Swedbank AB (publ) (STO:SWED.A)
Sweden flag Sweden · Delayed Price · Currency is SEK
320.10
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At close: Apr 27, 2026
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Pre-close call

Mar 31, 2026

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Good morning. Welcome to Swedbank's Q1 2026 pre-close call. I'm Maria Caneman. I am head of investor relations here at Swedbank, and this will be an audio-only Teams call where you'll be able to unmute yourself during the Q&A session. We kindly ask you to remain muted unless you're about to ask a question, and we would like to start by informing you that this call is being recorded, and the script used for this call will be published on the investor relations website after the call. This call will focus on the events during the first quarter, relevant public data, macro trends in our markets, and we'll go through the macro indicators, P&L statement, and comment on capital. We would like to highlight that we, of course, only answer questions related to already disclosed information as well as public available data.

To start off, there are two days less in this quarter compared to the previous one, resulting in a negative impact on NII and NCI. Looking at average day count effects, it's around SEK 50 million per day on NII and SEK 20 million per day on NCI. On FX movements as of end of last week, that's March 27th, the Swedish krona had depreciated from end December versus the U.S. dollar and the euro. On average quarter to date compared to last quarter, the krona appreciated versus both the dollar and the euro, and for P&L, the average quarter-on-quarter development is the relevant number to track. The Riksbank policy rate was left unchanged at 1.75% during the quarter, and ECB kept its policy rate unchanged at 2%.

As of March 27th, on average, quarter to date compared to the fourth quarter, the three-month Stibor was 9 basis points higher, and the six-month Euribor had increased by 7 basis points. We've seen quite sharp increases towards the end of the quarter, where Stibor end of period was up 22 basis points and Euribor 40 basis points. On net interest income, reminding you that our CFO said in the Q4 results call that the Riksbank cut the policy rate effective as of October 1st, and ECB's latest rate cut was in June. By the end of the year, these policy rate changes were fully priced in. Hence, we should see the full quarterly NII effect of the rate cuts in the first quarter of 2026. Let's turn to Sweden first.

Mortgage list prices in Sweden on fixings one year or longer were lowered on February 17th by 15-20 basis points and raised on March 24th by 30-40 basis points. Furthermore, the mortgage list price on three-month fixings was raised on March 28th by 15 basis points. All this information can be found on our website, and I would like to encourage you to visit the website continuously as we show you most of our offering there, and that's where the most up-to-date information is located. Actual mortgage prices fell by 2 basis points on three-month fixings in the first two months of the quarter compared to a decrease of 11 basis points in the previous quarter. On deposits in Sweden, rates on six months and one year were raised on March 23rd by 20 basis points and 40 basis points respectively.

We pay 0% on transaction accounts as well as on e-savings accounts. Mortgage volumes and public statistics then. Swedbank's volumes in the first two months of the quarter, excluding savings banks volumes on our balance sheet, increased by SEK 2 billion or by 13.4% of the total market increase. Including savings banks, volumes grew by SEK 1.1 billion. Swedbank's total market share, excluding volumes by savings banks, was 18% at end of February. Savings banks volumes added another 3.6 percentage points. The acquisition of Stabelo added around SEK 17 billion of mortgage loans when incorporated and, in conjunction with the first quarter report, we will report and comment more on the developments during the quarter as Stabelo is not yet included in the monthly public statistics.

On the corporate lending for January and February, Swedbank's volumes grew by SEK 3.3 billion or by 13.4% of the total market growth. Swedbank's market share was 15% at the end of February. Retail deposits in Sweden grew in January and February by SEK 13 billion, and Swedbank accounted for SEK 6.2 billion of this, corresponding to 46.1% of the market growth. Corporate deposits in Sweden in January and February decreased by SEK 21 billion, of which SEK 13 billion in Swedbank. As of February, Swedbank's market share amounted to 18% for retail deposits and 13% for corporate deposits. Now turning to the Baltics. According to ECB data, total lending in January in the Baltics increased by 13.7% year-on-year, private lending by 12.7%, and corporate lending by 14.8%.

Total deposits in the Baltics in January increased by 8.3% year-on-year. Private deposits grew by 9.3% and corporate deposits by 7.1%. Regarding retail deposit rates as of March 27th, we paid 0% in interest on transaction and Easy Saver accounts, unchanged from the previous quarter. The rates on all other accounts were kept unchanged compared to the end of the fourth quarter, except for 5-25 basis point reduction of fixed between three months and six months in Latvia and Estonia, and a 20 basis points increase on fixed longer than 12 months in Estonia. Moving on to net commission income, first of all, a kind reminder that asset management commissions are generated by daily fees.

Looking at average volumes of the stock market development which impact our asset management fees, up to March 27th, and this is compared to the averages of the fourth quarter, the Swedish stock market increased by 9.6%. In the U.S. market, 0.8% increase, and European stock markets increased by 5.8%. Also a reminder about the FX component, where the Swedish krona by March 27th had appreciated versus the U.S. dollar on average compared to the fourth quarter, and this should of course be considered when translating the U.S. stock market changes. According to statistics from the Swedish Investment Fund Association, the Swedish mutual fund market had net inflows during January and February of approximately SEK 15 billion, compared to an inflow of approximately SEK 80 billion in the fourth quarter.

There were outflows in actively managed equity funds, while index funds and fixed income funds saw inflows. Swedbank Robur market share was 21.4% at the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, sorry. Regarding card commissions, in addition to the negative day count effect, card activity in the first quarter is normally seasonally lower than in the fourth quarter. Let me just remind you that our CFO pointed out in connection with the fourth quarter results that commission expenses are impacted by the large investments needed to transform the Swedish payment system. Moving on to expenses. As communicated in Q4, 2026 cost guidance is around SEK 27.5 billion, based on the exchange rate of 10.6 Swedish krona over euro.

Please keep in mind the seasonal decline that we normally see in Q1 and the full quarter impact from the consolidation of Stabelo and Entercard. Furthermore, of course, that we received VAT recoveries of SEK 963 million for the years 2019 to 2023. Those were received in the fourth quarter. Bank taxes in Sweden, the government decided on a base deduction as of 2026 to the bank tax while delivering the same tax revenues, so the tax rate is therefore raised to 7 basis points in 2026. Then there is the SEK 6 billion Riksbank reserve requirement for which interest is not paid. That cost up until June 2026, SEK 71 million has been taken in full upfront in the fourth quarter of 2025 and as a bank tax.

In Latvia, we are into the second year of a three-year with the tax on NII, while Lithuania, the previous year's NII tax, which ran from 2023 to 2025, has been abolished and is no longer in place in 2026. On asset quality at the end of the fourth quarter, the post-model adjustment stood at SEK 131 million following the release of SEK 228 million, reminding you that the acquisition of Entercard added SEK 354 million as a day one effect on Swedbank Stage 1 credit impairment provisions. Credit impairments excluding Entercard was net reversals of SEK 60 million. Lastly, on capital, the balance sheet is affected by end-of-period FX rates, mainly via risk-weighted assets from the Baltics which are denominated in euro. As mentioned earlier, by March 27th, the SEK had weakened somewhat versus the euro.

That was all for the pre-close call. I'll pause for a moment to see if there are any question, and if so, please raise your virtual hand. Let's see, we have a question from Magnus Andersson here. I will allow you to unmute. You should be able to unmute now, Magnus.

Magnus Andersson
Head of Research, ABG Sundal Collier

Yes. Hi. Just on Entercard, will you book a restructuring charge now in Q1 when you will present your plans for that business? Secondly, will you already now account for the consumer finance portfolio as discontinued operations now in Q1?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

We will come back. That's why I've said we will come back now in Q1 with an update on that and come back with the integration cost for Entercard. We have not mentioned anything further other than that we have decided to initiate a sale of the consumer portfolio. We will be back in Q1.

Magnus Andersson
Head of Research, ABG Sundal Collier

I think you said you would account for it as available for sale, which would mean that you take it.

As discontinued operations in the P&L, I guess, from Q1. Could it be for later on in the year?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Yes, exactly. We've said that we are initiating that process, so it will be discontinued, but we will update on the timing of these things in the Q1 report.

Magnus Andersson
Head of Research, ABG Sundal Collier

Yeah. Okay. Secondly, just in... You mentioned in Latvia you lowered deposit rates on three- and six-month fixed rates. Have you received any reactions on that, considering that your Euribor is up?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

No, nothing in particular that we could say something about at this point.

Magnus Andersson
Head of Research, ABG Sundal Collier

Okay. Thank you.

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Thank you. Let's move on to Sofie. You're next.

Sofie Peterzens
Executive Director, Goldman Sachs

Thanks a lot for taking my question. Quick one. On the VAT refunds, do we have any visibility if we will get more VAT refunds in Q1, or we should expect assume no VAT refunds this quarter?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Well, now we have received all the years, so it's only the, you know, kind of ongoing, and we have not said anything further. It is about submitting that and then receiving an answer for that. Therefore, it's fair to not assume that this will continue. Of course we have the year 2020, 2024 still, but that we have not commented on.

Sofie Peterzens
Executive Director, Goldman Sachs

Kind of, we should assume no VAT refund in Q1?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

I mean, yes, exactly. We have communicated all the ones that we have received. We will let you know when the last one gets submitted, but we are not yet there.

Sofie Peterzens
Executive Director, Goldman Sachs

The Lithuania banking tax that has been abolished, could you just remind us how much it was in Q4?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Let's see if I have the Q4 number for Lithuania in front of me here. In Q4 we had 163.

Sofie Peterzens
Executive Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. My final question. You mentioned on the commission expenses that they are impacted by higher costs to reform the payment system in Sweden. How should we think about this commission expense? And is it just a Q1 impact, or should we expect the impact to continue throughout 2026?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

No, the way we spoke about it in the fourth quarter is because you've seen the increase during 2025. There was a difference between if you look at the beginning of 2025 and if you look at the end of 2025, so it's more that the run rate has now come up and is higher. If you are to compare to Q1 last year, you will see a difference. I think that was the point that our CFO wanted to make, that this is a higher run rate.

Sofie Peterzens
Executive Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. That's very clear. Thank you.

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Thank you. Let's move on to Andreas.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Yeah, thanks. First question on your rate sensitivity. I mean, we have a situation where the market rates are moving sharply, but policy rates haven't moved at all yet. Could you tell us your different NII in Sweden and the Baltics, how big portion of the sensitivity come from market rates compared to policy rates? That's my first question.

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Good question. I might have to maybe come back to you on that one. I mean, we have the rate sensitivity as we usually present it in the fact book and, where you see the different components are. Of course, policy rates are a big part of that. Depends on how you look at it. Maybe it will be a good timing for us to come back to that in the Q1 report as we now are. We were hoping to be in a place with more stable rates, but we're now back to more volatility in the rate cycle.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Okay. Yeah. Let's please go into that in the Q1 call. On Entercard, if you now move it to available for sale, should we already now make an assumption of the different P&L lines that falls out? If we had it one month in December, and now it should be nothing into the P&L, then is that now one line accounted or how should we look at that?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

I think it's fair to say that we will come back with as much detail as possible on that in the Q1 result to be as helpful as possible.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Yeah

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

because so far it's been quite limited information from Entercard side on these different portfolios.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Sure, Maria, but you can imagine, I mean, if you're selling SEK 10 billion-SEK 15 billion of loans, and if you're gonna not include NII in the NII line, your consensus number is gonna be all over the place. I think it's quite helpful if maybe not in this call, but you let us know before estimates are set if it's gonna be on NII on other lines. Otherwise you might be apt to miss quite significantly.

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Absolutely. We'll try to be as helpful as possible on that.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Thanks. Just back to the resolution and bank taxes in Latvia and Lithuania. I mean, the bank tax in Latvia in Q4 was zero, right?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Yes, correct.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

That's not coming back now, or what did you say that Latvia is on the second year, you said, but if it's zero, is it gonna go back up again, while Lithuania is of course continue to be at a high level?

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Yes, exactly. The Latvia still has it for one more year.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Why was it then zero in-

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Because there are these effects where you have to precalculate it, and then there are these discounts that you can reach where if you reach a certain volume, you get a discount. That means that it was adjusted to zero in the last quarter. You probably need to look at an average for the year rather than-

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Okay

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

an individual quarter. These are things.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Okay

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

We can't count on because we're not steering on that. We're not trying to reach a certain bucket of volume in this calculation. As it happened, we did, and then we got the discount at the end of the year.

Andreas Håkansson
Senior Analyst, Danske Bank

Okay. That's it. Thank you.

Maria Caneman
Head of Investor Relations, Swedbank

Thank you very much. Let's see if we have another question. It doesn't seem like it, but we remain available, for yet, sometime after Easter as well as we go into silent period on April 13th, and our Q1 report will be released Wednesday, April 29th. Thank you so much for attending the call, and we wish you all a nice day.

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