Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for Nationwide Building Society full-year results call. I'm Debbie Crosbie, I'm the Chief Executive, and I'm joined this morning by Chris Rhodes, our Chief Financial Officer, and Muir Mathieson, our Deputy Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. So I'm delighted to say we have made excellent progress against the strategy that I shared with you 12 months ago, evidenced through sustained growth in our core markets, a strong service performance, and enhanced member benefits. And not only do we remain number one for customer satisfaction amongst our peer group for a 12th consecutive year, but we've also increased our lead in the past year from 3.8% to 5.5%.
Our approach to provide better value products means we are in the unique position of having grown both our mortgage and deposit balances, allowing us to maintain market share despite significant competitive pressures. We also continue to grow in current accounts, attracting a record number of switchers. That's 1 in 6 in the overall market switchers, underpinned by our leading, market-leading cashback incentive. During the year, we chose to pass on a higher percentage of base rate rises to our savers than our competitors, with our average deposit rates over the year 38% higher than the market average. Our mortgage pricing also remained highly competitive in a challenging market, supporting high levels of retention. Together, this has contributed to a record level of member financial benefit of GBP 1.85 billion, which increases to GBP 2.2 billion when taking the inaugural Fairer Share Payment into account.
I'm pleased to say that our strong financial performance, underpinned by robust capital ratios and a focus on delivering efficiency, has allowed us to enhance our Fairer Share package for this year. Members with an active current account and either a qualifying mortgage or savings account will receive a GBP 100 Fairer Share payment, and for a limited time, all our members will have access to an exclusive bond with a highly competitive interest rate, alongside a GBP 200 member-only incentive to encourage more members to switch their main current account to us. Our branch network remains central to our support for customers, and I was particularly pleased to announce that we have extended our branch promise to 2028, which means we have committed to closing no branches until at least 2028.
We continue to see real value in our branch network, evidenced by one in four savings products openings originating in branch, and more than half our Fairer Share Bond openings by value. While committed to our face-to-face services, we're continuing to enhance and improve our digital services at pace to ensure that we really deliver on giving our customers the choice in how they bank with us, with simply brilliant service at all our touchpoints. Our digital service Mortgage Manager platform allows customers to switch to our best rate in a matter of minutes, supporting very strong levels of retention. And last month, we launched our new Digital Landlord Hub, enabling buy-to-let landlords to manage their accounts online for the first time.
We've launched a brand-new mobile banking app with a refreshed look and added features, and we will continue to innovate, rolling out regular updates with features that we know our customers want to see. We're also leveraging automation and artificial intelligence capabilities to help customers when facing financial difficulties more quickly and more efficiently, and we're actively exploring ways to innovate our complaints process. In a rapidly evolving landscape, we're also maintaining a strong focus on digital resilience. Last year, our fraud defense systems and specialist fraud team helped prevent more than GBP 130 million of attempted fraud on card and online transactions, and our Scam Checker service continues to help protect customers. Finally, we underwent our most significant rebrand in over 30 years. This was supported by our high-profile marketing campaign, bringing to life our purpose and the difference that we bring as a modern mutual.
We are also first among our peer group when rated by non-customers for which brand they have heard good things about, and that's one of the key indicators of success. Our ongoing commitment to deliver the services and products that members value will continue to help the society thrive and stand out as a force for good in value and fairness. Now I'm going to hand you to Chris, who's going to run you through the details of the numbers.
Thank you, Debbie, and good morning, everyone. While the economic outlook remains uncertain, the impact of our strategy can clearly be seen across a broad range of performance measures. We continue to lead on customer service, and we are seeing growth on both sides of the balance sheet. Costs continue to be well managed, and asset quality remains strong, with a stable arrears performance in the second half of the year. We have continued to price competitively throughout the year, which means member financial benefit is a record at GBP 1.85 billion, when taking our inaugural Fairer Share payment into account, we delivered GBP 2.2 billion of value back to our members. Now, before I cover our financial performance in more detail, note that any guidance I provide is on a Nationwide standalone basis.
Underlying profits declined slightly to GBP 2 billion, compared to GBP 2.2 billion a year earlier. Statutory profit is GBP 227 million lower than underlying profit, due to the GBP 344 million Fairer Share Payment, which is partially offset by below-the-line hedging items. Total income was broadly unchanged, with the net interest margin reducing to 1.56% from 1.57% a year ago. Costs are GBP 99 million higher, reflecting the new Bank of England levy of GBP 36 million, plus a 2.7% increase in other costs. Asset quality remains strong and better than the industry average. The net loan impairment charge of GBP 112 million is in line with last year and the long-run average at circa five basis points.
Provisions for liabilities and charges are GBP 127 million, largely reflecting an historic administrative matter in relation to withholding tax, specific to events from 2018 to 2019. We expect to recover a significant amount of the charge. A stable balance sheet of GBP 272 billion reflects GBP 2.5 billion growth in lending, offset by a planned reduction in liquidity, including GBP 12.4 billion of Bank of England TFSME repayments. Retail deposit growth of GBP 6.3 billion reflects strong inflows into savings accounts, partially offset by outflows from our current accounts as members move money into higher-paying products. Capital ratios remain strong, with the leverage ratio growing to 6.5% and the CET1 ratio increasing to 27.1%.
Net Interest Margin was broadly unchanged, as lower lending margins and fewer bank base rate movements offset higher retail funding margins. We expect margins to decline in the year ahead as the mortgage book reprices towards current new business margins, together with the timing impact of base rate reductions and the unwind of deposit margin increases that took place when rates increased. Mortgage market activity remained weak through much of 2023. The sharp decline in swap rates around the turn of the year led to a modest pickup, but the market has lost some momentum in recent months. However, our central expectation remains that activity will gradually recover as affordability improves through a combination of income growth and reducing interest rates. Mortgage book margins continue to decline from their peak as mortgages written during the pandemic run off.
Completions in the second half of the financial year were written at circa 50 basis points on a blended basis, which includes the cost of rebooking switchers with increased optionality under the Mortgage Charter. The mortgage market remains very competitive, and we expect new business margins, which include switchers, to settle between 60 and 70 basis points. The current pipeline is at circa 70 basis points. The deposit market continues to grow in line with expectations, with balances moving from lower-paying accounts into higher-yielding accounts, though this trend is slowing. Approximately 57% of the change in base rate since December 2021 has now been passed through to our retail variable savings base.
Our average pay rate for total deposits is now 312 basis points, which is 73 basis points higher than the market average deposit rate, compared to 53 basis points higher at the end of the previous financial year. As a consequence, our member financial benefit, which measures the value returned to members through better long-term pricing, increased to GBP 1.85 billion in the financial year. Deposit margins will decrease as base rate reduces, with the broad expectation that the margin widening, which occurred as rates increased, will be reversed as rates fall. In addition, there will be a margin drag because of the lag between base rate reductions and the feed-through to customer rates.
We expect the net interest margin to decline to the low to mid-1.40s this year, with the H1 outturn likely to be lower than H2 due to the current account switching incentive we have just launched. Costs increased by GBP 99 million, though GBP 36 million of this increase reflects the Bank of England levy that is now payable in advance of the financial year, and which was previously recognized through income. Excluding this impact, total costs increased by 2.7%, significantly below the rate of inflation. We expect costs to increase by circa 4% this year. This year's cost of risk is 5 basis points, which is broadly in line with the long run average. Compared to the base case scenario alone, the multiple economic scenarios uplift the expected credit loss provision by GBP 126 million.
The provision also includes modeled adjustments of GBP 164 million, which is mainly due to a probability of default uplift for continued economic uncertainty impacting borrower affordability. The coverage for the owner-occupied portfolio was 6 basis points, up 1 basis point on the prior year. Buy-to-let coverage increased by 9 basis points to 53 basis points, reflecting an increase in arrears over the year and the retention of provisions linked to higher interest rates. Unsecured coverage was lower by 40 basis points at 10.2 percentage points, which remains elevated compared to pre-COVID levels. Domestically, downside economic risks have diminished somewhat, but we have maintained a 15% weighting to the severe downside scenario to reflect increased geopolitical risks.
Secured arrears have increased from 32 basis points to 41 basis points, but have been broadly stable in the second half of the year and well below the industry average. The average LTV of new business increased to 70% from 69%, driven by our support for first time buyers. The average stock LTV is stable at 55%. Forbearance, excluding mortgage charter cases, fell from GBP 1.2 billion to GBP 1 billion. Mortgage charter balances are GBP 1.4 billion, and as they mature, we are seeing only circa 7% of cases needing additional support or in early stage arrears. If the current trend continues, then we would expect forbearance levels to increase back to where they were 12 months ago.
Unsecured arrears have increased from 1.21% to 1.36% and are now slightly above the pre-pandemic levels of 1.32%. The twelve-month LCR was 191%, compared to 180% at the end of the prior year. Our internal assessment of liquidity, which is in excess of regulatory requirements, explicitly considers behavioral and other characteristics of the book, including the level of uninsured balances and the levels of digital engagement. On balance sheet, liquidity totals GBP 47 billion, compared to GBP 37 billion of deposit balances in excess of the 85,000 FSCS limit. In addition, we hold an estimated GBP 79 billion of drawdown capacity at the central bank, much of which can be drawn intraday. Our funding and liquidity position remains strong.
We continue to pre-fund our repayment of TFSME drawings, and when all TFSME has been repaid, we expect our LCR will sit in a range of 135%-145%. We have already repaid GBP 12.4 billion of TFSME ahead of contractual maturity, leaving GBP 9.3 billion outstanding. We issued over GBP 8 billion sterling equivalent of wholesale funding during the last financial year and expect issuance in this financial year to be in the range of GBP 7-9 billion sterling. We are already well progressed against our plan, having successfully issued circa GBP 1.5 billion sterling equivalent in Tier 2 and covered bond format since April 4. It remains our intention to maintain at least one benchmark outstanding in each instrument type across the liability structure.
We continue to ensure our issuance plans take account of credit rating agency requirements for loss-absorbing capacity. Our capital resources are in excess of regulatory requirements, with substantial buffers across risk base, leverage, and MREL frameworks. The Society holds surplus capital of GBP 5.4 billion to the leverage requirement and GBP 7.6 billion to risk-based requirements. The PRA has consulted on Basel 3.1, and our interpretation of the draft rules suggests our CET1 ratio would reduce to the low- to mid-20s on a pro forma endpoint basis. The leverage ratio is expected to remain our Tier 1 binding constraint. We have repurchased circa GBP 175 million of CCDS to date, which is held on our balance sheet.
The PRA has granted a renewed 12-month general prior permission to repurchase CCDS, up to the equivalent of 2% of existing CET1 resources, though this does not mean any further buyback exercises will necessarily follow. The current permission will expire in January 2025. Thank you. I will now pass you back to Debbie.
Thank you, Chris. Now, in March, we announced our bid for Virgin Money, and I'm pleased to say that yesterday their shareholders voted in favor of the acquisition. We believe this deal will provide our members with a wide range of benefits, including a broader and more diverse product range. It will also provide a strong business banking platform, which will enable us to bring a mutual approach to this very important sector. The transaction also delivers strong financial benefits to the society. In the last financial year, Virgin Money generated pre-tax profits of GBP 345 million and announced distributions of over GBP 270 million to shareholders. Following the acquisition, Nationwide Group will be able to retain these profits in the U.K. for the benefit of our customers and members.
Based on market consensus forecast for Virgin Money's pre-tax profits in 2024, the acquisition would represent a 17% return on the purchase price. Notably, the tangible net asset value of Virgin Money of GBP 4.4 billion, as at the thirty-first of December 2023, is GBP 1.5 billion in excess of the acquisition price of GBP 2.9 billion. Although the final figures will depend on the fair value of net assets acquired at the completion, a significant gain is expected to be recognized as a result of the acquisition. As well as our existing surplus capital to invest in Virgin Money, our capital ratios will continue to be stronger than the major banks, with an expected pro forma CET1 ratio of approximately 20%.
The transaction has been received positively in financial markets, including by the three major credit rating agencies, which have all recently reaffirmed Nationwide's existing ratings. Because Virgin Money is a profitable business today, we can take a prudent customer-first approach to our post-acquisition management of the business, underpinned by a gradual integration plan that will not commence for a number of years. Virgin Money will continue as a separate legal entity with a separate board, management team, banking license, and therefore FSCS protection. This will be reviewed within approximately 18 months of deal completion to deliver a clear strategy for integration in the future. Our initial focus will be to invest in Virgin Money service and infrastructure to bring it closer to the level of service the society offers.
Nationwide and Virgin Money share many of the same strategic IT suppliers, which will enable some benefits to be delivered ahead of integration. This transaction gives us scale and depth to really compete with the shareholder banks, and we look forward to giving you an update on how we progress at our future results call. Of course, the transaction remains subject to receiving the necessary regulatory approvals, which we anticipate will complete in quarter four of 2024. With that, we're now gonna move to questions.
Thank you, Debbie, and good morning, everyone. If you'd like to ask a question, please type it into the Q&A box on your screen. We already have a few questions, and there are three product-related ones from Rohith Chandra-Rajan from Bank of America. So the first one for Chris: You've grown mortgages when other major lenders have seen some contraction. What has differentiated Nationwide's offering?
So we've had, well, we've built some new digital retention processes. We have a tool called Mortgage Manager, which has been used both for Mortgage Charter cases, mortgage servicing, and switchers. So importantly, I think what differentiates us through a combination of service, price, and just, you know, good products is retention. We have maintained a retention rate of 85% of mortgages coming off the deal. When you look at sort of our stack of various market shares, it's that retention rate that stands out and has driven the market share from 12.2 to 12.3 in terms of outstanding balances.
Thank you, Chris, and now one for you on deposits. Your recent deposit mix performance has been similar to the wider market, with little change in the second half. How do you see the dynamics this year in response to potential rate cuts and the competitive environment?
Yeah, so those deposit dynamics have seen fixed rate grow, flow out of current accounts, and a flow out of low-paying variable rate. What we're now seeing is some real stability. So current accounts at the end of the year were GBP 29 billion. They are still GBP 29 billion as of today. So we've got stability in current account balances, and we've hit the peak, I think, of fixed rates. So as the year progresses, I would expect broadly stable current account balances, growth in variable, and a slight decline in fixed-rate balances.
Thank you, and the third one is for Debbie, please. On Virgin Money, it may be too early to discuss, but do you see the acquisition of Virgin Money's unsecured and business lending books as a platform for diversification? And what's the bigger attraction, diversification or scale?
Thank you. Look, it's a great question. I mean, we see both diversification and scale as really important, and in fact, it was the reason why we think the Virgin Money acquisition is a great fit for us. We look forward to delivering a wider range of products. We're particularly excited about business banking, and we think that's a great opportunity. And yes, we will look at a broader range of unsecured products as well. So it's really both. And, yeah, looking forward to getting stuck in.
Thank you. We've had a few questions on MREL post the Virgin Money transaction from Corinne Cunningham, from Lee Street, from Elsa Dargent, so I'm going to pull them all together. You mentioned no change to Virgin's legal structure initially. Does this mean that its MREL and capital instruments will qualify at a group level? Are we expecting a Bank of England waiver? What are the transition arrangements for any grandfathering, and are you expecting to run with a single point of entry resolution strategy?
Yeah. Thanks, Sarah, and thanks everybody for all of those questions. As Debbie's already touched on, we are in the midst of regulatory approval process. So you'll appreciate that, until those, regulatory approval processes have concluded, there will be a, only so much we can say. What we have said, and as, as you've already touched on there, that we are not anticipating any immediate changes to the capital structure of Virgin Money. Over time, of course, we would anticipate that we would seek to align and simplify capital structure across the group. So hopefully that gives you a good enough summary of what we anticipate. Once we, do get through regulatory approvals and completion of the deal, we'll be able to say more.
Thank you, Muir. And probably a little bit of a follow-up there from Lee Street: Do we have any plans to do any funding associated with Virgin Money U.K.?
So as Chris has already touched on, our standalone funding plan is similar to previous years, at between GBP 7 billion and GBP 9 billion equivalent of funding. We are funding the Virgin Money deal from our own resources, as we've already disclosed. Post-completion, we'll be able to say how the acquisition and the larger group will impact our funding plans thereafter.
Thank you, Muir. And a question from Olivier Doukam for Debbie, please. Thank you for the presentation. Do you foresee any issues from Nationwide's members continuing to request a members' vote on the deal?
So look, overwhelmingly, our members have not expressed an interest in this issue. Just to give you some numbers on that, so we've surveyed all of our members, so we surveyed 30,000 of our members, and there was only 8% of those surveyed expressed any concern whatsoever about the transaction. The rest of the people who were surveyed were either very supportive or neutral or neutral on the transaction. We've also written to our 16 million members twice now, and we've had a tiny response to that in relation to the member vote. Frankly, our members are much more interested in things like our branch promise, the financial package that we've announced today, our Fairer Share Payment, et cetera. So I'm really happy that overwhelmingly our members are very happy with the direction of travel.
Thank you, Debbie. Back to Muir now, please, from Nicolas Bonis: Following the renewal of the general prior permission to repurchase CCDS, what conditions do you set to relaunch a CCDS buyback? For example, solvency levels, completion of the acquisition, stress test results.
Thanks, Nicholas. We haven't set out a public framework or, anything as hard and fast as the, the kinds of metrics you're talking about, Nicholas. We've seen it as a useful tool, being able to provide liquidity and, buybacks into the market. We're pleased that that general prior permission has been renewed. As we've said in our disclosure today, that doesn't necessarily mean that we will be announcing more buybacks, but, we now do have the option to do that. So no, framework, no, metrics as such, but we're pleased to, still have the ability to be able to do those buybacks should we choose to.
Thank you, Muir. Back to Chris now, please. A follow-up on, margins from Rohith. When you say you expect all of the deposit margin widening to reverse, do you expect it to go back to zero?
Do I expect it to go back to zero? Depends on your view of base rates. So our view of base rates would not have them falling to where they were pre the rate hike cycle, and on that basis, I would not expect them to go back to zero, no.
Thank you. A similar question from both Luis Garrido and Corinne Cunningham for Muir, please: What is your estimated CET1 ratio, including Virgin Money and including the Basel IV regulatory changes?
So that number we'll put in the public domain post completion of the acquisition, once we've got the consolidated reporting all together, so that's not something we'll put out today. Clearly, I'm sure you heard it, Kareen, but just for the benefit of everybody else, low to mid-20s for Nationwide on a standalone basis, and we're expecting our CET1 ratio post-completion to be around about 20% on a combined basis. I believe Virgin Money have put out some disclosures around minimum initial impact from Basel 3.1. Clearly, the other thing just to note, of course, is that we are expecting the PRA to put out the very important conclusion around Basel 3.1 implementation in the U.K. by the end of June.
So all of those disclosures are subject to exactly how the PRA decide to implement it, which we'll find out within the next month or so.
... Thank you, Muir. And whilst you're on a capital roll, another question from Lee Street. What are your expectations for the group leverage requirements when including Virgin Money U.K.?
Yep. Thanks, Lee. We clearly will have a bigger balance sheet, and, as I think many callers on this call will know, the O-SII buffer is graduated depending on the size of the organization. So, we think this transaction tips us into the next grade up. And clearly, you know, as I say, going through a regulatory approval process, ultimately it's for the PRA to dictate capital requirements and the timing thereof. But that would be our expectation. And that clearly, the O-SII buffer on a risk-based basis will flow through to the leverage requirement as well.
Thank you, Muir. And now some questions on margin for Chris, please, from Aman Rakkar at Barclays. What is the exit NIM for financial year 2023, 2024, so we can understand the incremental NIM pressure relative to your low 140s guide this year? And what do you see as a normalized NIM longer term, considering there's an ongoing tailwind from hedge repricing?
Wow! Okay. Lots of moving parts in there. So look, the H2 NIM this year was 146, which is broadly the exit NIM of the year. We're guiding you to low to mid 140s. That includes the timing lag of base rate changes. Broadly, in that guidance, I've given you the timing impact. Well, the range covers roughly 75 basis points of base rate cut. Low-end range would be slightly more than that, which is a long way round of saying, excluding timing differences, we expect our NIM this year to be roughly the same as it was in H2 last year. I don't really want to go beyond the next 12 months, because it's really dependent on mortgage competition and the ultimate response on savings pricing to base rate cuts, but we've got a very good line of sight to this year's number.
So like I say, excluding timing differences, think about it as broadly flat this year on the exit of last year as, structural hedge offsets both deposit and mortgage margin pressure.
Thank you, Chris. A question for Debbie from James Hyde, please. Can you rule out a second acquisition during the integration, given that another one of her former banks is now likely to come up for sale?
Look, I think what I can confidently say is for the next number of years, we'll be very focused on the Virgin Money acquisition. We don't have any plans to look at anything else at the moment.
Thank you. As a reminder, if you have any questions, please type them into the Q&A box. We've got quite a technical one on LCR, Muir. The post-TFSME guidance, is that based on the same, 12-month average as the way that you report the LCR today?
Yes. Well, so we've quoted 150% if we were to have fully repaid all of our TFSME as at the reporting date. And the only other thing I would say is we've also, as Chris touched on earlier, in a normalized environment, we'd expect to be around about the 135%-145% mark, as we've previously discussed.
Thank you, Muir. Another one has come in from Karine. Could you reconsider the distribution rates on the CCDS?
We've got no plans to reconsider the distribution rates on CCDS, Karine.
Thank you. A question for Chris: Can you give us an updated outlook on the arrears profile?
Yeah. So, so look, we are holding expected loss provisions, which cover a significant rise in arrears. We are not, not seeing that rise in arrears, and we got stability in the second half of the year. I think we hold provisions more than we are ultimately likely to need, and as time progresses, it will be increasingly difficult to hang on to the economic uncertainty post-model adjustment. The timing of that will clearly be determined by economic scenarios, but actually, there's nothing in the arrears performance that says we're not very close to the peak.
Thank you, Chris. We have no further questions, so I will hand back to Debbie to close the call, please.
Okay. I just want to thank you all for joining, and thank you all for your questions. I think I'd round up by saying, we feel very happy with our financial results. The strategy is working. We're delivering against it well. We also remain very confident about the progress that we're making on Virgin Money, and we look forward to providing you further updates at our next, half-year results call in November. Thank you.