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[6-K] NatWest Group plc Current Report (Foreign Issuer)

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NatWest Group (NWG) reported strong Q3 2025 results, with total income of £4,332m and income excluding notable items of £4,166m. Attributable profit was £1,598m and Return on Tangible Equity reached 22.3% as net interest margin improved to 2.37%.

Lending grew across businesses, with net loans to customers up £4.4bn excluding central items, while customer deposits decreased modestly by £1.1bn. Liquidity remained robust with an average LCR of 148%, and AUMA rose 8.1% to £56.0bn. Year‑to‑date, the cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) improved to 47.8% from 52.8%.

Capital was solid: CET1 ratio increased to 14.2%, supported by £2.2bn of RWA management actions in the quarter; TNAV per share rose to 362p. The net impairment charge was £153m. Management upgraded 2025 guidance to income excluding notable items of around £16.3bn and RoTE of greater than 18.0%.

NatWest Group (NWG) ha riportato solidi risultati nel terzo trimestre 2025, con un reddito totale di 4.332 milioni di sterline e un reddito esclusi elementi rilevanti di 4.166 milioni. L’utile imputabile è stato di 1.598 milioni e il Return on Tangible Equity ha raggiunto il 22,3% poiché il margine di interesse netto è migliorato al 2,37%.

I prestiti sono cresciuti tra le attività, con i prestiti netti alla clientela in aumento di 4,4 miliardi escludendo elementi centrali, mentre i depositi dei clienti sono diminuiti modestamente di 1,1 miliardo. La liquidità è rimasta solida con un LCR medio del 148%, e AUMA è aumentato dell'8,1% a 56,0 miliardi. Da inizio anno, il rapporto costi/ricavi (esclusi contenziosi e condotta) è migliorato al 47,8% dal 52,8%.

Il capitale è stato solido: il CET1 è salito al 14,2%, sostenuto da azioni di gestione del RWA per 2,2 miliardi nel trimestre; TNAV per azione è cresciuto a 362p. Il costo netto delle impairment è stato di 153 milioni. La direzione ha rivisto le previsioni per il 2025 a reddito esclusi elementi rilevanti di circa 16,3 miliardi e RoTE superiore al 18,0%.

NatWest Group (NWG) informó de sólidos resultados en el tercer trimestre de 2025, con ingresos totales de 4.332 millones de libras y ingresos excluidos de elementos notables de 4.166 millones. El beneficio atribuible fue de 1.598 millones y el retorno sobre el patrimonio tangible alcanzó el 22,3% mientras que el margen neto de interés mejoró al 2,37%.

El crédito creció en todos los negocios, con préstamos netos a clientes de un aumento de 4,4 mil millones excluyendo elementos centrales, mientras que los depósitos de los clientes disminuyeron ligeramente en 1,1 mil millones. La liquidez se mantuvo robusta con un LCR medio del 148%, y AUMA subió un 8,1% a 56,0 mil millones. En lo que va del año, la relación gasto/ingreso (excluyendo litigios y conducta) mejoró al 47,8% desde el 52,8%.

El capital fue sólido: la ratio CET1 se incrementó al 14,2%, respaldada por acciones de gestión de RWA por 2,2 mil millones en el trimestre; el TNAV por acción subió a 362p. El beneficio neto por deterioros fue de 153 millones. La dirección elevó la guía de 2025 a ingresos excluidos de elementos notables de alrededor de 16,3 mil millones y RoTE superior al 18,0%.

NatWest Group(NWG)는 2025년 3분기 실적이 강세를 보였습니다, 총수익이 4,332백만 파운드, 주목할 만한 항목을 제외한 수익은 4,166백만 파운드였습니다. 귀속 이익은 1,598백만 파운드였고, 유형자산수익률(Return on Tangible Equity)은 22.3%에 도달했으며 순이자마진은 2.37%로 개선되었습니다.

대출은 사업 전반에서 성장했고, 중앙 항목을 제외한 고객 대출 순액은 44억 파운드 증가했습니다. 한편 고객 예금은 11억 파운드 소폭 감소했습니다. 유동성은 평균 LCR 148%로 견고했고, AUMA는 56.0억 파운드로 8.1% 상승했습니다. 연초 이후 비용대수익률(Cost:income ratio, 소송 및 행위 제외)은 52.8%에서 47.8%로 개선되었습니다.

자본은 견실했다: CET1 비율은 14.2%로 상승했고 분기 중 RWA 관리 조치로 22억 파운드의 지지가 있었습니다; 주당 TNAV는 362펜으로 상승했습니다. 순손실 충당액은 1.53억 파운드였습니다. 경영진은 2025년 전망치를 주목할 만한 항목 제외 수익 약 16.3억 파운드와 RoTE 18.0% 이상으로 상향했습니다.

NatWest Group (NWG) a affiché des résultats solides au T3 2025, avec un revenu total de 4 332 millions de livres et un revenu hors éléments notables de 4 166 millions. Le bénéfice attribuable était de 1 598 millions et le RoTE a atteint 22,3% tandis que la marge d'intérêt nette s'est améliorée à 2,37%.

Les crédits ont progressé dans les activités, avec des prêts nets aux clients en hausse de 4,4 milliards hors éléments centraux, tandis que les dépôts des clients ont diminué modestement de 1,1 milliard. La liquidité est restée solide avec un LCR moyen de 148%, et l'AUMA a augmenté de 8,1% pour atteindre 56,0 milliards. Depuis le début de l'année, le ratio coût/revenu (hors litiges et conduite) s'est amélioré à 47,8% contre 52,8%.

Le capital était solide: le ratio CET1 a augmenté à 14,2%, soutenu par des actions de gestion du RWA pour 2,2 milliards au cours du trimestre; le TNAV par action est monté à 362p. La charge nette d'imparité était de 153 millions. La direction a relevé les prévisions 2025 à un revenu hors éléments notables d'environ 16,3 milliards et RoTE supérieur à 18,0%.

NatWest Group (NWG) meldete starke Ergebnisse im dritten Quartal 2025, mit einem Gesamtumsatz von 4.332 Mio. £ und einem Umsatz ohne wesentliche Posten von 4.166 Mio. £. Der zuzuordnende Gewinn betrug 1.598 Mio. £ und die Rendite auf das gebildete Eigenkapital erreichte 22,3%, während sich die Nettozinsmarge auf 2,37% verbesserte.

Die Vergaben wuchsen branchenübergreifend, mit Netto-Kundendarlehen um 4,4 Mrd. £ außerhalb zentraler Posten, während die Kundeneinlagen moderat um 1,1 Mrd. £ sanken. Die Liquidität blieb robust mit einem durchschnittlichen LCR von 148% und AUMA stieg um 8,1% auf 56,0 Mrd. £. Year-to-Date hat sich das Kosten-Einkommens-Verhältnis (ohne Rechtsstreitigkeiten und Verhalten) auf 47,8% von 52,8% verbessert.

Kapital war solide: Die CET1-Quote stieg auf 14,2%, gestützt durch RWA-Managementmaßnahmen im Quartal über 2,2 Mrd. £; TNAV pro Aktie stieg auf 362p. Die Nettorückstellungsbelastung betrug 153 Mio. £. Die Geschäftsführung hob die Guidance für 2025 auf einen Umsatz ohne wesentliche Posten von rund 16,3 Mrd. £ und RoTE >18,0% an.

مجموعة NatWest (NWG) أبلغت عن نتائج قوية في الربع الثالث من 2025، بإجمالي إيرادات قدره 4.332 مليون جنيه إسترليني وإيرادات باستثناء العناصر الملحوظة قدرها 4.166 مليون. كان الربح القابل للتحويل 1.598 مليون جنيه ورجع العائد على حقوق الملكية الملموسة إلى 22,3% مع تحسن هامش الفائدة الصافي إلى 2,37%.

نما القروض عبر الأعمال، مع زيادة القروض الصافية للعملاء بمقدار 4,4 مليار جنيه باستثناء العناصر المركزية، بينما انخفضت ودائع العملاء بشكل طفيف بمقدار 1,1 مليار. ظلت السيولة قوية مع معدل تغطية السيولة المتوسط 148%، وارتفع AUMA بنسبة 8,1% إلى 56,0 مليار. حتى تاريخ السنة، تحسن نسبة التكلفة إلى الدخل (باستثناء النزاعات والسلوك) إلى 47,8% من 52,8%.

كان رأس المال قوياً: ارتفعت نسبة CET1 إلى 14,2%، مدعومة بإجراءات إدارة مخاطر الأصول بقيمة 2,2 مليار في الربع؛ وارتفع TNAV للسهم إلى 362 بنس. بلغت تكلفة الصافي للأدوات impairment 153 مليون جنيه. رفعت الإدارة التوجيه لعام 2025 لإيرادات باستثناء العناصر الملحوظة نحو 16,3 مليار وروتي أعلى من 18,0%.

Positive
  • Guidance raised for 2025: income excluding notable items around £16.3bn and RoTE greater than 18.0%.
Negative
  • None.

Insights

Strong quarter, higher 2025 guidance, and capital headroom.

NatWest Group posted Q3 income of £4,332m and RoTE of 22.3%, with NIM up to 2.37%. Lending expanded by £4.4bn excluding central items, while deposits dipped slightly. The cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) improved to 47.8% YTD, indicating efficiency gains.

Capital metrics strengthened: CET1 rose to 14.2%, aided by £2.2bn of RWA actions, and TNAV per share increased to 362p. Liquidity stayed strong with average LCR at 148%. The impairment charge was £153m, consistent with stable ECL coverage at 0.87%.

Management upgraded 2025 guidance to income excluding notable items of around £16.3bn and RoTE > 18.0%. Execution depends on deposit margins, credit trends, and balance sheet mix; subsequent filings may refine these outcomes.

NatWest Group (NWG) ha riportato solidi risultati nel terzo trimestre 2025, con un reddito totale di 4.332 milioni di sterline e un reddito esclusi elementi rilevanti di 4.166 milioni. L’utile imputabile è stato di 1.598 milioni e il Return on Tangible Equity ha raggiunto il 22,3% poiché il margine di interesse netto è migliorato al 2,37%.

I prestiti sono cresciuti tra le attività, con i prestiti netti alla clientela in aumento di 4,4 miliardi escludendo elementi centrali, mentre i depositi dei clienti sono diminuiti modestamente di 1,1 miliardo. La liquidità è rimasta solida con un LCR medio del 148%, e AUMA è aumentato dell'8,1% a 56,0 miliardi. Da inizio anno, il rapporto costi/ricavi (esclusi contenziosi e condotta) è migliorato al 47,8% dal 52,8%.

Il capitale è stato solido: il CET1 è salito al 14,2%, sostenuto da azioni di gestione del RWA per 2,2 miliardi nel trimestre; TNAV per azione è cresciuto a 362p. Il costo netto delle impairment è stato di 153 milioni. La direzione ha rivisto le previsioni per il 2025 a reddito esclusi elementi rilevanti di circa 16,3 miliardi e RoTE superiore al 18,0%.

NatWest Group (NWG) informó de sólidos resultados en el tercer trimestre de 2025, con ingresos totales de 4.332 millones de libras y ingresos excluidos de elementos notables de 4.166 millones. El beneficio atribuible fue de 1.598 millones y el retorno sobre el patrimonio tangible alcanzó el 22,3% mientras que el margen neto de interés mejoró al 2,37%.

El crédito creció en todos los negocios, con préstamos netos a clientes de un aumento de 4,4 mil millones excluyendo elementos centrales, mientras que los depósitos de los clientes disminuyeron ligeramente en 1,1 mil millones. La liquidez se mantuvo robusta con un LCR medio del 148%, y AUMA subió un 8,1% a 56,0 mil millones. En lo que va del año, la relación gasto/ingreso (excluyendo litigios y conducta) mejoró al 47,8% desde el 52,8%.

El capital fue sólido: la ratio CET1 se incrementó al 14,2%, respaldada por acciones de gestión de RWA por 2,2 mil millones en el trimestre; el TNAV por acción subió a 362p. El beneficio neto por deterioros fue de 153 millones. La dirección elevó la guía de 2025 a ingresos excluidos de elementos notables de alrededor de 16,3 mil millones y RoTE superior al 18,0%.

NatWest Group(NWG)는 2025년 3분기 실적이 강세를 보였습니다, 총수익이 4,332백만 파운드, 주목할 만한 항목을 제외한 수익은 4,166백만 파운드였습니다. 귀속 이익은 1,598백만 파운드였고, 유형자산수익률(Return on Tangible Equity)은 22.3%에 도달했으며 순이자마진은 2.37%로 개선되었습니다.

대출은 사업 전반에서 성장했고, 중앙 항목을 제외한 고객 대출 순액은 44억 파운드 증가했습니다. 한편 고객 예금은 11억 파운드 소폭 감소했습니다. 유동성은 평균 LCR 148%로 견고했고, AUMA는 56.0억 파운드로 8.1% 상승했습니다. 연초 이후 비용대수익률(Cost:income ratio, 소송 및 행위 제외)은 52.8%에서 47.8%로 개선되었습니다.

자본은 견실했다: CET1 비율은 14.2%로 상승했고 분기 중 RWA 관리 조치로 22억 파운드의 지지가 있었습니다; 주당 TNAV는 362펜으로 상승했습니다. 순손실 충당액은 1.53억 파운드였습니다. 경영진은 2025년 전망치를 주목할 만한 항목 제외 수익 약 16.3억 파운드와 RoTE 18.0% 이상으로 상향했습니다.

NatWest Group (NWG) a affiché des résultats solides au T3 2025, avec un revenu total de 4 332 millions de livres et un revenu hors éléments notables de 4 166 millions. Le bénéfice attribuable était de 1 598 millions et le RoTE a atteint 22,3% tandis que la marge d'intérêt nette s'est améliorée à 2,37%.

Les crédits ont progressé dans les activités, avec des prêts nets aux clients en hausse de 4,4 milliards hors éléments centraux, tandis que les dépôts des clients ont diminué modestement de 1,1 milliard. La liquidité est restée solide avec un LCR moyen de 148%, et l'AUMA a augmenté de 8,1% pour atteindre 56,0 milliards. Depuis le début de l'année, le ratio coût/revenu (hors litiges et conduite) s'est amélioré à 47,8% contre 52,8%.

Le capital était solide: le ratio CET1 a augmenté à 14,2%, soutenu par des actions de gestion du RWA pour 2,2 milliards au cours du trimestre; le TNAV par action est monté à 362p. La charge nette d'imparité était de 153 millions. La direction a relevé les prévisions 2025 à un revenu hors éléments notables d'environ 16,3 milliards et RoTE supérieur à 18,0%.

NatWest Group (NWG) meldete starke Ergebnisse im dritten Quartal 2025, mit einem Gesamtumsatz von 4.332 Mio. £ und einem Umsatz ohne wesentliche Posten von 4.166 Mio. £. Der zuzuordnende Gewinn betrug 1.598 Mio. £ und die Rendite auf das gebildete Eigenkapital erreichte 22,3%, während sich die Nettozinsmarge auf 2,37% verbesserte.

Die Vergaben wuchsen branchenübergreifend, mit Netto-Kundendarlehen um 4,4 Mrd. £ außerhalb zentraler Posten, während die Kundeneinlagen moderat um 1,1 Mrd. £ sanken. Die Liquidität blieb robust mit einem durchschnittlichen LCR von 148% und AUMA stieg um 8,1% auf 56,0 Mrd. £. Year-to-Date hat sich das Kosten-Einkommens-Verhältnis (ohne Rechtsstreitigkeiten und Verhalten) auf 47,8% von 52,8% verbessert.

Kapital war solide: Die CET1-Quote stieg auf 14,2%, gestützt durch RWA-Managementmaßnahmen im Quartal über 2,2 Mrd. £; TNAV pro Aktie stieg auf 362p. Die Nettorückstellungsbelastung betrug 153 Mio. £. Die Geschäftsführung hob die Guidance für 2025 auf einen Umsatz ohne wesentliche Posten von rund 16,3 Mrd. £ und RoTE >18,0% an.

 
 
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
 
FORM 6-K
 
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16
UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
October, 2025
 
Commission File Number 001-10306
 
NatWest Group plc
 
250 Bishopsgate,
London, EC2M 4AA
United Kingdom
(Address of principal executive offices)
 
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
 
 
Form 20-F
 
Form 40-F
 
 
 
 
 
The following information was issued as Company announcements in London, England and is furnished pursuant to General Instruction B to the General Instructions to Form 6-K:
 
 
 
 
Inside this report
 
 
Business performance summary
 
 
2
 
Q3 2025 performance summary
 
3
 
Performance key metrics and ratios
 
5
 
Chief Financial Officer's review
 
6
 
Retail Banking
 
7
 
Private Banking & Wealth Management
 
8
 
Commercial & Institutional
 
9
 
Central items & other
 
10
 
Segment performance
 
 
 
Risk and capital management
 
15
 
Credit risk
 
15
 
Segment analysis - portfolio summary
 
16
 
Segment analysis - loans
 
16
 
Movement in ECL provision
 
17
 
ECL post model adjustments
 
18
 
Sector analysis - portfolio summary
 
23
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk
 
29
 
Pension risk
 
 
Financial statements and notes
 
30
 
Condensed consolidated income statement
 
31
 
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income
 
32
 
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
 
33
 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
 
35
 
Presentation of condensed consolidated financial statements
 
35
 
Litigation and regulatory matters
 
36
 
Post balance sheet events
 
 
 
Additional information
 
37
 
Presentation of information
 
37
 
Statutory accounts
 
37
 
Contacts
 
37
 
Forward-looking statements
 
38
 
Non-IFRS financial measures
 
43
 
Performance measures not defined under IFRS 
 
 
 
Q3 2025 performance summary
Chief Executive, Paul Thwaite, commented:
"NatWest Group delivered another strong performance in the third quarter of 2025, underpinned by healthy levels of customer activity and the continued support we provide to them. This is driving positive momentum across our three businesses, with continued lending growth and deposits remaining stable.  
 
With our strategic focus on growth, NatWest Group's impact can be felt right across the economy, as we help people get on the housing ladder, save and invest for the future and grow their businesses - from innovative start-ups and vital mid-market firms to the largest multinationals responsible for critical infrastructure projects. We are also becoming a much simpler bank, with tight control of costs supporting our digital transformation that is enabling us to anticipate and meet the changing needs of customers at pace.
 
As a result of our consistent delivery and capital generation, we have upgraded our income and returns guidance for 2025 and are well placed to support our customers, invest for the future and deliver returns to our shareholders."
 
 
Growth in all of our customer businesses
We have delivered a strong financial performance in the quarter, with income and lending growth across all of our businesses demonstrating our broad-based support for our customers. 
 
−       Total income excluding notable items was up £0.2 billion to £4.2 billion in the quarter, driving an attributable profit of £1.6 billion and a Return on Tangible Equity (RoTE) of 22.3%.
 
−       In the third quarter net loans to customers excluding central items were up by £4.4 billion as we met customer needs while deploying capital where returns were attractive.
 
−       Deposits remained broadly stable across each of the businesses, with a small overall decrease in the quarter of £1.1 billion in customer deposits excluding central items. We continue to maintain a strong loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) up 2% in the quarter to 88%, and a strong liquidity position with an average Liquidity      Coverage Ratio (LCR) of 148%.
 
−       Assets under management and administration (AUMA) grew strongly in the quarter, up by 8.1% to £56.0 billion assisted by strong client net inflows.
 
 
Simplification continues to drive efficiency
We continued to make good progress on becoming a simpler bank, delivering efficiencies from our investment programmes and driving efficiency in the business which resulted in a 5% improvement in our year to date cost:income (excl. litigation and conduct) ratio of 47.8%, compared with 52.8% in the same period of 2024.
 
We are pleased with progress towards our objective of simplifying the way we operate, becoming a more agile and technology driven bank.
 
 
Active balance sheet management creates capacity for growth
We continued to actively manage our balance sheet and risk, delivering a £2.2 billion benefit from RWA management actions as we created capacity for growth.
 
Capital generation pre-distributions was 101 basis points in the quarter.
 
Our Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 14.2% was up c.60 basis points compared with Q4 2024 and c.60 basis points higher than Q2 2025. TNAV per share in Q3 2025 increased by 11 pence to 362 pence.
 
 
Outlook(1)
We will introduce guidance for 2026 and new targets for 2028 with our Full Year 2025 results on 13 February 2026.
 
The following statements are based on our current expectations for interest rates and economic conditions. We will monitor and react to market conditions and refine our internal forecasts as the economic position evolves.
 
We now expect income excluding notable items to be around £16.3 billion for 2025 and to achieve a Return on Tangible Equity of greater than 18.0%.
 
Except for this strengthened guidance, we reaffirm the outlook provided in our H1 2025 Interim Results.

 
(1)   The guidance, targets, expectations and trends discussed in this section represent NatWest Group plc management's current expectations and are subject to change, including as a result of the factors described in the NatWest Group plc Risk Factors in the 2024 Annual Report and Accounts and Form 20-F and the Summary Risk Factors in the NatWest Group plc 2025 Interim Results announcement. These statements constitute forward-looking statements. Refer to Forward-looking statements in this announcement.
 
 
Business performance summary
 
 
 
 
Nine months ended
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 September
 
 
30 September
30 June
 
30 September
 
 
2025
2024
 
 
2025
2025
 
2024
 
Summary consolidated income statement
£m
£m
Variance
 
£m
£m
Variance
£m
Variance
Net interest income
9,388
8,307
13.0%
 
3,268
3,094
5.6%
2,899
12.7%
Non-interest income
2,929
2,571
13.9%
 
1,064
911
16.8%
845
25.9%
Total income
12,317
10,878
13.2%
 
4,332
4,005
8.2%
3,744
15.7%
Litigation and conduct costs
(130)
(142)
(8.5%)
 
(12)
(74)
(83.8%)
(41)
(70.7%)
Other operating expenses
(5,884)
(5,740)
2.5%
 
(1,984)
(1,965)
1.0%
(1,784)
11.2%
Operating expenses
(6,014)
(5,882)
2.2%
 
(1,996)
(2,039)
(2.1%)
(1,825)
9.4%
Profit before impairment losses
6,303
4,996
26.2%
 
2,336
1,966
18.8%
1,919
21.7%
Impairment losses
(535)
(293)
82.6%
 
(153)
(193)
(20.7%)
(245)
(37.6%)
Operating profit before tax
5,768
4,703
22.6%
 
2,183
1,773
23.1%
1,674
30.4%
Tax charge
(1,412)
(1,232)
14.6%
 
(502)
(439)
14.4%
(431)
16.5%
Profit from continuing operations
4,356
3,471
25.5%
 
1,681
1,334
26.0%
1,243
35.2%
Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
-
12
(100.0%)
 
-
-
-
1
(100.0%)
Profit for the period
4,356
3,483
25.1%
 
1,681
1,334
26.0%
1,244
35.1%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Performance key metrics and ratios
 
 
 
 
 
 
Notable items within total income (1)
£189m
£102m
85.3%
 
£166m
(£5m)
nm
(£28m)
nm
Total income excluding notable items (1)
£12,128m
£10,776m
12.5%
 
£4,166m
£4,010m
3.9%
£3,772m
10.4%
Net interest margin (1)
2.31%
2.11%
20bps
 
2.37%
2.28%
9bps
2.18%
19bps
Average interest earning assets (1)
£544bn
£526bn
3.4%
 
£548bn
£543bn
0.9%
£530bn
3.4%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
47.8%
52.8%
(5.0%)
 
45.8%
49.1%
(3.3%)
47.6%
(1.8%)
Loan impairment rate (1)
17bps
10bps
7bps
 
15bps
19bps
(4bps)
25bps
(10bps)
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
£4,086m
£3,271m
24.9%
 
£1,598m
£1,236m
29.3%
£1,172m
36.3%
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - basic 
50.7p
38.3p
12.4p
 
19.8p
15.3p
4.5p
14.1p
5.7p
Return on Tangible Equity (RoTE) (1)
19.5%
17.0%
2.5%
 
22.3%
17.7%
4.6%
18.3%
4.0%
Climate and transition finance (2)
£7,569m
na
na
 
£7,569m
na
na
na
na
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable.
 
For the footnotes to this table refer to the following page.
 
 
Business performance summary continued
 
 
 
 
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
 
31 December
 
 
2025
2025
 
2024
 
Balance sheet
 
 
 
 
£bn
£bn
Variance
£bn
Variance
Total assets
 
 
 
 
725.6
730.8
(0.7%)
708.0
2.5%
Loans to customers - amortised cost
 
 
 
 
415.3
407.1
2.0%
400.3
3.7%
Loans to customers excluding central items (1,3)
 
 
 
 
384.5
380.1
1.2%
368.5
4.3%
Loans to customers and banks - amortised cost and FVOCI 
 
 
 
 
427.3
417.9
2.2%
410.2
4.2%
Total impairment provisions (4)
 
 
 
 
3.7
3.7
-
3.4
8.8%
Expected credit loss (ECL) coverage ratio 
 
 
 
 
0.87%
0.87%
-
0.83%
4bps
Assets under management and administration (AUMA) (1)
 
 
 
 
56.0
51.8
8.1%
48.9
14.5%
Customer deposits
 
 
 
 
435.5
436.8
(0.3%)
433.5
0.5%
Customer deposits excluding central items (1,3)
 
 
 
 
434.7
435.8
(0.3%)
431.3
0.8%
Liquidity and funding
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Average Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) (5)
 
 
 
 
148%
150%
(2.0%)
151%
(3.0%)
Liquidity portfolio
 
 
 
 
239
217
10.1%
222
7.7%
Average Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) (5)
 
 
 
 
135%
136%
(1.0%)
137%
(2.0%)
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) (1)
 
 
 
 
88%
86%
2%
85%
3%
Total wholesale funding
 
 
 
 
93
91
2.2%
86
8.1%
Short-term wholesale funding
 
 
 
 
37
35
5.7%
33
12.1%
Capital and leverage
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio (6)
 
 
 
 
14.2%
13.6%
60bps
13.6%
60bps
Total capital ratio (6)
 
 
 
 
20.2%
19.7%
50bps
19.7%
50bps
Pro forma CET1 ratio (excl. foreseeable items) (7)
 
 
 
 
15.1%
14.6%
50bps
14.3%
80bps
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs)
 
 
 
 
189.1
190.1
(0.5%)
183.2
3.2%
UK leverage ratio
 
 
 
 
5.0%
5.0%
-
5.0%
-
Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share (1,8)
 
 
 
 
362p
351p
11p
329p
33p
Number of ordinary shares in issue (millions) (8)
 
 
 
 
8,031
8,088
(0.7%)
8,043
(0.1%)
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
(2)     NatWest Group uses its climate and transition finance framework to determine the assets, activities, acquisition targets and companies that are eligible to be included within its target to provide £200 billion in climate and transition finance between 1 July 2025 and the end of 2030. This included both provision of committed (on and off-        balance      sheet) financing and facilitation. The climate and transition finance framework is available on natwestgroup.com.
(3)     Central items includes Treasury repo activity.
(4)     Includes £0.1 billion relating to off-balance sheet exposures (30 June 2025 - £0.1 billion; 31 December 2024 - £0.1 billion).
(5)     Reported on an average basis in line with supervisory guidelines. The LCR is calculated as the average of the preceding 12 months. The NSFR is calculated as the average of the preceding four quarters.
(6)     Refer to the Capital, liquidity and funding risk section for details of the basis of preparation.
(7)     The pro forma CET1 ratio at 30 September 2025 excludes foreseeable items of £1,721 million: £1,275 million for ordinary dividends and £446 million foreseeable charges (30 June 2025 excludes foreseeable items of £1,994 million: £1,244 million for ordinary dividends and £750 million foreseeable charges; 31 December 2024 excludes                 foreseeable items of £1,249 million for ordinary dividends).
(8)     The number of ordinary shares in issue excludes own shares held.
 
  
Chief Financial Officer's review
 
We delivered another strong performance in the third quarter with total income excluding notable items up by 3.9% on Q2 2025 and 10.4% on Q3 2024. We made further progress on simplification and as a result our cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) was 47.8% in the year to date compared with 52.8% in the prior year. As a result, we achieved RoTE of 22.3%, including more than 2 percentage points from one-off items in the quarter.
 
The balance sheet continues to grow, with another quarter of strong lending growth of £4.4 billion excluding central items while customer deposits excluding central items remained broadly stable with a small decrease overall of £1.1 billion in the quarter. Liquidity position remains robust with an average LCR of 148%.
 
Our CET1 ratio came in just above the top end of our target range at 14.2% as we actively managed the balance sheet, delivering RWA management actions of £2.2 billion in Q3 2025 which created continued capacity for growth.

 
Strong Q3 2025 performance across growth and simplification
 
−       Total income increased by 8.2% in Q3 2025 compared with Q2 2025 and was 15.7% higher than Q3 2024. Total income excluding notable items was £156 million higher than Q2 2025 reflecting deposit margin expansion alongside the benefit of one additional day in the quarter. As a result, NIM increased by 9 basis points in the quarter to 2.37%.
 
−       Total operating expenses were £43 million lower than Q2 2025 and £171 million higher than Q3 2024. Other operating expenses were £19 million higher than Q2 2025 primarily reflecting integration costs following the acquisition of balances from Sainsbury's Bank and higher restructuring costs as we continue to develop core skills for the future,        including increasing the number of software engineering roles. Our focus remains on driving cost savings to create capacity for further investment to accelerate our bank-wide simplification. Headcount reduced by around 600 FTE compared with Q3 2024 and was 100 FTE lower than Q2 2025.
 
We continue to proactively manage risk
 
−       The net impairment charge of £153 million, or 15 basis points of gross customer loans, was £40 million lower than Q2 2025 as Stage 3 charges were lower in Commercial & Institutional and the prior quarter included an £81 million charge on the acquisition of balances from Sainsbury's Bank, offset by lower post model adjustment releases.
 
−       Compared with Q2 2025, our ECL provision and our ECL coverage ratio remained stable at £3.7 billion and 0.87% respectively. We retain post model adjustments of £265 million and remain comfortable with the strong credit performance of our diversified prime loan book.
 
Our lending aligns to our climate ambitions
 
−       During Q3 2025 we provided £7.6 billion in climate and transition finance against our target to provide £200 billion between 1 July 2025 and the end of 2030, which is underpinned by our climate and transition finance framework. We also achieved our aim to provide £10 billion in lending for EPC A and B rated residential properties between 1           January 2023 and the end of 2025, with £10.8 billion lending up to 30 September 2025.
 
Active balance sheet management supporting robust liquidity levels
 
−       We continued to support our customers as net loans to customers excluding central items increased £4.4 billion in Q3 2025. Retail Banking mortgage balances increased by £1.7 billion and Commercial & Institutional balances were up by £2.5 billion, largely within Corporate & Institutions and Commercial Mid-market.
 
−       Customer deposits excluding central items reduced £1.1 billion in the quarter to £434.7 billion primarily reflecting a reduction in savings balances in Retail Banking and Private Banking & Wealth Management. Commercial & Institutional increased by £0.4 billion largely due to higher balances within Commercial Mid-market and Business Banking.    Total business term balances reduced to 16% of the book, down from 17% at Q2 2025.
 
−       We continue to actively manage our balance sheet as RWAs decreased by £1.0 billion in the quarter to £189.1 billion, including a further £2.2 billion benefit from RWA management actions as we created capacity for lending growth.
 
−       The average LCR of 148% (spot LCR: 141%) representing £51.6 billion headroom above 100% minimum requirement, decreased by 2 percentage points compared with Q2 2025 primarily due to higher lending. Our primary liquidity at Q3 2025 was £159 billion, of which £80.5 billion, or 51% was cash and balances at central banks. Total wholesale    funding increased by £2.1 billion in the quarter to £92.9 billion.
 
Shareholder return supported by strong capital generation
−       An attributable profit of £1,598 million and RoTE of 22.3% included more than 2 percentage points from one-off items in the quarter, including a £147 million gain from the release of a funding valuation adjustment applied to a portfolio of derivatives.   
 
−       The CET1 ratio of 14.2% was c.60 basis points higher than Q2 2025 principally reflecting the attributable profit for the quarter, c.85 basis points, and the reduction in RWAs, c.10 basis points, partially offset by the foreseeable ordinary dividend, c.40 basis points.
 
−       TNAV per share increased by 11 pence in the quarter to 362 pence primarily reflecting the profit for the period partially offset by the interim dividend payment.
 
Business performance summary
 
Retail Banking
 
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
Total income
1,662
1,594
1,459
Operating expenses
(715)
(742)
(659)
   of which: Other operating expenses
(712)
(734)
(656)
Impairment losses
(97)
(117)
(144)
Operating profit
850
735
656
 
 
 
 
Return on equity (1)
26.4%
23.2%
21.4%
Net interest margin (1)
2.64%
2.59%
2.43%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
42.8%
46.0%
45.0%
Loan impairment rate (1)
18bps
22bps
28bps
 
 
 
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost)
216.0
214.3
208.4
Customer deposits
195.8
196.6
194.8
RWAs
69.1
69.4
65.5
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
During Q3 2025, Retail Banking delivered a return on equity of 26.4% and an operating profit of £850 million, with continued positive income and net interest margin momentum. We have increased net mortgage lending by £1.7 billion and, as we widen our customer proposition, we have announced our partnership with Landbay to support more buy-to-let property investors. In addition, we have continued to progress the integration of our recently acquired Sainsbury's customers, with credit card customers now able to view their credit card, link their Sainsbury's Nectar card and view their Nectar points from credit card spending in our app.
 
Retail Banking provided £1.2 billion of climate and transition financing in Q3 2025 from lending on EPC A and B rated residential properties.
 

Q3 2025 performance
 
−       Total income was £68 million, or 4.3%, higher than Q2 2025 reflecting deposit margin expansion, full quarter impact of balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank and the benefit of one additional day in the quarter. Q3 2025 total income was £203 million, or 13.9%, higher than Q3 2024 reflecting deposit margin expansion, lending growth   and the impact of balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank.
 
−       Net interest margin was 5 basis points higher than Q2 2025 largely reflecting deposit margin expansion and full quarter impact of balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank.
 
−       Other operating expenses were £22 million, or 3.0%, lower than Q2 2025 reflecting non-repeat of Q2 2025 FCA regulatory fees and property exit costs. Other operating expenses were £56 million, or 8.5%, higher than Q3 2024 reflecting higher investment spend, partly offset by a 4.9% reduction in headcount.
 
−       An impairment charge of £97 million, compared with a £117 million charge in Q2 2025, largely driven by good book model releases. Stage 3 default driven charge remains stable.
 
−       Net loans to customers increased by £1.7 billion, or 0.8%, in Q3 2025 driven by higher mortgage balances of £1.7 billion, or 0.9%, higher cards balances of £0.1 billion, or 1.2%, partly offset by lower personal advances of £0.1 billion, or 1.1%.
 
−       Customer deposits decreased by £0.8 billion, or 0.4%, in Q3 2025 reflecting lower savings balances of £1.4 billion, partly offset by increased current account balances of £0.6 billion.
 
−       RWAs decreased by £0.3 billion, or 0.4%, in Q3 2025 primarily due to RWA management actions, largely offset by book movements.
 
 
Business performance summary continued
 
Private Banking & Wealth Management
 
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
Total income
284
274
253
   of which: AUMA income (1)
75
72
68
Operating expenses
(173)
(172)
(166)
   of which: Other operating expenses
(172)
(171)
(166)
Impairment (losses)/releases
(3)
-
3
Operating profit
108
102
90
 
 
 
 
Return on equity (1)
23.4%
22.5%
19.7%
Net interest margin (1)
2.66%
2.56%
2.50%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
60.6%
62.4%
65.6%
Loan impairment rate (1)
6bps
-
(7bps)
AUMA net flows (£bn) (1)
1.2
1.3
0.9
 
 
 
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost)
18.8
18.6
18.2
Customer deposits
40.6
41.3
42.4
Assets under management (AUM) (1)
41.9
39.0
37.0
Assets under administration (AUA) (1)
14.1
12.8
11.9
Assets under management and administration (AUMA) (1)
56.0
51.8
48.9
Total combined assets and liabilities (CAL) (1,2)
114.2
110.4
108.4
RWAs
11.4
11.5
11.0
 
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
(2)     CAL refers to customer deposits, net loans to customers and AUMA. To avoid double counting, investment cash is deducted as it is reported within customer deposits and AUMA.
 
During Q3 2025, Private Banking & Wealth Management continued to deliver a strong performance with an operating profit of £108 million, return on equity of 23.4% and cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) of 60.6%. We have continued to progress our simplification agenda, including the rollout of a new workflow tool for investment advice, which has reduced the time to deliver simple investment advice. Our digital experience also continues to improve, with mobile NPS rising to 54, reflecting the ongoing enhancements to our mobile app.
 
Private Banking & Wealth Management provided £0.1 billion of climate and transition financing in Q3 2025, principally in relation to mortgages on residential properties with an EPC rating of A or B and wholesale transactions.
 
 
Q3 2025 performance
 
−       Total income was £10 million, or 3.6%, higher than Q2 2025 primarily reflecting balance growth across lending and AUMA and deposit margin expansion. Q3 2025 total income was £31 million, or 12.3%, higher than Q3 2024 primarily reflecting balance growth across deposits, lending and AUMA, and deposit margin expansion.
 
−       Net interest margin was 10 basis points higher than Q2 2025 largely reflecting deposit margin expansion.
 
−       Other operating expenses were £1 million, or 0.6%, higher than Q2 2025 primarily reflecting timing of non-staff costs. Other operating expenses were £6 million, or 3.6%, higher than Q3 2024 primarily reflecting higher back office costs, partly offset by a 4.5% reduction in headcount.
 
−       An impairment charge of £3 million in Q3 2025, compared with no impairment charge in Q2 2025. Stage 3 charges remain at low levels.
 
−       CAL increased by £3.8 billion, or 3.4%, in Q3 2025, supported by growth in AUMA and lending balances.
 
−       Net loans to customers increased by £0.2 billion, or 1.1%, in Q3 2025 driven by higher personal lending balances.
 
−       Customer deposits decreased by £0.7 billion, or 1.7%, in Q3 2025 driven by seasonal tax outflows and continued flows to AUMAs.
 
−       AUMA balances increased by £4.2 billion, in Q3 2025, driven by positive market movements of £3.0 billion, AUM net inflows of £0.6 billion, AUA net inflows of £0.4 billion and Cushon net inflows of £0.2 billion. AUM net flows as a percentage of opening balances are 6.2% on an annualised basis.
 
 
Business performance summary continued
 
Commercial & Institutional
 
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
Net interest income
1,550
1,496
1,392
Non-interest income
658
651
679
Total income
2,208
2,147
2,071
 
 
 
 
Operating expenses
(1,115)
(1,107)
(945)
   of which: Other operating expenses
(1,060)
(1,047)
(911)
Impairment losses
(52)
(76)
(109)
Operating profit
1,041
964
1,017
 
 
 
 
Return on equity (1)
19.7%
17.9%
19.9%
Net interest margin (1)
2.36%
2.35%
2.24%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
48.0%
48.8%
44.0%
Loan impairment rate (1)
14bps
20bps
31bps
 
 
 
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost)
149.7
147.2
141.9
Customer deposits
198.3
197.9
194.1
Funded assets (1)
348.2
343.1
321.6
RWAs
107.0
107.8
104.7
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
During Q3 2025, Commercial & Institutional continued to deliver a strong performance in income and operating profit, supporting a return on equity of 19.7%, an increase from 17.9% in Q2 2025. We have supported sectors that are vital to the health and success of the UK economy including continued support for UK Infrastructure and Housing Associations, reaching £7.4 billion of lending to Social Housing against our target of £7.5 billion. We saw another quarter of continued strong demand for FX risk management against a backdrop of volatile markets, supporting income. We have improved customer experience through our Bankline transformation and modernised digital platforms, driving deeper customer engagement.
 
Commercial & Institutional provided £6.3 billion of climate and transition funding in Q3 2025 to support customers investing in the transition to net zero.
 
 
Q3 2025 performance
 
−       Total income was £61 million, or 2.8%, higher than Q2 2025 primarily reflecting deposit margin expansion, lending growth as well as the impact of an additional day in the quarter. Q3 2025 total income was £137 million, or 6.6%, higher than Q3 2024 primarily reflecting deposit margin expansion and customer lending growth.
 
−       Net interest margin was 1 basis point higher than Q2 2025 reflecting deposit margin expansion.
 
−       Other operating expenses were £13 million, or 1.2%, higher than Q2 2025 largely reflecting increased investment spend partially offset by non-repeat of Q2 2025 FCA regulatory fees and one-off VAT recovery in the quarter. Other operating expenses were £149 million, or 16.4%, higher than Q3 2024 reflecting inflationary increases on staff costs        and increased investment spend.
 
−       An impairment charge of £52 million in Q3 2025 compared with a £76 million charge in Q2 2025 reflecting lower levels of Stage 3 impairments.
 
−       Net loans to customers increased by £2.5 billion, or 1.7%, in Q3 2025 principally due to Funds lending and Large Corporate growth within Corporate & Institutions and Regional and Commercial Real Estate growth within Commercial Mid-market, partly offset by UK Government scheme repayments of £0.5 billion.
 
−       Customer deposits increased by £0.4 billion, or 0.2%, in Q3 2025 largely reflecting higher balances within Commercial Mid-market and Business Banking.
 
−       RWAs decreased by £0.8 billion, or 0.7%, in Q3 2025 primarily reflecting continued RWA management actions, partially offset by book movements and currency impacts.
 
 
Business performance summary continued
 
Central items & other
 
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
Total income
178
(10)
(39)
Operating expenses 
7
(18)
(55)
   of which: Other operating expenses
(40)
(13)
(51)
Impairment (losses)/releases
(1)
-
5
Operating profit/(loss)
184
(28)
(89)
 
 
As at
 
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost)
30.8
27.0
31.8
Customer deposits
0.8
1.0
2.2
RWAs
1.6
1.4
2.0
 
 
Q3 2025 performance
 
−       Total income was £188 million higher than Q2 2025 primarily reflecting higher gains on interest and FX risk management derivatives not in accounting hedge relationships and Business Growth Fund profits partially offset with foreign exchange recycling losses.
 
−       Other operating expenses were £27 million higher than Q2 2025 primarily due to one-off items including an HMRC tax credit in Q2 2025, timing of spend, as well as higher staff restructuring costs in the quarter as we pivot support towards developing critical core skills for the future.
 
−       Net loans to customers increased by £3.8 billion in Q3 2025 driven by reverse repo activity in Treasury.
 
−       Customer deposits decreased by £0.2 billion in Q3 2025 reflecting repo activity in Treasury.
 
 
Segment performance
 
 
Nine months ended 30 September 2025
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
Central items
Total NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 & other
Group
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
Income statement 
 
Net interest income
4,471
555
4,505
(143)
9,388
Own credit adjustments
-
-
3
-
3
Other non-interest income
325
268
1,989
344
2,926
Total income 
4,796
823
6,497
201
12,317
Direct expenses
(604)
(183)
(1,192)
(3,905)
(5,884)
Indirect expenses
(1,519)
(347)
(1,930)
3,796
-
Other operating expenses
(2,123)
(530)
(3,122)
(109)
(5,884)
Litigation and conduct costs
(15)
(2)
(144)
31
(130)
Operating expenses
(2,138)
(532)
(3,266)
(78)
(6,014)
Operating profit before impairment losses
2,658
291
3,231
123
6,303
Impairment losses
(323)
(4)
(206)
(2)
(535)
Operating profit
2,335
287
3,025
121
5,768
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total income excluding notable items (1)
4,796
823
6,494
15
12,128
 
 
 
 
 
 
Additional information
 
Return on Tangible Equity (1)
na
na
na
na
19.5%
Return on equity (1)
24.7%
21.0%
19.0%
nm
na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
44.3%
64.4%
48.1%
nm
47.8%
Total assets (£bn)
240.6
29.1
408.9
47.0
725.6
Funded assets (£bn) (1)
240.6
29.1
348.2
46.6
664.5
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)
216.0
18.8
149.7
30.8
415.3
Loan impairment rate (1)
20bps
3bps
18bps
nm
17bps
Impairment provisions (£bn)
(1.9)
(0.1)
(1.7)
-
(3.7)
Impairment provisions - Stage 3 (£bn)
(1.2)
-
(1.1)
-
(2.3)
Customer deposits (£bn)
195.8
40.6
198.3
0.8
435.5
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)
69.1
11.4
107.0
1.6
189.1
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)
69.9
11.4
108.0
1.9
191.2
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)
11.6
2.1
12.6
32.8
59.1
Third party customer asset rate (1)
4.34%
4.74%
6.04%
nm
nm
Third party customer funding rate (1)
(1.78%)
(2.75%)
(1.60%)
nm
nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1)
229.8
28.5
257.1
na
544.3
Net interest margin (1)
2.60%
2.60%
2.34%
na
2.31%
 
nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable.
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
Segment performance continued
 
 
Nine months ended 30 September 2024
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
Central items
Total NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 & other
Group
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
 
 
Income statement 
 
Net interest income
3,825
455
3,935
92
8,307
Own credit adjustments
-
-
(5)
-
(5)
Other non-interest income
324
242
1,941
69
2,576
Total income 
4,149
697
5,871
161
10,878
Direct expenses
(586)
(190)
(1,120)
(3,844)
(5,740)
Indirect expenses
(1,527)
(331)
(1,864)
3,722
-
Other operating expenses
(2,113)
(521)
(2,984)
(122)
(5,740)
Litigation and conduct costs
(16)
(1)
(111)
(14)
(142)
Operating expenses
(2,129)
(522)
(3,095)
(136)
(5,882)
Operating profit before impairment losses/releases
2,020
175
2,776
25
4,996
Impairment (losses)/releases
(266)
14
(52)
11
(293)
Operating profit
1,754
189
2,724
36
4,703
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total income excluding notable items (1)
4,149
697
5,876
54
10,776
 
 
 
 
 
 
Additional information
 
Return on Tangible Equity (1)
na
na
na
na
17.0%
Return on equity (1)
19.4%
13.6%
17.4%
nm
na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
50.9%
74.7%
50.8%
nm
52.8%
Total assets (£bn)
231.1
27.3
398.7
54.8
711.9
Funded assets (£bn) (1)
231.1
27.3
331.1
53.7
643.2
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)
207.4
18.2
138.1
23.0
386.7
Loan impairment rate (1)
17bps
(10bps)
5bps
nm
10bps
Impairment provisions (£bn)
(1.9)
(0.1)
(1.6)
-
(3.6)
Impairment provisions - Stage 3 (£bn)
(1.1)
-
(1.0)
-
(2.1)
Customer deposits (£bn)
192.0
39.7
195.7
3.7
431.1
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)
64.8
11.0
104.0
1.9
181.7
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)
65.3
11.0
105.3
2.4
184.0
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)
12.2
2.2
12.8
32.5
59.7
Third party customer asset rate (1)
3.95%
4.99%
6.74%
nm
nm
Third party customer funding rate (1)
(2.08%)
(3.15%)
(1.92%)
nm
nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1)
220.5
26.6
244.9
na
526.2
Net interest margin (1)
2.32%
2.29%
2.15%
na
2.11%
 
nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable.
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
Segment performance continued
 
 
Quarter ended 30 September 2025
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
Central items
Total NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 & other
Group
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
 
 
Income statement 
 
Net interest income
1,549
192
1,550
(23)
3,268
Own credit adjustments
-
-
-
-
-
Other non-interest income
113
92
658
201
1,064
Total income 
1,662
284
2,208
178
4,332
Direct expenses
(208)
(61)
(410)
(1,305)
(1,984)
Indirect expenses
(504)
(111)
(650)
1,265
-
Other operating expenses
(712)
(172)
(1,060)
(40)
(1,984)
Litigation and conduct costs
(3)
(1)
(55)
47
(12)
Operating expenses
(715)
(173)
(1,115)
7
(1,996)
Operating profit before impairment losses
947
111
1,093
185
2,336
Impairment losses
(97)
(3)
(52)
(1)
(153)
Operating profit
850
108
1,041
184
2,183
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total income excluding notable items (1)
1,662
284
2,208
12
4,166
 
 
 
 
 
 
Additional information
 
Return on Tangible Equity (1)
na
na
na
na
22.3%
Return on equity (1)
26.4%
23.4%
19.7%
nm
na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
42.8%
60.6%
48.0%
nm
45.8%
Total assets (£bn)
240.6
29.1
408.9
47.0
725.6
Funded assets (£bn) (1)
240.6
29.1
348.2
46.6
664.5
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)
216.0
18.8
149.7
30.8
415.3
Loan impairment rate (1)
18bps
6bps
14bps
nm
15bps
Impairment provisions (£bn)
(1.9)
(0.1)
(1.7)
-
(3.7)
Impairment provisions - Stage 3 (£bn)
(1.2)
-
(1.1)
-
(2.3)
Customer deposits (£bn)
195.8
40.6
198.3
0.8
435.5
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)
69.1
11.4
107.0
1.6
189.1
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)
69.9
11.4
108.0
1.9
191.2
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)
11.6
2.1
12.6
32.8
59.1
Third party customer asset rate (1)
4.40%
4.66%
5.88%
nm
nm
Third party customer funding rate (1)
(1.69%)
(2.61%)
(1.49%)
nm
nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1)
233.0
28.6
260.5
na
548.1
Net interest margin (1)
2.64%
2.66%
2.36%
na
2.37%
 
nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable.
 
(1)       Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
Segment performance continued
 
 
Quarter ended 30 June 2025
 
 
Private Banking 
 
 
 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
Central items
Total NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 & other
Group
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
Income statement 
 
Net interest income
1,484
182
1,496
(68)
3,094
Own credit adjustments
-
-
(3)
-
(3)
Other non-interest income
110
92
654
58
914
Total income 
1,594
274
2,147
(10)
4,005
Direct expenses
(230)
(63)
(403)
(1,269)
(1,965)
Indirect expenses
(504)
(108)
(644)
1,256
-
Other operating expenses
(734)
(171)
(1,047)
(13)
(1,965)
Litigation and conduct costs
(8)
(1)
(60)
(5)
(74)
Operating expenses
(742)
(172)
(1,107)
(18)
(2,039)
Operating profit/(loss) before impairment losses
852
102
1,040
(28)
1,966
Impairment losses
(117)
-
(76)
-
(193)
Operating profit/(loss)
735
102
964
(28)
1,773
 
 
Total income excluding notable items (1)
1,594
274
2,150
(8)
4,010
 
 
Additional information
 
 
 
 
 
Return on Tangible Equity (1)
na
na
na
na
17.7%
Return on equity (1)
23.2%
22.5%
17.9%
nm
na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
46.0%
62.4%
48.8%
nm
49.1%
Total assets (£bn)
238.6
29.1
414.9
48.2
730.8
Funded assets (£bn) (1)
238.6
29.1
343.1
47.0
657.8
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)
214.3
18.6
147.2
27.0
407.1
Loan impairment rate (1)
22bps
-
20bps
nm
19bps
Impairment provisions (£bn)
(1.9)
(0.1)
(1.7)
-
(3.7)
Impairment provisions - Stage 3 (£bn)
(1.1)
-
(1.1)
-
(2.2)
Customer deposits (£bn)
196.6
41.3
197.9
1.0
436.8
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)
69.4
11.5
107.8
1.4
190.1
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)
70.0
11.5
108.8
2.0
192.3
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)
11.8
2.1
12.8
32.5
59.2
Third party customer asset rate (1)
4.32%
4.74%
6.00%
nm
nm
Third party customer funding rate (1)
(1.79%)
(2.74%)
(1.60%)
nm
nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1)
230.0
28.5
255.6
na
543.2
Net interest margin (1)
2.59%
2.56%
2.35%
na
2.28%
 
nm = not meaningful, na = not applicable.
 
(1)     Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
Segment performance continued
 
 
Quarter ended 30 September 2024
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
Central items
Total NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 & other
Group
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
 
 
Income statement 
 
Net interest income
1,350
170
1,392
(13)
2,899
Own credit adjustments
-
-
2
-
2
Other non-interest income
109
83
677
(26)
843
Total income 
1,459
253
2,071
(39)
3,744
Direct expenses
(205)
(64)
(356)
(1,159)
(1,784)
Indirect expenses
(451)
(102)
(555)
1,108
-
Other operating expenses
(656)
(166)
(911)
(51)
(1,784)
Litigation and conduct costs
(3)
-
(34)
(4)
(41)
Operating expenses
(659)
(166)
(945)
(55)
(1,825)
Operating profit/(loss) before impairment losses/releases
800
87
1,126
(94)
1,919
Impairment (losses)/releases
(144)
3
(109)
5
(245)
Operating profit /(loss)
656
90
1,017
(89)
1,674
 
 
Total income excluding notable items (1)
1,459
253
2,069
(9)
3,772
 
 
Additional information
 
 
 
 
 
Return on Tangible Equity (1)
na
na
na
na
18.3%
Return on equity (1)
21.4%
19.7%
19.9%
nm
na
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) (1)
45.0%
65.6%
44.0%
nm
47.6%
Total assets (£bn)
231.1
27.3
398.7
54.8
711.9
Funded assets (£bn) (1)
231.1
27.3
331.1
53.7
643.2
Net loans to customers - amortised cost (£bn)
207.4
18.2
138.1
23.0
386.7
Loan impairment rate (1)
28bps
(7bps)
31bps
nm
25bps
Impairment provisions (£bn)
(1.9)
(0.1)
(1.6)
-
(3.6)
Impairment provisions - Stage 3 (£bn)
(1.1)
-
(1.0)
-
(2.1)
Customer deposits (£bn)
192.0
39.7
195.7
3.7
431.1
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) (£bn)
64.8
11.0
104.0
1.9
181.7
RWA equivalent (RWAe) (£bn)
65.3
11.0
105.3
2.4
184.0
Employee numbers (FTEs - thousands)
12.2
2.2
12.8
32.5
59.7
Third party customer asset rate (1)
4.09%
5.01%
6.67%
nm
nm
Third party customer funding rate (1)
(2.10%)
(3.16%)
(1.91%)
nm
nm
Average interest earning assets (£bn) (1)
221.4
27.0
246.8
na
529.8
Net interest margin (1)
2.43%
2.50%
2.24%
na
2.18%
 
nm - not meaningful, na - not applicable
 
(1)       Refer to the Non-IFRS financial measures appendix for details of the basis of preparation and reconciliation of non-IFRS financial measures and performance metrics.
 
 
Risk and capital management
Credit risk
Segment analysis - portfolio summary
The table below shows gross loans and ECL, by segment and stage, within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework.
 
 
30 September 2025
 
31 December 2024
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
Central items 
 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
Central items 
 
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
& other
Total
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
& other
Total
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
Loans - amortised cost and FVOCI (1,2)
 
 
Stage 1
189,140
17,619
138,333
35,504
380,596
 
182,366
17,155
128,988
35,312
363,821
Stage 2
25,529
891
14,510
56
40,986
 
24,242
844
15,339
49
40,474
Stage 3
3,068
372
2,286
2
5,728
 
3,268
322
2,340
-
5,930
Of which: individual
-
272
1,290
-
1,562
 
-
233
1,052
-
1,285
Of which: collective
3,068
100
996
2
4,166
 
3,268
89
1,288
-
4,645
Total 
217,737
18,882
155,129
35,562
427,310
 
209,876
18,321
146,667
35,361
410,225
ECL provisions (3)
 
 
Stage 1
346
14
263
14
637
 
279
16
289
14
598
Stage 2 
413
10
331
1
755
 
428
12
346
1
787
Stage 3
1,179
45
1,100
1
2,325
 
1,063
36
941
-
2,040
Of which: individual
-
45
599
-
644
 
-
36
415
-
451
Of which: collective
1,179
-
501
1
1,681
 
1,063
-
526
-
1,589
Total 
1,938
69
1,694
16
3,717
 
1,770
64
1,576
15
3,425
ECL provisions coverage (4)
 
 
Stage 1 (%)
0.18
0.08
0.19
0.04
0.17
 
0.15
0.09
0.22
0.04
0.16
Stage 2 (%)
1.62
1.12
2.28
1.79
1.84
 
1.77
1.42
2.26
2.04
1.94
Stage 3 (%)
38.43
12.10
48.12
50.00
40.59
 
32.53
11.18
40.21
-
34.40
Total 
0.89
0.37
1.09
0.04
0.87
 
0.84
0.35
1.07
0.04
0.83
 
(1)     The table shows gross loans only and excludes amounts that were outside the scope of the ECL framework. Other financial assets within the scope of the IFRS 9 ECL framework were cash and balances at central banks totalling £83.5 billion (31 December 2024 - £91.8 billion) and debt securities of £70.7 billion (31 December 2024 - £62.4 billion).
(2)     Fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI). Includes loans to customers and banks.
(3)     Includes £4 million (31 December 2024 - £4 million) related to assets classified as FVOCI and £0.1 billion (31 December 2024 - £0.1 billion) related to off-balance sheet exposures.
(4)     ECL provisions coverage is calculated as ECL provisions, including ECL for other non-loan assets and unutilised exposure, divided by loans - amortised cost and FVOCI. Some segments with a high proportion of debt securities or unutilised exposure may result in a not meaningful (nm) coverage ratio.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
Segment analysis - loans
 
●     Retail Banking - Asset quality and arrears rates remained stable and within expectations during the year. The overall 2025 increase in good book and total ECL coverage was largely driven by the acquisition of the Sainsbury's Bank portfolio earlier this year which, in conjunction with continued organic growth on cards and personal loan portfolios, increased the unsecured portfolio mix. Good book coverage for Retail Banking remained stable, reflecting portfolio arrears trends and no change to economic scenarios The good book ECL on credit cards reduced due to a decrease in exposure at default on inaccessible limits. The reduction in the proportion of Stage 3 loans this year was influenced by both the acquisition of the Sainsbury's Bank portfolio on unsecured and an enhancement to the application of the definition of default used on mortgages. The latter resulted in a £0.4 billion migration of loans from Stage 3 back to the good book.
 
Commercial & Institutional - Increased coverage in the portfolio primarily reflected the impact of defaulted charges in the first half of the year, driven by a small number of individual charges. Underlying default rates and total number of defaults remained subdued, reflecting overall stable portfolio performance. Performing book ECL reduced in the year, in line with economic improvements and reductions in post model adjustments, even as total performing book exposure increased.
 
 
Movement in ECL provision
The table below shows the main ECL provision movements during the year.

 
 
ECL provision
 
£m
At 1 January 2025
3,425
Acquisitions
81
Changes in economic forecasts
10
Changes in risk metrics and exposure: Stage 1 and Stage 2
(20)
Changes in risk metrics and exposure: Stage 3
564
Judgemental changes: changes in post model adjustments for Stage 1,
 
   Stage 2 and Stage 3
(71)
Write-offs and other
(272)
At 30 September 2025
3,717
 
−       For the nine months to 30 September 2025, overall ECL increased following Non-Personal Stage 3 charges and an increase in good book ECL in the Personal portfolio, driven by the Sainsbury's Bank portfolio acquisition.
 
−       For the Non-Personal portfolio, ECL increased this year from Stage 3 charges, driven by a small number of individual charges in the Commercial & Institutional portfolio. This was partially offset by post model adjustment releases in the good book. 
 
−       In the Personal portfolios, default inflows were broadly stable for the nine months to 30 September 2025. However, Stage 3 ECL increased year-to-date on all unsecured portfolios, with reduced debt sale activity. In 2025, there was a reduction of Stage 3 ECL on mortgages related to an enhancement to the application of the definition of default,   resulting in a £0.4 billion migration of loans from Stage 3 to the good book.
 
−       Judgemental ECL post model adjustments decreased this year to £265 million (31 December 2024 - £336 million) representing 7.1% of total ECL (31 December 2024 - 9.8%). This reflected revisions to the Retail Banking cost of living post model adjustment after regular back-testing, and Non-Personal portfolio improvements in underlying risk   profile. 
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
ECL post model adjustments
The table below shows ECL post model adjustments.
 
 
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
 
Retail Banking
 
& Wealth
Commercial
 
 
Mortgages
Other
 
 Management
 & Institutional
Total
30 September 2025
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Deferred model 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   calibrations
-
-
 
1
13
14
Economic uncertainty
55
31
 
8
139
233
Other adjustments
-
-
 
-
18
18
Total
55
31
 
9
170
265
Of which:
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Stage 1
40
13
 
4
73
130
- Stage 2
15
18
 
5
97
135
- Stage 3
-
-
 
-
-
-
 
31 December 2024
 
 
 
 
 
 
Deferred model 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   calibrations
-
-
 
1
18
19
Economic uncertainty
90
22
 
8
179
299
Other adjustments
-
-
 
-
18
18
Total
90
22
 
9
215
336
Of which:
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Stage 1
58
9
 
5
94
166
- Stage 2
26
13
 
4
119
162
- Stage 3
6
-
 
-
2
8
 
 
Post model adjustments reduced since 31 December 2024, reflecting updates to post model adjustment parameters.
 
−      Retail Banking - As at 30 September 2025, the post model adjustment for economic uncertainty decreased to £86 million (31 December 2024 - £112 million). This reduction was driven by a revision to the cost of living post model adjustment, which now stands at £86 million (31 December 2024 - £105 million), and is the sole remaining economic uncertainty post model adjustment. This change was based on a review of back-testing. Despite ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty, the Retail Banking portfolios demonstrated resilience, supported by a robust risk appetite. The cost of living post model adjustment continued to address the risk in segments of the Retail Banking portfolio that were more susceptible to affordability challenges. It focused on key affordability factors, including lower income customers in fuel poverty, over-indebted borrowers, and customers vulnerable to higher mortgage rates.
 
−     Commercial & Institutional - As at 30 September 2025, the post model adjustment for economic uncertainty decreased to £139 million (31 December 2024 - £179 million). The inflation, supply chain and liquidity post model adjustment of £123 million (31 December 2024 - £150 million) for lending prior to 1 January 2024, remained the largest component of this adjustment. Downgrades to risk profiles were applied to the sectors that were considered most at risk from the current economic and geopolitical headwinds, with the level of downgrade reviewed to ensure the latest risks were appropriately captured. The £27 million decrease reflected improved risk metrics along with reduced exposure in the portfolio subject to the adjustment, through either repayment or default.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
 
Sector analysis - portfolio summary
The table below shows financial assets and off-balance sheet exposures gross of ECL and related ECL provisions, impairment and past due by sector, asset quality and geographical region.
 
 
Personal
 
Non-Personal
 
 
 
 
Credit
Other 
 
 
Corporate and 
Financial
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgages (1)
 cards
personal
Total
 
other
institutions
Sovereign
Total
 
Total
30 September 2025
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
Loans by geography
215,140
8,275
11,447
234,862
 
115,024
76,100
1,324
192,448
 
427,310
  - UK
215,128
8,275
11,447
234,850
 
99,727
48,581
491
148,799
 
383,649
  - Other Europe
12
-
-
12
 
6,694
13,989
369
21,052
 
21,064
  - RoW
-
-
-
-
 
8,603
13,530
464
22,597
 
22,597
Loans by asset quality (2) 
215,140
8,275
11,447
234,862
 
115,024
76,100
1,324
192,448
 
427,310
  - AQ1-AQ4
118,453
124
887
119,464
 
44,200
70,744
913
115,857
 
235,321
  - AQ5-AQ8
93,366
7,796
9,353
110,515
 
68,382
5,217
129
73,728
 
184,243
  - AQ9
1,163
130
204
1,497
 
251
3
265
519
 
2,016
  - AQ10
2,158
225
1,003
3,386
 
2,191
136
17
2,344
 
5,730
Loans by stage 
215,140
8,275
11,447
234,862
 
115,024
76,100
1,324
192,448
 
427,310
  - Stage 1
190,571
6,046
8,966
205,583
 
98,545
75,427
1,041
175,013
 
380,596
  - Stage 2
22,408
2,004
1,478
25,890
 
14,293
537
266
15,096
 
40,986
  - Stage 3
2,161
225
1,003
3,389
 
2,186
136
17
2,339
 
5,728
  - Of which: individual
154
1
26
181
 
1,241
123
17
1,381
 
1,562
  - Of which: collective
2,007
224
977
3,208
 
945
13
-
958
 
4,166
Loans - past due analysis
215,140
8,275
11,447
234,862
 
115,024
76,100
1,324
192,448
 
427,310
  - Not past due
211,764
7,987
10,421
230,172
 
111,908
75,826
1,307
189,041
 
419,213
  - Past due 1-30 days
1,614
64
76
1,754
 
1,869
150
-
2,019
 
3,773
  - Past due 31-90 days
581
74
108
763
 
380
9
17
406
 
1,169
  - Past due 91-180 days
409
55
104
568
 
105
65
-
170
 
738
  - Past due >180 days
772
95
738
1,605
 
762
50
-
812
 
2,417
Loans - Stage 2
22,408
2,004
1,478
25,890
 
14,293
537
266
15,096
 
40,986
  - Not past due
20,992
1,915
1,368
24,275
 
13,449
532
266
14,247
 
38,522
  - Past due 1-30 days
1,142
37
39
1,218
 
579
3
-
582
 
1,800
  - Past due 31-90 days
274
52
71
397
 
265
2
-
267
 
664
Weighted average life 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   - ECL measurement (years)
9
4
6
5
 
7
4
nm
7
 
6
Weighted average 12 months PDs
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  - IFRS 9 (%)
0.44
3.46
4.68
0.70
 
1.13
0.16
9.34
0.80
 
0.75
  - Basel (%)
0.66
3.87
3.35
0.87
 
1.06
0.15
9.34
0.75
 
0.82
ECL provisions by geography
377
469
1,134
1,980
 
1,564
149
24
1,737
 
3,717
  - UK
376
469
1,134
1,979
 
1,389
99
12
1,500
 
3,479
  - Other Europe
1
-
-
1
 
115
9
-
124
 
125
  - RoW
-
-
-
-
 
60
41
12
113
 
113
 
For the notes to this table refer to page 21.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
Sector analysis - portfolio summary continued
 
 
Personal
 
Non-Personal
 
 
 
 
Credit
Other
 
 
Corporate and 
Financial
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgages (1)
 cards
personal
Total
 
other
institutions
Sovereign
Total
 
Total
30 September 2025
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
ECL provisions by stage 
377
469
1,134
1,980
 
1,564
149
24
1,737
 
3,717
  - Stage 1
55
121
175
351
 
235
38
13
286
 
637
  - Stage 2
46
185
184
415
 
326
9
5
340
 
755
  - Stage 3
276
163
775
1,214
 
1,003
102
6
1,111
 
2,325
  - Of which: individual
14
1
13
28
 
511
99
6
616
 
644
  - Of which: collective
262
162
762
1,186
 
492
3
-
495
 
1,681
ECL provisions coverage (%)
0.18
5.67
9.91
0.84
 
1.36
0.20
1.81
0.90
 
0.87
  - Stage 1 (%)
0.03
2.00
1.95
0.17
 
0.24
0.05
1.25
0.16
 
0.17
  - Stage 2 (%)
0.21
9.23
12.45
1.60
 
2.28
1.68
1.88
2.25
 
1.84
  - Stage 3 (%)
12.77
72.44
77.27
35.82
 
45.88
75.00
35.29
47.50
 
40.59
Loans by residual maturity
215,140
8,275
11,447
234,862
 
115,024
76,100
1,324
192,448
 
427,310
 - 1 year 
2,115
2,515
2,969
7,599
 
32,738
55,837
362
88,937
 
96,536
 - >1 and 5 year
8,555
5,760
6,800
21,115
 
50,610
15,618
516
66,744
 
87,859
 - >5 and 15 year
42,899
-
1,674
44,573
 
23,154
4,510
288
27,952
 
72,525
 - >15 year
161,571
-
4
161,575
 
8,522
135
158
8,815
 
170,390
Other financial assets by asset quality (2)
-
-
-
-
 
4,440
25,091
124,670
154,201
 
154,201
  - AQ1-AQ4
-
-
-
-
 
4,386
24,996
124,670
154,052
 
154,052
  - AQ5-AQ8
-
-
-
-
 
54
95
-
149
 
149
Off-balance sheet
15,073
23,265
7,666
46,004
 
76,836
21,560
491
98,887
 
144,891
  - Loan commitments
15,073
23,265
7,629
45,967
 
73,984
20,073
491
94,548
 
140,515
  - Financial guarantees
-
-
37
37
 
2,852
1,487
-
4,339
 
4,376
Off-balance sheet by asset quality (2)
15,073
23,265
7,666
46,004
 
76,836
21,560
491
98,887
 
144,891
  - AQ1-AQ4
14,212
471
6,222
20,905
 
48,850
19,679
100
68,629
 
89,534
  - AQ5-AQ8
850
22,701
1,401
24,952
 
27,599
1,837
15
29,451
 
54,403
  - AQ9 
-
12
14
26
 
17
-
376
393
 
419
  - AQ10
11
81
29
121
 
370
44
-
414
 
535
 
For the notes to this table refer to page 21.

 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continue
Sector analysis - portfolio summary continued
 
 
Personal
 
Non-Personal
 
 
 
Credit
Other
 
 
Corporate and 
Financial
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgages (1)
 cards
personal
Total
 
other
institutions
Sovereign
Total
 
Total
31 December 2024
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
Loans by geography
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
111,734
70,321
1,645
183,700
 
410,225
  - UK
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
97,409
43,412
562
141,383
 
367,908
  - Other Europe
-
-
-
-
 
6,311
14,747
766
21,824
 
21,824
  - RoW
-
-
-
-
 
8,014
12,162
317
20,493
 
20,493
Loans by asset quality (2) 
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
111,734
70,321
1,645
183,700
 
410,225
  - AQ1-AQ4
113,209
128
818
114,155
 
43,918
65,078
1,365
110,361
 
224,516
  - AQ5-AQ8
92,946
6,516
7,880
107,342
 
65,231
5,172
127
70,530
 
177,872
  - AQ9
1,156
110
191
1,457
 
306
12
132
450
 
1,907
  - AQ10
2,535
176
860
3,571
 
2,279
59
21
2,359
 
5,930
Loans by stage
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
111,734
70,321
1,645
183,700
 
410,225
  - Stage 1
186,250
4,801
7,267
198,318
 
94,991
69,021
1,491
165,503
 
363,821
  - Stage 2
21,061
1,953
1,622
24,636
 
14,464
1,241
133
15,838
 
40,474
  - Stage 3
2,535
176
860
3,571
 
2,279
59
21
2,359
 
5,930
  - Of which: individual
141
-
26
167
 
1,046
51
21
1,118
 
1,285
  - Of which: collective
2,394
176
834
3,404
 
1,233
8
-
1,241
 
4,645
Loans - past due analysis
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
111,734
70,321
1,645
183,700
 
410,225
  - Not past due
206,739
6,721
8,865
222,325
 
107,855
70,055
1,627
179,537
 
401,862
  - Past due 1-30 days
1,404
50
70
1,524
 
2,530
211
-
2,741
 
4,265
  - Past due 31-90 days
580
51
99
730
 
398
2
18
418
 
1,148
  - Past due 91-180 days
408
41
96
545
 
139
49
-
188
 
733
  - Past due >180 days
715
67
619
1,401
 
812
4
-
816
 
2,217
Loans - Stage 2
21,061
1,953
1,622
24,636
 
14,464
1,241
133
15,838
 
40,474
  - Not past due
19,939
1,889
1,521
23,349
 
13,485
1,228
133
14,846
 
38,195
  - Past due 1-30 days
853
31
37
921
 
640
11
-
651
 
1,572
  - Past due 31-90 days
269
33
64
366
 
339
2
-
341
 
707
Weighted average life
 
   - ECL measurement (years)
8
4
6
6
 
6
2
nm
6
 
6
Weighted average 12 months PDs
 
 
  - IFRS 9 (%)
0.51
3.23
4.59
0.76
 
1.24
0.16
5.51
0.86
 
0.80
  - Basel (%)
0.68
3.65
3.18
0.87
 
1.11
0.15
4.16
0.76
 
0.82
ECL provisions by geography
462
381
969
1,812
 
1,504
90
19
1,613
 
3,425
  - UK
462
381
969
1,812
 
1,335
37
12
1,384
 
3,196
  - Other Europe
-
-
-
-
 
109
9
-
118
 
118
  - RoW
-
-
-
-
 
60
44
7
111
 
111
 
 
For the notes to this table refer to the following page.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
Sector analysis - portfolio summary continued
 
 
Personal
 
Non-Personal
 
 
 
 
Credit
Other
 
 
Corporate and 
Financial
 
 
 
 
 
Mortgages (1)
cards
personal
Total
 
other
institutions
Sovereign
Total
 
Total
31 December 2024
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
ECL provisions by stage 
462
381
969
1,812
 
1,504
90
19
1,613
 
3,425
  - Stage 1
77
77
130
284
 
264
38
12
314
 
598
  - Stage 2
60
186
183
429
 
344
12
2
358
 
787
  - Stage 3
325
118
656
1,099
 
896
40
5
941
 
2,040
  - Of which: individual
11
-
17
28
 
382
36
5
423
 
451
  - Of which: collective
314
118
639
1,071
 
514
4
-
518
 
1,589
ECL provisions coverage (%)
0.22
5.50
9.94
0.80
 
1.35
0.13
1.16
0.88
 
0.83
  - Stage 1 (%)
0.04
1.60
1.79
0.14
 
0.28
0.06
0.80
0.19
 
0.16
  - Stage 2 (%)
0.28
9.52
11.28
1.74
 
2.38
0.97
1.50
2.26
 
1.94
  - Stage 3 (%)
12.82
67.05
76.28
30.78
 
39.32
67.80
23.81
39.89
 
34.40
Loans by residual maturity
209,846
6,930
9,749
226,525
 
111,734
70,321
1,645
183,700
 
410,225
 - 1 year 
3,367
3,903
3,186
10,456
 
34,929
54,971
822
90,722
 
101,178
 - >1 and 5 year
11,651
3,027
5,551
20,229
 
48,075
10,967
488
59,530
 
79,759
 - >5 and 15 year
45,454
-
1,006
46,460
 
20,623
4,270
298
25,191
 
71,651
 - >15 year
149,374
-
6
149,380
 
8,107
113
37
8,257
 
157,637
Other financial assets by asset quality (2)
-
-
-
-
 
3,644
31,102
119,502
154,248
 
154,248
  - AQ1-AQ4
-
-
-
-
 
3,639
30,743
119,502
153,884
 
153,884
  - AQ5-AQ8
-
-
-
-
 
5
359
-
364
 
364
Off-balance sheet
13,806
20,135
7,947
41,888
 
75,964
21,925
239
98,128
 
140,016
  - Loan commitments
13,806
20,135
7,906
41,847
 
72,940
20,341
239
93,520
 
135,367
  - Financial guarantees
-
-
41
41
 
3,024
1,584
-
4,608
 
4,649
Off-balance sheet by asset quality (2)
13,806
20,135
7,947
41,888
 
75,964
21,925
239
98,128
 
140,016
  - AQ1-AQ4
12,951
510
6,568
20,029
 
47,896
20,063
155
68,114
 
88,143
  - AQ5-AQ8
839
19,276
1,336
21,451
 
27,657
1,813
21
29,491
 
50,942
  - AQ9 
1
12
17
30
 
19
-
63.0
82
 
112
  - AQ10
15
337
26
378
 
392
49
-
441
 
819
 
(1)     Includes a portion of Private Banking & Wealth Management lending secured against residential real estate, in line with ECL calculation methodology. Private Banking & Wealth Management and RBS International mortgages are reported in UK, reflecting the country of lending origination and includes crown dependencies.
(2)     AQ bandings are based on Basel PDs and mapping is as follows:
 
Internal asset quality band
Probability of default range
Indicative S&P rating
 
Internal asset quality band
Probability of default range
Indicative S&P rating
AQ1
0% - 0.034%
AAA to AA
 
AQ6
1.076% - 2.153%
BB- to B+
AQ2
0.034% - 0.048%
AA to AA-
 
AQ7
2.153% - 6.089%
B+ to B
AQ3
0.048% - 0.095%
A+ to A
 
AQ8
6.089% - 17.222%
B- to CCC+
AQ4
0.095% - 0.381%
BBB+ to BBB-
 
AQ9
17.222% - 100%
CCC to C
AQ5
0.381% - 1.076%
BB+ to BB
 
AQ10
100%
D
 

Risk and capital management continued
 
Credit risk continued
Sector analysis - portfolio summary continued
The table below shows ECL by stage, for the Personal portfolio and Non-Personal portfolio, including the three largest borrowing sector clusters included in Corporate and other.
 
 
Loans - amortised cost and FVOCI
 
Off-balance sheet 
 
ECL provisions
 
 
 
Loan
Contingent
 
 
 
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Total
 
commitments
liabilities
 
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Total
30 September 2025
£m
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
Personal
205,583
25,890
3,389
234,862
 
45,967
37
 
351
415
1,214
1,980
Mortgages (1)
190,571
22,408
2,161
215,140
 
15,073
-
 
55
46
276
377
Credit cards
6,046
2,004
225
8,275
 
23,265
-
 
121
185
163
469
Other personal
8,966
1,478
1,003
11,447
 
7,629
37
 
175
184
775
1,134
Non-Personal
175,013
15,096
2,339
192,448
 
94,548
4,339
 
286
340
1,111
1,737
Financial institutions (2)
75,427
537
136
76,100
 
20,073
1,487
 
38
9
102
149
Sovereign
1,041
266
17
1,324
 
491
-
 
13
5
6
24
Corporate and other
98,545
14,293
2,186
115,024
 
73,984
2,852
 
235
326
1,003
1,564
Of which:
 
Commercial real estate
17,277
1,372
344
18,993
 
6,590
160
 
61
26
135
222
Mobility and logistics
14,997
1,989
105
17,091
 
9,808
498
 
26
34
43
103
Consumer industries
12,755
2,686
414
15,855
 
11,330
534
 
34
72
208
314
Total
380,596
40,986
5,728
427,310
 
140,515
4,376
 
637
755
2,325
3,717
 
 
31 December 2024
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Personal
198,318
24,636
3,571
226,525
 
41,847
41
 
284
429
1,099
1,812
Mortgages (1)
186,250
21,061
2,535
209,846
 
13,806
-
 
77
60
325
462
Credit cards
4,801
1,953
176
6,930
 
20,135
-
 
77
186
118
381
Other personal
7,267
1,622
860
9,749
 
7,906
41
 
130
183
656
969
Non-Personal
165,503
15,838
2,359
183,700
 
93,520
4,608
 
314
358
941
1,613
Financial institutions (2)
69,021
1,241
59
70,321
 
20,341
1,584
 
38
12
40
90
Sovereign
1,491
133
21
1,645
 
239
-
 
12
2
5
19
Corporate and other
94,991
14,464
2,279
111,734
 
72,940
3,024
 
264
344
896
1,504
Of which:
 
Commercial real estate
16,191
1,517
433
18,141
 
6,661
143
 
70
30
146
246
Mobility and logistics
13,363
2,384
148
15,895
 
9,367
595
 
26
35
67
128
Consumer industries
13,312
3,015
444
16,771
 
10,706
595
 
45
90
188
323
Total
363,821
40,474
5,930
410,225
 
135,367
4,649
 
598
787
2,040
3,425
 
(1)     As at 30 September 2025, £141.8 billion, 65.9%, of the total residential mortgages portfolio had Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) data available (31 December 2024 - £139.1 billion, 66.3%). Of which, 48.3% were rated as EPC A to C (31 December 2024 - 46.3%).
(2)     Includes transactions, such as securitisations, where the underlying risk may be in other sectors.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk
Introduction
NatWest Group takes a comprehensive approach to the management of capital, liquidity and funding, underpinned by frameworks, risk appetite and policies, to manage and mitigate capital, liquidity and funding risks. The framework ensures the tools and capability are in place to facilitate the management and mitigation of risk ensuring that NatWest Group operates within its regulatory requirements and risk appetite.
 
 
Key developments since 31 December 2024
 
CET1 ratio
14.2%
(2024 - 13.6%)
The CET1 ratio increased by 60 basis points to 14.2% due to a £1.8 billion increase in CET1 capital offset by a £5.9 billion increase in RWAs.
 
The CET1 capital increase was mainly driven by an attributable profit to ordinary shareholders of £3.3 billion (net of ordinary interim dividend paid) and other movements on reserves and regulatory adjustments of £0.5 billion partially offset by a share buyback of £0.8 billion and a foreseeable ordinary dividend accrual of £1.3 billion.      
 
 
 
 
RWAs
£189.1bn
(2024 - £183.2bn)
Total RWAs increased by £5.9 billion to £189.1 billion reflecting:
 
 −             an increase in credit risk RWAs of £3.8 billion, primarily driven by lending growth, balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank and CRD IV model updates. These increases were partially offset by, reductions as a result of RWA management actions, movements in risk metrics and the impact                  of foreign exchange movements.
−             an increase in operational risk RWAs of £2.2 billion following the annual recalculation.
−             an increase in counterparty credit risk RWAs of £0.3 billion driven by an increase in securities financing transactions and over-the-counter transactions under the IMM approach.
−             a decrease in market risk RWAs of £0.4 billion, driven by the IRC, reflecting changes in government bond positions and RNIV.    
 
 
 
 
UK leverage ratio
5.0%
(2024 - 5.0%)
The leverage ratio remained stable at 5.0% due to a £2.4 billion increase in Tier 1 capital offset by a £41.4 billion increase in leverage exposure. The key drivers in the leverage exposure were an increase in other financial assets, trading assets, net settlement balances and other off balance sheet items.  
 
 
MREL ratio
33.3%
(2024 - 33.0%)
 
The Minimum Requirements of own funds and Eligible Liabilities (MREL) ratio increased by 30 basis points driven by a £2.5 billion increase in MREL partially offset by a £5.9 billion increase in RWAs.
 
MREL increased to £62.9 billion driven by a £1.8 billion increase in CET1 capital, a £0.5 billion increase in Additional Tier 1 capital, a £0.2 billion decrease in Tier 2 capital, and a £0.3 billion increase in senior unsecured debt. Additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital movements were driven by issuance and redemptions in the period. The senior unsecured debt movement was driven by issuance and redemptions totalling £2.1 billion partially offset by a $1.5 billion debt instrument no longer being MREL eligible and foreign exchange movements of £0.7 billion.
 
 
 
 
Liquidity portfolio
£239.1bn
(2024 - £222.3bn)
 
The liquidity portfolio increased by £16.8 billion to £239.1 billion compared with Q4 2024. Primary liquidity decreased by £2.0 billion to £159.0 billion, driven by higher lending (including balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank), partially offset by increased issuance. Secondary liquidity increased by £18.8 billion due to increase in pre-positioned collateral at the Bank of England.
 
 
 
 
LCR average
148%
(2024 - 151%)
 
The average Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) decreased by 3 percentage points to 148%, during 2025, driven by increased lending.
 
 
 
NSFR average
135%
(2024 - 137%)
 
The average Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) decreased by 2 basis points to 135% during 2025 driven by increased lending.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
Maximum Distributable Amount (MDA) and Minimum Capital Requirements
NatWest Group is subject to minimum capital requirements relative to RWAs. The table below summarises the minimum capital requirements (the sum of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2A), and the additional capital buffers which are held in excess of the regulatory minimum requirements and are usable in stress.
 
Where the CET1 ratio falls below the sum of the minimum capital and the combined buffer requirement, there is a subsequent automatic restriction on the amount available to service discretionary payments (including AT1 coupons), known as the MDA. Note that different capital requirements apply to individual legal entities or sub-groups and that the table shown does not reflect any incremental PRA buffer requirements, which are not disclosable.
 
The current capital position provides significant headroom above both NatWest Group's minimum requirements and its MDA threshold requirements.
 
Type
CET1
Total Tier 1 
Total capital
Pillar 1 requirements
4.5%
6.0%
8.0%
Pillar 2A requirements
1.6%
2.1%
2.9%
Minimum Capital Requirements
6.1%
8.1%
10.9%
Capital conservation buffer
2.5%
2.5%
2.5%
Countercyclical capital buffer (1) 
1.7%
1.7%
1.7%
MDA threshold (2)
10.3%
n/a
n/a
Overall capital requirement 
10.3%
12.3%
15.1%
Capital ratios at 30 September 2025
14.2%
17.2%
20.2%
Headroom (3,4) 
3.9%
4.9%
5.1%
 
(1)     The UK countercyclical buffer (CCyB) rate is currently being maintained at 2%. This may vary in either direction in the future subject to how risks develop. Foreign exposures may be subject to different CCyB rates depending on the rate set in those jurisdictions.
(2)     Pillar 2A requirements for NatWest Group are set as a variable amount with the exception of some fixed add-ons.
(3)     The headroom does not reflect excess distributable capital and may vary over time.
(4)     Headroom as at 31 December 2024 was CET1 3.1%, Total Tier 1 3.9% and Total Capital 4.3%.
 
Leverage ratios
 
The table below summarises the minimum ratios of capital to leverage exposure under the binding PRA UK leverage framework applicable for NatWest Group.
 
Type
CET1
Total Tier 1
Minimum ratio
2.44%
3.25%
Countercyclical leverage ratio buffer (1)
0.6%
0.6%
Total
3.04%
3.85%
 
(1)      The countercyclical leverage ratio buffer is set at 35% of NatWest Group's CCyB.
 
Liquidity and funding ratios
The table below summarises the minimum requirements for key liquidity and funding metrics under the PRA framework.
 
Typ
 
Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)
100%
Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR)
100%
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
Capital and leverage ratios
The tables below show key prudential metrics calculated in accordance with current PRA rules.
 
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
Capital adequacy ratios (1)
%
%
%
CET1
14.2
13.6
13.6
Tier 1
17.2
16.7
16.5
Total
20.2
19.7
19.7
 
 
 
Capital
£m
£m
£m
Tangible equity
29,093
28,416
26,482
 
 
 
 
Expected loss less impairment
(35)
-
(27)
Prudential valuation adjustment
(172)
(210)
(230)
Deferred tax assets
(834)
(935)
(1,084)
Own credit adjustments
34
24
28
Pension fund assets
(163)
(157)
(147)
Cash flow hedging reserve
886
971
1,443
Foreseeable ordinary dividends
(1,275)
(1,244)
(1,249)
Adjustment for trust assets (2)
(365)
(365)
(365)
Foreseeable charges (3)
(446)
(750)
-
Adjustments under IFRS 9 transitional arrangements
-
-
33
Other adjustments for regulatory purposes
46
49
44
Total regulatory adjustments
(2,324)
(2,617)
(1,554)
 
 
 
 
CET1 capital
26,769
25,799
24,928
 
 
 
 
Additional AT1 capital
5,771
6,005
5,259
Tier 1 capital
32,540
31,804
30,187
 
 
 
 
Tier 2 capital
5,752
5,727
5,918
Total regulatory capital
38,292
37,531
36,105
 
 
 
 
Risk-weighted assets
 
 
Credit risk
151,945
152,785
148,078
Counterparty credit risk
7,397
7,626
7,103
Market risk
5,825
5,777
6,219
Operational risk
23,959
23,959
21,821
Total RWAs
189,126
190,147
183,221
 
(1)     The IFRS 9 transitional capital rules in respect of ECL provisions no longer apply as of 1 January 2025. (The impact of the IFRS 9 transitional adjustments at 31 December 2024 was £33 million for CET1 capital, £33 million for total capital and £3 million RWAs. Excluding this adjustment at 31 December 2024, the CET1 ratio was 13.6%, Tier 1 capital ratio was 16.5% and the Total capital ratio was 19.7%).
(2)     Prudent deduction in respect of agreement with the pension fund to establish legal structure to remove dividend linked contribution.
(3)     For September 2025, the foreseeable charge of £446 million relates to a share buyback.
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
Capital and leverage ratios continued
 
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
Leverage
£m
£m
£m
Cash and balances at central banks
84,686
90,706
92,994
Trading assets
56,856
56,706
48,917
Derivatives
61,119
73,010
78,406
Financial assets
494,874
486,305
469,599
Other assets
28,100
24,051
18,069
Total assets
725,635
730,778
707,985
Derivatives
 
 
   - netting and variation margin
(58,580)
(69,191)
(76,101)
   - potential future exposures
17,690
16,831
16,692
Securities financing transactions gross up
1,841
1,510
2,460
Other off balance sheet items
63,394
62,497
59,498
Regulatory deductions and other adjustments
(18,124)
(17,869)
(11,014)
Claims on central banks
(81,179)
(87,228)
(89,299)
Exclusion of bounce back loans
(1,457)
(1,777)
(2,422)
UK leverage exposure 
649,220
635,551
607,799
UK leverage ratio (%) (1)
5.0
5.0
5.0
 
(1)     The UK leverage exposure and transitional Tier 1 capital are calculated in accordance with current PRA rules. The IFRS 9 transitional capital rules in respect of ECL no longer apply as of 1 January 2025. (Excluding the IFRS 9 transitional adjustment, the UK leverage ratio at 31 December 2024 was 5.0%).
 
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
Capital flow statement
The table below analyses the movement in CET1, AT1 and Tier 2 capital for the nine months ended 30 September 2025.
 
 
CET1
AT1
Tier 2
Total
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
At 31 December 2024
24,928
5,259
5,918
36,105
Attributable profit for the period
4,086
-
-
4,086
Ordinary interim dividend paid
(768)
-
-
(768)
Share buyback 
(750)
-
-
(750)
Foreseeable ordinary dividends 
(1,275)
-
-
(1,275)
Foreign exchange reserve
2
-
-
2
FVOCI reserve
81
-
-
81
Own credit
6
-
-
6
Share based remuneration and shares vested under employee share schemes
190
-
-
190
Goodwill and intangibles deduction
113
-
-
113
Deferred tax assets
250
-
-
250
Prudential valuation adjustments
58
-
-
58
New issues of capital instruments
-
1,244
823
2,067
Redemption of capital instruments
(109)
(732)
(1,000)
(1,841)
Foreign exchange movements
-
-
11
11
Adjustment under IFRS 9 transitional arrangements
(33)
-
-
(33)
Expected loss less impairment
(8)
-
-
(8)
Other movements
(2)
-
-
(2)
At 30 September 2025
26,769
5,771
5,752
38,292
 
−       For CET1 movements refer to the key points on page 23.
−       The AT1 movement reflects the £0.7 billion 7.500% Reset Perpetual Subordinated Contingent Convertible Additional Tier 1 Capital Notes issued in March 2025 and the £0.5 billion 7.625% Reset Perpetual Subordinated Contingent Convertible Additional Tier 1 Capital Notes issued in September 2025 offset by the redemption of $1.15 billion 8.000% Perpetual Subordinated Contingent Convertible Additional Tier 1 Capital Notes in August 2025.
−       Tier 2 movements of £0.2 billion include a decrease of £1.0 billion due to the redemption of 3.622% Fixed to Fixed Rate Reset Tier 2 Notes due 2030 in May 2025 partially offset by an increase of £0.8 billion for a €1.0 billion 3.723% Fixed to Fixed Rate Reset Tier 2 Notes 2035 issued in February 2025 and foreign exchange movements.
 
Capital generation pre-distributions
 
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
CET1 
26,769
25,799
24,928
CET1 capital pre-distributions (1)
29,562
27,793
28,920
RWAs 
189,126
190,147
183,221
 
 % 
 % 
 % 
CET1 ratio - opening at 1 January
13.61
13.61
13.36
CET1 pre-distributions - closing
15.63
14.62
15.78
Capital generation pre-distributions (1)
2.02
1.01
2.43
(1)     The calculation of capital generation pre-distributions uses CET1 capital pre-distributions. Distributions includes ordinary dividends paid, foreseeable ordinary dividends and share buybacks.
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
Risk-weighted assets
The table below analyses the movement in RWAs for the nine months ended 30 September 2025, by key drivers.
 
 
 
Counterparty
 
Operational
 
 
Credit risk
credit risk
Market risk
risk
Total 
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
£bn
£bn
At 31 December 2024
148.1
7.1
6.2
21.8
183.2
Foreign exchange movement
(0.3)
-
-
-
(0.3)
Business movement
1.0
0.2
(0.4)
2.2
3.0
Risk parameter changes
(0.9)
-
-
-
(0.9)
Model updates
2.4
0.1
-
-
2.5
Acquisitions
1.6
-
-
-
1.6
At 30 September 2025
151.9
7.4
5.8
24.0
189.1
 
The table below analyses segmental RWAs.
 
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Total 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
Central items 
NatWest
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional 
& other
Group
Total RWAs
£bn
£bn
£bn
£bn
£bn
At 31 December 2024
65.5
11.0
104.7
2.0
183.2
Foreign exchange movement
-
-
(0.3)
-
(0.3)
Business movement
0.8
0.4
2.2
(0.4)
3.0
Risk parameter changes 
0.2
-
(1.1)
-
(0.9)
Model updates
1.0
-
1.5
-
2.5
Acquisitions
1.6
-
-
-
1.6
At 30 September 2025
69.1
11.4
107.0
1.6
189.1
 
 
Credit risk
60.0
9.8
80.7
1.4
151.9
Counterparty credit risk
0.2
-
7.2
-
7.4
Market risk
0.2
-
5.6
-
5.8
Operational risk
8.7
1.6
13.5
0.2
24.0
Total RWAs
69.1
11.4
107.0
1.6
189.1
 
 
Total RWAs increased by £5.9 billion to £189.1 billion during the period mainly reflecting:
 
−             A reduction in risk-weighted assets from foreign exchange movements of £0.3 billion due to sterling appreciation versus the US dollar and euro.
−            An increase in business movements of £3.0 billion, driven by the annual recalculation of operational risk, an increase in credit risk due to lending growth partially offset by reductions as a result of RWA management actions. Further increase seen in counterparty credit risk driven by securities financing and OTC transactions partially offset by a             decrease in market risk driven by IRC and RNIV.
−             A reduction in risk parameters of £0.9 billion primarily driven by movements in risk metrics within Commercial & Institutional and Retail Banking.
−             An increase in model updates of £2.5 billion primarily driven by CRD IV model updates within Commercial & Institutional and Retail Banking.
−             An increase in acquisitions of £1.6 billion driven by balances acquired from Sainsbury's Bank.
 
 
Risk and capital management continued
 
Capital, liquidity and funding risk continued
 
Liquidity portfolio
 
The table below shows the composition of the liquidity portfolio with primary liquidity aligned to high-quality liquid assets on a regulatory LCR basis. Secondary liquidity comprises of assets which are eligible as collateral for local central bank liquidity facilities and do not form part of the LCR eligible high-quality liquid assets. High-quality liquid assets cover both Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 risks.
 
 
Liquidity value
 
30 September 2025
 
30 June 2025
 
31 December 2024
 
NatWest
NWH
UK DoL
 
NatWest
NWH
UK DoL
 
NatWest
NWH
UK DoL
 
Group (1)
Group (2)
Sub
 
Group (1)
Group (2)
Sub 
 
Group (1)
Group (2)
Sub 
 
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Cash and balances at central banks 
 80,489
 51,277
 50,666
 
 86,589
 55,027
 54,353
 
 88,617
 58,313
 57,523
High quality government/MDB/PSE and GSE bonds (3)
 65,588
 47,194
 47,194
 
 61,527
 44,580
 44,580
 
 58,818
 43,275
 43,275
Extremely high quality covered bonds
 4,613
 4,613
 4,613
 
 4,494
 4,494
 4,494
 
 4,341
 4,340
 4,340
LCR level 1 assets
 150,690
 103,084
 102,473
 
 152,610
 104,101
 103,427
 
 151,776
 105,928
 105,138
LCR level 2 Eligible Assets (4)
 8,332
 7,397
 7,397
 
 7,985
 6,880
 6,880
 
 9,271
 7,957
 7,957
Primary liquidity (HQLA) (5)
 159,022
 110,481
 109,870
 
 160,595
 110,981
 110,307
 
 161,047
 113,885
 113,095
Secondary liquidity
 80,051
 80,023
 80,023
 
 55,997
 55,969
 55,969
 
 61,230
 61,200
 61,200
Total liquidity value
 239,073
 190,504
 189,893
 
 216,592
 166,950
 166,276
 
 222,277
 175,085
 174,295
 
(1)     NatWest Group includes the UK Domestic Liquidity Sub-Group (UK DoLSub), NatWest Markets Plc and other significant operating subsidiaries that hold liquidity portfolios. These include RBSI Ltd and NWM N.V. who hold managed portfolios that comply with local regulations that may differ from PRA rules.
(2)     NWH Group comprises UK DoLSub and NatWest Bank Europe GmbH who hold managed portfolios that comply with local regulations that may differ from PRA rules.
(3)     Multilateral development bank abbreviated to MDB, public sector entities abbreviated to PSE and government sponsored entities abbreviated to GSE.
(4)     Includes Level 2A and Level 2B.
(5)     High-quality liquid assets abbreviated to HQLA.
 
 
Pension risk
 
On 8 August 2025, the Trustee of the Main section of the NatWest Group Pension Fund entered into a buy-in transaction with a third-party insurer for some of its liabilities. This is an insurance policy that gives the Fund protection against demographic and investment risks, so improves the security of member benefits. The transaction did not affect the 2025 statement of comprehensive income because the net pension asset was limited to zero due to the impact of the asset ceiling.
 
 
Condensed consolidated income statement
 
for the period ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)
 
 
 Nine months ended 
 
 Quarter ended 
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
 £m 
 £m 
 
 £m 
 £m 
 £m 
Interest receivable
19,155
18,734
 
6,482
6,358
6,444
Interest payable
(9,767)
(10,427)
 
(3,214)
(3,264)
(3,545)
Net interest income
9,388
8,307
 
3,268
3,094
2,899
Fees and commissions receivable
2,412
2,378
 
804
806
811
Fees and commissions payable
(552)
(529)
 
(184)
(179)
(181)
Trading income
974
607
 
399
291
257
Other operating income
95
115
 
45
(7)
(42)
Non-interest income
2,929
2,571
 
1,064
911
845
Total income
12,317
10,878
 
4,332
4,005
3,744
Staff costs
(3,193)
(3,112)
 
(1,064)
(1,060)
(965)
Premises and equipment
(906)
(863)
 
(319)
(293)
(284)
Other administrative expenses
(1,060)
(1,153)
 
(315)
(395)
(330)
Depreciation and amortisation
(855)
(754)
 
(298)
(291)
(246)
Operating expenses
(6,014)
(5,882)
 
(1,996)
(2,039)
(1,825)
Profit before impairment losses
6,303
4,996
 
2,336
1,966
1,919
Impairment losses
(535)
(293)
 
(153)
(193)
(245)
Operating profit before tax
5,768
           4,703 
 
2,183
           1,773 
           1,674 
Tax charge
(1,412)
          (1,232)
 
(502)
            (439)
            (431)
Profit from continuing operations
4,356
           3,471 
 
1,681
           1,334 
           1,243 
Profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
-
               12 
 
-
 - 
                 1 
Profit for the period
4,356
           3,483 
 
1,681
           1,334 
           1,244 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Attributable to:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ordinary shareholders
4,086
3,271
 
1,598
1,236
1,172
Paid-in equity holders
268
202
 
82
96
73
Non-controlling interests
2
10
 
1
2
(1)
 
4,356
3,483
 
1,681
1,334
1,244
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Earnings per ordinary share - continuing operations
50.7p
38.2p
 
19.8p
15.3p
14.1p
Earnings per ordinary share - discontinued operations
-
0.1p
 
-
-
-
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - basic 
50.7p
38.3p
 
19.8p
15.3p
14.1p
Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted continuing operations
50.2p
37.9p
 
19.6p
15.1p
14.0p
Earnings per ordinary share - fully diluted discontinued operations
-
0.1p
 
-
-
-
Total earnings per share attributable to ordinary shareholders - fully diluted
50.2p
38.0p
 
19.6p
15.1p
14.0p
 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income
 
for the period ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)
 
 
Nine months ended
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Profit for the period
4,356
3,483
 
1,681
1,334
1,244
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes
20
(92)
 
11
3
(32)
Changes in fair value of financial liabilities designated at fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL)
 
 
 
 
 
 
   due to changes in credit risk
(11)
(25)
 
(10)
(5)
1
FVOCI financial assets
54
16
 
5
35
49
Tax
(10)
39
 
(8)
(4)
(5)
 
53
(62)
 
(2)
29
13
Items that will be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss when specific conditions are met:
 
 
 
 
 
 
FVOCI financial assets
76
21
 
13
29
(20)
Cash flow hedges (1)
778
732
 
120
475
611
Currency translation
(18)
(119)
 
77
(65)
(77)
Tax
(224)
(221)
 
(32)
(130)
(164)
 
612
413
 
178
309
350
Other comprehensive income after tax
665
351
 
176
338
363
Total comprehensive income for the period
5,021
3,834
 
1,857
1,672
1,607
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Attributable to:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ordinary shareholders
4,751
3,622
 
1,774
1,574
1,535
Paid-in equity holders
268
202
 
82
96
73
Non-controlling interests
2
10
 
1
2
(1)
 
5,021
3,834
 
1,857
1,672
1,607
(1)
Refer to footnote 4 of the condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
 
as at 30 September 2025 (unaudited)
 
 
30 September
31 December
 
2025
2024
 
£m 
£m 
Assets
 
 
Cash and balances at central banks
84,686
92,994
Trading assets
56,856
48,917
Derivatives
61,119
78,406
Settlement balances
12,331
2,085
Loans to banks - amortised cost
8,005
6,030
Loans to customers - amortised cost
415,274
400,326
Other financial assets
71,595
63,243
Intangible assets
7,477
7,588
Other assets
8,292
8,396
Total assets
725,635
707,985
 
 
 
Liabilities
 
 
Bank deposits
44,962
31,452
Customer deposits
435,490
433,490
Settlement balances
9,271
1,729
Trading liabilities
58,402
54,714
Derivatives
54,114
72,082
Other financial liabilities
67,634
61,087
Subordinated liabilities
6,136
6,136
Notes in circulation
3,340
3,316
Other liabilities
3,905
4,601
Total liabilities
683,254
668,607
 
 
 
Equity
 
 
Ordinary shareholders' interests
36,570
34,070
Other owners' interests
5,792
5,280
Owners' equity
42,362
39,350
Non-controlling interests
19
28
Total equity
42,381
39,378
 
 
 
Total liabilities and equity
725,635
707,985
 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
 
for the period ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)
 
 
Share 
 
Other
 
Other reserves
Total
Non
 
 
capital and
Paid-in
statutory
Retained
 
Cash flow
Foreign
 
owners'
controlling
Total 
 
share premium
equity
reserves (3)
earnings
Fair value
hedging (4,5)
exchange (6)
Merger
equity
 interests
equity
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
At 1 January 2025
10,133
5,280
2,350
11,426
(103)
(1,443)
826
10,881
39,350
28
39,378
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
 
   and other equity owners
 
- continuing operations
 
4,354
 
4,354
2
4,356
- discontinued operations
 
-
 
-
 
 
Other comprehensive income
 
Realised gains in period on FVOCI equity shares
 
25
(25)
 
-
 
-
Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes
 
20
 
20
 
20
Changes in fair value of credit in financial liabilities
 
   designated at FVTPL due to own credit risk
 
(11)
 
(11)
 
(11)
Unrealised gains
 
129
 
129
 
129
Amounts recognised in equity
 
17
 
17
 
17
Retranslation of net assets
 
43
 
43
 
43
Losses on hedges of net assets
 
(90)
 
(90)
 
(90)
Amount transferred from equity to earnings (6)
 
1
761
29
 
791
 
791
Tax
 
(9)
(24)
(221)
20
 
(234)
 
(234)
Total comprehensive income
-
-
-
4,379
81
557
2
-
5,019
2
5,021
 
 
Transactions with owners
 
Ordinary share dividends paid
 
(2,018)
 
(2,018)
-
(2,018)
Redemption of paid-in equity
 
(736)
 
(109)
 
(845)
 
(845)
Paid-in equity dividends
 
(268)
 
(268)
 
(268)
Securities issued (2)
 
1,248
 
1,248
 
1,248
Purchase of non-controlling interest
 
(10)
 
(10)
(11)
(21)
Shares repurchased during the period (1,7)
(62)
 
62
(304)
 
(304)
 
(304)
Employee share schemes
 
76
 
76
 
76
Shares vested under employee share schemes
 
124
 
124
 
124
Share-based remuneration
 
(10)
 
(10)
 
(10)
At 30 September 2025
10,071
5,792
2,536
13,162
(22)
(886)
828
10,881
42,362
19
42,381
 
 
For the notes to this table, refer to the following page.
 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited) continued
 
 
Share 
 
Other
 
Other reserves
Total
Non
 
 
capital and
Paid-in
statutory
Retained
 
Cash flow
Foreign
 
owners'
controlling
Total 
 
share premium
equity
reserves (3)
earnings
Fair value
hedging (4,5)
exchange 
Merger
equity
 interests
equity
 
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
At 1 January 2024
10,844
3,890
2,004
10,645
(49)
(1,899)
841
10,881
37,157
31
37,188
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
 
   and other equity owners
 
- continuing operations
 
3,461
 
3,461
10
3,471
- discontinued operations
 
12
 
12
-
12
 
 
Other comprehensive income
 
Realised gains in period on FVOCI equity shares
 
54
(54)
 
-
 
-
Remeasurement of retirement benefit schemes
 
(92)
 
(92)
 
(92)
Changes in fair value of credit in financial liabilities
 
   designated at FVTPL due to own credit risk
 
(25)
 
(25)
 
(25)
Unrealised gains
 
24
 
24
 
24
Amounts recognised in equity
 
(442)
 
(442)
 
(442)
Retranslation of net assets
 
(283)
 
(283)
 
(283)
Gains on hedges of net assets
 
122
 
122
 
122
Amount transferred from equity to earnings 
 
13
1,174
42
 
1,229
 
1,229
Tax
 
25
9
(198)
(18)
 
(182)
 
(182)
Total comprehensive income/(loss)
-
-
-
3,435
(8)
534
(137)
-
3,824
10
3,834
 
 
Transactions with owners
 
Ordinary share dividends paid
 
(1,505)
 
(1,505)
-
(1,505)
Paid-in equity dividends
 
(202)
 
(202)
 
(202)
Securities issued (2)
 
800
 
800
 
800
Shares repurchased during the period (1,7)
(428)
 
428
(1,171)
 
(1,171)
 
(1,171)
Shares vested under employee share schemes
 
142
(7)
 
135
 
135
Own shares acquired
 
(540)
 
(540)
 
(540)
At 30 September 2024
10,416
4,690
2,034
11,195
(57)
(1,365)
704
10,881
38,498
41
38,539
 
(1)
As part of the On Market Share Buyback Programmes NatWest Group plc repurchased and cancelled 58.9 million shares (September 2024 - 173.3 million shares), of which one million shares were settled in October 2025. The total consideration of these shares excluding fees was £308.3 million (September 2024 - £450.9 million), of which £5.1 million were settled in October 2025. Included in the retained earnings reserve movement is 2.3 million shares which were repurchased and cancelled in December 2023, settled in January 2024 for a total consideration of £4.9 million. The nominal value of the share cancellations was transferred to the capital redemption reserve.
 
(2)
The issuance above is after netting of issuance fees of £2.8 million (September 2024 - £2.4 million), and the associated tax credit of £0.7 million (September 2024 - £0.7 million).
 
(3)
Other statutory reserves consist of Capital redemption reserves of £3,280 million (September 2024 - £2,935 million) and Own shares held reserves of (£744) million (September 2024 - (£901) million).
 
(4)
The change in the cash flow hedging reserve is driven by realised accrued interest transferred into the income statement and an increase in swap rates in the medium term tenors in the year, where the portfolio of swaps are net receive fixed from an interest rate risk perspective.
 
(5)
The amount transferred from equity to the income statement is mostly recorded within net interest income mainly within loans to banks and customers - amortised cost, balances at central banks, bank deposits and customer deposits.
 
(6)
Includes £29 million FX recycled to profit or loss upon redemption of paid-in equity and capital repatriation.
 
(7)
In June 2024, there was an agreement to buy 392.4 million ordinary shares of the Company from His Majesty's Treasury (HM Treasury) at 316.2 pence per share for total consideration of £1.2 billion. NatWest Group cancelled 222.4 million of the purchased ordinary shares, amounting to £706.9 million excluding fees and held the remaining 170.0 million shares as Own Shares Held, amounting to £540.2 million excluding fees. The nominal value of the share cancellation was transferred to the capital redemption reserve. There were no repurchases in 2025.
 
 
 
Notes
 
1. Presentation of condensed consolidated financial statements
 
The condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with NatWest Group plc's 2024 Annual Report and Accounts. The accounting policies are the same as those applied in the consolidated financial statements.
 
The directors have prepared the condensed consolidated financial statements on a going concern basis after assessing the principal risks, forecasts, projections and other relevant evidence over the twelve months from the date they are approved.
 
2. Litigation and regulatory matters
 
NatWest Group plc's Interim Results 2025, issued on 25 July 2025, included disclosures about NatWest Group's litigation and regulatory matters in Note 14. Set out below are the material developments in those matters (which have been previously disclosed) since publication of the Interim Results 2025.
 
Litigation
 
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and other rates litigation
 
NatWest Group plc and certain other members of NatWest Group, including NWM Plc, are defendants in a number of claims pending in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) with respect to the setting of USD LIBOR. The complainants allege that certain members of NatWest Group and other panel banks violated various federal laws, including the US commodities and antitrust laws, and state statutory and common law, as well as contracts, by manipulating LIBOR and prices of LIBOR-based derivatives in various markets through various means.
 
The co-ordinated proceeding in the SDNY relating to USD LIBOR now includes one remaining class action, which is on behalf of persons who purchased LIBOR-linked instruments from defendants and bonds issued by defendants, as well as several non-class actions. On 25 September 2025, the SDNY granted summary judgment to the defendants on the issue of liability and dismissed all claims in both the class action and the non-class actions. The decision remains subject to appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (US Court of Appeals).
 
Two other IBOR-related class actions involving NWM Plc, concerning alleged manipulation of Euribor and Pound Sterling LIBOR, were previously dismissed by the SDNY for various reasons. However, on 22 August 2025, the US Court of Appeal reversed the SDNY's decision in the Euribor case, reinstating claims against NWM Plc. That case will therefore return to the SDNY for further proceedings.
 
On 15 September 2025, the US Court of Appeals affirmed the SDNY's dismissal of the Pound Sterling LIBOR case.
 
Foreign exchange litigation
 
NWM Plc, NWMSI and/or NatWest Group plc are defendants in several cases relating to NWM Plc's foreign exchange (FX) business.
 
In May 2025, NWM Plc executed an agreement to settle the claim in the Federal Court of Australia, which the court approved in August 2025. The settlement amount is covered in full by an existing provision.
 
Odd lot corporate bond trading antitrust litigation
 
In July 2024, the US Court of Appeals vacated the SDNY's October 2021 dismissal of the class action antitrust complaint alleging that, from August 2006 onwards, various securities dealers, including NWMSI, conspired artificially to widen spreads for odd lots of corporate bonds bought or sold in the United States secondary market and to boycott electronic trading platforms that would have allegedly promoted pricing competition in the market for such bonds.
 
The appellate court held that the district judge who made the decision should not have been presiding over the case because a member of the judge's family had owned stock in one of the defendants while the motion was pending.
 
On 2 September 2025, a different judge in the SDNY again dismissed the complaint in this action on the ground that the plaintiffs have failed to plead antitrust conspiracy. The plaintiffs did not appeal the decision within the time required for an appeal.
 
Offshoring VAT assessments
 
HMRC, as part of an industry-wide review, issued protective tax assessments in 2018 against NatWest Group plc totalling £143 million relating to unpaid VAT in respect of the UK branches of two NatWest Group companies registered in India for the period from 1 January 2014 until 31 December 2017 inclusive. NatWest Group formally requested reconsideration by HMRC of their assessments, and this process was completed in November 2020. HMRC upheld their original decision and, as a result, NatWest Group plc lodged an appeal with the Tax Tribunal and an application for judicial review with the High Court of Justice of England and Wales, both in December 2020.
 
In order to lodge the appeal with the Tax Tribunal, NatWest Group plc was required to pay amounts totalling £153 million (including statutory interest) to HMRC in December 2020 and May 2022. The appeal and the application for judicial review were previously stayed behind a separate case involving another bank. 
 
NatWest Group plc was informed in late 2024 that the other bank had settled its case with HMRC by agreement. NatWest Group plc is progressing its appeal before the Tax Tribunal in its own name. NatWest Group plc will also continue to review next steps relevant to the judicial review.
 
The amount of £153 million continues to be recognised as an asset that NatWest Group plc expects to recover. Since 1 January 2018, NatWest Group plc has paid VAT on intra-group supplies from India-registered NatWest Group companies.
 
 
Notes continued
 
2. Litigation and regulatory matters continued
 
US Anti-Terrorism Act litigation
 
NWM N.V. and certain other financial institutions are defendants in several actions filed by a number of US nationals (or their estates, survivors, or heirs), most of whom are, or were, US military personnel who were killed or injured in attacks in Iraq between 2003 and 2011.
 
NWM Plc is also a defendant in some of these cases.
 
According to the plaintiffs' allegations, the defendants are liable for damages arising from the attacks because they allegedly conspired with and/or aided and abetted Iran and certain Iranian banks to assist Iran in transferring money to Hezbollah and the Iraqi terror cells that committed the attacks, in violation of the US Anti-Terrorism Act, by agreeing to engage in 'stripping' of transactions initiated by the Iranian banks so that the Iranian nexus to the transactions would not be detected.
 
The first of these actions, alleging conspiracy claims but not aiding and abetting claims, was filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York in November 2014. In September 2019, the district court dismissed the case, finding that the claims were deficient for several reasons, including lack of sufficient allegations as to the alleged conspiracy and causation. In January 2023, the US Court of Appeals affirmed the district court's dismissal of this case.
 
On 30 September 2025, the district court denied a motion by the plaintiffs to re-open the case to assert aiding and abetting claims that they previously did not assert. Another action, filed in the SDNY in 2017, which asserted both conspiracy and aiding and abetting claims, was dismissed by the SDNY in March 2019 on similar grounds as the first case, but remains subject to appeal to the US Court of Appeals.
 
Other follow-on actions that are substantially similar to those described above are pending in the same courts.
 
Regulatory matters
 
US investigations relating to fixed-income securities
 
In December 2021, NWM Plc pled guilty in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut to one count of wire fraud and one count of securities fraud in connection with historical spoofing conduct by former employees in US Treasuries markets between January 2008 and May 2014 and, separately, during approximately three months in 2018. The 2018 trading occurred during the term of a non-prosecution agreement (NPA) between NWMSI and the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut (USAO CT), under which non-prosecution conditioned on NWMSI and affiliated companies not engaging in criminal conduct during the term of the NPA. The relevant trading in 2018 was conducted by two NWM traders in Singapore and breached that NPA. The plea agreement reached with the US Department of Justice (DOJ) and the USAO CT resolved both the spoofing conduct and the breach of the NPA.
 
 
The DOJ and USAO CT paused the monitorship in May 2025 and, following a review, determined that a monitorship was no longer necessary as a result of NWM's notable progress in strengthening its compliance programme, certain of NWM's remedial improvements, internal controls, and the status of implementation of Monitor recommendations, and that reporting by NWM to the DOJ and USAO CT on its continued compliance programme progress provided an appropriate degree of oversight. The court approved the amended plea agreement and extended NWM's obligations under the plea agreement and probation until December 2026.
 
In the event that NWM Plc does not meet its obligations to the DOJ, this may lead to adverse consequences such as increased costs, findings that NWM Plc violated its probation term, and possible re-sentencing, amongst other consequences. Other material adverse collateral consequences may occur as a result of this matter, as further described in the Risk Factor relating to legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations set out on pages 422-423 of the NatWest Group Annual Results and Accounts 2024.
 
Review and investigation of treatment of tracker mortgage customers in Ulster Bank Ireland DAC
 
In December 2015, correspondence was received from the Central Bank of Ireland setting out an industry examination framework in respect of the sale of tracker mortgages from approximately 2001 until the end of 2015. 
 
The redress and compensation process has now largely concluded, although a small number of cases remain outstanding relating to uncontactable customers.
 
Ulydien (formerly UBIDAC) customers have lodged tracker mortgage complaints with the Financial Services and Pensions Ombudsman (FSPO). UBIDAC challenged three FSPO adjudications in the Irish High Court. In June 2023, the High Court found in favour of the FSPO in all matters. UBIDAC appealed that decision to the Court of Appeal. In September 2024, the Court of Appeal allowed UBIDAC's appeal and set aside certain findings of the FSPO. The Court of Appeal directed one aspect of the FSPO decisions to be remitted to the FSPO for its consideration following an oral hearing.
 
Decisions are awaited from the FSPO in respect of these cases.
 
3. Post balance sheet events
 
As part of the ongoing on-market share buyback programme, NatWest Group plc has repurchased and cancelled a further 12.2 million shares since 30 September 2025 for a total consideration (excluding fees) of £65.99 million.
 
There have been no significant events between 30 September 2025 and the date of approval of this announcement which would require a change to, or additional disclosure, in the announcement.
 
 
Presentation of information
 
'Parent company' refers to NatWest Group plc and 'NatWest Group', 'Group' or 'we' refers to NatWest Group plc and its subsidiaries. The term 'NWH Group' refers to NatWest Holdings Limited ('NWH Limited') and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term 'NWM Group' refers to NatWest Markets Plc ('NWM Plc') and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term RBSH N.V. refers to RBS Holdings N.V. The term NWM N.V. Group refers to NatWest Markets N.V. and its subsidiary and associated undertakings. The term 'NWMSI' refers to NatWest Markets Securities, Inc. The term 'RBS plc' refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland plc. The term 'NWB Plc' refers to National Westminster Bank Plc. The term RBSI Ltd refers to The Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited. Effective from Q2 2025, the reportable segment Private Banking was renamed Private Banking & Wealth Management. This does not change the financial results of Private Banking & Wealth Management or the consolidated financial results of NatWest Group.
 
NatWest Group publishes its financial statements in pounds sterling ('£' or 'sterling'). The abbreviations '£m' and '£bn' represent millions and thousands of millions of pounds sterling, respectively, and references to 'pence' or 'p' represent pence where the amounts are denominated in pounds sterling ('GBP'). Reference to 'dollars' or '$' are to United States of America ('US') dollars. The abbreviations '$m' and '$bn' represent millions and thousands of millions of dollars, respectively. The abbreviation '€' represents the 'euro', and the abbreviations '€m' and '€bn' represent millions and thousands of millions of euros, respectively.
 
Statutory accounts
 
Financial information contained in this document does not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of section 434 of the Companies Act 2006 ('the Act'). The statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2024 have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The report of the auditor on those statutory accounts was unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis and did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Act.
 
Contacts:
 
Analyst enquiries:               Claire Kane, Investor Relations        +44 (0) 20 7672 1758
Media enquiries:                 NatWest Group Press Office             +44 (0) 7557 316 540
 
Management presentation
Date:
Time:
Zoom ID:
24 October 2025
9am BST
919 8718 5486
 
Available on natwestgroup.com/results
−       Q3 2025 Interim Management Statement and background slides.
 
−       A financial supplement containing income statement, balance sheet and segment performance for four quarters ended 30 September 2025.
 
−       NatWest Group Pillar 3 at 30 September 2025.
 
Forward-looking statements
 
This document may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, such as statements with respect to NatWest Group's financial condition, results of operations and business, including its strategic priorities, financial, investment and capital targets, and climate and sustainability related targets, commitments and ambitions described herein. Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about NatWest Group's beliefs and expectations, are forward-looking statements. Words, such as 'expect', 'estimate', 'project', 'anticipate', 'commit', 'believe', 'should', 'intend', 'will', 'plan', 'could', 'target', 'goal', 'objective', 'may', 'outlook', 'prospects' and similar expressions or variations on these expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. In particular, this document may include forward-looking statements relating , but not limited to: NatWest Group's outlook, guidance and targets (including in relation to RoTE, total income, other operating expenses, loan impairment rate, CET1 ratio, RWA levels, payment of dividends and participation in directed buybacks), its financial position, profitability and financial performance, the implementation of its strategy, its access to adequate sources of liquidity and funding, its regulatory capital position and related requirements, its impairment losses and credit exposures under certain specified scenarios, substantial regulation and oversight, ongoing legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations. Forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that might cause actual results and performance to differ materially from any expected future results or performance expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause or contribute to differences in current expectations include, but are not limited to, future growth initiatives (including acquisitions, joint ventures and strategic partnerships), the outcome of legal, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations, the level and extent of future impairments and write-downs, legislative, political, fiscal and regulatory developments, accounting standards, competitive conditions, technological developments, interest and exchange rate fluctuations, general economic and political conditions and uncertainties, exposure to third party risk, operational risk, conduct risk, cyber, data and IT risk, financial crime risk, key person risk and credit rating risk and the impact of climate and sustainability related risks and the transitioning to a net zero economy. These and other factors, risks and uncertainties that may impact any forward-looking statement or NatWest Group plc's actual results are discussed in NatWest Group plc's 2024 Annual Report and Accounts on Form 20-F, NatWest Group's Interim Management Statement for Q1, H1 and Q3 2025 on Form 6-K, and its other public filings. The forward-looking statements contained in this document speak only as of the date of this document and NatWest Group plc does not assume or undertake any obligation or responsibility to update any of the forward-looking statements contained in this document, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except to the extent legally required.
 
 
Non-IFRS financial measures
 
NatWest Group prepares its financial statements in accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). This document contains a number of non-IFRS measures, or alternative performance measures, defined under the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) guidance, or non-GAAP financial measures in accordance with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations. These measures are adjusted for notable and other defined items which management believes are not representative of the underlying performance of the business and which distort period-on-period comparison.
 
The non-IFRS measures provide users of the financial statements with a consistent basis for comparing business performance between financial periods and information on elements of performance that are one-off in nature. The non-IFRS measures also include a calculation of metrics that are used throughout the banking industry.
 
These non-IFRS measures are not a substitute for IFRS measures and a reconciliation to the closest IFRS measure is presented where appropriate.
 
Measure
 
Description
 
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct)
Refer to table 2. Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) on page 40.
 
The cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct) is calculated as other operating expenses (operating expenses less litigation and conduct costs) divided by total income. Litigation and conduct costs are excluded as they are one-off in nature, difficult to forecast for Outlook purposes and distort period-on-period comparisons.
 
Customer deposits excluding central items
Refer to Segment performance on pages 10-14 for components of calculation.
 
Customer deposits excluding central items is calculated as total NatWest Group customer deposits excluding Central items & other customer deposits. Central items & other includes Treasury repo activity.  The exclusion of Central items & other removes the volatility relating to Treasury repo activity and the reduction of deposits as part of our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland.
These items may distort period-on-period comparisons and their removal gives the user of the financial statements a better understanding of the movements in customer deposits.  
 
Funded assets
Refer to Condensed consolidated balance sheet on page 32 for components of calculation.
 
Funded assets is calculated as total assets less derivative assets. This measure allows review of balance sheet trends exclusive of the volatility associated with derivative fair values.
 
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos)
Refer to table 5. Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) on page 41.
 
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) is calculated as net loans to customers - amortised cost excluding reverse repos divided by total customer deposits excluding repos. This metric is used to assess liquidity.
The removal of repos and reverse repos reduces volatility and presents the ratio on a basis that is comparable to UK peers. The nearest ratio using IFRS measures is loan:deposit ratio. This is calculated as net loans to customers - amortised cost divided by customer deposits.
 
NatWest Group Return on Tangible Equity
Refer to table 7. NatWest Group Return on Tangible Equity on page 42.
 
NatWest Group Return on Tangible Equity comprises annualised profit or loss for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by average tangible equity. Average tangible equity is average total equity excluding average non-controlling interests, average other owners' equity and average intangible assets. This measure shows the return NatWest Group generates on tangible equity deployed. It is used to determine relative performance of banks and used widely across the sector, although different banks may calculate the rate differently. The nearest ratio using IFRS measures is return on equity - this comprises profit attributable to ordinary shareholders divided by average total equity.
 
 
 
Non-IFRS financial measures continued
 
Measure
 
Description
 
Net interest margin and average interest earning assets
Refer to Segment performance on pages 10-14 for components of calculation.
 
Net interest margin is net interest income, as a percentage of average interest earning assets (IEA).
Average IEA are average IEA of the banking business of NatWest Group and primarily consists of cash and balances at central banks, loans to banks - amortised cost, loans to customers - amortised cost and other financial assets. It excludes trading balances and assets in treasury repurchase agreements that have not been derecognised. Average IEA shows the average asset base generating interest over the period.
 
Net loans to customers excluding central items
Refer to Segment performance on pages 10-14 for components of calculation.
 
Net loans to customers excluding central items is calculated as total NatWest Group net loans to customers excluding Central items & other net loans to customers. Central items & other includes Treasury reverse repo activity. The exclusion of Central items & other removes the volatility relating to Treasury reverse repo activity and the reduction of loans to customers as part of our withdrawal from the Republic of Ireland.
This allows for better period-on-period comparisons and gives the user of the financial statements a better understanding of the movements in net loans to customers.
 
Operating expenses excluding litigation and conduct
Refer to table 4. Operating expenses excluding litigation and conduct on page 41.
 
The management analysis of operating expenses shows litigation and conduct costs separately. These amounts are included within staff costs and other administrative expenses in the statutory analysis. Other operating expenses excludes litigation and conduct costs, which are more volatile and may distort period-on-period comparisons.
 
Segment return on equity
Refer to table 8. Segment return on equity on page 42.
 
Segment return on equity comprises segmental operating profit or loss, adjusted for paid-in equity and tax, divided by average notional equity. Average RWAe is defined as average segmental RWAs incorporating the effect of capital deductions. This is multiplied by an allocated equity factor for each segment to calculate the average notional equity. This measure shows the return generated by operating segments on equity deployed.
 
Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share
Refer to table 3. Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share on page 40.
 
TNAV per ordinary share is calculated as tangible equity divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue. This is a measure used by external analysts in valuing the bank and allows for comparison with other per ordinary share metrics including the share price. The nearest ratio using IFRS measures is: net asset value (NAV) per ordinary share - this comprises ordinary shareholders' interests divided by the number of ordinary shares in issue.
 
Total combined assets and liabilities (CAL) - Private Banking & Wealth Management
Refer to table 6. Total combined assets and liabilities (CAL) - Private Banking & Wealth Management on page 41.
 
CAL refers to customer deposits, net loans to customers - amortised cost and AUMA. To avoid double counting, investment cash is deducted as it is reported within customer deposits and AUMA.
The components of CAL are key drivers of income and provide a measure of growth and strength of the business on a comparable basis.
 
Total income excluding notable items
Refer to table 1. Total income excluding notable items on page 40.
 
Total income excluding notable items is calculated as total income less notable items. The exclusion of notable items aims to remove the impact of one-offs and other items which may distort period-on-period comparisons.
 
 
 
Non-IFRS financial measures continued
 
1. Total income excluding notable items
 
 
Nine months ended
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total income
12,317
10,878
 
4,332
4,005
3,744
Less notable items:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Commercial & Institutional
 
 
 
 
 
 
   Own credit adjustments (OCA)
3
(5)
 
-
(3)
2
Central items & other
 
 
 
 
 
 
   Share of associate profits/(losses) for Business Growth Fund
55
22
 
41
(1)
11
   Interest and foreign exchange management derivatives not in hedge accounting relationships
168
131
 
162
(1)
5
   Foreign exchange recycling losses
(37)
(46)
 
(37)
-
(46)
 
189
102
 
166
(5)
(28)
Total income excluding notable items
12,128
10,776
 
4,166
4,010
3,772
 
2. Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct)
 
 
Nine months ended
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Continuing operations
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating expenses
6,014
5,882
 
1,996
2,039
1,825
Less litigation and conduct costs
(130)
(142)
 
(12)
(74)
(41)
Other operating expenses
5,884
5,740
 
1,984
1,965
1,784
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total income
12,317
10,878
 
4,332
4,005
3,744
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cost:income ratio
48.8%
54.1%
 
46.1%
50.9%
48.7%
Cost:income ratio (excl. litigation and conduct)
47.8%
52.8%
 
45.8%
49.1%
47.6%
 
 
3. Tangible net asset value (TNAV) per ordinary share
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
Ordinary shareholders' interests (£m)
36,570
35,929
34,070
Less intangible assets (£m)
(7,477)
(7,513)
(7,588)
Tangible equity (£m)
29,093
28,416
26,482
 
 
 
 
Ordinary shares in issue (millions) (1)
8,031
8,088
8,043
 
 
 
 
NAV per ordinary share (pence)
455p
444p
424p
TNAV per ordinary share (pence)
362p
351p
329p
 
(1)     The number of ordinary shares in issue excludes own shares held.
 
 
Non-IFRS financial measures continued
 
4. Operating expenses excluding litigation and conduct
 
 
Nine months ended
 
Quarter ended
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Other operating expenses
 
 
 
 
 
 
Staff expenses
3,144
3,060
 
1,045
1,044
947
Premises and equipment
902
863
 
318
293
284
Other administrative expenses
983
1,063
 
323
337
307
Depreciation and amortisation
855
754
 
298
291
246
Total other operating expenses
5,884
5,740
 
1,984
1,965
1,784
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Litigation and conduct costs
 
 
 
 
 
 
Staff expenses
49
52
 
19
16
18
Premises and equipment
4
-
 
1
-
-
Other administrative expenses
77
90
 
(8)
58
23
Total litigation and conduct costs
130
142
 
12
74
41
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total operating expenses
6,014
5,882
 
1,996
2,039
1,825
Operating expenses excluding litigation and conduct
5,884
5,740
 
1,984
1,965
1,784
 
5. Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos)
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
£m
Loans to customers - amortised cost
415,274
407,135
400,326
Less reverse repos
(33,604)
(30,400)
(34,846)
Loans to customers - amortised cost (excl. reverse repos)
381,670
376,735
365,480
Customer deposits
435,490
436,756
433,490
Less repos
(1,412)
(988)
(1,363)
Customer deposits (excl. repos)
434,078
435,768
432,127
Loan:deposit ratio (%)
95%
93%
92%
Loan:deposit ratio (excl. repos and reverse repos) (%)
88%
86%
85%
 
6. Total combined assets and liabilities (CAL) - Private Banking & Wealth Management
 
 
As at
 
30 September
30 June
31 December
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£bn
£bn
£bn
Net loans to customers (amortised cost)
18.8
18.6
18.2
Customer deposits
40.6
41.3
42.4
Assets under management and administration (AUMA)
56.0
51.8
48.9
Less investment cash included in both customer deposits and AUMA
(1.2)
(1.3)
(1.1)
Total combined assets and liabilities (CAL)
114.2
110.4
108.4
 
 
Non-IFRS financial measures continued
 
7. NatWest Group Return on Tangible Equity
 
 
Nine months ended and as at
 
Quarter ended and as at
 
30 September
30 September
 
30 September
30 June
30 September
 
2025
2024
 
2025
2025
2024
 
£m
£m
 
£m
£m
£m
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
4,086
3,271
 
1,598
1,236
1,172
Annualised profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 
5,448
4,361
 
6,392
4,944
4,688
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Average total equity 
41,043
37,707
 
41,667
41,474
37,960
Adjustment for average other owners' equity and intangible assets 
(13,175)
(12,040)
 
(12,954)
(13,529)
(12,375)
Adjusted total tangible equity
27,868
25,667
 
28,713
27,945
25,585
Return on equity
13.3%
11.6%
 
15.3%
11.9%
12.3%
Return on Tangible Equity 
19.5%
17.0%
 
22.3%
17.7%
18.3%
 
8. Segment return on equity
 
 
Nine months ended 30 September 2025
 
Nine months ended 30 September 2024
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
 
Retail
 & Wealth
Commercial 
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
Operating profit (£m)
2,335
287
3,025
 
1,754
189
2,724
Paid-in equity cost allocation (£m)
(75)
(13)
(181)
 
(56)
(13)
(130)
Adjustment for tax (£m)
(633)
(77)
(711)
 
(475)
(49)
(649)
Adjusted attributable profit (£m)
1,627
197
2,133
 
1,223
127
1,946
Annualised adjusted attributable profit (£m)
2,170
263
2,844
 
1,630
169
2,594
Average RWAe (£bn)
68.7
11.3
107.8
 
62.7
11.1
108.0
Equity factor 
12.8%
11.1%
13.9%
 
13.4%
11.2%
13.8%
Average notional equity (£bn)
8.8
1.3
15.0
 
8.4
1.2
14.9
Return on equity (%)
24.7%
21.0%
19.0%
 
19.4%
13.6%
17.4%
 
 
 
Quarter ended 30 September 2025
 
Quarter ended 30 June 2025
 
Quarter ended 30 September 2024
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Private Banking
 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
 
Retail
& Wealth
Commercial 
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
 
Banking
Management
& Institutional
Operating profit (£m)
850
108
1,041
 
735
102
964
 
656
90
1,017
Paid-in equity cost allocation (£m)
(26)
(5)
(52)
 
(26)
(4)
(66)
 
(22)
(5)
(47)
Adjustment for tax (£m)
(231)
(29)
(247)
 
(199)
(27)
(225)
 
(178)
(24)
(243)
Adjusted attributable profit (£m)
593
74
742
 
510
71
673
 
456
61
728
Annualised adjusted attributable profit (£m)
2,373
297
2,967
 
2,042
282
2,694
 
1,826
245
2,910
Average RWAe (£bn)
70.2
11.4
108.2
 
68.9
11.3
108.3
 
63.8
11.1
106.0
Equity factor 
12.8%
11.1%
13.9%
 
12.8%
11.1%
13.9%
 
13.4%
11.2%
13.8%
Average notional equity (£bn)
9.0
1.3
15.0
 
8.8
1.3
15.1
 
8.5
1.2
14.6
Return on equity (%)
26.4%
23.4%
19.7%
 
23.2%
22.5%
17.9%
 
21.4%
19.7%
19.9%
 
 
Performance measures not defined under IFRS
 
The table below summarises other performance measures used by NatWest Group, not defined under IFRS, and therefore a reconciliation to the nearest IFRS measure is not applicable.
Measure
 
Description
 
AUMA
 
AUMA comprises both assets under management (AUM) and assets under administration (AUA) serviced through the Private Banking & Wealth Management segment. AUM comprise assets where the investment management is undertaken by Private Banking & Wealth Management on behalf of Private Banking & Wealth Management, Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional customers. AUA comprise i) third party assets held on an execution-only basis in custody by Private Banking & Wealth Management, Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional for their customers, for which the execution services are supported by Private Banking & Wealth Management ii) AUA of Cushon, acquired on 1 June 2023, which are supported by Private Banking & Wealth Management and held and managed by third parties. This measure is tracked and reported as the amount of funds that we manage or administer, and directly impacts the level of investment income that we receive.
 
AUMA income
 
AUMA income includes investment income which reflects an ongoing fee as percentage of assets and transactional income related to investment services comprised of one-off fees for advice services, trading and exchange services, protection and alternative investing services. AUMA is a core driver of non-interest income, especially with respect to ongoing investment income and this measure provides a means of reporting the income earned on AUMA.
 
AUMA net flows
 
AUMA net flows represents assets under management (AUM net flows) and assets under administration (AUA net flows). AUMA net flows is reported and tracked to monitor the business performance of new business inflows and management of existing client withdrawals across Private Banking & Wealth Management, Retail Banking and Commercial & Institutional.
 
Capital generation pre-distributions
 
Capital generation pre-distributions refers to the change in the CET1 ratio in the period, before distributions to ordinary shareholders. It reflects the capital generated through business activities and all other movements, including attributable profit for the period, impacts from acquisitions and disposals, and risk-weighted asset (RWA) changes, prior to the deduction of ordinary shareholder distributions such as ordinary dividends and share buybacks. It is used to show the capital generated in the period that is available for deployment in the business and distribution to shareholders.
 
Climate and transition finance
 
The climate and transition finance target enables NatWest Group to quantify the level of financing and facilitation provided by NatWest Group that could support customers in achieving their climate and/or transition ambitions, through lending and underwriting activities. The climate and transition finance framework, available on natwestgroup.com, underpins the target to provide £200 billion in climate and transition finance between 1 July 2025 and the end of 2030.
 
Loan impairment rate
 
Loan impairment rate is the annualised loan impairment charge divided by gross customer loans. This measure is used to assess the credit quality of the loan book.
 
Third party rates
 
Third party customer asset rate is calculated as annualised interest receivable on third-party loans to customers as a percentage of third-party loans to customers. This excludes assets of disposal groups, intragroup items, loans to banks and liquid asset portfolios. Third party customer funding rate reflects interest payable or receivable on third-party customer deposits, including interest bearing and non- interest bearing customer deposits. Intragroup items, bank deposits, debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities are excluded for customer funding rate calculation.
 
Wholesale funding
 
Wholesale funding comprises deposits by banks (excluding repos), debt securities in issue and subordinated liabilities. Funding risk is the risk of not maintaining a diversified, stable and cost-effective funding base. The disclosure of wholesale funding highlights the extent of our diversification and how we mitigate funding risk.
 
Legal Entity Identifier: 2138005O9XJIJN4JPN90
 
SIGNATURE
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
 
 
 
 
 
 
NatWest Group plc
(Registrant)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Date:
24 October 2025
 
 
By:
/s/ Mark Stevens
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Name:
Mark Stevens
 
 
 
 
 
Title:
Assistant Secretary
 
Natwest Group Plc

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