BASIS OF PRESENTATION
|
This release covers the results of Lloyds Banking Group plc together with its subsidiaries (the Group) for the year ended 31 December 2014.
|
Statutory basis
Statutory information is set out on pages 67 to 113. However, a number of factors have had a significant effect on the comparability of the Group’s financial position and results. As a result, comparison on a statutory basis of the 2014 results with 2013 is of limited benefit.
|
Underlying basis
In order to present a more meaningful view of business performance, the results are presented on an underlying basis excluding items that in management’s view would distort the comparison of performance between periods. Based on this principle the following items are excluded from underlying profit:
– the amortisation of purchased intangible assets and the unwind of acquisition-related fair value adjustments;
– the effects of certain asset sales, the impact of liability management actions and the volatility relating to the Group’s own debt and hedging arrangements as well as that arising in the insurance businesses and insurance
gross up;
– Simplification costs, TSB build and dual running costs;
– payment protection insurance and other regulatory provisions; and
– certain past service pensions credits or charges in respect of the Group’s defined benefit pension arrangements.
|
Unless otherwise stated, income statement commentaries throughout this document compare the year ended 31 December 2014 to the year ended 31 December 2013, and the balance sheet analysis compares the Group balance sheet as at 31 December 2014 to the Group balance sheet as at 31 December 2013.
Segment information and TSB
The segment results and balance sheet information have been restated to reflect the previously announced changes to the Group operating structure implemented from 1 January 2014. The Group’s underlying profit and statutory results are unchanged as a result of these restatements. The Group’s consolidated results and balance sheet include TSB. Any TSB disclosures in the document are presented on a Lloyds Banking Group basis and may differ to the equivalent figures disclosed in the TSB results release.
|
Page
|
|
Key highlights
|
1
|
Consolidated income statement
|
2
|
Balance sheet and key ratios
|
2
|
Summary consolidated balance sheet
|
3
|
Group Chief Executive’s statement
|
4
|
Chief Financial Officer’s review of financial performance
|
8
|
Underlying basis segmental analysis
|
17
|
Underlying basis quarterly information
|
18
|
Divisional highlights
|
|
Retail
|
19
|
Commercial Banking
|
21
|
Consumer Finance
|
23
|
Insurance
|
25
|
Run-off and Central items
|
28
|
Additional information
|
|
Reconciliation between statutory and underlying basis results
|
29
|
Banking net interest margin
|
30
|
Volatility arising in the insurance businesses
|
30
|
Number of employees (full-time equivalent)
|
32
|
TSB
|
32
|
Remuneration
|
33
|
Risk management
|
34
|
Principal risks and uncertainties
|
35
|
Credit risk portfolio
|
37
|
Funding and liquidity management
|
53
|
Capital management
|
58
|
Statutory information
|
67
|
Primary statements
|
|
Consolidated income statement
|
68
|
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
|
69
|
Consolidated balance sheet
|
70
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
|
72
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
|
74
|
Notes
|
75
|
Contacts
|
114
|
·
|
Group has been reshaped with Run-off assets reduced to £16.9 billion (2013: £33.3 billion) and international presence reduced to six countries from 30 countries in 2010
|
·
|
Strong balance sheet and liquidity position attained with, post dividend, a CET1 ratio of 12.8 per cent, a total capital ratio of 22.0 per cent and a leverage ratio of 4.9 per cent
|
·
|
Cost leadership position achieved with cost:income ratio of 51 per cent
|
·
|
Lending and deposit growth in key customer segments and relationship brands
|
·
|
Strategy updated in October with focus on creating the best customer experience, becoming simpler and more efficient and delivering sustainable growth
|
·
|
£11.9 billion of mortgage lending to over 89,000 first-time buyers and continued growth in SME lending, up 5 per cent
|
·
|
Continued to support our communities with over 2,200 apprenticeship positions and over 940,000 paid volunteer hours
|
·
|
Underlying profit increased 26 per cent to £7.8 billion (2013: £6.2 billion)
|
·
|
Return on risk-weighted assets increased to 3.02 per cent (2013: 2.14 per cent)
|
·
|
Income of £18.4 billion, up 1 per cent excluding St. James’s Place effects in 2013
|
–
|
Net interest income up 8 per cent, driven by margin improvement to 2.45 per cent
|
–
|
Other income down 9 per cent reflecting disposals and a challenging operating environment
|
·
|
Costs down 2 per cent to £9.4 billion (cost base of £9.0 billion excluding TSB)
|
·
|
Impairment charge reduced 60 per cent to £1.2 billion; asset quality ratio improved 33 basis points to 0.24 per cent
|
·
|
£2.2 billion provision for PPI in the year (2013: £3.1 billion) and a £0.9 billion provision for other regulatory items
|
·
|
Statutory profit after tax of £1.5 billion (2013: loss of £0.8 billion)
|
·
|
Tangible net assets per share increased to 54.9p (31 Dec 2013: 48.5p)
|
·
|
2015 full year net interest margin expected to be around 2.55 per cent
|
·
|
2015 full year asset quality ratio expected to be around 30 basis points
|
·
|
Expect other income to be broadly stable in 2015
|
·
|
Targeting cost:income ratio to exit 2017 at around 45 per cent, with reductions in each year
|
·
|
Expect to generate between 1.5 and 2 percentage points of common equity tier 1 per annum (pre dividend)
|
·
|
Expected return on required equity of 13.5-15 per cent by the end of the strategic plan period (2017)
|
|
Dividend
|
·
|
Recommending a dividend of 0.75 pence per share in respect of 2014, amounting to £535 million
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
11,761
|
10,885
|
8
|
|||
Other income
|
6,607
|
7,920
|
(17)
|
|||
Total income
|
18,368
|
18,805
|
(2)
|
|||
Total costs
|
(9,412)
|
(9,635)
|
2
|
|||
Impairment
|
(1,200)
|
(3,004)
|
60
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
7,756
|
6,166
|
26
|
|||
Asset sales and other items
|
(1,719)
|
(280)
|
||||
Simplification and TSB costs
|
(1,524)
|
(1,517)
|
||||
Payment Protection Insurance provision
|
(2,200)
|
(3,050)
|
||||
Other regulatory provisions
|
(925)
|
(405)
|
||||
Other items
|
374
|
(499)
|
||||
Profit before tax – statutory
|
1,762
|
415
|
||||
Taxation
|
(263)
|
(1,217)
|
||||
Profit (loss) for the year
|
1,499
|
(802)
|
||||
Underlying earnings per share1
|
8.1p
|
6.6p
|
1.5p
|
|||
Earnings (loss) per share
|
1.7p
|
(1.2)p
|
2.9p
|
|||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.45%
|
2.12%
|
33bp
|
|||
Cost:income ratio2
|
51.2%
|
52.9%
|
(1.7)pp
|
|||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.24%
|
0.57%
|
(33)bp
|
|||
Return on risk-weighted assets3
|
3.02%
|
2.14%
|
88bp
|
|||
Return on assets3
|
0.92%
|
0.70%
|
22bp
|
|||
Underlying return on required equity4
|
13.6%
|
9.7%
|
3.9pp
|
|||
Statutory return on required equity4
|
3.0%
|
(1.3)%
|
4.3pp
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
%
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers5
|
£478bn
|
£493bn
|
(3)
|
|||
Loans and advances to customers excluding TSB,
Run-off and other5,6
|
£406bn
|
£402bn
|
1
|
|||
Customer deposits7
|
£447bn
|
£436bn
|
2
|
|||
Loan to deposit ratio
|
107%
|
113%
|
(6)pp
|
|||
Total assets
|
£855bn
|
£842bn
|
1
|
|||
Run-off assets
|
£17bn
|
£33bn
|
(49)
|
|||
Wholesale funding
|
£116bn
|
£138bn
|
(15)
|
|||
Common equity tier 1 ratio8,9
|
12.8%
|
10.3%
|
2.5pp
|
|||
Transitional total capital ratio8,9
|
22.0%
|
18.8%
|
3.2pp
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets8,9
|
£240bn
|
£272bn
|
(12)
|
|||
Leverage ratio9,10
|
4.9%
|
3.8%
|
1.1pp
|
|||
Tangible net assets per share
|
54.9p
|
48.5p
|
6.4p
|
1
|
In calculating underlying earnings per share, tax has been assumed at the standard UK corporation tax rate for the year.
|
2
|
Excluding impact of St. James’s Place.
|
3
|
Underlying profit before tax divided by average quarter end risk-weighted and total assets respectively.
|
4
|
See definition on page 13.
|
5
|
Excludes reverse repos of £5.1 billion (31 December 2013: £0.1 billion). Loans and advances comparative restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
6
|
Other includes the specialist mortgage book, Intelligent Finance and Dutch mortgages.
|
7
|
Excludes repos of £nil (31 December 2013: £3.0 billion). Customer deposits comparative restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
8
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
9
|
31 December 2013 comparatives are reported on a pro forma basis that includes the benefit of the sales of Heidelberger Leben, Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and the Group’s 50 per cent stake in Sainsbury’s Bank.
|
10
|
Following PRA guidance, calculated in accordance with the January 2014 revised Basel III leverage ratio framework.
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
|||
Assets
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
||
Cash and balances at central banks
|
50,492
|
49,915
|
||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
151,931
|
142,683
|
||
Derivative financial instruments1
|
36,128
|
30,804
|
||
Loans and receivables:
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers1
|
482,704
|
492,952
|
||
Loans and advances to banks
|
26,155
|
25,365
|
||
Debt securities
|
1,213
|
1,355
|
||
510,072
|
519,672
|
|||
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
56,493
|
43,976
|
||
Other assets
|
49,780
|
55,330
|
||
Total assets
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
Deposits from banks
|
10,887
|
13,982
|
|||||
Customer deposits1
|
447,067
|
439,467
|
|||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
62,102
|
43,625
|
|||||
Derivative financial instruments1
|
33,187
|
27,658
|
|||||
Debt securities in issue
|
76,233
|
87,102
|
|||||
Liabilities arising from insurance and investment contracts
|
114,486
|
110,758
|
|||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
26,042
|
32,312
|
|||||
Other liabilities
|
34,989
|
48,140
|
|||||
Total liabilities
|
804,993
|
803,044
|
|||||
Shareholders’ equity
|
43,335
|
38,989
|
|||||
Other equity instruments
|
5,355
|
−
|
|||||
Non-controlling interests
|
1,213
|
347
|
|||||
Total equity
|
49,903
|
39,336
|
|||||
Total liabilities and equity
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
1
|
See note 1, page 75.
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
11,761
|
10,884
|
8
|
|||
Banking fees and commissions
|
2,775
|
2,987
|
(7)
|
|||
Insurance income
|
1,944
|
2,234
|
(13)
|
|||
Operating lease and other income
|
1,437
|
1,434
|
−
|
|||
Run-off
|
451
|
604
|
(25)
|
|||
Other income
|
6,607
|
7,259
|
(9)
|
|||
Total underlying income
|
18,368
|
18,143
|
1
|
|||
St. James’s Place
|
−
|
662
|
||||
Total income
|
18,368
|
18,805
|
(2)
|
|||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.45%
|
2.12%
|
33bp
|
|||
Banking net interest margin excluding TSB
|
2.40%
|
2.10%
|
30bp
|
|||
Average interest-earning banking assets
|
£483.7bn
|
£510.9bn
|
(5)
|
|||
Average interest-earning banking assets excluding TSB
|
£461.1bn
|
£486.7bn
|
(5)
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
%
|
||||
Total costs
|
9,412
|
9,635
|
2
|
|||
Operating lease depreciation included in costs
|
720
|
746
|
3
|
|||
Cost:income ratio1
|
51.2%
|
52.9%
|
(1.7)pp
|
|||
Underlying cost:income ratio2
|
49.8%
|
49.8%
|
−
|
|||
Simplification savings annual run-rate
|
2,042
|
1,457
|
40
|
1
|
Excluding income of £662 million and costs of £44 million relating to St. James’s Place in 2013.
|
2
|
Excluding St. James’s Place, operating lease depreciation deducted from income and costs and excluding TSB running costs.
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
|||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
%
|
|||||
Impairment charge excluding Run-off
|
997
|
1,615
|
38
|
||||
Run-off impairment charge
|
203
|
1,389
|
85
|
||||
Total impairment charge
|
1,200
|
3,004
|
60
|
||||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.24%
|
0.57%
|
(33)bp
|
||||
Impaired loans as a % of closing advances
|
2.9%
|
6.3%
|
(3.4)pp
|
||||
Provisions as a % of impaired loans
|
56.4%
|
50.1%
|
6.3pp
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
7,756
|
6,166
|
||
Asset sales and other items:
|
||||
Asset sales
|
138
|
(687)
|
||
Sale of government securities
|
−
|
787
|
||
Liability management
|
(1,386)
|
(142)
|
||
Own debt volatility
|
398
|
(221)
|
||
Other volatile items
|
(112)
|
(457)
|
||
Volatility arising in insurance businesses
|
(228)
|
668
|
||
Fair value unwind
|
(529)
|
(228)
|
||
(1,719)
|
(280)
|
|||
Simplification and TSB costs:
|
||||
Simplification costs
|
(966)
|
(830)
|
||
TSB build and dual running costs
|
(558)
|
(687)
|
||
(1,524)
|
(1,517)
|
|||
Payment Protection Insurance provision
|
(2,200)
|
(3,050)
|
||
Other regulatory provisions
|
(925)
|
(405)
|
||
Other items:
|
||||
Past service pensions credit (charge)
|
710
|
(104)
|
||
Amortisation of purchased intangibles
|
(336)
|
(395)
|
||
374
|
(499)
|
|||
Profit before tax – statutory
|
1,762
|
415
|
||
Taxation
|
(263)
|
(1,217)
|
||
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
1,499
|
(802)
|
||
Underlying earnings per share
|
8.1p
|
6.6p
|
||
Earnings per share
|
1.7p
|
(1.2)p
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
%
|
||||
Underlying return on required equity
|
13.6%
|
9.7%
|
3.9pp
|
|||
Statutory return on required equity
|
3.0%
|
(1.3)%
|
4.3pp
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
|
||||
Common equity tier 1 capital ratio1,3
|
12.8%
|
10.3%
|
2.5pp
|
|||
Transitional tier 1 capital ratio1,3
|
16.5%
|
11.7%
|
4.8pp
|
|||
Transitional total capital ratio1,3
|
22.0%
|
18.8%
|
3.2pp
|
|||
Leverage ratio2,3
|
4.9%
|
3.8%
|
1.1pp
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets1,3
|
£240bn
|
£272bn
|
(12)%
|
|||
Shareholders’ equity
|
£43bn
|
£39bn
|
11%
|
1
|
Common equity tier 1 ratio is the same on both fully loaded and transitional bases. 31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
Calculated in accordance with the January 2014 revised Basel III leverage ratio framework.
|
3
|
31 December 2013 comparatives are reported on a pro forma basis that includes the benefit of the sales of Heidelberger Leben, Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and the Group’s 50 per cent stake in Sainsbury’s Bank.
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
%
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers1
|
£478bn
|
£493bn
|
(3)
|
|||
Loans and advances to customers excluding TSB,
Run-off and other1
|
£406bn
|
£402bn
|
1
|
|||
Run-off assets
|
£17bn
|
£33bn
|
(49)
|
|||
Non-retail run-off assets
|
£11bn
|
£25bn
|
(57)
|
|||
Funded assets
|
£493bn
|
£508bn
|
(3)
|
|||
Customer deposits2
|
£447bn
|
£436bn
|
2
|
|||
Wholesale funding
|
£116bn
|
£137bn
|
(15)
|
|||
Wholesale funding <1 year maturity
|
£41bn
|
£44bn
|
(7)
|
|||
Of which money-market funding <1 year maturity3
|
£19bn
|
£21bn
|
(11)
|
|||
Loan to deposit ratio
|
107%
|
113%
|
(6)pp
|
|||
Primary liquid assets4
|
£109bn
|
£89bn
|
22
|
1
|
Excludes reverse repos of £5.1 billion (31 December 2013: £0.1 billion). Loans and advances comparative restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
2
|
Excludes repos of £nil (31 December 2013: £3.0 billion). Deposits comparative restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
3
|
Excludes balances relating to margins of £2.8 billion (31 December 2013: £2.3 billion) and settlement accounts of £1.4 billion (31 December 2013: £1.3 billion).
|
4
|
Includes off-balance sheet liquid assets; includes TSB £4.5 billion (31 December 2013: £nil).
|
2014
|
Retail
|
Commercial Banking
|
Consumer Finance
|
Insurance
|
Run-off
and
Central
items
|
TSB1
|
Group
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||||||
Net interest income
|
7,079
|
2,480
|
1,290
|
(131)
|
257
|
786
|
11,761
|
|||||||
Other income
|
1,212
|
1,956
|
1,364
|
1,725
|
210
|
140
|
6,607
|
|||||||
Total income
|
8,291
|
4,436
|
2,654
|
1,594
|
467
|
926
|
18,368
|
|||||||
Total costs
|
(4,464)
|
(2,147)
|
(1,429)
|
(672)
|
(330)
|
(370)
|
(9,412)
|
|||||||
Impairment
|
(599)
|
(83)
|
(215)
|
−
|
(205)
|
(98)
|
(1,200)
|
|||||||
Underlying profit (loss)
|
3,228
|
2,206
|
1,010
|
922
|
(68)
|
458
|
7,756
|
|||||||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.29%
|
2.67%
|
6.49%
|
2.45%
|
||||||||||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.19%
|
0.08%
|
1.05%
|
0.24%
|
||||||||||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
4.60%
|
1.92%
|
4.87%
|
3.02%
|
||||||||||
Return on assets
|
1.02%
|
0.94%
|
4.02%
|
0.92%
|
||||||||||
Key balance sheet items
at 31 December 2014
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
||||||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
315.2
|
100.9
|
20.9
|
19.0
|
21.6
|
477.6
|
||||||||
Customer deposits
|
285.5
|
119.9
|
15.0
|
2.1
|
24.6
|
447.1
|
||||||||
Total customer balances2
|
600.7
|
220.8
|
39.0
|
21.1
|
46.2
|
927.8
|
||||||||
Risk-weighted assets
|
67.7
|
106.2
|
20.9
|
39.7
|
5.2
|
239.7
|
20133 | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | ||||||||
Net interest income
|
6,500
|
2,113
|
1,333
|
(107)
|
431
|
615
|
10,885
|
||||||||
Other income
|
1,435
|
2,259
|
1,359
|
1,864
|
840
|
163
|
7,920
|
||||||||
Total income
|
7,935
|
4,372
|
2,692
|
1,757
|
1,271
|
778
|
18,805
|
||||||||
Total costs
|
(4,160)
|
(2,084)
|
(1,384)
|
(669)
|
(775)
|
(563)
|
(9,635)
|
||||||||
Impairment
|
(760)
|
(398)
|
(343)
|
−
|
(1,394)
|
(109)
|
(3,004)
|
||||||||
Underlying profit (loss)
|
3,015
|
1,890
|
965
|
1,088
|
(898)
|
106
|
6,166
|
||||||||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.09%
|
2.21%
|
6.94%
|
2.12%
|
|||||||||||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.24%
|
0.37%
|
1.76%
|
0.57%
|
|||||||||||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
3.81%
|
1.53%
|
4.51%
|
2.14%
|
|||||||||||
Return on assets
|
0.95%
|
0.77%
|
3.90%
|
0.70%
|
|||||||||||
Key balance sheet items
at 31 December 2013
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
314.3
|
105.7
|
19.1
|
30.3
|
23.5
|
492.9
|
|||||||||
Customer deposits
|
283.2
|
108.7
|
18.7
|
2.8
|
23.1
|
436.5
|
|||||||||
Total customer balances2
|
597.5
|
214.4
|
40.6
|
33.1
|
46.6
|
932.2
|
|||||||||
Risk-weighted assets4
|
72.9
|
124.0
|
20.1
|
48.5
|
5.6
|
271.1
|
1
|
See note 5, page 82.
|
2
|
Total customer balances include loans and advances to customers, customer deposit balances and Consumer Finance operating lease assets.
|
3
|
Segment information has been restated to reflect the changes made to the Group’s operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014. Loans and advances to customers and customer deposits have been restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
4
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules on a fully loaded basis as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
Quarter
ended
31 Dec
2014
|
Quarter
ended
30 Sept
2014
|
Quarter
ended
30 June
2014
|
Quarter
ended
31 Mar
2014
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
Net interest income
|
2,923
|
3,034
|
2,993
|
2,811
|
||||
Other income
|
1,547
|
1,612
|
1,730
|
1,718
|
||||
Total income
|
4,470
|
4,646
|
4,723
|
4,529
|
||||
Total costs
|
(2,505)
|
(2,232)
|
(2,377)
|
(2,298)
|
||||
Impairment
|
(183)
|
(259)
|
(327)
|
(431)
|
||||
Underlying profit
|
1,782
|
2,155
|
2,019
|
1,800
|
||||
Asset sales and other items
|
34
|
(186)
|
(1,687)
|
120
|
||||
Simplification and TSB costs
|
(460)
|
(236)
|
(362)
|
(466)
|
||||
PPI
|
(700)
|
(900)
|
(600)
|
−
|
||||
Other regulatory provisions
|
(425)
|
−
|
(500)
|
−
|
||||
Other items
|
(83)
|
(82)
|
624
|
(85)
|
||||
Statutory profit (loss)
|
148
|
751
|
(506)
|
1,369
|
||||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.47%
|
2.51%
|
2.48%
|
2.32%
|
||||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.15%
|
0.20%
|
0.26%
|
0.35%
|
||||
Cost:income ratio
|
56.0%
|
48.0%
|
50.3%
|
50.7%
|
||||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
2.89%
|
3.37%
|
3.09%
|
2.71%
|
||||
Return on assets
|
0.83%
|
1.01%
|
0.97%
|
0.87%
|
Quarter
ended
31 Dec
2013
|
Quarter
ended
30 Sept
2013
|
Quarter
ended
30 June
2013
|
Quarter
ended
31 Mar
2013
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
Net interest income
|
2,918
|
2,761
|
2,653
|
2,552
|
||||
Other income
|
1,754
|
1,776
|
1,872
|
1,857
|
||||
St. James’s Place
|
114
|
18
|
50
|
480
|
||||
Total income
|
4,786
|
4,555
|
4,575
|
4,889
|
||||
Total costs
|
(2,525)
|
(2,361)
|
(2,341)
|
(2,408)
|
||||
Impairment
|
(521)
|
(670)
|
(811)
|
(1,002)
|
||||
Underlying profit
|
1,740
|
1,524
|
1,423
|
1,479
|
||||
Asset sales and other items
|
(468)
|
(709)
|
(176)
|
1,073
|
||||
Simplification and TSB costs
|
(323)
|
(408)
|
(377)
|
(409)
|
||||
PPI
|
(1,800)
|
(750)
|
(500)
|
−
|
||||
Other regulatory provisions
|
(330)
|
−
|
(75)
|
−
|
||||
Other items
|
(98)
|
(97)
|
(201)
|
(103)
|
||||
Statutory (loss) profit
|
(1,279)
|
(440)
|
94
|
2,040
|
||||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.29%
|
2.17%
|
2.06%
|
1.96%
|
||||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.40%
|
0.51%
|
0.57%
|
0.80%
|
||||
Cost:income ratio1
|
54.0%
|
52.0%
|
51.7%
|
53.6%
|
||||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
2.55%
|
2.14%
|
1.93%
|
1.96%
|
||||
Return on assets
|
0.81%
|
0.69%
|
0.65%
|
0.66%
|
1
|
Excluding impact of St. James’s Place.
|
|
Progress against strategic initiatives
|
·
|
Continued development of its digital capability, with the launch of its new App and the optimisation of browser sites for mobile users. The online user base has increased to over 10.4 million customers, including more than 5 million active mobile users, an increase of 29 per cent from 2013.
|
·
|
Increased Net Promoter Scores across all channels in 2014.
|
·
|
Continued to attract new customers through positive switching activity, particularly through the Halifax challenger brand which has attracted around 250,000 customers in 2014.
|
·
|
Launch of a number of new products, including the Club Lloyds current account proposition which has attracted over 600,000 customers since launch, and the Club Lloyds Saver and Monthly Saver Accounts.
|
·
|
Launched two new unsecured lending products, enhancing account flexibility and online functionality.
|
·
|
Announced the simplification of the existing savings products range, which will lead to the consolidation of 47 accounts into three standard products.
|
·
|
Achieved £40 billion of gross new mortgage lending in 2014, providing 1 in 5 of all mortgage loans to customers buying their homes in the UK. Exceeded our lending commitment to first-time buyers, lending £11.9 billion to over 89,000 customers, providing 1 in 4 of all mortgages. Retail continues to be a leading supporter of the UK government’s Help to Buy scheme, lending £1.9 billion in 2014.
|
·
|
Improved proposition to small business customers through the launch of a new mobile App, online account opening and online lending and successfully transferred 120,000 customers onto a new multi-channel model in Retail. Exceeded its lending commitment by supporting over 100,000 new business start-ups.
|
|
Financial performance
|
·
|
Underlying profit increased 7 per cent to £3,228 million.
|
·
|
Net interest income increased 9 per cent. Margin increased 20 basis points to 2.29 per cent, driven by improved deposit mix and margin, more than offsetting reduced lending rates.
|
·
|
Other income down 16 per cent, with lower protection income partly due to the decision to close the face-to-face advised protection role in branches, and lower wealth related income due to regulatory changes.
|
·
|
Total costs increased 7 per cent to £4,464 million, reflecting higher indirect overheads previously absorbed in the TSB segment and costs associated with ongoing investment in the business.
|
·
|
Impairment reduced 21 per cent to £599 million, with unsecured charges decreasing consistent with lower impaired loan and arrears balances. Secured coverage strengthened to 37 per cent, resulting in a 13 per cent increase to the impairment charge.
|
·
|
Return on risk-weighted assets increased 79 basis points driven by 7 per cent increase in underlying profit and reduced risk-weighted assets.
|
|
Balance sheet
|
·
|
Loans and advances to customers increased slightly to £315.2 billion, with stronger growth of 2 per cent in the open mortgage book (excludes closed specialist book and Intelligent Finance).
|
·
|
Customer deposits increased 1 per cent to £285.5 billion, with relationship balances (including Lloyds, Halifax and BoS) up 4 per cent year-on-year.
|
·
|
Risk-weighted assets decreased by £5.2 billion to £67.7 billion driven by an improvement in the credit quality of retail assets and improving house prices.
|
2014
|
20131
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
7,079
|
6,500
|
9
|
|||
Other income
|
1,212
|
1,435
|
(16)
|
|||
Total income
|
8,291
|
7,935
|
4
|
|||
Total costs
|
(4,464)
|
(4,160)
|
(7)
|
|||
Impairment
|
(599)
|
(760)
|
21
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
3,228
|
3,015
|
7
|
|||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.29%
|
2.09%
|
20bp
|
|||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.19%
|
0.24%
|
(5)bp
|
|||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
4.60%
|
3.81%
|
79bp
|
|||
Return on assets
|
1.02%
|
0.95%
|
7bp
|
Key balance sheet items
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
|
|||
£bn
|
£bn
|
%
|
||||
Loans and advances excluding closed portfolios
|
284.7
|
280.4
|
2
|
|||
Closed portfolios
|
30.5
|
33.9
|
(10)
|
|||
Loans and advances to customers
|
315.2
|
314.3
|
−
|
|||
Relationship balances
|
247.9
|
238.4
|
4
|
|||
Tactical balances
|
37.6
|
44.8
|
(16)
|
|||
Customer deposits
|
285.5
|
283.2
|
1
|
|||
Customer deposits
|
285.5
|
283.2
|
1
|
|||
Total customer balances
|
600.7
|
597.5
|
1
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets2
|
67.7
|
72.9
|
(7)
|
1
|
Restated to reflect the changes to the Group operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
|
Progress against strategic initiatives
|
·
|
Continued its support of SMEs, growing lending by 5 per cent in a contracting market. Its network of local and key markets relationship managers enables a quick response to the needs of the significant client base.
|
·
|
Strengthened the capabilities and increased the number of relationship managers in Mid Markets, resulting in an increase in client numbers, particularly in the local authority, business services and education sectors.
|
·
|
Enhanced returns in Global Corporates as a result of continued capital optimisation and increased profitability due to resilient income performance in challenging market conditions.
|
·
|
Further developed the Financial Institutions franchise, meeting a broader range of client needs, delivering growth in income and profitability whilst supporting financial services in the UK
|
·
|
Continued to invest in digital capability, with CB Online launching in 2015 and the continued development of mobile services to clients.
|
·
|
Continued to help Britain prosper; committing over £15.5 billion of UK lending through Funding for Lending, over £1 billion of funding support to UK manufacturing. In line with the Group’s focus on sustainability and responsible lending Commercial Banking became the first UK bank to issue an Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) bond. The Debt Capital Markets team also pioneered market leading product innovation with the first green loan and first ESG bond for a housing association.
|
·
|
Its community based actions include the Enterprise Mentoring scheme, with over 400 Group colleagues now trained as Enterprise Mentors, providing support to over 700 SME businesses to date.
|
|
Financial performance
|
·
|
Underlying profit of £2,206 million, up 17 per cent on 2013, driven by strong income growth in SME, Mid Markets and Financial Institutions and lower impairments.
|
·
|
Income increased by 1 per cent to £4,436 million as a result of increased net interest income in all client segments offset by declining performance in other income reflecting challenging market conditions and lower income from Lloyds Development Capital.
|
·
|
Net interest margin increased by 46 basis points to 2.67 per cent as a result of disciplined pricing of new lending, customer repricing in deposits and a reduction in funding costs helped by the increase in Global Transaction Banking deposits.
|
·
|
Other income decreased 13 per cent driven by lower client income in Debt Capital Markets and Financial Markets due to the continued low interest rate and low volatility environment in 2014 and a lower level of revaluation gains in Lloyds Development Capital.
|
·
|
Asset quality ratio of 8 basis points improved by 29 basis points reflecting lower gross charges, improved credit quality and progress in executing its strategy of building a low risk commercial bank.
|
·
|
Return on risk-weighted assets increased by 39 basis points to 1.92 per cent, making good progress towards achieving its 2015 target of 2 per cent by the end of 2015.
|
|
Balance sheet
|
·
|
Lending decreased by 5 per cent as a result of selective participation in Global Corporates partially offset by growth in SME and Financial Institutions.
|
·
|
Customer deposits increased by 10 per cent with Global Transaction Banking balances growing year-on-year in all client segments.
|
·
|
Risk-weighted assets decreased by £17.8 billion with reductions in credit and market risk-weighted assets as a result of active portfolio management, including reductions in Global Corporates reflecting the successful progress on improving returns.
|
2014
|
20131
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
2,480
|
2,113
|
17
|
|||
Other income
|
1,956
|
2,259
|
(13)
|
|||
Total income
|
4,436
|
4,372
|
1
|
|||
Total costs
|
(2,147)
|
(2,084)
|
(3)
|
|||
Impairment
|
(83)
|
(398)
|
79
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
2,206
|
1,890
|
17
|
|||
Banking net interest margin
|
2.67%
|
2.21%
|
46bp
|
|||
Asset quality ratio
|
0.08%
|
0.37%
|
(29)bp
|
|||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
1.92%
|
1.53%
|
39bp
|
|||
Return on assets
|
0.94%
|
0.77%
|
17bp
|
Key balance sheet items
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
20131
|
Change
|
|||
£bn
|
£bn
|
%
|
||||
SME
|
27.9
|
26.6
|
5
|
|||
Other
|
73.0
|
79.1
|
(8)
|
|||
Loans and advances to customers
|
100.9
|
105.7
|
(5)
|
|||
Customer deposits
|
119.9
|
108.7
|
10
|
|||
Total customer balances
|
220.8
|
214.4
|
3
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets2
|
106.2
|
124.0
|
(14)
|
1
|
Restated to reflect the changes to the Group operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014. Loans and advances to customers and customer deposits have been restated, see note 1, page 75.
|
2
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
|
Progress against strategic initiatives
|
·
|
UK loan growth of 17 per cent year-on-year, increasing momentum from the first half of 2014.
|
·
|
New business growth of 48 per cent within Black Horse, supported by the launch of the Jaguar Land Rover partnership in the first quarter of 2014 and strong underlying business performance.
|
·
|
Growth of 23 per cent in new Lex Autolease fleet deliveries with leads from the franchise more than double 2013.
|
·
|
Growth in lending balances within Credit Cards for the first time in eight years.
|
·
|
Growth in new consumer credit cards including a 4 per cent increase in new accounts opened and a 15 per cent increase in balance transfer volumes from new and existing customers.
|
·
|
Net gainer in balance transfers compared to competitors in Credit Cards new business, leveraging the breadth of the product lines, brands, and channels, and making strong progress in building non-franchise capabilities.
|
·
|
Growth of 45 per cent in transaction volumes within the Cardnet Acquiring Solutions business, driven in part by new partnerships, in addition to increased activity from existing customers.
|
·
|
Successful implementation of initial regulatory changes following change of regulator from the Office of Fair Trading to the Financial Conduct Authority.
|
|
Financial performance
|
·
|
Underlying profit increased by 5 per cent to £1,010 million driven by significant reductions in impairment charges across the portfolio and income growth in Asset Finance, partially offset by a fall in income in Credit Cards and investing for future growth in the businesses.
|
·
|
Net interest margin reduced by 45 basis points to 6.49 per cent, resulting in a 3 per cent fall in net interest income to £1,290 million. Strong new business growth and deposit repricing have been offset by a change in mix towards higher quality, lower margin lending to the new vehicle market and the impact of the current year’s strategic focus on growing the volume of new credit cards. Consistent with the strategy of acquiring high quality new business, the asset quality ratio improved by 71 basis points.
|
·
|
Other income increased slightly as a result of the growth strategy.
|
·
|
Total costs increased by 3 per cent driven by investment in growth initiatives and increased operating lease depreciation as a result of growth in the Lex Autolease fleet, offset by cost savings and increased gains for end of life lease asset sales. In 2014 a further £45 million was invested in improving propositions and customer’s digital experience.
|
·
|
Impairment charges reduced by 37 per cent to £215 million, with a substantial improvement in the asset quality ratio. This has been driven by a continued underlying improvement of portfolio quality supported by the sale of recoveries assets in the Credit Cards and Asset Finance portfolios.
|
·
|
Return on risk-weighted assets increased to 4.87 per cent. This reflected a 5 per cent improvement in underlying profit, while risk-weighted assets increased by only 4 per cent driven by increased customer assets partially offset by an improved credit risk profile of customers.
|
·
|
Net lending increased by 9 per cent to £20.9 billion driven by growth across both the underlying and the Jaguar Land Rover portfolios within UK Asset Finance where net lending increased by 43 per cent, and within Credit Cards following eight years of decline where net lending increased by 2 per cent. Balances in the European businesses were down 9 per cent, driven largely by foreign exchange rate movements.
|
·
|
Operating lease assets increased by 11 per cent to £3.1 billion reflecting Lex Autolease fleet growth of 7 per cent.
|
·
|
Customer deposits reduced by 20 per cent within Online Deposits driven by deposit re-pricing activity in response to European Central Bank policy actions and foreign exchange rate movements.
|
·
|
Risk-weighted assets increased by 4 per cent.
|
2014
|
20131
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
1,290
|
1,333
|
(3)
|
|||
Other income
|
1,364
|
1,359
|
−
|
|||
Total income
|
2,654
|
2,692
|
(1)
|
|||
Total costs
|
(1,429)
|
(1,384)
|
(3)
|
|||
Of which operating lease depreciation
|
(667)
|
(653)
|
(2)
|
|||
Impairment
|
(215)
|
(343)
|
37
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
1,010
|
965
|
5
|
|||
Banking net interest margin
|
6.49%
|
6.94%
|
(45)bp
|
|||
Asset quality ratio
|
1.05%
|
1.76%
|
(71)bp
|
|||
Impaired loans as % of closing advances
|
3.4%
|
4.8%
|
(140)bp
|
|||
Return on risk-weighted assets
|
4.87%
|
4.51%
|
36bp
|
|||
Return on assets
|
4.02%
|
3.90%
|
12bp
|
Key balance sheet items
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Change
|
|||
£bn
|
£bn
|
%
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
20.9
|
19.1
|
9
|
|||
Of which UK
|
16.0
|
13.7
|
17
|
|||
Operating lease assets
|
3.1
|
2.8
|
11
|
|||
Total customer assets
|
24.0
|
21.9
|
10
|
|||
Of which UK
|
19.1
|
16.5
|
16
|
|||
Customer deposits
|
15.0
|
18.7
|
(20)
|
|||
Total customer balances
|
39.0
|
40.6
|
(4)
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets2
|
20.9
|
20.1
|
4
|
1
|
Restated to reflect the changes to the Group operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
|
Progress against strategic initiatives
|
·
|
Insurance is a market leader in the corporate pensions market serving over 11,500 employers (including 19 per cent of the FTSE 350) and 1.4 million employees with £27 billion of assets invested with us. In 2014 the number of employees covered by these schemes grew by 40 per cent principally reflecting the ongoing support for employers through the auto-enrolment process.
|
·
|
The roll out of the Pensions Freedoms legislation in 2015 presents a significant opportunity to help customers with their retirement planning needs and a range of products to support this is being developed. With access to 24 million Retail customers, the Group remains very well placed to participate in this market.
|
·
|
Re-launched the Scottish Widows brand in 2014 and increased investment in strategic initiatives specifically in digital and mobile solutions, demonstrating the Group’s commitment to being a leader in the changing market.
|
·
|
In 2014 the underwriting of the Home insurance direct channel business was brought in-house offering all customers access to the first class claims service we provide. Investment is being made in the Group’s direct digital capability with the aim of increasing market share in General Insurance and responding to changes in the way customers buy General Insurance, moving more towards online distribution channels.
|
·
|
Continued commitment to supporting customer protection needs, with focus now on the sale of our standalone protection products through investment in digital solutions and in the Independent Financial Adviser distribution channel alongside continued in-branch protection advice for mortgage applications. In recognition of the change in consumer focus, the Group withdrew standalone protection advice through Retail branches in November.
|
·
|
Completion of the sale of Heidelberger Leben and Scottish Widows Investment Partnership helped simplify the Insurance business, allowing increased focus on the remaining core business.
|
·
|
Resilient performance against a backdrop of significant change throughout the industry in 2014.
|
·
|
Operating cash generation increased by £55 million, to £737 million, primarily reflecting lower commission paid on corporate pensions and increased returns on shareholder free assets offset by reduced General Insurance premiums.
|
·
|
Underlying profit down 15 per cent to £922 million impacted by the cost of structural changes in the corporate pensions book, primarily the cap on pension charges, and lower life new business and General Insurance premiums offset by improved economics and an increase in yields on assets backing annuity business as a result of the strategy to invest in long-term, low risk, higher yielding assets.
|
·
|
A 10 per cent increase in corporate funds under management has driven a £3 billion increase in unit linked pension funds under management to £79 billion.
|
·
|
LP&I sales (PVNBP) reduced by 13 per cent in the year with sales of auto enrolment corporate pension business higher than expected but more than offset by an overall reduction in sales in 2014 following the Retail Distribution Review.
|
·
|
General Insurance Gross Written Premiums (GWP) down 8 per cent, reflecting the run off of legacy products and a competitive market during 2014.
|
·
|
Remitted £1.0 billion of dividends to the Group in 2014 (2013: £2.2 billion), including the £0.3 billion of Heidelberger Leben sale proceeds, whilst maintaining a strong capital base.
|
·
|
Estimated capital surplus for Pillar 1 is £2.3 billion (Scottish Widows plc, £2.7 billion in 2013) and for Insurance Groups Directive is £3.0 billion (Insurance Group, £2.9 billion in 2013) with the decrease in Pillar 1 reflecting the dividends paid over the period.
|
2014
|
20131
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Net interest income
|
(131)
|
(107)
|
(22)
|
|||
Other income
|
2,054
|
2,220
|
(7)
|
|||
Insurance claims
|
(329)
|
(356)
|
8
|
|||
Total income
|
1,594
|
1,757
|
(9)
|
|||
Total costs
|
(672)
|
(669)
|
−
|
|||
Underlying profit
|
922
|
1,088
|
(15)
|
|||
Operating cash generation
|
737
|
682
|
8
|
|||
UK LP&I sales (PVNBP)2
|
8,601
|
9,934
|
(13)
|
|||
General Insurance total GWP
|
1,197
|
1,307
|
(8)
|
|||
General Insurance combined ratio
|
76%
|
77%
|
(1)pp
|
1
|
Restated to reflect changes to the Group operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
Present value of new business premiums.
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||||||||
Pensions &
investments
|
Protection
& retirement1
|
General
Insurance
|
Other2
|
Total
|
Total
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
New business income
|
189
|
74
|
−
|
5
|
268
|
423
|
||||
Existing business income
|
658
|
120
|
−
|
114
|
892
|
807
|
||||
Assumption changes and experience variances
|
(219)
|
277
|
−
|
(24)
|
34
|
70
|
||||
General Insurance income net
of claims
|
−
|
−
|
400
|
−
|
400
|
457
|
||||
Total income
|
628
|
471
|
400
|
95
|
1,594
|
1,757
|
||||
Total costs
|
(381)
|
(127)
|
(144)
|
(20)
|
(672)
|
(669)
|
||||
Underlying profit 2014
|
247
|
344
|
256
|
75
|
922
|
1,088
|
||||
Underlying profit 20133
|
357
|
445
|
297
|
(11)
|
1,088
|
|||||
1
|
Retirement assumption changes and experience variances include the benefit of acquiring, from Commercial Banking, £1.7 billion of loans during 2014; bringing total social housing, infrastructure and education acquired loans to £3.9 billion.
|
|||||||||
2
|
’Other’ is primarily income from return on free assets, interest expense, certain provisions plus a small element of European business.
|
|||||||||
3
|
Full 2013 comparator tables for the profit and cash disclosures can be found on the Lloyds Banking Group investor site.
|
2014
|
2013
|
||||||
Pensions &
investments
|
Protection &
retirement
|
General
Insurance
|
Other1
|
Total
|
Total
|
||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||
Cash invested in new business
|
(238)
|
(38)
|
−
|
(12)
|
(288)
|
(270)
|
|
Cash generated from existing business
|
452
|
177
|
−
|
140
|
769
|
655
|
|
Cash generated from General Insurance
|
−
|
−
|
256
|
−
|
256
|
297
|
|
Operating cash generation
|
214
|
139
|
256
|
128
|
737
|
682
|
|
Intangibles and other adjustments2
|
33
|
205
|
−
|
(53)
|
185
|
406
|
|
Underlying profit
|
247
|
344
|
256
|
75
|
922
|
1,088
|
|
Operating cash generation 2013
|
224
|
136
|
297
|
25
|
682
|
1
|
Derived from IFRS underlying profit by removing the effect of movements in intangible (non-cash) items and assumption changes.
|
2
|
Intangible items include the value of in-force life business, deferred acquisition costs and deferred income reserves.
|
2014
|
20131
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Net interest income
|
(116)
|
138
|
||
Other income
|
451
|
1,266
|
||
Total income
|
335
|
1,404
|
||
Total costs
|
(308)
|
(726)
|
||
Impairment
|
(203)
|
(1,389)
|
||
Underlying loss
|
(176)
|
(711)
|
||
Total income excluding St. James’s Place
|
335
|
742
|
||
Underlying loss excluding St. James’s Place
|
(176)
|
(1,329)
|
2014
|
20131
|
|||
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||
Loans and advances to customers
|
14.4
|
27.7
|
||
Total assets
|
16.9
|
33.3
|
||
Risk-weighted assets2
|
16.8
|
30.6
|
1
|
Restated to reflect the changes to the Group operating structure that came into effect from 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
·
|
Run-off includes certain assets previously classified as non-core and the results and gains or losses on sale of businesses sold in 2013 and 2014.
|
·
|
The reduction in income and costs largely related to the sales of St. James’s Place in 2013 and Scottish Widows Investment Partnership in the first quarter of 2014.
|
·
|
The reduction in the impairment charge reflects continued proactive risk management and the success in managing down the Run-off portfolios.
|
2014
|
20131
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Total income (expense)
|
132
|
(133)
|
||
Total costs
|
(22)
|
(49)
|
||
Impairment
|
(2)
|
(5)
|
||
Underlying profit/(loss)
|
108
|
(187)
|
1
|
Restated.
|
·
|
Central items include income and expenditure not recharged to divisions, including the costs of certain central and head office functions.
|
·
|
Underlying income in 2014 included the benefit relating to the reduction in interest payable following the ECN exchange in the second quarter, which has not been passed onto divisions.
|
Removal of:
|
||||||||||||||||
Lloyds
Banking
Group
statutory
|
Acquisition
related and
other items1
|
Volatility
arising in
insurance
businesses
|
Insurance
gross up
|
PPI
and other
regulatory
provisions2
|
Fair value
unwind
|
Underlying
basis
|
||||||||||
2014
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||||
Net interest income
|
10,660
|
(7)
|
−
|
482
|
−
|
626
|
11,761
|
|||||||||
Other income, net of insurance claims
|
5,739
|
1,141
|
228
|
(614)
|
−
|
113
|
6,607
|
|||||||||
Total income
|
16,399
|
1,134
|
228
|
(132)
|
−
|
739
|
18,368
|
|||||||||
Operating expenses3
|
(13,885)
|
1,175
|
−
|
132
|
3,125
|
41
|
(9,412)
|
|||||||||
Impairment
|
(752)
|
(197)
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
(251)
|
(1,200)
|
|||||||||
Profit (loss)
|
1,762
|
2,112
|
228
|
−
|
3,125
|
529
|
7,756
|
Removal of:
|
|||||||||||||||
Lloyds
Banking
Group
statutory
|
Acquisition
related and
other items4
|
Volatility
arising in
insurance
businesses
|
Insurance
gross up
|
PPI
and other
regulatory
provisions2
|
Fair value
unwind
|
Underlying
basis
|
|||||||||
2013
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||||||
Net interest income
|
7,338
|
(14)
|
–
|
2,930
|
–
|
631
|
10,885
|
||||||||
Other income, net of insurance claims
|
11,140
|
460
|
(668)
|
(3,074)
|
–
|
62
|
7,920
|
||||||||
Total income
|
18,478
|
446
|
(668)
|
(144)
|
–
|
693
|
18,805
|
||||||||
Operating expenses3
|
(15,322)
|
2,041
|
–
|
144
|
3,455
|
47
|
(9,635)
|
||||||||
Impairment
|
(2,741)
|
249
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(512)
|
(3,004)
|
||||||||
Profit (loss)
|
415
|
2,736
|
(668)
|
–
|
3,455
|
228
|
6,166
|
1
|
Comprises the effects of asset sales (gain of £138 million), volatile items (gain of £286 million), liability management (loss of £1,386 million), Simplification costs related to severance, IT and business costs of implementation (£966 million), TSB build and dual running costs (£558 million), the past service pensions credit (£710 million) and the amortisation of purchased intangibles (£336 million).
|
2
|
Comprises the payment protection insurance provision of £2,200 million (2013: £3,050 million) and other regulatory provisions of £925 million (2013: £405 million).
|
3
|
On an underlying basis, this is described as total costs.
|
4
|
Comprises the effects of asset sales (gain of £100 million), volatile items (loss of £678 million), liability management (loss of £142 million), Simplification costs (£830 million), TSB build and dual running costs (£687 million), the past service pensions charge (£104 million) and the amortisation of purchased intangibles (£395 million).
|
2.
|
Banking net interest margin
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Banking net interest income – underlying basis
|
11,845
|
10,841
|
||
Insurance division
|
(131)
|
(107)
|
||
Other net interest income (including trading activity)
|
47
|
151
|
||
Group net interest income – underlying basis
|
11,761
|
10,885
|
||
Fair value unwind
|
(626)
|
(631)
|
||
Banking volatility and liability management gains
|
7
|
14
|
||
Insurance gross up
|
(482)
|
(2,930)
|
||
Group net interest income – statutory
|
10,660
|
7,338
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||
Average loans and advances (gross)
|
504.2
|
518.7
|
||
Non-banking assets
|
(11.6)
|
(8.8)
|
||
Other1
|
(8.9)
|
1.0
|
||
Average interest-earning assets
|
483.7
|
510.9
|
1
|
Other includes adjustments for assets that are netted for interest earning purposes, reverse repos and the timing effect of disposals.
|
3.
|
Volatility arising in insurance businesses
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Insurance volatility
|
(219)
|
218
|
||
Policyholder interests volatility1
|
17
|
564
|
||
Total volatility
|
(202)
|
782
|
||
Insurance hedging arrangements
|
(26)
|
(114)
|
||
Total
|
(228)
|
668
|
1
|
Includes volatility relating to the Group’s interest in St. James’s Place in 2013.
|
United Kingdom
|
2014
|
2013
|
||
%
|
%
|
|||
Investments backing annuity liabilities
|
4.54
|
3.83
|
||
Equities and property
|
6.48
|
5.58
|
||
UK Government bonds
|
3.48
|
2.58
|
||
Corporate bonds
|
4.08
|
3.18
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
Retail
|
35,383
|
38,844
|
||
Commercial Banking
|
6,188
|
6,752
|
||
Consumer Finance
|
3,485
|
3,393
|
||
Insurance
|
2,015
|
2,373
|
||
Run-off and Central items
|
32,078
|
32,813
|
||
TSB
|
7,685
|
7,140
|
||
86,834
|
91,315
|
|||
Agency staff (full-time equivalent)
|
(2,344)
|
(2,338)
|
||
Total number of employees (full-time equivalent)
|
84,490
|
88,977
|
||
Total number of employees excluding TSB
|
76,978
|
81,840
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
Profit before tax:
|
£m
|
£m
|
||
On a Lloyds Banking Group reporting basis (underlying profit)
|
458
|
106
|
||
Recognition of product transfers1
|
−
|
(200)
|
||
Cost allocation2
|
−
|
217
|
||
TSB dual running costs3
|
(326)
|
−
|
||
Volatile items4
|
(26)
|
(46)
|
||
Defined benefit pension scheme settlement gain5
|
64
|
−
|
||
FSCS levy adjustment6
|
−
|
10
|
||
Other
|
−
|
(2)
|
||
Reported in the TSB results announcement
|
170
|
85
|
||
2014
|
2013
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets:
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
||
On a Lloyds Banking Group reporting basis
|
5.2
|
5.6
|
||
Risk-weighted assets for operational risk7
|
1.5
|
0.4
|
||
Other8
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
||
Reported in the TSB results announcement
|
6.9
|
6.2
|
1
|
On the Lloyds Banking Group reporting basis, all product transfers to TSB are assumed to have occurred on 1 January 2013.
|
2
|
In 2013, TSB was allocated costs on the same basis as the other business segments. In 2014, costs have been charged to TSB in accordance with the Transitional Service Agreement and the costs that were previously allocated to TSB have been charged to the other business segments.
|
3
|
This represents corporate head office and similar costs incurred by TSB. The Group has excluded these from underlying profit to provide a more meaningful view of underlying business costs as they represent the duplicated costs of running two corporate head offices. These costs form part of the continuing TSB cost base and are reflected in the Group’s statutory profit before tax.
|
4
|
Banking volatility reported below underlying profit in the Lloyds Banking Group results.
|
5
|
Following the transfer of employees from employment with Lloyds Banking Group companies to TSB Bank, the defined benefit scheme assets and liabilities have been derecognised from the TSB Bank balance sheet and settled with nil cash consideration, resulting in a one off gain of £64 million. This is eliminated at Lloyds Banking Group level.
|
6
|
Adjustment to reflect the change in timing of the FSCS charge.
|
7
|
The TSB risk-weighted asset for operational risk is determined by TSB as a standalone organisation.
|
8
|
Other relates mainly to risk-weighted assets that result from TSB’s standalone capital calculations, for example threshold adjustments and exposures with other businesses in the Lloyds Banking Group.
|
Page
|
|
Principal risks and uncertainties
|
35
|
Credit risk portfolio
|
37
|
Funding and liquidity management
|
53
|
Capital management
|
58
|
·
|
Credit policy incorporating prudent lending criteria aligned with the Board approved risk appetite to effectively manage credit risk.
|
·
|
Clearly defined levels of authority ensure we lend appropriately and responsibly with separation of origination and sanctioning activities.
|
·
|
Robust credit processes and controls including well-established governance to ensure distressed and impaired loans are identified early, considered and controlled with independent credit risk assurance.
|
·
|
Customer focused conduct strategy implemented to ensure customers are at the heart of everything we do.
|
·
|
Product approval, review processes and outcome testing supported by conduct management information.
|
·
|
Clear customer accountabilities for colleagues, with rewards driven off customer-centric metrics.
|
·
|
Learning from past mistakes, including root-cause analysis.
|
·
|
A structural hedge programme has been implemented to manage liability margins and margin compression.
|
·
|
Board approved pensions risk appetite covering interest rate, credit spreads and equity risks. Credit assets are being purchased and equity holdings have reduced in the pension schemes.
|
·
|
Stress and scenario testing of risk exposures.
|
·
|
Continually review IT system architecture to ensure that our systems are resilient, and the confidentiality, integrity and availability of our critical systems and information assets are protected against cyber attacks.
|
·
|
Continue to implement the actions from the 2013 independent IT Resilience Review to enhance the resilience of systems supporting the processes most critical to our customers.
|
·
|
At 31 December 2014 the Group had £109.3 billion of unencumbered primary liquid assets and the Group maintains a further large pool of secondary assets that can be used to access Central Bank liquidity facilities.
|
·
|
Daily monitoring against a number of market and Group specific early warning indicators and regular stress tests.
|
·
|
Contingency funding plan to identify liquidity concerns earlier.
|
·
|
Close monitoring of capital and leverage ratios to ensure we meet our current and future regulatory requirements.
|
·
|
Comprehensive stress testing analysis to evidence sufficient levels of capital adequacy for the Group under various adverse scenarios.
|
·
|
In addition to accumulating retained profits, we can raise additional capital in a variety of ways.
|
·
|
The Legal, Regulatory and Mandatory Change Committee ensures we develop plans for regulatory changes and tracks their progress.
|
·
|
Continued investment in our people, processes and IT systems is enabling us to meet our regulatory commitments.
|
·
|
Continued engagement with government and regulatory authorities on forthcoming regulatory changes and market investigations and reviews.
|
·
|
Work collaboratively with regulators to implement the new Individual Accountability Regime in 2015, ensuring burden of proof and attestation requirements are effectively implemented.
|
·
|
Maintain competitive working practices to attract retain and engage high quality people.
|
·
|
Create a work environment which listens and acts on colleague feedback, making the Group the best bank for colleagues.
|
·
|
The impairment charge decreased by 60 per cent from £3,004 million in 2013 to £1,200 million in 2014. The impairment charge has decreased across all divisions. The material reduction reflects lower levels of new impairment as a result of effective risk management, improving economic conditions and the continued low interest rate environment.
|
·
|
The charge also benefited from significant provision releases but at lower levels than seen during 2013.
|
·
|
The impairment charge as a percentage of average loans and advances to customers improved to 24 basis points compared to 57 basis points during 2013.
|
·
|
Impaired loans as a percentage of closing advances reduced to 2.9 per cent at 31 December 2014, from 6.3 per cent at 31 December 2013, driven by improvements in all divisions. Impaired loans reduced substantially by £18 billion during the period, mainly due to disposals, write-offs and lower levels of newly impaired loans.
|
·
|
Impairment provisions as a percentage of impaired loans increased from 50.1 per cent at 31 December 2013 to 56.4 per cent at 31 December 2014, driven by the Retail, Commercial Banking and Run-off divisions.
|
·
|
The Group is delivering sustainable growth by maintaining the Group’s lower risk origination discipline. The overall quality of the portfolio has improved over the last 12 months.
|
·
|
The Group continues to deliver above market lending growth in SME whilst maintaining the Group’s prudent risk appetite. Portfolio credit quality has remained stable or improved across key metrics.
|
·
|
The Group continues to adopt a conservative stance across the Eurozone, maintaining close portfolio scrutiny and oversight. Detailed contingency plans are in place and exposures to financial institutions domiciled in peripheral Eurozone countries remain modest and managed within tight risk parameters.
|
·
|
Run-off net assets have reduced from £33.3 billion to £16.9 billion at the end of 2014. This reduction was capital accretive.
|
·
|
The Run-off portfolio now represents only 3.0 per cent of the overall Group’s total loans and advances and poses substantially less downside risk to the Group. The remaining assets are the subject of frequent review, and are impaired to appropriate levels based on external evidence and internal reviews.
|
·
|
The Group’s UK Direct Real Estate gross lending at 31 December 2014 in Commercial Banking, Wealth (within Retail division) and Run-off divisions was £21.6 billion (31 December 2013: gross £27.8 billion). The portfolio continues to reduce significantly, and the higher risk Run-off element of the book has reduced from gross £7.6 billion to gross £3.3 billion during 2014. The remaining gross lending of £18.3 billion (31 December 2013: £20.2 billion) is the lower risk element in Commercial Banking and Wealth, where the Group continues to write new business within conservative risk appetite parameters. The loan to value (LTV) profile of the UK Direct Real Estate portfolio in Commercial Banking continues to improve.
|
·
|
The Group continues to reduce its exposure to Ireland with gross loans and advances reducing by £7.5 billion during 2014 mainly due to strategic transactions, disposals, write-offs and net repayments. The Group has disposed of two significant impaired portfolios in 2014, with a combined gross book value of £2.4 billion.
|
·
|
The Irish commercial portfolio remains significantly impaired at 89 per cent, with provision coverage of 81 per cent. Net exposure in Ireland commercial has fallen to £1.0 billion (31 December 2013: £3.4 billion).
|
·
|
The Irish retail portfolio has reduced from £5,944 million at 31 December 2013 to £4,464 million at 31 December 2014. Within this portfolio, impaired loans have reduced from £1,002 million (16.9 per cent) at 31 December 2013 to £120 million (2.7 per cent) at 31 December 2014, driven primarily by the disposal of the majority of impaired assets in the second half of 2014.
|
·
|
The Acquisition Finance (leverage lending) portfolio has materially reduced and gross loans and advances totalled £1,910 million as at 31 December 2014. The Run-off element of the Acquisition Finance portfolio totalled only £40 million (net £22 million) as at 31 December 2014.
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Retail:
|
||||||
Secured
|
281
|
249
|
(13)
|
|||
Loans and overdrafts
|
279
|
478
|
42
|
|||
Other
|
39
|
33
|
(18)
|
|||
599
|
760
|
21
|
||||
Commercial Banking:
|
||||||
SME
|
15
|
162
|
91
|
|||
Other
|
68
|
236
|
71
|
|||
83
|
398
|
79
|
||||
Consumer Finance:
|
||||||
Credit Cards
|
186
|
274
|
32
|
|||
Asset Finance UK
|
30
|
52
|
42
|
|||
Asset Finance Europe
|
(1)
|
17
|
||||
215
|
343
|
37
|
||||
Run-off:
|
||||||
Ireland retail
|
(6)
|
(26)
|
(77)
|
|||
Ireland commercial real estate
|
67
|
219
|
69
|
|||
Ireland corporate
|
247
|
415
|
40
|
|||
Corporate and real estate and other corporate
|
(28)
|
522
|
||||
Specialist finance
|
22
|
345
|
94
|
|||
Other
|
(99)
|
(86)
|
15
|
|||
203
|
1,389
|
85
|
||||
TSB
|
98
|
109
|
10
|
|||
Central items
|
2
|
5
|
60
|
|||
Total impairment charge
|
1,200
|
3,004
|
60
|
|||
Impairment charge as a % of average advances
|
0.24%
|
0.57%
|
2014
|
2013
|
Change
|
||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
1,183
|
2,988
|
60
|
|||
Debt securities classified as loans and receivables
|
2
|
1
|
(100)
|
|||
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
5
|
15
|
67
|
|||
Other credit risk provision
|
10
|
−
|
−
|
|||
Total impairment charge
|
1,200
|
3,004
|
60
|
At 31 December 2014
|
Loans and
advances to
customers
|
Impaired
Loans
|
Impaired
loans as %
of closing
advances
|
Impairment provisions1
|
Impairment
provision
as % of
impaired
loans2
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
||||||
Retail:
|
||||||||||
Secured
|
303,121
|
3,911
|
1.3
|
1,446
|
37.0
|
|||||
Loans and overdrafts
|
10,395
|
695
|
6.7
|
220
|
85.3
|
|||||
Other
|
3,831
|
321
|
8.4
|
68
|
23.1
|
|||||
317,347
|
4,927
|
1.6
|
1,734
|
38.8
|
||||||
Commercial Banking:
|
||||||||||
SME
|
28,256
|
1,546
|
5.5
|
398
|
25.7
|
|||||
Other
|
74,203
|
1,695
|
2.3
|
1,196
|
70.6
|
|||||
102,459
|
3,241
|
3.2
|
1,594
|
49.2
|
||||||
Consumer Finance:
|
||||||||||
Credit Cards
|
9,119
|
499
|
5.5
|
166
|
76.5
|
|||||
Asset Finance UK
|
7,204
|
160
|
2.2
|
112
|
70.0
|
|||||
Asset Finance Europe
|
4,950
|
61
|
1.2
|
31
|
50.8
|
|||||
21,273
|
720
|
3.4
|
309
|
70.5
|
||||||
Run-off:
|
||||||||||
Ireland retail
|
4,464
|
120
|
2.7
|
141
|
117.5
|
|||||
Ireland commercial real estate
|
1,797
|
1,659
|
92.3
|
1,385
|
83.5
|
|||||
Ireland corporate
|
1,639
|
1,393
|
85.0
|
1,095
|
78.6
|
|||||
Corporate real estate and other corporate
|
3,947
|
1,548
|
39.2
|
911
|
58.9
|
|||||
Specialist finance
|
4,835
|
364
|
7.5
|
254
|
69.8
|
|||||
Other
|
1,634
|
131
|
8.0
|
141
|
107.6
|
|||||
18,316
|
5,215
|
28.5
|
3,927
|
75.3
|
||||||
TSB
|
21,729
|
205
|
0.9
|
88
|
42.9
|
|||||
Reverse repos and other items3
|
9,635
|
|||||||||
Total gross lending
|
490,759
|
14,308
|
2.9
|
7,652
|
56.4
|
|||||
Impairment provisions
|
(7,652)
|
|||||||||
Fair value adjustments4
|
(403)
|
|||||||||
Total Group
|
482,704
|
1
|
Impairment provisions include collective unimpaired provisions.
|
2
|
Impairment provisions as a percentage of impaired loans are calculated excluding Retail and Consumer Finance loans in recoveries
(31 December 2014: £437 million in Retail loans and overdrafts, £26 million in Retail other and £282 million in Consumer Finance credit cards).
|
3
|
Includes £4.4 billion (31 December 2013: £2.6 billion) of lower risk loans (social housing, infrastructure and education) transferred from Commercial Banking division into Insurance division’s shareholder funds to support the Group’s annuity portfolio.
|
4
|
The fair value adjustments relating to loans and advances were those required to reflect the HBOS assets in the Group’s consolidated financial records at their fair value and took into account both the expected losses and market liquidity at the date of acquisition. The unwind relating to future impairment losses requires significant management judgement to determine its timing which includes an assessment of whether the losses incurred in the current period were expected at the date of the acquisition and assessing whether the remaining losses expected at the date of the acquisition will still be incurred. The element relating to market liquidity unwinds to the income statement over the estimated expected lives of the related assets (until 2014 for commercial loans and 2018 for retail loans) although if an asset is written-off or suffers previously unexpected impairment then this element of the fair value will no longer be considered a timing difference (liquidity) but permanent (impairment). The fair value unwind in respect of impairment losses incurred was £251 million for the period ended 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: £512 million). The fair value unwind in respect of loans and advances is expected to continue to decrease in future years as fixed-rate periods on mortgages expire, loans are repaid or written-off, and will reduce to zero over time.
|
At 31 December 2013
|
Loans and
advances to
customers
|
Impaired
loans
|
Impaired
loans as %
of closing
advances
|
Impairment provisions1
|
Impairment
provision
as % of
impaired
loans2
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
||||||
Retail:
|
||||||||||
Secured
|
302,019
|
5,503
|
1.8
|
1,447
|
26.3
|
|||||
Loans and overdrafts
|
10,598
|
819
|
7.7
|
285
|
83.1
|
|||||
Other
|
4,148
|
408
|
9.8
|
106
|
28.3
|
|||||
316,765
|
6,730
|
2.1
|
1,838
|
29.5
|
||||||
Commercial Banking:
|
||||||||||
SME
|
27,268
|
2,194
|
8.0
|
623
|
28.4
|
|||||
Other3
|
80,782
|
2,853
|
3.5
|
1,761
|
61.7
|
|||||
108,050
|
5,047
|
4.7
|
2,384
|
47.2
|
||||||
Consumer Finance:
|
||||||||||
Credit Cards
|
9,008
|
639
|
7.1
|
226
|
96.6
|
|||||
Asset Finance UK
|
5,061
|
221
|
4.4
|
140
|
63.3
|
|||||
Asset Finance Europe
|
5,478
|
86
|
1.6
|
45
|
52.3
|
|||||
19,547
|
946
|
4.8
|
411
|
76.0
|
||||||
Run-off:
|
||||||||||
Ireland retail
|
5,944
|
1,002
|
16.9
|
638
|
63.7
|
|||||
Ireland commercial real estate
|
5,512
|
5,087
|
92.3
|
3,775
|
74.2
|
|||||
Ireland corporate
|
3,918
|
3,235
|
82.6
|
2,305
|
71.3
|
|||||
Corporate real estate and other corporate
|
11,571
|
8,131
|
70.3
|
3,320
|
40.8
|
|||||
Specialist finance
|
9,017
|
1,368
|
15.2
|
565
|
41.3
|
|||||
Other
|
2,519
|
486
|
19.3
|
372
|
76.5
|
|||||
38,481
|
19,309
|
50.2
|
10,975
|
56.8
|
||||||
TSB
|
23,553
|
227
|
1.0
|
99
|
43.6
|
|||||
Reverse repos and other items
|
2,779
|
|||||||||
Total gross lending
|
509,175
|
32,259
|
6.3
|
15,707
|
50.1
|
|||||
Impairment provisions
|
(15,707)
|
|||||||||
Fair value adjustments
|
(516)
|
|||||||||
Total Group
|
492,952
|
1
|
Impairment provisions include collective unimpaired provisions.
|
2
|
Impairment provisions as a percentage of impaired loans are calculated excluding Retail and Consumer Finance loans in recoveries (31 December 2013: £476 million in Retail loans and overdrafts, £34 million in Retail other and £405 million in Consumer Finance credit cards).
|
3
|
Loans and advances to customers restated. See note 1, page 75.
|
·
|
The Retail impairment charge was £599 million in 2014, a decrease of 21 per cent compared to 2013. The decrease was primarily driven by underlying improvements in portfolio quality and the sale of recoveries assets in the Loans and Overdrafts portfolios.
|
·
|
The Retail impairment charge, as an annualised percentage of average loans and advances to customers, decreased to 19 basis points in 2014 from 24 basis points in 2013.
|
·
|
Retail impaired loans decreased by £1,803 million to £4,927 million compared with 31 December 2013 driven by the Secured portfolio. Retail impaired loans represent 1.6 per cent of closing loans and advances to customers compared with 2.1 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
Impaired loans reduced to £3,911 million at 31 December 2014 compared to £5,503 million at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
Impairment provisions remained stable at £1,446 million at 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: £1,447 million). As a result of this impairment provisions as a percentage of impaired loans increased to 37.0 per cent from 26.3 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
The impairment charge increased by £32 million, to £281 million compared with 2013. The impairment charge as an annualised percentage of average loans and advances to customers, increased to 9 basis points in 2014 from 8 basis points in 2013.
|
·
|
The value of mortgages greater than three months in arrears (excluding repossessions) decreased by £2,249 million to £6,344 million at 31 December 2014 compared to £8,593 million at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
The average indexed loan to value (LTV) on the mortgage portfolio at 31 December 2014 decreased to 49.2 per cent compared with 53.3 per cent at 31 December 2013. The percentage of closing loans and advances with an indexed LTV in excess of 100 per cent decreased to 2.2 per cent at 31 December 2014, compared with 5.4 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
The average LTV for new mortgages and further advances written in 2014 was 64.8 per cent compared with 64.0 per cent for 2013 reflecting the Group’s participation in the UK government’s Help to Buy scheme.
|
·
|
The impairment charge decreased by £199 million, to £279 million compared with 2013. The annualised impairment charge, as a percentage of average loans and advances to customers, reduced to 2.6 per cent in 2014 from 4.2 per cent in 2013.
|
·
|
Impaired loans have decreased by £124 million since 31 December 2013 to £695 million at 31 December 2014 which represents 6.7 per cent of closing loans and advances to customers, compared with 7.7 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
Impairment provisions decreased by £65 million, compared with 31 December 2013.
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Mainstream
|
228,176
|
228,030
|
||
Buy-to-let
|
53,322
|
50,346
|
||
Specialist1
|
21,623
|
23,643
|
||
303,121
|
302,019
|
|||
Loans
|
8,204
|
8,282
|
||
Overdrafts
|
2,191
|
2,316
|
||
Wealth
|
2,962
|
3,232
|
||
Retail Business Banking
|
869
|
916
|
||
14,226
|
14,746
|
|||
Total
|
317,347
|
316,765
|
1
|
Specialist lending has been closed to new business since 2009.
|
Number of cases
|
Total mortgage accounts %
|
Value of loans1
|
Total mortgage balances %
|
|||||||||||||
2014
|
2013
|
2014
|
2013
|
2014
|
2013
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||||||||
Cases
|
Cases
|
%
|
%
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||||
Mainstream
|
37,849
|
50,437
|
1.7
|
2.2
|
4,102
|
5,683
|
1.8
|
2.5
|
||||||||
Buy-to-let
|
5,077
|
6,250
|
1.1
|
1.4
|
658
|
859
|
1.2
|
1.7
|
||||||||
Specialist
|
9,429
|
11,870
|
6.3
|
7.3
|
1,584
|
2,051
|
7.3
|
8.7
|
||||||||
Total
|
52,355
|
68,557
|
1.8
|
2.3
|
6,344
|
8,593
|
2.1
|
2.8
|
1
|
Value of loans represents total book value of mortgages more than three months in arrears.
|
At 31 December 2014
|
Mainstream
|
Buy-to-let
|
Specialist
|
Total
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
||||||
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||
Less than 60%
|
44.6
|
32.4
|
31.4
|
41.5
|
41.7
|
22.5
|
||||||
60% to 70%
|
19.9
|
27.3
|
19.5
|
21.2
|
21.3
|
15.3
|
||||||
70% to 80%
|
18.5
|
21.8
|
19.8
|
19.2
|
19.2
|
17.8
|
||||||
80% to 90%
|
10.6
|
9.4
|
14.9
|
10.7
|
10.6
|
16.7
|
||||||
90% to 100%
|
4.5
|
6.8
|
8.7
|
5.2
|
5.2
|
11.9
|
||||||
Greater than 100%
|
1.9
|
2.3
|
5.7
|
2.2
|
2.0
|
15.8
|
||||||
Total
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
||||||
Outstanding loan value (£m)
|
228,176
|
53,322
|
21,623
|
303,121
|
299,210
|
3,911
|
||||||
Average loan to value:1
|
||||||||||||
Stock of residential mortgages
|
46.3
|
61.3
|
59.2
|
49.2
|
||||||||
New residential lending
|
65.3
|
62.7
|
n/a
|
64.8
|
||||||||
Impaired mortgages
|
60.1
|
81.0
|
72.6
|
64.9
|
||||||||
At 31 December 2013
|
Mainstream
|
Buy-to-let
|
Specialist
|
Total
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
||||||
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||
Less than 60%
|
36.4
|
19.1
|
20.1
|
32.3
|
32.6
|
15.3
|
||||||
60% to 70%
|
16.6
|
20.7
|
15.7
|
17.2
|
17.3
|
11.2
|
||||||
70% to 80%
|
19.8
|
26.5
|
19.3
|
20.9
|
21.0
|
15.4
|
||||||
80% to 90%
|
15.2
|
15.7
|
20.1
|
15.6
|
15.6
|
17.7
|
||||||
90% to 100%
|
7.4
|
11.6
|
14.3
|
8.6
|
8.5
|
16.1
|
||||||
Greater than 100%
|
4.6
|
6.4
|
10.5
|
5.4
|
5.0
|
24.3
|
||||||
Total
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
||||||
Outstanding loan value (£m)
|
228,030
|
50,346
|
23,643
|
302,019
|
296,516
|
5,503
|
||||||
Average loan to value:1
|
||||||||||||
Stock of residential mortgages
|
49.9
|
67.9
|
66.2
|
53.3
|
||||||||
New residential lending
|
64.0
|
64.0
|
n/a
|
64.0
|
||||||||
Impaired mortgages
|
67.2
|
90.4
|
80.8
|
72.2
|
1
|
Average loan to value is calculated as total loans and advances as a percentage of the total collateral of these loans and advances.
|
·
|
Commercial Banking net impairment charge was £83 million in 2014, substantially lower than £398 million in 2013. The material reduction reflects better quality origination, improving economic conditions, continued low interest rates and provision releases.
|
·
|
The obligor quality of the Commercial Banking lending portfolio is predominantly rated good or better. New business is of good quality and generally better than the back book average.
|
·
|
Impaired loans reduced substantially by 35.8 per cent to £3,241 million compared with 31 December 2013 mainly due to disposals and write-offs. As a percentage of closing loans and advances to customers, impaired loans reduced to 3.2 per cent from 4.7 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
Impairment provisions reduced to £1,594 million (December 2013: £2,384 million) and includes collective unimpaired provisions of £338 million (December 2013: £436 million).
|
·
|
The SME portfolio continues to grow within prudent and consistent credit risk appetite parameters. Net lending has increased 5 per cent since 2013 reflecting the Group’s commitment to the UK economy and the Funding for Lending Scheme.
|
·
|
Portfolio credit quality has remained stable or improved across all key metrics.
|
·
|
Other Commercial Banking comprises £74,203 million of gross loans and advances to customers in Mid Markets, Global Corporates and Financial Institutions.
|
·
|
The Mid Markets portfolio remains UK focused and dependent on the performance of the domestic economy. Overall credit quality remained stable during 2014.
|
·
|
The real estate business within Mid Markets is focused predominantly upon unquoted private real estate portfolios. Credit quality continues to improve and the number of new impaired connections is minimal.
|
·
|
The Global Corporate portfolio continues to be predominantly investment grade focused.
|
·
|
The real estate business within Global Corporate is focused on the upper end of the UK property market with a bias to the quoted publicly listed and funds sector. Portfolio credit quality remains good, being underpinned by seasoned management teams with proven asset management skills.
|
·
|
The Financial Institutions portfolio relates to relationships which are either client focused or held to support the Group’s funding, liquidity or general hedging requirements.
|
·
|
Traded products continue to be predominantly short-term and/or collateralised with inter-bank activity mainly undertaken with strong investment grade counterparties.
|
·
|
The Group classifies Direct Real Estate as exposure which is directly supported by cash flows from property activities (as opposed to trading activities, such as hotels, care homes and housebuilders).
|
·
|
The Group manages its exposures to Direct Real Estate across a number of different coverage segments.
|
·
|
Approximately three quarters of loans and advances to UK Direct Real Estate relate to commercial real estate with the remainder residential real estate.
|
·
|
The Group makes use of a variety of methodologies to assess the value of property collateral where external valuations are not available. These include use of market indexes, models and subject matter expert judgement.
|
At 31 December 20141
|
At 31 December 20131
|
|||||||||||||||
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
|||||||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
|||||||||
UK exposures >£5 m
|
||||||||||||||||
Less than 60%
|
3,985
|
52
|
4,037
|
47.8
|
4,365
|
79
|
4,444
|
42.4
|
||||||||
60% to 70%
|
1,644
|
62
|
1,706
|
20.2
|
2,113
|
69
|
2,182
|
20.8
|
||||||||
70% to 80%
|
964
|
17
|
981
|
11.6
|
1,117
|
42
|
1,159
|
11.0
|
||||||||
80% to 100%
|
66
|
211
|
277
|
3.3
|
285
|
122
|
407
|
3.9
|
||||||||
100% to 120%
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
20
|
351
|
371
|
3.5
|
||||||||
120% to 140%
|
130
|
6
|
136
|
1.6
|
130
|
170
|
300
|
2.9
|
||||||||
Greater than 140%
|
−
|
95
|
95
|
1.1
|
79
|
206
|
285
|
2.7
|
||||||||
Unsecured
|
1,222
|
−
|
1,222
|
14.4
|
1,336
|
6
|
1,342
|
12.8
|
||||||||
8,011
|
443
|
8,454
|
100.0
|
9,445
|
1,045
|
10,490
|
100.0
|
|||||||||
UK exposures <£5 m
|
8,833
|
644
|
9,477
|
8,565
|
715
|
9,280
|
||||||||||
Total
|
16,844
|
1,087
|
17,931
|
18,010
|
1,760
|
19,770
|
1
|
Exposures exclude £0.4 billion of gross UK Direct Real Estate lending in Wealth (within Retail division).
|
·
|
The Consumer Finance impairment charge reduced by 37 per cent to £215 million, with a substantial improvement in the asset quality ratio. This has been driven by a continued underlying improvement of portfolio quality supported by the sale of recoveries assets in the Credit Cards and Asset Finance portfolios.
|
·
|
Total impaired loans as a percentage of closing loans and advances to customers decreased to 3.4 per cent (£720 million) at 31 December 2014 compared to 4.8 per cent (£946 million) at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
Run-off impairment charge was £203 million in 2014, substantially lower than £1,389 million in 2013. The material reduction reflects continued proactive management and deleveraging (for example, disposals and write offs).
|
·
|
Impaired assets reduced substantially by 73 per cent to £5,215 million compared with 31 December 2013, mainly due to disposals and write-offs.
|
·
|
The most significant contribution to impaired loans is the Commercial Real Estate portfolio. 92.3 per cent of the portfolio is impaired. The impairment coverage ratio has increased to 83.5 per cent from 74.2 per cent at 31 December 2013 reflecting additional impairments on already impaired connections as well as the impact of deleveraging activities. Net lending in Ireland Commercial Real Estate has reduced to £0.4 billion (31 December 2013: £1.7 billion).
|
·
|
Total impaired loans within the Irish retail mortgage portfolio decreased by 88.2 per cent (£878 million) to £118 million, compared with £996 million at 31 December 2013. The reduction was driven by the disposal of the majority of impaired assets in the second half of 2014.
|
·
|
In the Irish retail mortgage portfolio the average indexed loan to value (LTV) at 31 December 2014 decreased to 88.5 per cent compared with 102.3 per cent at 31 December 2013. The percentage of closing loans and advances with an indexed LTV in excess of 100 per cent decreased to 38.9 per cent at 31 December 2014, compared with 54.0 per cent at 31 December 2013.
|
·
|
This portfolio predominantly consists of UK real estate loans together with other Corporate loans relating to real estate sectors, supported by trading activities (such as hotels, house builders and care homes).
|
·
|
Net loans and advances reduced by £5.2 billion from £8.2 billion to £3.0 billion. The book continues to reduce significantly ahead of expectations.
|
·
|
The Specialist Finance Run-off portfolio has been proactively deleveraged down from £9.0 billion gross (£8.5 billion net) to £4.8 billion gross (£4.6 billion net).
|
·
|
Gross loans and advances to customers include the Run-off Asset Based Finance portfolios (which mainly include Ship Finance, Aircraft Finance and Infrastructure) and the element of the Acquisition Finance (leverage lending) portfolio classified as Run-off. The Specialist Finance Run-off portfolio also includes a significantly reduced Treasury Asset legacy investment portfolio.
|
·
|
The majority of remaining lending of £4.8 billion is in the lower risk leasing sector where gross drawn lending totalled £2.5 billion.
|
At 31 December 2014
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
|||||||||
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
|||||||
Less than 60%
|
979
|
22.5
|
18
|
15.2
|
997
|
22.4
|
||||||
60% to 70%
|
356
|
8.2
|
4
|
3.4
|
360
|
8.1
|
||||||
70% to 80%
|
425
|
9.8
|
4
|
3.4
|
429
|
9.6
|
||||||
80% to 100%
|
925
|
21.3
|
14
|
11.9
|
939
|
21.0
|
||||||
100% to 120%
|
933
|
21.5
|
15
|
12.7
|
948
|
21.2
|
||||||
120% to 140%
|
505
|
11.6
|
14
|
11.9
|
519
|
11.6
|
||||||
Greater than 140%
|
221
|
5.1
|
49
|
41.5
|
270
|
6.1
|
||||||
Total
|
4,344
|
100.0
|
118
|
100.0
|
4,462
|
100.0
|
||||||
Average loan to value:
|
||||||||||||
Stock of residential mortgages
|
88.5
|
|||||||||||
Impaired mortgages
|
124.7
|
|||||||||||
At 31 December 2013
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
|||||||||
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
|||||||
Less than 60%
|
800
|
16.3
|
109
|
10.9
|
909
|
15.3
|
||||||
60% to 70%
|
297
|
6.0
|
56
|
5.6
|
353
|
5.9
|
||||||
70% to 80%
|
362
|
7.3
|
81
|
8.1
|
443
|
7.5
|
||||||
80% to 100%
|
826
|
16.7
|
199
|
20.0
|
1,025
|
17.3
|
||||||
100% to 120%
|
936
|
18.9
|
218
|
21.9
|
1,154
|
19.4
|
||||||
120% to 140%
|
894
|
18.1
|
161
|
16.2
|
1,055
|
17.8
|
||||||
Greater than 140%
|
826
|
16.7
|
172
|
17.3
|
998
|
16.8
|
||||||
Total
|
4,941
|
100.0
|
996
|
100.0
|
5,937
|
100.0
|
||||||
Average loan to value:
|
||||||||||||
Stock of residential mortgages
|
102.3
|
|||||||||||
Impaired mortgages
|
104.7
|
At 31 December 2014
|
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||||
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
%
|
|||||
Gross exposures > €5m
|
||||||||
Less than 100%
|
65
|
5.0
|
198
|
4.6
|
||||
100% to 200%
|
281
|
21.3
|
550
|
12.9
|
||||
200% to 300%
|
151
|
11.5
|
891
|
20.8
|
||||
300% to 400%
|
90
|
6.8
|
513
|
12.0
|
||||
Greater than 400%
|
494
|
37.5
|
1,682
|
39.4
|
||||
Unsecured
|
236
|
17.9
|
440
|
10.3
|
||||
1,317
|
100.0
|
4,274
|
100.0
|
|||||
Gross exposures < €5m
|
480
|
1,238
|
||||||
Total gross exposure
|
1,797
|
5,512
|
||||||
Impairment provisions
|
(1,385)
|
(3,775)
|
||||||
Total net exposure
|
412
|
1,737
|
·
|
The Group considers this portfolio to be appropriately provided for after taking into account the provisions held for each loan and the value of the collateral held.
|
·
|
In the case of impaired UK Direct Real Estate exposures (over £5 million), there is a net property collateral shortfall of approximately £60 million. This figure excludes benefits of credit mitigants such as cross collateralisation and cross guarantees. The Group makes use of a variety of methodologies to assess the value of property collateral, where external valuations are not available. These include use of market indexes, models and subject matter expert judgement.
|
At 31 December 2014
|
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||||||||||||
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
Unimpaired
|
Impaired
|
Total
|
|||||||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
|||||||||
UK exposures >£5m
|
||||||||||||||||
Less than 100%
|
1,578
|
204
|
1,782
|
67.6
|
2,021
|
725
|
2,746
|
42.3
|
||||||||
100% to 200%
|
34
|
440
|
474
|
18.0
|
34
|
1,630
|
1,664
|
25.6
|
||||||||
200% to 300%
|
−
|
86
|
86
|
3.3
|
−
|
461
|
461
|
7.1
|
||||||||
300% to 400%
|
−
|
149
|
149
|
5.7
|
−
|
400
|
400
|
6.2
|
||||||||
Greater than 400%
|
−
|
144
|
144
|
5.4
|
6
|
1,196
|
1,202
|
18.5
|
||||||||
Unsecured
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
23
|
23
|
0.3
|
||||||||
1,612
|
1,023
|
2,635
|
100.0
|
2,061
|
4,435
|
6,496
|
100.0
|
|||||||||
UK exposures <£5m
|
412
|
261
|
673
|
618
|
525
|
1,143
|
||||||||||
Total
|
2,024
|
1,284
|
3,308
|
2,679
|
4,960
|
7,639
|
||||||||||
Impairment provisions
|
−
|
(547)
|
(547)
|
−
|
(2,635)
|
(2,635)
|
||||||||||
Total net exposure
|
2,024
|
737
|
2,761
|
2,679
|
2,325
|
5,004
|
·
|
In Commercial Banking, the Group no longer reports as forborne non-payment concessions to unimpaired obligors if the revised terms are within the Group’s risk appetite and the overall risk remains acceptable, taking into account the overall structure of facilities together with the current state and expectations of financial strength (unless there is evidence of financial difficulty). There is no significant impact as a result of this change.
|
·
|
Asset Finance UK balances within Consumer Finance continue to be reported as forborne for six months after a temporary concession has ended (previously such balances were reported as forborne for the period of the concession only) and for 24 months after a permanent concession has been granted (previously 12 months). 2013 values have been restated to reflect this change.
|
Total loans and advances which are currently or recently forborne
|
Total current and recent forborne loans and advances which are impaired1
|
Impairment provisions as % of loans and advances which are currently or recently forborne
|
||||||||||
At Dec
2014
|
At Dec
2013
|
At Dec
2014
|
At Dec
2013
|
At Dec
2014
|
At Dec
2013
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||
UK secured lending:
|
||||||||||||
Temporary forbearance arrangements
|
||||||||||||
Reduced contractual monthly payment
|
146
|
957
|
29
|
221
|
6.0
|
4.1
|
||||||
Reduced payment arrangements
|
552
|
1,336
|
69
|
157
|
3.4
|
3.2
|
||||||
698
|
2,293
|
98
|
378
|
4.0
|
3.6
|
|||||||
Permanent treatments
|
||||||||||||
Repair and term extensions
|
3,696
|
3,860
|
168
|
296
|
3.5
|
3.4
|
||||||
Total
|
4,394
|
6,153
|
266
|
674
|
3.5
|
3.5
|
||||||
UK unsecured lending:
|
||||||||||||
Loans and overdrafts
|
162
|
191
|
139
|
169
|
39.4
|
45.8
|
1
|
£4,128 million of current and recent forborne secured loans and advances were not impaired at 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: £5,479 million). £23 million of current and recent forborne loans and overdrafts were not impaired at 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: £22 million).
|
At 31 December 2014
|
At 31 December 2013
|
|||||||||||
Direct Real
Estate
|
Other
industry
sector
|
Total
|
Direct Real
Estate
|
Other
industry
sector
|
Total
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||
Type of unimpaired forbearance:
|
||||||||||||
UK1 exposures > £5m
|
||||||||||||
Covenants
|
153
|
865
|
1,018
|
527
|
488
|
1,015
|
||||||
Extensions
|
−
|
426
|
426
|
69
|
254
|
323
|
||||||
Multiple
|
−
|
6
|
6
|
−
|
316
|
316
|
||||||
153
|
1,297
|
1,450
|
596
|
1,058
|
1,654
|
|||||||
Exposures < £5m and other
non-UK1
|
446
|
778
|
||||||||||
Total
|
1,896
|
2,432
|
1
|
Based on location of the office recording the transaction.
|
Total loans and advances which are forborne
|
Total forborne loans and advances which are impaired1
|
Impairment provisions as % of loans and advances which are forborne
|
||||||||||
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||
Consumer Credit Cards
|
234
|
326
|
140
|
188
|
29.1
|
21.9
|
||||||
Asset Finance2
|
109
|
149
|
53
|
75
|
20.5
|
24.0
|
1
|
£150 million of forborne loans and advances (Consumer Credit Cards: £94 million, Asset Finance: £56 million) were not impaired at 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: Consumer Credit Cards: £138 million, Asset Finance: £74 million).
|
2
|
As stated on page 49, Asset Finance retail forborne loan values for 31 December 2013 have been restated to include temporary forbearance arrangements which ended within the last six months and permanent changes which commenced during the last 24 months.
|
Total loans and advances which are currently or recently forborne
|
Total current and recent forborne loans and advances which are impaired1
|
Impairment provisions as % of loans and advances which are currently or recently forborne
|
||||||||||
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
31 Dec
2014
|
31 Dec
2013
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
%
|
%
|
|||||||
Ireland secured lending:
|
||||||||||||
Temporary forbearance arrangements
|
||||||||||||
Reduced payment arrangements
|
41
|
254
|
28
|
227
|
34.0
|
49.8
|
||||||
Permanent treatments
|
||||||||||||
Repair and term extensions
|
239
|
473
|
13
|
102
|
9.1
|
14.4
|
||||||
Total
|
280
|
727
|
41
|
329
|
12.7
|
26.7
|
1
|
£239 million of current and recent forborne loans and advances were not impaired at 31 December 2014 (31 December 2013: £398 million).
|
At 31 December 2014
|
Direct Real
Estate
|
Other
industry
sector
|
Total
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||
Type of unimpaired forbearance
|
||||||
UK1 exposures > £5m
|
||||||
Covenants
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
|||
Extensions
|
−
|
47
|
47
|
|||
Multiple
|
24
|
−
|
24
|
|||
24
|
47
|
71
|
||||
Exposures < £5m and other non-UK1
|
15
|
|||||
Total
|
86
|
1
|
Based on location of the office recording the transaction.
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
20131
|
Change
|
||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
%
|
||||
Funding requirement
|
||||||
Loans and advances to customers2
|
477.6
|
492.9
|
(3)
|
|||
Loans and advances to banks3
|
3.0
|
5.1
|
(41)
|
|||
Debt securities
|
1.2
|
1.4
|
(14)
|
|||
Reverse repurchase agreements
|
−
|
0.2
|
||||
Available-for-sale financial assets – secondary4
|
8.0
|
4.4
|
82
|
|||
Cash balances5
|
3.6
|
3.9
|
(8)
|
|||
Funded assets
|
493.4
|
507.9
|
(3)
|
|||
Other assets6
|
265.2
|
246.3
|
8
|
|||
758.6
|
754.2
|
1
|
||||
On balance sheet primary liquidity assets7
|
||||||
Reverse repurchase agreements
|
7.0
|
0.1
|
||||
Balances at central banks – primary5
|
46.9
|
46.0
|
2
|
|||
Available-for-sale financial assets – primary
|
48.5
|
39.6
|
22
|
|||
Trading and fair value through profit and loss
|
(6.1)
|
3.1
|
||||
Repurchase agreements
|
−
|
(0.6)
|
||||
96.3
|
88.2
|
9
|
||||
Total Group assets
|
854.9
|
842.4
|
1
|
|||
Less: other liabilities6
|
(240.3)
|
(224.7)
|
7
|
|||
Funding requirement
|
614.6
|
617.7
|
(1)
|
|||
Funded by
|
||||||
Customer deposits8
|
447.1
|
436.5
|
2
|
|||
Wholesale funding9
|
116.5
|
137.6
|
(15)
|
|||
563.6
|
574.1
|
(2)
|
||||
Repurchase agreements
|
1.1
|
4.3
|
(74)
|
|||
Total equity
|
49.9
|
39.3
|
27
|
|||
Total funding
|
614.6
|
617.7
|
(1)
|
1
|
Loans and advances to customers and customer deposits restated. See note 1, page 75.
|
2
|
Excludes £5.1 billion (31 December 2013: £0.1 billion) of reverse repurchase agreements.
|
3
|
Excludes £21.3 billion (31 December 2013: £20.1 billion) of loans and advances to banks within the Insurance business and £1.9 billion (31 December 2013: £0.2 billion) of reverse repurchase agreements.
|
4
|
Secondary liquidity assets comprise a diversified pool of highly rated unencumbered collateral (including retained issuance).
|
5
|
Cash balances and balances at central banks – primary are combined in the Group’s balance sheet.
|
6
|
Other assets and other liabilities primarily include balances in the Group’s Insurance business and the fair value of derivative assets and liabilities.
|
7
|
Primary liquidity assets are PRA eligible liquid assets, including UK Gilts, US Treasuries, Euro AAA government debt, designated multilateral development bank debt and unencumbered cash balances held at central banks.
|
8
|
Excluding repurchase agreements at 31 December 2014 of £nil (31 December 2013: £3.0 billion).
|
9
|
The Group’s definition of wholesale funding aligns with that used by other international market participants; including interbank deposits, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities.
|
At 31 December 2014
|
Included in
funding
analysis
|
Repos
|
Fair value
and other
accounting
methods
|
Balance
sheet
|
||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||
Deposits from banks
|
9.8
|
1.1
|
−
|
10.9
|
||||
Debt securities in issue
|
80.6
|
−
|
(4.4)
|
76.2
|
||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
26.1
|
−
|
(0.1)
|
26.0
|
||||
Total wholesale funding
|
116.5
|
1.1
|
||||||
Customer deposits
|
447.1
|
−
|
−
|
447.1
|
||||
Total
|
563.6
|
1.1
|
At 31 December 2013
|
Included in
funding
analysis
(above)
|
Repos
|
Fair value
and other
accounting
methods
|
Balance
sheet
|
||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||
Deposits from banks
|
12.1
|
1.9
|
−
|
14.0
|
||||
Debt securities in issue
|
91.6
|
−
|
(4.5)
|
87.1
|
||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
33.9
|
−
|
(1.6)
|
32.3
|
||||
Total wholesale funding
|
137.6
|
1.9
|
||||||
Customer deposits
|
436.5
|
3.0
|
−
|
439.5
|
||||
Total
|
574.1
|
4.9
|
Less
than
one
month
|
One to
three
months
|
Three
to six
months
|
Six to
nine
months
|
Nine
months
to one
year
|
One to
two
years
|
Two to
five
years
|
More
than
five
years
|
Total
at
31 Dec
2014
|
Total
at
31 Dec
2013
|
|||||||||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||||||||
Deposit from banks
|
7.0
|
1.2
|
0.5
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
9.8
|
12.1
|
||||||||||
Debt securities in issue:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Certificates of deposit
|
1.0
|
2.7
|
1.2
|
0.6
|
1.3
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
6.8
|
9.0
|
||||||||||
Commercial paper
|
4.7
|
1.4
|
0.3
|
0.8
|
0.1
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
7.3
|
4.8
|
||||||||||
Medium-term notes1
|
1.0
|
0.7
|
1.1
|
1.4
|
1.3
|
4.5
|
8.5
|
10.7
|
29.2
|
29.1
|
||||||||||
Covered bonds
|
0.3
|
0.7
|
−
|
1.3
|
−
|
3.0
|
8.0
|
11.9
|
25.2
|
29.4
|
||||||||||
Securitisation
|
0.1
|
0.9
|
2.0
|
1.9
|
2.0
|
2.2
|
2.4
|
0.6
|
12.1
|
19.3
|
||||||||||
7.1
|
6.4
|
4.6
|
6.0
|
4.7
|
9.7
|
18.9
|
23.2
|
80.6
|
91.6
|
|||||||||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
−
|
1.1
|
1.3
|
0.7
|
0.1
|
3.3
|
4.6
|
15.0
|
26.1
|
33.9
|
||||||||||
Total wholesale funding2
|
1
|
14.1
|
8.7
|
6.4
|
7.0
|
4.9
|
13.1
|
23.6
|
38.7
|
116.5
|
137.6
|
1
|
Medium-term notes include funding from the National Loan Guarantee Scheme (31 December 2014: £1.4 billion; 31 December 2013: £1.4 billion).
|
2
|
The Group’s definition of wholesale funding aligns with that used by other international market participants; including interbank deposits, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities.
|
Sterling
|
US Dollar
|
Euro
|
Other
currencies
|
Total
|
||||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
||||||
Securitisation
|
1.2
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
1.2
|
|||||
Medium-term notes
|
0.3
|
0.6
|
2.0
|
0.3
|
3.2
|
|||||
Covered bonds
|
1.5
|
−
|
0.8
|
−
|
2.3
|
|||||
Private placements1
|
0.3
|
1.5
|
1.1
|
0.4
|
3.3
|
|||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
−
|
0.6
|
−
|
−
|
0.6
|
|||||
Total issuance
|
3.3
|
2.7
|
3.9
|
0.7
|
10.6
|
1
|
Private placements include structured bonds and term repurchase agreements (repos).
|
Primary liquidity
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Average
2014
|
Average
2013
|
||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||
Central bank cash deposits
|
46.9
|
46.0
|
62.3
|
69.4
|
||||
Government/MDB bonds1
|
62.4
|
43.3
|
47.9
|
28.2
|
||||
Total
|
109.3
|
89.3
|
110.2
|
97.6
|
Secondary liquidity
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
Average
2014
|
Average
2013
|
||||
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
£bn
|
|||||
High-quality ABS/covered bonds2
|
3.9
|
1.4
|
3.6
|
2.0
|
||||
Credit institution bonds2
|
0.9
|
0.4
|
1.4
|
1.2
|
||||
Corporate bonds2
|
0.6
|
0.1
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
||||
Own securities (retained issuance)
|
20.6
|
22.1
|
22.2
|
33.3
|
||||
Other securities
|
5.7
|
4.3
|
5.5
|
4.8
|
||||
Other3
|
67.5
|
77.1
|
74.1
|
75.2
|
||||
Total
|
99.2
|
105.4
|
107.1
|
116.6
|
||||
Total liquidity
|
208.5
|
194.7
|
1
|
Designated multilateral development bank (MDB).
|
2
|
Assets rated A- or above.
|
3
|
Includes other central bank eligible assets.
|
·
|
The Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio increased 2.5 percentage points from 10.3 per cent (pro forma) to 12.8 per cent.
|
·
|
The leverage ratio increased 1.1 percentage points from 3.8 per cent (pro forma) to 4.9 per cent.
|
·
|
The transitional total capital ratio increased 3.2 percentage points from 18.8 per cent (pro forma) to 22.0 per cent.
|
·
|
The Group’s Pillar 2A Individual Capital Guidance equates to 3.8 per cent of RWAs, of which 2.1 per cent must be covered by CET1 capital. This reflects a point in time estimate by the PRA, which may change over time, of the total amount of capital that is needed and includes risks that are not fully covered by Pillar 1 such as credit concentration and operational risk, and those risks not covered by Pillar 1 such as pensions and interest rate risk.
|
·
|
The Group is now assuming a steady state CET1 ratio requirement of around 12 per cent.
|
Transitional
|
Fully loaded
|
||||||
Capital resources
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
20132
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
20132
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||
Common equity tier 1
|
|||||||
Shareholders’ equity per balance sheet
|
43,335
|
39,191
|
43,335
|
39,191
|
|||
Adjustment to retained earnings for foreseeable dividends
|
(535)
|
−
|
(535)
|
−
|
|||
Deconsolidation of insurance entities1
|
(824)
|
(1,367)
|
(824)
|
(1,367)
|
|||
Adjustment for own credit
|
158
|
185
|
158
|
185
|
|||
Cash flow hedging reserve
|
(1,139)
|
1,055
|
(1,139)
|
1,055
|
|||
Other adjustments
|
333
|
133
|
333
|
133
|
|||
41,328
|
39,197
|
41,328
|
39,197
|
||||
less: deductions from common equity tier 1
|
|||||||
Goodwill and other intangible assets
|
(1,875)
|
(1,979)
|
(1,875)
|
(1,979)
|
|||
Excess of expected losses over impairment provisions and value adjustments
|
(565)
|
(866)
|
(565)
|
(866)
|
|||
Removal of defined benefit pension surplus
|
(909)
|
(78)
|
(909)
|
(78)
|
|||
Securitisation deductions
|
(211)
|
(141)
|
(211)
|
(141)
|
|||
Significant investments1
|
(2,546)
|
(2,890)
|
(2,546)
|
(3,090)
|
|||
Deferred tax assets
|
(4,533)
|
(5,025)
|
(4,533)
|
(5,118)
|
|||
Common equity tier 1 capital
|
30,689
|
28,218
|
30,689
|
27,925
|
|||
Additional tier 1
|
|||||||
Additional tier 1 instruments
|
9,728
|
4,486
|
5,355
|
−
|
|||
less: deductions from tier 1
|
|||||||
Significant investments
|
(859)
|
(677)
|
−
|
−
|
|||
Total tier 1 capital
|
39,558
|
32,027
|
36,044
|
27,925
|
|||
Tier 2
|
|||||||
Tier 2 instruments
|
14,197
|
19,870
|
10,836
|
15,636
|
|||
Eligible provisions
|
333
|
349
|
333
|
349
|
|||
less: deductions from tier 2
|
|||||||
Significant investments
|
(1,288)
|
(1,015)
|
(2,146)
|
(1,692)
|
|||
Total capital resources
|
52,800
|
51,231
|
45,067
|
42,218
|
|||
Risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
272,641
|
239,734
|
271,908
|
|||
Common equity tier 1 capital ratio
|
12.8%
|
10.3%
|
12.8%
|
10.3%
|
|||
Tier 1 capital ratio
|
16.5%
|
11.7%
|
15.0%
|
10.3%
|
|||
Total capital ratio
|
22.0%
|
18.8%
|
18.8%
|
15.5%
|
1
|
The amount of post-acquisition reserves for the Group’s Insurance business are excluded from shareholders’ equity. The remaining cost of the Group’s investment in the equity of the Insurance business is risk-weighted as part of threshold risk-weighted assets up to a limit based on the size of the Group’s common equity tier 1 capital position, with the residual amount deducted from common equity tier 1 capital.
|
2
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014 and are reported on a pro forma basis that includes the benefit of the sales of Heidelberger Leben, Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and the Group’s 50 per cent stake in Sainsbury’s Bank. 31 December 2013 common equity tier 1 ratios, excluding the benefit of these sales, were 10.0 per cent fully loaded and 10.1 per cent on transitional rules, while risk-weighted assets under fully loaded rules were £271.1 billion and under transitional rules were £272.1 billion.
|
·
|
Capital securities that previously qualified as tier 1 or tier 2 capital, but do not fully qualify under CRD IV, can be included in tier 1 or tier 2 capital (as applicable) up to a specified limit which reduces by 10 per cent per annum until 2022.
|
·
|
The significant investment deduction from AT1 in 2014 will transition to tier 2 by 2018.
|
Common
Equity Tier 1
|
Additional
Tier 1
|
Tier 2
|
Total
capital
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 31 December 20131
|
28,218
|
3,809
|
19,204
|
51,231
|
||||
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders2
|
1,235
|
1,235
|
||||||
Adjustment to above re December 13 pro forma
|
(202)
|
(202)
|
||||||
Adjustment to retained earnings for foreseeable dividends
|
(535)
|
(535)
|
||||||
Pension movements:
|
||||||||
Deduction of pension asset
|
(831)
|
(831)
|
||||||
Movement through other comprehensive income
|
739
|
739
|
||||||
Available-for-sale reserve
|
548
|
548
|
||||||
Deferred tax asset
|
492
|
492
|
||||||
Goodwill and intangible assets deductions
|
104
|
104
|
||||||
Excess of expected losses over impairment provisions and value adjustments
|
301
|
301
|
||||||
Significant investment deduction
|
344
|
(182)
|
(273)
|
(111)
|
||||
Eligible provisions
|
−
|
(16)
|
(16)
|
|||||
Subordinated debt movements:
|
||||||||
Restructuring to ensure CRD IV compliance
|
−
|
5,355
|
(4,006)
|
1,349
|
||||
Subordinated debt issuance
|
−
|
−
|
645
|
645
|
||||
Repurchases, redemptions and other
|
−
|
(113)
|
(2,312)
|
(2,425)
|
||||
Other movements
|
276
|
−
|
−
|
276
|
||||
At 31 December 2014
|
30,689
|
8,869
|
13,242
|
52,800
|
1
|
31 December 2013 comparatives reflect CRD IV transitional rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014 and are reported on a pro forma basis that includes the benefit of the sales of Heidelberger Leben, Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and the Group’s 50 per cent stake in Sainsbury’s Bank.
|
2
|
As the Insurance business is excluded from the scope of the Group’s regulatory capital consolidation, profits made by Insurance are removed from CET1 capital. Dividends paid to the Group by Insurance, however, are recognised through CET1 capital and for the period include £400 million paid in March 2014 and £300 million paid in December 2014. In addition, the sale of Heidelberger Leben resulted in the payment of an additional dividend from Insurance to the Group of £295 million.
|
Transitional1
|
||||
Risk-weighted assets
|
At 31 Dec
2014
|
At 31 Dec
2013
|
||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Divisional analysis of risk-weighted assets:
|
||||
Retail
|
67,666
|
72,948
|
||
Consumer Finance
|
20,882
|
20,136
|
||
Commercial Banking
|
106,185
|
123,951
|
||
Central Items
|
12,193
|
7,743
|
||
TSB2
|
5,170
|
5,591
|
||
Run-off
|
16,814
|
30,569
|
||
Underlying risk-weighted assets
|
228,910
|
260,938
|
||
Threshold risk-weighted assets
|
10,824
|
11,154
|
||
Total risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
272,092
|
||
Movement to fully loaded risk-weighted assets
|
−
|
(1,014)
|
||
Fully loaded risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
271,078
|
||
Risk type analysis of risk-weighted assets:
|
||||
Foundation Internal Ratings Based (IRB) Approach
|
72,393
|
84,882
|
||
Retail IRB Approach
|
72,886
|
83,815
|
||
Other IRB Approach
|
15,324
|
9,526
|
||
IRB Approach
|
160,603
|
178,223
|
||
Standardised Approach
|
25,444
|
33,819
|
||
Contributions to the default fund of a central counterparty
|
515
|
484
|
||
Credit risk
|
186,562
|
212,526
|
||
Counterparty credit risk
|
9,108
|
7,546
|
||
Credit valuation adjustment
|
2,215
|
3,190
|
||
Operational risk
|
26,279
|
26,594
|
||
Market risk
|
4,746
|
11,082
|
||
Underlying risk-weighted assets
|
228,910
|
260,938
|
||
Threshold risk-weighted assets3
|
10,824
|
11,154
|
||
Total risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
272,092
|
||
Movement to fully loaded risk-weighted assets4
|
−
|
(1,014)
|
||
Fully loaded risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
271,078
|
Pro forma transitional rules risk-weighted assets
|
272,641
|
|||||||
Pro forma fully loaded risk-weighted assets
|
271,908
|
1
|
CRD lV rules as implemented by the PRA at 1 January 2014.
|
2
|
TSB risk-weighted assets are on a Lloyds Banking Group reporting basis and differ to those reported by TSB as a standalone regulated entity.
|
3
|
Threshold risk-weighted assets reflect the element of significant investments and deferred tax assets that are permitted to be risk-weighted instead of deducted from common equity tier 1 capital under threshold rules. Significant investments primarily arise from investment in the Group’s Insurance business.
|
4
|
Differences may arise between transitional and fully loaded threshold risk-weighted assets where deferred tax assets reliant on future profitability and arising from temporary timing differences and significant investments exceed the fully loaded threshold limit, resulting in an increase in amounts deducted from CET1 rather than being risk-weighted. At 31 December 2014 the fully loaded threshold was not exceeded and therefore no further adjustment was applied to the transitional threshold risk-weighted assets.
|
·
|
Retail division risk-weighted assets reduced by £5.2 billion in the year primarily due to improvements in credit quality arising from active portfolio management and the impact of positive economic factors (including favourable movements in UK house prices and reduced unemployment) as well as the exit from its joint venture banking operations with Sainsbury’s. These movements are partially offset by risk-weighted asset increases arising from model changes.
|
·
|
Consumer Finance division risk-weighted assets increased by £0.8 billion largely due to new business lending and model changes partially offset by reductions arising from improvements in credit quality and economic factors.
|
·
|
Commercial Banking risk-weighted assets reduced by £17.8 billion mainly reflecting market risk reductions, active portfolio management and methodology refinements. The market risk-weighted asset reduction of £6.3 billion is primarily due to the removal of a temporary capital buffer applied to the Group’s internal market risk models on completion of specific market risk infrastructure projects.
|
·
|
Central Items risk-weighted assets primarily comprise the Group’s liquidity portfolio and strategic equity investments and other balance sheet assets such as fixed assets and sundry debtors. The increase in the year of £4.4 billion is primarily due to equity received in consideration for the disposal of Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP).
|
·
|
The reduction in Run-off risk-weighted assets of £13.8 billion is mainly due to disposals, including the sale of loans in the Irish retail mortgage portfolio and movements in external economic factors.
|
Risk-weighted assets movement
by key driver
|
Credit
risk1
|
Counter
party
credit risk1
|
Market
risk
|
Operational risk
|
Total
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||||
Risk-weighted assets at
31 December 2013
|
212,526
|
10,736
|
11,082
|
26,594
|
260,938
|
|||||
Management of the balance sheet
|
(4,694)
|
(366)
|
(1,850)
|
−
|
(6,910)
|
|||||
Disposals
|
(9,781)
|
(170)
|
−
|
−
|
(9,951)
|
|||||
External economic factors
|
(10,459)
|
1,187
|
26
|
−
|
(9,246)
|
|||||
Model and methodology changes
|
(995)
|
(64)
|
(4,512)
|
−
|
(5,571)
|
|||||
Other
|
(35)
|
−
|
−
|
(315)
|
(350)
|
|||||
Risk-weighted assets
|
186,562
|
11,323
|
4,746
|
26,279
|
228,910
|
|||||
Threshold risk-weighted assets
|
10,824
|
|||||||||
Total risk-weighted assets
|
239,734
|
1
|
Credit risk includes movements in contributions to the default fund of central counterparties and counterparty credit risk includes the movements in credit valuation adjustments.
|
Fully loaded
|
||||
2014
|
20131
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Total tier 1 capital for leverage ratio2
|
||||
Common equity tier 1 capital
|
30,689
|
27,041
|
||
Additional tier 1 capital
|
5,355
|
−
|
||
Total tier 1 capital
|
36,044
|
27,041
|
||
Exposure measure3
|
||||
Statutory balance sheet assets
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
36,128
|
30,804
|
||
Securities financing transactions (SFTs)
|
43,772
|
29,592
|
||
Loans and advances and other assets
|
774,996
|
781,984
|
||
Total assets
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
||
Deconsolidation of insurance entities
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
(1,686)
|
(1,030)
|
||
Loans and advances and other assets
|
(143,459)
|
(150,174)
|
||
Total deconsolidation adjustments
|
(145,145)
|
(151,204)
|
||
Derivatives adjustments
|
||||
Adjustment for regulatory netting
|
(24,187)
|
(20,926)
|
||
Adjustment to cash collateral
|
(1,024)
|
(70)
|
||
Net written credit protection
|
425
|
280
|
||
Regulatory potential future exposure
|
12,722
|
13,368
|
||
Total derivatives adjustments
|
(12,064)
|
(7,348)
|
||
Counterparty credit risk add-on for SFTs
|
1,364
|
1,921
|
||
Off-balance sheet items
|
50,980
|
55,987
|
||
Regulatory deductions and other adjustments
|
(10,362)
|
(9,382)
|
||
Total exposure
|
739,669
|
732,354
|
||
Leverage ratio
|
4.9%
|
3.7%
|
||
Pro forma leverage ratio at 31 December 20134
|
3.8%
|
|||
1
|
31 December 2013 comparatives are reported on the same basis of calculation as the current year.
|
2
|
Calculated in accordance with CRD IV rules.
|
3
|
Calculated in accordance with the revised Basel III leverage ratio framework issued in January 2014, as interpreted through the July 2014 Basel III Quantitative Impact Study instructions and related guidance.
|
4
|
Includes the pro forma benefit of the sales of Heidelberger Leben, Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and the Group’s 50 per cent stake in Sainsbury’s Bank.
|
Page
|
||
Condensed consolidated financial statements
|
||
Consolidated income statement
|
68
|
|
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
|
69
|
|
Consolidated balance sheet
|
70
|
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
|
72
|
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
|
74
|
|
Notes
|
||
1
|
Accounting policies, presentation and estimates
|
75
|
2
|
Segmental analysis
|
76
|
3
|
Other income
|
80
|
4
|
Operating expenses
|
81
|
5
|
Impairment
|
82
|
6
|
Taxation
|
83
|
7
|
Earnings (loss) per share
|
83
|
8
|
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
84
|
9
|
Derivative financial instruments
|
84
|
10
|
Loans and advances to customers
|
85
|
11
|
Allowance for impairment losses on loans and receivables
|
85
|
12
|
Securitisations and covered bonds
|
86
|
13
|
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
87
|
14
|
Other assets
|
87
|
15
|
Customer deposits
|
87
|
16
|
Debt securities in issue
|
88
|
17
|
Other liabilities
|
88
|
18
|
Post-retirement defined benefit schemes
|
88
|
19
|
Subordinated liabilities
|
90
|
20
|
Share capital
|
90
|
21
|
Reserves
|
91
|
22
|
Other equity instruments
|
92
|
23
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges
|
93
|
24
|
Contingent liabilities and commitments
|
101
|
25
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities
|
102
|
26
|
Related party transactions
|
110
|
27
|
Disposal of a non-controlling interest in TSB Banking Group plc
|
112
|
28
|
Ordinary dividends
|
112
|
29
|
Future accounting developments
|
113
|
30
|
Other information
|
113
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||||
Note
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
||||
Interest and similar income
|
19,211
|
21,163
|
||||
Interest and similar expense
|
(8,551)
|
(13,825)
|
||||
Net interest income
|
10,660
|
7,338
|
||||
Fee and commission income
|
3,659
|
4,119
|
||||
Fee and commission expense
|
(1,402)
|
(1,385)
|
||||
Net fee and commission income
|
2,257
|
2,734
|
||||
Net trading income
|
10,159
|
16,467
|
||||
Insurance premium income
|
7,125
|
8,197
|
||||
Other operating income
|
(309)
|
3,249
|
||||
Other income
|
3
|
19,232
|
30,647
|
|||
Total income
|
29,892
|
37,985
|
||||
Insurance claims
|
(13,493)
|
(19,507)
|
||||
Total income, net of insurance claims
|
16,399
|
18,478
|
||||
Regulatory provisions
|
(3,125)
|
(3,455)
|
||||
Other operating expenses
|
(10,760)
|
(11,867)
|
||||
Total operating expenses
|
4
|
(13,885)
|
(15,322)
|
|||
Trading surplus
|
2,514
|
3,156
|
||||
Impairment
|
5
|
(752)
|
(2,741)
|
|||
Profit before tax
|
1,762
|
415
|
||||
Taxation
|
6
|
(263)
|
(1,217)
|
|||
Profit (loss) for the year
|
1,499
|
(802)
|
||||
Profit (loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders
|
1,125
|
(838)
|
||||
Profit attributable to other equity holders1
|
287
|
−
|
||||
Profit (loss) attributable to equity holders
|
1,412
|
(838)
|
||||
Profit attributable to non-controlling interests
|
87
|
36
|
||||
Profit (loss) for the year
|
1,499
|
(802)
|
||||
Basic earnings (loss) per share
|
7
|
1.7p
|
(1.2)p
|
|||
Diluted earnings (loss) per share
|
7
|
1.6p
|
(1.2)p
|
1
|
The profit after tax attributable to other equity holders of £287 million (2013: £nil) is offset in reserves by a tax credit attributable to ordinary shareholders of £62 million (2013: £nil).
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||
Profit (loss) for the year
|
1,499
|
(802)
|
||
Other comprehensive income
|
||||
Items that will not subsequently be reclassified to profit or loss:
|
||||
Post-retirement defined benefit scheme remeasurements (note 18):
|
||||
Remeasurements before taxation
|
674
|
(136)
|
||
Taxation
|
(135)
|
28
|
||
539
|
(108)
|
|||
Items that may subsequently be reclassified to profit or loss:
|
||||
Movements in revaluation reserve in respect of available-for-sale financial assets:
|
||||
Change in fair value
|
690
|
(680)
|
||
Income statement transfers in respect of disposals
|
(131)
|
(629)
|
||
Income statement transfers in respect of impairment
|
2
|
18
|
||
Taxation
|
(13)
|
277
|
||
548
|
(1,014)
|
|||
Movements in cash flow hedging reserve:
|
||||
Effective portion of changes in fair value
|
3,896
|
(1,229)
|
||
Net income statement transfers
|
(1,153)
|
(550)
|
||
Taxation
|
(549)
|
374
|
||
2,194
|
(1,405)
|
|||
Currency translation differences (tax: nil)
|
(3)
|
(6)
|
||
Other comprehensive income for the year, net of tax
|
3,278
|
(2,533)
|
||
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
4,777
|
(3,335)
|
||
Total comprehensive income attributable to ordinary shareholders
|
4,403
|
(3,371)
|
||
Total comprehensive income attributable to other equity holders
|
287
|
−
|
||
Total comprehensive income attributable to equity holders
|
4,690
|
(3,371)
|
||
Total comprehensive income attributable to non-controlling interests
|
87
|
36
|
||
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
4,777
|
(3,335)
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||||
Assets
|
Note
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||
Cash and balances at central banks
|
50,492
|
49,915
|
||||
Items in course of collection from banks
|
1,173
|
1,007
|
||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
8
|
151,931
|
142,683
|
|||
Derivative financial instruments1
|
9
|
36,128
|
30,804
|
|||
Loans and receivables:
|
||||||
Loans and advances to banks
|
26,155
|
25,365
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers1
|
10
|
482,704
|
492,952
|
|||
Debt securities
|
1,213
|
1,355
|
||||
510,072
|
519,672
|
|||||
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
13
|
56,493
|
43,976
|
|||
Investment properties
|
4,492
|
4,864
|
||||
Goodwill
|
2,016
|
2,016
|
||||
Value of in-force business
|
4,864
|
5,335
|
||||
Other intangible assets
|
2,070
|
2,279
|
||||
Tangible fixed assets
|
8,052
|
7,570
|
||||
Current tax recoverable
|
127
|
31
|
||||
Deferred tax assets
|
4,145
|
5,104
|
||||
Retirement benefit assets
|
18
|
1,147
|
98
|
|||
Other assets
|
14
|
21,694
|
27,026
|
|||
Total assets
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
1
|
See note 1, page 75.
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||||
Equity and liabilities
|
Note
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||
Liabilities
|
||||||
Deposits from banks
|
10,887
|
13,982
|
||||
Customer deposits1
|
15
|
447,067
|
439,467
|
|||
Items in course of transmission to banks
|
979
|
774
|
||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
62,102
|
43,625
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments1
|
9
|
33,187
|
27,658
|
|||
Notes in circulation
|
1,129
|
1,176
|
||||
Debt securities in issue
|
16
|
76,233
|
87,102
|
|||
Liabilities arising from insurance contracts and
participating investment contracts
|
86,918
|
82,777
|
||||
Liabilities arising from non-participating investment contracts
|
27,248
|
27,590
|
||||
Unallocated surplus within insurance businesses
|
320
|
391
|
||||
Other liabilities
|
17
|
28,105
|
40,456
|
|||
Retirement benefit obligations
|
18
|
453
|
1,096
|
|||
Current tax liabilities
|
69
|
147
|
||||
Deferred tax liabilities
|
54
|
3
|
||||
Other provisions
|
4,200
|
4,488
|
||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
19
|
26,042
|
32,312
|
|||
Total liabilities
|
804,993
|
803,044
|
||||
Equity
|
||||||
Share capital
|
20
|
7,146
|
7,145
|
|||
Share premium account
|
21
|
17,281
|
17,279
|
|||
Other reserves
|
21
|
13,216
|
10,477
|
|||
Retained profits
|
21
|
5,692
|
4,088
|
|||
Shareholders’ equity
|
43,335
|
38,989
|
||||
Other equity instruments
|
22
|
5,355
|
−
|
|||
Total equity excluding non-controlling interests
|
48,690
|
38,989
|
||||
Non-controlling interests
|
1,213
|
347
|
||||
Total equity
|
49,903
|
39,336
|
||||
Total equity and liabilities
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
Attributable to equity shareholders
|
||||||||||||||
Share
capital
and
premium
|
Other
reserves
|
Retained
profits
|
Total
|
Other
equity
instruments
|
Non-
controlling
interests
|
Total
|
||||||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
||||||||
Balance at 1 January 2014
|
24,424
|
10,477
|
4,088
|
38,989
|
−
|
347
|
39,336
|
|||||||
Comprehensive income
|
||||||||||||||
Profit for the year
|
–
|
−
|
1,412
|
1,412
|
–
|
87
|
1,499
|
|||||||
Other comprehensive income
|
||||||||||||||
Post-retirement defined benefit scheme remeasurements, net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
539
|
539
|
–
|
–
|
539
|
|||||||
Movements in revaluation reserve in respect of available-for-sale financial assets, net of tax
|
–
|
548
|
–
|
548
|
–
|
–
|
548
|
|||||||
Movements in cash flow hedging reserve, net of tax
|
–
|
2,194
|
–
|
2,194
|
–
|
–
|
2,194
|
|||||||
Currency translation differences (tax: nil)
|
–
|
(3)
|
–
|
(3)
|
–
|
–
|
(3)
|
|||||||
Total other comprehensive income
|
–
|
2,739
|
539
|
3,278
|
–
|
–
|
3,278
|
|||||||
Total comprehensive income
|
–
|
2,739
|
1,951
|
4,690
|
–
|
87
|
4,777
|
|||||||
Transactions with owners
|
||||||||||||||
Dividends
|
–
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
–
|
(27)
|
(27)
|
|||||||
Distributions on other equity instruments, net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
(225)
|
(225)
|
–
|
–
|
(225)
|
|||||||
Issue of ordinary shares
|
3
|
–
|
–
|
3
|
–
|
–
|
3
|
|||||||
Issue of Additional Tier 1 securities (note 22)
|
–
|
–
|
(21)
|
(21)
|
5,355
|
–
|
5,334
|
|||||||
Movement in treasury shares
|
–
|
–
|
(286)
|
(286)
|
–
|
–
|
(286)
|
|||||||
Value of employee services:
|
||||||||||||||
Share option schemes
|
–
|
–
|
123
|
123
|
–
|
–
|
123
|
|||||||
Other employee award schemes
|
–
|
–
|
233
|
233
|
–
|
–
|
233
|
|||||||
Adjustment on sale of non-controlling interest in TSB Banking Group plc (TSB) (note 27)
|
–
|
−
|
(171)
|
(171)
|
–
|
805
|
634
|
|||||||
Other changes in non-controlling interests
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
1
|
1
|
|||||||
Total transactions with owners
|
3
|
–
|
(347)
|
(344)
|
5,355
|
779
|
5,790
|
|||||||
Balance at
31 December 2014
|
24,427
|
13,216
|
5,692
|
43,335
|
5,355
|
1,213
|
49,903
|
Share
capital and
premium
|
Other
reserves
|
Retained
profits
|
Total
|
Non-
controlling
interests
|
Total
|
|||||||
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||||||
Balance at 1 January 2013
|
23,914
|
12,902
|
5,080
|
41,896
|
685
|
42,581
|
||||||
Comprehensive income
|
||||||||||||
(Loss) profit for the year
|
–
|
–
|
(838)
|
(838)
|
36
|
(802)
|
||||||
Other comprehensive income
|
||||||||||||
Post-retirement defined benefit scheme remeasurements,
net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
(108)
|
(108)
|
–
|
(108)
|
||||||
Movements in revaluation reserve
in respect of available-for-sale financial assets, net of tax
|
–
|
(1,014)
|
–
|
(1,014)
|
−
|
(1,014)
|
||||||
Movements in cash flow hedging reserve, net of tax
|
–
|
(1,405)
|
–
|
(1,405)
|
–
|
(1,405)
|
||||||
Currency translation differences (tax: nil)
|
–
|
(6)
|
–
|
(6)
|
–
|
(6)
|
||||||
Total other comprehensive income
|
–
|
(2,425)
|
(108)
|
(2,533)
|
−
|
(2,533)
|
||||||
Total comprehensive income
|
–
|
(2,425)
|
(946)
|
(3,371)
|
36
|
(3,335)
|
||||||
Transactions with owners
|
||||||||||||
Dividends
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(25)
|
(25)
|
||||||
Issue of ordinary shares
|
510
|
–
|
–
|
510
|
–
|
510
|
||||||
Movement in treasury shares
|
–
|
–
|
(480)
|
(480)
|
–
|
(480)
|
||||||
Value of employee services:
|
||||||||||||
Share option schemes
|
–
|
–
|
142
|
142
|
–
|
142
|
||||||
Other employee award schemes
|
–
|
–
|
292
|
292
|
–
|
292
|
||||||
Change in non-controlling interests
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(349)
|
(349)
|
||||||
Total transactions with owners
|
510
|
–
|
(46)
|
464
|
(374)
|
90
|
||||||
Balance at 31 December 2013
|
24,424
|
10,477
|
4,088
|
38,989
|
347
|
39,336
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£ million
|
£ million
|
|||
Profit before tax
|
1,762
|
415
|
||
Adjustments for:
|
||||
Change in operating assets1
|
(872)
|
20,383
|
||
Change in operating liabilities1
|
11,992
|
(47,687)
|
||
Non-cash and other items
|
(2,496)
|
11,382
|
||
Tax received (paid)
|
(33)
|
(24)
|
||
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities
|
10,353
|
(15,531)
|
||
Cash flows from investing activities
|
||||
Purchase of financial assets
|
(11,533)
|
(36,959)
|
||
Proceeds from sale and maturity of financial assets
|
4,668
|
21,552
|
||
Purchase of fixed assets
|
(3,442)
|
(2,982)
|
||
Proceeds from sale of fixed assets
|
2,043
|
2,090
|
||
Acquisition of businesses, net of cash acquired
|
(1)
|
(6)
|
||
Disposal of businesses, net of cash disposed
|
543
|
696
|
||
Net cash used in investing activities
|
(7,722)
|
(15,609)
|
||
Cash flows from financing activities
|
||||
Distributions on other equity instruments
|
(287)
|
−
|
||
Dividends paid to non-controlling interests
|
(27)
|
(25)
|
||
Interest paid on subordinated liabilities
|
(2,205)
|
(2,451)
|
||
Proceeds from issue of subordinated liabilities
|
629
|
1,500
|
||
Proceeds from issue of ordinary shares
|
3
|
350
|
||
Repayment of subordinated liabilities
|
(3,023)
|
(2,442)
|
||
Changes in non-controlling interests
|
635
|
−
|
||
Net cash used in financing activities
|
(4,275)
|
(3,068)
|
||
Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
|
(6)
|
(53)
|
||
Change in cash and cash equivalents
|
(1,650)
|
(34,261)
|
||
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year
|
66,797
|
101,058
|
||
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year
|
65,147
|
66,797
|
1
|
See note 1, page 75.
|
1.
|
Accounting policies, presentation and estimates
|
2.
|
Segmental analysis
|
·
|
The Wealth business has been integrated into the Retail division;
|
·
|
The Consumer Finance division now includes credit cards, asset finance and the European online deposits businesses; the Retail and Commercial Banking credit cards businesses have transferred into Consumer Finance;
|
·
|
TSB operates as a standalone listed entity following the IPO;
|
·
|
The remaining portfolio of assets which are outside of the Group’s risk appetite is managed within Other.
|
2.
|
Segmental analysis (continued)
|
2014
|
Net
interest
income
|
Other
income,
net of
insurance
claims
|
Total
income,
net of
insurance
claims
|
Profit
(loss)
before tax
|
External
revenue
|
Inter-
segment
revenue
|
||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||
Underlying basis
|
||||||||||||
Retail
|
7,079
|
1,212
|
8,291
|
3,228
|
9,034
|
(743)
|
||||||
Commercial Banking
|
2,480
|
1,956
|
4,436
|
2,206
|
3,800
|
636
|
||||||
Consumer Finance
|
1,290
|
1,364
|
2,654
|
1,010
|
2,803
|
(149)
|
||||||
Insurance
|
(131)
|
1,725
|
1,594
|
922
|
1,206
|
388
|
||||||
TSB
|
786
|
140
|
926
|
458
|
912
|
14
|
||||||
Other
|
257
|
210
|
467
|
(68)
|
613
|
(146)
|
||||||
Group
|
11,761
|
6,607
|
18,368
|
7,756
|
18,368
|
−
|
||||||
Reconciling items:
|
||||||||||||
Insurance grossing adjustment
|
(482)
|
614
|
132
|
−
|
||||||||
Asset sales, volatile items and liability management1
|
7
|
(1,119)
|
(1,112)
|
(962)
|
||||||||
Volatility relating to the insurance business
|
−
|
(228)
|
(228)
|
(228)
|
||||||||
Simplification costs
|
−
|
(22)
|
(22)
|
(966)
|
||||||||
TSB costs
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
(558)
|
||||||||
Payment protection insurance provision
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
(2,200)
|
||||||||
Other regulatory provisions
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
(925)
|
||||||||
Past service credit2
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
710
|
||||||||
Amortisation of purchased intangibles
|
−
|
−
|
−
|
(336)
|
||||||||
Fair value unwind
|
(626)
|
(113)
|
(739)
|
(529)
|
||||||||
Group – statutory
|
10,660
|
5,739
|
16,399
|
1,762
|
1
|
Comprises (i) gains on disposals of assets which are not part of normal business operations (£138 million); (ii) the net effect of banking volatility, changes in the fair value of the equity conversion feature of the Group’s Enhanced Capital Notes and net derivative valuation adjustments (gain of £286 million); and (iii) the results of liability management exercises (losses of £1,386 million).
|
2
|
This represents the curtailment credit of £843 million following the Group’s decision to reduce the cap on pensionable pay (see note 4) partly offset by the cost of other changes to the pay, benefits and reward offered to employees.
|
2.
|
Segmental analysis (continued)
|
2013
|
Net
interest
income
|
Other
income,
net of
insurance
claims
|
Total
income,
net of
insurance
claims
|
Profit (loss)
before tax
|
External
revenue
|
Inter-
segment
revenue
|
||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||
Underlying basis
|
||||||||||||
Retail
|
6,500
|
1,435
|
7,935
|
3,015
|
8,526
|
(591)
|
||||||
Commercial Banking
|
2,113
|
2,259
|
4,372
|
1,890
|
2,959
|
1,413
|
||||||
Consumer Finance
|
1,333
|
1,359
|
2,692
|
965
|
2,772
|
(80)
|
||||||
Insurance
|
(107)
|
1,864
|
1,757
|
1,088
|
2,439
|
(682)
|
||||||
TSB
|
615
|
163
|
778
|
106
|
863
|
(85)
|
||||||
Other
|
431
|
840
|
1,271
|
(898)
|
1,246
|
25
|
||||||
Group
|
10,885
|
7,920
|
18,805
|
6,166
|
18,805
|
–
|
||||||
Reconciling items:
|
||||||||||||
Insurance grossing adjustment
|
(2,930)
|
3,074
|
144
|
–
|
||||||||
Asset sales, volatile items and liability management1
|
14
|
(460)
|
(446)
|
(720)
|
||||||||
Volatility relating to the insurance business
|
–
|
668
|
668
|
668
|
||||||||
Simplification costs
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(830)
|
||||||||
TSB costs
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(687)
|
||||||||
Past service pensions cost
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(104)
|
||||||||
Payment protection insurance provision
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(3,050)
|
||||||||
Other regulatory provisions
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(405)
|
||||||||
Amortisation of purchased intangibles
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(395)
|
||||||||
Fair value unwind
|
(631)
|
(62)
|
(693)
|
(228)
|
||||||||
Group – statutory
|
7,338
|
11,140
|
18,478
|
415
|
1
|
Comprises (i) gains on disposals of assets, including centrally held government bonds, which are not part of normal business operations (£100 million); (ii) the net effect of banking volatility, changes in the fair value of the equity conversion feature of the Group’s Enhanced Capital Notes and net derivative valuation adjustments (losses of £678 million); and (iii) the results of liability management exercises (losses of £142 million).
|
2.
|
Segmental analysis (continued)
|
Segment external assets
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
20131
|
||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Retail
|
317,246
|
317,146
|
||
Commercial Banking
|
241,754
|
227,771
|
||
Consumer Finance
|
25,646
|
25,025
|
||
Insurance
|
150,615
|
155,378
|
||
TSB
|
27,006
|
24,084
|
||
Other
|
92,629
|
92,976
|
||
Total Group
|
854,896
|
842,380
|
||
Segment customer deposits
|
||||
Retail
|
285,539
|
283,189
|
||
Commercial Banking
|
119,882
|
111,654
|
||
Consumer Finance
|
14,955
|
18,733
|
||
TSB
|
24,625
|
23,100
|
||
Other
|
2,066
|
2,791
|
||
Total Group
|
447,067
|
439,467
|
||
Segment external liabilities
|
||||
Retail
|
295,880
|
300,412
|
||
Commercial Banking
|
231,400
|
206,729
|
||
Consumer Finance
|
18,581
|
21,868
|
||
Insurance
|
144,921
|
149,445
|
||
TSB
|
25,085
|
23,289
|
||
Other
|
89,126
|
101,301
|
||
Total Group
|
804,993
|
803,044
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
3.
|
Other income
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Fee and commission income:
|
||||
Current account fees
|
918
|
973
|
||
Credit and debit card fees
|
1,050
|
984
|
||
Other fees and commissions
|
1,691
|
2,162
|
||
3,659
|
4,119
|
|||
Fee and commission expense
|
(1,402)
|
(1,385)
|
||
Net fee and commission income
|
2,257
|
2,734
|
||
Net trading income
|
10,159
|
16,467
|
||
Insurance premium income
|
7,125
|
8,197
|
||
Gains on sale of available-for-sale financial assets
|
131
|
629
|
||
Liability management1,2
|
(1,386)
|
(142)
|
||
Other3,4
|
946
|
2,762
|
||
Other operating income
|
(309)
|
3,249
|
||
Total other income
|
19,232
|
30,647
|
1
|
In April 2014, the Group completed concurrent Sterling, Euro and Dollar exchange offers with holders of certain series of its Enhanced Capital Notes (ECNs) to exchange the ECNs for new Additional Tier 1 (AT1) securities. In addition the Group completed a tender offer to eligible retail holders outside the United States to sell their Sterling-denominated ECNs for cash. The exchange offers completed with the equivalent of £5.0 billion of ECNs being exchanged for the equivalent of £5.35 billion of AT1 securities, before issue costs. The retail tender offer completed with approximately £58.5 million of ECNs being repurchased for cash. A loss of £1,362 million has been recognised in relation to these exchange and tender transactions in the year ended 31 December 2014.
|
2
|
Losses of £24 million arose in 2014 (2013: £142 million) on other transactions undertaken as part of the Group’s management of its wholesale funding and capital.
|
3
|
On 31 March 2014 the Group completed the sale of Scottish Widows Investment Partnership, realising a gain of £128 million.
|
4
|
During 2013 the Group had completed a number of disposals of assets and businesses, including the sale of its shareholding in St. James’s Place plc (profit of £540 million), a portfolio of US residential mortgage-backed securities (profit of £538 million), its Spanish retail banking operations (loss of £256 million), its Australian operations (profit of £49 million) and its German life insurance business (this disposal completed in the first quarter of 2014, but an impairment of £382 million was recognised in the year ended 31 December 2013).
|
4.
|
Operating expenses
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||||||
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||
Administrative expenses
|
||||||||
Staff costs:
|
||||||||
Salaries
|
3,178
|
3,331
|
||||||
Performance-based compensation
|
390
|
473
|
||||||
Social security costs
|
398
|
385
|
||||||
Pensions and other post-retirement benefit schemes:
|
||||||||
Past service (credits) charges1
|
(822)
|
104
|
||||||
Other
|
596
|
654
|
||||||
(226)
|
758
|
|||||||
Restructuring costs
|
264
|
111
|
||||||
Other staff costs
|
741
|
783
|
||||||
4,745
|
5,841
|
|||||||
Premises and equipment:
|
||||||||
Rent and rates
|
424
|
467
|
||||||
Hire of equipment
|
12
|
15
|
||||||
Repairs and maintenance
|
221
|
178
|
||||||
Other
|
234
|
310
|
||||||
891
|
970
|
|||||||
Other expenses:
|
||||||||
Communications and data processing
|
1,118
|
1,169
|
||||||
Advertising and promotion
|
336
|
313
|
||||||
Professional fees
|
481
|
425
|
||||||
UK bank levy
|
237
|
238
|
||||||
Other
|
1,017
|
971
|
||||||
3,189
|
3,116
|
|||||||
8,825
|
9,927
|
|||||||
Depreciation and amortisation
|
1,935
|
1,940
|
||||||
Total operating expenses, excluding regulatory provisions
|
10,760
|
11,867
|
||||||
Regulatory provisions:
|
||||||||
Payment protection insurance provision (note 23)
|
2,200
|
3,050
|
||||||
Other regulatory provisions (note 23)
|
925
|
405
|
||||||
3,125
|
3,455
|
|||||||
Total operating expenses
|
13,885
|
15,322
|
1
|
On 11 March 2014 the Group announced a change to its defined benefit pension schemes, revising the existing cap on the increases in pensionable pay used in calculating the pension benefit, from 2 per cent to nil with effect from 2 April 2014. The effect of this change was to reduce the Group's retirement benefit obligations recognised on the balance sheet by £843 million with a corresponding curtailment gain recognised in the income statement. This has been partly offset by a charge of £21 million following changes to pension arrangements for staff within the TSB business.
In 2013, the Group agreed certain changes to early retirement and commutation factors in two of its principal defined benefit pension schemes, resulting in a curtailment cost of £104 million recognised in the Group’s income statement in the year ended 31 December 2013.
|
4.
|
Operating expenses (continued)
|
|
Performance-based compensation
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Performance-based compensation expense comprises:
|
||||
Awards made in respect of the year ended 31 December
|
324
|
394
|
||
Awards made in respect of earlier years
|
66
|
79
|
||
390
|
473
|
|||
Performance-based compensation expense deferred until later years comprises:
|
||||
Awards made in respect of the year ended 31 December
|
152
|
47
|
||
Awards made in respect of earlier years
|
32
|
30
|
||
184
|
77
|
5.
|
Impairment
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Impairment losses on loans and receivables:
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
735
|
2,725
|
||
Debt securities classified as loans and receivables
|
2
|
1
|
||
Impairment losses on loans and receivables (note 11)
|
737
|
2,726
|
||
Impairment of available-for-sale financial assets
|
5
|
15
|
||
Other credit risk provisions
|
10
|
−
|
||
Total impairment charged to the income statement
|
752
|
2,741
|
6.
|
Taxation
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Profit before tax
|
1,762
|
415
|
||
Tax charge thereon at UK corporation tax rate of 21.5 per cent
(2013: 23.25 per cent)
|
(379)
|
(96)
|
||
Factors affecting tax charge:
|
||||
UK corporation tax rate change and related impacts
|
(24)
|
(594)
|
||
Disallowed items
|
(195)
|
(167)
|
||
Non-taxable items
|
153
|
132
|
||
Overseas tax rate differences
|
(24)
|
(116)
|
||
Gains exempted or covered by capital losses
|
181
|
57
|
||
Policyholder tax
|
(14)
|
(251)
|
||
Deferred tax on losses no longer recognised following sale of Australian operations
|
−
|
(348)
|
||
Deferred tax on Australian tax losses not previously recognised
|
−
|
60
|
||
Adjustments in respect of previous years
|
34
|
97
|
||
Effect of results of joint ventures and associates
|
7
|
9
|
||
Other items
|
(2)
|
−
|
||
Tax charge
|
(263)
|
(1,217)
|
7.
|
Earnings (loss) per share
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
Basic
|
||||
Profit (loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders
|
£1,125m
|
£(838)m
|
||
Tax credit on distributions to other equity holders
|
£62m
|
−
|
||
£1,187m
|
£(838)m
|
|||
Weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue
|
71,350m
|
71,009m
|
||
Earnings (loss) per share
|
1.7p
|
(1.2)p
|
||
Fully diluted
|
||||
Profit (loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders
|
£1,125m
|
£(838)m
|
||
Tax credit on distributions to other equity holders
|
£62m
|
−
|
||
£1,187m
|
£(838)m
|
|||
Weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue
|
72,447m
|
71,009m
|
||
Earnings (loss) per share
|
1.6p
|
(1.2)p
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Trading assets
|
48,494
|
37,350
|
||
Other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss:
|
||||
Treasury and other bills
|
22
|
54
|
||
Loans and advances to customers
|
−
|
27
|
||
Debt securities
|
41,839
|
38,853
|
||
Equity shares
|
61,576
|
66,399
|
||
103,437
|
105,333
|
|||
Total trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
151,931
|
142,683
|
9.
|
Derivative financial instruments
|
31 December 2014
|
31 December 20131
|
|||||||
Fair value
of assets
|
Fair value
of liabilities
|
Fair value
of assets
|
Fair value
of liabilities
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
Hedging
|
||||||||
Derivatives designated as fair value hedges
|
2,472
|
962
|
3,055
|
1,497
|
||||
Derivatives designated as cash flow hedges
|
1,761
|
2,654
|
1,687
|
3,021
|
||||
4,233
|
3,616
|
4,742
|
4,518
|
|||||
Trading and other
|
||||||||
Exchange rate contracts
|
7,034
|
6,950
|
4,686
|
5,671
|
||||
Interest rate contracts
|
22,506
|
20,374
|
18,203
|
15,801
|
||||
Credit derivatives
|
279
|
1,066
|
208
|
190
|
||||
Embedded equity conversion feature
|
646
|
−
|
1,212
|
–
|
||||
Equity and other contracts
|
1,430
|
1,181
|
1,753
|
1,478
|
||||
31,895
|
29,571
|
26,062
|
23,140
|
|||||
Total recognised derivative assets/liabilities
|
36,128
|
33,187
|
30,804
|
27,658
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
10.
|
Loans and advances to customers
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
20131
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Agriculture, forestry and fishing
|
6,586
|
6,051
|
||
Energy and water supply
|
3,853
|
4,414
|
||
Manufacturing
|
6,000
|
7,650
|
||
Construction
|
6,425
|
7,024
|
||
Transport, distribution and hotels
|
15,112
|
22,294
|
||
Postal and communications
|
2,624
|
2,364
|
||
Property companies
|
36,682
|
44,277
|
||
Financial, business and other services
|
44,979
|
42,478
|
||
Personal:
|
||||
Mortgages
|
333,318
|
335,611
|
||
Other
|
23,123
|
23,230
|
||
Lease financing
|
3,013
|
4,435
|
||
Hire purchase
|
7,403
|
5,090
|
||
489,118
|
504,918
|
|||
Allowance for impairment losses on loans and advances (note 11)
|
(6,414)
|
(11,966)
|
||
Total loans and advances to customers
|
482,704
|
492,952
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
11.
|
Allowance for impairment losses on loans and receivables
|
Year ended
31 December 2014
|
Year ended
31 December 2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Opening balance
|
12,091
|
15,459
|
||
Exchange and other adjustments
|
(401)
|
291
|
||
Adjustment on disposal of businesses
|
−
|
(176)
|
||
Advances written off
|
(6,442)
|
(6,314)
|
||
Recoveries of advances written off in previous years
|
681
|
456
|
||
Unwinding of discount
|
(126)
|
(351)
|
||
Charge to the income statement (note 5)
|
737
|
2,726
|
||
Balance at end of year
|
6,540
|
12,091
|
||
In respect of:
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers (note 10)
|
6,414
|
11,966
|
||
Debt securities
|
126
|
125
|
||
Balance at end of year
|
6,540
|
12,091
|
12.
|
Securitisations and covered bonds
|
31 December 2014
|
31 December 2013
|
|||||||
Loans and
advances
securitised
|
Notes in
issue
|
Loans and
advances
securitised
|
Notes in
issue
|
|||||
Securitisation programmes1
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||
UK residential mortgages
|
50,250
|
28,392
|
55,998
|
36,286
|
||||
Commercial loans
|
13,372
|
12,533
|
10,931
|
11,259
|
||||
Credit card receivables
|
6,762
|
4,278
|
6,314
|
3,992
|
||||
Dutch residential mortgages
|
3,866
|
4,004
|
4,381
|
4,508
|
||||
Personal loans
|
1,318
|
751
|
2,729
|
750
|
||||
PPP/PFI and project finance loans
|
402
|
99
|
525
|
106
|
||||
75,970
|
50,057
|
80,878
|
56,901
|
|||||
Less held by the Group
|
(38,149)
|
(38,288)
|
||||||
Total securitisation programmes (note 16)
|
11,908
|
18,613
|
||||||
Covered bond programmes
|
||||||||
Residential mortgage-backed
|
47,795
|
31,730
|
59,576
|
36,473
|
||||
Social housing loan-backed
|
2,826
|
1,800
|
2,536
|
1,800
|
||||
50,621
|
33,530
|
62,112
|
38,273
|
|||||
Less held by the Group
|
(6,339)
|
(7,606)
|
||||||
Total covered bond programmes (note 16)
|
27,191
|
30,667
|
||||||
Total securitisation and covered bond programmes
|
39,099
|
49,280
|
1
|
Includes securitisations utilising a combination of external funding and credit default swaps.
|
13.
|
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Asset-backed securities
|
1,359
|
2,178
|
||
Other debt securities:
|
||||
Bank and building society certificates of deposit
|
298
|
208
|
||
Government securities
|
47,402
|
38,290
|
||
Corporate and other debt securities
|
5,529
|
1,855
|
||
53,229
|
40,353
|
|||
Equity shares
|
1,042
|
570
|
||
Treasury and other bills
|
863
|
875
|
||
Total
|
56,493
|
43,976
|
14.
|
Other assets
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Assets arising from reinsurance contracts held
|
682
|
732
|
||
Deferred acquisition and origination costs
|
114
|
130
|
||
Settlement balances
|
1,676
|
2,904
|
||
Corporate pension asset
|
12,741
|
9,984
|
||
Investments in joint ventures and associates
|
74
|
101
|
||
Assets of disposal groups
|
−
|
7,988
|
||
Other assets and prepayments
|
6,407
|
5,187
|
||
Total other assets
|
21,694
|
27,026
|
15.
|
Customer deposits
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
20131
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Non-interest bearing current accounts
|
46,487
|
40,802
|
||
Interest bearing current accounts
|
86,131
|
77,789
|
||
Savings and investment accounts
|
256,701
|
265,422
|
||
Liabilities in respect of securities sold under repurchase agreements
|
−
|
2,978
|
||
Other customer deposits
|
57,748
|
52,476
|
||
Total
|
447,067
|
439,467
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
16.
|
Debt securities in issue
|
31 December 2014
|
31 December 2013
|
|||||||||||||
At fair value
through
profit or
loss
|
At
amortised
cost
|
Total
|
At fair value
through
profit or
loss
|
At
amortised
cost
|
Total
|
|||||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||||
Medium-term notes issued
|
6,739
|
22,728
|
29,467
|
5,267
|
23,921
|
29,188
|
||||||||
Covered bonds (note 12)
|
−
|
27,191
|
27,191
|
–
|
30,667
|
30,667
|
||||||||
Certificates of deposit
|
−
|
7,033
|
7,033
|
–
|
8,866
|
8,866
|
||||||||
Securitisation notes (note 12)
|
−
|
11,908
|
11,908
|
–
|
18,613
|
18,613
|
||||||||
Commercial paper
|
−
|
7,373
|
7,373
|
–
|
5,035
|
5,035
|
||||||||
6,739
|
76,233
|
82,972
|
5,267
|
87,102
|
92,369
|
17.
|
Other liabilities
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Settlement balances
|
1,024
|
3,358
|
||
Unitholders’ interest in Open Ended Investment Companies
|
19,525
|
22,219
|
||
Liabilities of disposal groups
|
−
|
7,302
|
||
Other creditors and accruals
|
7,556
|
7,577
|
||
Total other liabilities
|
28,105
|
40,456
|
18.
|
Post-retirement defined benefit schemes
|
|
The Group’s post-retirement defined benefit scheme obligations are comprised as follows:
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Defined benefit pension schemes:
|
||||
- Fair value of scheme assets
|
38,133
|
32,568
|
||
- Present value of funded obligations
|
(37,243)
|
(33,355)
|
||
Net pension scheme liability
|
890
|
(787)
|
||
Other post-retirement schemes
|
(196)
|
(211)
|
||
Net retirement benefit asset (liability)
|
694
|
(998)
|
Recognised on the balance sheet as:
|
||||
Retirement benefit assets
|
1,147
|
98
|
||
Retirement benefit obligations
|
(453)
|
(1,096)
|
||
Net retirement benefit asset (liability)
|
694
|
(998)
|
18.
|
Post-retirement defined benefit schemes (continued)
|
£m
|
||
At 1 January 2014
|
(998)
|
|
Exchange and other adjustments
|
2
|
|
Income statement charge:
|
||
Regular cost
|
(344)
|
|
Curtailments (see below)
|
822
|
|
478
|
||
Employer contributions
|
538
|
|
Remeasurement
|
674
|
|
At 31 December 2014
|
694
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Past service (credit) cost (note 4)
|
(822)
|
104
|
||
Current service cost
|
344
|
399
|
||
Defined benefit pension schemes
|
(478)
|
503
|
||
Defined contribution schemes
|
252
|
255
|
||
Total charge to the income statement (note 4)
|
(226)
|
758
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
%
|
%
|
|||
Discount rate
|
3.67
|
4.60
|
||
Rate of inflation:
|
||||
Retail Prices Index
|
2.95
|
3.30
|
||
Consumer Price Index
|
1.95
|
2.30
|
||
Rate of salary increases
|
0.00
|
2.00
|
||
Weighted-average rate of increase for pensions in payment
|
2.59
|
2.80
|
19.
|
Subordinated liabilities
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Preference shares
|
1,091
|
876
|
||
Preferred securities
|
3,819
|
4,301
|
||
Undated subordinated liabilities
|
1,852
|
1,916
|
||
Enhanced Capital Notes
|
3,683
|
8,938
|
||
Dated subordinated liabilities
|
15,597
|
16,281
|
||
Total subordinated liabilities
|
26,042
|
32,312
|
2014
|
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
At 1 January
|
32,312
|
34,092
|
||
New issues during the year
|
629
|
1,500
|
||
Exchange offer in respect of Enhanced Capital Notes (notes 3 and 22)
|
(4,961)
|
−
|
||
Other repurchases and redemptions during the year
|
(3,023)
|
(2,442)
|
||
Foreign exchange and other movements
|
1,085
|
(838)
|
||
At 31 December
|
26,042
|
32,312
|
20.
|
Share capital
|
Number of shares
|
||||
(million)
|
£m
|
|||
Ordinary shares of 10p each
|
||||
At 1 January 2014
|
71,368
|
7,137
|
||
Issued in the year (see below)
|
6
|
1
|
||
At 31 December 2014
|
71,374
|
7,138
|
||
Limited voting ordinary shares of 10p each
|
||||
At 1 January and 31 December 2014
|
81
|
8
|
||
Total share capital
|
7,146
|
21.
|
Reserves
|
Other reserves
|
||||||||||||||
Share
premium
|
Available-
for-sale
|
Cash flow
hedging
|
Merger
and other
|
Total
|
Retained
profits
|
|||||||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||||||
At 1 January 2014
|
17,279
|
(615)
|
(1,055)
|
12,147
|
10,477
|
4,088
|
||||||||
Issue of ordinary shares
|
2
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
||||||||
Profit for the year
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
1,412
|
||||||||
Issue costs of other equity instruments, net of tax (note 22)
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(21)
|
||||||||
Distributions on other equity instruments, net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(225)
|
||||||||
Post-retirement defined benefit scheme remeasurements,
net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
539
|
||||||||
Movement in treasury shares
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(286)
|
||||||||
Value of employee
services:
|
||||||||||||||
Share option schemes
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
123
|
||||||||
Other employee award schemes
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
233
|
||||||||
Change in fair value of available-for-sale assets, net of tax
|
–
|
625
|
–
|
–
|
625
|
–
|
||||||||
Change in fair value of hedging derivatives,
net of tax
|
–
|
–
|
3,131
|
–
|
3,131
|
–
|
||||||||
Transfers to income statement, net of tax
|
–
|
(77)
|
(937)
|
–
|
(1,014)
|
–
|
||||||||
Adjustment on sale of non-controlling interest in TSB (note 27)
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(171)
|
||||||||
Exchange and other
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(3)
|
(3)
|
–
|
||||||||
At 31 December 2014
|
17,281
|
(67)
|
1,139
|
12,144
|
13,216
|
5,692
|
||||||||
£m
|
||
At 1 January 2014
|
−
|
|
Additional Tier 1 securities issued in the year:
|
||
Sterling notes (£3,725 million nominal)
|
3,725
|
|
Euro notes (€750 million nominal)
|
622
|
|
US dollar notes ($1,675 million nominal)
|
1,008
|
|
At 31 December 2014
|
5,355
|
·
|
The securities rank behind the claims against Lloyds Banking Group plc of (a) unsubordinated creditors, (b) claims which are, or are expressed to be, subordinated to the claims of unsubordinated creditors of Lloyds Banking Group plc but not further or otherwise or (c) whose claims are, or are expressed to be, junior to the claims of other creditors of Lloyds Banking Group, whether subordinated or unsubordinated, other than those whose claims rank, or are expressed to rank, pari passu with, or junior to, the claims of the holders of the AT1 Securities in a winding-up occurring prior to the Conversion Trigger.
|
·
|
The securities bear a fixed rate of interest until the first call date. After the initial call date, in the event that they are not redeemed, the AT1 securities will bear interest at rates fixed periodically in advance for five year periods based on market rates.
|
·
|
Interest on the securities will be due and payable only at the sole discretion of Lloyds Banking Group plc, and Lloyds Banking Group plc may at any time elect to cancel any Interest Payment (or any part thereof) which would otherwise be payable on any Interest Payment Date. There are also certain restrictions on the payment of interest as specified in the terms.
|
·
|
The securities are undated and are repayable, at the option of Lloyds Banking Group plc, in whole at the first call date, or on any fifth anniversary after the first call date. In addition, the AT1 securities are repayable, at the option of Lloyds Banking Group plc, in whole for certain regulatory or tax reasons. Any repayments require the prior consent of the PRA.
|
·
|
The securities convert into ordinary shares of Lloyds Banking Group plc, at a pre-determined price, should the fully loaded Common Equity Tier 1 ratio of the Group fall below 7.0 per cent.
|
23.
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges
|
Quarter
|
Average monthly reactive complaint volume
|
Quarter on Quarter %
|
||||||||
Q1 2012
|
109,893
|
During the fourth quarter the Group has seen a fall of approximately 12 per cent in complaint levels. However, the provision remains sensitive to future trends.
|
||||||||
Q2 2012
|
130,752
|
19%
|
||||||||
Q3 2012
|
110,807
|
(15)%
|
||||||||
Q4 2012
|
84,751
|
(24)%
|
||||||||
Q1 2013
|
61,259
|
(28)%
|
||||||||
Q2 2013
|
54,086
|
(12)%
|
||||||||
Q3 2013
|
49,555
|
(8)%
|
||||||||
Q4 2013
|
37,457
|
(24)%
|
||||||||
Q1 2014
|
42,259
|
13%
|
||||||||
Q2 2014
|
39,426
|
(7)%
|
||||||||
Q3 2014
|
40,624
|
3%
|
||||||||
Q4 2014
|
35,910
|
(12)%
|
23.
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges (continued)
|
23.
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges (continued)
|
Sensitivities1
|
To date unless
noted
|
Future
|
Sensitivity
|
Customer initiated complaints since origination (m)2
|
3.0
|
0.6
|
0.1 = £230m
|
Proactive Mailing: – number of policies (m)3
|
2.7
|
0.1
|
0.1 = £45m
|
– response rate4
|
34%
|
30%
|
1% = £3m
|
Average uphold rate per policy5
|
85%
|
80%
|
1% = £12m
|
Average redress per upheld policy6
|
£1,700
|
£1,790
|
£100 = £90m
|
Remediation Cases (m) 7
|
0.2
|
1.0
|
1 case = £600
|
Administrative expenses (£m)
|
2,035
|
485
|
1 case = £500
|
FOS Referral Rate8
|
40%
|
40%
|
1% = £3m
|
FOS Change Rate9
|
58%
|
30%
|
1% = £2m
|
1
|
All sensitivities exclude claims where no PPI policy was held.
|
2
|
Sensitivity includes complaint handling costs, and has increased as a result of higher uphold rates and a shift towards older policies.
|
3
|
To date volume includes customer initiated complaints.
|
4
|
Metric has been adjusted to include mature mailings only. Future response rates are expected to be lower than experienced to date as mailings to higher risk customers have been prioritised. The sensitivity has reduced from the half year as the higher risk population continues to decrease.
|
5
|
The percentage of complaints where the Group finds in favour of the customer. This is a blend of proactive and customer initiated complaints. The 85 per cent uphold rate is based on six months to December 2014. The lower uphold rate in the future reflects a lower proportion of PBR related cases which typically have a higher uphold rate, reflecting the higher risk nature of those policy sales.
|
6
|
The amount that is paid in redress in relation to a policy found to have been mis-sold, comprising, where applicable, the refund of premium, compound interest charged and interest at 8 per cent per annum. Actuals are based on the six months to December 2014. The increase in future average redress is influenced by fewer PBR policies due to the maturity of the PBR mailing. The increase is also due to a shift in the reactive complaint mix towards older, and therefore more expensive, policies.
|
7
|
Remediation to date is based on cases reviewed as at 31 December 2014, but not necessarily settled and also includes a small portion relating to previously upheld complaints. The average cost included in the sensitivity is based on all cases included within the remediation scope, and is therefore a weighted average of full payments, top-up payments on previously upheld cases, and nil payouts where the original decision is retained.
|
8
|
The percentage of cases reviewed by the Group that are subsequently referred to the FOS by the customer. A complaint is considered mature when six months have elapsed since initial decision. Actuals are based on decisions made by the Group during January 2014 to June 2014 and subsequently referred to the FOS.
|
9
|
The percentage of complaints referred where the FOS arrive at a different decision to the Group. Actuals are based on the six months to December 2014. The overturn rate to date is high as it continues to include a significant number of cases assessed prior to the implementation of changes to the case review process during 2013.
|
23.
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges (continued)
|
23.
|
Provisions for liabilities and charges (continued)
|
24.
|
Contingent liabilities and commitments
|
·
|
the European Commission has proposed legislation to regulate interchange fees which continues through the EU legislative process. A political agreement has been reached between the European Parliament and the Council and the legislation is expected to be adopted and come into force in the second quarter of 2015 with certain articles applying six months or a year after that (the adoption and entry into force dates remain subject to change);
|
·
|
the European Commission has adopted commitments proposed by VISA to settle an investigation into VISA’s cross-border interchange arrangements and aspects of its scheme rules . VISA has, amongst other things, agreed to reduce the level of interchange fees for cross-border card transactions to: 30 basis points (for credit) and 20 basis points (for debit). VISA has also changed a number of its rules in relation to cross-border acquiring. MasterCard unilaterally undertook, amongst other things, to reduce the level of cross-border interchange fees to the same levels as agreed between the Commission and Visa;
|
·
|
the Commission also continues to pursue other competition investigations into MasterCard and Visa probing, amongst other things, interchange paid in respect of cards issued outside the EEA;
|
·
|
litigation continues in the English High Court against both Visa and MasterCard. This litigation has been brought by several retailers who are seeking damages for allegedly ‘overpaid’ MIFs;
|
·
|
the new UK payments regulator may exercise its powers, when these come in to force (in April 2015), to regulate domestic interchange fees. In November 2014, the Competition and Markets Authority (the CMA) announced that it would not reopen the investigation into domestic interchange levels at this time following MasterCard's agreement to introduce a phased reduction of domestic interchange rates commencing in April 2015. In addition, the FCA has started a market study in relation to the UK credit cards market.
|
24.
|
Contingent liabilities and commitments (continued)
|
24.
|
Contingent liabilities and commitments (continued)
|
24.
|
Contingent liabilities and commitments (continued)
|
At
31 December
2014
|
At
31 December
2013
|
|||
£m
|
£m
|
|||
Contingent liabilities
|
||||
Acceptances and endorsements
|
59
|
204
|
||
Other:
|
||||
Other items serving as direct credit substitutes
|
330
|
710
|
||
Performance bonds and other transaction-related contingencies
|
2,293
|
1,966
|
||
2,623
|
2,676
|
|||
Total contingent liabilities
|
2,682
|
2,880
|
||
Commitments
|
||||
Documentary credits and other short-term trade-related transactions
|
101
|
54
|
||
Forward asset purchases and forward deposits placed
|
162
|
440
|
||
Undrawn formal standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments to lend:
|
||||
Less than 1 year original maturity:
|
||||
Mortgage offers made
|
8,809
|
9,559
|
||
Other commitments
|
64,015
|
55,002
|
||
72,824
|
64,561
|
|||
1 year or over original maturity
|
34,455
|
40,616
|
||
Total commitments
|
107,542
|
105,671
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
31 December 2014
|
31 December 20131
|
|||||||
Carrying
value
|
Fair
value
|
Carrying
value
|
Fair
value
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
Financial assets
|
||||||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
151,931
|
151,931
|
142,683
|
142,683
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
36,128
|
36,128
|
30,804
|
30,804
|
||||
Loans and receivables:
|
||||||||
Loans and advances to banks
|
26,155
|
26,031
|
25,365
|
25,296
|
||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
482,704
|
480,631
|
492,952
|
484,166
|
||||
Debt securities
|
1,213
|
1,100
|
1,355
|
1,251
|
||||
Available-for-sale financial instruments
|
56,493
|
56,493
|
43,976
|
43,976
|
||||
Financial liabilities
|
||||||||
Deposits from banks
|
10,887
|
10,902
|
13,982
|
14,101
|
||||
Customer deposits
|
447,067
|
450,038
|
439,467
|
440,011
|
||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
62,102
|
62,102
|
43,625
|
43,625
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
33,187
|
33,187
|
27,658
|
27,658
|
||||
Debt securities in issue
|
76,233
|
80,244
|
87,102
|
90,803
|
||||
Liabilities arising from non-participating investment contracts
|
27,248
|
27,248
|
27,590
|
27,590
|
||||
Financial guarantees
|
51
|
51
|
50
|
50
|
||||
Subordinated liabilities
|
26,042
|
30,175
|
32,312
|
34,449
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
|
Valuation hierarchy
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 31 December 2014
|
||||||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss:
|
||||||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
−
|
28,513
|
−
|
28,513
|
||||
Loans and advances to banks
|
−
|
8,212
|
−
|
8,212
|
||||
Debt securities:
|
||||||||
Government securities
|
23,950
|
1,523
|
−
|
25,473
|
||||
Other public sector securities
|
−
|
781
|
1,389
|
2,170
|
||||
Bank and building society certificates of deposit
|
−
|
554
|
−
|
554
|
||||
Asset-backed securities:
|
||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities
|
24
|
963
|
47
|
1,034
|
||||
Other asset-backed securities
|
1
|
849
|
−
|
850
|
||||
Corporate and other debt securities
|
255
|
19,814
|
2,021
|
22,090
|
||||
24,230
|
24,484
|
3,457
|
52,171
|
|||||
Equity shares
|
59,607
|
322
|
1,647
|
61,576
|
||||
Treasury and other bills
|
1,459
|
−
|
−
|
1,459
|
||||
Total trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
85,296
|
61,531
|
5,104
|
151,931
|
||||
Available-for-sale financial assets:
|
||||||||
Debt securities:
|
||||||||
Government securities
|
47,402
|
−
|
−
|
47,402
|
||||
Bank and building society certificates of deposit
|
−
|
298
|
−
|
298
|
||||
Asset-backed securities:
|
||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities
|
−
|
674
|
−
|
674
|
||||
Other asset-backed securities
|
−
|
685
|
−
|
685
|
||||
Corporate and other debt securities
|
35
|
5,494
|
−
|
5,529
|
||||
47,437
|
7,151
|
−
|
54,588
|
|||||
Equity shares
|
45
|
727
|
270
|
1,042
|
||||
Treasury and other bills
|
852
|
11
|
−
|
863
|
||||
Total available-for-sale financial assets
|
48,334
|
7,889
|
270
|
56,493
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
94
|
33,263
|
2,771
|
36,128
|
||||
Total financial assets carried at fair value
|
133,724
|
102,683
|
8,145
|
244,552
|
||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value
through profit or loss
|
||||||||
Liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss
|
−
|
6,739
|
5
|
6,744
|
||||
Trading liabilities:
|
||||||||
Liabilities in respect of securities sold under repurchase agreements
|
−
|
50,007
|
−
|
50,007
|
||||
Short positions in securities
|
2,700
|
519
|
−
|
3,219
|
||||
Other
|
−
|
2,132
|
−
|
2,132
|
||||
2,700
|
52,658
|
−
|
55,358
|
|||||
Total trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
2,700
|
59,397
|
5
|
62,102
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
68
|
31,663
|
1,456
|
33,187
|
||||
Financial guarantees
|
−
|
−
|
51
|
51
|
||||
Total financial liabilities carried at fair value
|
2,768
|
91,060
|
1,512
|
95,340
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
|
Valuation hierarchy
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 31 December 20131
|
||||||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss:
|
||||||||
Loans and advances to customers
|
–
|
21,110
|
–
|
21,110
|
||||
Loans and advances to banks
|
–
|
8,333
|
–
|
8,333
|
||||
Debt securities:
|
||||||||
Government securities
|
20,191
|
498
|
–
|
20,689
|
||||
Other public sector securities
|
–
|
1,312
|
885
|
2,197
|
||||
Bank and building society certificates of deposit
|
–
|
1,491
|
–
|
1,491
|
||||
Asset-backed securities:
|
||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities
|
30
|
768
|
–
|
798
|
||||
Other asset-backed securities
|
171
|
756
|
–
|
927
|
||||
Corporate and other debt securities
|
244
|
18,689
|
1,687
|
20,620
|
||||
20,636
|
23,514
|
2,572
|
46,722
|
|||||
Equity shares
|
64,690
|
53
|
1,660
|
66,403
|
||||
Treasury and other bills
|
7
|
108
|
–
|
115
|
||||
Total trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
85,333
|
53,118
|
4,232
|
142,683
|
||||
Available-for-sale financial assets:
|
||||||||
Debt securities:
|
||||||||
Government securities
|
38,262
|
28
|
–
|
38,290
|
||||
Bank and building society certificates of deposit
|
–
|
208
|
–
|
208
|
||||
Asset-backed securities:
|
||||||||
Mortgage-backed securities
|
–
|
1,263
|
–
|
1,263
|
||||
Other asset-backed securities
|
–
|
841
|
74
|
915
|
||||
Corporate and other debt securities
|
56
|
1,799
|
–
|
1,855
|
||||
38,318
|
4,139
|
74
|
42,531
|
|||||
Equity shares
|
48
|
147
|
375
|
570
|
||||
Treasury and other bills
|
852
|
23
|
–
|
875
|
||||
Total available-for-sale financial assets
|
39,218
|
4,309
|
449
|
43,976
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
235
|
27,550
|
3,019
|
30,804
|
||||
Total financial assets carried at fair value
|
124,786
|
84,977
|
7,700
|
217,463
|
||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value
through profit or loss
|
||||||||
Liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss
|
–
|
5,267
|
39
|
5,306
|
||||
Trading liabilities:
|
||||||||
Liabilities in respect of securities sold under repurchase agreements
|
–
|
28,902
|
–
|
28,902
|
||||
Short positions in securities
|
6,473
|
417
|
–
|
6,890
|
||||
Other
|
–
|
2,527
|
–
|
2,527
|
||||
6,473
|
31,846
|
–
|
38,319
|
|||||
Total trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
6,473
|
37,113
|
39
|
43,625
|
||||
Derivative financial instruments
|
119
|
26,553
|
986
|
27,658
|
||||
Financial guarantees
|
–
|
–
|
50
|
50
|
||||
Total financial liabilities carried at fair value
|
6,592
|
63,666
|
1,075
|
71,333
|
1
|
See note 1.
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
Trading
and other
financial
assets at fair
value through
profit or loss
|
Available-
for-sale
financial
assets
|
Derivative
assets
|
Total
financial
assets
carried at
fair value
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 1 January 2014
|
4,232
|
449
|
3,019
|
7,700
|
||||
Exchange and other adjustments
|
5
|
(7)
|
(11)
|
(13)
|
||||
Gains recognised in the income statement within other income
|
579
|
−
|
755
|
1,334
|
||||
Gains recognised in other comprehensive income within the revaluation reserve in respect of available-for-sale financial assets
|
−
|
(61)
|
−
|
(61)
|
||||
Purchases
|
552
|
229
|
68
|
849
|
||||
Sales
|
(587)
|
(266)
|
(154)
|
(1,007)
|
||||
Derecognised pursuant to exchange and retail tender offers in respect of Enhanced Capital Notes
|
−
|
−
|
(967)
|
(967)
|
||||
Transfers into the level 3 portfolio
|
708
|
−
|
114
|
822
|
||||
Transfers out of the level 3 portfolio
|
(385)
|
(74)
|
(53)
|
(512)
|
||||
At 31 December 2014
|
5,104
|
270
|
2,771
|
8,145
|
||||
Gains recognised in the income statement within other income relating to those assets held at 31 December 2014
|
547
|
−
|
755
|
1,302
|
Trading
and other
financial
assets at fair
value through
profit or loss
|
Available-
for-sale
financial
assets
|
Derivative
assets
|
Total
financial
assets
carried at
fair value
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 1 January 2013
|
3,306
|
567
|
2,358
|
6,231
|
||||
Exchange and other adjustments
|
21
|
15
|
2
|
38
|
||||
Gains recognised in the income statement within other income
|
296
|
−
|
144
|
440
|
||||
Gains recognised in other comprehensive income within the revaluation reserve in respect of available-for-sale financial assets
|
−
|
40
|
−
|
40
|
||||
Purchases
|
582
|
43
|
271
|
896
|
||||
Sales
|
(631)
|
(224)
|
(102)
|
(957)
|
||||
Transfers into the level 3 portfolio
|
995
|
12
|
354
|
1,361
|
||||
Transfers out of the level 3 portfolio
|
(337)
|
(4)
|
(8)
|
(349)
|
||||
At 31 December 2013
|
4,232
|
449
|
3,019
|
7,700
|
||||
Gains recognised in the income statement within other income relating to those assets held at 31 December 2013
|
70
|
−
|
159
|
229
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
Trading and
other financial
liabilities
at fair value
through profit
or loss
|
Derivative
liabilities
|
Financial
guarantees
|
Total
financial
liabilities
carried at
fair value
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 1 January 2014
|
39
|
986
|
50
|
1,075
|
||||
Exchange and other adjustments
|
−
|
(4)
|
−
|
(4)
|
||||
(Gains) losses recognised in the income statement
within other income
|
(5)
|
375
|
1
|
371
|
||||
Additions
|
−
|
59
|
−
|
59
|
||||
Redemptions
|
(29)
|
(66)
|
−
|
(95)
|
||||
Transfers into the level 3 portfolio
|
−
|
110
|
−
|
110
|
||||
Transfers out of the level 3 portfolio
|
−
|
(4)
|
−
|
(4)
|
||||
At 31 December 2014
|
5
|
1,456
|
51
|
1,512
|
||||
Gains (losses) recognised in the income statement within other income relating to those liabilities held at 31 December 2014
|
−
|
376
|
1
|
377
|
Trading and
other financial
liabilities
at fair value
through profit
or loss
|
Derivative
liabilities
|
Financial
guarantees
|
Total
financial
liabilities
carried at
fair value
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
|||||
At 1 January 2013
|
–
|
543
|
48
|
591
|
||||
Exchange and other adjustments
|
–
|
8
|
–
|
8
|
||||
(Gains) losses recognised in the income statement within other income
|
10
|
(30)
|
3
|
(17)
|
||||
Additions
|
29
|
262
|
–
|
291
|
||||
Redemptions
|
–
|
(29)
|
(1)
|
(30)
|
||||
Transfers into the level 3 portfolio
|
–
|
233
|
–
|
233
|
||||
Transfers out of the level 3 portfolio
|
–
|
(1)
|
–
|
(1)
|
||||
At 31 December 2013
|
39
|
986
|
50
|
1,075
|
||||
Gains (losses) recognised in the income statement within other income relating to those liabilities held at 31 December 2013
|
10
|
(20)
|
3
|
(7)
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
At 31 December 2014
|
||||||||||
Effect of reasonably possible alternative assumptions1
|
||||||||||
Valuation technique(s)
|
Significant unobservable inputs
|
Range2
|
Carrying
value
|
Favourable
changes
|
Unfavourable
changes
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
||||||||||
Debt securities
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Credit spreads (bps)
|
n/a3
|
35
|
5
|
(5)
|
||||
Asset-backed securities
|
Lead manager or broker quote
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
65
|
−
|
(2)
|
||||
Equity and venture capital investments
|
Market approach
|
Earnings multiple
|
4/14
|
2,214
|
75
|
(75)
|
||||
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
173
|
26
|
(23)
|
|||||
Unlisted equities
and debt securities, property
partnerships in
the life funds
|
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
2,617
|
4
|
(2)
|
||||
5,104
|
||||||||||
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
||||||||||
Equity and venture capital investments
|
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
270
|
10
|
(18)
|
||||
270
|
||||||||||
Derivative financial assets
|
||||||||||
Embedded equity conversion feature
|
Lead manager or broker quote
|
Equity conversion feature spread (bps)
|
175/432
|
646
|
21
|
(21)
|
||||
Interest rate
derivatives
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Inflation swap rate – funding component (bps)
|
3/167
|
1,382
|
17
|
(16)
|
||||
Option pricing model
|
Interest rate
volatility
|
4%/120%
|
743
|
6
|
(6)
|
|||||
2,771
|
||||||||||
Financial assets carried at fair value
|
8,145
|
|||||||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
5
|
−
|
−
|
|||||||
Derivative financial liabilities
|
||||||||||
Interest rate
derivatives
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Inflation swap rate – funding component (bps)
|
3/167
|
807
|
−
|
−
|
||||
Option pricing model
|
Interest rate
volatility
|
4%/120%
|
649
|
−
|
−
|
|||||
1,456
|
||||||||||
Financial guarantees
|
51
|
|||||||||
Financial liabilities carried at fair value
|
1,512
|
1
|
Where the exposure to an unobservable input is managed on a net basis, only the net impact is shown in the table.
|
2
|
The range represents the highest and lowest inputs used in the level 3 valuations.
|
3
|
A single pricing source is used.
|
4
|
Underlying asset/net asset values represent fair value.
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
At 31 December 2013
|
||||||||||
Effect of reasonably possible alternative assumptions1
|
||||||||||
Valuation technique(s)
|
Significant unobservable inputs
|
Range2
|
Carrying
value
|
Favourable
changes
|
Unfavourable
changes
|
|||||
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
||||||||
Trading and other financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
||||||||||
Debt securities
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Credit spreads (bps)
|
n/a3
|
18
|
5
|
(2)
|
||||
Equity and venture capital investments
|
Market approach
|
Earnings multiple
|
0.2/14.6
|
2,132
|
70
|
(70)
|
||||
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
130
|
17
|
(16)
|
|||||
Unlisted equities
and property
partnerships in the life funds
|
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
1,952
|
–
|
–
|
||||
4,232
|
||||||||||
Available-for-sale financial assets
|
||||||||||
Asset-backed
securities
|
Lead manager
or broker quote/consensus pricing
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
74
|
–
|
–
|
||||
Equity and venture capital investments
|
Underlying asset/net asset value (incl. property prices)4
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
375
|
28
|
(19)
|
||||
449
|
||||||||||
Derivative financial assets
|
||||||||||
Embedded equity conversion feature
|
Lead manager or broker quote
|
Equity conversion feature spread (bps)
|
199/420
|
1,212
|
59
|
(58)
|
||||
Interest rate
derivatives
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Inflation swap rate – funding component (bps)
|
62/192
|
1,461
|
66
|
(39)
|
||||
Option pricing model
|
Interest rate
volatility
|
3%/112%
|
346
|
6
|
(7)
|
|||||
3,019
|
||||||||||
Financial assets carried at fair value
|
7,700
|
|||||||||
Trading and other financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
|
39
|
1
|
(1)
|
|||||||
Derivative financial liabilities
|
||||||||||
Interest rate
derivatives
|
Discounted cash flow
|
Inflation swap rate – funding component (bps)
|
62/192
|
754
|
–
|
–
|
||||
Option pricing model
|
Interest rate
volatility
|
3%/112%
|
232
|
–
|
–
|
|||||
986
|
||||||||||
Financial guarantees
|
50
|
|||||||||
Financial liabilities carried at fair value
|
1,075
|
1
|
Where the exposure to an unobservable input is managed on a net basis, only the net impact is shown in the table.
|
2
|
The range represents the highest and lowest inputs used in the level 3 valuations.
|
3
|
A single pricing source is used.
|
4
|
Underlying asset/net asset values represent fair value.
|
25.
|
Fair values of financial assets and liabilities (continued)
|
|
Unobservable inputs
|
·
|
Interest rates and inflation rates are referenced in some derivatives where the payoff that the holder of the derivative receives depends on the behaviour of those underlying references through time.
|
·
|
Credit spreads represent the premium above the benchmark reference instrument required to compensate for lower credit quality; higher spreads lead to a lower fair value.
|
·
|
Volatility parameters represent key attributes of option behaviour; higher volatilities typically denote a wider range of possible outcomes.
|
·
|
Earnings multiples are used to value certain unlisted equity investments; a higher earnings multiple will result in a higher fair value.
|
|
Debt securities
|
|
Derivatives
|
(i)
|
In respect of the embedded equity conversion feature of the Enhanced Capital Notes, the sensitivity was based on the absolute difference between the actual price of the Enhanced Capital Note and the closest, alternative broker quote available plus the impact of applying a 10 basis points increase/decrease in the market yield used to derive a market price for similar bonds without the conversion feature. The effect of interdependency of the assumptions is not material to the effect of applying reasonably possible alternative assumptions to the valuations of derivative financial instruments.
|
(ii)
|
Uncollateralised inflation swaps are valued using appropriate discount spreads for such transactions. These spreads are not generally observable for longer maturities. The reasonably possible alternative valuations reflect flexing of the spreads for the differing maturities to alternative values.
|
(iii)
|
Swaptions are priced using industry standard option pricing models. Such models require interest rate volatilities which may be unobservable at longer maturities. To derive reasonably possible alternative valuations these volatilities have been flexed within a range.
|
·
|
for valuations derived from earnings multiples, consideration is given to the risk attributes, growth prospects and financial gearing of comparable businesses when selecting an appropriate multiple;
|
·
|
the discount rates used in discounted cash flow valuations; and
|
·
|
in line with International Private Equity and Venture Capital Guidelines, the values of underlying investments in fund investments portfolios.
|
26.
|
Related party transactions
|
26.
|
Related party transactions (continued)
|
27.
|
Disposal of a non-controlling interest in TSB Banking Group plc
|
(i)
|
in June 2014, the Group disposed of a 35 per cent interest in TSB for a consideration of £430 million, after directly attributable costs of £25 million, through an initial public offering (IPO);
|
(ii)
|
in July 2014, the Group sold 3.5 per cent of TSB for £44 million, after directly attributable costs of £1 million, through an over-allotment option which was exercised by the underwriters of the IPO; and
|
(iii)
|
in September 2014, the Group disposed of a further 11.5 per cent for a consideration of £160 million, after directly attributable costs of £1 million.
|
28.
|
Ordinary dividends
|
29.
|
Future accounting developments
|
Pronouncement
|
Nature of change
|
IASB effective date
|
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments1
|
Replaces IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement. IFRS 9 requires financial assets to be classified into one of three measurement categories, fair value through profit or loss, fair value through other comprehensive income and amortised cost, on the basis of the objectives of the entity’s business model for managing its financial assets and the contractual cash flow characteristics of the instruments. The requirements for derecognition are broadly unchanged from IAS 39. The standard retains most of the existing requirements for financial liabilities except for those designated at fair value through profit or loss whereby that part of the fair value change attributable to the entity’s own credit risk is recorded in other comprehensive income. These changes are not expected to have a significant impact on the Group.
IFRS 9 also replaces the existing ‘incurred loss’ impairment approach with an expected credit loss approach. This change is likely to result in an increase in the Group’s balance sheet provisions for credit losses although the extent of any increase will depend upon, amongst other things, the composition of the Group’s lending portfolios and prevailing and forecast economic conditions at the date of implementation. The hedge accounting requirements of IFRS 9 are more closely aligned with risk management practices and follow a more principle-based approach than IAS 39. The revised requirements are not expected to have a significant impact on the Group.
|
Annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2018
|
IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers1
|
Replaces IAS 18 Revenue and IAS 11 Construction Contracts. IFRS 15 establishes principles for reporting useful information about the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from an entity’s contracts with customers. Revenue is recognised at an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for goods and services. Financial instruments, leases and insurance contracts are out of scope and so this standard is not expected to have a significant impact on the Group.
|
Annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2017
|
1
|
As at 26 February 2015, these pronouncements are awaiting EU endorsement.
|