Metro Bank Holdings PLC (LON:MTRO)
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May 6, 2026, 4:53 PM GMT
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Investor Update

Oct 9, 2023

Operator

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to today's conference call, titled The Metro Bank Webcast Call. My name is Ellen, and I'll be the call operator for today. At the end of today's presentation, there'll be an opportunity to ask a question. If you'd like to ask a question at this time, please press Star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If at any point your question has been answered or you change your mind and would like to revoke your question, you can do this by pressing Star followed by two on your telephone keypad. I would now like to turn the call over to Daniel Frumkin, CEO of Metro Bank, to begin. Daniel, please go ahead whenever you're ready.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Good morning, everyone. Thank you so much for joining the call. I really appreciate you taking the time. I know the announcement got out, a bit later last night than we were expecting, but, I'm really glad you've had a chance to digest it, and I look forward to spending some time with you this morning. So listen, I think we need to back up to what we've always said about Metro since the time I joined. It is a great franchise that does a phenomenal job at looking after customers and growing deposits, current accounts, business current accounts. It continues to deliver for our colleagues, our communities, and ultimately, our customers. I think if we go back to what we said at the half year, without wanting to be too repetitive, you'll see the first slide in the slide deck on slide three, the strategic pillars.

I want to be really clear that we have delivered everything we said we were going to do, and we positioned Metro in a unique position, as you can see on the chart on the right on this slide. It differentiates us from everybody else in the U.K., be it another monoline challenger or a full-service high street bank. Our funding advantages and our ability to generate assets in a diversified way means that Metro has an opportunity to grow and generate meaningful returns. What we said at the half year on this slide is we just needed more petrol. We needed a bit more fuel for the tank. This is it. This capital raise positions Metro to leverage up the foundations it has built and allows us to drive the business forward.

If you turn to the next slide, the famous tick mark slide, the reality is that we are well-positioned across an array of asset classes, a truly full-service financial institution, and we can now start to leverage up those abilities for the benefit of all stakeholders. And then if you go on to the next slide, on slide five, as we talked about at the half year, we have a unique opportunity to grow our deposit franchise by introducing new products into our array of existing products. As I said at the time, we have a very limited product set as an institution, so at the moment, our Cash ISA product is not digitally enabled, is not straight-through processing, and we don't take advantage of the switcher service. In both retail easy access and business easy access, we have a single account.

It doesn't give us the flexibility to reward those most loyal and those most committed to supporting the bank. We are in the process of building those products out and would hope to be in a position to launch them by early next year. If we can simply get to our existing market share for personal or business current accounts, we would generate the thick end of GBP 15 billion of incremental deposits over time. That doesn't even account for other products we'll introduce over time or other growth we would expect to receive. Again, Metro has always been well-positioned to grow and deliver good returns. The missing link was the capital. This fills that need. Now, turning on to the specificity on the next slide of what we've done in the last few days. We've secured GBP 325 million of new capital.

150 million of that is new equity, mainly provided by existing shareholders. We've also secured GBP 175 million of new MREL. At the same time of doing that, we thought it prudent to refinance the existing GBP 600 million of debt. The refinance of the GBP 600 million of debt has bought Metro not only time, but additional resources to grow in the market. As we have informed the market, we were also considering a GBP 3 billion mortgage sale that should complete this year. The mortgage sale is not dissimilar to what Metro did three years ago when we did what we affectionately call internally as Project Eden, when we sold GBP 3 billion of residential mortgages to NatWest to reposition the balance sheet to allow for further growth, higher margin lending, and improved profitability.

The mortgage sale, depending upon pricing, makes a lot of sense for the exact same reasons. The mortgages we have on our balance sheet are of high quality... but aren't necessarily what we want on our balance sheet as we move forward. They're probably better placed on another institution's balance sheet. As I've said, this package gets us out of our combined buffers. That is a major accomplishment and gives us the room to stretch our legs. What-- based on the 30th of June numbers, the performance at one would have been over 13% and the MREL ratio in excess of 21.5%. As I've said before, the refinancing means that all our MREL senior instruments aren't due until 2028. We have petrol and time. Those are two resources that were quite limited at Metro and constrained our strategic optionality.

Now that we have capital and time, we can drive the business forward in an extremely accretive manner. We're looking forward to growing the business over the coming years. We've also provided guidance that we had not provided previously. So we expect in 2025 to have a ROE in excess of 9% and then growing to low double-digit to mid-teens thereafter over the medium term. So I just wanna make sure everybody really understands that what we are saying is this bank is profitable, will be profitable, and its profitability will grow. We also have provided guidance for 2024 of a mid-single-digit ROE, which we believe is deliverable if we deliver on the plans we've outlined in this document. And again, quarter three on an after-tax basis, was profitable again.

It's the fourth quarter in a row where we saw profitability, and we continue to see personal and business current account growth. To be clear, even over the last handful of days, we saw new accounts being opened. Let's get into a bit more detail on slide seven of the capital package overview. I'm not gonna spend a lot of time on this. I'm happy to take questions. There's a fair amount of detail in here. I think you can read it at your leisure and go forward. What I would say is the equity raise was supported by the majority of our shareholder register, and we were happy for that support.

I think the investment we got in was completely aligned with Metro being Metro, and the folks who continue to support us completely believe in the model and completely believe in the prospects for Metro going forward. I think they all realized the missing ingredient was a bit more capital, and they were happy to provide it. In terms of the debt refinancing, we managed to obtain GBP 175 million more of MREL resources. That again helps us grow. I'm not gonna spend a lot more time on that slide because I think we've covered it on the prior slide. So if you go on to slide eight. A bit of additional guidance, so that everybody has an understanding. Loan growth, we expect asset rotation as we did post the original mortgage sale we did.

That mortgage sale will allow us to continue to rotate assets, as well as the additional capital. We're focused on continuing to grow our specialist mortgage business and really start to grow our commercial lending business again. Our commercial lending business has been really constrained over the last few years due to the capital, and it's an area where between our regional commercial, our corporate, and our SME lending franchises, we are very confident in our ability to grow share in a very accretive way. The loan book obviously contract in 2023. If we sell the loan book, I mean, if we sell GBP 3 billion of loans, obviously it'll contract, but we expect double digit compound annual growth rates between 2024 and 2028 in loan growth, as we stretch our legs in commercial lending and specialist mortgages.

The funding, again, we will fund the balance sheet through native activities. We fully anticipate to be able to grow deposits quite quickly in 2024, followed by a mid-single digit growth in 2025 and 2026. I will say it's an area that I would hope to outperform over time, but we need to get the products built, get them launched, and understand how quickly we can get the growth in. But again, for us, going back to the first slide, we're uniquely positioned where our funding model gives us a huge competitive advantage. We expect NIM to grow. We would hope that NIM starts to approach 3% by 2026. Again, we don't hedge our mortgage portfolio, so some of the banks who have had a hedge in place have probably shown more NIM expansion due to the value of the hedges.

We naturally hedge, so as the mortgage book rolls off and our investment portfolio rolls off and we reinvest it at higher yields, we get natural NIM expansion. In addition, as we now have the capital to really go after commercial and corporate lending, those are significantly NIM accretive activities. You will see in the RNS that we were very clear that we need to reduce cost by GBP 30 million.... I wanna be clear though, that that is not GBP 30 million down year-over-year. That is GBP 30 million down on the 2024 forecast that investors saw as part of the capital activities. And we expect cost income ratio to continue to improve, both through our cost actions and as we leverage up the fixed cost base of Metro. And again, in case you missed it, we put it in red to make it really clear.

We expect a ROAE in excess of 9% in 2025, and we will be a double-digit ROAE organization thereafter, growing into mid-teens in the medium term. There is nothing wrong with the Metro business model. It has a huge potential to deliver for all stakeholders. With the capital we've just obtained, we are very confident in where we go. In terms of the capital, again, I think those are there for you to be able to model. The timetable and conditions of the capital, we expect to issue a prospectus and a shareholder circular in the next few weeks. We expect to complete by Q4 2023. But obviously, conditions of the capital package, that's what happens when you let lawyers draft half a slide.

I think there's a couple of bits you need to know more than anything else. Of the debt, we had 100% support from all debt holders, both in the Tier 2 and on the senior, of the ones we could find. So that equaled a little over 74% after trades are settled this week for both instruments. So we're within 100 basis points of the 75% needed to be able to compel those refinancing. So we're very confident in our ability to deliver that. We've been very engaged with the shareholder base, obviously, over the last stretch, and we're confident in our ability to get to the 75% needed to enact the transaction.

We think we have delivered a transaction that is meaningfully superior to any alternative for all stakeholders. We would hope the benefits of the transaction are self-evident, and therefore, we're confident in the support. Lastly, just because I like to be a bit repetitive, on slide 10, we're gonna end where we started, with the right-hand box. Metro Bank is uniquely positioned because it has a funding model that is differentiated and asset-generating capabilities that are diverse. We are not a monoline, and we fund ourselves like a high street bank. We just need to be bigger, and we now have the capital to do that. With that, I'm happy to take questions. Thank you.

Operator

Thanks very much. We will now enter our Q&A session. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind and would like to revoke your question, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure that your device is unmuted locally. Our first question comes from Grace Dargan from Barclays. Grace, your line is now open. Please proceed with your question.

Grace Dargan
Assistant VP, Barclays

Hi, thank you. Good morning. Thank you very much for the presentation.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Morning, Grace.

Grace Dargan
Assistant VP, Barclays

So I guess, a couple from me, if possible. So firstly, to what extent are you prepared to move back into your capital buffers? And would you be prepared to do that across the stack? Kind of what's the conversation been like with the PRA regarding that? And then secondly, on the potential kind of asset sales. So note the commentary around kind of being capital accretive in 2024 and kind of beyond. Are you trying to tell us something around the potential discount you'd be willing to absorb there? Maybe something around kind of 5%-10%. And is that realistic, kind of given where the portfolio is sitting? And I guess, would you also consider further portfolio sales, or how are you thinking about that? Thank you.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Listen, Grace, two really good questions, although I find the first one quite hurtful, just because we haven't, you know—I just got out of buffers. At least let me have a day. Listen, we haven't really contemplated going back into buffers. You can assume that the five-year plan that we've created over the last few days has been reviewed in detail with the PRA as part of this, as it has been with potentially new and existing investors as they contemplated whether they would move forward. We've become quite capitally accretive, Grace. I mean, we, you know, if we're generating, you know, mid, you know, upper single digit, low double digit, mid-teens return on tangible equity, actually, you would assume that that would build capital over time.

So, I think that's probably the best answer I can give you. But you know, I had a little bit of PTSD there, so let's not talk about that anymore because I'm quite glad to be out of buffers. In terms of the asset sales, we've been really clear that we will treat the balance sheet in the best interest of all stakeholders, and we will trade in and out of assets when we think it's appropriate. Yeah? I would say a 5%-10% discount on the mortgage sale is significantly outside anything we would consider. I think the book and the yield on the book and the quality of the book will not require that.

I think you're off by a pretty significant magnitude, even at the 5%. I think if you cut the 5% in half, you might be sneaking up on it. The reality is that there is a way for that math to work, but we think actually the book's good quality. Fundamentally, given the fact that we're still a standardized bank, after the recent headlines, those assets we're selling are probably better off on a bank's balance sheet that has A-IRB. Yeah? So in essence, there are mortgages we put on our balance sheet in anticipation of gaining A-IRB. Now that that is unlikely in the near term, then the reality is that they're better off on somebody else's balance sheet.

We think they will pay us for them, and we'd rather redeploy that capital and that liquidity into different earnings classes. In terms of whether we, whether we'd sell other portfolios, you know, Grace, I'm not wedded to anything. If somebody wants to pay me a price that I find attractive, that I can then redeploy the capital and make more money for all stakeholders, then I, I, I would sell the furniture. So, I have. I will do whatever it takes to drive the business forward. The beauty of it is, now that we have additional capital and that we actually have the petrol we need, you know, the business can really stretch its legs across a lot of vectors, and we're very excited about the prospects. Thank you.

Grace Dargan
Assistant VP, Barclays

Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Perlie Mong , from KBW. Perlie, your line is now open. Please go ahead when you're ready.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Hey, Perlie.

Perlie Mong
Director and Equity Research Analyst, KBW

Yes. Another two questions. Oh, so, just congratulations for the capital raise. I'm sure it's a relief for you. I guess, two questions for me. One is, I don't know whether I'm missing something, but you talked about a GBP 200 million capital increase from the package, but, the new equity is GBP 150 million, and I guess the benefit you get from the liability management of the 40% haircut, is a GBP 100 million. So I just struggle to get to a GBP 200 million benefit. So if you could help me with that, that'd be great. And secondly, on, I guess, just some of the assumptions you have on the loan growth, because, a 10%...

Well, I guess, not more than 10%, double-digit CAGR in specialist mortgages and commercial, feels quite ambitious in the current environment, when obviously mortgages are not growing across the sector, and commercial lending, well, I guess, especially SME lending, has been falling for coming to 29, 30 months now. So I guess just what, what assumptions are you making around those loan book growth?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Okay, great. So listen, I'll give a quick answer on the GBP 200 million, and then I'll let James give a little bit more detail. So you're right, it's GBP 150 million of common and GBP 100 million of debt discount. You do need to remember the debt discount has a bit of a tax hit to it, and there are obviously a bit of cost to get here. But we'll let James come in and give you a bit more detail. But I think those are the two things you need to think of. And also, we want to be a bit conservative in the numbers we provided.

In terms of loan growth, we are actively not accepting certain loan applications because we have been carefully constrained in our commercial and corporate business. We have seen limited to very limited effect of interest rate rises and COVID and everything else on our corporate and commercial loan book, because it's extremely well underwritten, really well collateralized. We have teams of very experienced, very seasoned corporate and commercial lenders who've not been able to attack the market the way they would like. If you go back in time, the amount of loan volume we need to generate in corporate commercial, while above, is not significantly above what we were doing pre the 2019 issues. So we're pretty confident in that space.

In terms of our specialist mortgage space, I mean, the gentleman who runs our mortgage business, who I have a ton of time for, who does a great job, Charlie, I mean, he used to run distribution for Kensington Mortgages. The gentleman who runs products and commercial for me in the mortgage space, used to be at OSB. We probably know the specialist mortgage business better than we know the prime resi business. We're very convinced, given the contacts we have in the marketplace, our ability to generate significant volumes. In terms of processing those volumes, those volumes would still be below what we did about a year ago, 15 months ago, in mortgages, when we really stretched our legs for a period of time.

We've also just put in a new platform that will allow us to introduce some scoring technology and some other things to automate and a little bit more straight-through processing to free up capacity of underwriters. So we're pretty confident. I don't want to say overconfident, but we're really confident in our ability to grow those asset platforms. And then, James, if you want to just come back to the capital.

James Hopkinson
CFO, Metro Bank

Well, I mean, so I think you answered that incredibly well. So, just to reiterate what you said, we wanted to be conservative in how we modeled it. We have assumed a full tax charge against the gain on the Tier 2 haircut. And also there are additional costs associated with all of the transactions. So I think that's the way to think about it. If we can outdeliver that, then great. And then on the asset side as well, I mean, I think, as Dan said, we're very excited about the opportunity we see in the corporate and commercial space.

We opened up, we think, about 7% of the U.K.'s business account openings in the first half of this year. We're getting really good momentum into that business. Our offering resonates with that segment. So we're looking forward to being able to really lean in and support that important part of the economy. So, you know, I wouldn't add anything more to that.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Good. Okay, great. Thanks, Perlie.

Perlie Mong
Director and Equity Research Analyst, KBW

Mm-hmm

Operator

Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Alexei Lougovtsov from Bank of America. Alexei, please go ahead whenever you're ready.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Good morning, and thanks for the announcement today. My question is about the lock-up agreements. You mentioned in the announcement that the debt haircut depends on the lock-up agreements. However, I don't see details of what exactly those lock-up agreements are. And my second question is: when will prospectuses become available?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Okay. I'll do the first one. The first one's really easy. There's an incentive for the debt holders to get to 75%. I think that's why the language is in there, but we're at 74.1%, and I think 74.3% on the other, on the two pieces. We're so close to, after trade settle. We're so close to 75%, Alexei, I wouldn't get hung up on the lockups. The deal is pretty well papered. We can't, it's very well papered, so I think we're in really good shape. I wouldn't focus on that. Then there's prospectuses. I think it's a fair question.

To be honest, we've been pretty focused and resources have been dedicated to getting the deal done and structured and papered. It's gonna take us a little bit of time to get the prospectus out. You know, I would think you're thinking sometime in early to mid-November by the time it gets out.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

I see. To me, lock-up agreements sounded like the holders of new notes would commit to not sell them in the secondary market?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

No.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Or-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

No, no. Nope, nope, no, no, nope, nope, nope. That's not what we-

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

They will be-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

I get it.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Completely free to trade, right?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

They will be... I think so. I mean, I'll have to check with the lawyers to make sure there's no short term or short duration, but we did not ask-

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Yeah.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

for any exceptional lockup. Yeah?

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Okay. Thank you. So you said 74.9% or 74% of the senior committed-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

And of the Tier 2?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, they're both over 74%. So we had 100% support.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Both, or?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

We had 100% support from both the Tier 2 and the seniors. Yeah.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Yeah.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

But we could only identify, a bit over 74% after trade settle of both bonds. So they're both over 74%. So we've just got, we've got to find less than 1% of both bonds to get over 75%. Yeah?

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

And then, everyone will be taken into the deal, right? 100% will be taken-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

- because 75 is sufficient.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Exactly.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Okay. Thank you very much, and good luck in the process and in the future bank.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Thank you so much. I really appreciate your questions.

Alexei Lougovtsov
Director, Bank of America

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from John Cronin from Goodbody. John, your line is now open. Please go ahead.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Morning, guys.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Hi, John.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Just a few from me, please, some points of detail. One, look, notably absent from the statement, is any, any commitments in relation to consumer lending growth. Just wondering what your perspectives are there for the medium to longer term. Do you feel you're sort of right-sized at this stage in terms of proportionality? Just your thoughts on that would be helpful. Secondly, can you give us an update on where deposits are now, and how they have evolved since the H1 update? Thirdly, sorry for all the questions, but there's just-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

No, that's okay.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Third one is, IRB, like, you have a GBP 7.6 billion mortgage portfolio at the end of June. Okay, you might sell GBP 3 billion of assets here, but still pretty relevant in the context of the other 4.6, assuming you do achieve the sale. You know, are we, should we think about that as a possibility for 2024 now or not? Anything you can say on that would be helpful. And then, look, on the equity raise mechanics, I'm just trying to do some. Look, I know it's not a rights issue, but going off and just doing the basic math around calculating what a theoretical exercise price would be, it gets me to about 34p. Equity is coming in though for 102 and will have 53%.

Currently, your market close of Friday, and I understand they have about 9%, so try, struggling to dovetail that with how they get to 53%. Anything you can be a bit more specific on with respect to the equity raise would also be helpful. Look, a final one, although I probably don't expect much of an answer on this. I mean, you built about 400 basis points of MREL, if I remember correctly, when you did the asset sales in NatWest three years ago. You're talking similar quantum in terms of asset sales. Any sense of what might be a reasonable expectation based on your conversation so far? Again, just to reiterate, I appreciate maybe you just can't really say much in terms of value. It is speculation at this juncture. Thanks.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Okay. So, let me go through them, John. I'll try to go through them at a little bit of pace, but I think I'll get it. So the consumer lending growth, actually, it's a business we're really happy we bought. It's worked out really well. However, at this point, margins in that business have compressed. Pricing in the market has not kept pace with base rate movements. So again, we always say we look at risk-adjusted returns on regulatory capital, and the risk-adjusted returns on regulatory capital in that business have been hindered by the lack of margin expansion in the market. So I doubt it's gonna grow. I think it's probably flat to down over the next 18 months to two years.

But it's a business we like, and we think in a low-rate environment does quite well. Deposits, in terms of recent activity, I genuinely appreciate the question, and you already know my answer, which is, you know, we, we don't disclose. We don't disclose that information intraperiod, but I, I know, that is something that people wanna know. A-IRB? That is a great question, John. So we have not yet received written feedback on, I expect it shortly. We've only gotten verbal feedback. So we need to take the written feedback from the, the Bank of England, and digest it, and then rerun it through the models and see what reduction in capital it gives us. I know you always modeled sort of we'd end up at sort of 20%-25% risk weight.

I think if we take the feedback back and that's where we end up, we end up with risk weights around 20%, 22%, then my answer to you is, yes, I don't think we're far away. I think it's a tidy up exercise, and we can get it done in, you know, sometime in 2024, 2025, who knows? I've never really commented on timeline, but it's not a huge exercise. I am worried when we get the written feedback back, that it's gonna—when we run it through our models, it's gonna get us risk weights in the upper 20s or the low 30s. At that point, John, I think the board would have to reassess whether it's a futile exercise, and given our lack of internal data, we should just pause the program and reposition the balance sheet.

I mean, there are lots of good mid-tier banks that generate really good returns without having A-IRB. And we know full well that one of the reasons we were constraining our commercial business and our corporate business is 'cause we weren't sure how they were gonna model under A-IRB. Well, if we're not gonna have A-IRB, there are definitely business lines there that we could take advantage of to generate really good returns on a very conservative basis. So the A-IRB question is a live question. We just talked about it at the board a couple of weeks ago, and I don't have an answer. We'll get the written feedback, we'll run it through the models, but if we're not chasing a really good savings on our residential mortgage book, I don't know why we do it.

Because as you know, 'cause you know this as well, if not better than I do, every other portfolio in a bank kind of gets hurt or stays flat under A-IRB. You really need to get the benefit out of your residential mortgage portfolio to make up for the impact it has on your commercial and corporate books. So I think it's... I don't know. We'll have to wait and see. The equity raise mechanics, we gave—the rights issue is at 30p, John. So we had 172 million shares outstanding, I think, plus or minus. If you multiply that by 30p, I think it's GBP 52 million. I'm doing this in my head right now, John, so if I get it slightly wrong, bear with me. But I think that gets you to GBP 52 million.

There's GBP 150 million of new equity coming in, which gets you at a total of GBP 202 million. Spaldy, Jaime's putting in GBP 102 million, which is a little over 50% of the GBP 202 million, but he also owned a little over 9% of the 52. I think if you put those two things together, you end up with sort of 53%. Yeah? And then the GBP 400 b-

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Great.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

So, sorry, let me just finish on the loan sale, because it's the last thing. So you'll remember the GBP 3 billion loan sale we did at par, slightly above par. This loan sale, I mean, I'd love to get par, and I hope somebody falls down and hits their head, and I hope they're not listening right now. I hope somebody falls down and hits their heads and pays me par. But I think given the rate moves we've had over the last little bit, I think it'll be a below-par trade. I gave Grace a pretty good indication of where our tolerance starts to break.

So you know, I think if you factor in a little bit of a discount to par, magically you'll find out 400 basis points is a bit too much. You know, if you factor in a little bit, if you cut it in half and maybe a little bit less-ish, you'll be okay. Yeah?

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

That we've given guidance on-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

the RWA, obviously,

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

It's 1 billion of RWAs that goes away. Yeah?

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

And it's-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

It's earnings accretive as well. So you, you-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah. I mean, one of the best parts of the trade, and somebody wrote it, it wasn't you, John, because your math's too good. Somebody else wrote that they didn't think it would, it would help earnings. I don't understand it. We get GBP 3 billion back that's earning us somewhere around, you know, 3.5, and we put it just in cash at the Bank of England, and we pick up 175 basis points on GBP 3 billion. I mean, that's not insignificant from an earnings perspective. Yeah?

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

No, no, not at all. Actually, just a couple of follow-ups, if you don't mind. It's important on the IRB point, so I really want to just understand it. Like, I mean, you've highlighted the lack of internal data. I mean, the Bank of England came out in 2017 with a hard-hitting speech around, you know, relaxing requirements around data to include external data for challenger banks. Kind of led to believe from that speech and kind of subsequent musings that, you know, this wasn't gonna mean that you'd end up with late 20s or early 30s on the risk weights. I mean, I'm-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Sort of struggling with that. Secondly, on that point, like, you're talking about GBP 30 million annual cost reduction. In my understanding, and please correct me if I'm wrong, but, like, a lot of the investment you've put into cost has been to support an IRB-enabled bank. I mean, can you kind of walk away from some of this now? Like, if you can kind of help me piece that together, that would be helpful. Secondly, on the equity, thanks for your clarification, but I read that—must have read that wrongly, where I thought the GBP 150 million of new equity was effectively the raise of 30p, but sorry, the GBP 102 million was obviously separate to the 30p per share raise. That sort of dovetails then in terms of the maths around Spaldy.

And then finally, look, I forgot to ask it initially, but look, cost of risk. Is there anything to say in terms of evolution there?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

... on the consumer book, maybe most particularly, but just generally, any kind of update, please?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, happy to. So A-IRB, listen, they also, the Bank of England published a paper on reference points, John, which they used, that if you didn't have sufficient internal data, especially about probability of possession given default, PPGD,

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Mm.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

and the use of reference points, which I think is actually something they published... that requires, if you don't have enough internal data, that they would request that you use their suggested outcomes. Yeah. For some of the attributes?

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Yep.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

And then if you layer in conservatism because we don't have internal data, the math becomes quite onerous. Yeah, that's—listen, that's when they say, "Oh, you have more work to do," it's just because they didn't like our risk weights, John. I mean, it's lovely. I mean, math is math. It's not hard. I mean, we gave them over 1,000 pages. We did every module. I mean, you know, there was no other feedback about anything else. I think they were fine with our stress testing, they were fine with our governance, they were fine with everything else. It's just our models gave us a risk weight that they didn't think it was high enough. I mean, that's what this game is, right? So we just need to...

We need to kind of figure out—we need to figure out whether there's a path through that, that makes sense for us. In terms of the investment, you are right. We have built a balance sheet. We built a GBP 7.5 billion mortgage portfolio in anticipation of getting A-IRB. I think one of the things that we need to decide strategically at the board level, over the next handful of months, is whether we need to reposition that GBP 7.5 billion of mortgages, make it maybe a bit smaller, a bit more specialist, and really start to stretch our legs in commercial and corporate. Funny, we spent a lot of time, as you can imagine, over the last couple of months, modeling all sorts of different scenarios.

Actually, we get to about mid-teens ROA medium term, whether we're an A-IRB bank or whether we're not an A-IRB bank. And so we've just got to decide where we want to stretch our legs. If we're an A-IRB bank, we do more resi mortgages, we do more prime resi mortgages, a bit of specialist. If we're a non-A-IRB bank, we do more corporate, more commercial, and we do a bit of specialist mortgages. It is back to that tick mark slide, and it really brings the tick mark slide to life. We are lucky to have the level of asset optionality we possess at Metro, because it really insulates us and allows us to pivot based on risk-adjusted returns on reg cap. And if the denominator, i.e., reg cap, changes, well, then we change the numerator.

Then in terms of risk, you know, it's really weird. We're still not seeing anything. So we're seeing, like, little bits here and there, John. You'll see, when we get to the year-end, you'll see the risk metrics have ticked up a bit in unsecured personal, but it's only because the book seasoning, because it's all new lending. So, you know, some of that needs to occur. We've seen a little bit in our mortgage portfolio that we acquired before I got here. Somebody bought a mortgage portfolio that's actually just not very good. So we're seeing a bit coming out of that. We've seen some little bits and bobs on the mortgage portfolio, but not too much. So again, we'll get more into a year-end.

We tend not to disclose much even at the quarters, as you know, but the portfolio is holding up really, really well.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Okay. Look, and one final clarification, and sorry for dominating the call for so long, but on the GBP 30 million of annual cost save that you articulate, I mean, is that independent of IRB?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Again, just back to my slide around-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yes, yes. You know, no, completely, John. It has to be independent. We haven't really solutionized it yet, John, if I'm honest. Yeah, we're starting to think through what the implications of it-

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

But there'll be more in the tank.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

I'm sorry?

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Could there be more in the tank?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Maybe.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

In terms of-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

I don't know.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Cost savings. Yeah.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Maybe. I don't know. 30, 30 seems like a big number. And I want to be really clear, it's not-

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Yeah

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

... 30 off of the 23 number, because-

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Yeah

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

... I think we guided that we thought we'd have kind of mid-single digit growth and cost next year. I think that was the guidance we gave at the half year. I can't remember what we said. I think it was mid-single digit. And so, low to mid or mid. And so, so the reality is that you need to kind of take 2023 up and then take the 20 of it off in 2024, and then we'll take another further 10 off as we get into 2025, because, you know-

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Yeah.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah. I think we need to really rethink what we do.

John Cronin
Financials Analyst, Goodbody

Okay. Fair. Thanks.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Thanks, John.

Operator

Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Corinne Cunningham from Autonomous. Corinne, your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Hey, Corinne, how are you?

Corinne Cunningham
Partner and Head of Credit Research, Autonomous

Good morning. Very well, thanks. Thank you for the question. What are you-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Do me a favor. Thank Chris for his cameo last week. It was nice to see him pop back up.

Corinne Cunningham
Partner and Head of Credit Research, Autonomous

Okay, I will do. I think he might be listening, so I'm sure he's, I'm sure he's hearing you, ear to ear, so to speak. A couple of techy ones from me. First one, just in terms of, do you expect to be profitable in Q4 after restructuring costs and then whatever you're going to book on the mortgage sale? Another one is just on the capital ratios. I assume we're still using phased-in ratios in the 13% range, et cetera. Do you move to full phase out, or fully phased in, I should say, on the first of January, and is that still about 70 basis points difference? Last question is on TFSME refinancing. Would part of the mortgage disposals, would that be expected to go towards TFSME refinancing?

If not, what are your plans there? Thank you.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

So I'll start at the end and then we'll—and I assume the phase in, you're talking about the airbag we get for ECL. Yeah? The thing that went back to COVID is, you know-

Corinne Cunningham
Partner and Head of Credit Research, Autonomous

Yeah.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, okay, fine. So, yeah, it assumes it phases out. Yeah? It is in as – So the June thirtieth numbers are as they were, i.e., with a bit of the phase-in left, and then the rest rolls off. The TFSME, it's a really good question. You're the first person to ask it, and I think it's a – so listen, I think the liquidity we generate is likely to end up at the Bank of England in cash for the near term. Whether we use it to pay back the Bank of England or whether we put them with them in cash, it's the exact same interest rate. So we're having that debate internally.

Clearly, if we use it to pay off TFSME, it probably helps NIM a bit more, if we're honest. So, it's a conversation we're having. I think it's a really clever observation, yeah? But I don't know the answer to it, if I'm honest, because, you know, we don't have the cash yet. Loan sale is not done, so we're really just debating it. Oh, yeah, we talked about the phase in, the capital ratios. I think it's lovely that you've asked about profitability for quarter four, but it's not guidance we're going to provide. But you know, quarter three, we did say on an after-tax basis, we made a bit of money, not a lot, but it was a positive number.

We did talk about the fact that the business, well, had lost a bit of momentum because of a bit of deposit outflow in the first half of the year, as everybody saw in the marketplace. And I think everybody was modeling that the second half of the year would be significantly less profitable than the first half of the year. I don't know that that changes. I think what does change is, as we start to get into 2024, we can start to deploy the growth capital we just got our hands on and really start to transform the PNL of the bank. But since it's not even going to close until December, there's no way I can use the growth capital to transform the fourth quarter.

Yeah, so, I think I don't really have an answer for you on quarter four. Well, even if I did, I wouldn't tell you, but I think there's a lot of moving pieces. What I am really confident in is beyond 2024, because we now have the growth capital necessary to really stretch our legs.

Corinne Cunningham
Partner and Head of Credit Research, Autonomous

Thank you. But one last one, which you're probably not going to appreciate. Just on your Pillar 2 requirements, they've been gradually kind of coming down. Do you expect that that would go into reverse and then start to go up?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

I have no idea. No idea. So, you know, the reality is we need to spend some time with the regulator. You know, they do periodic C-SREPs, as everybody knows. You know, we'll get through that process when our next C-SREP is, and I'm not going to tell you when that is. And we'll see, we'll see where it goes. I have no idea. I think I've learned a valuable lesson not to speak for the regulator, and I learned it years and years ago, and I'm not going to start now. It's really within their discretion. Yeah.

Corinne Cunningham
Partner and Head of Credit Research, Autonomous

Okay. Thanks very much.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press Star followed by One on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Aman Rakkar from Barclays. Please go ahead whenever you're ready. Your line is now open.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

Hi, Dan.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Morning.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

Thanks very much for the update, and thanks for taking the questions. So I've got two. I'm revisiting topics that have already been addressed, but I think there's a point of clarification on both.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Sure.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

Can I just check on this mortgage sale? Are you, are you registering interest at the kind of commercial terms that you've alluded to, or is this a kind of hope and aspiration?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

No, we're registering interest. No, no. No, no. No, no. We're-

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

I-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Genuine interest. And yeah, genuine interest across a range of names, not one dissimilar to what's on your paycheck.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

That's great to know. I guess I was just noting, you know, you did a GBP 3 billion mortgage sale in 2020, and you, broadly speaking, sold that at par value, and it had a weighted average rate of 208 basis points. So you know, that would have been a quite an attractive fixed rate asset portfolio. But, you know, given interest rates are so much higher, there has to be a pretty significant negative fair value on this portfolio on acquisition, right?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

So I think you need to think a few things through, actually. Right? So again, if you're doing any kind of an NPV model, you need to figure out how long they're durated for, when the buyer might be able to get access to reunderwrite the credit, and then be able to reprice it up. Yeah? So you're right. If we sold, you know, mortgages that had five-year duration from today, yielding a little under 4%, the haircut might be bigger. If we sold mortgages that had an 18-month duration and were a little under 4%, the mark would be different. So I think you need to factor that into your thinking. And then the second thing is that you got to factor in the ability of certain financial institutions to be able to have grown their mortgage book.

I think it was actually—I can't remember, I think it was Perlie's question, actually, about whether we were confident in our ability to grow assets, and confident in our ability to get the loan growth given the compression in the mortgage market. So I think if I ran a big mortgage shop and I was going to have to show that I was going backwards from an asset perspective, I think I might be motivated to try to do a transaction. So I think there's a lot of factors that go in there. So... And again, if we don't sell it, I don't really care. We'll just let it run off. Yeah? It doesn't really matter to me.

It's just the pace at which we could reposition the balance sheet is attractive because we'd like to crack on with it. But if we have to wait for it to roll off ourselves, well, we'll take the margin uplift when it rolls off. It doesn't, it doesn't really matter. Yeah.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

Thanks very much for that. I mean, that's a really helpful bit of color. The second was just on, on cost. Sorry if I've kind of misheard you. I think there's been a kind of nod a couple of times towards a 2024 cost number that, I think I heard actually in your prepared remarks or at some point during your presentation, that, you know, the GBP 30 million of cost savings is versus a 2024 cost number, that some kind of investors that have had, you know, had access to that number or have seen that number. Forgive me if I've missed guidance that you've issued at H1 or something, but, I mean, can you just, can you just clarify that point? Is there a—

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah.

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

24 cost number you're pitching for?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, yeah. So sorry, because I know it's important for the model. So I think we have a session later today with analysts and stuff, too, as well. So the reality is that I think when we stood up the half year, we showed a negative little red arrow going up about cost. And I think with the voice overlay was, I think, something along with inflationary pressures, low- to mid-single-digit increases should be expected. I think that was the language we used. And so I think if you take the GBP 533 or whatever, GBP 534, whatever the number was at the half year, and you gross it up a little bit by, you know, somewhere between low-single- to mid-single-digit.

If you then took GBP 30 million off of it, that's probably a, a closer to a better answer than just taking GBP 30 million off of the 23 number. Yeah?

Aman Rakkar
Director of Banks Equity Research, Barclays

Perfect. Thank you so much, and thanks so much for the detail that you've given. It's really helpful.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have time for one more question, and that comes from Daniel Crowe from Goldman Sachs. Daniel, your line is now open. Please proceed.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Hey, Daniel.

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Hi there. Good morning. You've asked most of my questions, just a couple of points of clarification. The extension on the senior, I assume that's gonna match the GBP 175 million coming in, so a 6 non-call 5.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

What we did is we're just grossing up the senior. To make it as simple as we could, given the time window we had, the 350 is gonna become a 525, GBP 525 million. It's gonna go from GBP 350 million to GBP 525 million. The terms will be exactly the same because it'll be the exact same interest rate.

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay. So it becomes 6 non-call 5?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

It's a little bit. It's like, it's like actually like a 5.5 non-call, 4.5, I think, technically, because I think it's like April of 2028 or something. Do you know what I mean?

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Yeah, yeah. That's no problem. And then the Tier 2, I mean, I think it's pretty clear, but just checking. The GBP 100 million, they're effectively contributing to CET1. They don't get anything apart from, I guess, not getting burnt.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

I have nothing to add to that comment, Daniel.

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

And then just finally on the TFSME, I know you kind of talked around it there. Just given the mark-to-market loss in the portfolio, I know you said you previously matched TFSME to your bond portfolio. Is there a bit of an asset and liability match there?

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Maybe. We don't really... We-- I mean, that was, that was prior management. We don't, we don't really look at it that way, if I'm honest. Listen, we have tons of liquidity, yeah? I mean, just tons. Yeah? We've held on to the TFSME just for a level of prudence. We're either gonna repay it from the liquidity we generate from our deposit book, which continues... you know, which, which I think everybody's seen, or we're gonna potentially use the asset sale proceeds to repay some of it. We're not really all that worried. We just think in an uncertain marketplace, having extra liquidity just makes sense. It's sort of income neutral and NIM dilutive, right? We basically take it and put it back with the bank.

I mean, it's not—it's a relatively straightforward trade, but it does give us a bit of insulation. But it is really NIM dilutive, so I don't know. We're kicking around. But there's no, we're not worried about how we get the liquidity to pay it back because we have so much excess liquidity. Yeah?

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Yeah, no, but I mean, I agree that the rates at which that's paying on now, it doesn't make a huge amount of difference. And then just a final clarification on the mortgage sale. You were kind of alluding to it there, but I assume to reduce day one capital loss, I mean, you effectively want to match the assets, well, I guess, reduce the duration and bring them more up to the kind of levels the rates are now, or just-

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Ah.

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Effectively sell off the shorter dated.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Ah, yeah, spot on. So if you start looking at swap curves instead of looking at base rate, you start to probably come out with different math. Yeah? So that's spot on. And then I think for us, you know, it's capital accretive on a ratio perspective, because again, we're gonna take a bit of a hit in terms of, you know, we're not going to sell at a par. So obviously, that means it comes out of CET1, but we do have a big reduction in RWAs. So it is ratio accretive, and we get earnings uplift. So you know, whether you make it back in earnings or not, depends on what price we get.

So it's that. And you are right when you're trying to figure out the price. I think everybody kind of thinks, "Oh, a base rate of five..." No, no. Look at the, you know, short-dated swaps . Yeah?

Daniel Crowe
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay, perfect. Thanks, guys. Thanks very much.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, no worries. Thank you, Daniel. I appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you. We have no further questions. I'll now hand back to Daniel for any closing remarks.

Daniel Frumkin
CEO, Metro Bank

Yeah, listen, I first thank you all for the time. I genuinely appreciate it. I think I just want to sort of reiterate what this means for Metro going forward and how it repositions us to genuinely take advantage of the unique franchise we have built. We are very excited about the prospects this gives Metro going forward, and we're very excited about the core profitability we'll be able to generate and the capital generation and how we can deploy that capital generation. All the capital we generate, we know we have ability to redeploy it in accretive ways. So again, thank you all for the time, and thank you all for your support of Metro. Take care.

Operator

This now concludes the conference call, everybody. Thank you very much for joining. You may now disconnect your line. Have a great rest of your day.

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