
       
NAV per ordinary share (pence) 389p 378p 353p
TNAV per ordinary share (pence) 302p 292p 278p

 

(1) The number of ordinary shares in issue excludes own shares held.

 

8. Customer deposits excluding central items

Customer deposits excluding central items is calculated as total NatWest Group customer deposits excluding Central items & other customer deposits.

 

Central items & other includes Treasury repo activity and Ulster Bank RoI. The exclusion of Central items & other removes the volatility relating to Treasury repo activity and the reduction of deposits as part of our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland. These items may distort period-on-period comparisons and their removal gives the user of the financial statements a better understanding of the movements in customer deposits.

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Customer deposits 432.8 431.4 430.5
Less Central items & other (12.8) (12.3) (8.7)
Customer deposits excluding central items 420.0 419.1 421.8

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202441 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

9. Net loans to customers excluding central items

Net loans to customers excluding central items is calculated as total NatWest Group net loans to customers excluding Central items & other net loans to customers.

 

Central items & other includes Treasury reverse repo activity and Ulster Bank RoI. The exclusion of Central items & other removes the volatility relating to Treasury reverse repo activity and the reduction of loans to customers as part of our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland. This allows for better period-on-period comparisons and gives the user of the financial statements a better understanding of the movements in net loans to customers.

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £bn £bn £bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost) 378.0 381.4 374.2
Less Central items & other (21.0) (25.8) (21.8)
Net loans to customers excluding central items 357.0 355.6 352.4

 

10. Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos)

Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) is calculated as net loans to customer held at amortised cost excluding reverse repos divided by customer deposits excluding repos. This is a common metric used to assess liquidity.

 

The removal of repos and reverse repos reduces volatility and presents the ratio on a basis that is comparable to UK peers. A reconciliation is shown below including a comparison to the nearest GAAP measure: loan:deposit ratio. This is calculated as net loans to customers held at amortised cost divided by customer deposits.

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Net loans to customers - amortised cost  378,010 381,433 374,214
Less reverse repos (23,120) (27,117) (21,743)
Loans to customers  - amortised cost (excl. reverse repos) 354,890 354,316 352,471
       
Customer deposits  432,793 431,377 430,537
Less repos (11,437) (10,844) (5,989)
Customer deposits (excl. repos) 421,356 420,533 424,548
       
Loan:deposit ratio  87% 88% 87%
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) 84% 84% 83%

 

11. Loan impairment rate

Loan impairment rate is the annualised loan impairment charge divided by gross customer loans. This measure is used to assess the credit quality of the loan book.

 

  Quarter ended or as at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
Loan impairment charge/(release) (£m) 93 126 70
Annualised loan impairment charge/(release) (£m) 372 504 280
       
Gross customer loans (£bn) 381.6 385.0 377.6
       
Loan impairment rate  10bps 13bps 7bps

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202442 

 

 

Non-IFRS financial measures continued

12. Funded assets

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.

 

  As at
  31 March 31 December 31 March
  2024 2023 2023
  £m £m £m
Total assets 697,452 692,673 695,624
Less derivative assets (68,133) (78,904) (79,420)
Funded assets 629,319 613,769 616,204

 

13. AUMA

AUMA comprises both assets under management (AUMs) and assets under administration (AUAs) serviced through the Private Banking segment. AUMs comprise assets where the investment management is undertaken by Private Banking on behalf of Private Banking, Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional customers. AUAs comprise i) third party assets held on an execution-only basis in custody by Private Banking, Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional for their customers, for which the execution services are supported by Private Banking, and for which Private Banking receives a fee for providing investment management and execution services to Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional business segments ii) AUA of Cushon, acquired on 1 June 2023, which are supported by Private Banking and held and managed by third parties.

 

This measure is tracked and reported as the amount of funds that we manage or administer directly impacts the level of investment income that we receive.

 

14. AUM net flows

AUM net flows refers to client cash inflows and outflows relating to investment products (this can include transfers from savings accounts). AUM net flows excludes the impact of European Economic Area (EEA) resident client outflows following the UK’s exit from the EU and Russian client outflows since Q1 2022.

 

AUM net flows is reported and tracked to monitor the business performance of new business inflows and management of existing client withdrawals across Retail Banking, Private Banking and Commercial & Institutional Banking.

 

15. Wholesale funding

Wholesale funding comprises deposits by banks (excluding repos), debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities.

 

Funding risk is the risk of not maintaining a diversified, stable and cost-effective funding base. The disclosure of wholesale funding highlights the extent of our diversification and how we mitigate funding risk.

 

16. Third party rates

Third party customer asset rate is calculated as 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.

 

These metrics help investors better understand our net interest margin and interest rate sensitivity.

 

17. Climate and sustainable funding and financing

The climate and sustainable funding and financing metric is used by NatWest Group to measure the level of support it provides customers, through lending products and underwriting activities, to help in their transition towards a net zero, climate resilient and sustainable economy. We have a target to provide £100 billion of climate and sustainable funding and financing between the 1 of July 2021 and the end of 2025. As part of this, we aim to provide at least £10 billion in lending for residential properties with EPC ratings A and B between 1 January 2023 and the end of 2025.

 

Legal Entity Identifier: 2138005O9XJIJN4JPN90

 

NatWest Group - Form 6-K Q1 Results 202443 

 

 

SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorised.

 

NatWest Group plc

Registrant

 

/s/ Katie Murray

Group Chief Financial Officer

26 April 2024