Cyprus Mail
Banking and FinanceBusinessCyprus Business NewsInternational

UK banks hold £200bn in new deposits; lending remains slow

uk bank chart

Full-year earnings reported by HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds and NatWest last month revealed the extent to which lenders’ finances have been upended by the crisis.

The banks now face a glut in savings, a Reuters analysis of the banks’ results show, as domestic customers of the four lenders deposited £221 billion of extra cash.

By contrast, despite banks doling out billions of pounds of state-guaranteed finance to companies since the pandemic hit, their net lending growth in the UK overall was £53.4 billion – a quarter of the growth in deposits.

The more limited lending growth can be explained by a fall in appetite for some lending, particularly consumer credit, where separate Bank of England data has shown Britons paid back £13.8 billion in the last year.

More deposits help shore up bank finances, but are not necessarily good news for lenders when central bank interest rates are near zero, making it hard to lend profitably.

That explains the heavy focus on wealth management in banks’ strategy updates last month, as they race to earn more from fees to compensate for low lending margins.

Banks have said they expect a customer spending splurge as Britain comes out of its latest lockdown in the coming months, which may go some way to eating into the deposits pile.

The bulk of UK bank profits are made on the difference between the interest gained on lending and paid out on deposits.

The crunch in consumer credit therefore severely dented lender income, compounded by the fact the Bank of England cut benchmark rates to an all-time low of 0.1 per cent.

This double whammy can be seen in sharp drops in income at the two domestically-focused banks – NatWest and Lloyds – where income fell 24 per cent and 16 per cent respectively last year.

The fall was a more modest 10 per cent at HSBC, which benefited from a more international footprint and exposure to markets in Asia that proved more resilient over the year.

Barclays bucked the trend entirely, with income overall edging up 1 per cent thanks to a stellar year for its investment bank in pandemic-driven volatile markets that offset woes in retail.

The big unknown for the banks remains how severe a hit the crisis will deal to their loan books, once government stimulus packages to support consumers and businesses are phased out.

The four banks have set aside nearly £19 billion worth of provisions between them for loans expected to go bad due to the crisis.

These provisions were largely front-loaded in 2020, with the bulk taken in the first half of the year – as lenders are required to book ahead of time under forward-looking accounting rules known as IFRS9.

Despite the torrid economic backdrop, the provisions in the last two quarters were back to pre-crisis levels at at least some of the banks – a reflection of the impact of ongoing government stimulus.

Britain’s Finance Minister Rishi Sunak is expected to extend support again on Wednesday when he lays out his annual budget plan that is expected to pile more borrowing on top of almost £300 billion of Covid-19 spending and tax cuts.

Banks know there is a great deal of delayed pain to come and it is unclear whether their provisioning to date is sufficient.

Solving this conundrum will be key to jump-starting British banks’ share prices, which have languished in recent years over fears about Brexit and near-constant restructuring that has crimped profits.

Optimism over vaccine rollouts has seen the lenders’ shares climb back towards pre-pandemic levels since the autumn, but that still leaves them near 12-year lows.

Follow the Cyprus Mail on Google News

Related Posts

‘Cyprus is a reliable business centre’

Tom Cleaver

Guidelines for logo size: What is the best logo size for social media and websites?

CM Guest Columnist

Verbex Group Review: 5 trading tips for first-time Forex Traders [verbexg.com]

CM Guest Columnist

Cyprus Business Now

Kyriacos Nicolaou

Tesla’s plan for affordable cars takes page from Detroit rivals

Reuters News Service

War and peace on the brink

Ioannis Tirkides