Good morning. This is the conference operator. Welcome, and thank you for joining SEB's third quarter 2022 results conference call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your touchtone telephone. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Johan Torgeby, President and CEO. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you very much, and welcome everyone to SEB's Q3 quarterly results presentation. As customary, you can find the presentation on sebgroup.com. There will also be a live stream if you wanna follow it online. Starting with page two, highlights in Q3, we experienced a continuation of our operating leverage where income is increasing faster than costs. We noted robust asset quality and a return on equity of 14.9% with a capital buffer of 410 basis points. We will get into more details, but very clearly, there is a wide range of different macroeconomic developments that has affected and had implications for our financial results in the last quarter. This is inflation, interest rates, and of course, volatile financial markets.
We've also concluded and launched the last quarter's share buyback program to the tune of SEK 1.25 billion for the remainder of the year. Next page, adapting to a new environment. I think I am just here depicting what we all know and have read and seen a lot about this year. Inflation is going up and has now been talked about when it peaks, which is maybe not the most interesting thing. It's very likely just because of the base effect that these inflation rates are going to peak and come down.
It's probably in a year or two for the coming decade, what is the interest rate environment going to be like compared to the last two or three decades, where we've seen a long-term trend of falling interest rates and falling inflation, and this is of course gonna dictate what kind of terms of trade the financial markets will experience. As a consequence, inflation rates have led to higher central bank rates, but also even higher market rates, where we are now pricing in further interest rate hikes from the central banks with U.S. leading the way at 3.5% on the 10-year, and here Sweden and Germany not far behind. Maybe more interestingly is to compare the credit spreads observable and comparable in the market between investment grade and non-investment grade corporates versus SEB credit spreads.
What has happened lately is that the difference between what is observed in the market is increasing. Even though credit spreads for SEB, here measured as the CDS, the five-year, has gone up to roughly 60 basis points, this is way less than what we've experienced in the other market. This means that the credit curve, the difference between high credit quality and lower credit quality is steepening, which is of course a very positive development as the bank is more secure than the average of its clients, and that's what it's supposed to be in order to be an effective intermediary to channel capital from one part of society to another. Lastly, just to conclude, consumer confidence we've seen plummeting.
Here we also show business and producers' confidence, which is also declining, and I think it's prudent to assume that we are entering into some type of real economic weakness or recession in the coming year. Next page, please. In the quarter, when we look at the credit exposure in the bank, we increased quite significantly. The year-on-year number for corporate lending is up 25%, but importantly to note that we have had a huge beneficial effect from FX. This is not new borrowings, it's borrowings in foreign currency that has been translated into a higher number. Adjusted for FX, we're still at a healthy 11% growth with a 3% growth quarter-on-quarter FX adjusted, which would imply roughly 11%-12% also on a year-on-year pace annualized for the third quarter.
Here we can just state that this is predominantly not large new organic investments, but we've experienced a continuation of a higher utilization of existing credit lines, which we draw the conclusion is based on working capital need is increasing, both because supply chains are still not 100% solved and disrupted, as well as having a little bit more cash at hand for a rainy day. Both of these things amongst the corporates we bank have, of course, benefited us in this quarter. Very muted to no growth really on mortgages and in the real estate segments, commercial, residential, and housing co-ops. Next page, we're gonna have a sustainability event coming here on the fifteenth of November, but I'll just give you a small snapshot.
You might remember that we launched the SEB strategy of reducing the brown, increasing the green, and announcing a new transition measure, which we hope to come back to you soon. On the green, we have had a 64% increase in the last year of sustainable finance lending. A couple of examples are the EUR 11 billion facility for Daimler, Mercedes-Benz, which we were a lead arranger to changing into sustainability-linked loans, and also doing green bonds for Aker for financing in renewable projects. Today, we've also announced the more comparable number, which is the financed emissions according to the Net-Zero Banking Alliance.
You can see that, if you look to the press release, and we have here specified what our ambition are in mortgages, in reduction of CO₂ emissions for the steel industry, the car industry, oil and gas, and power and energy. To the next page, we have, of course, a very keen eye on all the customer satisfaction data that we can get a hold of. We've used this slide before to summarize how we view the main indices that come our way. Since we last met, there has been five new updates. We maintained the number one position in customer satisfaction within the fixed income community. We maintain our position within the corporates, the SMEs in the Swedish Quality Index, and we maintain it amongst private individuals, and we actually had a two-notch uptick when you compare us to all banks.
Here we compare ourselves with the larger incumbents, but also all banks in the survey. We had one notch downtick in the financial barometer, compared to last year to a second position, maintained the position as number four. Here in private banking, and here, of course, our ambition is to be a top three bank in the near future. My last thematic slide before I ask Masih to go into the financial is really just to highlight the long-term performance of SEB. I think in times like these, it's very easy to become short-sighted, and we are sitting here today reviewing the last 60 working days since we last met, and a lot of things have happened.
Looking from the nineties up until today, including all the financial stress that we have seen, macroeconomic weakness, recession, financial crisis, real estate implosion, PIIGS crisis, the Euro crisis, the COVID. I just wanna, you know, look up and say that this is a very stable type of business that we're in, and SEB is very stable within it. Over time, these things tend to be same. Now, risk management is key because this is the underlying operating performance measured at income and cost. The real risk is, of course, if you don't have capital liquidity. You wouldn't see here the early crises of the early nineties.
Here we see the very robust asset quality and that we have come a long way in the last decade to weather any storms when it comes to risk management and being stable for the future. Also on the financial performance, this is a very representative picture of how we see ourselves in the future. Operating leverage is that different times have different kind of strategies, but the outcome is still desired to be the same. Namely, that you have an income that is generated in excess of your cost, that it costs to run the business. Here we have the last 30 years, the last 10, and the last five.
You all know about the strategy that we launched last year, which is of course now starting to have somewhat more investing in the business in exchange to pursuing more opportunities, acquiring more clients, and therefore generating more income. Masih, over to you.
Thank you, Johan, and good morning, everyone. I'm on slide nine, looking at the financial summary year-to-date. Income has grown by 10% so far this year compared to the same period last year, and that's largely driven by a strong growth of 22% for net interest income. The cost level is up 7% compared to last year, and one should note here that on the income side, we have positive FX effects that has improved income by SEK 890 million compared to the same period last year. On the cost side, there's a negative FX effect of SEK 321 million. The profit for the bank is only up 4%, and that's largely due to the fact that we have reserved more for expected credit losses, even though the asset quality is pretty much unchanged here and now.
A large part of these reserves is based on a deteriorating macro outlook. The resolution fund fee has increased, and the bank tax has been introduced, which increases imposed levies. To move to the next slide and look at Q3, we can see here that income growth is a bit higher than the year-to-date numbers, 18%, and again, largely driven by net interest income, which is up 35%. Again, here we have higher net expected losses than Q3 last year and also higher imposed levies. Overall, the operating profit is up 14% versus Q3 last year. I move to the next slide, net interest income development, and just right away move to the slide after that to explain this development that we've seen, a 22% increase of NII.
Here on this slide, you can see the net interest income development as a bridge going from the year-to-date number last year of SEK 19.4 billion to the SEK 23.7 billion we report this year. Deposit margins have added SEK 1.9 billion and explains almost half of this improvement, but also a large part is coming from lending volumes. Here, the FX effect is embedded in all of these numbers. We also see a positive effect from the fixed income currencies and commodities business, and that's typically more short term in nature. It doesn't mean that this will go down already next quarter or any quarters in the future. It's just that in practice, this is more short term, and it's difficult to know to what extent it will be repeated.
You can also note here that we've had a negative effect from lending margins and predominantly from Swedish mortgages, where the margins on new mortgages today are almost half of what they were a year ago, and this is just starting to have an impact on the mortgage portfolio. If these kind of margins prevail, then over time you'll continue to see negative effects coming from mortgage margins going forward. There's a lot of discussions about net interest income sensitivity. In our view, most of the sensitivity is behind us. Looking forward, we think that most of the sensitivity will come from the fact that we have about SEK 200 billion in equity. With every 25 basis points of rate hikes, that should generate about half a billion of NII.
We have some transaction accounts where we don't expect to pay an interest rate going forward, at least not in the near term. If you add that to the SEK 500 million from 25 basis points on the equity base, that's another SEK 250 million. Overall, we think that for Swedish krona, the sensitivity going from here is about SEK 750 million per year per 25 basis points of higher rates. If you add euros to this, that's likely around EUR 250 million more. Overall, about SEK 1 billion in interest rate sensitivity, including all currencies. To move to the next slide and look at net fee and commission income. The year-to-date development, you can see here, is +6%.
This is to a large degree driven by a recovery in the card business, where we can see that the transaction amounts are higher than the pre-pandemic levels, both for corporate cards and private cards. We've also seen strong lending flows, lending fees this year compared to last year, to a large extent driven by the strong credit growth we've had in the corporate book, and of which some is event-driven. We've also seen good development in the custody and mutual fund business, even though valuations have come down. We've onboarded a large number of mandates in our sub-custody business, and typically when you onboard these mandates, initially they don't pay a fee, and then over time, they start to pay a fee.
In Q3 now, we have seen a full fee for the new mandates that we've onboarded, and this has offset some of the negative impact we've seen from valuations coming down. On the negative side, this year has so far been worse for investment banking business compared to the very strong results we saw last year, but still okay in the long-term perspective given that we've seen some resilience in the M&A business. Move to net financial income. This is down 13% compared to the same period last year. Last year was a very good year, and then we had a weaker Q2 this year. If you look at the underlying business, the FX business, the commodities business, and the fixed income business, we've seen a good development.
The high volatility in the market has led to a high demand for our services in this area. Adding to that, we've had positive valuation effects in treasury driven by rate hikes. We continue to guide for a level of between SEK 1.5 billion-SEK 1.7 billion excluding XVA effects and treasury. If we deep dive on our fixed income currencies and commodities business on the next slide from a long-term perspective, you can see here that it's been fairly stable over time. This is not just in the net financial income line. This is both in net interest income, net fee and commission income, as well as NFI. There was a negative trend here between 2012 and 2018 of a negative CAGR of 6% adding all of these different business lines.
We can now detect that there's been a positive trend from 2018 up until today of a 12% CAGR in the last four years. Whether this will continue or not is difficult to say, but we are hopeful that the fixed income business could have better terms of trade in this new environment where rates have gone up. Next slide, we'll look at the capital development. We started this quarter with a buffer of 480 basis points. That has now come down to 410 basis points. We continue to generate good profits net of dividends, but we've also deducted SEK 2.5 billion for share buybacks, as that is the approval we have from the Swedish FSA to do until the next AGM early April.
As Johan mentioned before, we've decided here and now to do quarterly share buybacks of half of that sum, or SEK 1.25 billion. Despite that, we've deducted the full SEK 2.5 billion from the capital base. Then we have some negative effects coming from credit volumes, FX, as well as market risk. Here, as always, obviously, one should note that all of these capital consumptions have long-term positive effects, both credit volumes as well as FX and market risk. The capital consumption is less than the profit we generate from these increases. There's a short-term negative effect, but if these things stay unchanged, it will be a long-term positive effect, and we'll generate more capital from these effects in the long term than we've sort of consumed in the short term. Next slide, a few key ratios.
I think the ones to note here is the deposit growth. We, for the second quarter in a row, we have more deposits than lending in the bank, so the loan deposit ratio is below one. The main reason for the leverage ratio coming down from year-end last year is the fact that we've generated a lot of deposits, which we place at central banks, so we have a lot of liquidity, and that reduces the leverage ratio as that is a very crude measure. Noting that funding and liquidity ratios are very stable and good. Finally, a reminder of our group financial targets, 50% dividend payout ratio as of GPS. We plan to over time have a capital buffer above the requirements of 100-300 basis points, and a return equity that's competitive with peers and a long-term aspiration of 15%.
As you see below there, when we have a capital buffer above 300 basis points, and our forecast is that it will continue to be above 300 basis points, share repurchases will be the main form of capital distribution. I think I'll stop there and we'll take questions.
This is the Chorus Call Conference operator. We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question is from Johan Ekblom of UBS. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Net interest income, I guess two components to it. Number one, on the corporate credit demand, you mentioned that it's mostly utilization of existing credit facilities. What do you see looking ahead? I mean, will that trend or is that trend sustainable? Will we see, you know, volume boosted by transition from bond financing to bank financing? Relate to that, maybe on the credit spread, if I look at your NII bridge, it looks like ex the mortgage side, credit spreads have widened somewhat in your book. Is that a trend we should expect to continue given the credit spreads you observe in the bond market that you highlighted? And then the second point, just on the cost side, I mean, you talk about higher cost growth in 2023 than what we've seen in recent years.
Now, recent years has been anything from flat to high single digits up. Can you elaborate a little bit on how much cost growth we should see in 2023, or at least help us with the building blocks of inflation and kind of incremental investment to give us a better idea there?
Okay. If I start on the corporate loan demand, I think it's fair to say the outlook does not look positive when it comes to large scale organic investments expanding your businesses. That's just how we draw the conclusion that we are expecting a recession, and we see that producer confidence is down. However, on the other side, as this is swings and roundabouts all the time, we do see that credit exposure is up, but lending is up more. It's not only that companies have been drawing more, it's the predominant driver of NII, that we don't make that much NII on committed unused facilities. There is definitely a demand for working capital, making sure you have the financial stability to enter into this winter and next year as much as you can.
We've also seen both real estate companies and other this quarter taking care of a lot of the maturities that are coming due in the bond market. A prudent financial treasury will definitely shoring up. I think those are kind of with swings and roundabouts. As long as uncertainty continues, this pattern is likely to prevail, not making any estimates. On the back of it's the bond to loans, which is also a factor, both for the ones that find that the price is very unattractive or that the depth of the bond market is shaky. Right now to have committed backup facilities for future redemptions or maturities, it's clearly something that people are looking at. Also that they will typically come to the banks and make sure that there are lending in place should this become bad.
That's, I guess, not a positive. It just means that we do less DCM business and more loan business, which was very clear this quarter also in the P&L, where the investment bank did less business than last year while the loan side did more. Masih, you wanna say a few words on cost?
Yeah, I'll do that. I'll try to be as concrete as possible. With the new strategy, we plan to invest more in our business. I don't think that's gonna change a lot going forward. If you recall, we ended 2021 with a cost base of SEK 23.2 billion, and we plan to have a cost base of SEK 24.5 billion this year, which is a SEK 1.3 billion increase. That was based on an environment where we thought that overall inflation would be around 3%, including everything, salaries, information services, everything we do as a bank. Obviously, looking forward, we can see that the inflation will be higher than that 3%.
We don't know exactly where it's gonna land in terms of salaries, but in some areas in the bank when it comes to energy costs, when it comes to rents on premises, when it comes to information services. Let's say a Bloomberg Terminal, which we prepay in dollars and where they're price-hiking the price by 10% in dollars, and then you convert that to Swedish krona, we're talking about a 30% increase. We know that inflation will be higher than what we have experienced during 2022. We will take more efficiency measures because of this higher inflation, but we don't think that we'll be able to fully offset that higher inflation with further efficiency measures. The guidance is really that you should expect a higher cost increase in 2023 than the SEK 1.3 billion that we planned for in 2022.
Exactly where this will end up, we haven't decided yet because we are recalibrating the business plan based on the different implications the new macro environment will have on business. We'll come back to that with the Q4 results to come up with a new nominal cost target for 2023. Thank you.
The next question is from Rickard Strand of Nordea. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. First the question on your progression in the Swedish mortgage space where you previously talked about some operational headwinds. Was just wondering if you could give an update on how that's progressing and when you expect to sort of catch up and grow more in line with the market.
Yeah. We have struggled also this quarter with some operational headwinds, particularly in the beginning. We got a report very recently that things are looking better. I'm talking mostly about the influx of incoming calls that we did not foresee when it comes to mortgage holders who wanna renegotiate and wanna check their rates. It's also related to the very high volatility in the market and the increase in interest rates, of course. Now in the last month or weeks, it looks much better. I'm expecting us to show some progress and be able to sit here and say something different than we do today in the next quarters.
If I just add there, I mean, the terms of trade on mortgages today is really, really bad. It's extremely high competition in the market and margins, as I said before, has halved compared to a year ago. The returns on a mortgage is extremely low today. With this kind of, sort of competitive level, it's fairly difficult. You have to run pretty fast just to stand still because there's a lot of competition in the market. What I'm trying to say with that is that, yeah, we have an ambition to not lose customers, and we plan to come back to our sort of more historical market share on mortgages. You wanna be patient, you wanna do this slowly, so you don't sort of deteriorate the terms of trade even further than what they have deteriorated already.
Thank you. Also, in previous quarters, you highlighted the potential of repricing of your corporate book in general, since spreads are widening in the market. Have you started to see any positive effects of that yet, or is that still to come in the coming quarters and years?
There is such a sense that it's happening, but don't overestimate it. It takes a long time, and the current prevailing market rates needs to be there for years, a year or so before you can really see the effect. It's definitely the case that the credit curve has deepened in the market, both on the bond market and on the lending market. Yes, it is in line with what we previously communicated.
Mm-hmm. Thank you. Just the last one on the commercial real estate. As you've highlighted in the presentation, you remain very cautious, at least looking at the volume development. Could you give us an update since your corporate book in general is growing that much, and I think you have a risk appetite of some 10% exposure towards commercial real estate. Should we expect that you start growing volumes within this space going forward, or would you remain cautious here?
We will remain cautious. It's not a strategy of ours now to increase because we have headroom in your relative multiple of 10%. However, we don't dictate this necessarily from the top only. We also have a lot of clients that depends on us. It's a little bit hard to say exactly where we will end up next quarter or in two quarters. It's very much dependent on the commercial real estate clients of ours that we've decided to support through quite difficult times. They're doing very fine right now, and I think the stress test that we showed last time we included it in appendix is kind of still intact. The only marginal positive is that a lot of the maturing bonds of 2023 has been taken care of. These companies have not been sleeping in the last quarter.
They really tried everything they can to shore up capital. That's a marginal positive when it comes to the refinancing risk, which was very prevalent last quarter.
Yep. Thank you.
The next question is from Magnus Andersson of ABG. Please go ahead.
Yes. Hi. Good morning. First of all, on NII, thanks very much for the NII bridge there on slide 12. I think we all would like to see that also on a quarter-on-quarter basis, going forward. On that topic, when I look at the fact book there at page nine, we see that the effect of deposit volumes and margins is up around SEK 2 billion quarter-on-quarter. I was just wondering whether you could break that down a bit into volumes and margins and also into SEK and euro respectively. I guess, for example, that there are some floor effects there in Q3 that will disappear in Q4 on your euro-denominated deposits.
Secondly, on NII, you talked about SEK 200-300 million in kind of short-term effects or positive FICC effects in Q2, whether that's still in NII or if it has even increased in this quarter. Finally, just on capital, should we expect kind of a normal run rate of SEK 1.25 billion per quarter also beyond Q1 in 2023, or will that be calibrated depending on what happens? Thanks.
Thanks, Magnus. On net interest income, the chart you're referring to in the fact book, just note that that is showing you the deposit margin from the division's perspective relative to treasury. It's not the external deposit margin the way you—I guess you look at it. If you note from the quarter, that treasury's net interest income is down half a billion . I would say that that chart is exaggerating the deposit margin effect that you see externally. Because the way the internal funds transfer pricing in the bank works is that we pay for deposits in the divisions based on the prevailing credit spreads and not the current sort of policy rates. Just note that as...
What I'm trying to say is that the positive effect from deposit margins are not as large as you see in that chart if you look at the external deposit margins. If the best sort of guidance for how much of this is in SEK and how much of this is in euros is just looking at the Baltic business, and the NII development in that business in the quarter. If you deduct that from its full amount, you'll get sort of the SEK amount. Obviously there is some effect within LC&FI when it comes to euros, but I would say that's pretty marginal. You get a sense of the sort of the split between Swedish krona and euros by looking at the Baltic division compared to the rest.
On the sort of short-term effects on net interest income, those were sort of twofold, partly fixed income and commodities to some degree. Then we had earlier this year some bridge financing that will be syndicated out during the year. When it comes to the fixed income or the FICC business in total, that has been pretty much flat quarter on quarter. To the extent that it was elevated in Q2, it is still elevated. We don't know whether that's the case or not because rates have gone up, and it's absolutely possible that the fixed income business we have will generate a higher net interest income also going forward. When it comes to the event financing and the bridges, there are a few that will be. They are planned to be syndicated out during Q4.
To the extent that those are generating some net interest income, that should come down, maybe not fully in Q4, but at least next year if these syndications happen. Yeah, I mean, net interest income, you have everything between sort of mortgages that are 30 years, and then you have fixed income papers that are one to three months. Some of them are short-term, and obviously other ones are long-term. Exactly how this will change going forward is difficult to say.
Yeah, there are some short-term effects in the current net interest income line.
On capital, we're not really guiding for what's gonna happen next year or the coming quarters in addition to what we have guided for before, i.e., if we have a capital buffer above 300 basis points and we project that it's gonna stay above 300 basis points, the main form of capital distribution will be share buybacks. Exactly at what pace they will be in, it's up to the Board, and they will decide on that later on. We've said that we plan to, by year-end 2024, be within our target range of 100 to 300 basis points of capital buffer above the regulatory requirements. So far this year, we have consumed about 160 basis points of the 570 we had when we started the year.
For now, the pace is actually fairly fast in terms of taking this buffer down to the target range. Now, some of that is consumed in the bank. It's not through dividends or share buybacks. That capital consumption we've had overall, both when it comes to credit volumes, FX, as well as market risk, has had a clearly higher return than what share buybacks would have. I think that's just important to say.
Okay. Thank you.
The next question is from Andreas Håkansson of Danske Bank. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Morning, everyone. Few questions, a bit of follow-up, starting with NII. Masih, you gave that sensitivity to 25 basis points in SEK and euro. Could you tell us these numbers, were those adjusted for the change in deposit betas and so on? This is what you would actually expect to come through on NII? We start there.
It's difficult to say what we expect. We think that the dynamics for deposits will probably change going forward. Initially, you've had fairly large effects as rates have moved from zero and then to positive territory. The higher they go, it's more likely that our customers in general will, to some extent, switch from on-demand deposits to term deposits. If that happens, that will have a negative sort of migration effect. Going forward, it's likely that the savings ratios, the saving rates on different deposit accounts will more closely follow the policy rates.
We are potentially on the conservative side saying that going forward, we only would assume that the net interest sensitivity would only be related to the equity we hold, where we obviously don't pay any interest rate, and the transaction accounts that we have in the bank, which will likely be at zero rates also going forward.
Yeah.
You can have a different view on that's obviously possible. Our view is that that's sort of the best base case scenario for future interest rate sensitivity.
Yeah. Perfect. Question back to mortgages, and I think I asked you the same question in Q2. You talk about this significant margin pressure. When I look at your funding structure, you have SEK 315 billion of covered bonds, and you have mortgage lending is within of some SEK 600 billion. Aren't you actually talking about margin pressure as if you would have been 100% wholesale funded? Or is this actually reflecting your true funding cost?
I think it's semantics to some degree. When we issue mortgages, the way the regulation works, we have to use about 70% of that funding through covered bonds and 30% through senior unsecured funding. Our blended funding cost is based on those two, senior unsecured and covered bonds. We treat deposit as a different product. You can blend in deposits if you like, and then mortgage margins would look different. If you do that, you can talk about deposit beta, because then you're mismatching two things through the math. If you look at our funding costs for covered bonds and senior unsecured funding, it has clearly gone up more than mortgage rates. That's why we say that we have margin pressure.
It's pretty clear you can see in the numbers that we've had SEK 350 million of negative impact from mortgages year to date versus last year. If margins stay where they are, this will over a couple of years time flow through the whole mortgage book, and that whole book will be repriced at about half of the back book margins. Then we're talking about SEK 2.5 billion of negative impact from mortgages just through margins. It is a clear negative margin effect on mortgages the way we look at it.
Yeah. Now I'm just blending the deposit beta in there. Wouldn't this also suggest that the competitors of yours that have basically no deposits but are much more reliant on wholesale funding is gonna have a much bigger problem competing than what you would have? Because you can take that pressure because you make money on the other side.
I don't wanna comment on competitors in general, but I would just say that the terms of trade for mortgages right now are really bad. There's a massive amount of competition. All banks have good capitalization, so they seem to be prepared to compete for mortgages. We've noted this very sharp decline on margins so far. That's just what we note. To what extent different banks can cope with that, we'll see. It's been more dramatic than maybe at least I could have expected.
Yeah. Finally, a bit more detailed question. I saw that your stage two commercial real estate loans actually moved up quite sharply in the quarter. I mean, it's starting from low numbers, but it's still quite sharply. But you didn't see any movement in stage two provisions for commercial real estate. Should we just assume that the PDs have moved up on changed assumption while there hasn't actually been any underlying change to your view on the risk, or how should I view that?
No, this is completely driven by macro updates. When our economists lower the GDP forecast and consumption forecast, you see this flow from stage one to stage two. If you look at the ECL number we report this quarter, almost half of that is driven by just a different view of the future macro. It has nothing to do with the underlying asset quality for any sector or any business here and now.
Yeah. Perfect. Thank you. That's it.
The next question is from Nicolas McBeath of DNB. Please go ahead.
Thank you. A few follow-ups. First, on NII sensitivity. It would be interesting if you could please share any additional insights you gained regarding your NII sensitivity over the past couple of quarters and where you think your assumptions were perhaps initially too conservative if we look at the actual outcome when it comes to the benefit from higher rates. Also if you could please comment on the competitive situation and margin trends for deposits from institutions, large corporates and SMEs, please.
Yeah. On your first question, I would say that, the sensitivity has been slightly higher than we expected, and that is generally coming from the corporate side, where we've seen some margin expansion on corporate deposits that we did not include or didn't expect to the same degree, in our previous interest rate sensitivity analysis. It's coming from the corporate side. On the second question?
On the competitive situation for deposits from institutions, large corporates and SMEs.
I think just what's very important here is that there's a lot of excess liquidity in the system. Quantitative tightening has just started, and in the Swedish market, there's about SEK 1,000 billion of excess liquidity, and this will have to land one way or the other on any bank's balance sheet. As long as that's the case, the competition for deposits, and this is typically deposits from corporates and typically financial institutions, competition will be less. With quantitative tightening, if you look at the Swedish Central Bank, they're likely to do about SEK 400 billion of quantitative tightening for the next couple of years. The competition for deposits will increase linearly with that quantitative tightening as liquidity is withdrawn from the market.
It is to some degree a sweet spot right now in the sense that there's a lot of excess liquidity and therefore less competition with deposits, but you should expect that to go up as liquidity in the system is taken out.
Given that, do you see a risk that this margin expansion on corporate deposit that was higher than you anticipated, that it could partly reverse over the next couple of years when tightening goes on?
I think in general, there will be a lot of different dynamics in the market that are very difficult to predict. I think it's just more likely that going forward, sensitivity will be reduced rather than it's gonna be reversed what we've seen so far. Again, it's gonna be very dynamic and therefore very difficult to sort of have any kind of guidance or view on what's gonna happen in the next couple of years.
A follow-up on CRE lending. Given that you find the sector healthy, and as you write in the presentation, you find the commercial real estate sector resilient in your book, at least to higher rates, should there not be an attractive opportunity for high risk-adjusted profitability in this sector, given these fundamentals?
Yeah.
Increased lending.
You could argue that way, but that's not how we think. The opportunistic side is definitely, nothing right or wrong. You could do that. There will most likely be some good, businesses to do, but we think more about what DNA this bank and institution is all about. Therefore, we have had a very explicit cap that we are not a real estate bank. We are a corporate bank defined as non-financial corporate, non-real estates. Therefore, we will be cautious. It's always, you have to weigh the opportunity risk-adjusted returns versus the DNA and what risk profile do you want. As I said previously, we'll still have a cautious base case, when we enter into the next year.
Okay, perfect. Thank you.
The next question is from Maria Semikhatova of Citibank. Please go ahead. Ms. Semikhatova, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you for the presentation. Couple of questions. First of all, on your NII sensitivity. Yes. Hello, can you hear me?
Yeah, we can hear you. It's a little bit of jumpy line.
Hello?
Go ahead. Can you hear us?
Okay.
Can you hear us, Maria?
Okay. Sorry for that. I'll try. Okay, great. The first question on NII sensitivity. Yes, I can.
I think we have a-
Okay. I can hear you. I will go ahead with my questions. First on NII sensitivity. Okay, I'll try to dial back.
Please do.
The next question is from Sofie Peterzens of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, here is Sofie from JP Morgan. My first question would just be a follow-up question. Could you just quantify the bridge financing net interest income contribution this quarter? My second question would be if you could also provide guidance for lower interest rates, considering that some of the macroeconomists in Sweden are calling for lower rates. My final question would be, could you just update us on your Russia-Ukraine exposures, where you're on the German tax case and if the U.S. information requests have been closed? Thank you.
Okay. Thanks, Sofie. I'll start. No, we can't quantify the bridge financing. The best guidance I can give is the SEK 200-300 million that we shared with you a couple of quarters ago, which is a combination of this FICC business and the bridge financing that we have. That's the best guidance I can give you. On lower interest rates, you should just assume that if rates are cut, you're gonna see a reversal of the trends you've seen so far. Instead of improving deposit margins and falling lending margins, it should probably just reverse and go the other way if that happens. Ukraine and Russia, there's no real change in the exposure compared to what we've said before. The Ukrainian business is very small, and the Russian business, we've said that we're gonna slowly wind that down.
It's gonna take a couple of years because we wanna do that in an orderly fashion with the customers we have there, which are just home country customers doing business in Russia. What we do is that we allow their deposits to be placed at us, and then we place them at the central bank. That's pretty much the business we have there. On the German tax case, there are no real developments during the quarter. What has happened, and you've probably seen that in the papers, there's been a few raids on different banks in Germany from the prosecutor that's running that business. These have been based on CumEx, nothing to do really with the sort of tax situation with what we have related to CumCum.
It's a heightened political sort of situation when it comes to CumEx, I would say, in Germany. On the legal front, which is what we are relying on, if anything, there's been some marginal movements in the positive direction during the quarter. If you look at a couple of the court cases, they are more in line with our reasoning that this business that we did was absolutely, completely legitimate and that the tax deductions we've had have been correct. This will again, probably take many years before it's settled in any direction. For now our estimate is that we're more likely than not to get this right and therefore we haven't provisioned against it. I think you asked about the AML. There are no news. There are
I don't think we've answered too many questions during the quarter, to be honest. To the extent that we've had questions, we just answered them and there's no real development there.
Thank you.
The next question is from Namita Samtani from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Hi, thanks for the questions. I've got three, please. Firstly, what are you paying on corporate deposits and what's the deposit beta there at present? The second question is on the Swedish mortgage market share with your earlier comments, are you saying we're not getting back to the top of market share by year-end? Lastly, how many clients have called asking for a pause in the amortization requirement on the back of the Swedish FSA's comments that customers should call banks if they're having troubles with their electricity bills? Thanks.
Yeah, I can start. On corporate deposits, most of our corporate deposits, these are bilateral discussions with different counterparties. There's no sort of one corporate deposit rate, especially when it comes to large corporate side. I can't give you a number on that. On the SME side, it's a bit different. It's not sort of bilateral to the same degree. But generally, corporate deposit rates have gone up pretty much similar to what you can see on our savings accounts, but it's gonna be different for different customers, depending on the relationship we have. But as I said before, deposit margins on the corporate side have increased probably less than we thought so far, and we relate that to some degree to the excess liquidity you have in the system.
On the mortgage market share, I would say that it's less likely now that we by year-end will be back to our historical market share of around 14%. The main reason for that is that competition has continued to heat up during the quarter. We wanna be patient in how we come back to that historical market share. We don't wanna lead to terms of trade deteriorating even further. We're working with a combination of our service, which has improved, clearly improved in recent months or so. The telephone line queues are down to a minute or so. That's a clear improvement. When it comes to price, there is a significant margin pressure, and we don't wanna do that much more, when it comes to that.
Therefore, this is probably gonna take a bit longer than we thought before. What was your last question, please?
How many called in for the amortization?
I don't know. Many people called based on that guidance from the Swedish FSA on that day when they gave that guidance, and I think it's been a bit calmer since. It is very difficult for us as a bank to sort of make any assessment of how much your electricity bill should have gone up for us to give you lower amortizations. It wasn't easy to handle that. Hopefully in the future, if there are any changes to that, there will be more sort of clear guidance on exactly how to act as a bank.
Thanks very much.
The next question is from Riccardo Rovere of Mediobanca. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking my questions, and good morning, everybody. I have a couple of follow-up. One again on NII, and the other one is on capital distribution. On NII, Masih, correct me if I'm wrong, in the number that you have mentioned today, roughly speaking, SEK 1 billion for 25 basis points, and again, correct me if I'm wrong, does not look that different from the one that you provided in previous occasions. I think it was SEK 1 billion, maybe SEK 1.2 billion. I don't exactly remember. When I look at slide 17, the customer deposits have moved from SEK 1.6 trillion to SEK 2.1 trillion. They are 30%, something like that. How can the number remain more or less the same? This is my first question.
Also considering the comments that you made on the fact that there is still liquidity in the system and so on, and in your bank too. The second question I have is on buyback capital return. Now, in this quarter, you generated SEK 7.3 billion. Divided by three, you generate SEK 2.3 billion per month. Take out 50% cash DPS, this is your policy more or less. You are left with 1.2, 1.3, whatever it is, which is exactly the amount of the buyback. So basically, in a month, you generate capital equal to your buyback in 30 days. Now, does it mean that you don't believe in this instrument anymore? Because clearly this amount will not bring you back anywhere, basically. On the other...
Have you been told by someone to move the buyback to quarterly one rate? Because the situation is what it is, we got more uncertainty, better to stay prudent, blah, blah, something like that, which would be understandable, by the way. I was just would love to hear what you think about it because this. Again, this is very small. It's 15 basis points. And still on that, how should we think about the original range of SEK 5 billion-SEK 10 billion? Does it still have any meaning or we should just forget it? Thanks.
Okay. Thank you for those good questions and funny to some degree. On the NII sensitivity, what we said before was a SEK 1 billion sensitivity only for Swedish krona. We're saying that now that that is likely to be lower of around SEK 750 million. We're adding the euro sensitivity, which is about EUR 250 million. The total number ends up similar to what we've said before, but now it's including all the currencies that we are sensitive to. This is not really a guidance. What I'm trying to say is that if you assume that the sensitivity only will be on the equity base we have and the transactions accounts we have, this is the number.
If you have a different view that we will have further sensitivity on other types of deposits, then obviously the number will be different. But that's sort of based on your own view, and we can't really say what's gonna happen with competition on deposits going forward because we're moving into new territory in the sense that rates are going up very quickly, and they're going up from being very low over a long period of time. We can't dictate how competition in the market will look like. We're just giving you a number based on the balance sheet we have, and then if you have a different number, then you should sort of rely on that number. On the buybacks and capital, I think it's clear that the uncertain macro outlook has an impact on what we do.
One of the reasons or maybe the main reason we move from a semi-annual to a quarterly share buyback program is that the macro outlook is more uncertain. That's clear to say. If you look at it so far this year, we have consumed 160 basis points of our capital buffer. If anything, we have consumed capital faster than the pace we need to have to be within our target range by the year end of 2024. The way we've consumed it is by growing our business. It is FX to some degree, but it's market risk, it's credit volumes. What I've tried to say it a couple of times is that that type of capital consumption creates more value for the shareholders than if this would only have been share buybacks.
As long as we can create value for the customers and the shareholders through growing our business, that's preferable for us rather than any share buybacks or dividends. As long as we can do this, it's better for everyone, really.
Just to be clear, organic growth comes first, buyback comes second, right?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Buyback is a by-product of not growing your business fast enough.
Very clear. Thank you. Very clear.
The next question is from Piers Brown of HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good morning. It's Piers Brown from HSBC. Just two sort of detail questions. First off, on mortgages, I think last quarter you said you gave a gross versus net number. I think you said you're doing about SEK 10 billion of gross mortgage origination per month. I wonder if you could just update on that number as how it stood in the third quarter. The second question is on ratings migration. I'm just looking at slide 16 here, but it appears you've had actually a positive move in risk exposures from credit quality in the third quarter, but obviously with a deteriorating macro outlook that you would expect would flip around. Just how you're thinking about the potential for negative ratings migrations to accelerate from here and how that may impact the capital buffer.
Thanks very much.
Yeah, thank you for that. The first question on mortgages, I think during Q3, we issued about SEK 15 billion of gross mortgages. Since the net number was 0, it means that we've had a loss of SEK 15 billion of mortgages through the transfer market, so people moving their mortgage from SEB to a different provider. We still have healthy levels of gross issuance of new mortgages. It's lower than it was previously, but that's because the whole market is slowing down quite rapidly as there are fewer transactions in the market. On the rating migration, you're right, asset quality has improved during the quarter, and that has reduced the risk exposure amount.
That is more driven, I would say, by the fact that the new volumes that we have issued has been at better ratings than the sort of back book volumes of the balance sheet. The sort of the impact of asset quality is it's both driven by potential rating migration combined with the new issuance we do and to what customers that is to, obviously with macro deteriorating, that should typically lead to negative rating migration. But it also depends on the new business, obviously. You should just note that, the main concerns may be right now is for real estate, both mortgages, commercial real estate and residential real estate. For all of those three, we have risk weight floors of 25% and 35%. If there is some rating migration for that type of exposure, it will not impact our capital buffers.
At least if they're not very, very large.
That's great. Thank you very much.
The next question is from Jacob Kruse of Autonomous Research. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Just two questions, I guess. Firstly, on the mortgage side, are you seeing any change in behavior? Are you seeing any shift from deposits to repaying mortgages to impact the flows there? Secondly, just on the same topic, you talked about the SEK 2.5 billion if the book reprices fully. What was the timeline there? If I look at the central bank data, it looks like around 75% of mortgages has an interest fixing period of less than two years. Is that the timeline or should I think about it more from this SEK 15 billion gross issuance perspective?
I guess my other question was just on the CRE stress test, the interest coverage ratio is dropping from 4.5 to two. What proportion of funding has been refinanced in that stress test? Is that the 2023 and 2024 maturities or what do you look at? Because you talk about the average cost going up by about 2%, which is obviously a lot less than the increase to STIBOR that you assume. Thank you.
Yeah, I can start and I'll take or do you want to take the CRE question. So on the mortgage side, we haven't really seen any sort of increases of amortizations so far, but I guess it's likely that could happen the higher the rates go. On a mortgage book, it's typically a two-year duration in terms of renegotiations. So if the current margins stay where they are, it will take a couple of years before that's fully repriced. Then the CRE question?
I'm not sure I completely understood it, but there is a lot of hedging going on. When we do the stress test, it's kind of assuming that you reduce the hedges, which is the interest rate you used to pay. We look at when the hedge falls off, and then you just use the 4% higher rate and put it assuming they could refinance it at 4% higher, which would then have been a tripling or so, or a doubling at least of the interest rates. Then you see what if you do change nothing, you don't increase rents, you do no positive sides, which is of course unreasonable to assume, but it's good for a stress test. How much is your interest cover?
If it's two, which we have in that the stress test, you have twice as much operating cash flow to pay the banks than you need. No one is below one on the top 20 exposures. I think it is what we have. I hope that answered the question.
Yeah. I guess my question is kind of when do you drop to two? Is that happening, like, if you just roll forward according to that scenario, at which point in time does the portfolio reach an ICR of two? I mean.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yes, it's on average. You will have some of them. If you would have 100% floating in the analysis, you would get there now, then you would have the interest cover. If you're later, you would be there. It's two and a half years on average, I think it is. When on average for the portfolio, it's two and a half, then some will be there, will feel the pain later because they have 10-year hedges on, and some will feel them faster because they have shorter maturities and shorter hedges.
Could I just ask, what would it mean for your risk classes in your credit scoring if people moved from on average 4.5 to 2.0?
I don't have the answer. I mean, it will be a negative as operating cash flow, which is the key. The most important thing will deteriorate as you have less of it. I might get back to you. I don't know the number.
Thank you.
The next question is from Maria Semikhatova of Citibank. Please go ahead.
Hello. Well, I apologize for the technical issue. I hope you can hear me. Two questions from my side. First, just wanted to clarify on your net interest income guidance from transaction accounts. In the fact book, I see that the share of transaction accounts for corporate and private customers decreased from 98% to 54% over the quarter. That would still suggest that your balances are around SEK 260 billion in this transaction accounts in Sweden, whereas your sensitivity implies around SEK 100 billion. Just wanted to check if there is any other assumptions embedded here. If you could give us some color, what percentage of the savings accounts are actually placed on term deposits with the much higher interest rates. Then the second part is on the cost outlook.
I understand that you will provide updated outlook with fourth quarter results, but with now three quarters out of this year, maybe you could just talk about the components of costs this year, how they fare relative to your plan. I believe that you were looking for investments of between SEK 800 million and SEK 900 million and efficiencies between SEK 400 million and SEK 600 million. If there are any changes from your initial assessment.
Yeah, thank you for that, Maria. On the first question, the transaction accounts we're including in that sensitivity are the ones related to private individuals, and that number is just below SEK 100 billion. So that's what I'm using. I think in the fact book, you're looking at transaction accounts maybe combined, corporate and private. I don't know exactly which number you're looking at. What we have in our transaction accounts from private individuals is just below SEK 100 billion. On the cost outlook, I mean, we haven't decided yet exactly what we will do. We are looking into the business plan right now and recalibrating the parts that we think should be recalibrated.
This is just an overall view of the future, which is in general terms, that we will continue to invest in our business, not too different to how much we're investing this year. We will do further efficiencies than what we have done this year because of the high inflation levels. We're just saying that the accelerated efficiency measures will not be enough to fully offset the much higher inflation level we have, and therefore you should expect a larger cost increase next year than what we've seen this year, for example. That's all we can say for now, and then we'll come back to this question in conjunction with our Q4 results.
I will also ask what you think about this year, as we have three quarters. Are we roughly on track or not?
Yeah, absolutely. We're roughly on track. As you can see, just take the three quarters, analyze that, you'll see that we're roughly on track. Q4 is typically seasonally higher in terms of cost. If you add that seasonality, you'll see that we're gonna end up, I think, very close to the guidance, which currently with current FX levels is SEK 24.9. We've had, we continue to have very good cost control in the bank.
Understood, very clear. I indeed looked at both, transaction accounts of corporates and individuals. I didn't know if you could give us a sense of how much of this, let's say, savings accounts are in term deposits, because I believe on savings, you're just paying 30 basis points, whereas on a fixed term, the rates are much higher.
Yeah. A very small proportion is on term deposits today. Given the fact that there's a large difference between the rate on term deposits and on-demand deposits, it is absolutely possible that you're gonna see some migration going forward from on-demand to term deposits.
You mentioned, just a quick follow-up, that you don't see any changes in customer behavior, but we've seen that there was a decline in customer deposits in corporate and private segment for the first time in many quarters. Maybe you could just give us some color if that's kind of corporate withdrawal, or you see a change in saving behavior among individuals.
I think the change is way too small for us to be able to draw any sort of long-term conclusions from that. Obviously, a big change compared to the last couple of years is that we've had quantitative easing, which has added liquidity to the market, and now we don't have that anymore. To the extent that that has led to deposits growing, that's not happening anymore. Maybe that's part of the explanation. We probably need to add a few quarters before we can draw any conclusions on whether people are using their deposits by offsetting some of the inflation in the market and consuming a bigger share of that.
Understood. Thank you very much.
The next question is from Nick Davey of BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Morning, everyone. Two questions, please. The first one, can I ask you just to talk a bit about the Baltics and the impact of 20%+ inflation at the moment? We've had questions already about, you know, people calling into the Swedish branches, struggling with electricity bills. I'm just wondering on some of the maybe longer-lasting impacts of this high level of inflation in the Baltics. I just don't see any impact of it on the P&L in a way other than the nice rate hike sensitivity. Either thinking about lending growth impacts, wage inflation, impairments, any thoughts gratefully received. Second question would be just following up on Jacob's questioning around the CRE stress test. Could you just help us with any more detail about things like the inflation indexed rental agreements?
Because when I look at the test, I know you put through 200 basis points higher costs by the end of next year, but presumably, if we have to think out three, four years ahead as the hedges roll off and looking at what credit spreads are doing, we could get the interest coverage ratio on that book down, I guess, quite dramatically. The moving part is around, I guess, the EBIT outlook. Just, is there any more comfort you can give us that we shouldn't be more worried into the future?
Yeah. Thank you. I'll start. On the Baltic situation, I would characterize it like this. The
The kind of terms of trade, the activity levels, taking care of your personal finance, the corporate, very similar to the other 19 or 17 countries we operate in. Activity is high. This is of course a benign environment in the sense that a bank is all in demand. That's a positive for the operational side. However, it's for very sad reasons that we have a geopolitical tension going up, and the Baltic is probably the area that feels Ukraine the closest. It's not a good situation. The wage inflation is the key question. We're now noting 21%-25% CPI, normal consumer price inflation in the Baltics, and the stress is very much felt. Why you don't see it in the P&L yet is because the salaries have not yet been adjusted.
We are entering into now in the coming months for the whole bank, how to compensate for where will negotiations with the union go. It's very, very clear, as Masih Yazdi have pointed out, that the inflation in the Consumer Price Index, it's twice as high in the producer price index will have some type of effect to protect people's disposable income. The pain, as you rightly point out, is much, much higher in the Baltic than it is in Sweden or any Western country. It's double. They are looking at 20%-25% inflation. In the kind of other part of the world we exist in it's closer to the 10% inflation. It will come. On CRE, this stress—I mean, all stress tests are really reluctant to show them because they are assuming so many things.
It's not guidance, it's not estimates, it's just playing around with the numbers. Though we don't have any of the rent increases in the stress test, and that is completely unreasonable, as close to 100% of the CRE book is inflation-linked, and that's consumer price inflation. Ironically, this stress test will certainly not play out in the next quarters as you will now see the rents going up by 10% and none of the pain from the increased interest rates will be felt on average yet. This is very, very different from liquidity risk for refinancing, so don't mix them up. This means that you have two-three years estimates on interest rates and credit spread that you need to assess where you end up in the stress test horizon end of next year.
Of course, it will begin with you get the income but not feeling the pain on average. Very different if you have a long-term debt portfolio, which is hedged versus a very high dependence on floating rates and low hedging. There will be definitely net a positive cash flow from here, which can of course be saved for future potential distress. Then you have to have an assumption on 2024, 2025 credit spreads and interest rates for the commercial real estate market. Of course, many people are now saying it's very difficult, including us, to know if this is gonna be a one-year tightening cycle of interest rates, although QT is probably likely to be longer term, and where will rates be then. That's if you want to have the optimistic side, that's probably it.
Not a prediction, just reasoning around it.
Okay, thank you.
Mr. Torgeby, there are no more questions registered at this time.
Okay. I'll thank everyone for participating today and look forward to seeing many of you in the coming weeks. Goodbye.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining. The conference is now over. You may disconnect your telephones. Thank you.