Today is great to have you here as usual. I think most people here know you very well, so maybe we can just dive straight in. Maybe starting with the macro side of things, I think William said last week the UK macro backdrop is uninspiring but not unsupportive. I hope I'm not misquoting him. Do you think there is a risk that we focus too much on the uninspiring and not enough on the not unsupportive? If I look at unemployment, credit quality, all of that is still looking quite supportive. Are there any other areas that you think are actually more supportive than we give it credit for?
Brilliant. First of all, thank you for having me. It's great to be here today. Yes, I think William's characterization is good. We've talked for a while about what we call a resilient, a very resilient economy, but a slower growth economy. Our forecasts, as you know, have been saying that we get about 1% to 1.5% GDP growth, for example, in the next period. As you say, unemployment stays healthy. Actually, we see for Lloyds Banking Group an opportunity to grow faster than the economy. I'll come back to those opportunities. Why do we have that confidence in the resilience of the economy? It's primarily because of what we can see in households, individuals, and then businesses. Obviously, the government's finances is a matter for quite a public debate.
We can see the challenges we've got, which is caused by the £400 billion injection through COVID, Brexit, and all the other things, the structural issues we've got. When you look at households and businesses, they continue to improve their resilience. For households, the savings rates actually in quite a broad spectrum from the bottom 20% plus in terms of income and wealth of households has continued to strengthen. We've now seen six to seven quarters of real wage growth. We're seeing strong discretionary spending year on year. There's the ability for households to create more demand if they wanted to. As you will have known from the data, the households have been deleveraging consistently pretty much since the financial crisis. Households' finances are in a pretty healthy state.
We know consumer confidence isn't at all at the highest levels, but there is a real opportunity for households to move to a different trajectory. Businesses are the same. Actually, we've now seen six quarters where business cash flows, different by sector, have continued to strengthen. They're continuing to deleverage post the COVID period. The issue for businesses is that business investment is lower, which is part of the productivity issue. The first thing is real resilience in the underlying economy. The second thing as kind of green shoots or areas for higher growth, we always, when we laid out the strategy for Lloyds Banking Group, wanted to expose ourselves to the higher growth parts of the economy.
When you look at the policy and then the government commitments and the momentum around some of the big sectors, such as infrastructure, green energy transition, housing, obviously some of the advanced and tech sectors, the pensions market and pensions reform, electronification or EVs in transport, we're seeing all of those things have real significant money behind them, very significant international investors that want to continue to invest in the UK. There's an opportunity for those areas to grow faster. As a result of that, what we're seeing is even our lending and our balance sheet is growing faster than the economy. We saw $5 billion worth of asset growth, 3% growth in the first half of this year alone. We really do think it's a resilient, slow growth economy with the potential to move to a higher growth trajectory.
You've mentioned government finances. Maybe we should address the other elephant in the room. I know you've said in the past that you thought increasing taxes on banks would be inconsistent with the growth agenda. Can you share your thoughts on the autumn budget more broadly? We still have two months to go. Is there anything other than bank tax that concerns you?
I'm probably experienced enough now not to get into the middle of a political discussion around a budget. Clearly, the budget will be an important event. I don't think it will change the trajectory materially of the economy or, by the way, our growth story in the next period of time. It's clearly a really important event. It's become almost a clearing event, I think, for some investors for the obvious reasons that we know. Look, on bank taxes, because you raised that, the position that we've had, and you'll have heard probably from all of the bank CEOs, is the one that we've seen to date. First of all, both the Chancellor and the Governor have come out previously and said they don't think that's the right policy decision for this environment.
Actually, having a Chancellor with the lease reforms, the Mansion House reforms, and with an explicit statement that says simply a healthy economy needs a healthy financial system, it wouldn't be consistent with prior statements. We think it's unlikely in that context. We've had no discussions with the government or the Treasury around the bank tax. Clearly feasible from a political perspective, but not something we've had debates on. It wouldn't be consistent with previous messages. In terms of the budget itself, there's going to be a combination of factors that determine how big any hole in the government's finances are. The OBR will be important, how the government thinks about its own fiscal constraints, the pace and the market's view of quantitative tightening is interesting in this context. I know that all of us will be all over that stuff.
Depending on where they get to, our view is very much they need to stay focused on enabling the investment and the real economy, businesses to continue to invest and grow. That's a really important part of this. Incentives to support that would be important. I think what we would hope to see is a balanced agenda between proper reform that enables some level of control on spending alongside whatever they decide from a political perspective on taxes in order to fill that gap.
When you look at the industrial strategy, the regulatory reform agenda, the focus on the economy taking a higher level but an appropriate level of risk through things like pensions and pensions markets, the government's current strategy really requires a budget that's in line with that if it's going to maintain momentum and get back to where we started, which is get the UK back to our higher growth trajectory.
You've talked about the higher growth trajectory and looking maybe a little bit further ahead than the budget. Your purpose is to help Britain prosper. Where do you see the best opportunities for the medium term in terms of growth that obviously will be good for the economy but also good for Lloyds Banking Group?
Yeah, as you know, we are in year four or five of our five-year strategy. We announced our objectives in February 24, 2022, which was actually the day Russia invaded Ukraine. I remember that day very well. Our strategy was to get back to growth and really drive investment in our talent, our people, and our technology to be fit for the future. The great news is we think we've managed to deliver that over the last period. We still see that as the path for the next period of time. As you know, a big part of that was our commitment to our shareholders in 2026 to get to greater than 200 bps of capital and greater than 15% RoTE. We're feeling really confident about that. The reason for that is when you look at the underlying, it's how and where we've grown.
We will, depending on where you come out in your consensus, have been able to grow our revenues by about 30% in that period of time. The biggest driver of that isn't interest margins, NIM, because we've had to deal with some very significant headwinds on NIM. For example, many of our investors will know we had a significant compression in our mortgage margins. What's been the driver of that? It's been a few things. First of all, a focus on other operating income. We wanted a more diversified, more balanced mix of revenues. We prioritized some of our businesses that would grow other operating income. That's businesses like our transport finance business, our pensions business, our bancassurance model of selling insurance to our 28 million retail customers with the biggest digital bank in the UK, regrowing our corporate institutional business, trade and working capital, our equity finance business, LDC.
All of those businesses really drive other operating income. We've been driving an 8% to 10% growth per year, 9% in the first half of this year, up again year on year. That's really differentiating and really important. The second part is what I just described. We built a strategy focused on the parts of the economy that we knew needed to grow, like housing, infrastructure, green finance, and transition. I mentioned pensions now a few times, but that's an exciting business because even before the government's current pensions reform, we knew the pivot towards pensions, pension contributions, and the ability to consolidate pensions means you can grow that business significantly above GDP. That's what we've been doing for the last few years. It's working. We can see that trajectory and momentum continuing. We think there's a really exciting opportunity in financial services in that context in the UK.
Speaking of exciting new launches, I've noticed that you've recently launched a Premier Bank account, which should really complement your broader Mass Affluent offering. Can you talk about the customer opportunity there and the cross-selling potential?
Yes, thank you. That was one of the initiatives we laid out in 2021, which was to focus more on our—it's a horrible name, Mass Affluent, by the way. We knew that, but we knew at least we could explain what it meant. We defined that as customers that had either an income or savings of more than £75,000. That was the definition back in 2021. Premier's got a slightly different positioning, but it's very much focused on that. The great news was we are already the biggest Mass Affluent financial services provider in the UK. We knew that was an opportunity for us to really deepen our relationships, bring the full breadth of Lloyds Banking Group, including things like investments, pensions, insurance, obviously our homes business, and then start to differentiate further. So far, we've had good progress.
Premier is the next part around trying to really bring a proposition that's differentiated for customers. For example, when we started this journey, we only had about a 9% share of mortgages more than £500,000. We've gone up to over 22%. We had less than, I think it was a 6% share of equity ISAs. We've been up at over 20% of equity ISAs. We attracted about £25 billion worth of additional Mass Affluent savings during this period. We know that's where customers have more complex needs, where the market's growing fast, and we can grow with them. It's been a great journey so far. It's very competitive. It's very innovative. We need to stay right on the front of it. That's what we intend to do.
Thank you for that. Normally, as an analyst, after hearing all about growth, we want to follow up with, and how much is that going to cost? Cost control has always been very strong at Lloyds Banking Group. You've talked about a flatter cost profile next year. Can you talk about the efficiency gains you have achieved to make that possible and your investment priorities from here?
Yeah, as I've said before in this forum, I think it's been a pleasure to join an organization that has a culture of cost discipline and cost control. I've inherited other organizations which aren't like that. It's certainly one of the core strengths of Lloyds Banking Group. Having said that, I think this has been one of my frustrations and probably for you, organizations and financial services organizations have delivered significant cost efficiency, but total costs have gone up. Ours have, and I should just explain that a bit. In terms of cost efficiencies through this period, we have delivered, we announced at the year-end results, now £1.5 billion worth of gross cost savings. That's a very material efficiency and productivity delivery in this context. Obviously, it's been a massive offset to the inflation we've experienced, but also the high level of investment.
It's been the high level of investment in our growth that's been driving our costs in this last period of time. When we look forward, we're going to continue to have the core cost discipline we expect. The track record we now have around delivering the efficiencies that you've seen will continue. In 2022, again, we asked investors to support an additional £4 billion worth of investment over this five-year period on top of our BAU investment. That investment's now plateauing, which is why the combination of ongoing cost savings together with a slowing down in the investment in this cycle underpinned by growth in the businesses, which obviously brings some level of growth cost, is why we see that the cost base we think will flatten into next year. The momentum, though, when we see looking forward next year, we'll talk more about the strategy beyond 2026.
I think how we look at efficiency and productivity in financial services, there's going to be another wave of it looking forward. We're going to be very well positioned for that based on the investments and the capabilities we've built in this last three or four years.
That's very exciting. Sorry to bring you to a slightly less exciting topic on costs, motor finance remediation costs. I'm sure you're glad the Supreme Court decision is now behind us. The FCA, however, has estimated a £9 billion to £18 billion cost for the sector from the redress scheme that they will consult on later this year. I know you said that you're not expecting any further material charges, but can you just give us a bit more color behind your confidence around this matter?
Yeah, so first of all, what have we provisioned already and why have we made that provision? We've already provisioned, as many of you will know, £1.15 billion. These are the hardest decisions I think we make as a board to make sure that we are doing it in a way that is giving as much clarity and foresight as we can, but knowing that's a big decision for us, for the investors, for the shareholders of the organization. That was made up of two parts: an initial provision we made back in January last year on what was called discretionary commission models, which was a regulatory issue raised by the FCA at that stage, and then an additional £700 million that we put linked to the Court of Appeal. The Supreme Court has just largely overturned the majority of that issue, but not all of it.
That's the provision we have. That provision is based, we did it deliberately this way because we knew that many of our investors and analysts would understand it. We did it the same way we do ECLs. We have multiple scenarios around a very broad range of issues that the regulator and the legal system is deciding on, and then we've probability weighted them based on our understanding of those scenarios. Of course, as you said, we saw a very, we really welcomed the Supreme Court judgment. We think it gave real clarity around the points of law that enable us to operate safely and support customers. We really looked at our scenarios in that context, and we were comfortable that there's no material update needed at this stage. We've always said the provision we have by definition could either need to be reduced or increased.
I think what the FCA has now done as they come out in the next few weeks with their consultation plan has materially de-risked the range of our provision. Actually, the range that Nikhil has given around this, and I think he's joining us later here, isn't he? It is quite well aligned with our £1.15 billion, depending on where you end up in that range. I think it really gives us more clarity now to put this issue behind us. As a management team, we'll work incredibly closely with the FCA to make sure we get a scheme that we think is fully fair and proportionate. Proportionate means on behalf of our shareholders and customers in this context. I think from a timeline perspective, you're right. They're going to come out with the consultation in the next period of time. It will take a few weeks to consult.
We will need to see if we get to a clearer position. With respect to Lloyds Banking Group, it feels like we're in a much more certain place as to where we are. If there's any new information, we'll update you positively or negatively, but I don't think it's going to be material. The other broader context here, which is important, is this government through the Mansion House reforms and then what they call the lease reforms has really started to create a different framework for conduct risk. As Lloyds Banking Group, one of our big objectives when we started this phase was to try and make the regulatory environment more supportive of the real economy, economic growth, and the financial system as an enabler of that. We always said one of the biggest areas was to develop a more forward-looking and predictable conduct regime.
I think some of the changes we've seen alongside what's been going on with motor finance has been really important. The FODs now have a 10-year backstop. There's been a review of how we think about interest rates for remediation. It's gone from an assumed 8% to base rate plus 1%, which is broadly 3% for the last 10 years, which is much more we think in line with kind of customers, shareholders, balanced interests. There's a whole set of reforms the government's laid out to continue to create a more predictable and form. We can reach more customers, but our shareholders can actually feel more confident in terms of what's predictable in terms of returns going forward. We're going to stay very focused on that agenda as well.
While we're on the topic of regulations, this agenda about making remediation especially more predictable is very helpful. You've also been vocal about your views on a whole range of other rate changes that the government is considering, like pension reform and ring fencing, to name a few. Can you talk about how you think the regulations can help support the sector further?
Yeah, so it goes back to the comment I just made. For the first time since the financial crisis, we have a government and a Chancellor saying that a healthy economy needs a healthy financial system. There's been a set of statements also then from the regulators to say, including the PRA. I don't think Sam's coming today, is he? To say that we have reached the level of regulation post the financial crisis that is needed to maintain prudential stability in the economy and for the right level of conduct standards, which is the first time we've heard that in 15 years.
The previous government put it in place, and this government has enforced it in a more rigorous way, has put in place this secondary objective for both regulators, and in fact, it's taken this to other regulators to make sure they have an objective around competitiveness and growth. That's both competitiveness and growth of our sector, and that's relative to other international sectors, other international financial services sectors and companies, as well as the competitiveness and growth of the real economy, which we are the biggest enabler of, actually, Lloyds Banking Group, more than any other financial services company. That's a really helpful context. As I say, I think the initial announcements through the Mansion House and the lease reforms do a good job of teeing up a pretty bold set of changes on the conduct regime.
There's now a commitment to start looking at the capital regime and other forms of prudential regulation. The PRA through the FPC is now going to be looking at capital in the next few months. Of course, they're going to have a look at the ring-fencing regime. Based on the interactions that we had over the last period of time, I think ring-fencing is with us for the next period of time anyway. That's not material, by the way, for us. The reason we raised it as an issue is we thought it would take five years for any ring-fencing to be materially changed. For the 2030s, I think ring-fencing won't help the UK economy be competitive with other economies. It doesn't slow us down. It doesn't do anything to materially change what we're doing, certainly this decade.
Right. You mentioned capital review. The capital flight path is probably clearer now that there is more clarity over the motor finance situation. You've committed to paying down to 13% next year. Is distribution still your priority use of capital?
Yes, we said from the very start, actually. I hope people now that I'm over four years in can really see that we've got a track record around this. We said we were going to create a very strong and sustainable capital return and capital generation business that works through cycle. That's where our greater than 15% RoTE in 2026 and greater than 200 bps of capital is very differentiating. We said we thought if we had the additional investment that was already included in that, we would always look to return excess capital at the end of the year in our discussions with the board to shareholders. That's what we've done. You've seen the track record on us building our sustainable dividend every year. We've grown it basically at a 15% CAGR.
We've done a buyback, which based on our discussions with our investors has been the right combination between the two. We still think that's a really important part of our investor proposition. We're completely committed to that next year. Now, two builds on that, none of which say that we shouldn't continue to distribute at the level we're talking about. The first is we also, with that level of growth in capital distributions, are growing our balance sheet. I smile because when I came to join this organization, I spent a lot of time with analysts in my gardening leave. A number of people said to me, "Lloyds Banking Group's TNAV has been £0.50 at the start of the last decade. It's £0.50 now.
How are you going to get growth?" I said, "If you don't grow the balance sheet, you don't invest in the business, and you give your retained earnings back as capital, by definition, the TNAV doesn't move." We're now proving that we can grow the balance sheet profitably and deploy it. I just mentioned earlier, for example, having grown the balance sheet to 5% in the first six months of this year. We think that's really important and a really important use of capital for our investors so that we could be generating strong returns on that capital. The second thing is, and we've done a couple of them, we've always said we'll look at what I'd characterize as infill M&A, where it brings distinctive capability or things we can't do ourselves. We're already the scale player in virtually every part of the UK.
Where it brings new capabilities that we can bring to market, we'll do that. One of the great examples is the Tusker EV financing business that we bought. We have now, I'm not sure we made this public, but anyway, we've more than tripled the size of the fleet within two years. It's exactly the kind of distinctive capability, number one in the sector, plugged into our distribution. We can bring real value to our shareholders and really create synergies that are positive. We'll look at those kind of infill acquisitions. I think at this stage, given who we are, we should continue to see very strong distributions to shareholders.
Now that you've mentioned M&A, I could not help. What other capabilities would you like to add to your franchise? You have a lot of business footprint. Anything specific in mind?
No, I mean, it's in the areas we've laid out as strategic priorities. I think where we don't start with 15% to 30% market share and the leading capabilities. What are the kind of areas? Obviously, in our insurance and pensions business and some of our wealth businesses, there's opportunities to look at capabilities. In some of our SME financing businesses, there's capabilities there that we don't have relative to the market that we'll continue to look at. We've looked at capabilities. We've taken equity positions, not done outright buys, of some tech companies that bring distinctive tech capabilities to deliver the next level of innovation. You've heard me say it many times. We're by far the biggest digital service in the UK, 23 million people with 7 billion log-ons to our digital apps. How do we continue to be at the forefront of digital and take that forward?
We'll continue to look at those kinds of things. The key theme for us is a distinctive capability that we can scale. If we can see those things in areas that we've committed to growing to our investors, that's great. If not, we'll just continue to do it organically because we tend to be the leader in most segments and sectors anyway.
Yeah, that's great. We are now more than halfway through your current strategy cycle, as you said. We've talked a lot about your organic plans. I wouldn't want to get ahead of myself. When you look ahead to the next strategy cycle, what are the areas that you're particularly focused on? What can drive returns even higher?
Yes, our guidance goes out till 2026. My team's here, so I'm not going to give you guidance beyond 2026. Otherwise, I get myself into trouble. I think one thing we will be clear, we will come out with our new strategy before year-end results 2027. We'll do it at some time next year. I'm a big believer that when you've got an organization moving, you want to sprint through the finish line into the next phase of your strategy, not take some weird pause and then slow down before you start mobilizing again. That's what we'll do. Now, what do I think are going to be the themes?
The first thing was getting the biggest UK-centered financial balance sheet and bank growing, maintaining or winning market share, and then growing at an 8% to 10% CAGR in our combination of businesses that drive other operating income is a brilliant starting point. That momentum is momentum that will make a difference to our investors, to our investor proposition. We need to maintain that. I think that's clearly one of the things we see. The world continues to change. It's a very competitive market. We're proving we can more than compete and win share where we want to win. We're going to have to continue to invest and innovate in those areas. We should be able to maintain that growth. A part of that, as you will all know, has been us revaluing our structural hedge.
The great thing for Lloyds Banking Group is we have a different structural hedge to other players in the market. By design, it's a longer-dated structural hedge. It's been a significant source of the value creation through this first phase, but not the majority. It will still be a tailwind, depending on your views of the market, as we leave 2026. It'll still give us some upside into 2027. Then, depending on your view of the longer-term rates market for the rest of this decade, it will be supportive of our businesses and our growth. The second thing I think is obviously we're a bank that's great at cost control and has delivered significant efficiencies. I talked about the £1.5 billion we delivered through the first few periods of time.
When we look at the maturity of our capabilities now, the way the market's operating, and then how new technologies and the combination of generative AI with agentic, so agentic AI, we think will provide opportunities for another change in the level of productivity, but also support growth, enable us to differentiate and deliver propositions that don't exist in the market today, which we're really excited by. We think that'll be a material part of this next phase as well. We're very excited about the phase beyond 2026. We are going to deliver our 2026 results. We have confidence in those. We really believe, as a management team, that doing what we said we would do is important. As I said, delivering almost a 30% increase in revenues at those greater than 15% RoTEs and delivering the level of capital we're talking about is a material achievement.
We want to deliver that. We're going to grow from there. It's going to be a fun few years.
I'm very looking forward to that. You mentioned structural hedge and the slightly different shape and duration versus other peers. I think one of the questions that we all think about as analyst community is to what extent will these benefits, if you like, be shared with customers versus shareholders? When your structural hedge gets rolled in 2027 and 2028, that will probably give you a bit more competitive advantage versus some of your peers who might have already rolled through their structural hedges. Is that how you would think about it in terms of competition?
I think the first point is to focus on competition, I think, is really important. The one thing as a management team you can't control is what your competitors do on pricing. As you say, the UK is a very competitive market. The good news in that context is we've proven in the last few years we can, for the first time actually since the financial crisis, either maintain our market share or grow market share without massively compromising margins. Where margins have got tighter, we do it in a way that still generates shareholder value. Mortgages is probably the great example, actually. As I said, we've had another £5 billion of growth this year. Last year, we were trading at kind of 20% market share. Margins are being stable around the 70 bps. Through cycle, we know that's going to be very attractive for our shareholders.
In the 15 years or the 12 or 13 years before that, Lloyds Banking Group gave up 1% to 2% market share per year. It's really important that we know how to compete and maintain margins even in this very competitive dynamic. I think you're right. Our structural hedge will be differentiating relative to some of our peers in that next period of time. At the same time, I'm never complacent. I spend a lot of time looking out at the market. The nature of competition is getting more complex. You're getting obviously some fintechs with greater scale. We've got other UK banks operating now with a very clear focus on the UK. We've got international competitors who are increasingly looking at the UK and our core businesses. For us, we just need to raise the game. We've proven we can compete with them. We can win share.
We can do it at margins that are very accretive. We're going to have a differentiated underlying ballast for our structural hedge through this period of time. Actually, what's going to be even more important, which I don't talk that much to the analysts, is the change in the management team, the capabilities, and some of the technology that we're using, and the pace at which we can then respond to competition and compete. That's been the biggest change we've made in the last three years that gives us some confidence that we can face into that next three years as well. Do I think margins are going to get completely competed away? No, I don't.
That's very reassuring. With 10 minutes left, maybe I will open the floor up for questions. Anybody's got a question for Charlie? Gentleman over there, please.
Sorry, it's probably a small technicality. I was picking up a comment you said there that we review the capital distributions once a year. You're the only one in the sector who does that because everyone else does it at the half year. If I was the board, I wouldn't change it while motor finance remediation's hanging over you. I think it would send either positive or negative signals and create unnecessary headaches. If we think about motor finance remediation being put behind, is that something you would, the board will reconsider into next year?
Thank you for the question. It's something I've proactively brought to the board a couple of times since I've been in this role, actually. It is something we have as a discussion with the board on a regular basis. A number of our investors have asked us that question. To date, the board's decided, as you say, that the current plan we have is the right one. We'll have it open to current review. It is very much a discussion for the board in that context. As you say, there's some other uncertainties going on at the moment. I also think when we look at the new strategy, it will be a meaningful part of the discussion, and we'll be in those discussions over the next six months. I'm not going to make a commitment either way. I want you to know we do discuss it.
We do take investor feedback and definitely, we'll continue to review it.
Any other questions? If not, then I always have more. Sitting next to the CEO of the largest mortgage bank in the UK, I can't finish this discussion without asking you to comment on that. What are you seeing in terms of volumes now that the seasonal effect from the stamp duty change is over? Has there been any changes in terms of price competition?
Yeah, so I gave some of the stats around our performance. Obviously, we saw a significant increase in volumes in the first quarter pre the stamp duty changes. We were surprised, and I think the industry was surprised that the volumes stayed stronger in the last quarter than we thought they might do. They did reduce slightly. Overall, the first half of the year has been strong. Of course, there's been some changes from a regulatory and a government perspective that's enabled us, especially for first-time buyers, to look at affordability and support customers in a slightly broader way. That's supported some of the volumes in the market. We're looking at this in a very supportive way. Our forecast for house prices, by the way, of all the forecasts we do, it's the hardest one to get right. We upgraded slightly to 3% for this year.
At this stage, that looks pretty good. We don't see that there's a massive either spike or increase in house prices, although it differs by house and property and location in the country. It feels like it remains a supportive market at this stage. You're right, competition is hot and it is tight. What you've seen us print in the first two quarters is around 70 bps of margin. That's a pretty complex makeup of both retention business, new business, and then all of the different types of the mortgage market, including buy-to-let. We feel confident in those margins. It is a tighter, higher margin market. We feel confident around that circa 70 bps at this stage. The other thing that's been complex in this market, which you'll have all been seeing, is when swap rates move, we see that margins and pricing aren't stable for a period.
They either widen or narrow, and it takes a while for them to get to some kind of equilibrium. In the first half, we've seen quite a change in swap rates. Let's see how this stabilizes in the second half. It's a supportive market. We seem to be trading well in that context. We're growing the business. It's very accretive. We see that as one of the continued growth engines of Lloyds Banking Group.
Fantastic. I do not want to forget about asset quality. Maybe I'll ask in a slightly different way. I think you've previously noted that 70% of customers have less than £5,000 of savings. So far, customers have been pretty resilient in terms of credit quality and spending. With the autumn budget, as we talked about coming through, maybe more pressure on household finances, especially if we see a further tax rise in a couple of months. What's your expectation for that resilience?
Yeah, very much the same. I think a couple of things in that context. I said up front that we see the top 80% by income of people in the UK. Remember, we have half the households in the UK, so I have this unique lens on UK household finances or individuals' finance. The top 80% have been increasing their savings and their cash flows. Obviously, saving rates are at a high % rate, and debt ratios broadly have been coming down. I think the first thing is that's a pretty supportive environment from a credit perspective. The second thing is obviously Lloyds Banking Group has a very specific risk appetite. On the retail side, which is where you're at, but on both sides, but on the retail side, we basically only do prime lending.
Where we would see the stress is typically in the bottom 20% of society by income and wealth. Obviously, a lot of those people would typically be on benefits or have some form of benefits. By the way, they'll have zero or negative savings. They won't have £5,000. That's very distributed to the top end. We will support them in different ways. We will support them with everyday banking services and appropriate support where needed. They tend not to be, we can't lend to them. We won't be lending to them within our risk appetite. Of course, on mortgages, again, when you look at it, the average household income is over £70,000, so double the average individual income. They tend to be families that are more financially resilient.
The real driver of ECLs that would be different from our forecasts is if we saw unemployment materially spike because that then isn't around financial resilience. It's much more around individual circumstances. As you know, actually, we've been slightly above the market in terms of our baseline forecasts. The market's come to us, but we're still seeing unemployment in our guidance stay pretty strong, about 4.8%, 4.9%, maybe it ticks to 5%. All of our guidance and all of our forecasts are on that basis. No, we feel good about both the economy, but also our strategy for how we're supporting customers in that context. We expect we'll continue to see a pretty benign environment from an ECLs on impairments perspective.
Fantastic. Unless there are any last-minute questions? That gentleman over there.
Roughly how much this year are you spending on AI? How much do you think that probably increases next year? Are you getting any material cash cost savings at the moment from any of that, or it's more just kind of non-cash productivity improvements?
On AI?
Yeah.
We haven't disclosed the amount we're spending on AI. Let me give you some context on that. I think it's a brilliant question. We have 800 AI models live at the moment, including a significant number using generative AI and a few use cases combining agentic AI and generative AI. I'm sure you're all over this. The traditional forms of AI, which is typically machine learning, as you know, is already driving massive productivity, efficiency, and credit decisioning benefits across the bank. We already have one of the key use cases we've talked about externally: we use a generative AI tool to support all of our contact center colleagues. It was over 10,000 colleagues, and it saw a very material productivity lift in that context. We haven't given specific numbers, but we're already seeing significant value from it. We are using these tools extensively across the bank.
We definitely see, as I just said earlier, that the opportunity to use specifically agentic AI as we get into the next few years is going to create significant opportunities. We haven't disclosed the money around this, but we are investing significantly around it. The really important point is when you try and do this at scale in a regulated market, you do it with the right foundations. We started this in the back end of 2022, implementing the data environments and the AI tool environments, and then building a set of engineering and data scientists who would enable us to leverage, obviously, generative safely, but then also generative combined with agentic. That's in a very, very good place for us to then start to deploy it at scale across the organization.
The third thought around this is, you know, I always think the long pole in the tent here for really exciting use cases, which aren't just about faster, better, cheaper, which is what most organizations are talking about, but are actually about extending and changing how we serve customers in new ways and then provide new growth. The long pole in that tent is going to be the regulation. We are already working in a regulatory sandbox with the FCA around some use cases that use agentic AI directly with customers. That's exciting because if we can build confidence around how we do this safely with our regulator, it will give us confidence, going back to where we started this, around how can we then scale out across the UK and then be a leader in trying to drive that innovation. We're going to come back.
I'm sure we'll talk about this more in our next phase of our strategy. I'll take that as input that you'd like to see how much specifically we're investing. We'll see if we can give you that number. I know the number, but I'm not going to say it now. We'll think about how we tell this story because we think it's a really significant opportunity for us. I know we're the leader in this context. That'll be fun. Thank you.
As usual, much to look forward to. Thank you very much, Charlie, for joining me today. I'll draw the session to a close now. Thank you.
Thank you.