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    Metro Bank Holdings PLC  117  0 Kommentare Results for year ended 31 December 2023

    Metro Bank Holdings PLC (MTRO)
    Metro Bank Holdings PLC: Results for year ended 31 December 2023

    13-March-2024 / 07:00 GMT/BST


    Metro Bank Holdings plc

    Full year results

    Trading update 2023

    13 March 2024

     

    Metro Bank Holdings plc (LSE: MTRO LN)

    Results for year ended 31 December 2023

     

    Highlights

    •  

    Statutory profit before tax of £30.5 million for the year, the first time since 2018, with a 67% year-on-year reduction in underlying loss to £16.9 million

    •  

    Deposits of £15,623 million as at 31 December 2023 are up 1% from June leading to an elevated liquidity coverage ratio of 332% as at 31 December 2023

    •  

    Underlying revenue grew by 5% year-on-year reflecting effective asset rotation and increased yields plus 12% growth in capital efficient fee income, whilst costs marginally reduced, creating positive operating jaws

    •  

    Continued to grow personal and business current accounts, opened 246,000 accounts in the year and over 52,000 of those were in the fourth quarter

    •  

    On track to deliver £50 million of annualised cost savings in Q1 2024 as previously announced, these savings have been actioned with c.1,000 colleagues, equal to 22% of headcount, leaving before mid-April

    •  

    A further £30 million of annualised cost savings is expected to be delivered by the end of 2024

    •  

    Remain committed to stores, including opening new stores in the North of England

    •  

    Secured the capital position and extended the debt instrument maturities to 2028 or beyond

     

    Daniel Frumkin, Chief Executive Officer at Metro Bank, said:

    “Overall, Metro Bank performed strongly in 2023 as we continued to position the business for growth. We were pleased to return to profit on a statutory basis and deliver our best half-year results for several years. After addressing our capital position in Q4, we also launched a successful deposit campaign, with deposits totalling £16.5 million as at the end of February 2024.”

    “During the year we also launched a cost saving plan which included reducing store hours and roles across the organisation. These efforts will ensure the bank is right-sized for the future, with a strong focus on both digital and great customer service.”

    “Looking forward, I remain confident in our ability to be the number one community bank. The work we have undertaken this year has laid the path to become a structurally profitable business and our focus towards the SME, Commercial and specialist mortgages sector presents an exciting opportunity in an underserved area of the market. I remain grateful for the continued support of our colleagues, customers and shareholders as we embark on the next chapter of our journey”.

     

    Key Financials

     

    £ in millions

    31 Dec

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

    Change from

    FY 2022

    30 Jun

    2023

    Change from

    H1 2023

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Assets

    £22,245

    £22,119

    1%

    £21,747

    2%

    Loans

    £12,297

    £13,102

    (6%)

    £12,572

    (2%)

    Deposits

    £15,623

    £16,014

    (2%)

    £15,529

    1%

    Loan to deposit ratio

    79%

    82%

    (3 ppts)

    81%

    (2 ppts)

     

     

     

     

     

     

    CET1 capital ratio

    13.1%

    10.3%

    280 bps

    10.4%

    270 bps

    Total capital ratio (TCR)

    15.1%

    13.4%

    170 bps

    13.2%

    190 bps

    MREL ratio

    22.0%

    17.7%

    430 bps

    18.1%

    390 bps

    Liquidity coverage ratio

    332%

    213%

    119 bps

    214%

    118 bps

     

     

    £ in millions

    FY

    2023

    FY

    2022

    Change from

    FY 2022

    H2

    2023

    H1

    2023

    Change from

    H1 2023

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Total underlying revenue1

    £546.5

    £522.1

    5%

    £260.9

    £285.6

    (9%)

    Underlying profit/(loss) before tax2

    (£16.9)

    (£50.6)

    67%

    (£33.0)

    £16.1

    (305%)

    Statutory profit/(loss) before tax

    £30.5

    (£70.7)

    143%

    £15.1

    £15.4

    (2%)

    Net interest margin

    1.98%

    1.92%

    6 bps

    1.85%

    2.14%

    (29 bps)

    Lending yield

    4.72%

    3.67%

    105 bps

    4.91%

    4.50%

    41 bps

    Cost of deposits

    0.97%

    0.20%

    77 bps

    1.29%

    0.66%

    63 bps

    Cost of risk

    0.26%

    0.32%

    (6 bps)

    0.34%

    0.18%

    (16 bps)

    Underlying EPS

    (8.4p)

    (30.5p)

    22.1p

    (12.2p)

    7.8p

    (20.0p)

    Tangible book value per share

    £1.40

    £4.29

    (67%)

    £1.40

    £4.42

    (68%)

     

    1. Underlying revenue excludes grant income recognised relating to the Capability & Innovation fund and the gain relating to the capital raise and refinancing
    2. Underlying loss before tax is an alternative performance measure and excludes impairment and write-off of property, plant & equipment (PPE) and intangible assets, transformation costs, remediation costs, costs incurred as part of the holding company insertion and impacts of the capital raise and refinancing

     

    Investor presentation

    A presentation for investors and analysts will be held at 9AM (UK time) on Wednesday 13 March 2024. The presentation will be webcast on:

    https://webcast.openbriefing.com/metrobank-mar24/

    For those wishing to dial-in:

    From the UK: +44 800 358 1035

    From the US: +1 855 9796 654

    Access code: 439242

    Other global dial-in numbers: https://www.netroadshow.com/events/global-numbers?confId=59913

     

     

    Financial performance for the year ended 31 December 2023

     

    Deposits

    £ in millions

    31 Dec

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

    Change from

    FY 2022

    30 Jun

    2023

    Change from

    H1 2023

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Demand: current accounts

    £5,696

    £7,888

    (28%)

    £7,106

    (20%)

    Demand: savings accounts

    £7,827

    £7,501

    4%

    £7,218

    8%

    Fixed term: savings accounts

    £2,100

    £625

    236%

    £1,205

    74%

    Deposits from customers

    £15,623

    £16,014

    (2%)

    £15,529

    1%

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers includes:

     

     

     

     

    Retail customers (excluding retail partnerships)

    £7,235

    £5,797

    25%

    £5,647

    28%

    SMEs3

    £3,782

    £5,080

    (26%)

    £5,066

    (25%)

     

    £11,017

    £10,877

    1%

    £10,713

    3%

    Retail partnerships

    £1,708

    £1,949

    (12%)

    £1,910

    (11%)

    Commercial customers (excluding SMEs3)

    £2,898

    £3,188

    (9%)

    £2,906

    0%

     

    £4,606

    £5,137

    (10%)

    £4,816

    (4%)

     

    1. SME defined as enterprises which employ fewer than 250 persons and which have an annual turnover not exceeding €50 million, and/or an annual balance sheet total not exceeding €43 million, and have aggregate deposits less than €1 million

     

    • Total deposits increased by 1% from June to £15,623 million, and further increased to c£16.5 billion in February 2024 (31 December 2022: £16,014 million). The underlying service-led core deposit franchise remained resilient and over 117,000 current accounts were opened in the second half of 2023.

     

    In Q4 the Group saw deposit outflows following press speculation in the week leading up to the capital raise, Metro Bank launched a successful fourth quarter deposit campaign in response to these outflows proving the resilience and value in the brand. The campaign has now concluded and the significant levels of liquidity raised now enable the Group to focus on low-cost relationship deposits to manage down the cost of funding.

    • Cost of deposits was 0.97% for the year (2022: 0.20%) reflecting rising base rates, the impact of the deposit campaign in the fourth quarter, and the customer behaviour shift away from current accounts towards savings and fixed term accounts, a trend seen across the market.
    • Customer account growth of 0.3 million in the year to 3.0 million (31 December 2022: 2.7 million) as organic growth in the underlying franchise continued, with over 203,000 personal current accounts and over 43,000 business current accounts opened in the year.
    • Stores remain a key element to the Group’s service offering and opportunity exists for further market penetration in new locations, Metro Bank continues to work to identify appropriate sites for new stores in the North of England. Locations are being prioritised to support Metro Bank’s SME, Commercial and Corporate Banking offering.

     

    Loans

    £ in millions

    31 Dec

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

    Change from

    FY 2022

    30 Jun

    2023

    Change from

    H1 2023

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Gross loans and advances to customers

    £12,496

    £13,289

    (6%)

    £12,769

    (2%)

    Less: allowance for impairment

    (£199)

    (£187)

    6%

    (£197)

    1%

    Net loans and advances to customers

    £12,297

    £13,102

    (6%)

    £12,572

    (2%)

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Gross loans and advances to customers consists of:

     

     

     

     

     

    Retail mortgages

    £7,818

    £7,649

    2%

    £7,591

    3%

    Commercial lending4

    £2,443

    £2,847

    (14%)

    £2,659

    (8%)

    Consumer lending

    £1,297

    £1,480

    (12%)

    £1,410

    (8%)

    Government-backed lending5

    £938

    £1,313

    (29%)

    £1,109

    (15%)

     

    1. Includes CLBILS
    2. BBLS, CBILS and RLS

     

    • Total net loans reduced by 6% in the year to £12,297 million (31 December 2022: £13,102 million) as focus remained on optimising the mix for risk-adjusted return on regulatory capital, the Consumer and Government-backed lending portfolios are in run-off as the Group pivots its strategy towards SME, Commercial and Specialist Mortgages.
    • Retail mortgages increased by 2% during the year to £7,818 million (31 December 2022: £7,649 million) and remains the largest component of the lending book at 63% (31 December 2022: 58%). The DTV of the portfolio at 31 December 2023 was 58% (31 December 2022: 56%) and 80% of new originations in 2023 were <80% LTV (2022: 82%). Over the next 3 years more than £4.1 billion of fixed rate mortgages will mature at an average blended yield of less than 3.7%. A pivot towards more specialist mortgages is expected following recent investment to enhance product offerings. Metro Bank’s operating model is tailored to more complex underwriting which enables the Group to meet the needs of more customers and scale underserved markets whilst offering improved risk-adjusted returns.
    • Commercial loans (excluding BBLS, CBILS and RLS) reduced by 14% during the year to £2,443 million (31 December 2022: £2,847) reflecting continued portfolio management with reductions in commercial real estate to £509 million (31 December 2022: £681 million) and portfolio buy-to-let to £465 million (31 December 2022: £731 million). The DTV of the portfolio at 31 December 2023 was 55% (31 December 2022: 55%) and the portfolio has a coverage ratio of 2.13% (31 December 2022: 2.21%). Metro Bank is committed to supporting local businesses and expects to grow SME and Commercial lending through 2024.
    • Cost of risk reduced to 26bps for the year (2022: 32bps) reflecting the run-off of the Consumer portfolio, improvements in the macroeconomic scenarios for the Commercial and Retail mortgage portfolios and repayments of a small number of large Commercial exposures.
    • Non-performing loans increased to 3.11% (31 December 2022: 2.65%) driven largely by the maturity profile of the Consumer portfolio and reduced Commercial lending volumes, partly offset by successful BBLS claims and repayments of a number of large Commercial exposures. Excluding Government-backed lending, non-performing loans were 2.58% at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: 2.02%).
    • The Group’s loan portfolio remains highly collateralised and well provisioned. The ECL provision at 31 December 2023 was £199 million with a coverage ratio of 1.59%, compared to £187 million with a coverage ratio of 1.41% at 31 December 2022.

     

    Profit and Loss Account

    • Underlying net interest income increased by 2% to £411.9 million (2022: £404.2 million) driven by improvements in net interest margin (NIM) which is up 6bps to 1.98% for the year (2022: 1.92%) reflecting improved yields on new lending and treasury investments offset by the impact of increased cost of deposits in the fourth quarter following the successful deposit campaign.
    • Underlying net fee and other income increased by 12% to £131.9 million (2022: £117.9 million) reflecting strong underlying customer acquisition and increased transactional volumes.
    • Underlying costs reduced to £530.2 million for the year (2022: £532.8 million) against a backdrop of inflationary pressures, including the full year impact of the autumn 2022 2.75% cost of living payrise coupled with a 5% average colleague payrise in April 2023. Cost reduction has been driven by the disciplined approach to cost management.
    • The previously announced annualised savings of £50 million (up from the original guidance of £30 million) are on track to be delivered in the first quarter of 2024, with the colleague restructuring and consultation process having concluded, and all impacted colleagues having left the organisation by mid-April. The Group continues to seek cost-reductions through transitioning to a more cost-effective model and expects to deliver additional annualised savings of £30 million by the end of 2024.
    • The Group has upgraded its cost guidance as it expects to deliver additional annualised savings of £30 million by the end of 2024. Together with the £50 million already announced this totals £80 million of annualised cost reductions, all delivered in 2024.
    • Operating jaws remain positive and led to a reduction in the underlying cost:income ratio to 97% (2022: 102%), the first time Metro Bank’s cost:income ratio has fallen below 100% since 2018.
    • Underlying loss before tax continued to improve, reducing to £16.9 million for the year (2022: loss of £50.6 million) reflecting significant margin improvements achieved through disciplined cost management and balance sheet optimisation. The second half loss was impacted by market pressures on current account balances and asset pricing, and constrained lending volumes to maintain capital as well as the impact of inflated cost of deposits in the fourth quarter due to the deposit campaign in response to the previously announced deposit outflows and press speculation.
    • Statutory profit before tax of £30.5 million for the year (2022: loss of £70.7 million), the first time Metro Bank has achieved statutory profitability since 2018, driven by the first half performance and the gain recognised in relation to the haircut on the Tier 2 debt instrument in the debt refinancing, marginally offset by costs associated with restructuring.

     

    Capital, Funding and Liquidity

     

    Position

    31 Dec

    2023

    Position

    31 Dec

    2022

    Minimum

    requirement

    including buffers6

    Minimum

    requirement

    excluding buffers6

     

     

     

     

     

    Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1)

    13.1%

    10.3%

    9.2%

    4.7%

    Tier 1

    13.1%

    10.3%

    10.8%

    6.3%

    Total Capital

    15.1%

    13.4%

    12.9%

    8.4%

    Total Capital + MREL

    22.0%

    17.7%

    21.2%

    16.7%

     

    1. CRD IV buffers

     

    • On 30 November 2023 Metro Bank announced completion of the Capital Raise which consisted of  £150 million equity, £600 million of debt refinancing and £175 million of new MREL debt. The capital raise secured the balance sheet, extended the debt instrument maturities to 2028 or beyond and provided sufficient capital resources to enable the Group to meet all minimum regulatory requirements including CRD IV buffers.
    • Total RWAs as at 31 December 2023 were £7,533 million (31 December 2022: £7,990 million). The movement reflects the actions taken to optimise the balance sheet. RWA density was 33.9% as at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: 36.1%), the movement year-on-year reflects the elevated liquidity position.
    • Strong liquidity and funding position maintained. All customer loans are fully funded by customer deposits with a loan-to-deposit ratio of 79% as at 31 December 2023, and less than 75% in February 2024 (31 December 2022: 82%). Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) of 332% as at 31 December 2023, and more than 360% in February 2024 (31 December 2022: 213%) with cash balances at c£5.1 billion. Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) of 145% as at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: 134%). Over the next 3 years more than £2.0 billion of fixed rate treasury assets will mature at an average blended yield of less than 0.9%, these will be replaced by asset with yields in line with the prevailing base rate.
    • UK leverage ratio was 5.3% as at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: 4.2%).
    • No decision has been made regarding the Group’s AIRB application. Forward plans are not predicated on accreditation and the work performed on the application to date remains beneficial to the Group.

     

    Outlook and Guidance

     

    2023

    Guidance

    Lending

    £12.3 billion

    • Loan growth of mid-single digit CAGR from 2024 to 2028
    • Total blended risk weight density on a standardised basis (total RWA/ total assets) 35-45%

    Deposits

    £15.6 billion

    • Low-mid single digit reduction in 2024 to optimise cost of funding
    • Mid-single digit growth across 2025 and 2026

    NIM

    1.98%

    • Marginal reduction in 2024;
      • Headwinds in H1 2024 following the deposit campaign, marginally offset by;
      • Momentum generated in H2 2024 as assets reprice, lending pivot towards higher yielding specialist mortgages and SME/ Commercial, and the elevated liquidity position enables focus on reducing cost of funding
    • 2024 exit rate will support accretion through 2025 and 2026, coupled with a continuation of asset repricing, lending pivot and a rising loan-to-deposit ratio

    Costs

    £530 million

    • £80m of annualised cost savings, of which;
      • £50 million of annualised cost savings to be delivered in Q1 2024
      • £30 million of annualised cost savings to be delivered by Q4 2024
    • 2024 costs are expected to be below 2023, with further reductions in 2025 reflecting the benefit of the full £80 million annualised cost savings
    • Low single digit annual growth from 2025 onwards, nearing 60% cost:income ratio by 2028

    ROTE

    4%

    • ROTE low-single digit in 2025, increasing to high-single digit in 2026 and low-mid teens thereafter

     

     

    • The guidance above reflects the impact of recent market pressures, competition for deposits and the prevailing macroeconomic outlook.

     

     

    Metro Bank Holdings plc

     

    Summary Balance Sheet and Profit & Loss Account

    (Unaudited)

    Balance Sheet

    YoY

    change

     

    31 Dec

    2023

    30 Jun

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

     

     

     

    £'million

    £'million

    £'million

    Assets

     

     

     

     

     

    Loans and advances to customers

    (6%)

     

    £12,297

    £12,572

    £13,102

    Treasury assets7

     

     

    £8,770

    £8,023

    £7,870

    Other assets8

     

     

    £1,178

    £1,152

    £1,147

    Total assets

    1%

     

    £22,245

    £21,747

    £22,119

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Liabilities

     

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers

    (2%)

     

    £15,623

    £15,529

    £16,014

    Deposits from central banks

     

     

    £3,050

    £3,800

    £3,800

    Debt securities

     

     

    £694

    £573

    £571

    Other liabilities

     

     

    £1,744

    £875

    £778

    Total liabilities

    0%

     

    £21,111

    £20,777

    £21,163

    Total shareholder's equity

     

     

    £1,134

    £970

    £956

    Total equity and liabilities

     

     

    £22,245

    £21,747

    £22,119

     

     

    1. Comprises investment securities and cash & balances with the Bank of England
    2. Comprises property, plant & equipment, intangible assets and other assets

     

     

    YoY

    change

       

     

    Year ended

    Profit & Loss Account

    31 Dec

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

     

     

    £'million

    £'million

     

     

     

     

    Underlying net interest income

    2%

    £411.9

    £404.2

    Underlying net fee and other income

    12%

    £131.9

    £117.9

    Underlying net gains on sale of assets

     

    £2.7

    -

    Total underlying revenue

    5%

    £546.5

    £522.1

     

     

     

     

    Underlying operating costs

    -

    (£530.2)

    (£532.8)

    Expected credit loss expense

     

    (£33.2)

    (£39.9)

     

     

     

     

    Underlying (loss) before tax

     

    (£16.9)

    (£50.6)

     

     

     

     

    Impairment and write-off of property plant & equipment and intangible assets

     

    (£4.6)

    (£9.7)

    Transformation costs

     

    (£20.2)

    (£3.3)

    Remediation costs

     

    -

    (£5.3)

    Capital raise and refinancing

     

    £74.0

    -

    Holding company insertion costs

     

    (£1.8)

    (£1.8)

    Statutory profit/(loss) before tax

     

    £30.5

    (£70.7)

     

     

     

     

    Statutory taxation

     

    (£1.0)

    (£2.0)

     

     

     

     

    Statutory profit/(loss) after tax

     

    £29.5

    (£72.7)

           

     

     

     

     

     

         

     

    Year ended

    Key metrics

    31 Dec

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

     

     

     

     

     

    Underlying earnings per share – basic

     

    (8.4p)

    (30.5p)

    Number of shares

     

    672.7m

    172.5m

    Net interest margin (NIM)

     

    1.98%

    1.92%

    Lending yield

     

    4.72%

    3.67%

    Cost of deposits

     

    0.97%

    0.20%

    Cost of risk

     

    0.26%

    0.32%

    Arrears rate

     

    3.8%

    3.2%

    Underlying cost:income ratio

     

    97%

    102%

    Tangible book value per share

     

    £1.40

    £4.29

    Risk weighted assets (RWAs)

     

    £7,533m

    £7,990m

    Risk weight density (RWAs / total assets)

     

    33.9%

    36.1%

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

             

     

     

     

    Half year ended

    Profit & Loss Account

    HoH

    change

    31 Dec

    2023

    30 Jun

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

     

     

    £'million

    £'million

    £'million

     

     

     

     

     

    Underlying net interest income

    (14%)

    £190.4

    £221.5

    £223.3

    Underlying net fee and other income

    8%

    £68.6

    £63.3

    £62.6

    Underlying net gains on sale of assets

     

    £1.9

    £0.8

    -

    Total underlying revenue

    (9%)

    £260.9

    £285.6

    £285.9

     

     

     

     

     

    Underlying operating costs

    5%

    (£272.0)

    (£258.2)

    (£266.5)

    Expected credit loss expense

     

    (£21.9)

    (£11.3)

    (£22.0)

     

     

     

     

     

    Underlying profit/(loss) before tax

     

    (£33.0)

    £16.1

    (£2.6)

     

     

     

     

     

    Impairment and write-off of property plant & equipment and intangible assets

     

    (£4.6)

    -

    (£1.5)

    Transformation costs

     

    (£20.2)

    -

    (£2.3)

    Remediation costs

     

    (£0.8)

    £0.8

    (£2.3)

    Capital raise and refinancing

     

    £74.0

    -

    -

    Holding company insertion costs

     

    (£0.3)

    (£1.5)

    (£1.8)

    Statutory profit/(loss) before tax

     

    £15.1

    £15.4

    (£10.5)

     

     

     

     

     

    Statutory taxation

     

    £1.7

    (£2.7)

    (£0.5)

     

     

     

     

     

    Statutory profit/(loss) after tax

     

    £16.8

    £12.7

    (£11.0)

     

     

     

     

     

    Half year ended

    Key metrics

    31 Dec

    2023

    30 Jun

    2023

    31 Dec

    2022

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Underlying earnings per share – basic

     

    (12.2p)

    7.8p

    (2.0p)

     

    Number of shares

     

    672.7m

    172.6m

    172.5m

     

    Net interest margin (NIM)

     

    1.85%

    2.14%

    2.11%

     

    Lending yield

     

    4.91%

    4.50%

    3.93%

     

    Cost of deposits

     

    1.29%

    0.66%

    0.25%

     

    Cost of risk

     

    0.34%

    0.18%

    0.33%

     

    Arrears rate

     

    3.8%

    3.5%

    3.2%

     

    Underlying cost:income ratio

     

    104%

    90%

    93%

     

    Tangible book value per share

     

    £1.40

    £4.42

    £4.29

     

    Risk weighted assets (RWAs)

     

    £7,533m

    £7,802m

    £7,990m

     

    Risk weight density (RWAs / total assets)

     

    33.9%

    35.9%

    36.1%

     
               

     

     

    Enquiries

     

    For more information, please contact:

     

    Metro Bank PLC Investor Relations

    +44 (0) 20 3402 8900

    IR@metrobank.plc.uk

     

    Teneo

    Charles Armitstead / Haya Herbert Burns

    +44 (0) 7703 330269 / +44 (0) 7342 031051

    Metrobank@teneo.com

     

    Metro Bank PLC Media Relations

    pressoffice@metrobank.plc.uk

     

    ENDS

     

    About Metro Bank

    Metro Bank services over three million customer accounts and is celebrated for its exceptional customer experience. It remains one of the highest rated high street banks for overall service quality for personal customers, the best bank for service in-store for business customers and joint top for service in-store for personal customers, in the Competition and Markets Authority’s Service Quality Survey in February 2024.

    Metro Bank has also been awarded “Large Loans Mortgage Lender of the Year”, 2024 and 2023 Mortgage Awards, accredited as a top ten Most Loved Workplace 2023, “2023 Best Lender of the Year – UK” in the M&A Today, Global Awards, the “Inclusive Culture Initiative Award” in the 2023 Inclusive Awards, “Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Award” and “Leader of the Year Award 2023” at the Top 1% Workplace Awards, “Best Women Mortgage Leaders in the UK” from Elite Women 2023, “Diversity Lead of the Year”, 2023 Women in Finance, Best Large Loan Lender, 2023 Mortgage Strategy Awards,, “Best Business Credit Card”, Forbes Advisor Best of 2023 Awards, “Best Business Credit Card”, 2023 Moneynet Personal Finance Awards.

    The community bank offers retail, business, commercial and private banking services, and prides itself on giving customers the choice to bank however, whenever and wherever they choose, and supporting the customers and communities it serves. Whether that’s through its network of 76 stores open seven days a week, 362 days a year; on the phone through its UK-based contact centres; or online through its internet banking or award-winning mobile app, the bank offers customers real choice.

    Metro Bank Holdings plc (registered in England and Wales with company number 14387040, registered office: One Southampton Row, London, WC1B 5HA) is the listed entity and holding company of Metro Bank PLC.

    Metro Bank plc (registered in England and Wales with company number 6419578, registered office: One Southampton Row, London, WC1B 5HA) is authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority. ‘Metrobank’ is a registered trademark of Metro Bank PLC.  Eligible deposits are protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. For further information about the Scheme refer to the FSCS website www.fscs.org.uk. All Metro Bank products are subject to status and approval.

    Metro Bank is an independent UK bank – it is not affiliated with any other bank or organisation (including the METRO newspaper or its publishers) anywhere in the world. Please refer to Metro Bank using the full name.

     

     

     

     

    Metro Bank Holdings PLC

    Preliminary Announcement

    (Unaudited)

    For the year ended 31 December 2023

     

     

    Chief Executive Officer’s statement

    With 3.0 million customer accounts covering retail, SME and commercial, a national network of stores and our continued digital investments we remain the UK’s leading full-service mid-sized bank.

     

    The start of the year began with continued momentum from 2022, which saw us return to profit on both a statutory and underlying basis and deliver our best set of results for several years in the first half. For the full year, we recognised an underlying loss before tax of £16.9 million for 2023 (2022: loss of £50.6 million), impacted in part by deposit pricing actions taken in the second half. On a statutory basis we delivered a profit before tax of £30.5 million (2022: loss of £70.7 million) largely as the result of a one-off gain from the capital restructure completed in November.

    2023 saw the continued execution of our strategic priorities with tangible progress made across all areas. We enter 2024 with an improved and longer-dated capital position, and continue to take a disciplined approach to cost saving and have commenced further activities to achieve the savings outlined, all of which will set us up to continue on our path to sustainable profitability, and deliver on our ambition to be the number one community bank.

    Capital package

    Going into the year we were always clear about our need both to access the capital markets comfortably ahead of the call date for our MREL in October 2024 and  to deliver profitability as a prerequisite. The increased capital requirements in July, combined with the setback in September to our ambition to achieve Advanced Internal Ratings Based (AIRB) accreditation for residential mortgages, put pressure on our capital position, impacting the levels to which we were able to grow capital organically. Speculative media reporting contributed to  our decision to accelerate and address our capital position in the fourth quarter.

    The ability to secure the £925 million capital package demonstrates our investors’ faith in us and in our customer service-centric model. We believe that this capital support provides certainty for us going forward.

    Strategic delivery

    Throughout the year our customers have remained supportive and our promise to provide better service and to support the communities in which we operate continues to resonate. Progress has been achieved in the automation of back-office processes and investment in core infrastructure aimed at ensuring the stability and security of systems. Alongside this we have seen the launch of new products including enhanced commercial overdrafts and business credit cards. Whilst we see near-term pressure on profitability resulting from the increased cost of deposits gathered in the final quarter of the year, we are optimistic that the good work put in throughout 2023 continues to set us up well for the future.

    Revenue

    Revenue during the year benefitted from increases in base rates and the continued growth in customer accounts, with total underlying income increasing 5% to £546.5 million (2022: £522.1 million).

    Like most banks, a large proportion of our lending is fixed rate and therefore despite base rates having stabilised we are continuing to see the benefits as older loans mature into a higher rate environment. We will see further upside in 2024, 2025 and 2026 as loans and fixed rate treasury investments continue to reprice. Offsetting this, the weakened outlook for base rates and the competitive nature of the lending market will likely compress front-book loan pricing through 2024.

    We also saw the increase in base rates flow through to deposit pricing, particularly as competition in the savings market continued to increase. As cost-of-living pressures continue, which is leading to customers utilising current account balances, and industry-wide drawings under TFSME mature we envisage these pressures continuing through 2024 and for the medium term. To aid this we have been investing in our deposit capabilities, including preparing for the ISA season in 2024 through improvements to our ISA switching capabilities. We have also started to provide savings accounts on deposit aggregator sites and are launching a new ‘boost’ proposition for savings accounts. While these deposits are more expensive than our core current account deposits, they are priced to be net interest income accretive, enable more lending and help to support our strong liquidity position.

    Following the announcement of the successful completion of the capital package in November, we launched a deposit campaign to replace the deposits we lost in October resulting from speculative media reports. As a result, our deposits ended the year at £15.6 billion up 1% from the level reported in our interim results. This campaign and the prevailing higher rate environment, saw cost of deposits in the second half of the year increase to 1.29%, up from 0.66% in the first half.

    Our priority remains growing the number, depth and quality of our deposit relationships and we remain committed to supporting more customers and communities.

    Costs

    We continue to take a disciplined approach to costs, with underlying costs slightly down year on year, despite the continued high inflationary environment. The executive team has worked hard to improve processes helping manage costs. Our processes are still not as efficient or as automated as we would want which gives us the opportunity to identify and deliver further cost savings going forward. As committed at the time of the capital package, we are  on track, to deliver up to £50 million in annualised cost savings. As part of this approach we took the decision to reduce our store hours, to focus on the times when customers need us most, and introduced changes to our organisational structure resulting in a reduction of roles. As a people-focused organisation it is always incredibly difficult to let good colleagues go. I want to thank all of them for their hard work and dedication to Metro Bank. Whilst this was a very tough decision, it was ultimately necessary and is a key step in helping support our long-term sustainability. The exits agreed results in £43 million of annual savings and we remain confident in exceeding £50 million in total annual cost savings in 2024.

    We will continue to explore options to further right-size our cost base in the months ahead, as we look to secure a sustainably profitable future for the bank. Part of this will include continuing to review our options around stores and our real estate which remain one of the largest components of our fixed cost base.

    Infrastructure

    Whilst we have reduced our operating hours we remain committed to stores, which remain central to our proposition. During the year, we acquired a freehold site in Chester which will be our next new location. We continue to focus on building a pipeline to deliver our growth in the years ahead and have placed a greater focus on securing locations with a strong SME presence. Further store openings in the north of England will predominantly focus on out-of-town locations with parking which are easier for businesses to access and can serve larger populations.

    Although a physical presence remains core to our offering, our priority will be to continue to digitalise to ensure we remain both competitive against larger high-street peers and new digital entrants. A particular area of focus will continue to be on enhancing our self-service features as well as building out our SME offering where we feel we are continuing to win market share in an area which remains underserved by the market.

    During the year we worked to transform our mortgage origination platform, which has streamlined the process for both mortgage intermediaries and customers. As mortgages will continue to be the largest component of our lending portfolio we envisage that this investment will yield improvements in productivity and allow us to launch a greater range of products.

    In May, we completed the implementation of our holding company marking an important milestone in meeting our requirements in respect of the Bank of England’s resolution framework.

    Balance sheet optimisation

    Over the course of 2023, the management team actively constrained lending to around replacement levels in an effort to build capital organically. Following the capital raise it is now more important than ever that we continue to optimise our balance sheet and utilise our capital stack most efficiently to get the best possible sustainable returns for all stakeholders.

    The return to a more normalised interest rate environment has led us to shift our focus away from unsecured lending back towards commercial, whilst mortgages will remain the largest component of our balance sheet. With the feedback from the PRA that we would not receive AIRB approval in 2023, our focus is to participate in niche parts of the mortgage market where our manual underwriting capacity is a competitive advantage. This will likely mean that we seek to compete less for vanilla mortgages where AIRB-approved competitors benefit from a materially lower RWA weightage than either standardised weightages or those expected under the Basel 3.1 regulations. The pivot to commercial and specialist lending will drive higher risk adjusted returns but will also increase risk density. In order to meet customer demand and improve profitability we will manage the balance sheet to optimise returns, which may include (but not limited to) periodically utilising capital buffers or electing to access capital markets to support growth.

    Communication

    Our focus on delivering excellent customer service is reflected in the latest Independent Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) survey where we retained the number one spot for in-store service for personal and business customers. 2023 also saw us implement Consumer Duty and sign up to the Government’s Mortgage Charter supporting our commitment to customers, especially as many dealt with the effects of increases in the cost of living.

    Whilst we have reduced our store opening hours in 2024, we remain committed to maintaining a physical presence and ensuring that stores remain both accessible and at the heart of local communities. In 2023, we rolled out our British Sign Language service which customers can now access in any of our stores, on the phone, in app or online. Fifty-two of our stores are also now designated as Safe Spaces – places where those suffering domestic abuse can go to safely start the process of rebuilding their lives.

    Our community bank ethos also saw us deliver our financial education programme Money Zone in record numbers. The programme has now been delivered to 2,800 schools and 250,000 children, which in 2023 included delivering to 1,100 children in just one day at the Hertfordshire Agricultural Society Food and Farming Day. We have also introduced bespoke programmes for our armed forces’ communities as well as for teenagers aged 16 to 18.

    Alongside Money Zone we support our communities through a wider range of initiatives. We have dedicated over 4,000 hours to local causes ranging from litter picks to sponsored walks as well as celebrating large scale community events, notably Pride in London, Birmingham and Cardiff.

    We are determined that the right-sizing of our workforce will not impede our ability to be a great place to work or a great place to bank. We will continue to foster an environment where colleagues can grow their careers and thrive. I was particularly pleased that during the year we were voted as a top 10 place to work in the UK and our annual Voice of the Colleague survey, conducted in October, saw some of the best results in our history as well as being significantly higher than the global benchmark.

    We continue to focus on our culture of promoting from within, with over 40% of the positions in the first half of the year filled by colleagues being promoted or moving around the business. For the remaining hires we have amplified our community focus when recruiting talent, increased opportunities available for apprentices from disadvantaged backgrounds, run a series of roadshows for professional returners trying to get back into the workplace and engaged with later in career populations to support our diverse workforce.

    In May we launched a five-year partnership with the England and Wales Cricket Board, later jointly pledging to treble the number of girls’ cricket teams to support the development of women’s and girls’ cricket both at a national and community level, with the aim of delivering a lasting legacy for female representation in the sport. The partnership includes the sponsorship of key sporting events including the Women’s Ashes where we are the title partner.

    Looking ahead

    2023 has been a varied year for performance with the continued strong underlying momentum towards achieving underlying profitability in the first half of the year and our successful capital raise being key highlights. These have been offset by continued external headwinds combined with the need to make difficult decisions in the last quarter of the year. Some of these decisions, including our higher deposit cost will continue to impact earnings potential into 2024, whilst we will not fully benefit from the effects of loan and investment repricing until 2026, therefore acting as a drag on our near-term results. Despite this I remain confident that the work we have undertaken has allowed us to build the foundations of a structurally profitable bank – which is fundamentally different from where we were four years ago.

    I remain grateful for the continued support of all our colleagues, customers, debt holders and shareholders as well as wider stakeholders.

     

    Finance review

    Summary of the year

    2023 was another important year for us as we returned to profit on both a statutory and underlying basis in the first half of the year, established our new holding company and secured a successful capital package that will allow us to continue to profitably grow the business over the coming years.

    For the full year ended 31 December 2023, we recorded an underlying loss before tax of £16.9 million a reduction of 67% from 2022 (2022: loss of £50.6 million) partially reflecting the higher cost of deposits and wider market trend of declining current account balances.

    On a statutory basis we recognised a profit before tax of £30.5 million (2022: loss of £70.7 million), reflecting the one-off gain on the refinancing of our existing Tier 2 debt as part of the capital package.

    Additionally, non-underlying items included £20.2 million of costs associated with our announced cost reduction plan which is designed to improve the ongoing efficiency of our business as we look to deliver sustainable profitability.

    Our results were impacted by the setback in September to our ambition to achieve AIRB accreditation for residential mortgages and associated speculative media reports regarding our capital position led to an outflow of customer deposits, with a notable decrease in current accounts balances. Our strong levels of liquidity and prudent approach meant these outflows were manageable and we were able to quickly replace these balances with longer-term deposits, albeit at a higher cost, which contributed to a material increase in our cost of deposits in the fourth quarter.

    Despite these challenges we have entered 2024 with both a stronger capital and liquidity position. We have taken the first steps to deliver a disciplined cost reduction programme that will act to mitigate many of the headwinds we face and ensure a return to sustainable profitability.

     

    Income statement

     

     

    2023

    £m

    2022

    £m

    Change

    %

    Underlying net interest income

    411.9

     404.2

     2%

    Underlying non-net interest income

    134.6

     117.9

    14%

    Total underlying revenue

    546.5

     522.1

     5%

    Underlying operating expenses

    (530.2)

     (532.8)

    -

    Expected credit loss expense

     (33.2)

     (39.9)

     (17%)

    Underlying loss before tax

    (16.9)

     (50.6)

     (67%)

    Non-underlying items

    47.4

     (20.1)

    n/a

    Statutory profit/(loss) before tax

    30.5

     (70.7)

    n/a

     

    Interest income

    Interest income benefitted from a rising base rate during the period, increasing 52% to £855.7 million (2022: £563.7 million). Lending income continues to be the largest component of our interest income.

    Residential mortgage assets benefitted from higher rates for new and retained customers, with asset yields increasing to 3.37% (2022: 2.65%). Our retail mortgages are 92% fixed with an average time to reversion of 2.41 years (31 December 2022: 2.45 years); we expect to see continued rate growth in the years ahead as older balances roll-off and are replaced with new lending at a higher rate.

    Our commercial lending portfolio income grew due to higher yields, predominantly driven by our floating business loans which have seen greater yields as a result of the higher base rate environment, as well as the continued attrition of lower-yielding government-backed lending which was written during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Commercial lending remains a strong and growing part of our book; as part of our strategy we will continue to rotate and grow our commercial lending, with a particular focus on small and medium enterprises as well as more specialist lending.

    Consumer lending income also increased, driven by higher yielding originations due to the base rate environment. In 2024, we will no longer provide new consumer lending and instead focus on the commercial and retail markets for new originations.

    We also saw the benefits of increased rates flowing through to our treasury portfolio with interest income on our cash and investment securities increasing. This increase was also aided by our decision to adjust our portfolio mix towards lower risk-weighted investment securities and restrict levels of new lending origination to repayment levels.

    Interest expense

    Interest expense increased 178% to £443.8 million (2022: £159.6 million). This increase reflected the combination of the continued gradual reduction in non-interest bearing personal current accounts as well as an increase in cost of deposits reflecting the rising rate environment.

    The reduction in average balances started across the industry in late 2022 in response to increases in the cost of living, as customers looked to pay down debt and move excess deposits into savings accounts, as well as weather the higher inflationary environment. We saw additional attrition in the fourth quarter following media speculation surrounding our capital options although we have continued to see the number of current accounts grow.

    During 2023, we have enhanced our deposit capabilities, including serving aggregators and the launch of limited-edition savings products. This has successfully aided deposit inflows, whilst also increasing our average cost of deposits to 0.97% (2022: 0.20%).

    Our wholesale funding expenses have also increased as a function of interest rates, where the largest expense is the Bank of England’s Term Funding Scheme (TFSME) which is directly linked to base rate. Due to a higher rate environment, we have seen expenses for TFSME increase to £161.3 million (2022: £55.5 million). Despite this increase, it remains an additional stable cost of funding and is accretive to net interest income.

    During the year we repaid early the TFSME maturities scheduled for 2024 and the start of 2025. This repayment was partially funded by repurchase agreements, which represented a more cost-effective form of funding. We also used repurchase agreements in the fourth quarter which provided additional liquidity, which were largely repaid by the year-end. A combination of these factors, along with the increase in base rate, led to an increase in interest expense on repurchase agreements from £3.4 million in 2022 to £50.1 million in 2023.

    As part of the capital package, our existing Tier 2 notes, which repriced to 9% in June 2023, were redeemed and replaced with £150 million of new Tier 2 notes at a coupon of 14%. The redemption date of our existing MREL debt was extended, and £175 million new MREL debt issued, both at a coupon of 12%.

    The repricing and restructuring has resulted in an increase to interest expense on debt securities in 2023 which rose from £48.7 million in 2022 to £55.7 million in 2023; this increased cost of funding will continue into the future. Despite the increased cost, the refinancing of our wholesale debt has enhanced our balance sheet strength, provides additional certainty to all stakeholders and allows us greater runway to continue to deliver our strategy thereby assisting in delivering greater earnings potential in the future.

    Non-interest income

    Net fee and commission income has increased by £8.6 million to £90.4 million in 2023 (2022: £81.8 million), reflecting growth in retail and business current account volumes. Interchange income grew by £3.0 million to £40.0 million (2022: £37.0 million) reflecting increased consumer spending using a Metro Bank card.

    Safe deposit box income increased by £1.7 million to £18.2 million (2022: £16.5 million) reflecting higher volumes as occupancy levels increased, driven by greater consumer demand in strategic geographical locations. Foreign exchange income has remained broadly static year on year at £34.0 million (2022: £34.1 million), providing a valuable source of income, whilst having minimal impact on our capital ratios.

     

    Operating expenses

     

     

    2023

    2022

    Underlying cost:income ratio

    97%

    102%

    Statutory cost:income ratio

    90%

    106%

     

     

    Despite inflationary pressures, our disciplined approach to cost management has led to a slight decrease in underlying operating expenses to £530.2 million compared to £532.8 million in 2022.

    This was aided by the decision at the end of 2022 to reduce the number of consultants and contractors used in the business, and to streamline our project delivery capabilities.

    Salary costs remain our biggest contributor to operating expenses and in the current year we incurred costs of £241.2 million (2022: £236.6 million). A £13.8 million provision for the cost of the restructure has been booked in 2023 as a non-underlying item.

    Professional fees have reduced significantly by £15.2 million to £23.2 million (2022: £38.4 million) as we have moved away from the use of contractors. In addition to this information technology costs have also fallen by £2.5 million to £59.7 million (2022: £62.2 million), reflecting our cost discipline.

    Occupancy expenses continue to be a fixed cost being driven by our store portfolio; costs have remained broadly flat despite the inflationary environment as we continue to actively reduce the cost base whilst maintaining our presence on the high street.

    The continued discipline in operational cost has also funded areas of increased expenses including greater investment into deposit product capability as well as a new multi-year sponsorship of women and girls cricket with the ECB. We see this as part of our ongoing commitment to become the number one community bank.

     

    Non-underlying items

     

     

     

    2023

    £m

    2022

    £m

    Change

    %

    Impairment and write-off of property, plant, equipment and intangible assets

     (4.6)

     (9.7)

     (53%)

    Remediation costs

     (5.3)

    n/a

    Transformation costs

     (20.2)

     (3.3)

    512%

    Capital raise and refinancing

    74.0

    n/a

    Holding company insertion costs

     (1.8)

     (1.8)

    Non-underlying items

    47.4

     (20.1)

    (336%)

     

     

    We have recognised non-underlying income in 2023 of £47.4 million (2022: expenses of £20.1 million) driven by the capital package secured in October 2023 which resulted in a 40% haircut, and a £100 million gain, on the £250 million Tier 2 debt issuance.  As part of the capital packaged we incurred costs of £26.0 million. These consisted of fees paid to our advisors in relation to the debt restructuring, the acceleration of unamortised issuance costs as well as the impacts from the breaking of the hedge relationships the instruments were previously in.

    This is offset by the recognition of £20.2 million of transformation costs, which includes a £15.0 million provision for restructuring and associated costs. We have benefitted from the completion of remediation activities which were settled in 2022.

     

    Expected credit loss expense

     

    31 December 2023

    ECL Allowance

    £m

    Coverage ratio

    %

    Non-performing loan ratio

    %

    Retail mortgages

    19

    0.24%

    1.87%

    Consumer lending

    108

    8.33%

    5.94%

    Commercial

    72

    2.13%

    4.91%

    Total lending

    199

    1.59%

    3.11%

    31 December 2022

     

     

     

    Retail mortgages

    20

    0.26%

    1.45%

    Consumer lending

    75

    5.07%

    3.38%

    Commercial

    92

    2.21%

    4.59%

    Total lending

    187

    1.41%

    2.65%

     

    We recognised an expected credit loss expense of £33.2 million in year 2023 (2022: £39.9 million), reflecting the challenging economic environment arising from the increased cost of living. The decrease from 2022 is due to management actions to optimise the credit quality of new lending combined with releases relating to commercial customers that we have worked with and have secured repayments from. We continue to maintain management overlays and adjustments of £23.4 million (2022: £30.9 million) which represents 12% of ECL stock (31 December 2022: 16%). As at 31 December 2023 our coverage ratio was 1.59% (2022: 1.41%) and we believe we remain appropriately provided at this stage in the economic cycle.

    Consumer lending accounted for the majority of the expected credit loss expense driven by loan maturation and deteriorated performance due to macroeconomic factors. The loan coverage ratio for consumer lending ended the year at 8.33% compared to 5.07% as at 31 December 2022.

    Commercial lending has been more resilient in 2023, with a release of expected credit losses during the year. The coverage ratio for commercial lending has decreased slightly to 2.13% as at 31 December 2023, down from 2.21% as at 31 December 2022.

    We also saw a release of expected credit losses in respect of our retail mortgage portfolio, where credit quality remains high, leading to a slight decrease in coverage ratio from 0.26% to 0.24% over the year to 31 December 2023.

    Looking forwards into 2024, we expect to continue the rotation of assets away from consumer unsecured and towards the commercial sector where we see strategic opportunity to support SMEs, a vital segment of the UK economy. The economic environment and wider outlook remain challenging and uncertain; however our processes ensure we continue to maintain adequate coverage ratios and continue to actively manage our portfolios.

     

    Balance sheet

    Lending

     

     

    31 December

     

     

    2023

    £m

    2022

    £m

    Change

    %

    Retail mortgages

     7,817

     7,649

     2%

    Consumer lending

    1,297

     1,480

     (12%)

    Commercial

     3,382

     4,160

     (19%)

    Gross lending

     12,496

     13,289

    (6%)

    ECL allowance

    (199)

     (187)

    6%

    Net lending

     12,297

     13,102

     (6%)

     

     

    Net loans and advances to customers ended the year at £12,297 million, down 6% from £13,102 million as at 31 December 2022, as we actively managed our RWA capacity reflecting our capital constraints for the majority of the year. The increased rate environment is ensuring that we are achieving a higher return on regulatory capital in all areas of lending as new loans are written at higher yields but with the same risk-weighting.

    Retail mortgages continue to form the largest component of our lending base at £7,817 million (31 December 2022: £7,649 million), representing 63% of lending (31 December 2022: 58%). With the feedback from the PRA that we should not expect to receive AIRB approval in 2023, our focus going forward will be to dominate in niche parts of the mortgage market where our manual underwriting capacity is a competitive advantage. This will likely mean that we seek to compete less for vanilla mortgages with competitors benefitting from a materially lower RWA weightage than either standardised weightages or those expected under the  Basel 3.1 regulations.

    The commercial portfolio has decreased from £4,160 million as at 31 December 2022 to £3,382 million as at 31 December 2023. The decrease primarily related to our government-backed COVID relief loans which continue to run off following the closure of most schemes in 2021. As at 31 December 2022 outstanding lending under these schemes totalled £938 million (31 December 2022: £1,313 million). Although these loans are highly capital efficient due to their government backing, as these were written at the bottom of the interest rate cycle they are relatively low-yielding and we will continue to see the benefit to interest income as these loans roll-off.

    Commercial lending is expected to increase in 2024 as we shift our asset focus to commercial and specialist lending, especially in the SME sector which is currently underserved in the market. This includes launching a suite of relationship-driven products to ensure we can meet all of our customer needs. In 2023, we launched our new business credit card and commercial overdraft, which are fully digital journeys with automated acceptance and decision scoring. This comes off the back of our business overdraft in 2022 which continues to be popular with customers.

    The consumer portfolio has also decreased to £1,297 million (31 December 2022: £1,480 million), driven in part to minimise exposure to a higher risk segment during this part of the economic environment, but also partly reflecting our evolving strategic priorities where we are looking to prioritise relationship lending as part of our ambition to be the best community bank.

    Treasury portfolio

    Over the year we have continued to optimise our treasury portfolio to maximise our risk adjusted return on regulatory capital, particularly as rates have risen. We ended the year with £8,770 million of treasury assets (31 December 2022: £7,870 million), comprising £4,879 million investment securities and £3,891 million cash and balances at the Bank of England (31 December 2022: £5,914 million and £1,956 million respectively). Our investment securities remain high quality and liquid with 75% being either AAA-rated or gilts (31 December 2022: 68%).

    Other assets

    Property, plant and equipment ended the year at £723 million, down from £748 million as at 31 December 2022. Depreciation continues to outstrip additions, due to no new store openings taking place in 2023, although we are continuing to identify sites for future stores in the North of England. These sites are likely to be smaller than previously envisaged and more likely to be in locations that are most convenient for surrounding businesses.

    Freehold and long-leasehold properties total 30 out of our 76 stores. This strategy continues to provide us with a more cost-effective way of delivering its store-based service-led model. Intangible assets have decreased to £193 million, down from £216 million in 2022, reflecting a more selective approach to investments. Our investments in 2023 have including delivering confirmation of payee services, improved deposit propositions and a new mortgage platform.

    Deposits

     

    31 December

     

     

    2023

    £m

    2022

    £m

    Change

    %

    Retail customer (excluding retail partnerships)

    7,235

     5,797

    25%

    Retail partnership

    1,708

     1,949

    (12%)

    Commercial customers (excluding SMEs)

    2,898

     3,188

    (9%)

    SMEs

    3,782

     5,080

    (26%)

    Total customer deposits

     15,623

     16,014

     (2%)

    Of which:

     

     

     

    Demand: current accounts

    5,696

     7,888

     (28%)

    Demand: savings accounts

    7,827

     7,501

     4%

    Fixed term: savings accounts

    2,100

     625

     236%

     

    We remain focused on being a service-led deposit-driven bank. We ended the year with deposits of £15,623 million (31 December 2022: £16,014 million), a decrease of 2% year on year but up 1% from 30 June 2023. Deposits have been gradually decreasing during 2023 due to the increased cost of living weighing on people’s savings capacity as well as the increasingly competitive interest rate environment which has seen customers both paying down debt and increasingly move deposits to higher-earning savings accounts.

    Following press speculation surrounding our capital raise, we saw a time-limited outflow of deposits. Core deposit flows have since stabilised to more recent normal ranges and we have seen a return to growth in these balances following the successful completion of the capital raise. The launch of a deposit gathering promotion in November 2023 saw us successfully attract new funding albeit at a higher cost.

    Overall our deposit base continues to remain diversified with a 57%:43% split between retail and commercial customers (31 December 2022: 49%:51%).

    We expect to continue raising deposits along with current account growth with planned store openings in the North of England, as well as continuing to pursue growth in the Instant Access and Cash ISA markets.

    Wholesale funding

    We remain predominantly a deposit funded organisation, with wholesale funding utilised where appropriate. Our wholesale funding continues to be mainly the Term Funding Scheme with additional incentives for SMEs (TFSME). During the year we have reduced our utilisation of the TFSME by £750 million, reducing our holding to £3,050 million (31 December 2022: £3,800 million) as we repaid some maturities due in 2024 and 2025 early. Part of this has been funded by our high levels of liquidity, as well as via the utilisation of short-term repurchase agreements which represented a more cost-effective source of financing.

    Taxation

    We recorded a tax charge of £1.0 million (2022: £2.0 million) in the year. This charge is primarily due to the offsetting impact of achieving a statutory profit, against exemptions in tax law for the gain recognised on the Tier 2 haircut.

    We have unused tax losses of £912 million (2022: £859 million) for which no deferred tax asset is being recognised. The current value of our deferred tax asset is £214 million (2022: £215 million). There is no time limit on the utilisation of tax losses and as such the bank will recognise a deferred tax asset once sustainable profitability is achieved.

    Liquidity

    Our liquidity position remains strong and in excess of regulatory minimum requirements. We ended the year with a liquidity coverage ratio of 332% (31 December 2022: 213%) and a net stable funding ratio of 145% (31 December 2022: 134%).

    We continue to hold large amounts of high-quality liquid assets totalling £6,656 million (2022: £4,976 million). This included £3,642 million of cash held at the Bank of England (2022: £1,761 million).

    Capital

     

     

    2023

    £m

    2022

    £m

    Change

     

    CET1 capital1

    985

    819

    20%

    RWAs

    7,533

    7,990

    (6%)

    CET1 ratio1

    13.1%

    10.3%

    280bps

    Total regulatory capital ratio1

    15.1%

    13.4%

    170bps

    Total regulatory capital + MREL ratio1

    22.0%

    17.7%

    430bps

    UK regulatory leverage ratio1

    5.3%

    4.2%

    110bps

     

    1. All the capital figures as at 31 December 2023 are presented on a proforma basis, including our profit for the year. The profit will only be eligible to be included in our capital resources following the completion of our audit and publication of our Annual Report and Accounts.

     

    We ended the year with CET1, total capital and total capital plus MREL ratios of 13.1%, 15.1% and 22.0% respectively (31 December 2022: 10.3%, 13.4% and 17.7%), above regulatory minima, including buffers (excluding any confidential buffers, where applicable), of 9.2%, 10.8% and 21.2%.

    The capital raise saw us issue £150 million of new equity and £175 million in new MREL-eligible debt. As part of the capital package, a long-time investor, Spaldy Investment Limited, became our majority shareholder,

    In addition to raising new capital, we also refinanced all of our existing regulatory debt. This consisted of £350 million of MREL, which had a call date in November 2024. The refinanced debt, along with the new MREL has a call date of 30 April 2028, providing additional runway for us to deliver our strategy. Alongside this, we replaced our existing £250 million of Tier 2 debt with £150 million of new instruments. The £100 million haircut agreed by bondholders has led to a one-off gain which has been reported as a non-underlying income amount in 2023.

    We ended the year with risk-weighted assets of £7,533 million (31 December 2022: £7,990 million), reflecting the active capital management we have delivered since the end of 2022 as well as prudent lending decisions at this stage in the economic cycle.

    At the end of the first half of 2023 we also completed the implementation of our holding company marking an important milestone in meeting our requirements in respect of the Bank of England’s resolution framework. All of our regulatory capital and debt capital is now issued from the new holding company.

    Basel 3.1

    The PRA has published the first of two near-final policy statements covering the implementation of the Basel 3.1 standards for market risk, credit valuation adjustment risk, counterparty credit risk, and operational risk, with remaining elements of the standards expected to be published in Q2 2024.

    In September 2023 the PRA announced a delay in implementation of the proposals until 1 July 2025. However, the phase in period for the output floor was reduced from 5 years to 4.5 years to maintain full implementation by 1 January 2030.

    Based on our balance sheet and lending mix as at 31 December 2023 and the current proposals, our initial assessment of the impact indicates that there should be no material change to our capital position on implementation day. It should be noted that the rules are still subject to change.

    Looking ahead

    We enter 2024 with a stronger and longer dated capital base, putting us in a good position to deliver on strategy. We have also started the process of delivering a disciplined cost reduction programme, which will help to mitigate some of the near-term headwinds, notably the increased cost of deposits.

    Ensuring we reduce our cost of deposits from their 2023 exit rate through the generation of additional core-deposits remains a priority. Alongside this a key area of focus will be rotation of assets from consumer unsecured towards commercial lending where we believe we can generate a better return in the current environment.

    This combination of selective capital allocation, pricing rigour and cost discipline are core to our execution, with these steps meaning we are on the path to long term sustainable profitability.

     

    Risk summary

    We operate a straightforward community banking strategy and business model, carefully managing risk as we serve our customers through both physical and digital channels.

    Approach to risk management

    Our risk management framework underpins our ability to deliver, ensuring risks are carefully considered when making decisions and are managed within acceptable limits on an ongoing basis. The framework establishes the risk management responsibilities of all colleagues, which are embedded within our AMAZEING values, formalises our risk appetite and sets out the tools and techniques used to operate safely within it.

     

    Risk environment in 2023

    During 2023, there has been particular focus on overseeing the management of our capital risk, culminating with the successful completion of the refinancing activity in November, which restored capital ratios to above regulatory minima including buffers (excluding any confidential buffers, where applicable). Management of liquidity risk was also heightened following increased customer deposit outflows in October as a result of speculative media reports on the strength of our capital position and negotiations.

     

    Our strong levels of liquidity and prudent approach meant these outflows were manageable and by year end we had returned to broadly the same deposit levels as we reported for the third quarter. Whilst some deposits came at an increased cost, we continue to demonstrate strong liquidity and funding regulatory ratios. Focus has also remained on assessing and manging the impact of the changing macroeconomic environment and the effect of this on credit risk, including supporting our customers and ensuring appropriate levels of credit provisions.

     

    Key areas of focus across non-financial risk have been the implementation of the new Consumer Duty requirements, ongoing assessment and improvements in operational resilience and continued strengthening of financial crime controls. Through the year, we have continued to enhance our risk data and systems, introduced new and updated tooling and focused on their application to further mature and streamline risk management activities. Our Policy Governance Framework has been refined with a focus on usability and we have enhanced reporting to governance committees and the Board.

     

    Principal risk exposures

    On an ongoing basis, we assess our risks against risk appetite, including those that could result in events or circumstances that might threaten our business model, future performance, solvency or liquidity, and reputation. We consider the potential impact and likelihood of internal and external risk events and circumstances, and the timescale over which they may occur.

     

    We identify, define and assess a range of principal risks to which we are exposed. These are the high-level risks we face, for which risk appetite is set and monitored via key risk indicators. They are consistent with those set out in last year’s annual report and comprise:

     

    • Credit risk.
    • Capital risk.
    • Liquidity and Funding risk.
    • Market risk.
    • Financial Crime risk.
    • Operational risk.
    • Conduct risk.
    • Regulatory risk.
    • Legal risk.
    • Model risk.
    • Strategic risk.

     

    Amongst these, certain risks have been considered most material over the course of the year. Our capital risk position has improved following the successful refinancing in late 2023, but oversight remains heightened as we continue to closely monitor the implementation of our strategy and our financial performance. Credit risk has been subject to continued close scrutiny in light of the challenging macroeconomic environment and management of financial crime risk remains a priority, aligned to regulatory focus. Strategic risk including reputational risk has also been subject to more active management in light of the risks prior to, and following, the capital restructuring and associated media speculation. This risk is anticipated to stabilise and improve in line with our planned return to sustained profitability. Further details on these four risks are set out below:

     

    Strategic risk

     

    Exposure

    Strategic risk could arise as the result of an insufficiently defined, flawed, or poorly implemented strategy.  Successful management of strategic risk requires a plan that is responsive to the rapidly evolving external environment in which we operate. Furthermore, our strategy needs to meet the expectations of our stakeholders, including our customers, regulators and investors.

    During 2023, we remained focused on the execution of our strategy, with the return to profitability in the first half of the year demonstrating the strengths of our community banking strategy. The second half of the year saw a combination of increased capital requirements together with a setback in September to our ambition to achieve AIRB for residential mortgages. These factors put pressure on our capital position and restrained the levels to which we were able to grow capital organically.

    In challenging market conditions, we were successful in delivering a £925 million capital package which included the raising of new capital as well as the refinancing of our existing regulatory debt. Externally, some negative sentiment was generated prior to and following this activity with short-term impacts on deposits.

    Response

    We continue to oversee the development and execution of our strategy on an ongoing basis through regular in-depth management reviews of business performance and change delivery, oversight of strategic risks through risk governance and regular updates presented to the Board. We actively monitor media coverage to understand stakeholder perceptions and potential impacts and ensure our corporate announcements are clear, informative and a fair reflection of who we are and what we do. The Board undertakes an annual review of the strategy and Long-Term Plan, which is supported by a risk assessment reviewed at the Risk Oversight Committee. During 2023, we have continued to strengthen our cost management discipline, including prioritisation and delivery of technology change.

    Outlook

    We continue to see a high level of volatility in the external environment. The risk of further negative sentiment is expected to remain for the near term, but we are confident that we have developed a strategy for 2024 that serves our customers, sets us on a path to sustained profitability and supports our ambition to be the number one community bank. As we begin to see the success of our revised strategy, we expect this risk to recede.

    Monitoring of performance will remain heightened with close Board oversight of the efficacy of the strategy and its implementation. This will be supported by ongoing risk assessment to support active management of the evolving risk profile, with oversight from the Risk Oversight Committee.

     

    Capital risk

     

     

    Exposure

    Capital risk exposures arise from the depletion of our capital resources which may result from:

    • Increased RWAs.
    • Losses.
    • Changes to regulatory minima or other regulatory rules.

    Our capital risk management approach is therefore focused on ensuring we can maintain appropriate levels of capital to both meet regulatory minima and support our objectives, both under normal and stress conditions.

     

    Response

    Our capital risk mitigation is focused on three key components:

    • A return to sustainable profitability that will allow us to generate organic capital growth.
    • The continued optimisation of our balance sheet to ensure we are utilising our capital stack efficiently.
    • Continuing to assess the raising of capital, as and when market conditions and opportunities allow.

     

    Outlook

    Following the capital raise we enter 2024 with a stronger and longer dated capital base, putting us in a good position to deliver on strategy and achieve sustainable profitability in the years ahead. Our active P&L management, including disciplined cost reduction programme, will help to mitigate the near-term headwinds from the increased cost of deposits and funding for the bank. Capital risk will continue to be subject to heighted monitoring and active management.

     

     

    Credit risk

    Exposure

    During 2023, the macroeconomic environment in the UK has been impacted by high inflation, increased interest rates and subdued economic growth. This has impacted upon the cost of living for our customers and in turn, affordability and property valuations. There have been decreases observed in the residential property price indices, although the overall reduction has been relatively muted to date.

    The rate of inflation has reduced significantly over the year,but remained above the central bank target rate at year end. As a result, whilst the Bank of England base rate has remained higher than prior years, mortgage rates have started to decrease and there is an expectation that this will continue in 2024.

    We have observed some crystallisation of the economic deterioration on customer positions and through this, onto ECL. As affordability for customers has come under pressure from rising higher interest rates, we have observed an increase in arrears rates for the mortgage portfolio from a low base. Against this, whilst the economic outlook remains on the downside, forecasts have improved over the course of 2023, and this has resulted in a positive impact on the ECL position.

    Response

    We have an appetite and credit criteria appropriate for managing lending through an economic cycle and have made limited updates to our credit criteria and risk exposure where appropriate during 2023. We have continued to enhance our credit risk framework and associated policies in the current macroeconomic environment: reporting, analysis, and forecasting have been enhanced, particularly around arrears and impairments, to inform strategic decision-making and operational management.

    We have sought to work with our customers who are in arrears, have payment shortfalls or are in financial difficulties to obtain the most appropriate outcome for both the Bank and the customer. The primary objectives of our policy are to ensure that appropriate mechanisms and tools are in place to support customers during periods of financial difficulty and to minimise the duration of the difficulty and the consequence, costs and other impacts arising.

    Outlook

    As noted above, the macroeconomic outlook has improved during the course of 2023, although risks remain as central banks manage the course of interest rates, and geopolitical instability continues from conflicts in both Ukraine and the Middle East.

    We remain alert to the ongoing impact of the resetting of interest rates after a prior period of historically lower rates. We anticipate that the impact of this will continue throughout 2024 as customers transfer from older fixed rate mortgage products, and we have appropriate mechanisms in place to support customers and manage the associated risks.

    We utilise macroeconomic scenarios provided by Moody’s Analytics in the assessment of provisions. The use of an independent supplier for the provision of scenarios helps to ensure that the estimates are unbiased. The macroeconomic scenarios are assessed and reviewed monthly to ensure appropriateness and relevance to the ECL calculation.

     

    Financial crime risk

    Exposure

    We may be exposed to financial crime risk if we do not effectively identify and appropriately mitigate the risks of criminals using our products and services for financial crime. Financial crime risks include money laundering, violations of sanctions, bribery and corruption, facilitation of tax evasion and terrorist financing.

    Failure to prevent financial crime may result in harm to our customers, ourselves and third parties. In addition, non-compliance with regulatory and legal requirements may result in enforcement action such as regulatory fines, restrictions, or suspension of business or cost of mandatory corrective action, which will have an adverse effect on us from a financial and reputational perspective.

    Response

    We are committed to safeguarding both ourselves and our customers from financial crime.  We continue to invest in our financial crime control framework to ensure compliance with current as well as newly issued legal and regulatory requirements. We have invested in an ongoing financial crime change capability to deliver these improvements as well as support with the embedding of previously implemented controls. In 2023, this saw us deliver an ongoing due diligence capability.

     

    We continue to identify emerging trends and typologies through conducting horizon scanning activity, through information obtained from investigative and intelligence teams and through attending key industry forums (or associations) such as those hosted by UK Finance. As required, we continue to update our control framework to ensure emerging risks are identified and mitigated.

    Outlook

     Recognising the evolving landscape of financial crime risk against the backdrop of increasing regulatory focus, we continue to invest in our financial crime control environment to prevent financial crime and remain aligned to our legal and regulatory requirements. The FCA is currently undertaking enquiries regarding our financial crime systems and controls. We continue to engage and co-operate fully with the FCA in relation to these matters, and the FCA’s enquiries remain ongoing.

     

     

     

     

     

    Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

    For the year ended 31 December 2023

     

     

     

    Years ended 31 December

     

    Notes

    2023

     £’million

    2022

     £’million

    Interest income

    2

    855.7

     563.7

    Interest expense

    2

    (443.8)

     (159.6)

    Net interest income

     

    411.9

     404.1

    Fee and commission income

    3

    95.0

     84.4

    Fee and commission expense

    3

    (4.6)

     (2.6)

    Net fee and commission income

     

    90.4

     81.8

    Net gains on sale of assets

     

    2.7

     

    Other income

     

    143.9

     37.6

    Total income

     

    648.9

     523.5

    General operating expenses

    4

    (502.9)

     (467.6)

    Depreciation and amortisation

    9, 10

    (77.7)

     (77.0)

    Impairment and write-offs of property, plant, equipment and intangible assets

    9, 10

    (4.6)

     (9.7)

    Total operating expenses

     

    (585.2)

     (554.3)

    Expected credit loss expense

    12

    (33.2)

     (39.9)

    Profit/(loss) before tax

     

    30.5

     (70.7)

    Taxation

    5

    (1.0)

     (2.0)

    Profit/(loss) for the year

     

    29.5

     (72.7)

    Other comprehensive income/(expense) for the year

     

     

     

    Items which will be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:

     

     

     

    Movement in respect of investment securities held at FVOCI (net of tax):

     

     

     

    • changes in fair value

     

    2.4

     (7.6)

    Total other comprehensive income/(expense)

     

    2.4

     (7.6)

    Total comprehensive profit/(loss) for the year

     

    31.9

     (80.3)

    Earnings per share

     

     

     

    Basic (pence)

    15

    13.8

     (42.2)

    Diluted (pence)

    15

    13.4

     (42.2)

     

     

    Consolidated balance sheet

    As at 31 December 2023

     

     

    Years ended 31 December

     

    Notes

    2023

     £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Cash and balances with the Bank of England

     

                 3,891

      1,956

    Loans and advances to customers

    7

               12,297

      13,102

    Investment securities held at fair value through other comprehensive income

    8

                    476

      571

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

    8

                 4,403

      5,343

    Financial assets held at fair value through profit and loss

     

                        

      1

    Derivative financial assets

     

                      36

      23

    Property, plant and equipment

    9

                    723

      748

    Intangible assets

    10

                    193

      216

    Prepayments and accrued income

     

                    118

      85

    Assets classified as held for sale

     

                        

      1

    Other assets

     

                    108

      73

    Total assets

     

               22,245

      22,119

    Deposits from customers

     

               15,623

      16,014

    Deposits from central banks

     

                 3,050

      3,800

    Debt securities

     

                    694

      571

    Repurchase agreements

     

                 1,191

      238

    Derivative financial liabilities

     

      

      26

    Lease liabilities

    11

                    234

      248

    Deferred grants

     

                      16

      17

    Provisions

     

                      23

      7

    Deferred tax liability

    5

                      13

      12

    Other liabilities

     

                    267

      230

    Total liabilities

     

               21,111

      21,163

    Called-up share capital

     

      

     

    Share premium

     

                    144

    1,964

    Retained earnings

     

                    978

     (1,015)

    Other reserves

     

                      12

    7

    Total equity

     

                 1,134

    956

    Total equity and liabilities

     

               22,245

    22,119

     

    Consolidated statements of changes in equity

    For the year ended 31 December 2023

     

     

    Called-up

    share

    capital

    £’million

    Share

    premium

    £’million

    Merger

    reserve

    £’million

    Retained

    earnings

    £’million

    FVOCI

    reserve

    £’million

    Share

    option

    reserve

    £’million

    Total

    equity

    £’million

    Balance as at 1 January 2023

    1,964

    (1,015)

    (13)

    20

    956

    Profit for the year

    29

    29

    Other comprehensive income (net of tax) relating to investment securities held at FVOCI

    2

    2

    Total comprehensive income

    29

    2

    31

    Net share option movements

    3

    3

    Cancellation of Metro Bank PLC share capital and share premium

    (1,964)

    1,964

    Issuance of Metro Bank Holdings PLC share capital

    965

    (965)

    Bonus issuance

    965

    (965)

    -

    Capital reduction of Metro Bank Holdings PLC share capital

    (965)

    965

    Shares issued

    150

    150

    Cost of shares issued

    (6)

    (6)

    Balance as at 31 December 2023

    144

    978

    (11)

    23

    1,134

    Balance as at 1 January 2022

    1,964

    (942)

    (5)

    18

    1,035

    Loss for the year

    (73)

    (73)

    Other comprehensive expense (net of tax) relating to investment securities held at FVOCI

    (8)

    (8)

    Total comprehensive loss

    (73)

    (8)

    (81)

    Net share option movements

    2

    2

    Balance as at 31 December 2022

    1,964

    (1,015)

    (13)

    20

    956

     

    Consolidated cash flow statement

    For the year ended 31 December 2023

     

     

     

    Years ended 31 December

     

    Notes

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Reconciliation of loss before tax to net cash flows from operating activities:

     

     

     

    Profit/(loss) before tax

     

    31

    (71)

    Adjustments for non-cash items

    16

    (376)

    (273)

    Interest received

     

    834

    553

    Interest paid

     

    (370)

    (124)

    Changes in other operating assets

     

    744

    (852)

    Changes in other operating liabilities

     

    (235)

    (418)

    Net cash inflows/(outflows) from operating activities

     

    628

    (1,185)

    Cash flows from investing activities

     

     

     

    Sales, redemptions and paydowns of investment securities

     

    1,870

    857

    Purchase of investment securities

     

    (816)

    (1,206)

    Purchase of property, plant and equipment

    9

    (12)

    (29)

    Purchase and development of intangible assets

    10

    (26)

    (24)

    Net cash inflows/(outflows) from investing activities

     

    1,016

    (402)

    Cash flows from financing activities

     

     

     

    Repayment of capital elements of leases

    11

    (23)

    (25)

    Issuance of new shares

     

    150

    Cost of share issuance

     

    (6)

    Issuance of debt securities

     

    175

    Cost of debt issuance

     

    (5)

    Net cash inflows/(outflows) from financing activities

     

    291

    (25)

    Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

     

    1,935

    (1,612)

    Cash and cash equivalents at start of year

     

    1,956

    3,568

    Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

     

    3,891

    1,956

     

    1. Basis of preparation and significant accounting policies

    Basis of preparation

    Our consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the UK, interpretations issued by the IFRS Interpretations Committee and the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under IFRSs. They were authorised by the Board for issue on 13 March 2024.

     

    Insertion of Metro Bank Holdings PLC

    To meet Bank of England’s resolution requirements, on 19 May 2023, Metro Bank Holdings PLC was inserted as the new ultimate holding company and listed entity of the Group. Prior to this date Metro Bank PLC was both a banking entity and the ultimate parent company of the Group, but has subsequently become a 100% subsidiary of Metro Bank Holdings PLC. In addition to the insertion of a new holding company the Group undertook a reduction in capital to provide the Group with distributable reserves.

    The insertion of Metro Bank Holdings PLC has been treated as a business combination under common control, with the Group controlled by the same parties both before and after the insertion. Combinations under common control are outside the scope of IFRS 3 ‘Business Combinations’ and accordingly, the insertion has not been recognised at fair value and no goodwill or fair value acquisition adjustments have been recognised. The Group has instead applied predecessor accounting approach as this most faithfully represents the substance of the facts and circumstances of the series of transactions that comprise the insertion of Metro Bank Holdings PLC. This is on the basis that those transactions are not designed to deliver economic benefits but represent a re-arrangement of the organisation of business activities across legal entities in order to be compliant with the relevant regulations.

    In applying this approach, we have used the carrying amounts in Metro Bank PLC’s consolidated financial statements at the date of transfer to determine the value of the assets and liabilities transferred. These financial statements are therefore prepared as if Metro Bank Holdings PLC had been the parent company throughout the current and prior years, to treat the new structure as if it has always been in place. Hedge accounting continues to be applied to the transferred designated hedge relationships as if they have originally been designated by the Group.

     

    Changes in accounting policy and disclosures

    During the period there have not been any changes in accounting policy or disclosures that have had a material impact on our financial statements.

    2. Net interest income

    Interest income

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Cash and balances held with the Bank of England

    120.9

     33.0

    Loans and advances to customers

    599.9

     462.2

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

    118.6

     62.9

    Investment securities held at FVOCI

    6.8

     4.7

    Interest income calculated using the effective interest rate method

    846.2

    562.8

    Derivatives in hedge relationships

    9.5

    0.9

    Total interest income

    855.7

    563.7

     

    Interest expense

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Deposits from customers

    147.8

     32.9

    Deposits from central banks

    161.3

     55.5

    Debt securities

    55.7

     48.7

    Lease liabilities

    13.1

     14.4

    Repurchase agreements

    50.1

     3.4

    Interest expense calculated using the effective interest rate method

    428.0

    154.9

    Derivatives in hedge relationships

    15.8

    4.7

    Total interest expense

    443.8

    159.6

     

    3. Net fee and commission income

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Service charges and other fee income

    36.8

    30.9

    Safe deposit box income

    18.2

     16.5

    ATM and interchange fees

    40.0

     37.0

    Fee and commission income

    95.0

    84.4

    Fee and commission expense

    (4.6)

    (2.6)

    Total net fee and commission income

    90.4

     81.8

     

    4. General operating expenses

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    People costs

    241.2

    236.6

    Information technology costs

    59.7

     62.2

    Occupancy costs

    31.7

     30.8

    Money transmission and other banking-related costs

    49.2

     48.7

    Transformation costs

    20.2

     3.3

    Remediation costs

     5.3

    Capability and Innovation Fund costs

    2.4

     1.3

    Legal and regulatory fees

    7.0

     7.0

    Professional fees

    23.2

     38.4

    Printing, postage and stationery costs

    7.2

     6.2

    Travel costs

    1.5

     1.6

    Marketing costs

    7.7

     5.0

    Costs associated with capital raise

    26.0

     

    Holding company insertion costs

    1.8

     1.8

    Other

    24.1

     19.4

    Total general operating expenses

    502.9

     467.6

     

    5. Taxation

    Tax expense

     

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Current tax

     

     

    Current tax

    (0.1)

     

    Total current tax expense

    (0.1)

    Deferred tax

     

     

    Origination and reversal of temporary differences

    (0.5)

     (1.5)

    Effect of changes in tax rates

    (0.4)

     (0.7)

    Adjustment in respect of prior years

     0.2

    Total deferred tax expense

    (0.9)

     (2.0)

    Total tax expense

    (1.0)

     (2.0)

     

    Reconciliation of the total tax expense

     

     

    2023

     £’million

    Effective

    tax rate

    %

    2022

     £’million

    Effective

    tax rate

    %

    Accounting profit/(loss) before tax

    30.5

     

     (70.7)

     

    Tax expense at statutory tax rate of 23.5% (2022: 19%)

    (7.2)

    23.5%

     13.4

    19.0%

    Tax effects of:

     

     

     

     

    Non-deductible expenses – depreciation on non-qualifying fixed assets

    (2.5)

    8.3%

     (2.5)

     (3.5%)

    Non-deductible expenses – investment property impairment

     (0.1)

     (0.1%)

    Non-deductible expenses – remediation

     (0.6)

     (0.8%)

    Non-deductible expenses – other

    (0.8)

    2.6%

     (0.4)

     (0.6%)

    Impact of intangible asset write-off on research and development deferred tax liability

    0.1

    (0.3%)

     0.3

     0.4%

    Share-based payments

    (1.2)

    3.9%

     0.1

     0.1%

    Adjustment in respect of prior years

     0.2

     0.2%

    Current year losses for which no deferred tax asset has been recognised

    (15.4)

    50.5%

     (11.7)

     (16.5%)

    Losses offset against current year profits

    1.1

    (3.6%)

    Movement in recognised deferred tax asset for unused tax losses

    1.8

    (5.9%)

    Effect of changes in tax rates

    (0.4)

    1.3%

     (0.7)

     (1.0%)

    Income tax not taxable

    23.5

    (77.0%)

    Tax expense reported in the consolidated income statement

    (1.0)

    3.3%

     (2.0)

     (2.8%)

     

    Deferred tax assets

     

    31 December 2023

     

    Unused

    tax losses

    £’million

    Investment

    securities

    and

    impairments

    £’million

    Share-

    based

    payments

    £’million

    Property,

    plant and

    equipment

    £’million

    Intangible

    assets

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Deferred tax assets

    14

    2

    1

     

     

    17

    Deferred tax liabilities

     

    4

     

    (29)

    (5)

    (30)

    Deferred tax liabilities (net)

    14

    6

    1

    (29)

    (5)

    (13)

    1 January 2023

    12

    7

    1

    (26)

    (6)

    (12)

    Income statement

    2

    (1)

    (3)

    1

    (1)

    31 December 2023

    14

    6

    1

    (29)

    (5)

    (13)

     

    31 December 2022

     

    Unused

    tax losses

    £’million

    Investment

    securities

    and

    impairments

    £’million

    Share-

    based

    payments

    £’million

    Property,

    plant and

    equipment

    £’million

    Intangible

    assets

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Deferred tax assets

     12

     3

     1

     

     

     16

    Deferred tax liabilities

     

     4

     

     (26)

     (6)

     (28)

    Deferred tax liabilities (net)

     12

     7

     1

     (26)

     (6)

     (12)

    1 January 2022

     13

     5

     

     (23)

     (7)

     (12)

    Income statement

     (1)

     

     1

     (3)

     1

     (2)

    Other comprehensive income

     

     2

     

     

     

     2

    31 December 2022

     12

     7

     1

     (26)

     (6)

     (12)

     

    Unrecognised deferred tax assets

    We have total unused tax losses of £912 million for which a deferred tax asset of £214 million has not been recognised. The impact of recognising the deferred tax asset in the future would be material.

    Although there is an expectation for future profits in the near future, as we have a recent history of operating losses for tax purposes, we have taken the decision not to recognise a deferred tax asset in respect of these losses at 31 December 2023. We will continue to reassess this decision as we move into 2024.

    6. Financial instruments

    Our financial instruments primarily comprise customer deposits, loans and advances to customers and investment securities, all of which arise as a result of our normal operations.

    The main financial risks arising from our financial instruments are credit risk, liquidity risk and market risks (price and interest rate risk).

    The financial instruments we hold are simple in nature and we do not consider that we have made any significant or material judgements relating to the classification and measurement of financial instruments under IFRS 9.

    Cash and balances with the Bank of England, trade and other receivables, trade and other payables and other assets and liabilities which meet the definition of financial instruments are not included in the following tables.

    Classification of financial instruments

     

    31 December 2023

     

    Fair value

    through

    profit and

    loss

    £’million

    FVOCI

    £’million

    Amortised

    cost

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Assets

     

     

     

     

    Loans and advances to customers

    12,297

    12,297

    Investment securities

    476

    4,403

    4,879

    Derivative financial assets

    36

    36

    Liabilities

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers

    15,623

    15,623

    Deposits from central bank

    3,050

    3,050

    Debt securities

    694

    694

    Repurchase agreements

    1,191

    1,191

     

     

    31 December 2022

     

    Fair value

    through

    profit

    and loss

    £’million

    FVOCI

    £’million

    Amortised

    cost

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Assets

     

     

     

     

    Loans and advances to customers

    13,102

    13,102

    Investment securities

     571

     5,343

     5,914

    Financial assets held as fair value through profit and loss

    1

    1

    Derivative financial assets

    23

    23

    Liabilities

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers

    16,014

    16,014

    Deposits from central bank

    3,800

    3,800

    Debt securities

    571

    571

    Derivative financial liabilities

     26

    26

    Repurchase agreements

    238

    238

     

     

    7. Loans and advances to customers

     

     

    31 December 2023

    31 December 2022

     

    Gross

    carrying

    amount

    £’million

    ECL

    allowance

    £’million

    Net

    carrying

     amount

    £’million

    Gross

    carrying

    amount

     £’million

    ECL

    allowance

    £’million

    Net

    carrying

    amount

    £’million

    Consumer lending

    1,297

    (108)

    1,189

     1,480

     (75)

     1,405

    Retail mortgages

    7,817

    (19)

    7,798

     7,649

     (20)

     7,629

    Commercial lending

    3,382

    (72)

    3,310

    4,160

    (92)

    4,068

    Total loans and advances to customers

    12,496

    (199)

    12,297

     13,289

     (187)

     13,102

     

    Gross loans and advances by product category

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Overdrafts

    40

     60

    Credit cards

    28

     19

    Term loans

    1,219

     1,401

    Consumer auto-finance

    10

    Total consumer lending

    1,297

     1,480

    Residential owner occupied

    5,851

     5,507

    Retail buy-to-let

    1,966

     2,142

    Total retail mortgages

    7,817

     7,649

    Total retail lending

    9,114

     9,129

    Professional buy-to-let

    465

     731

    Bounce back loans

    524

     801

    Coronavirus business interruption loans

    86

     127

    Recovery loan scheme1

    328

     385

    Other term loans

    1,341

     1,578

    Commercial term loans

    2,744

     3,622

    Overdrafts and revolving credit facilities

    172

     122

    Credit cards

    4

     4

    Asset and invoice finance

    462

     412

    Total commercial lending

    3,382

     4,160

    Gross loans and advances to customers

    12,496

     13,289

    Amounts include:

     

     

    Repayable at short notice

     244

     156


    Recovery loan scheme includes £70 million acquired from third parties under forward flow arrangements (31 December 2022: £97 million). The loans are held in a trust arrangement in which we hold 99% of the beneficial interest, with the issuer retaining the remaining 1% (the trust retains the legal title loans).

     

    8. Investment securities

     

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Investment securities held at FVOCI

    476

    571

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

                 4,403

     5,343

    Total investment securities

                 4,879

     5,914

     

     

    Investment securities held at FVOCI

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Sovereign bonds

                        220

     215

    Residential mortgage-backed securities

                              

     38

    Covered bonds

                        112

     152

    Multi-lateral development bank bonds

                        144

     166

    Total investment securities held at FVOCI

                        476

     571

     

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Sovereign bonds

                        938

     1,717

    Residential mortgage-backed securities

                        954

     1,095

    Covered bonds

                        594

     542

    Multi-lateral development bank bonds

                     1,729

     1,821

    Asset backed securities

                        188

     168

    Total investment securities held at amortised cost

                     4,403

     5,343

     

    9. Property, plant and equipment

     

     

    Investment

    property

    £’million

    Leasehold

    improvements

    £’million

    Freehold

    land and

    buildings

    £’million

    Fixtures,

    fittings and

    equipment

    £’million

    IT Hardware

    £’million

    Right-of-use

    assets

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Cost

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2023

    12

    261

    372

    22

    8

    283

    958

    Additions

    9

    1

    2

    12

    Disposals

    (4)

    (4)

    Transfers

    (5)

    5

    31 December 2023

    12

    256

    386

    23

    10

    279

    966

    Accumulated depreciation

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2023

    8

    69

    34

    20

    2

    77

    210

    Depreciation charge

    13

    5

    1

    2

    13

    34

    Disposals

    (1)

    (1)

    Transfers

    (3)

    3

    31 December 2023

    8

    79

    42

    21

    4

    89

    243

    Net book value

    4

    177

    344

    2

    6

    190

    723

     

     

     

    Investment

    property

    £’million

    Leasehold

    improvements

    £’million

    Freehold

    land and

    buildings

    £’million

    Fixtures,

    fittings and

    equipment

    £’million

    IT Hardware

    £’million

    Right-of-use

    assets

    £’million

    Total

    £’million

    Cost

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2022

    18

    280

    341

    24

    1

    295

    959

    Additions

    22

    7

    1

    30

    Disposals

    (13)

    (13)

    Write-offs

    (10)

    (2)

    (12)

    Moved to held for sale

    (6)

    (6)

    Transfers

    (9)

    9

    31 December 2022

    12

    261

    372

    22

    8

    283

    958

    Accumulated depreciation

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2022

    12

    68

    28

    19

    67

    194

    Depreciation charge

    12

    5

    3

    2

    13

    35

    Impairments

    1

    1

    Disposals

    (3)

    (3)

    Write-offs

    (10)

    (2)

    (12)

    Moved to held for sale

    (5)

    (5)

    Transfers

    (1)

    1

    31 December 2022

    8

    69

    34

    20

    2

    77

    210

    Net book value

    4

    192

    338

    2

    6

    206

    748

     

    10. Intangible assets

     

    Goodwill

    £’million

    Brands

     £’million

    Software

     £’million

    Total

     £’million

    Cost

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2023

    10

    2

    338

    350

    Additions

    26

    26

    Write-offs

    (9)

    (9)

    31 December 2023

    10

    2

    355

    367

    Accumulated amortisation

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2023

    134

    134

    Amortisation charge

    1

    43

    44

    Write-offs

    (4)

    (4)

    31 December 2023

    1

    173

    174

    Net book value

    10

    1

    182

    193

     

     

    Goodwill

    £’million

    Brands

     £’million

    Software

     £’million

    Total

     £’million

    Cost

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2022

     10

     2

     336

     348

    Additions

     

     

     24

     24

    Write-offs

     

     

     (22)

     (22)

    31 December 2022

     10

     2

     338

     350

    Accumulated amortisation

     

     

     

     

    1 January 2022

     

     

     105

     105

    Amortisation charge

     

     

     42

     42

    Write-offs

     

     

     (13)

     (13)

    31 December 2022

     

     

     134

     134

    Net book value

     10

     2

     204

     216

     

    11. Leases

    Lease liabilities

     

     

    2023

    £’million

     

    2022

    £’million

    1 January

               249

    269

    Additions and modifications

      

    1

    Disposals

                 (5)

     (11)

    Lease payments made

                (23)

     (25)

    Interest on lease liabilities

                 13

     14

    31 December

               234

     248

     

    Minimum lease payments

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Within one year

                 22

     24

    Due in one to five years

                 83

     88

    Due in more than five years

               145

     172

    Total

               250

     284

     

    12. Expected credit losses and credit risk

    Expected credit loss expense

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Retail mortgages1

    (1)

     1

    Consumer lending1

    33

     33

    Commercial lending1

    (20)

     (16)

    Investment securities

    1

    1

    Write-offs and other movements

    20

    21

    Total expected credit loss expense

    33

    40

     

    1. Represents the movement in ECL stock during the year and therefore excludes write-offs which are shown separately.

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Total loans and advances to customers

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2023

    10,849

    2,088

    352

    13,289

     

    (66)

    (51)

    (70)

    (187)

     

    10,783

    2,037

    282

    13,102

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 11

    872

    (857)

    (15)

     

    (15)

    15

     

    857

    (842)

    (15)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

    (581)

    589

    (8)

     

    4

    (6)

    2

     

    (577)

    583

    (6)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

    (170)

    (71)

    241

     

    3

    4

    (7)

     

    (167)

    (67)

    234

    Net remeasurement due to transfers2

     

    12

    (13)

    (38)

    (39)

     

    12

    (13)

    (38)

    (39)

    New lending3

    2,060

    239

    16

    2,315

     

    (18)

    (6)

    (6)

    (30)

     

    2,042

    233

    10

    2,285

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

    (685)

    (172)

    (40)

    (897)

     

     

    (685)

    (172)

    (40)

    (897)

    Derecognitions4

    (1,749)

    (305)

    (157)

    (2,211)

     

    13

    10

    26

    49

     

    (1,736)

    (295)

    (131)

    (2,162)

    Changes to model assumptions5

     

    4

    4

    8

     

    4

    4

    8

    31 December 2023

    10,596

    1,511

    389

    12,496

     

    (63)

    (43)

    (93)

    (199)

     

    10,533

    1,468

    296

    12,297

    Off-balance sheet items

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Commitments and guarantees

     

     

     

     

    718

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    718

     

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2022

     10,071

     1,925

     462

     1

     12,459

     

     (47)

     (49)

     (73)

     

     (169)

     

     10,024

     1,876

     389

     1

     12,290

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

     517

     (504)

     (13)

     

     

     

     (13)

     13

     

     

     

     

     504

     (491)

     (13)

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

     (451)

     458

     (7)

     

     

     

     2

     (2)

     

     

     

     

     (449)

     456

     (7)

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

     (124)

     (73)

     197

     

     

     

     1

     7

     (8)

     

     

     

     (123)

     (66)

     189

     

     

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

     

     

     

     

     

     10

     (10)

     (15)

     

     (15)

     

     10

     (10)

     (15)

     

     (15)

    New lending

     3,157

     742

     31

     

     3,930

     

     (30)

     (15)

     (11)

     

     (56)

     

     3,127

     727

     20

     

     3,874

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

     (604)

     (107)

     (26)

     (1)

     (738)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     (604)

     (107)

     (26)

     (1)

     (738)

    Derecognitions

     (1,717)

     (353)

     (292)

     

     (2,362)

     

     7

     10

     34

     

     51

     

     (1,710)

     (343)

     (258)

     

     (2,311)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

     

     

     

     

     

     4

     (5)

     3

     

     2

     

     4

     (5)

     3

     

     2

    31 December 2022

     10,849

     2,088

     352

     

     13,289

     

     (66)

     (51)

     (70)

     

     (187)

     

     10,783

     2,037

     282

     

     13,102

    Off-balance sheet items

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Commitments and guarantees

     

     

     

     

    1,120

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    1,120

     

    1. Represents stage transfers prior to any ECL remeasurements.
    2. Represents the remeasurement between the 12 month and lifetime ECL due to stage transfer. In addition it includes any ECL change resulting from model assumptions and forward-looking information on these loans.
    3. Represents the increase in balances resulting from loans and advances that have been newly originated, purchased or renewed as well as any ECL that has been recognised in relation to these loans during the year.
    4. Represents the decrease in balances resulting from loans and advances that have been fully repaid, sold or written off.
    5. Represents the change in ECL to those loans that remain within the same stage through the year.

     

    Retail mortgages

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2023

    6,195

    1,343

    111

    7,649

     

    (6)

    (11)

    (3)

    (20)

     

    6,189

    1,332

    108

    7,629

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

    745

    (737)

    (8)

     

    (6)

    6

     

    739

    (731)

    (8)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

    (193)

    199

    (6)

     

     

    (193)

    199

    (6)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

    (38)

    (29)

    67

     

     

    (38)

    (29)

    67

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

    5

    (2)

    (2)

    1

     

    5

    (2)

    (2)

    1

    New lending

    1,195

    147

    1

    1,343

     

    (1)

    (1)

    (2)

     

    1,194

    146

    1

    1,341

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

    (177)

    (18)

    (195)

     

     

    (177)

    (18)

    (195)

    Derecognitions

    (840)

    (121)

    (19)

    (980)

     

    1

    1

    2

     

    (839)

    (120)

    (19)

    (978)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

    1

    (1)

     

    1

    (1)

    -

    31 December 2023

    6,887

    784

    146

    7,817

     

    (7)

    (6)

    (6)

    (19)

     

    6,880

    778

    140

    7,798

     

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2022

     5,546

     1,063

     114

     

     6,723

     

     (2)

     (12)

     (5)

     

     (19)

     

     5,544

     1,051

     109

     

     6,704

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

     293

     (281)

     (12)

     

     

     

     (4)

     4

     

     

     

     

     289

     (277)

     (12)

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

     (199)

     205

     (6)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     (199)

     205

     (6)

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

     (16)

     (22)

     38

     

     

     

     

     1

     (1)

     

     

     

     (16)

     (21)

     37

     

     

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

     

     

     

     

     

     4

     (1)

     

     

     3

     

     4

     (1)

     

     

     3

    New lending

     1,666

     549

     1

     

     2,216

     

     (3)

     (7)

     

     

     (10)

     

     1,663

     542

     1

     

     2,206

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

     (130)

     (22)

     (5)

     

     (157)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     (130)

     (22)

     (5)

     

     (157)

    Derecognitions

     (965)

     (149)

     (19)

     

     (1,133)

     

     (1)

     2

     3

     

     4

     

     (966)

     (147)

     (16)

     

     (1,129)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     2

     

     

     2

     

     

     2

     

     

     2

    31 December 2022

     6,195

     1,343

     111

     

     7,649

     

     (6)

     (11)

     (3)

     

     (20)

     

     6,189

     1,332

     108

     

     7,629

     

    Consumer lending

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2023

    1,180

    250

    50

    1,480

     

    (21)

    (12)

    (42)

    (75)

     

    1,159

    238

    8

    1,405

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

    34

    (34)

     

    (2)

    2

     

    32

    (32)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

    (182)

    182

     

    2

    (2)

     

    (180)

    180

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

    (35)

    (9)

    44

     

    1

    2

    (3)

     

    (34)

    (7)

    41

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

    2

    (6)

    (28)

    (32)

     

    2

    (6)

    (28)

    (32)

    New lending

    311

    78

    7

    396

     

    (9)

    (4)

    (6)

    (19)

     

    302

    74

    1

    377

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

    (217)

    (111)

    (10)

    (338)

     

     

    (217)

    (111)

    (10)

    (338)

    Derecognitions

    (185)

    (42)

    (14)

    (241)

     

    3

    2

    12

    17

     

    (182)

    (40)

    (2)

    (224)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

    (2)

    2

    1

    1

     

    (2)

    2

    1

    1

    31 December 2023

    906

    314

    77

    1,297

     

    (26)

    (16)

    (66)

    (108)

     

    880

    298

    11

    1,189

     

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2022

     786

     82

     21

     1

     890

     

     (18)

     (8)

     (16)

     

     (42)

     

     768

     74

     5

     1

     848

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

     19

     (19)

     

     

     

     

     (2)

     2

     

     

     

     

     17

     (17)

     

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

     (96)

     96

     

     

     

     

     1

     (1)

     

     

     

     

     (95)

     95

     

     

     

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

     (21)

     (6)

     27

     

     

     

     1

     2

     (3)

     

     

     

     (20)

     (4)

     24

     

     

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

     

     

     

     

     

     2

     (3)

     (15)

     

     (16)

     

     2

     (3)

     (15)

     

     (16)

    New lending

     806

     156

     12

     

     974

     

     (15)

     (7)

     (9)

     

     (31)

     

     791

     149

     3

     

     943

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

     (144)

     (41)

     (6)

     (1)

     (192)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     (144)

     (41)

     (6)

     (1)

     (192)

    Derecognitions

     (170)

     (18)

     (4)

     

     (192)

     

     5

     1

     1

     

     7

     

     (165)

     (17)

     (3)

     

     (185)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

     

     

     

     

     

     5

     2

     

     

    7

     

     5

     2

     

     

     7

    31 December 2022

     1,180

     250

     50

     

     1,480

     

     (21)

     (12)

     (42)

     

     (75)

     

     1,159

     238

     8

     

     1,405

     

    Commercial lending

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2023

    3,474

    495

    191

    4,160

     

    (39)

    (28)

    (25)

    (92)

     

    3,435

    467

    166

    4,068

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

    93

    (86)

    (7)

     

    (7)

    7

     

    86

    (79)

    (7)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

    (206)

    208

    (2)

     

    2

    (4)

    2

     

    (204)

    204

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

    (97)

    (33)

    130

     

    2

    2

    (4)

     

    (95)

    (31)

    126

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

    5

    (5)

    (8)

    (8)

     

    5

    (5)

    (8)

    (8)

    New lending

    554

    14

    8

    576

     

    (8)

    (1)

    (9)

     

    546

    13

    8

    567

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

    (291)

    (43)

    (30)

    (364)

     

     

    (291)

    (43)

    (30)

    (364)

    Derecognitions

    (724)

    (142)

    (124)

    (990)

     

    9

    7

    14

    30

     

    (715)

    (135)

    (110)

    (960)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

    6

    1

    7

     

    6

    1

    7

    31 December 2023

    2,803

    413

    166

    3,382

     

    (30)

    (21)

    (21)

    (72)

     

    2,773

    392

    145

    3,310

     

     

    Gross carrying amount

     

    Loss allowance

     

    Net carrying amount

    £’million

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

     

    Stage 1

    Stage 2

    Stage 3

    POCI

    Total

    1 January 2022

    3,739

    780

    327

    4,846

     

    (27)

    (29)

    (52)

    (108)

     

    3,712

    751

    275

    4,738

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 1

    205

    (204)

    (1)

     

    (7)

    7

     

    198

    (197)

    (1)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 2

    (156)

    157

    (1)

     

    1

    (1)

     

    (155)

    156

    (1)

    Transfers to/(from) Stage 3

    (87)

    (45)

    132

    4

    (4)

     

    (87)

    (41)

    128

    Net remeasurement due to transfers

     

    4

    (6)

    -

    (2)

     

    4

    (6)

    (2)

    New lending

    685

    37

    18

    740

     

    (12)

    (1)

    (2)

    (15)

     

    673

    36

    16

    725

    Repayments, additional drawdowns
    and interest accrued

    (330)

    (44)

    (15)

    (389)

     

     

    (330)

    (44)

    (15)

    (389)

    Derecognitions

    (582)

    (186)

    (269)

    (1,037)

     

    3

    7

    30

    40

     

    (579)

    (179)

    (239)

    (997)

    Changes to model assumptions

     

    (1)

    (9)

    3

    (7)

     

    (1)

    (9)

    3

    (7)

    31 December 2022

    3,474

    495

    191

    4,160

     

    (39)

    (28)

    (25)

    (92)

     

    3,435

    467

    166

    4,068

     

    Credit risk exposures

    Retail mortgages

     

     

    31 December 2023

    31 December 2022

    £’million

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Up to date

    6,885

    695

    37

     

    7,617

     6,194

     1,289

     33

     

     7,516

    1 to 29 days past due

    2

    28

    10

     

    40

     1

     21

     7

     

     29

    30 to 89 days past due

     

    61

    16

     

    77

     

     33

     15

     

     48

    90+ days past due

     

     

    83

     

    83

     

     

     56

     

     56

    Gross carrying amount

    6,887

    784

    146

     

    7,817

     6,195

     1,343

     111

     

     7,649

     

    Consumer lending

     

     

    31 December 2023

    31 December 2022

    £’million

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Up to date

    900

    297

    3

    1,200

     1,172

     235

     3

     

     1,410

    1 to 29 days past due

    6

    2

    8

     8

     2

     

     

     10

    30 to 89 days past due

    15

    7

    22

     

     13

     5

     

     18

    90+ days past due

    67

    67

     

     

     42

     

     42

    Gross carrying amount

    906

    314

    77

    1,297

     1,180

     250

     50

     

     1,480

     

    Commercial lending

     

     

    31 December 2023

    31 December 2022

    £’million

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Stage 1

    12-month

    ECL

    Stage 2

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Stage 3

    Lifetime

    ECL

    POCI

    Lifetime

    ECL

    Total

    Up to date

    2,768

    350

    83

    3,201

    3,453

    419

    67

    3,939

    1 to 29 days past due

    35

    24

    5

    64

    21

    36

    5

    62

    30 to 89 days past due

    39

    20

    59

    40

    20

    60

    90+ days past due

    58

    58

    99

    99

    Gross carrying amount

    2,803

    413

    166

    3,382

    3,474

    495

    191

    4,160

     

    Credit risk concentration

     

    Retail mortgage lending by repayment type

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

    Interest only

    1,933

    1,878

    3,811

     

     2,005

     2,047

     4,052

    Capital and repayment

    3,918

    88

    4,006

     

     3,502

     95

     3,597

    Total retail mortgage lending

    5,851

    1,966

    7,817

     

     5,507

     2,142

     7,649

     

    Retail mortgage lending by geographic exposure

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

    Greater London

    2,040

    1,091

    3,131

     

     1,937

     1,201

     3,138

    South east

    1,564

    381

    1,945

     

     1,435

     408

     1,843

    South west

    487

    87

    574

     

     476

     99

     575

    East of England

    590

    150

    740

     

     531

     163

     694

    North west

    268

    65

    333

     

     263

     68

     331

    West Midlands

    240

    71

    311

     

     226

     76

     302

    Yorkshire and the Humber

    185

    32

    217

     

     184

     34

     218

    East Midlands

    180

    53

    233

     

     168

     54

     222

    Wales

    111

    17

    128

     

     109

     18

     127

    North east

    60

    8

    68

     

     63

     10

     73

    Scotland

    126

    11

    137

     

     115

     11

     126

    Total retail mortgage lending

    5,851

    1,966

    7,817

     

     5,507

     2,142

     7,649

     

    Retail mortgage lending by DTV

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

     

    Retail owner occupied

    Retail
    buy-to-let

    Total
    retail mortgages

    Less than 50%

    1,994

    439

    2,433

     

     2,007

     568

     2,575

    51–60%

    1,069

    375

    1,444

     

     961

     463

     1,424

    61–70%

    1,044

    642

    1,686

     

     1,088

     660

     1,748

    71–80%

    1,100

    493

    1,593

     

     990

     434

     1,424

    81–90%

    550

    16

    566

     

     374

     13

     387

    91–100%

    89

    89

     

     87

     

     87

    More than 100%

    5

    1

    6

     

     

     4

     4

    Total retail mortgage lending

    5,851

    1,966

    7,817

     

     5,507

     2,142

     7,649

     

    Commercial lending – excluding BBLS by repayment type

     

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

    Interest only

    438

    222

    660

     

     691

     253

     944

    Capital and repayment

    27

    1,533

    1,560

     

     40

     1,837

     1,877

    Total commercial term loans

    465

    1,755

    2,220

     

     731

     2,090

     2,821

     

    Commercial term lending – excluding BBLS by geographic exposure

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

    Greater London

    298

    880

    1,178

     

     472

     1,052

     1,524

    South east

    88

    340

    428

     

     149

     377

     526

    South west

    15

    111

    126

     

     22

     143

     165

    East of England

    31

    122

    153

     

     45

     147

     192

    North west

    11

    106

    117

     

     13

     153

     166

    West Midlands

    4

    101

    105

     

     8

     112

     120

    Yorkshire and the Humber

    2

    17

    19

     

     3

     23

     26

    East Midlands

    9

    44

    53

     

     12

     43

     55

    Wales

    3

    8

    11

     

     3

     11

     14

    North east

    3

    19

    22

     

     3

     19

     22

    Scotland

    5

    5

     

     

     7

     7

    Northern Ireland

    1

    2

    3

     

     1

     3

     4

    Total commercial term loans

    465

    1,755

    2,220

     

     731

     2,090

     2,821

     

    Commercial term lending – excluding BBLS by sector exposure

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

     

    Professional

    buy-to-let

    Other

    term loans

    Total commercial term loans

    Real estate (rent, buy and sell)

    465

    509

    974

     

     731

     681

     1,412

    Hospitality

    368

    368

     

     

     372

     372

    Health and social work

    298

    298

     

     

     334

     334

    Legal, accountancy and consultancy

    150

    150

     

     

     196

     196

    Retail

    136

    136

     

     

     161

     161

    Real estate (develop)

    14

    14

     

     

     6

     6

    Recreation, cultural and sport

    72

    72

     

     

     87

     87

    Construction

    48

    48

     

     62

     62

    Education

    19

    19

     

     

     17

     17

    Real estate (management of)

    7

    7

     

     

     9

     9

    Investment and unit trusts

    7

    7

     

     

     11

     11

    Other

    127

    127

     

     154

     154

    Total commercial term loans

    465

    1,755

    2,220

     

     731

     2,090

     2,821

     

     

     

    Commercial term lending – excluding BBLS by DTV

     

    31 December 2023
    £’million

     

    31 December 2022
    £’million

     

     Professional

    buy-to-let

     


    Other

    term loans

     


    Total commercial term loans

     

     

     Professional

    buy-to-let

     


    Other

    term loans

     


    Total commercial term loans

     

    Less than 50%

    160

    707

    867

     

     278

     817

     1,095

    51–60%

    59

    319

    378

     

     158

     433

     591

    61–70%

    105

    185

    290

     

     219

     112

     331

    71–80%

    76

    79

    155

     

     62

     76

     138

    81–90%

    60

    21

    81

     

     3

     53

     56

    91–100%

    2

    11

    13

     

     5

     12

     17

    More than 100%

    3

    433

    436

     

     6

     587

     593

    Total commercial term loans

    465

    1,755

    2,220

     

     731

     2,090

     2,821

     

    13. Legal and regulatory matters

    As part of the normal course of business we are subject to legal and regulatory matters. The matters outlined below represent contingent liabilities and as such at the reporting date no provision has been made for any of these cases within the financial statements. This is because, based on the facts currently known, it is not practicable to predict the outcome, if any, of these matters or reliably estimate any financial impact. Their inclusion does not constitute any admission of wrongdoing or legal liability.

     

    Financial Crime

    The FCA is currently undertaking enquiries regarding our financial crime systems and controls. We continue to engage and co-operate fully with the FCA in relation to these matters, and the FCA’s enquiries remain ongoing.

     

    Magic Money Machine litigation

    In 2022 Arkeyo LLC, a software company based in the United States, filed a civil suit with a stated value of over £24 million against us in the English High Court alleging, among other matters, that we infringed their copyright and misappropriated their trade secrets relating to money counting machines (i.e. our Magic Money Machines).

    We believe Arkeyo LLC’s claims are without merit and are vigorously defending the claim.

    14. Fair value of financial instruments

     

    31 December 2023

     

    Carrying

    value

    £’million

    Quoted

    market

    price

    Level 1

    £’million

    Using

    observable

    inputs

    Level 2

    £’million

    With

    significant

    unobservable

    inputs

    Level 3

    £’million

    Total fair

    value

    £’million

    Assets

     

     

     

     

     

    Loans and advances to customers

    12,297

    12,156

    12,156

    Investment securities held at fair value through other comprehensive income

    476

    476

    476

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

    4,403

    3,143

    1,072

    4,215

    Derivative financial assets

    36

    36

    36

    Liabilities

     

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers

    15,623

    15,622

    15,622

    Deposits from central bank

    3,050

    3,050

    3,050

    Debt securities

    694

    585

    585

    Repurchase agreements

    1,191

    1,191

    1,191

     

    31 December 2022

     

    Carrying

    value

    £’million

    Quoted

    market

    price

    Level 1

    £’million

    Using

    observable

    inputs

    Level 2

    £’million

    With

    significant

    unobservable

    inputs

    Level 3

    £’million

    Total fair

    value

    £’million

    Assets

     

     

     

     

     

    Loans and advances to customers

     13,102

     12,321

     12,321

    Investment securities held at fair value through other comprehensive income

     571

     533

     38

     571

    Investment securities held at amortised cost

     5,343

     3,834

     1,135

     40

     5,009

    Financial assets held at fair value through profit and loss

     1

    1

    1

    Derivative financial assets

    23

    23

    23

    Liabilities

     

     

     

     

     

    Deposits from customers

     16,014

     16,004

     16,004

    Deposits from central bank

     3,800

    3,800

    3,800

    Debt securities

     571

    423

    423

    Derivative financial liabilities

     26

    26

    26

    Repurchase agreements

     238

    238

    238

     

    Information on how fair values are calculated are explained below:

    Loans and advances to customers

    Fair value is calculated based on the present value of future principal and interest cash flows, discounted at the market rate of interest at the balance sheet date, adjusted for future credit losses and prepayments, if considered material.

    Investment securities

    The fair value of investment securities is based on either observed market prices for those securities that have an active trading market (fair value Level 1 assets) or using observable inputs (in the case of fair value Level 2 assets).

    Financial assets held at fair value through profit and loss

    The financial assets at fair value through profit and loss relate to the loans and advances previously assumed by the RateSetter provision fund. They are measured at the fair value of the amounts that we expect to recover on these loans.

    Deposits from customers

    Fair values are estimated using discounted cash flows, applying current rates offered for deposits of similar remaining maturities. The fair value of a deposit repayable on demand is approximated by its carrying value.

     

    Debt securities

    Fair values are determined using the quoted market price at the balance sheet date.

    Deposits from central banks/repurchase agreements

    Fair values are estimated using discounted cash flows, applying current rates. Fair values approximate carrying amounts as their balances are either short-dated or are on a variable rate which aligns to the current market rate.

    Derivative financial liabilities

    The fair values of derivatives are obtained from discounted cash flow models as appropriate.

     

    15. Earnings per share

    Basic earnings per share (‘EPS’) is calculated by dividing the (loss)/profit attributable to ordinary equity holders of Metro Bank by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period.

    Diluted EPS has been calculated by dividing the loss attributable to our ordinary equity holders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the year plus the weighted average number of ordinary shares that would be issued on the conversion to shares of options granted to colleagues.

    As we were loss making in the year ended 31 December 2022, the share options would be antidilutive, as they would reduce the loss per share. Therefore, all the outstanding options have been disregarded in the calculation of dilutive EPS for 2022.

    In the year ended 31 December 2023, 6.5 million share options were excluded from the weighted average number of shares due to these being anti-dilutive.

     

     

    2023

    2022

    Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary equity holders (£’million)

    29.5

    (72.7)

    Weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue (thousands)

     

     

    Basic

    214,297

    172,464

    Adjustment for share awards

    6,459

    Diluted

    220,756

    172,464

    Earning per share (pence)

     

     

    Basic

    13.8

    (42.2)

    Diluted

    13.4

    (42.2)

     

    16. Non-cash items

     

    2023

    £’million

    2022

    £’million

    Interest income

                         (856)

     (564)

    Interest expense

                           444

     160

    Depreciation and amortisation

                             78

     77

    Impairment and write-offs of property, plant, equipment and intangible assets

                               5

     10

    Expected credit loss expense

                             33

     40

    Share option charge

                               3

     2

    Grant income recognised in the income statement

                              (2)

     (2)

    Amounts provided for (net of amounts released)

                             16

     4

    Haircut on Tier 2 debt

                         (100)

    Gain on sale of assets

                               3

    Total adjustments for non-cash items

                         (376)

    (273)

    17. Post balance sheet events

    There have been no material post balance sheet events.

    Reconciliation from statutory to underlying results

     

     

     

    Year ended 31 December 2023

    Statutory basis
    £’million

    Impairment and write-off of property, plant, equipment and intangible assets
    £’million

    Net C&I

    costs
    £’million

    Transformation costs
    £’million

    Remediation costs

    £’million

    Holding company insertion costs £’million

    Capital raise and refinancing

    £’million

    Underlying basis

     £’million

     

     

    Net interest income

    411.9

    411.9

     

     

    Net fee and commission income

    90.4

    90.4

     

     

    Net gains on sale of assets

    2.7

    2.7

     

     

    Other income

    143.9

    (2.4)

    (100.0)

    41.5

     

     

    Total income

    648.9

    (2.4)

    (100.0)

    546.5

     

     

    General operating expenses

    (502.9)

    2.4

    20.2

    1.8

    26.0

    (452.5)

     

     

    Depreciation and amortisation

    (77.7)

    (77.7)

     

     

    Impairment and write-offs of PPE and intangible assets

    (4.6)

    4.6

     

     

    Total operating expenses

    (585.2)

    4.6

    2.4

    20.2

    1.8

    26.0

    (530.2)

     

     

    Expected credit loss expense

    (33.2)

    (33.2)

     

     

    Profit/(loss) before tax

    30.5

    4.6

    20.2

    1.8

    (74.0)

    (16.9)

     

     

     

     

    Year ended 31 December 2022

    Statutory basis
    £’million

    Impairment and write-off of property, plant, equipment and intangible assets
    £’million

    Net C&I

    costs
    £’million

    Transformation costs
    £’million

    Remediation costs

    £’million

    Holding company insertion costs £’million

    Capital raise and refinancing

    £’million

    Underlying basis

     £’million

     

     

    Net interest income

     404.1

     0.1

     404.2

     

     

    Net fee and commission income

     81.8

     81.8

     

     

    Net gains on sale of assets

    –-

     

     

    Other income

     37.6

     (1.5)

     36.1

     

     

    Total income

     523.5

     (1.4)

     522.1

     

     

    General operating expenses

     (467.6)

     1.4

     3.3

     5.3

     1.8

     (455.8)

     

     

    Depreciation and amortisation

     (77.0)

     (77.0)

     

     

    Impairment and write-offs of PPE and intangible assets

     (9.7)

     9.7

     

     

     

    Total operating expenses

     (554.3)

     9.7

     1.4

     3.3

     5.3

     1.8

     

     (532.8)

     

     

    Expected credit loss expense

     (39.9)

     (39.9)

     

     

    Loss before tax

     (70.7)

     9.7

     3.3

     5.3

     1.8

     (50.6)

     

     

     

    Capital information

    Key metrics

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Available capital

     

     

    CET1 capital

                        985

                    819

    Tier 1 capital

                        985

                    819

    Total capital

                     1,135

                  1,069

    Total capital + MREL

                     1,655

                  1,416

    Risk-weighted assets

     

     

    Total risk-weighted assets

                     7,533

                  7,990

     

     

     

    Risk-based capital ratios as % of risk-weighted assets

     

     

    CET1 ratio

    13.1%

    10.3%

    Tier 1 ratio

    13.1%

    10.3%

    Total capital ratio

    15.1%

    13.4%

    MREL ratio

    22.0%

    17.7%

    Additional CET1 buffer requirements as % of risk-weighted assets

     

     

    Capital conservation buffer requirement

    2.5%

    2.5%

    Countercyclical buffer requirement

    2.0%

    1.0%

    Total of bank CET1 specific buffer requirements

    4.5%

    3.5%

     

     

     

    Leverage ratio

     

     

    UK leverage ratio

    5.3%

    4.2%

     

     

     

    Liquidity coverage ratio

     

     

    Liquidity coverage ratio

    332%

    213%

     

    Leverage ratio

    The table below shows our Tier 1 Capital and Total Leverage Exposure that are used to derive the UK leverage ratio. The UK leverage ratio is the ratio of Tier 1 Capital to Total Leverage exposure.

     

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Common equity tier 1 capital

                        985

                    819

    Additional tier 1 capital

     

    Tier 1 capital

                        985

                    819

     

     

     

    CRD IV leverage exposure

                   18,420

    19,348

     

     

     

    UK leverage ratio

    5.3%

    4.2%

     

    Liquidity coverage ratio

    The table below shows the bank's Total HQLA and total net cash outflow that are used to derive the liquidity coverage ratio.

     

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Total high-quality liquid assets

                     6,656

    4,976

    Total net cash outflow

                     2,002

    2,342

    Liquidity coverage ratio

    332%

    213%

     

    Overview of risk-weighted assets and capital requirements

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

     

    Pillar 1 capital required

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

    Credit risk (excluding counterparty credit risk (CCR))

            6,804

    7,237

               544

    Of which the standardised approach

            6,804

    7,237

               544

    CCR

              26

    9

                   2

    Of which mark to market

              26

    7

                   2

    Of which CVA

                0

    2

                 -  

    Market risk

                   

                 -  

    Operational risk

               703

    739

                 56

    Of which basic indicator approach

                   

    739

                 

    Of which standardised indicator approach

                 703  

     

    Amounts below the thresholds for deduction (subject to 250% risk weight)

                  

    5

     

    Total

    7,533 

    7,990

    602

     

    Credit risk exposures by exposure class

    Our Pillar 1 capital requirement for credit risk is set out in the table below.

     

    31 December 2023

    £’million

     

    31 December 2022

    £’million

     

    Exposure value

    Capital required

     

    Exposure value

    Capital required

    Central governments or central banks

    5,997

    1

     

    5,326

    Exposures to multilateral development banks

    1,614

     

    1,663

    Institutions

    9

     

    10

    Corporates

    702

    49

     

    703

    50

    Retail

    1,639

    93

     

    1,870

    107

    Secured by mortgages on immovable property

    9,061

    291

     

    9,424

    308

    Covered bonds

    706

    6

     

    693

    6

    Claims on institutions and corporates with a short-term credit assessment

    133

    3

     

    97

    3

    Securitisation position

    1,075

    10

     

    1,223

    13

    Exposure at default

    210

    17

     

    179

    15

    Collective investment undertakings

    58

     

    59

     Items associated with particularly high risk

    12

    1

     

    18

    2

    Other exposures

    973

    72

     

    1,021

    75

    Total

    22,189

    544

     

    22,286

    579

     

    Capital resources

    The table below summarises the composition of regulatory capital on a proforma basis, including the profit for the year1.

     

     

     

     

    31 December

    2023

    £’million

     

    31 December

    2022

    £’million

    Share capital and premium

     

               144

    1,964

    Retained earnings

     

               949

    (942)

    Profit/(loss) for the year1

     

                 29

    (73)

    Available for sale reserve

     

                 -  

    (13)

    Other reserves

     

                 12

    20

    Intangible assets

     

    (193)

    (216)

    Other regulatory adjustments

     

                 44

    79

    CET 1 capital

     

               985

    819

     

     

     

     

    Tier 1 capital

     

               985

    819

    Tier 2 capital

     

               150

    250

    Total capital resources

     

            1,135

    1,069

     

     

     

     

    MREL eligible debt

     

               520

    347

    TCR + MREL

     

            1,655

    1,416

     

    1. The profit for the year is included to show our capital resources on a proforma basis as at 31 December 2023. The profit will only be eligible to be included in our capital resources following the completion of our audit and publication of our Annual Report and accounts.

     

    Our capital adequacy was in excess of the minimum required by the regulators at all times.

     

     



    Dissemination of a Regulatory Announcement, transmitted by EQS Group.
    The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.


    ISIN: GB00BMX3W479
    Category Code: FR
    TIDM: MTRO
    LEI Code: 984500CDDEAD6C2EDQ64
    OAM Categories: 1.1. Annual financial and audit reports
    Sequence No.: 309258
    EQS News ID: 1857243

     
    End of Announcement EQS News Service

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    Metro Bank Holdings PLC Results for year ended 31 December 2023 Metro Bank Holdings PLC (MTRO) Metro Bank Holdings PLC: Results for year ended 31 December 2023 13-March-2024 / 07:00 GMT/BST Metro Bank Holdings plc Full year results Trading update 2023 13 March 2024   Metro Bank Holdings plc (LSE: MTRO LN) …

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