Morning, welcome to NatWest Group's Q1 2026 Results Management Presentation. Today's presentation will be hosted by CEO Paul Thwaite and CFO Katie Murray. After the presentation, we will take questions.
Good morning, thank you for joining us today. As usual, I'm here with Katie. I'll start with a brief introduction before Katie takes you through the numbers, and we'll then open it up for questions. We started the year with strong momentum across our three businesses and made good progress against each of our three strategic priorities. First, we continue to pursue disciplined growth. In retail banking, we increased our share of the mortgage market as we expand our offering and announced new partnerships, such as becoming the exclusive mortgage provider for Rightmove. In private banking and wealth management, our acquisition of Evelyn Partners makes a strong addition to the group. The transaction is progressing well, and we expect it to complete in the second quarter, subject to the usual regulatory approval.
In commercial and institutional, we are the leading bank for U.K. startups, and we grew our share this quarter as we onboarded 24,000 new startups, a 25% uplift on the same period last year, supported by easier agentic onboarding. Second, we are leveraging our investments in simplification and have delivered over GBP 100 million of additional cost savings in the 1st quarter. We employ over 12,000 software engineers, and we are complementing that talent with artificial intelligence. Over 40% of our code is now written by AI, and we are scaling agentic software development. Typically, our development process for new customer propositions requires 12 engineers and takes 6 weeks. In some scenarios with a team of 3 engineers and 7 agents, we can deliver in just 6 hours, making us more productive and delivering faster for our customers.
Third, we continue to manage our balance sheet actively, helping to free up capacity for further growth and allocate capital dynamically in this fast-changing environment. Let's turn now to the financial headlines. Customer lending grew 6.6% year-on-year to GBP 400 billion, whilst customer deposits grew 2.6% to GBP 445 billion. Lending growth of GBP 7.3 billion in the first quarter was well balanced across our businesses, including GBP 3.3 billion in mortgages and GBP 3.8 billion in commercial and institutional. We also provided over GBP 10 billion of climate and transition finance, taking the total to GBP 29 billion since last July, making good progress towards our GBP 200 billion 2030 target.
Deposits increased by GBP 3.1 billion in the first quarter, with growth in corporate and institutional partly offset by an expected decrease in retail and private banking as customers use their savings to make annual tax payments. Assets under management and administration grew 16.9% year-on-year to GBP 57 billion. 23,000 people invested with us for the first time during the quarter, with net inflows to assets under management of GBP 900 million. Taken together, client assets and liabilities have increased to just over GBP 900 billion, up 5.2% year-on-year, in line with our 2028 annual growth rate target of more than 4%.
Income grew 6.9% to GBP 4.2 billion, and costs were up 4.8% to GBP 2 billion as we increased our operating leverage and reduced our cost income ratio by 2.1 percentage points to 46.5%. Our return on tangible equity was 18.2%, driving strong capital generation of 65 basis points in the first quarter. Earnings per share grew 15.5% year-on-year to GBP 0.179. Tangible net asset value per share was up 15.1% to GBP 4, and we continue to maintain a strong balance sheet with a CET1 ratio of 14.3%. Since we announced our full year results in February, conflict in the Middle East has clearly increased geopolitical uncertainty.
While sentiment is now more considered, we have yet to see any material impact on our customers. Both households and corporates remain resilient with historically high levels of savings and low levels of debt and arrears. In light of this uncertainty, we have revised our economic scenarios and now expect higher inflation with interest rates remaining at 3.75% for the rest of the year, resulting in slower economic growth and a modest increase in unemployment. This means we have taken an additional provision in the first quarter of GBP 140 million, which reflects our macroeconomic assumptions, not our credit performance, which remains strong. With rates staying higher for longer, we now expect full year income to be at the top end of the GBP 17.2 billion-GBP 17.6 billion range we set out in February.
We remain confident about the outlook and our 2026 guidance. That confidence is underpinned by the knowledge that we have built a resilient business which is well-positioned for a broad range of macroenvironments. We have a clear strategic focus on growth that delivers good returns with a prime lending portfolio that's well diversified and largely secured. We have invested and simplified so that we are now the most efficient large U.K. bank with a cost income ratio that continues to improve, and we are actively managing our balance sheet. For example, we have taken the opportunity of a sharp move upwards in the yield curve to accelerate the increase in our structural hedge, supporting income growth in the years ahead. We have also increased our capital efficiency significantly in recent years, driving high levels of capital generation.
All these factors have contributed to our strong performance in the Bank of England stress tests, giving us confidence in our outlook and guidance, not just this year, but over the medium term. With that, I'll hand over to Katie to take you through the numbers in more detail.
Thank you, Paul. My comments for the first quarter use the fourth quarter as a comparator. Income, excluding notable items, reduced 1.1% to GBP 4.2 billion, and total operating costs were 9.2% lower at GBP 2 billion, delivering 11.6% growth in operating profit before impairment to GBP 2.3 billion. The impairment charge was GBP 283 million, equivalent to 26 basis points of loans, including the charge for our updated economic scenarios that Paul mentioned. This resulted in operating profit of GBP 2 billion, with profits attributable to ordinary shareholders of GBP 1.4 billion and return on tangible equity was 18.2%. Turning now to income. Income, excluding notable items, was GBP 4.2 billion.
Excluding the impact of two fewer days in the quarter, income across the three businesses continued to grow, supported by both volumes and margin. Net interest margin was 247 basis points, up 2 basis points due to deposit margin expansion and a small benefit from funding and other, with lending margin declining by 2 basis points, mainly driven by mortgages. As you heard from Paul Thwaite, our 2026 guidance now assumes that the Bank of England base rate remains at 3.75% this year, rather than coming down to 3.25%. Together with our revised economic scenarios, this means we now expect income, excluding notable items, to be at the top end of our GBP 17.2 billion-GBP 17.6 billion range, excluding the impact of Evelyn Partners. Turning now to customer assets and liabilities or CAL.
You will recall we introduced our 2028 growth target for CAL in February. I am pleased we are entering another new year with strong growth continuing our track record. Our CAL increased by GBP 8.4 billion or 0.9% in the quarter to GBP 900 billion. This includes lending growth of GBP 7.3 billion, deposit growth of GBP 3.1 billion, and a reduction in assets under management and administration of GBP 1.8 billion as strong AUM inflows were offset by market movements. I'll touch on each of these elements in turn. We're reporting another quarter of strong broad-based loan growth across the group, with growth loans to customers up by GBP 7.3 billion. Retail banking and private banking and wealth management balances grew GBP 3.5 billion or 1.5%.
This comprises GBP 3.3 billion in mortgage lending and GBP 200 million in unsecured lending. Mortgage stock share increased marginally to 12.6%, and we have a robust pipeline following record applications in March. Commercial and institutional lending increased by GBP 3.8 billion or 2.4%. This includes growth in corporate and institutions driven by good demand across a broad range of sectors, including project finance, renewables and utilities, and funds lending, together with increased lending in commercial mid-market, notably in commercial real estate and the housing sector. You will also see we have provided a detailed breakdown of our financial institution exposures, including private credit in the appendix of our presentation. Turning now to deposits. Customer deposits increased by GBP 3.1 billion despite the expected higher seasonal tax outflows. Commercial and institutional deposits increased by GBP 5.1 billion.
This was partly offset by a slight decline in retail banking and private banking and wealth management deposits as a result of higher customer tax payments of GBP 10.3 billion. Retail banking outflows were partly offset by growth in current account and ISA balances. Overall, our deposit mix remained broadly stable. Turning now to assets under management. Assets under management and administration closed the quarter at GBP 56.7 billion. We are pleased with positive AUM net inflows of GBP 0.9 billion, which equates to 8.2% of opening AUM, demonstrating continued client confidence and strong momentum. There was a reduction in assets under administration of GBP 1.4 billion, driven by guilt redemptions to support client tax payments. Overall, balances were impacted by negative market movements of GBP 1.7 billion. These were reversed during April. Turning now to costs.
Other operating expenses were GBP 2 billion, an increase of 4.8% year-on-year and a decrease of 8.3% compared with the fourth quarter. Our cost income ratio in the quarter was 46.5%. We are pleased with the progress we've made on our transformation, and we made decisions to accelerate investment spend and incur higher restructuring costs in the first quarter, which drove the overall cost growth year-on-year. The reduction from the fourth quarter is mainly due to ongoing cost savings as well as lower bank levies. We remain confident in the delivery of our full year 2026 cost guidance of around GBP 8.2 billion, though our cost profile will be uneven throughout the year. Turning now to our updated macroeconomic assumptions. Following a period of global macro uncertainty, we have revised our economic assumptions.
In our revised base case, we assumed inflation now means CPI will peak at 3.5% in 2026 rather than fall to 2% by the end of the year. This means interest rates stay higher for longer, and we assume the bank rate remains at 3.75% throughout the year. We expect lower GDP growth of 0.4% and a modest increase in unemployment to a peak of 5.7%, above our previous assumptions of 5.4%. This remains at levels we are comfortable with in terms of lending risk appetite and credit quality. We will continue to review our assumptions as the situation progresses. Our balance sheet remains well-provisioned with an expected credit loss of GBP 3.7 billion and ECL coverage ratio of 84 basis points.
Our latest scenarios also show that even if we were to give a 100% weight to our new moderate downside scenario, this would increase stage 1 and 2 ECL by GBP 99 million or 2 basis points. Turning now to the impairment charge. The impairment charge for the quarter was GBP 283 million, equivalent to 26 basis points of loans. This includes a charge of GBP 140 million as a result of changes in economic scenarios and total post-model adjustment releases of GBP 34 million, as elements were effectively consumed by changes in our economic scenarios. Excluding these, our underlying impairment charge was 16 basis points. There were no new signs of stress across our 3 businesses, and the current credit performance of our book remains strong.
We continue to expect a loan impairment rate below 25 basis points for 2026, so our guidance is unchanged. Turning now to capital. We ended the quarter with a common equity tier 1 ratio of 14.3%, up 30 basis points since the end of the year. Capital generation before distributions was strong at 65 basis points. This includes 69 basis points from earnings. Other regulatory capital movements added 16 basis points. Growth in risk-weighted assets consumed 21 basis points of capital, and our usual accrual for ordinary dividend payments reduced capital by a further 37 basis points. Risk-weighted assets increased by GBP 2.7 billion. GBP 4.3 billion of business movements broadly reflects our lending growth and increased market risk.
This was partly offset by a reduction of GBP 2.2 billion as a result of actively managing our RWAs to create capacity for further growth. Other movements included FX and immaterial CRD4 model updates. We remain confident in our ability to continue generating strong capital from earnings and to manage risk-weighted assets and expect around 200 basis points of capital generation before distributions this year, whilst operating at a CET1 ratio of around 13%. Turning now to guidance. We now expect income, excluding notable items, to be at the top end of our range of GBP 17.2 billion-GBP 17.6 billion, excluding the impact of the Evelyn Partners acquisition. All our other guidance and targets remain unchanged. With that, I'll hand back to the operator for Q&A. Thank you.
We'll now take your questions. If you'd like to ask a question today, you can do so by using the Raise Hand function on the Zoom app. If you are dialing by phone, you can press star 9 to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute once prompted. We ask that questions are limited to 2 people, sorry, 2 per person, to allow an opportunity for more people to ask questions. We'll take our first questions from Andrew Coombs of Citi. Andrew, if you'd like to unmute and ask your question.
Morning. Thank you for taking my questions. If I could just have one on loan and deposit growth and then I guess the second on average interest-earning assets. On the loan and deposit growth, again, it's a strong performance Q on Q, again, led by C&I. If I speak to any investor, particularly those outside the U.K., they always struggle to link the economic performance in the U.K. with the strong loan growth and loan demand you're seeing. Perhaps you can just touch upon, you know, what drove the loan and deposit growth, particularly in C&I. Where is that demand coming from? How sustainable do you think it is throughout the remainder of the year and into next year?
The second question, I mentioned that loans are up Q on Q, deposits up Q on Q, but your Average Interest-Earning Assets are down 0.2% Q on Q, and it seems to be due to a reduction in the liquid asset buffer. Perhaps you could just touch upon that as well and what's driving the disconnect between the Average Interest-Earning Assets and the movement in the loan balances. Thank you.
Thanks, Andy. Okay, Katie, why don't I take lending and deposits and then you come back on AIEA.
Perfect.
Okay. Good, good stuff. Andy, as you say, good strong growth on both sides of the balance sheet. Pleased on lending and deposits, especially as you know that the context for Q1 deposits is always higher outflows because of tax payments. Why don't I give an overview, and then I'll drop down into C&I 'cause I'm conscious you wanted some specific color there. Lending overall, I'd say it's pretty broad-based. You can see growth in mortgages, you can see growth in C&I, you can see growth in unsecured within retail as well. Within C&I, you can see it through different business lines. I'd also add that the pipelines remains pretty strong as well in both businesses, so we're encouraged by that.
Not only is the activity good, the pipeline, you know, I was going through it yesterday and Wednesday actually, the pipeline of activity looks strong looking ahead into quarter two and quarter three. As you know, we've consistently grown above market growth on the lending side. I'll come back to some of the reasons why I think that that's true. On deposits, two sides to this. As I say, we've got the tax outflows in retail and private banking. They were up 28% year-on-year, so it's a big number. You know, GBP 10 billion of deposits. That was offset by growth in C&I, which was from a combination of things. Some of that was operational deposits, some of that was interest-bearing deposits.
I think when you think about the size of our corporate and commercial franchise, the reality is we benefit, you know, as deposits flow onto corporate balance sheets. If you look into retail, actually personal current accounts were up, which is good. That's obviously healthy from a number of factors. We are starting to see the impact of our, what we call our boxed proposition, where we're providing savings products to companies like AA, Saga, Sainsbury's, et cetera. That's also supporting retail deposits. That hopefully gives you a kind of big picture view. On C&I specifically, demand has been strong. I think we're very well-positioned on what I'd call some of the structural drivers, so project finance, infrastructure, transition finance, utilities, funds lending, energy transition, et cetera.
I think what you can see is the growth in those parts of the market is bigger than, let's call it, the U.K. systems growth. I think that helps to explain why our C&I franchise captures the opportunities there, but also outperforms the market. As I said, the pipelines are strong. To your point on sustainability, I think those trends are they're structural trends, not kind of short-term opportunistic trends. I think the lending growth and the lending pipelines will continue to support sustainable growth. Net net, good balance sheet performance. C&I, yes, but also on the retail side of the business as well. Hopefully that gives you a bit of color. Katie?
Sure. Thanks very much. Hi, hi Andy. You're absolutely right. When you look at AIEA, they were sort of stable in the quarter. They were down kind of 0.2%. A couple of things within there. A reduction reflects the optimization of our surplus liquidity. We repaid around £4 billion of TFSME at the end of Q4, and we deployed surplus ability to meet our customer loan demands, which we've just been talking about in a quarter of seasonally lower deposit growth. If you look at the kind of the Q1 loan growth of £7.3 billion versus the £3.1 billion of deposit growth, there's a natural kind of mismatch within there.
What I would say is, you know, we're 3% higher than AIEA's a year ago, we do expect them to grow from here going forward as our customer lending increases.
Great.
Thanks, Andy.
Very clear. Thanks, Katie. Thanks, Andy.
Our next question comes from Alvaro Serrano. Sorry, Alvaro Serrano of Morgan Stanley. Alvaro, please go ahead.
Yeah, well.
Hope you can hear me okay. Good morning.
Morning. We can hear you clearly.
I actually had two questions related to spreads. The first one is on mortgages. At least I had the expectation of a step down in spread on mortgages in Q1, given the roll-off of the COVID ones. Actually the spread has held up reasonably well versus my expectations at least. I think the contribution is 324. Can you maybe? This one's for Katie, but can you maybe talk to if there's still sort of headwinds ahead and talk to the mortgage front book spreads? Then similarly on commercial, the spreads there, when I compare it to base rates, have been increasing steadily the last eight quarters or so.
As you grow the book, what kind of business are you underwriting there and, what do you think should it continue to improve or, how do you see the outlook on pricing on corporates and, as well commercial? Thank you.
Okay, great, Alvaro. Good. Do you want to start with mortgages?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great. Absolutely. No, thanks very much. morning Alvaro.
Yeah
At Q1, we continue to write mortgages at front book spreads that were below the back book, as we did through last year, which we talked about a lot, very much in line with our strategy of delivering steady growth at attractive returns. Our, I'd say our year-to-date margins are in line with expectations. We did see a bit of volatility in March. We repriced every 2 days, so that's 11 kind of changes in 20 to 22 days, which I think is a great testament to the flexibility we've built into the system.
We can even see that ability to handle that increased mortgage demand as a result of that investment in the platform and digitization, which has meant we've been able to execute new business at margins which are ahead of the back book in April, which is great to see. You're absolutely right to mention the COVID mortgages. We are seeing a little bit of the book margins being impacted by that churn of the 5-year COVID era mortgages, and they're rolling off at spreads that are higher than we're currently writing. I would expect that to have worked its way through during the rest of this year. We expect a little bit of pressure from this on the book margin for the coming quarters.
I guess as I go to where we are today. You know, where we're writing the mortgages in front book spreads which are below the back book, what we're seeing is it's starting to bring that back book margin down. We're kind of writing now, you've heard me talk a lot about this kind of below 70 basis points over the last number of quarters. That's kind of continued, and as I look at that number, I think that we will see the book margin to reprice to around 60 basis points over the course of this year. Interestingly, April margins have been above the back book, and we're pleased we were able to capture that.
I talked to you, remember, at the year end of around 1 to 2 basis points impact on our NIM walk per quarter throughout this year. You actually saw that already in our walk this quarter. You should expect to see that. I'd also really encourage you is don't forget to see that you have the deposit margin expansion that's gonna more than offset that negative. Hopefully, overall, that gives you what you need. Paul, are you gonna do the commercial spreads?
Yeah
Shall I?
Happy to.
Okay, perfect.
Thanks, Katie, and thanks, Alvaro Serrano. On commercial spreads, couple of general points first. I would say of our actually commercial lending margins, I would see them as fairly stable on a product-by-product basis. That's how I'd think about it. There's obviously always a mix effect depending on where you write the business, but there's been no material deltas, changes, you know, over the recent past or nor would we expect it going forward. That's, I guess, one positioning piece. Secondly, in our commercial book, a significant proportion of customers are paying variable rates, so you will see that. You will see kind of rates reprice in line with short-term rates and how that changes.
Hopefully those two points just contextualize what you'll be looking at in terms of the commercial lending book. If you drop down into the individual businesses or asset classes within the commercial institutional bank, there's different dynamics. Obviously at the very small end, margins are much higher, but the total value of lending there is small relative to the overall commercial book. Whilst we're growing that business, and it's higher margin business, from a weighted average perspective the impacts are relatively limited. In the commercial mid-market, that's a competitive space, but across the field, but depending upon the asset class, the margins can vary quite a lot, so if it's social housing, lower margins but very high risk-adjusted returns. Commercial real estate, thinner margins, more of a commoditized product.
At the large corporate side, obviously you've got the kind of revolver aspect to that, but also where you've got kind of project financing and infrastructure finance, a bit of the same dynamics as my example on social housing. At a spread level, you know, margins are relatively tight, but given the capital treatments, risk-adjusted returns are very attractive. What they're all very good areas to deploy capital at good returns at. Nothing major to call out, I'd say, on commercial spreads, but that hopefully gives you a bit of the contours of how that business works. Thanks, Alvaro.
Next question today comes from Benjamin Toms of RBC. Benjamin, please go ahead and ask your question.
Hey, Ben.
Hey, Ben.
Morning. Thank you guys for taking my question. The first one's on your income guidance for you, which you've upgraded to the top end of your previously provided range. Just wanted to kind of get some color, your thoughts on whether you'd characterize this guidance as being conservative. I'm just noting that consensus is kind of still quite a way above that guidance and whether you're comfortable with that gap. Secondly, there's been some pretty fairly intense competition in the ISA, cash ISA deposit market. NatWest Group are competing, but one of your large peers is not. Can you just talk a little bit about how you weigh up collecting deposit volumes versus margin at group level at the moment? Thank you very much.
Great. Thanks, Ben. I'll take the guidance and income, Katie. Then you can talk a little bit around retail savings and ISAs. Yeah, as you said, Ben, we've strengthened the income guidance. We're guiding to the top end of the range of the GBP 17.2-GBP 17.6. We're doing that for a couple of reasons. One, you can see the momentum in quarter 1. The underlying performance has been good, which is great. Then you've got the kind of net effect of the change in economics. Obviously, we've changed our rate assumptions. You've seen that from two cuts, assumed two cuts now to zero. We've also assumed, you have to follow the logic through.
You know, you would assume if you have, if you don't have rate reductions, it would be reasonable to expect some small softening in demand, so we've assumed that. Net-net, we see that as positive to income, so that's kind of how we're positioning at the top end. We haven't changed the guidance for ROTE. We're maintaining the greater than 17% there, but we're increasingly confident on that. As I said in February and I'll say again, it's always a greater, that's always been a greater than guidance, and we always aim to beat our targets. We haven't changed that, but we're increasingly confident 'cause obviously the conditions for that are supportive. I should point out, you know, it, I think it's obvious, but that all excludes Evelyn. Net-net, Ben, I would say it's a good start.
We're confident around 2026, hence the nudge up in guidance. We haven't changed 2028, but obviously you can see from the trends that it's the conditions are supportive towards the medium term as well. Katie?
Lovely. Thanks very much and hi, Ben. I guess if I look at our ISAs and the kind of recent activity, I think the first thing I would really say is we see really strong relationship value in our fixed term deposits. We have high retention rates, you know, greater than 80%, and some of those are retained in the higher margin instant access products, as well as us also having an opportunity in the future to engage with these customers on investment products, and we've seen good growth there as well this quarter with a lot of new investors coming in. We'll also expect that ambition to kind of grow, and it's that's supported by the acquisition of Evelyn Partners, obviously, in this last quarter.
During Q1, with the volatility that we saw in the swap markets, we actively managed our hedging across both our assets and liabilities, which enabled us to really price effectively on the fixed-rate deposits. Overall, you can see our deposit mix has been stable, both at the group level and in retail. When I look at fixed-rate ISA specifically, the balances are small in the context of the group, low single-digit percentages of deposits. In terms of overall deposit dynamics and margins, really very happy with the progress, particularly around things like current account growth, and we expect to see ongoing group deposit margin expansion in the coming quarters. Overall, a real comment on balance across the portfolio. Thanks.
That's good, Ben.
Thanks, Ben.
Yeah.
Thank you.
I'd add 1 small thing on that, actually, Ben, because I've got the pricing tables in front of me. It's quite interesting when you look through, you know, as Katie said, we've been very thoughtful about, you know, how we manage the volatility and swap rates and how we play that back into pricing to maintain margins. You can see you've got 3 or 4 of the larger banks ahead of us on pricing. As Katie alluded to, the volumes have been encouraging. I think we've been very thoughtful in how we're playing that market. Thanks.
Thanks.
Next question comes from Guy Stebbings of BNP Paribas. Please go ahead, Guy.
Hey, Guy.
Hey, Guy.
Hi. Morning there. Thanks for the question. I think I just have one sort of broad question on the income guidance for this year and the assumptions sort of underpinning it. It's clear in terms of what you're doing on policy rate, but in terms of the long run of the curve, when we're thinking about the hedge reinvestment, could you confirm what the assumption is there? In terms of volumes, I'm just trying to work out whether you're assuming slightly more sort of conservative macroeconomic assumptions as per the ECL models, but that would be going against the positive comments you're saying in terms of what you're actually seeing on lending volumes, et cetera. Clarify what sort of expectations are on volumes.
On, on mortgage spreads, just, in light of the comment you made there, I'm just trying to understand whether anything's changed. You've talked about the stock of the back book trending down towards 60. I presume that's kind of entirely consistent with what you were expecting, you know, a few months back. Actually your comment on April being above the back book is slightly encouraging. Could you just confirm if those mortgage spread trends are sort of in line better or worse than what you were thinking a month or 2 ago? Thanks.
Great. Thanks, Guy. Very clear. Katie, have you got any preference on order?
I'll-
We've got hedge, volume.
I'll start off with spreads and hedge, and then why don't you come back in on volume?
Yeah, volume. Yeah.
Yeah, perfect. Thanks so much. If I look at the hedge, first of all, a few things just to kind of share with you on that. First of all, when we talked about the hedge at the year-end, we said that we would increase our structural hedge this year above GBP 200 billion and as we've seen, as deposit balances have grown and equity base will increase given the business growth. What we did earlier in Q1 was, as we saw those yield curves move really sharply higher in the quarter, we did take a decision to accelerate the increase of our product hedge, so we added about GBP 5 billion additional in Q1. That means that we've locked in income for the outer years and, of course, modestly reduced our rate sensitivity as a result of that.
When I look at the kind of first three months of the year overall, we're reinvesting our product hedge at about 3.8%. That's against guidance I'd given you at the year-end of 3.5%. I would now expect that reinvestment rate on average for the whole year, given what we've seen also in April, to be around 3.9% on the product hedge and 4.7% on the equity hedge, which is up from 4.5% as we go through there. As I look at those kind of current assumptions of rates, the growth that we've seen, I do continue to expect total hedge income will grow annually through to 2030 as you see the improved levels that we spoke about in February.
If I look to your mortgage spreads, you've got it completely right. Mortgage margins very much in line with our expectations. They are currently a little bit better. I would encourage you not to bank that forever, but we're very happy with how the team are managing the book at the moment. We can see the reduction in book margins absolutely being driven by refinancing. If you think a little bit of our mix, 30% of the book will reprice this year, and the roll-off is a little over 90 basis points on a blended basis. That really drives the stock margin lower over the course of the year, completely in line with our expectations and very much in line with the income guidance that we've given you throughout this year and upgrading this morning.
Thanks. On volumes, Guy, so this, as you say, this kind of, this trying to thread the needle a little bit between, I guess, the logic of the kind of mechanistic logic of the economic assumptions versus activity year to date and pipelines, and I think that's what we're trying to balance. If you take the logic of the economic assumptions through, i.e., higher for longer, slight tick up in unemployment and slower growth, then the logic of that would be you would see some softening in, for example, the mortgage market. These are our original predictions and likewise some softening in business lending. That's what the economic assumptions drive.
When you look at the activity, you know, as you rightly point out, what we've said is quarter one has been very strong on the lending side. The pipelines in the respective businesses look strong, so the activity is there. I guess what we're trying to do is strike the right balance between optimism on that side, but also, I guess, the reality of how the economics play out over the course of the next nine months might impact demand, and we've factored that into how we've guided toward the changed guidance to the top end of the range. Hopefully that just unpacks a little bit how we're thinking about it. Cheers, Guy.
Next question comes from, Jonathan Pierce of Jefferies. Jonathan, if you'd like to unmute and ask your question.
Hey, Jonathan.
Hello. You all right?
Yeah.
Good. I've got two questions, please. The first, the other C&I non-interest income, it's been running at about GBP 230 million-GBP 240 million a quarter for the last 6 quarters. Dropped down to GBP 170 million in the 1st quarter. It does feel like there was a bit of a one-off in there. I don't know if you can quantify how big that was and whether you've seen anything else coming through since the end of March. Secondly, more broadly on this impairment sensitivity, I just trying to get a feel as to how much confidence you have. I've asked you this before, Katie, actually, in the IFRS 9 ECL models.
I mean, you're telling us today that the weighted average assumption for GDP growth is about 0.3%, 0.4% a year next couple of years. The downside is -0.4% this year and -1.6% next year. It's also got unemployment going up to 6.2% next year, I think. You're telling us your ECL in that scenario would only increase by about GBP 99 million. You know, I get that that's a general provision measure, but by definition, the ECL on those stage 1 and 2 is reflective of losses you expect in the future on the performing book. Are you genuinely confident?
If so, why, more qualitatively, in this idea that even if we saw a recession, even if we saw unemployment moving into the 6s, your impairment charge, X any initial ECL build, would not move up very significantly at all? Thanks a lot.
Good. Thanks, Jonathan. Right, I'll take the first one, Katie.
Perfect. Sure.
You can take the second one. Jonathan Pierce, your characterization is right. Obviously pretty stable income line last 6 quarters. Dropped off at the C&I, non-interest income dropped off in quarter 1 2026. If you look at that compared to 2025, I think GBP 20 million versus GBP 64 million. Not exclusively, but almost exclusively, it's explained by sterling rates, as you say. Kind of one-off, you've seen that across lots of desks and lots of banks. We have a relatively small rates business. It's obviously indexed to sterling given what we are as NatWest. That really explains the delta that you're seeing there. You'll see GBP 64 million in quarter 1 2025 and GBP 20 million in quarter 1 2026.
That's a big part of the difference versus the previous quarters. Couple of things I'd say, it's obviously very small in the context of the overall revenue line, and also given the more subdued volatility, we'd expect improvements as we go through quarter 2 onwards, not just in that line, but overall on C&I non-interest income. I think you're seeing it and reading it pretty accurately there. Okay, Katie.
Sure. On impairments, thank Jonathan, and good morning. Because as I look at it, these are models that we test extensively. They go through both our own verification and independent verification, and they're also reviewed very closely by external parties. I am comfortable in them, and I think that the thing that I do like with IFRS 9 is this concept, which is around the PMA. That enables me where there are moments of discomfort. You can see that we sometimes have them when you can see in different classifications it's wider than just the economic uncertainty.
When you see other numbers in there, you can go, actually, that's a bit of the model they're kind of working on. Completely comfortable on the models is what I would say first. You're right, if I look to the ECL on kind of stage 1 and 2, if I went 100% kind of to the downside, it suggests an extra GBP 99 million. I would remind you that's stage 1 and stage 2, there would be some stage 3 losses. They are impossible for us to quantify as to what they would be, we don't seek to attempt that. I would probably suggest to you that the actual charge could be a bit higher if that was the case.
Obviously, that's not our base case just now, in terms of where, of what we're looking at. We, you know, at this stage, we are happy with the base case. We're happy with the guidance that we've done. We've obviously added a bit on the MES, 110 net, a little bit out of PMA. That's just kind of mechanics of the calculation, which has taken us to the 26 basis point charge this quarter. You know, but if I take out that MES we've overlaid, it's kind of 16 basis points. What we can see, it's a good, well-diversified, well-performing book to date.
We've given you a good estimate if we were to move. At the moment, obviously, we're comfortable and happy to have that little bit of extra buffer as we enter a little bit of greater uncertainty than we've seen recently. Comfortable at this stage, Jonathan. Thank you.
Thanks, Katie.
Next question comes from Benjamin Caven-Roberts of Goldman Sachs. Benjamin, if you'd like to unmute and go ahead.
Hey, Ben.
Hey, Ben.
Thanks very much for the presentation and for taking the questions. Just 2 for me, please. First, a follow-up on the cost of risk. I see you mentioned about 60% of mortgage balances, and now with customer rates above 4%. How are you thinking about the refinancing profile for that remaining portion, and the extent to which those customers are moving on to rates a fair bit higher than what they'd expected when entering those mortgages? I know you do stress rate assumptions as well when issuing the mortgage originally, but clearly a lot of volatility in swaps and rate expectations right now. Just keen to your thoughts on that. Secondly, thanks a lot for the extra disclosure on the financial institutions.
If we look at that business and private credit altogether, how are you thinking about the growth of that book? Is it something you expect to grow more quickly or more slowly relative to the recent past? Have you changed your strategy at all in terms of the underwriting there? Thank you.
Great. Thank you, Ben. Katie, you go.
Yeah, sure.
You take the first question.
Yeah. On terms, of course, reference. Hi, Ben. You're absolutely right. You've obviously, you've got far in the pack this morning, slide 32 kind of lays it out really nicely. I guess a couple of things I would talk about as we look at our prime mortgage books, obviously the level of security gives us a lot of comfort. Our sort of greater than 3 month arrears are below the sector average and quite significantly so. It's very, it's well underwritten. I guess the guide on the financing of the remaining 40% that aren't on customer rates over 4%, we do kind of use what's happened in the last couple of years to kind of help guide us on that.
What you've seen in that time, obviously there has been wage growth across the different areas. People who are coming up are very aware that they're coming up. They are. What we see has been really interesting over the last couple of months is our kind of a greater increase on the use of the 2 year versus the 1 year. You know, if you look at our versus the 5 year, forgive me. If we look at our kind of 5 year fixed as a percentage of our fixed book, it's about 66% 5 year. Actually if I look just at what's even been happening in the last little while, that's kind of flipped almost completely so that we're writing about 77% 2 year at the moment. Customers, they understand what they're doing.
They are understanding what they need to do in terms of managing their exposure. We do see them looking to lock in refinancing early so that they can get the benefit of the rate, they've certainly been preparing for this. As we talk to them as they go through that, those transition, obviously it's a big change when you go from your COVID rate to the new rate, but it's something people have definitely been looking for, and we've seen them managing it really, really quite well, I would say. Paul.
Yeah. Yeah, fine.
... private credit.
Ben, so yeah, I'm glad you liked and have seen the new disclosure. We hope that's ever helpful to everybody. In terms of the kind of outlook for the, obviously it's a very broad business, when you look at the breakdown there. In terms of the areas that you referenced, we have been growing the business, I guess over a number of years, but it's been in a very disciplined way. If you look at limits there, they haven't really moved since this time last year, so quarter to 2025. Likewise, we haven't materially changed our risk appetite. We're always very focused on being senior lender, good protection from first loss, making sure that the risk adjusted returns are supported.
Our strategy really has been not around growing limits, but prioritizing risk adjusted returns versus volume driven growth. As you know, we haven't been involved in any of the recent public names. Looking forward, what I would expect actually is to see some of the spreads to widen, so i.e. the same business, the same risk, but actually better risk adjusted returns. That would be my assumption, 'cause as you know, a lot of that business is relatively short term in nature, so you get to reprice. That's how we're seeing. Hopefully that gives you a sense of it in terms of limits, but also I guess business strategy, which is returns led rather than volume led. Thanks.
Helpful. Thank you.
Thanks, Ben.
Our next question comes from Chris Kent of Autonomous. Chris, if you'd like to unmute and ask your question.
Are you there, Chris?
Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. 2 please. On corporate banking, commercial banking, in the context of what we've got going on in the Middle East, are there any areas of your book that you'd be more nervous on, please? I'm not thinking specifically just about oil price as an input here. I guess there is the potential for product shortages or oil related product shortages, regardless of price, if this persists. Are there any sectors that you're nervous on, when you're speaking to your corporate customers, what are they worried about?
On the comment around refi of the mortgage book, my understanding there is that customers essentially have sort of a bit of a free option to lock in, but then change product if rates shift after they've preemptively locked in. Are there any risks to you and to kind of NII later in the year given swap volatility? I'm just conscious, I guess, the value of that option being given to customers is arguably higher right now. Any comments on how you manage that, how we should think about that would be appreciated. Thank you.
Thanks, Chris. I'll take the first. Katie, you take the second.
Perfect.
On the, I guess the kind of core mid-market commercial bank, Chris, obviously we're staying very close to all the various sectors and also the different regions there. It's very consciously a very diversified book. You know, we give you quite a lot of breakdowns on the relative sectors and segments. In terms of it, to your specifics around sectors or sub-sectors that might see greater impacts, probably similar to some of the previous kind of challenges, I would say sectors like agriculture, aspects of hospitality and leisure.
Where you see some of the, you know, the not just what you call pure energy input prices, but, you know, fuel, fertilizer, food, et cetera, where you see exposure there would be areas that we will pay more attention to. As we've done in the past, work closely with those sectors if support packages are needed. We're not at that stage yet, and we're seeing no deterioration. I think generally what I'd say, if you think back through what we're seeing in the Middle East, what we saw through the tariff period, a similar time last year through Ukraine and even through the pandemic, customers are, I'd say business customers are a lot more adaptable and resilient than maybe they were prior to the pandemic.
Their ability to change their cost base and/or pass on costs, the kind of the way in which they've engineered their business models over time have given them more flexibility. What we see is both faster response, but also greater adaptability, which, you know, ironically, I think it is down to the fact that a lot of these businesses and sectors have had to face a lot over the course of the last 4 or 5 years. That's how we see it. They're probably two sectors that are kind of on our minds. Katie.
Sure. Thanks very much. You know, great question, Chris. We've kind of watched this happen historically, we've seen other peaks. Look, it's something that we manage incredibly tightly on this. We've got very sophisticated modeling that we have in play. We base on it looking very much at the kind of individual kind of customer behavior, looking at what happened in other periods of interest rate volatility, you know, who would move, who would kind of stick. You heard me mention earlier today as well that, you know, what we've done and the investment that we've done within our mortgage system has allowed us to kind of be able to react really, really quickly. You know, I mentioned that we reprice 11 times over the course of 22 days during March.
I mean, that is a significant change from where we were a number of years ago. Very comfortable with the dynamic overall. What I would kind of add is that we do see that most people who do refinance with us do ultimately kind of stick with us as well. There's that good kind of customer engagement, which is just is really, really critical. We're also kind of largely locked in already for our forthcoming roll-offs. What I would say, all of these things, you know, are embedded in the guidance that I've talked about today about the book actively kind of repricing to 60 basis points over the course of the year.
While we manage it actively, I don't see it being something that would change what I've said to you this morning already on that, on that number.
Perfect.
Thanks very much, Chris.
Thanks, Katie.
Next question comes from Sheel Shah of JP Morgan. Sheel, if you'd like to unmute and ask your question.
Hi, Sheel.
Hey, Sheel.
Hi. Hi, guys. First question on corporate deposits, please, because this is a line item that has remained under GBP 200 billion or so for the last two years, and we're finally seeing a lot of growth come through the business. Not only the growth, but also the rates that you're paying on these corporate deposits, looking at your other disclosure, looks to be declining as well. I'd be interested to get some insight as to what's happening there. Secondly, on the cost base, I know first quarter had some increased investment and restructuring costs, but you also mentioned on the call earlier that the cost profile will be uneven through the year. Just wondering how you're thinking about that across the remainder of the quarters. Thanks.
Thanks, Sheel. I'll take deposits, Katie.
Yeah, sure.
take costs. Yeah. I'm pleased you've noticed the trajectory there, Sheel. Deposits in the commercial bank is a big area of strategic focus for the team and has been, I would say, you know, increasingly over the course of the last 18 months. Part of the performance momentum there is around focus. Given also the growth we've seen in lending, there's been a natural need to increase deposits in the commercial bank. Focus has played a part, but we've also broadened the product range. We've also digitized parts of the product range as well.
We've got business focus, we've got enhanced proposition for different segments within the commercial and corporate bank. As you'd expect us to have, we also have a much brighter, broader focus on transaction banking, which obviously brings high value operational deposits. To your point, you know, depending on the nature of those deposits, high liquidity value, but also in relative terms versus interest-bearing deposits, good cost of funding. It's a strategic focus supported by, you know, a number of operational and tactical activities that support our client base, but also help the LDR. Katie.
Costs. Sure. Absolutely. You're absolutely right. Q1 is a little bit higher than normal, reflecting some of our decisions to front load investments and restructuring costs alongside staff and inflation-related increases from 2025. You'd expect me to say this, it's our history, it's what we deliver every single year. We are really confident in hitting our cost guidance of around GBP 8.2 billion. That excludes the impact of Evelyn. I'm just gonna take the opportunity just to talk a little bit about Evelyn costs. We'll share more about that as well Once we've finished the acquisition and things like that, which is going well. There are a few things that you need to be thinking about that will impact some of those Evelyn costs as they come through.
Obviously, first, we've got day one transaction costs. That was included in our guidance of the 130 basis points of capital. We've obviously got the operating costs that will come through from the point of consolidation in terms of Evelyn's own costs. We're then familiar, we've talked a lot about the costs to achieve in terms of the GBP 150 million total costs to achieve to drive the GBP 100 million of cost synergies. Finally, we are gonna have ongoing amortization of the intangibles that will be created upon completion. That doesn't impact our capital generation going forward as we've incurred that as part of the capital impact of the 130 basis points. Obviously, I'll give you more detail when we get to the point of completion, but when you think of lumpiness, they're absolutely rock solid on their 8.2.
That's where they'll land, 'cause they always do. There will be a little bit as Evelyn comes in. Think about that in your models of those four different kind of categories.
Yeah.
Hopefully, that's helpful to you, Sheel Shah, as well.
Great. Thanks, Sheel Shah.
Next question comes from Aman Rakkar of Barclays. Aman, if you'd like to go ahead, ask your question.
good morning. good morning.
Morning
hopefully you can hear me okay. Sorry.
We can. Yeah, we got you now.
I had 2 questions. Could I just trouble you on the deposit margin, please? I think that 2 pips deposit margin Q on Q contribution, I think it's the softest uplift Q on Q. You know, obviously you've got multiple moving parts in that, notably a, you know, a massive structural hedge tailwind. Presumably offset by compression on kind of actual deposit spreads in the quarter. I was interested in your sense of the deposit margin contribution on a sequential basis in coming quarters, please, and to what extent you think this kind of intense deposit competition dynamic, particularly for term deposits. I mean, lots of people raising term deposits at negative spread kind of feeds into that would be really helpful.
The second question was, broader question just around actually the income dynamic beyond this year, 'cause it feels like there's a building confidence around the income profile beyond this year, principally because of the interest rate environment. It's not really materially moving the needle on this year's guide as much as it perhaps will do on the forward look, not least because of the structural hedge. I'm thinking about the cadence for net interest income through the course of this year is presumably gonna be quite robust, right, in terms of what it means for the next year. Is that the right characterization?
What do you as a management team do with that, the kind of building confidence on the income outlook in the medium term versus, you know, what is quite an uncertain near term, you know, dynamic with the Middle East?
Sure.
Thank you.
Go on, Katie.
Shall I add one? Perfect. Deposit margin, you know, 2 basis points in this quarter. I think you need to just think a little bit about the overall movement imbalances in the quarter. You've got tax outflows, GBP 10.3 billion. They are predominantly in January. Some do dribble into February, but they are predominantly there. We're confident around the deposit margin expansion will be greater in the coming months as we move forward from here. If we then look at income beyond 2026, we expect annual income growth sort of through 2026 to 2028. We're confident in that growth trajectory. Obviously, disciplined growth across lending deposits and AUMAs continue in line with our CAL greater target of greater than 4%.
That will obviously be boosted by the Evelyn Partners acquisition when it comes online. The higher for a longer interest rate environment, we've got now got the terminal bank rate of 3.75% alongside the actions that we've taken, have already taken in Q1 to move higher in the yield curve, meaning that we are increasingly confident on the income tailwind from the structural hedge, supporting income all the way through to 2030. You've other variables like customer behavior, competitive behavior around pricing and macroeconomics. You know, we'll see how these develop, but again, you know, you can see what we've got in terms of our economics in there. Given that kind of interest rate sensitivity that we have, we do see that as a net positive for income beyond 2026. Overall, you know, confident.
Yeah
...the, as, and building on our confidence that we had when we spoke to you in February as well. Thanks very much, Aman.
Yeah. To your final point, Aman, as, you know, how the management characterize that, I think as Katie finished there, net, feels like we're in a stronger position on income and returns, both 2026, but also looking out to 2028. Thanks.
Thanks, Paul.
Our next question that comes from Amit Goel of Mediobanca. If you'd like to unmute, Amit, and go ahead and ask your question.
Hi. Thank you. Hopefully, you can hear me okay.
Yeah. We've got you crystal clear.
Great. Good stuff. Yeah. One, just kind of following up. I suppose just on slide 30, just on that deposit margin and contribution, just trying to reconcile, you know, on each of the divisions, it seems like the cost is coming down, but on the group it's flattish. Just wanted to check what's driving that. Secondly, just on Evelyn, just curious, I mean, if you've got any color in terms of how the business has been developing since the acquisition announcement and, I guess, during the, you know, the first quarter and beyond in terms of AUA. Anything on that would be helpful. Thank you.
Great. Okay.
Would you like-
You go first and I'll. Yeah, yeah.
The first one.
Yeah.
Absolutely. If you look at the businesses, what that is that's representing the customer rate on deposits or loans. Whereas if I look at the group number, it's the overall cost, including hedging. It's not perfectly like for like, as you look across those two lines. Paul, Evelyn.
Yeah. Amit, obviously, I can't comment on a business that we don't yet own, so that wouldn't be appropriate. What I would say is in terms of the planning to close yet is going very well. You know, we're moving at pace. We hope to announce that in the coming months. The work on, the appropriate work on integration is progressing really well. You can see from our AUMA performance, as in NatWest, the AUM performance, the strength, net new money, you know, above 8%, again, despite the market movements, top quartile investment performance.
Going back to the AUM, kind of 10% up on year on year, which is great. There's a limit, there's a obvious limits to what I can say. In the work that we're doing so far, we're very encouraged. You know, I've spoken at length around the scale and the capabilities that Evelyn will bring. I think if you look at the success we're starting to have around retail investment and premier investment in the NatWest base, the acquisition of Evelyn is only gonna accelerate that. To me, the demand signals and the performance signals are good.
Once we've closed, as Katie alluded to earlier, in relation to the cost question, once we've closed, we'll obviously share a lot more detail in terms of the overall numbers and the plans, and we are eager to do that as soon as we can. Thanks, Amit.
Thank you very much. Our final questions come from Ed Firth of KBW. Ed, if you'd like to unmute and ask your question.
Good morning, everybody. Thanks for the questions. I just have two. The first one was just on detail. I think at the time of Evelyn, we were talking about GBP 300 million of revenue and GBP 300 million of costs in the first year. Is that still the right number we should be getting? That was just my first question.
Yeah. Nothing's changed since the original disclosures, Ed. That's the best way to think about it.
Perfect. Okay. Thanks so much. Then the second question was related to Jonathan's question, really, about risk. I'm just struck that in your sort of worst case scenario, you're talking about a GBP low few hundred million of credit losses, I guess, something like that. I know it's more than 99, it's not huge. That's on a GBP 30 billion tangible equity base, you're making pre-provision profits of GBP 10 billion a year. I'm just wondering, how do you think about appetite to risk? I mean, do you really feel confident that you're taking enough risk? It feels to me that potentially there's quite a gap there for you to be doing quite a lot more and growing revenue quite a lot faster than you are.
I guess related to that, can I just ask about slide 33 again? I mean, it's a great slide, and thank you very much indeed for giving it to us, and I wish all the other banks would as well. It does strike me that particularly your funds lending looks quite a lot bigger than I would ever have imagined. I mean, I don't know the market that well, but I guess you do. Are you a market leader in that space? Would you imagine that you are sort of bigger than most people, or would you think that you're just a player and that's pretty standard? Unfortunately, other people don't give us that sort of disclosure. Thanks very much.
Great. Okay. Thanks, Ed. Good to hear from you. Quite a few different questions there. We've got the kind of the extreme downside, kind of credit piece. Katie, why don't you-
I'll crack on.
You have a shot at that. I'll cover funds, and then there's a bit, I guess, linked to just on lending risk appetite as well.
Yeah, I'll crack on on impairment. You can jump in after that.
Yeah. Yeah.
Ed, what I'd probably do is guide you a little bit. If you go after the call on page 27 of our IMS today, we give you, I think helpfully, as a non-standard Q1 disclosure, what our new change in our scenarios would be. You can see that on the downside scenario for stage 1 and stage 2, it's GBP 99 million additional. If you went to the extreme downside, that's a GBP 2.7 billion hit, really very different in terms of numbers. You can also see that that's obviously greater than the hit we would have had at the year end in that space. I'd probably just rebalance your numbers a little bit on that. That's obviously just stage 1 and stage 2.
We would, I would kind of point out that that extreme downside is really quite far away from our base case. Obviously, it's blended into the number. I think we give it about a 14% probability kind of weighting. Quite far out there, but it is something to kind of consider as you look at the numbers. Paul, shall I come to you?
Yeah
the other one?
Thank you, Katie. On funds lending, I'm glad you like the disclosure, Ed, I would say. On funds lending, that's a really long-standing business for us, you know, in excess of 20 years. A large part of that business is in our RBSI, which is our Channel Islands business. Been in our disclosures for, you know, for all that period of time. Probably worth diving into a little bit of the detail. I wouldn't say we were a leader in that business. I'd say we're a strong player where we choose to participate. It's worth bearing in mind of that funds lending business, 80% of it is, I guess, what you'd know as subscription lines or capital call facilities.
That's where you kind of got exposure to LPs, and we take security charge over the LPs. Typically, that's pretty short-dated as well, just to give you a bit more context, you know, 1 to 3 years. When you look at that line, best part of GBP 17 billion is sub lines. The other part is NAV, which is a smaller part, kind of GBP 3 billion-GBP 4 billion, and that's where you're a senior, in effect, a senior creditor when you're lending onto a particular asset. Average LTVs, again, just to help you there, around 30%, and you've got an institutional investor base. Very long-standing business. It's been predominantly led out of our Channel Islands business. No historical losses.
A good business. There'll be as you look across European, U.S. banks, you know, you'll see different levels of exposure. I'd say we're strong, but certainly not a leader. Thanks.
In terms of risk, do we feel we've got the balance right with how much we're taking?
Well-
To get to his last question.
Yeah, I think I hear both, I guess, Ed, I hear both sides of the story. I, you know, from some investors I hear, you know, they really value the low-risk business model, well-diversified credit base, you know, high risk-adjusted returns that you see, and then you hear other side is could you take more risk? I think the way we've approached our different asset portfolios, both in retail and commercial, has, you know, has stood us in good stead. It allows us to perform well with a low cost of risk. We generate a high cost of, you know, a high amount of capital. You know, our ROTEs are obviously sector leading. It feels like that's, you know, we've got the balance right.
We do at times, you know, increase our risk appetite. You go back, you know, over the course of the last couple of years, you can see some of the moves we've made in retail. You know, we've broadened our addressable market in mortgages and credit cards. I kind of feel that, you know, a U.K.-centric, low-risk business model, high capital generation serves us well, so it feels like we're in the right space. Hopefully, that gives you a bit of insight into how management think about it, Ed. Thanks.
Thank you for all your questions today. I will now like to hand over to Paul Thwaite for closing comments.
Yes. Thanks, Oliver. I just wanna close with a, I think, a couple of key points, which I think are particularly important given the context we're in, and I think demonstrate why we think we're very well-positioned as a bank. The first one is our deposit franchise and the gearing that gives us to rates. Obviously, that's driven by our corporate franchise. It supports our revenue growth, especially in a higher-for-longer environment. The second thing I would point to is the growth track record that we've built and continue to build, and the targets that we've put out there. We think we've got a good track record and further opportunities across our three businesses. You can see also the progress we're making around cost management and our cost income ratio and continuing benefits of operating leverage.
To link it to Ed's question, if you look at the loan book, you know, and you look at the Bank of England stress tests, you know, we are the most resilient bank under stress. I think that's as a consequence of our diversified business mix. The lowest stress to draw down of any U.K. bank. You add all that up together, superior returns, high capital generation, which can drive stronger distributions. From my perspective, we feel very well-placed as we look into the circumstances that face us. Thanks for your time. I hope you have a good weekend. Cheers.
Thank you.
That concludes today's presentation. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.