Lloyds Bank plc: 2024 Half-Year Results
LONDON, July 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --
Member of the Lloyds Banking Group
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CONTENTS |
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Financial review |
1 |
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Risk
management |
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Principal risks and
uncertainties |
3 |
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Capital risk |
4 |
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Credit risk |
8 |
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Liquidity risk |
18 |
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Statutory
information |
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Condensed consolidated
half-year financial statements (unaudited) |
21 |
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Condensed consolidated income
statement (unaudited) |
22 |
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Condensed consolidated
statement of comprehensive income (unaudited) |
23 |
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Condensed consolidated balance
sheet (unaudited) |
24 |
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Condensed consolidated
statement of changes in equity (unaudited) |
25 |
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Condensed consolidated cash
flow statement (unaudited) |
28 |
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Notes to the condensed
consolidated half-year financial statements (unaudited) |
29 |
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Statement of directors'
responsibilities |
58 |
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Independent review report to
Lloyds Bank plc |
59 |
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Forward looking
statements |
60 |
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Contacts |
61 |
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Principal activities
Lloyds Bank plc (the Bank) and its subsidiary undertakings (the
Group) provide a wide range of banking and financial services
through branches and offices in the UK and in certain overseas
locations. The Group's revenue is earned through interest and fees
on a broad range of financial services products including current
accounts, savings, mortgages, credit cards, motor finance and
unsecured loans to personal and business banking customers; and
lending, transactional banking, working capital management and risk
management services to commercial customers.
Income statement
The Group's profit before tax for the first half of 2024 was
£2,818 million, 20 per cent lower than the same period in 2023.
This was due to lower net interest income and higher operating
expenses, partly offset by a lower impairment charge. Profit after
tax was £2,007 million (half-year to 30 June 2023: £2,590
million).
Total income for the period was £8,376 million, a decrease of 7
per cent on the same period in 2023, primarily reflecting lower net
interest income. Net interest income of £6,222 million was down 11
per cent compared to the first half of 2023, driven by lower
margins. The lower margin reflects anticipated headwinds due to
deposit churn and asset margin compression, particularly in the
mortgage book as it refinances in a lower margin environment. These
factors were partially offset by benefits from higher structural
hedge earnings as it refinances in the higher rate environment.
Other income amounted to £2,154 million in the half-year to 30
June 2024 compared to £2,031 million in the same period in
2023, with improved UK Motor Finance performance, including growth
following the acquisition of Tusker in the first half of 2023 and
continued Commercial Banking growth partially offset by the impact
of changes to commission arrangements with Scottish Widows.
Operating expenses of £5,436 million were 13 per cent higher
than in the prior year. This reflects higher operating lease
depreciation, due to fleet size growth, the depreciation of higher
value vehicles and declines in used car prices (particularly in
electric vehicles), alongside planned strategic investment,
elevated severance charges and continued inflationary pressure. It
also includes c.£100 million relating to the sector-wide change in
the charging approach for the Bank of England Levy during the first
quarter.
In the first half of 2024 the Group recognised remediation costs
of £90 million (half-year to 30 June 2023: £62 million),
largely in relation to pre-existing programmes. There have been no
further charges relating to the potential impact of the FCA review
into historical motor finance commission arrangements. An update
from the FCA is currently expected in September.
Impairment was a net charge of £122 million compared to a £681
million charge in the half-year to 30 June 2023. This decrease
reflects a larger credit from improvements to the Group's economic
outlook in the period compared to the prior year (notably in HPI)
and changes in methodology. In addition the reduction also includes
the release of judgemental adjustments for inflation and interest
rate risks and stronger performance in UK mortgages resulting in
lower charges. Commercial Banking has benefited from a one-off
release from loss rates used in the model, while observing a low
charge on new and existing Stage 3 clients.
The Group recognised a tax expense of £811 million in the
period, compared to £940 million in the first half of 2023,
reflecting decreased profits.
FINANCIAL REVIEW (continued)
Balance sheet
Total assets were £2,957 million higher at £608,362 million at
30 June 2024 compared to £605,405 million at 31 December 2023.
Financial assets at amortised cost were £9,987 million higher at
£498,058 million compared to £488,071 million at
31 December 2023 with increases in reverse repurchase
agreements of £9,522 million and loans and advances to customers of
£2,186 million, partly offset by a reduction in loans and advances
to banks of £1,743 million. The increase in reverse repurchase
agreements and the decrease in cash and balances at central banks
by £8,755 million to £49,154 million reflected a change in the
mix of liquidity holdings. The increase in loans and advances to
customers included growth across most Retail product areas, in
particular UK Retail unsecured loans, due to balance growth and
lower repayments following a securitisation in the fourth quarter
of 2023. Other assets increased by £2,021 million to £13,959
million, driven by higher settlement balances and higher operating
lease assets reflecting continued motor finance growth.
Total liabilities were £3,749 million higher at £568,723 million
compared to £564,974 million at 31 December 2023. Customer deposits
at £446,165 million increased by £4,212 million since the end of
2023, driven by inflows to limited withdrawal and fixed savings
products, partly offset by decreases in current account balances.
Debt securities in issue at amortised cost decreased by £3,724
million to £48,725 million at 30 June 2024. Amounts due to fellow
Lloyds Banking Group undertakings increased by £2,236 million to
£5,168 million at 30 June 2024. Other liabilities increased by
£2,208 million to £8,468 million, driven by higher settlement
balances.
Total equity was £39,639 million at 30 June 2024 compared to
£40,431 million at 31 December 2023. The reduction in total equity
was driven by an interim dividend of £2.1 billion, pension
revaluations and cash flow hedging reserve movements, partly offset
by the profit for the period.
Capital
The Group's common equity tier 1 (CET1) capital ratio reduced to
13.6 per cent at 30 June 2024 (31 December 2023: 14.4 per cent).
This largely reflected profit for the period, offset by the payment
of ordinary dividends during the first half of the year, the
accrual for foreseeable ordinary dividends and an increase in
risk-weighted assets.
Risk-weighted assets have increased by £1,389 million to
£183,949 million at 30 June 2024 (31 December 2023:
£182,560 million). This incorporates the impact of Retail
lending growth, offset by optimisation including capital efficient
securitisation activity, in addition to other movements.
RISK MANAGEMENT |
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PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES |
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The most important risks faced by the Group are detailed below.
The external risks faced by the Group may impact the success of
delivering against the Group's long-term strategic objectives. They
include, but are not limited to, macroeconomic uncertainty and
elevated interest rates which are contributing to the cost of
living and associated implications for UK consumers and
businesses.
Asset quality remains strong with resilient credit performance
throughout the period. The Group continues to monitor the impacts
of the economic environment carefully through a suite of early
warning indicators and governance arrangements that ensure risk
mitigating action plans are in place to support customers and
protect the Group's positions.
With respect to conduct risk there have been no further charges
relating to the potential impact of the FCA review into historical
motor finance commission arrangements. An update from the FCA is
currently expected in September.
The Group is transforming its approach to risk management to
support its strategic ambition and purpose of Helping Britain
Prosper. The Group has reviewed its three lines of defence model
and is evolving its accountabilities with enhanced focus on
controls and expertise. This will increase the pace of decision
making, with the intent of improving risk management. The Group has
initially focused on non-financial risks.
The Group has also undertaken a detailed review of its risk
categories and implemented an events-based risk management
framework. This has resulted in a reduction in the number of
principal risk types and the simplification of secondary risk
categories. This change better aligns to the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision's event categories which will benefit the Group
for scenario activities and regulatory reporting.
The Group has 10 principal risks; capital risk, climate risk,
compliance risk (previously regulatory and legal risk), conduct
risk, credit risk, economic crime risk, liquidity risk (previously
liquidity and funding risk), market risk, model risk and
operational risk (operational resilience risk has been removed as a
separate risk category as it relates to many of the principal risk
types).
The below principal risk definitions have changed since the
Group's 2023 annual report and accounts:
Conduct risk - The risk of our Group
activities, behaviours, strategy or business planning, having an
adverse impact on outcomes for customers, undermining the integrity
of the market or distorting competition, which could lead to
regulatory censure, reputational damage or financial loss.
Economic crime risk - The risk that the
Group implements ineffective policies, systems, processes and
controls to prevent, detect and respond to the risk of fraud and/or
financial crime resulting in increased losses, regulatory
censure/fines and/or adverse publicity in the UK or other
jurisdictions in which the Group operates.
Liquidity risk - The risk that the Group
does not have sufficient financial resources to meet its
commitments when they fall due or can only secure them at excessive
cost.
Model risk - The potential for adverse
consequences from model errors or the inappropriate use of modelled
outputs to inform business decisions. Adverse consequences could
lead to a deterioration in the prudential position, non-compliance
with applicable laws and/or regulations, or damage to the Group's
reputation. Model risk can also lead to financial loss, as well as
qualitative limitations such as the imposition of restrictions on
business activities.
Operational risk - The risk of actual or
potential impact to the Group (financial and/or non-financial)
resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people, and
systems or from external events. Resilience is core to the
management of operational risk within Lloyds Banking Group to
ensure that business processes (including those that are
outsourced) can withstand operational risks and can respond to and
meet customer and stakeholder needs when continuity of operations
is compromised.
All other principal risk definitions remain unchanged.
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