a1345x
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
February, 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.
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:
NatWest Group plc 14 February 2025
Annual Report and Accounts 2024
Pillar 3 Report 2024
A copy of the Annual Report and Accounts 2024 for Group plc
will shortly be submitted to the
National Storage Mechanism and will be available for inspection
at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
The document will be available on
NatWest Group plc’s website at https://investors.natwestgroup.com/reports-archive
A printed version will be mailed to shareholders who have opted for
a hard copy ahead of the Annual General Meeting for which formal
Notice will be given in due course.
We have
also published the 2024 Pillar 3 report, available on our
website.
For further information, please contact:
Media Relations
+44 (0) 131 523 4205
Investor relations Claire Kane
+44 (0) 207 672 1758
For the purpose of compliance with the Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules, this announcement also contains risk factors
and details of related party transactions extracted from the Annual
Report and Accounts 2024 in full unedited text. Page references in
the text refer to page numbers in the Annual Report and Accounts
2024.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
Set out
below are certain risk factors that could have a material adverse
effect on NatWest Group’s future results, its financial
condition and/or prospects and cause them to be materially
different from what is forecast or expected, and directly or
indirectly impact the value of its securities. These risk factors
are broadly categorised and should be read in conjunction with
other risk factors in this section and other parts of this annual
report, including the forward-looking statements section, the
strategic report and the risk and capital management section. They
should not be regarded as a complete and comprehensive statement of
all potential risks and uncertainties facing NatWest
Group.
Economic and political risk
NatWest Group, its customers and its counterparties face continued
economic and political risks and uncertainties in the UK and global
markets, including as a result of inflation and interest rates,
supply chain disruption, and geopolitical
developments.
As a
principally UK-focused banking group, NatWest Group is affected by
global economic and market conditions and is particularly exposed
to those conditions in the UK. Uncertain and volatile economic
conditions in the UK or globally can create a challenging operating
environment for financial services companies such as NatWest
Group.
The
outlook for the UK and the global economy is affected by many
dynamic factors including: GDP, unemployment, inflation and
interest rates, asset prices (including residential and commercial
property), energy prices, monetary and fiscal policy (such as
increases in bank levies), supply chain disruption, protectionist
policies or trade barriers (including tariffs).
Economic
and market conditions could be exacerbated by a number of factors
including: instability in the UK and/or global financial systems,
market volatility and change, fluctuations in the value of the
pound sterling, new or extended economic sanctions, volatility in
commodity prices, political uncertainty, concerns regarding
sovereign debt (including sovereign credit ratings), any lack or
perceived lack of creditworthiness of a counterparty or borrower
that may trigger market-wide liquidity problems, changing
demographics in the markets that NatWest Group and its customers
serve, rapid changes to the economic environment due to the
adoption of technology, automation, artificial
intelligence, or due to the
consequences of climate change, biodiversity loss, nature
degradation and/or increasing social and other
inequalities.
NatWest
Group is also exposed to risks arising out of geopolitical events
or political developments that may hinder economic or financial
activity levels and may, directly or indirectly, impact UK,
regional or global trade and/or NatWest
Group’s
customers and counterparties. NatWest Group’s business and
performance could be negatively affected by political, military or
diplomatic events, geopolitical tensions, armed conflict (for
example, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and Middle East conflicts),
terrorist acts or threats, more severe and frequent extreme weather
events, widespread public health crises, and the responses to any
of the above scenarios by various governments and
markets.
In
recent years, the UK has experienced significant political
uncertainty. NatWest Group may also face political uncertainty in
Scotland if there is another Scottish independence referendum.
Scottish independence may adversely affect NatWest Group plc both
in relation to its entities incorporated in Scotland and in other
jurisdictions. Any changes to Scotland’s relationship with
the UK or the EU may adversely affect the environment in which
NatWest Group plc and its subsidiaries operate and may require
further changes to NatWest Group, independently or in conjunction
with other mandatory or strategic structural and organisational
changes, any of which could adversely affect NatWest
Group.
The
value of NatWest Group’s own and other securities may be
materially affected by economic and market conditions. Market
volatility, illiquid market conditions and disruptions in the
financial markets may make it very difficult to value certain of
NatWest Group’s own and other securities, particularly during
periods of market displacement. This could cause a decline in the
value of NatWest Group’s own and other securities, or
inaccurate carrying values for certain financial
instruments.
In
addition, financial markets are susceptible to severe events
evidenced by, or resulting in, rapid depreciation in asset values,
which may be accompanied by a reduction in asset liquidity. Under
these conditions, hedging and other risk management strategies may
not be as effective at mitigating losses as they would be under
more normal market conditions. Moreover, under these conditions,
market participants are particularly exposed to trading strategies
employed by many market participants simultaneously (and often
automatically) and on a large scale, increasing NatWest
Group’s counterparty risk. NatWest Group’s risk
management and monitoring processes seek to quantify and mitigate
NatWest Group’s exposure to extreme market moves. However,
market events have historically been difficult to predict, and
NatWest Group, its customers and its counterparties could realise
significant losses if severe market events were to
occur.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Changes in interest rates will continue to affect NatWest
Group’s business and results.
NatWest
Group’s performance is affected by changes in interest rates.
Benchmark overnight interest rates, such as the UK base rate,
decreased in 2024, and forward rates suggest that interest rates
will continue to decline in 2025. Stable interest rates support
more predictable income flow and less volatility in asset and
liability valuations, although persistently low and negative
interest rates may adversely affect NatWest Group. Further,
volatility in interest rates may result in unexpected outcomes both
for interest income and asset and liability valuations which may
adversely affect NatWest Group. For example, decreases in key
benchmark rates such as the UK base rate may adversely affect
NatWest Group’s net interest margin, and unexpected movements
in spreads between key benchmark rates such as sovereign and swap
rates may in turn affect liquidity portfolio valuations. In
addition, unexpected sharp rises in rates may also have negative
impacts on some asset and derivative valuations. Moreover, customer
and investor responses to rapid changes in interest rates can have
an adverse effect on NatWest Group. For example, customers may make
deposit choices that provide them with higher returns than those
being offered by NatWest Group. Alternatively, NatWest Group may
not respond with competitive products as rapidly, for example
following an interest rate change, which may in turn decrease
NatWest Group’s net interest income.
Movements
in interest rates also influence and reflect the macroeconomic
situation more broadly, affecting factors such as business and
consumer confidence, property prices, default rates on loans,
customer behaviour (which may adversely impact the effectiveness of
NatWest Group’s hedging strategy) and other indicators that
may indirectly affect NatWest Group.
Any of the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Fluctuations in currency exchange rates may adversely affect
NatWest Group’s results and financial condition.
Decisions
of central banks (including the BoE, the European Central Bank
(‘ECB’) and the US Federal Reserve) and political or
market events, which are outside NatWest Group’s control, may
lead to sharp and sudden fluctuations in currency exchange
rates.
Although
NatWest Group is principally a UK-focused banking group, it is
subject to structural foreign exchange risk from capital deployed
in NatWest Group’s foreign subsidiaries, branches and other
strategic equity shareholdings. NatWest Group also relies on
issuing securities in non-sterling currencies, such as US dollars
and euros, that assist in meeting NatWest Group’s regulatory
requirements. In addition, NatWest Group conducts banking
activities in non-sterling currencies (for example, loans, deposits
and dealing activity) which affect its revenue. NatWest Group also
uses service providers based outside the UK for certain services
and as a result certain operating results are subject to
fluctuations in currency exchange rates.
NatWest
Group maintains policies and procedures designed to manage the
impact of its exposure to fluctuations in currency exchange rates.
Nevertheless, changes in currency exchange rates, particularly in
the sterling-US dollar and sterling-euro rates, may adversely
affect various accounting and financial metrics including, the
value of assets, liabilities (including the total amount of
instruments eligible to contribute towards the minimum requirement
for own funds and eligible liabilities (‘MREL’)),
foreign exchange dealing activity, income and expenses, RWAs and
hence the reported earnings and financial condition of NatWest
Group.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
HM Treasury (or UKGI on its behalf) could exercise, or be perceived
as being capable of exercising, influence over NatWest
Group.
In its
Autumn Budget 2024, the UK Government confirmed its commitment to
exit its shareholding in NatWest Group plc by 2025-2026 subject to
market conditions and sales representing value for money for
taxpayers. Moreover, following various prior sell-downs of parts of
its shareholding in NatWest Group plc HM Treasury is no longer a
“controlling shareholder” of NatWest Group plc. As at
13 January 2025, HM Treasury held 8.90% of the ordinary share
capital with voting rights of NatWest Group plc.
HM
Treasury has indicated that it intends to respect the commercial
decisions of NatWest Group and that NatWest Group will continue to
have its own independent board of directors and management team
determining its own strategy. However, for as long as HM Treasury
remains NatWest Group plc’s largest single shareholder, HM
Treasury and UK Government Investments Limited (‘UKGI’)
(as manager of HM Treasury’s shareholding) could exercise, or
be perceived as being capable of exercising, influence over NatWest
Group plc, such as on matters relating to changes to NatWest
Group’s directors and senior management, its capital
strategy, dividend policy, remuneration policy or the conduct by
NatWest Group of its operations. HM Treasury or UKGI’s
approach largely depends on government policy, which could change.
Any exercise of such influence, or the perception that such
influence may be exercised, may have an adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s reputation or the price of its
securities.
The way
in which HM Treasury or UKGI exercises HM Treasury’s rights
as NatWest Group’s largest single shareholder could give rise
to conflicts between the interests of HM Treasury and the interests
of other shareholders, including as a result of a change in
government policy, which may in turn adversely affect NatWest
Group.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
reputation, and/or the price of its securities.
Business change and execution risk
The implementation and execution of NatWest Group’s strategy
carries execution and operational risks and it may not achieve its
stated aims and targeted outcomes.
NatWest
Group’s strategy (including the strategic priorities of
disciplined growth, bank-wide simplification and active balance
sheet and risk management) is intended to reflect the rapidly
changing environment and backdrop of significant disruption in
society driven by technology and changing customer
expectations.
Further,
shifting trends including digitalisation, decarbonisation,
automation, artificial intelligence, e-commerce and hybrid working,
have resulted in significant market volatility and
change.
There
is also increasing investor, employee, stakeholder, regulatory and
customer scrutiny regarding how businesses address these changes
and related environmental challenges, including climate change,
biodiversity and other sustainability issues, including how NatWest
Group supports its customers’ transition to net zero, is
tackling inequality, working conditions, workplace health, safety
and wellbeing, diversity and inclusion, data protection and
management, workforce management, human rights and supply chain
management.
Many
factors may adversely impact the successful implementation of
NatWest Group’s strategy, including:
–
macroeconomic
challenges which may adversely affect NatWest Group’s
customers, and could in turn adversely impact certain strategic
initiatives for NatWest Group (see ‘NatWest Group, its
customers and its counterparties face continued economic and
political risks and uncertainties in the UK and global markets,
including as a result of inflation and interest rates, supply chain
disruption, and geopolitical developments’);
–
changing customer
expectations and behaviour in response to macroeconomic conditions
or developments, technology and other factors which could reduce
the profitability, competitiveness, or volume of services NatWest
Group offers;
–
the rapid emergence
and deployment of new technologies (such as artificial
intelligence, quantum computing, blockchain and digital currencies)
resulting in a potential shift across the market towards products
and services that are not part of NatWest Group’s core
offering today;
–
increased
competitive threats from incumbent banks, fintech companies, large
retail and technology conglomerates and other new market entrants
(including those that emerge from mergers and consolidations) who
may have competitive advantages in terms of scale, technology and
customer engagement; and
–
changes to the
regulatory environment and associated requirements which could lead
to shifts in operating cost and regulatory capital requirements
that impact NatWest Group’s product offerings and business
models (see ‘NatWest Group’s businesses are subject to
substantial regulation and oversight, which are constantly evolving
and may adversely affect NatWest Group; and NatWest Group could
incur losses or be required to maintain higher levels of capital as
a result of limitations or failure of various
models.’)
Delivery
of NatWest Group’s strategy will require:
–
maintaining
effective governance, procedures, systems and controls giving
effect to NatWest Group’s strategy;
–
maintaining
effective conflicts of interest policies to mitigate the increased
risk of breach of the UK ring-fencing regime due to the creation of
the Commercial & Institutional business segment;
–
managing a broad
range of risks and opportunities related to changes in: the
macroeconomic environment, customer expectations and behaviour,
technology, regulation, competitiveness and climate and other
sustainability-related areas;
–
achieving the
stated financial, capital and operational targets and expectations
within the relevant timeframes; and
–
continued
cost-controlling measures, which may result in provisions in
connection with a lower NatWest Group cost base, may divert
investment from other areas, and may vary considerably from year to
year.
In
pursuing its strategy, NatWest Group may not be able to
successfully: (i) implement some or all aspects of its strategy;
(ii) meet any or all of the related targets or expectations of its
strategy; and otherwise realise the anticipated benefits of its
strategy, in a timely manner, or at all; or (iii) realise the
intended strategic objectives of any other future strategic or
growth initiative. The scale and scope of NatWest Group’s
strategy and the intended changes continue to present material
business, operational and regulatory (including compliance with the
UK ring-fencing regime), conflicts, legal, execution, IT system,
cybersecurity, internal culture, conduct and people risks.
Implementing changes and strategic actions, including in respect of
any growth, simplification or cost-saving initiatives, requires the
effective application of robust governance and controls frameworks
and IT systems and there is a risk that NatWest Group may not be
successful in these respects.
The
implementation of NatWest Group’s strategy could result in
materially higher costs or risks than initially contemplated
(including due to material uncertainties and factors outside of
NatWest Group’s control) and may not be completed as planned
(both in terms of substantive targets and timing), or at all. This
could lead to additional management actions by NatWest
Group.
Additionally,
as a result of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU, certain
aspects of the services provided by NatWest Group require local
licences or individual equivalence decisions (temporary or
otherwise) by relevant regulators.
In
April 2024, the European Parliament approved the Banking Package
(CRR III/CRD VI). From 10 January 2027, non-EU firms providing
‘banking services’ will be required to apply for and
obtain authorisation to operate as third country branches in each
relevant EU member state where they provide these services, unless
an exemption applies. NatWest Group continues to evaluate its EU
operating model, making adaptations as necessary. Changes to, or
uncertainty regarding, NatWest Group’s EU operating model
have been, and may continue to be, costly and may: (i) adversely
affect customers and counterparties who are dependent on trading
with the EU or personnel from the EU; and/or (ii) result in further
costs and/or regulatory sanction, due to a failure to receive the
required regulatory permissions and/or further changes to NatWest
Group’s business operations, product offering, customer
engagement, and regulatory requirements.
Each of
these risks, and others identified in this section entitled
‘Principal Risks and Uncertainties’, individually or
collectively could jeopardise the implementation and delivery of
NatWest Group’s strategy, impact NatWest Group’s
products and services offering, its reputation with customers or
business model and adversely affect NatWest Group’s ability
to deliver its strategy and meet its targets, guidance, and
forecasts.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Acquisitions, divestments, or other transactions by NatWest Group
may not be successful.
NatWest
Group may decide to undertake acquisitions, investments, the
purchase of assets and liabilities, divestments, restructurings,
reorganisations, joint ventures and other strategic partnerships,
as well as other transactions and initiatives. In doing so, NatWest
Group may have to compete with larger banks or financial
institutions or other larger entities offering financial services
products (including those that emerge from mergers and
consolidations, as well as retail and technology conglomerates).
These competitors may have more bargaining power in negotiations
than NatWest Group, and therefore may be in a position to extract
more advantageous terms than NatWest Group. Refer to ‘NatWest
Group operates in markets that are highly competitive, with
competitive pressures and technology
disruption’.
NatWest
Group may pursue these transactions and initiatives to, amongst
others: (i) enhance capabilities that may lead to better
productivity or cost efficiencies; (ii) acquire talent; (iii)
pursue new products or expand existing products; and/or (iv) enter
new markets or enhance its presence in existing markets. In
pursuing its strategy, NatWest Group may not fully realise the
expected benefits and value from the above-mentioned transactions
and initiatives in the time, or to the degree, anticipated, or at
all.
In
particular, NatWest Group may: (i) fail to realise the business
rationale for the transaction or initiative, or rely on assumptions
underlying the business plans supporting the valuation of a target
transaction or initiative that may prove inaccurate (for example,
regarding synergies and expected commercial demand); (ii) fail to
successfully integrate any acquired businesses, investment,
joint-venture or assets (including in respect of technologies,
existing strategies, products, governance, systems and controls,
and human capital) or to successfully divest or restructure a
business; (iii) fail to retain key employees, customers and
suppliers of any acquired or restructured business; (iv) be
required or wish to terminate pre-existing contractual
relationships, which could prove costly and/or be executed on
unfavourable terms and conditions; (v) fail to discover certain
contingent or undisclosed liabilities in businesses that it
acquires, or its due diligence to discover any such liabilities may
be inadequate; and (vi) not obtain necessary regulatory and other
approvals or onerous conditions may be attached to such approvals.
Accordingly, NatWest Group may not be successful in achieving its
strategy and any particular transaction may not succeed, may be
limited in scope or scale and may not conclude on the terms
contemplated, or at all.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
The transfer of NatWest Group’s Western European corporate
portfolio involves certain risks.
To
improve efficiencies and best serve customers following the
UK’s withdrawal from the EU, certain assets, liabilities,
transactions and activities of NatWest Group (including its Western
European corporate portfolio principally consisting of term funding
and revolving credit facilities), are expected to be: (i)
transferred from the ring-fenced subgroup of NatWest Group to NWM
Group and/or (ii) transferred to the ring-fenced subgroup of
NatWest Group from NWM Group, subject to regulatory and customer
requirements. The timing, success and quantum of any of these
transfers remain uncertain as is the impact of these transactions
on its results of operations.
As a
result, this may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Financial resilience risk
NatWest Group may not achieve its ambitions or targets, meet its
guidance, or be in a position to continue to make discretionary
capital distributions (including dividends to
shareholders).
NatWest
Group has set a number of financial, capital and operational
targets and provided guidance including in respect of its: CET1
ratio target, return on tangible equity (RoTE), total income, other
operating expenses, loan impairment rate, RWAs, ordinary dividends,
funding plans and requirements, employee engagement, diversity and
inclusion as well as climate-related targets (including its climate
and sustainable funding and financing targets) and customer
satisfaction targets and discretionary capital distributions
(including dividends to shareholders). Refer to ‘The
implementation and execution of NatWest Group’s strategy
carries execution and operational risks and it may not achieve its
stated aims and targeted outcomes.’
NatWest
Group’s ability to meet its ambitions, targets, guidance, and
make discretionary capital distributions is subject to various
internal and external factors, risks and uncertainties. These
include but are not limited to: UK and global macroeconomic,
political, market and regulatory uncertainties, customer behaviour,
operational risks and risks relating to NatWest Group’s
business model and strategy (including risks associated with
climate and other sustainability-related issues), competitive
pressures, and litigation, governmental actions, investigations and
regulatory matters. If assumptions, judgements and estimates (for
example about future economic conditions) prove to be incorrect,
NatWest Group may not achieve any or all of its ambitions or
targets, or meet its guidance.
In
addition, as NatWest Group plc is a non-operating holding company,
its source of income is from its operating subsidiaries that hold
the principal assets and operations of NatWest Group and its
ability to continue to make capital distributions (including
dividends to shareholders) is therefore subject to such
subsidiaries’ financial performance, and their respective
ability to make capital distributions directly or indirectly to
NatWest Group plc which, in certain cases, could also be restricted
by applicable laws, regulations and other requirements. Refer to
‘NatWest Group, its customers and its counterparties face
continued economic and political risks and uncertainties in the UK
and global markets, including as a result of inflation and interest
rates, supply chain disruption and geopolitical
developments.’
Any
failure of NatWest Group to achieve ambitions or target, meet its
guidance, or make discretionary capital distributions may have a
material adverse effect on NatWest Group’s future results,
financial condition, prospects, and/or reputation.
NatWest Group operates in markets that are highly competitive, with
competitive pressures and technology disruption.
NatWest
Group faces increasing competitive pressures and technology
disruption from incumbent traditional UK banks, challenger banks
and building societies (including those resulting from mergers
between these entities), fintech companies, large technology
conglomerates and new market entrants who could look to scale
technology and/or other competitive advantages to compete with
NatWest Group for customer engagement. “BigTech”
companies are seen as threats to incumbent banking providers
because of their customer innovation and global reach. In addition,
digital-first banks (often referred to as “neobanks”)
and fintechs are aiming to compete with incumbent banking providers
on the basis that customers increasingly use a constellation of
providers to support their complex and evolving needs (e.g.,
personal financial management and paying for goods and services in
foreign currency).
NatWest
Group expects competition to continue and intensify in response to
various trends including: evolving customer behaviour,
technological changes (including digital currencies, stablecoins
and the growth of digital banking), competitor behaviour, new
market entrants, competitive foreign exchange offerings, industry
trends resulting in increased disaggregation or unbundling of
financial services or, conversely, the re-intermediation of
traditional banking services, and the impact of regulatory actions,
among others. In particular, NatWest Group may be unable to grow or
retain its market share due to new (or more competitive) banking,
lending and payment products and services that are offered by
rapidly evolving incumbents and challengers (including shadow
banks, alternative or direct lenders and new
entrants).
These
competitive pressures and the introduction of disruptive technology
may result in a shift in customer behaviour and impact NatWest
Group’s revenues and profitability, particularly in its key
UK retail and Commercial & Institutional banking segments.
Moreover, innovations in biometrics, artificial intelligence,
automation, cloud services, blockchain, cryptocurrencies and
quantum computing may rapidly facilitate industry
transformation.
Increasingly,
many of NatWest Group’s products and services are, and will
become, more technology intensive, including through
digitalisation, automation, and the use of artificial intelligence
while needing to continue complying with applicable and evolving
regulations. NatWest Group’s ability to develop or acquire
digital solutions and
their integration into NatWest Group’s structures, systems
and controls has become increasingly important for retaining and
growing NatWest Group’s market share and customer-facing
businesses. NatWest Group’s innovation strategy, which
includes investing in its IT capability to address increasing
customer and merchant use of online and mobile banking technology,
as well as selective acquisitions (such as fintech ventures,
including Mettle, Rooster Money, Boxed and Cushon), may not be
successful or may not result in NatWest Group offering innovative
products and services in the future.
Furthermore,
current or future competitors may be more successful than NatWest
Group in implementing technologies for delivering products or
services to their customers, which may adversely affect its
competitive position. In addition, continued consolidation and/or
technological developments in the financial services industry could
result in the emergence of new competitors or NatWest Group’s
competitors gaining greater capital and other resources, including
the ability to offer a broader, more attractive and/or better value
range of products and services and geographic diversity. For
example, new market entrants, including non-traditional financial
services providers, such as retail or technology conglomerates, may
have competitive advantages in scale, technology and customer
engagement and may be able to develop and deliver financial
services at a lower cost base.
NatWest
Group may also fail to identify future opportunities, or fail to
derive benefits from technological innovation, changing customer
behaviour and changing regulatory demands. Competitors may be
better able to attract and retain customers and key employees, have
more effective IT systems, have access to lower cost funding and/or
be able to attract deposits on more favourable terms than NatWest
Group. Although NatWest Group invests in new technologies and
participates in industry and research-led technology development
initiatives, such investments may be insufficient or ineffective,
especially given NatWest Group’s focus on business
simplification and cost efficiencies. This could affect NatWest
Group’s ability to offer innovative products or technologies
to customers.
If
NatWest Group is unable to offer competitive, attractive and
innovative products that are also profitable and released in a
timely manner; it will lose market share, incur losses on some or
all of its initiatives and possibly lose growth opportunities. For
example, NatWest Group is investing in the automation of certain
solutions and interactions within its customer-facing businesses,
including through artificial intelligence. There can be no
certainty that such initiatives will allow NatWest Group to compete
effectively or will deliver the expected cost savings.
In
addition, the implementation of NatWest Group’s strategy,
delivery on its climate ambition and cost-controlling measures, may
also have an impact on its ability to compete effectively and
maintain satisfactory returns. Moreover, activist investors have
increasingly become engaged and interventionist in recent years,
which may pose a threat to NatWest Group’s strategic
initiatives.
Some of
these trends have been catalysed by various regulatory and
competition policy interventions, including the UK initiative on
Open Banking, ‘Open Finance’ and other remedies imposed
by the Competition and Markets Authority (‘CMA’), which
are designed to further promote competition within the financial
sector.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group has significant exposure to counterparty and borrower
risk including credit losses, which may have an adverse effect on
NatWest Group.
NatWest
Group has exposure to many different sectors, customers and
counterparties, and risks arising from actual or perceived changes
in credit quality and the recoverability of monies due from
borrowers and other counterparties are inherent in a wide range of
NatWest Group’s businesses. NatWest Group’s lending
strategy and associated processes and systems may fail to identify,
anticipate or quickly react to weaknesses or risks in a particular
sector, market, borrower or counterparty, or NatWest Group’s
credit risk appetite relative to competitors, or fail to
appropriately value physical or financial collateral. This may
result in increased default rates or a higher loss given default
for loans, which may, in turn, impact NatWest Group’s
profitability. Refer to ‘Risk and capital management —
Credit Risk’.
The
credit quality of NatWest Group’s borrowers and other
counterparties may be affected by UK and global macroeconomic and
political uncertainties, as well as prevailing economic and market
conditions. Refer to ‘NatWest Group, its customers and its
counterparties face continued economic and political risks and
uncertainties in the UK and global markets, including as a result
of inflation and interest rates, supply chain disruption, and
geopolitical developments’. Any further deterioration in
these conditions or changes to legal or regulatory landscapes could
worsen borrower and counterparty credit quality or impact the
enforcement of contractual rights, increasing credit risk. Any
increase in drawings upon committed credit facilities may also
increase NatWest Group’s RWAs. In addition, the level of
household indebtedness (on a per capita basis) in the UK remains
high. The ability of households and businesses to service their
debts could be worsened by a period of high unemployment, or high
interest rates or inflation, particularly if
prolonged.
NatWest
Group may be affected by volatility in property prices (including
as a result of UK political or economic conditions) given that
NatWest Group’s mortgage loan portfolio as at 31 December
2024 amounted to £209.8 billion, representing 51% of NatWest
Group’s total loan exposure. If property prices in the UK
were to weaken this could lead to higher impairment charges,
particularly if default rates also increase. In addition, NatWest
Group’s credit risk may be exacerbated if the collateral that
it holds cannot be realised as a result of market conditions,
regulatory intervention, or other applicable laws, or if it is
liquidated at prices not sufficient to recover the net amount
outstanding to NatWest Group after accounting for any IFRS 9
provisions already made. This is most likely to occur during
periods of illiquidity or depressed asset valuations.
NatWest
Group is exposed to the financial sector, including sovereign debt
securities, financial institutions, financial intermediation
providers (including providing facilities to financial sponsors and
funds, backed by assets or investor commitments) and securitised
products (typically senior lending to special purpose vehicles
backed by pools of financial assets). Concerns about, or a default
by, a financial institution or intermediary could lead to
significant liquidity problems and losses or defaults by other
financial institutions or intermediaries, since the commercial and
financial soundness of many financial institutions and
intermediaries is closely related and interdependent as a result of
credit, trading, clearing and other relationships. Any perceived
lack of creditworthiness of a counterparty or borrower may lead to
market-wide liquidity problems and losses for NatWest Group. In
addition, the value of collateral may be correlated with the
probability of default by the relevant counterparty (‘wrong
way risk’), which would increase NatWest Group’s
potential loss. Any of the above risks may also adversely affect
financial intermediaries, such as clearing agencies, clearing
houses, banks, securities firms and exchanges with which NatWest
Group interacts on a regular basis. Refer to ‘NatWest Group
may not meet the prudential regulatory requirements for liquidity
and funding or may not be able to adequately access sources of
liquidity and funding, which could trigger the execution of certain
management actions or recovery options.’
As a
result, adverse changes in borrower and counterparty credit risk
may cause additional impairment charges under IFRS 9, increased
repurchase demands, higher costs, additional write-downs and losses
for NatWest Group and an inability to engage in routine funding
transactions. If NatWest Group experiences losses and a reduction
in profitability, this is likely to affect the recoverable value of
fixed assets, including goodwill and deferred taxes, which may lead
to write-downs.
NatWest
Group has applied an internal analysis of multiple economic
scenarios (MES) together with the determination of specific overlay
adjustments to inform its IFRS 9 ECL (Expected Credit Loss). The
recognition and measurement of ECL is complex and involves the use
of significant judgement and estimation.
This
includes the formulation and incorporation of multiple
forward-looking economic scenarios into ECL to meet the measurement
objective of IFRS 9. The ECL provision is sensitive to the model
inputs and economic assumptions underlying the estimate. Going
forward, NatWest Group anticipates observable credit deterioration
of a proportion of assets resulting in a systematic uplift in
defaults, which is mitigated by those economic assumption scenarios
being reflected in the Stage 2 ECL across portfolios, along with a
combination of post model overlays in both wholesale and retail
portfolios reflecting the uncertainty of credit outcomes. Refer to
‘Risk and capital management – Credit Risk’. A
credit deterioration would also lead to RWA increases. Furthermore,
the assumptions and judgements used in the MES and ECL assessment
at 31 December 2024 may not prove to be adequate resulting in
incremental ECL provisions for NatWest Group.
As
NatWest Group has exposure to the financial industry, it also has
exposure to shadow banking entities (i.e. entities which carry out
activities of a similar nature to banks but without the same
regulatory oversight). As a result, NatWest Group is required to
identify and monitor its exposure to shadow banking entities,
implement and maintain an internal framework for the
identification, management, control and mitigation of the risks
associated with exposure to shadow banking entities, and ensure
effective reporting and governance in respect of such exposure. If
NatWest Group is unable to properly identify and monitor its shadow
banking exposure, maintain an adequate framework, and/or ensure
effective reporting and governance in respect of shadow banking
exposure, this may adversely affect NatWest Group.
In line
with certain mandated COVID-19 pandemic support schemes, NatWest
Group assisted customers with a number of initiatives including
NatWest Group’s participation in the Bounce Back Loan Scheme
(‘BBLS’), the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan
Scheme (‘CBILS’) and the Coronavirus Large Business
Interruption Loan Scheme (‘CLBILS’) products. NatWest
Group sought to manage the risks of fraud and money laundering
against the need for the fast and efficient release of funds to
customers and businesses. NatWest Group may be exposed to fraud,
conduct and litigation risks arising from inappropriate approval
(or denial) of BBLS, CBILS or CLBILS or the enforcing or pursuing
repayment of BBLS, CBILS and CLBILS (or a failure to exercise
forbearance), which may have an adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s reputation and results of operations. The
implementation of the initiatives and efforts mentioned above may
result in litigation, regulatory and government actions and
proceedings. These actions may result in judgements, settlements,
penalties, fines, or removal of recourse to the government
guarantee provided under those schemes for impacted
loans.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group may not meet the prudential regulatory requirements
for liquidity and funding or may not be able to adequately access
sources of liquidity and funding, which could trigger the execution
of certain management actions or recovery options.
Liquidity
and the ability to raise funds continues to be a key area of focus
for NatWest Group and the industry as a whole. NatWest Group is
required by regulators in the UK, the EU and other jurisdictions in
which it undertakes regulated activities to maintain adequate
liquidity and funding resources. To satisfy its liquidity and
funding requirements, NatWest Group may therefore access sources of
liquidity and funding through retail and wholesale deposits, as
well as through the debt capital markets. As at 31 December 2024,
NatWest Group plc subsidiaries held £464.9 billion in deposits
from banks and customers.
The
level of deposits of NatWest Group may fluctuate due to factors
outside of its control, such as a loss of customers, loss of
customer and/or investor confidence (including in individual
NatWest Group entities or as a result of volatility in the
financial industry), changes in customer behaviour, changes in
interest rates, government support, increasing competitive
pressures for retail and corporate customer deposits or the
reduction or cessation of deposits by wholesale depositors, which
could result in a significant outflow of deposits within a short
period of time. An inability to grow or any material decrease in
NatWest Group’s deposits could, particularly if accompanied
by one or more of the other factors mentioned above, adversely
affect NatWest Group’s ability to satisfy its liquidity or
funding needs, or comply with its related regulatory requirements.
In turn, this could require NatWest Group to adapt its funding
plans or change its operations.
Macroeconomic
developments, political uncertainty, changes in interest rates, and
market volatility could affect NatWest Group’s ability to
access sources of liquidity and funding on satisfactory terms, or
at all. This may result in higher funding costs and failure to
comply with regulatory capital, funding and leverage
requirements.
As a
result, NatWest Group and its subsidiaries could be required to
change their funding plans. This could exacerbate funding and
liquidity risk, which may adversely affect NatWest
Group.
As at
31 December 2024, NatWest Group plc’s liquidity coverage
ratio was 150% and net stable funding ratio was 137%. If its
liquidity position and/or funding were to come under stress, and if
NatWest Group were unable to raise funds through deposits, in the
debt capital markets or through other reliable funding sources, on
acceptable terms, or at all, its liquidity position would likely be
adversely affected and it might be unable to meet deposit
withdrawals on demand or at their contractual maturity, to repay
borrowings as they mature, to meet its obligations under committed
financing facilities, to comply with regulatory funding
requirements, to undertake certain capital and/or debt management
activities, and/or to fund new loans, investments and businesses or
make capital distributions to its shareholders.
If,
under a stress scenario, the level of liquidity falls outside of
NatWest Group’s risk appetite, there are a range of recovery
management actions that NatWest Group could take to manage its
liquidity levels, but any such actions may not be sufficient to
restore adequate liquidity levels and the related implementation
may have adverse consequences for NatWest Group’s operations.
Under the PRA Rulebook, NatWest Group must maintain a recovery plan
acceptable to its regulator, such that a breach of NatWest
Group’s applicable liquidity requirements may trigger the
application of NatWest Group’s recovery plan to attempt to
remediate a deficient liquidity position. NatWest Group may need to
liquidate assets to meet its liabilities, including disposals of
assets not previously identified for disposal to reduce its funding
commitments or trigger the execution of certain management actions
or recovery options. In a time of reduced liquidity, NatWest Group
may be unable to sell its assets, at attractive prices, or at all,
which may adversely affect NatWest Group’s
liquidity.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group may not meet the prudential regulatory requirements
for regulatory capital and MREL, or manage its capital effectively,
which could trigger the execution of certain management actions or
recovery options.
NatWest
Group is required by regulators in the UK, the EU and other
jurisdictions in which it undertakes regulated activities to
maintain adequate financial resources. Adequate levels of capital
provide NatWest Group with financial flexibility specifically in
its core UK operations in the face of turbulence and uncertainty in
the UK and the global economy. Adequate levels of capital also
enable NatWest Group plc to make discretionary capital
distributions (including dividends to shareholders) and undertake
buybacks of its shares.
As at
31 December 2024, NatWest Group plc’s CET1 ratio was 13.6%
and is targeting a CET1 ratio in the range of 13-14% by 31 December
2025. NatWest Group plc’s target CET1 ratio is based on a
combination of its views on the appropriate level of capital and
its actual and expected regulatory requirements and internal
modelling, including stress scenarios and management’s and/or
the Prudential Regulation Authority’s (PRA) views on
appropriate buffers above minimum required operating levels.
NatWest Group plc’s current capital strategy is based on the
expected accumulation of additional capital through the accrual of
retained earnings over time, planned capital actions (including
issuances, redemptions, and discretionary capital distributions),
RWA growth in the form of regulatory uplifts and lending growth and
other capital management initiatives which focus on improving
capital efficiency and ensuring NatWest Group meets its
medium-to-long term targets. NatWest Group intends to make capital
distributions to its equity investors of certain amounts surplus to
its publicly stated CET1 ratio target of 13-14%, subject to
macroeconomic conditions and regulatory approval, via a combination
of dividends and buybacks. In making dividends distribution and
buyback decisions, consideration is given to previously guided
ordinary dividend pay-out ratios, an intention to continue to help
reduce HM Treasury’s stake in NatWest Group, and maximising
shareholder value.
A
number of factors may impact NatWest Group plc’s ability to
maintain its CET1 ratio target and achieve its capital strategy.
These include:
–
a depletion of its
capital resources through increased costs or liabilities or reduced
profits (for example, due to an increase in provisions due to a
deterioration in UK economic conditions);
–
an increase in the
quantum of RWAs/leverage exposure in excess of that expected,
including due to regulatory changes (including their interpretation
or application), or a failure in internal controls or procedures to
accurately measure and report RWAs/leverage exposure;
–
changes in
prudential regulatory requirements including NatWest Group
plc’s total capital requirement/leverage requirement set by
the PRA, including Pillar 2 requirements, as applicable, and
regulatory buffers as well as any applicable scalars;
–
reduced upstreaming
of dividends from NatWest Group plc’s subsidiaries because of
changes in their financial performance and/or the extent to which
local capital requirements exceed NatWest Group plc’s target
ratio; and
–
limitations on the
use of double leverage (i.e., NatWest Group plc’s use of debt
to invest in the equity of its subsidiaries, as a result of the
BoE’s and/or NatWest Group’s evolving views on
distribution of capital within groups).
A
shortage or reduction of capital could in turn affect NatWest Group
plc’s capital ratio, and/or its ability to make capital
distributions and in turn NatWest Group may not remain a viable,
competitive or profitable banking business.
A
minimum level of capital is required to be met by NatWest Group plc
for it to be entitled to make certain discretionary payments, and
institutions such as NatWest Group plc which fail to meet the
regulatory combined buffer requirement are subject to restricted
discretionary payments.
The
resulting restrictions are scaled according to the extent of the
breach of the combined buffer requirement and calculated as a
percentage of the profits of the institution since the last
distribution of profits or discretionary payment which gives rise
to a maximum distributable amount (MDA) (if any) that the financial
institution can distribute through discretionary payments. Any
breach of the combined buffer requirement may necessitate for
NatWest Group plc reducing or ceasing discretionary payments to
shareholders (including payments of dividends) and buybacks
depending on the extent of the breach.
NatWest
Group plc is required to meet an external MREL equivalent to the
higher of: (i) two times the sum of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2A, or (ii)
if subject to a leverage ratio requirement, two times the
applicable requirement. The BoE has identified a “single
point-of-entry” at NatWest Group plc, as the preferred
resolution strategy for NatWest Group. As a result, NatWest Group
plc is the only entity within NatWest Group that can externally
issue securities that count towards its MREL requirements, the
proceeds of which can then be downstreamed to meet the internal
MREL of its operating entities and intermediate holding
companies.
If
NatWest Group plc is unable to raise or retain the requisite amount
of regulatory capital or MREL, downstream the proceeds of MREL to
subsidiaries as required, or to otherwise meet its regulatory
capital, MREL and leverage requirements, it may be exposed to
increased regulatory supervision or sanctions, loss of customer
and/or investor confidence, constrained or more expensive funding
and be unable to make discretionary payments on capital
instruments.
If,
under a stress scenario, the level of regulatory capital or MREL
falls outside of NatWest Group’s risk appetite, there are a
range of recovery management actions (focused on risk reduction and
mitigation) that NatWest Group could seek to take to manage its
capital levels, but any such actions may not be sufficient to
restore adequate capital levels. Under the PRA Rulebook, NatWest
Group must maintain a recovery plan acceptable to its regulator,
such that a breach of NatWest Group’s applicable capital or
leverage requirements may trigger the application of NatWest
Group’s recovery plan to remediate a deficient capital
position.
NatWest
Group’s regulator may request that NatWest Group carry out
certain capital management actions or, if NatWest Group plc’s
CET1 ratio falls below 7%, certain regulatory capital instruments
issued by NatWest Group plc will be written-down or converted into
equity, and there may be an issue of additional equity by NatWest
Group plc, which could result in the reduction in value of the
holdings of NatWest Group plc’s existing shareholders. The
success of such issuances will also be dependent on favourable
market conditions and NatWest Group may not be able to raise the
amount of capital required on acceptable terms, or at
all.
Separately,
NatWest Group may address a shortage of capital by taking action to
reduce leverage exposure and/or RWAs via asset or business
disposals. These actions may, in turn, affect: NatWest
Group’s product offering, credit ratings, ability to operate
its businesses, pursue its strategy and strategic opportunities,
any of which may adversely affect NatWest Group. Refer to
‘NatWest Group may become subject to the application of UK
statutory stabilisation or resolution powers which may result in,
for example, the cancellation, transfer or dilution of ordinary
shares, or the write-down or conversion of certain other of NatWest
Group’s securities.’; and ‘NatWest Group may be
adversely affected if it fails to meet the requirements of
regulatory stress tests.’
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Any reduction in the credit rating and/or outlooks assigned to
NatWest Group plc, any of its subsidiaries or any of their
respective debt securities could adversely affect the availability
of funding for NatWest Group, reduce NatWest Group’s
liquidity and funding position and increase the cost of
funding.
Rating
agencies regularly review NatWest Group plc and other NatWest Group
entities’ credit ratings and outlooks. NatWest Group
entities’ credit ratings and outlooks could be negatively
affected (directly and indirectly) by a number of factors that can
change over time, including, without limitation: credit rating
agencies’ assessment of NatWest Group’s strategy and
management’s capability; its financial condition including in
respect of profitability, asset quality, capital, funding and
liquidity, and risk management practices; the level of political
support for the sectors and regions in which NatWest Group
operates; the legal and regulatory frameworks applicable to NatWest
Group’s legal structure; business activities and the rights
of its creditors; changes in rating methodologies; changes in the
relative size of the loss-absorbing buffers protecting bondholders
and depositors; the competitive environment; political,
geopolitical and economic conditions in NatWest Group’s key
markets (including inflation and interest rates, supply chain
disruptions and geopolitical developments); any reduction of the
UK’s sovereign credit rating and market uncertainty. In
addition, credit rating agencies are increasingly taking into
account sustainability-related factors, including climate,
environmental, social and governance related risk, as part of the
credit rating analysis, as are investors in their investment
decisions.
Any
reductions in the credit ratings of NatWest Group plc or of certain
other NatWest Group entities could significantly affect NatWest
Group. Adverse consequences for NatWest Group from downgrades could
include, without limitation, a reduction in the access to capital
markets or in the size of its deposit base, and trigger additional
collateral or other requirements in its funding arrangements or the
need to amend such arrangements, which could adversely affect
NatWest Group’s liquidity and funding position, cost of
funding and could limit the range of counterparties willing to
enter into transactions with NatWest Group on favourable terms, or
at all. This may in turn adversely affect NatWest Group’s
competitive position and threaten its prospects.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group may be adversely affected if it fails to meet the
requirements of regulatory stress tests.
NatWest
Group entities are subject to annual and other stress tests by
their respective regulators in the UK and EU.
Stress
tests are designed to assess the resilience of banks such as
NatWest Group to potential adverse economic or financial
developments and ensure that they have robust, forward-looking
capital planning processes that account for the risks associated
with their business profile. If the stress tests reveal that a
bank’s existing regulatory capital buffers are not sufficient
to absorb the impact of the stress, then it is possible that
NatWest Group may need to take action to strengthen its capital
position.
Failure
by NatWest Group to meet the quantitative and qualitative
requirements of the stress tests as set forth by its UK regulator
may result in: NatWest Group’s regulators requiring NatWest
Group to generate additional capital, reputational damage,
increased supervision and/or regulatory sanctions, restrictions on
capital distributions and loss of investor confidence, all of which
may adversely affect NatWest Group.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group could incur losses or be required to maintain higher
levels of capital as a result of limitations or failure of various
models.
Given
the complexity of NatWest Group’s business, strategy and
capital requirements, NatWest Group relies on models for a wide
range of purposes, including to manage its business, assess the
value of its assets and its risk exposure, as well as to anticipate
capital and funding requirements (including to facilitate NatWest
Group’s mandated stress testing). In addition, NatWest Group
utilises models for valuations, credit approvals, calculation of
loan impairment charges on an IFRS 9 basis, financial reporting and
to help address financial crime (criminal activities in the form of
money laundering, terrorist financing, bribery and corruption, tax
evasion and sanctions as well as external or internal fraud
(collectively, ‘financial crime’)). NatWest
Group’s models, and the parameters and assumptions on which
they are based, are periodically reviewed.
Model
outputs are inherently uncertain, because they are imperfect
representations of real-world phenomena, are simplifications of
complex real-world systems and processes, and are based on a
limited set of observations. NatWest Group may face adverse
consequences as a result of actions or decisions based on models
that are poorly developed, incorrectly implemented, non-compliant,
outdated or used inappropriately. This includes models that are
based on inaccurate or non-representative data (for example, where
there have been changes in the micro or macroeconomic environment
in which NatWest Group operates) or as a result of the modelled
outcome being misunderstood, or used for purposes for which it was
not designed. This could result in findings of deficiencies by
NatWest Group’s regulators (including as part of NatWest
Group’s mandated stress testing), increased capital
requirements, may render some business lines uneconomical, may
require management action or may subject NatWest Group to
regulatory sanction, any of which in turn may also have an adverse
effect on NatWest Group and its customers.
Any of the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group’s financial statements are sensitive to
underlying accounting policies, judgements, estimates and
assumptions.
The
preparation of financial statements requires management to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets, liabilities, income, expenses, exposures and
RWAs. While estimates, judgements and assumptions take into account
historical experience and other factors (including market practice
and expectations of future events that are believed to be
reasonable under the circumstances), actual results may differ due
to the inherent uncertainty in making estimates, judgements and
assumptions (particularly those involving the use of complex
models).
Further,
accounting policy and financial statement reporting requirements
increasingly require management to adjust existing judgements,
estimates and assumptions for the effects of climate-related,
sustainability and other matters that are inherently uncertain and
for which there is little historical experience which may affect
the comparability of NatWest Group’s future financial results
with its historical results. Actual results may differ due to the
inherent uncertainty in making climate-related and sustainability
estimates, judgements and assumptions.
Accounting
policies deemed critical to NatWest Group’s results and
financial position, based upon materiality and significant
judgements and estimates, involve a high degree of uncertainty and
may have a material impact on its results. For 2024, these include
loan impairments, fair value, and deferred tax. These are set out
in ‘Critical accounting policies and sources of estimation
uncertainty’.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Changes in accounting standards may materially impact NatWest
Group’s financial results.
NatWest
Group prepares its consolidated financial statements in conformity
with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and in accordance
with IFRS as issued by the International Accounting Standards
Board. Changes in accounting standards or guidance by accounting
bodies or in the timing of their implementation, whether immediate
or foreseeable, could result in NatWest Group having to recognise
additional liabilities on its balance sheet, or in further
write-downs or impairments to its assets and could also have a
material adverse effect on NatWest Group. From time to time, the
International Accounting Standards Board may issue new accounting
standards or interpretations that could materially impact how
NatWest Group calculates, reports and discloses its financial
results and financial condition, and which may affect NatWest Group
capital ratios, including the CET1 ratio and the required levels of
regulatory capital. New accounting standards and interpretations
that have been issued by the International Accounting Standards
Board but which have not yet been adopted by NatWest Group are
discussed in ‘Future accounting
developments’.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
The value or effectiveness of any credit protection that NatWest
Group has purchased depends on the value of the underlying assets
and the financial condition of the insurers and
counterparties.
NatWest
Group has credit exposure arising from over-the-counter derivative
contracts, mainly credit default swaps (CDSs), and other credit
derivatives, each of which are carried at fair value. The fair
value of these CDSs, as well as NatWest Group’s exposure to
the risk of default by the underlying counterparties, depends on
the valuation and the perceived credit risk of the instrument
against which protection has been bought. Many market
counterparties have been adversely affected by their exposure to
residential mortgage-linked and corporate credit products, whether
synthetic or otherwise, and their actual and perceived
creditworthiness may deteriorate rapidly. If the financial
condition of these counterparties or their actual or perceived
creditworthiness deteriorates, NatWest Group may record further
credit valuation adjustments on the credit protection bought from
these counterparties under the CDSs. NatWest Group also recognises
any fluctuations in the fair value of other credit
derivatives.
Any
such adjustments or fair value changes may have a material adverse
effect on NatWest Group’s future results, financial
condition, prospects, and/or reputation.
NatWest Group is subject to regulatory oversight in respect of
resolution, and NatWest Group could be adversely affected should
the BoE in the future deem NatWest Group’s preparations to be
inadequate.
NatWest
Group is subject to regulatory oversight by the BoE and the PRA and
is required under the PRA rulebook to carry out an assessment of
its preparations for resolution, submit a report of the assessment
to the PRA, and disclose a summary of this report. NatWest Group
has dedicated significant resources towards the preparation of
NatWest Group for a potential resolution scenario.
In
August 2024, the BoE communicated its assessment of NatWest
Group’s preparations and did not identify any areas for
further enhancement, shortcomings, deficiencies or substantive
impediments. NatWest Group could be adversely affected should
future BoE assessments deem NatWest Group’s preparations to
be inadequate. If future BoE assessments identify any areas for
further enhancement, shortcomings, deficiencies or substantive
impediments in NatWest Group’s ability to achieve the
resolvability outcomes or reveal that NatWest Group is not
adequately prepared to be resolved, or does not have adequate plans
in place to meet resolvability requirements, NatWest Group may be
required to take action to enhance its preparations to be
resolvable, resulting in additional costs and the dedication of
additional resources. Such a scenario may have an impact on NatWest
Group as, depending on the BoE’s assessment, potential action
may include, but is not limited to, restrictions on NatWest
Group’s maximum individual and aggregate exposures, a
requirement to dispose of specified assets, a requirement to change
its legal or operational structure, a requirement to cease carrying
out certain activities, a requirement not to make discretionary
distributions or undertake NatWest Group’s shares buybacks,
and/or a requirement to maintain a specified amount of MREL. This
may also impact NatWest Group’s strategic plans.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation, or lead to a loss of investor
confidence.
NatWest Group may become subject to the application of UK statutory
stabilisation or resolution powers which may result in, for
example, the cancellation, transfer or dilution of ordinary shares,
or the write-down or conversion of certain other of NatWest
Group’s securities.
The
BoE, the PRA, the FCA, and HM Treasury (together, the
‘Authorities’) are granted substantial powers to
resolve and stabilise UK-incorporated financial institutions. Five
stabilisation options exist: (i) transfer of all of the business of
a relevant entity or the shares of the relevant entity to a private
sector purchaser; (ii) transfer of all or part of the business of
the relevant entity to a ‘bridge bank’ wholly or
partially owned by the BoE; (iii) transfer of part of the assets,
rights or liabilities of the relevant entity to one or more asset
management vehicles for management of the transferor’s
assets, rights or liabilities; (iv) the write-down, conversion,
transfer, modification, or suspension of the relevant
entity’s equity, capital instruments and liabilities; and (v)
temporary public ownership of the relevant entity. These options
may be applied to NatWest Group plc as the parent company or to any
subsidiary where certain conditions are met (such as, whether the
firm is failing or likely to fail, or whether it is reasonably
likely that action will be taken (outside of resolution) that will
result in the firm no longer failing or being likely to fail).
Moreover, there are modified insolvency and administration
procedures for relevant entities within NatWest Group, and the
Authorities have the power to modify or override certain
contractual arrangements in certain circumstances and amend the law
for the purpose of enabling their powers to be used effectively and
may promulgate provisions with retrospective
applicability.
Under
the UK Banking Act 2009, the Authorities are generally required to
have regard to specified objectives in exercising the powers
provided for by the UK Banking Act 2009. One of the objectives
(which is required to be balanced as appropriate with the other
specified objectives) refers to the protection and enhancement of
the stability of the financial system of the UK. Moreover, the
‘no creditor worse off’ safeguard provides that where
certain resolution actions are taken, the Authorities are required
to ensure that no creditor is in a worse position than if the bank
had entered into normal insolvency proceedings. Although, this
safeguard may not apply in relation to an application of the
separate write-down and conversion power relating to capital
instruments in circumstances where a stabilisation power is not
also used, the UK Banking Act 2009 still requires the Authorities
to respect the hierarchy on insolvency when using the write-down
and conversion power. Further, holders of debt instruments which
are subject to the power may, however, have ordinary shares
transferred to or issued to them by way of
compensation.
Uncertainty
exists as to how the Authorities may exercise their powers
including the determination of actions to be undertaken in relation
to the ordinary shares and other securities issued by NatWest
Group, which may depend on factors outside of NatWest Group’s
control. Moreover, the UK Banking Act 2009 provisions remain
largely untested in practice, particularly in respect of
resolutions of large financial institutions and
groups.
If
NatWest Group is at or is approaching the point such that
regulatory intervention is required, any exercise of the resolution
regime powers by the Authorities may adversely affect holders of
NatWest Group plc’s ordinary shares or other NatWest Group
securities. This may result in various actions being undertaken in
relation to NatWest Group and any securities of NatWest Group,
including cancellation, transfer, dilution, write-down or
conversion (as applicable). There may also be a corresponding
adverse effect on the market price of such ordinary shares and
other NatWest Group securities.
Each of
these actions may also have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Operational and IT resilience risk
Operational risks (including reliance on third party suppliers and
outsourcing of certain activities) are inherent in NatWest
Group’s businesses.
Operational
risk is the risk of loss or disruption resulting from inadequate or
failed internal processes, procedures, people or systems, or from
external events, including legal and regulatory risks, third party
processes, procedures, people or systems.
NatWest
Group operates in several countries, offering a diverse range of
products and services supported directly or indirectly by third
party suppliers. As a result, operational risks or losses can arise
from a number of internal or external factors (including for
example, payment errors or financial crime and fraud), for which
there is continued scrutiny by third parties of NatWest
Group’s compliance with financial crime requirements; refer
to, ‘NatWest Group is exposed to the risks of various
litigation matters, regulatory and governmental actions and
investigations as well as remedial undertakings, the outcomes of
which are inherently difficult to predict, and which could have an
adverse effect on NatWest Group.’ These risks are also
present when NatWest Group relies on critical service providers
(suppliers) or vendors to provide services to it or its customers,
as is increasingly the case as NatWest Group outsources certain
activities, including with respect to the implementation of
technologies, innovation (such as cloud services and artificial
intelligence) and responding to regulatory and market
changes.
Operational
risks also exist due to the implementation of NatWest Group’s
strategy, and the organisational and operational changes involved,
including: NatWest Group’s cost-controlling and
simplification measures; continued digitalisation and the
integration of artificial intelligence in the business;
acquisition, divestments and other transactions; the implementation
of recommendations from internal and external reviews with respect
to certain governance processes, policies, systems and controls of
NatWest Group entities including with respect to customer account
closures; and conditions affecting the financial services industry
generally (including macroeconomic and other geopolitical
developments) as well as the legal and regulatory uncertainty
resulting from these conditions. Any of the above may place
significant pressure on NatWest Group’s ability to maintain
effective internal controls and governance frameworks.
NatWest
Group also faces operational risks as it continues to invest in the
automation of certain solutions and customer interactions,
including through artificial intelligence. Such initiatives may
result in operational, reputational and conduct risks if the
technology is not used appropriately, is defective or inadequate,
or is not fully integrated into NatWest Group’s current
solutions, systems and controls.
The
effective management of operational risks is critical to meeting
customer service expectations and retaining and attracting customer
business. Although NatWest Group has implemented risk controls and
mitigation actions, with resources and planning having been devoted
to mitigate operational risk, such measures may not be effective in
controlling each of the operational risks faced by NatWest
Group.
Ineffective
management of such risks may have a material adverse effect on
NatWest Group’s future results, financial condition,
prospects, and/or reputation.
NatWest Group is subject to sophisticated and frequent
cyberattacks, and compliance with cybersecurity and data protection
regulations is becoming increasingly complex.
NatWest
Group experiences a constant threat from cyberattacks across the
entire NatWest Group and against NatWest Group’s supply chain
networks, reinforcing the importance of the due diligence of,
ongoing risk management of, and close working relationship with,
the third parties on which NatWest Group relies. NatWest Group is
reliant on technology, against which there is a constantly evolving
series of attacks that are increasing in terms of frequency,
sophistication, impact and severity. As cyberattacks evolve and
become more sophisticated, NatWest Group is required to continue to
invest significant resources in additional capability designed to
defend against emerging threats.
Third
parties continue to make hostile attempts to gain access to,
introduce malware (including ransomware) into, and exploit
potential vulnerabilities of, financial services
institutions’ IT systems, including those of NatWest Group.
For example, in 2024, NatWest Group and its supply chain were
subjected to a small number of attempted Distributed Denial of
Service and ransomware attacks. These hostile attempts were
addressed without material impact on NatWest Group or its customers
by deploying cybersecurity capabilities and controls that seek to
manage the impact of any such attacks, and sustain availability of
services for NatWest Group’s customers.
Consequently,
NatWest Group continues to invest significant resources in
developing and evolving cybersecurity capabilities and controls
that are designed to mitigate the potential effect of such attacks.
However, given the nature of the threat, there can be no assurance
that these capabilities and controls will prevent the potential
adverse effect of an attack from occurring. Refer to ‘NatWest
Group’s operations are highly dependent on its complex IT
systems and any IT failure could adversely affect NatWest
Group.’
Any
failure in NatWest Group’s information and cybersecurity
policies, procedures or controls, may result in significant
financial losses, major business disruption, inability to deliver
customer services, or loss of, or ability to access, data or
systems or other sensitive information (including as a result of an
outage) and may cause associated reputational damage. Any of these
factors could increase costs (including costs relating to
notification of, or compensation for customers, credit monitoring
or card reissuance), result in regulatory investigations or
sanctions being imposed or may affect NatWest Group’s ability
to retain and attract customers. Regulators in the UK, US, Europe
and Asia continue to recognise cybersecurity as an important
systemic risk to the financial sector and have highlighted the need
for financial institutions to improve their monitoring and control
of, and resilience (particularly of critical services) to
cyberattacks, and to provide timely reporting or notification of
them, as appropriate (including, for example, the SEC cybersecurity
requirements and the new EU Digital Operational Resilience Act
(‘DORA’)). Furthermore, cyberattacks on NatWest
Group’s counterparties and suppliers may also have an adverse
effect on NatWest Group’s operations.
Additionally,
malicious third parties may induce employees, customers,
third-party providers or other users with access to NatWest
Group’s systems to wrongfully disclose sensitive information
to gain access to NatWest Group’s data or systems or that of
NatWest Group’s customers or employees. Cybersecurity and
information security events can derive from groups or factors such
as: internal or external threat actors, human error, fraud or
malice on the part of NatWest Group’s employees or third
parties, including third party providers, or may result from
technological failure (including defective, inadequate or
inappropriately used artificial intelligence based
solutions).
NatWest
Group expects greater regulatory engagement, supervision and
enforcement to continue in relation to its overall resilience to
withstand IT and IT-related disruption, either through a
cyberattack or some other disruptive event. Such increased
regulatory engagement, supervision and enforcement is uncertain in
relation to the scope, cost, consequence and the pace of change,
which may have a material adverse effect on NatWest Group. Due to
NatWest Group’s reliance on technology, the adoption of
innovative solutions, the integration of automated processes and
artificial intelligence in its business and the increasing
sophistication, frequency and impact of cyberattacks, such attacks
may have an adverse effect on NatWest Group.
In
accordance with applicable UK and EU data protection, and
cybersecurity laws and regulations, NatWest Group is required to
ensure it implements timely, appropriate and effective
organisational and technological safeguards against unauthorised or
unlawful access to the data of NatWest Group, its customers and its
employees. In order to meet this requirement, NatWest Group relies
on the effectiveness of its internal policies, controls and
procedures to protect the confidentiality, integrity and
availability of information held on its IT systems, networks and
devices as well as with third parties with whom NatWest Group
interacts. A failure to monitor and manage data in accordance with
applicable requirements may result in financial losses, regulatory
fines and investigations and associated reputational
damage.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group’s operations and strategy are highly dependent
on the accuracy and effective use of data.
NatWest
Group relies on the availability, sourcing, and effective use of
accurate and high quality data to support, monitor, evaluate,
manage and enhance its operations, innovate its products offering,
meet its regulatory obligations, and deliver its strategy.
Investment is being made in data tools and analytics, including
raising awareness around ethical data usage (for example, in
relation to the use of artificial intelligence) and privacy across
NatWest Group. The availability and accessibility of current,
complete, detailed, accurate and, wherever possible,
machine-readable customer segment and sub-sector data, together
with appropriate governance and accountability for data, is fast
becoming a critical strategic asset, which is subject to increased
regulatory focus.
Failure
to have or be able to access that data or the ineffective use or
governance of that data could result in a failure to manage and
report important risks and opportunities or satisfy
customers’ expectations including the inability to deliver
products and services. This could also place NatWest Group at a
competitive disadvantage by increasing its costs, inhibiting its
efforts to reduce costs or its ability to improve its systems,
controls and processes. Any of the above could result in a failure
to deliver NatWest Group’s strategy.
These
data weaknesses and limitations, or the unethical or inappropriate
use of data, and/or non-compliance with data protection laws could
give rise to conduct and litigation risks and may increase the risk
of operational challenges, losses, reputational damage or other
adverse consequences due to inappropriate models, systems,
processes, decisions or other actions.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group’s operations are highly dependent on its
complex IT systems and any IT failure could adversely affect
NatWest Group.
NatWest
Group’s operations are highly dependent on the ability to
process a very large number of transactions efficiently and
accurately while complying with applicable laws and regulations.
The proper functioning of NatWest Group’s transactional and
payment systems, financial crime and fraud detection systems and
controls, risk management, credit analysis and reporting,
accounting, customer service and other IT systems, including cloud
services providers (some of which are owned and operated by other
entities in NatWest Group or third parties), as well as the
communication networks between its branches and main data
processing centres, is critical to NatWest Group’s
operations. Individually or collectively, any system failure
(including defective or inadequate automated processes or
artificial intelligence based solutions), loss of service
availability, mobile banking disruption, or breach of data security
could potentially cause significant damage to: (i) important
business services across NatWest Group; and (ii) NatWest
Group’s ability to provide services to its customers, which
could result in reputational damage, significant compensation costs
and regulatory sanctions (including fines resulting from regulatory
investigations) or a breach of applicable regulations and could
affect NatWest Group’s regulatory approvals, competitive
position, business and brands, which could undermine its ability to
attract and retain customers and talent.
NatWest
Group outsources certain functions as it innovates and offers new
digital solutions to its customers to meet the demand for online
and mobile banking. Outsourcing alongside remote working heighten
the above risks.
NatWest
Group uses IT systems that enable remote working interface with
third-party systems. NatWest Group could experience service denials
or disruptions if such IT systems exceed capacity or if NatWest
Group or a third-party system fails or experiences any
interruptions, all of which could result in business and customer
interruption and related reputational damage, significant
compensation costs, regulatory sanctions and/or a breach of
applicable regulations.
In
2024, NatWest Group continued to make considerable investments to
further simplify, upgrade and improve its IT and technology
capabilities (including migration of certain services to cloud
platforms). NatWest Group continues to develop and enhance digital
services for its customers and seeks to improve its competitive
position through integrating automated processes and artificial
intelligence based solutions in its business and by enhancing
controls and procedures and strengthening the resilience of
services including cybersecurity. Any failure of these investment
and rationalisation initiatives to achieve the expected results,
due to cost challenges, poor implementation, defects or otherwise,
may adversely affect NatWest Group’s operations, its
reputation and ability to retain or grow its customer business or
adversely affect its competitive position.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group relies on attracting, retaining and developing
diverse senior management and skilled personnel, and is required to
maintain good employee relations.
NatWest
Group’s success depends on its ability to attract, retain
(through creating an inclusive environment), and develop highly
skilled and qualified diverse personnel, including senior
management, directors and key employees (including technology and
data focused roles), in a highly competitive market and under
internal cost efficiency pressures.
NatWest
Group’s ability to attract, retain and develop highly skilled
and qualified diverse senior management and skilled personnel may
be more difficult due to cost-controlling measures, failure to pay
employees competitive compensation, heightened regulatory oversight
of banks and the increasing scrutiny of, and (in some cases)
restrictions placed upon, employee compensation arrangements. In
addition, certain economic, market and regulatory conditions and
political developments may reduce the pool of candidates for key
management and non-executive roles, including non-executive
directors with the right skills, knowledge and experience, or may
increase the number of departures of existing employees. Moreover,
a failure to foster a diverse and inclusive workforce may adversely
affect NatWest Group’s employee engagement and the
formulation and execution of its strategy and could also have an
adverse effect on its reputation with employees, customers,
investors and regulators.
Many of
NatWest Group’s employees in the UK, the Republic of Ireland
and continental Europe are represented by employee representative
bodies, including trade unions and works councils. Engagement with
its employees and such bodies is important to NatWest Group in
maintaining good employee relations. Any failure to do so may
adversely affect NatWest Group’s ability to operate its
business effectively.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
A failure in NatWest Group’s risk management framework could
adversely affect NatWest Group, including its ability to achieve
its strategic objectives.
Risk
management is an integral part of all of NatWest Group’s
activities and delivery of its long-term strategy. NatWest
Group’s Enterprise-Wide Risk Management Framework sets out
the approach for managing risk within NatWest Group including in
relation to risk governance and risk appetite. A failure to adhere
to this framework and to agreed risk appetite statements, or any
material weaknesses or deficiencies in the framework’s
controls and procedures, could adversely affect NatWest
Group’s financial condition and strategic delivery, as well
as accurate reporting of risk exposures.
In
addition, financial crime risk management is dependent on the use
and effectiveness of financial crime assessment, systems and
controls. Weak or ineffective financial crime processes and
controls may risk NatWest Group inadvertently facilitating
financial crime which may result in regulatory investigation,
sanction, litigation, fines and/or reputational
damage.
Financial
crime continues to evolve, whether through fraud, scams,
cyberattacks or other criminal activity. These risks are
exacerbated as NatWest Group continues to innovate its product
offering and increasingly offers digital solutions to its
customers, including through mobile banking. NatWest Group has made
and continues to make significant, multi-year investments to
strengthen and improve its overall financial crime control
framework with prevention systems and capabilities, including
investment in new technologies and capabilities to further enhance
customer due diligence, transaction monitoring, sanctions and
anti-bribery and corruption systems.
Financial
risk management is highly dependent on the use and effectiveness of
internal stress tests and models and ineffective risk management
may arise from a wide variety of factors, including lack of
transparency or incomplete risk reporting, manual processes and
controls, inaccurate data, inadequate IT systems, unidentified
conflicts or misaligned incentives, lack of accountability control
and governance, incomplete risk monitoring and management,
insufficient challenges or assurance processes, or a failure to
commence or timely complete risk remediation projects. Failure to
manage risks effectively, or within regulatory expectations, could
adversely affect NatWest Group’s reputation or its
relationship with its regulators, customers, shareholders or other
stakeholders.
NatWest
Group’s operations are inherently exposed to conduct risks,
which include business decisions, actions or reward mechanisms that
are not responsive to or aligned with NatWest Group’s
regulatory obligations, customers’ needs or do not reflect
NatWest Group’s strategy, ineffective product management,
unethical or inappropriate use of data, information asymmetry,
implementation and utilisation of new technologies, outsourcing of
customer service and product delivery, inappropriate behaviour
towards customers, customer outcomes, the possibility of
mis-selling of financial products and mishandling of customer
complaints. Some of these risks have materialised in the past and
ineffective management and oversight of conduct risks may lead to
further remediation and regulatory intervention or
enforcement.
NatWest
Group’s businesses are also exposed to risks from employee,
contractor or service providers misconduct including non-compliance
with policies and regulations, negligence or fraud (including
financial crimes and fraud), any of which could result in
regulatory fines or sanctions and serious reputational or financial
harm to NatWest Group. Hybrid working arrangements for NatWest
Group employees place heavy reliance on the IT systems that enable
remote working and may place additional pressure on NatWest
Group’s ability to maintain effective internal controls and
governance frameworks and increase operational risk. Hybrid working
arrangements are also subject to regulatory scrutiny to ensure
adequate recording, surveillance and supervision of regulated
activities, and compliance with regulatory requirements and
expectations, including requirements to: meet threshold conditions
for regulated activities; ensure the ability to oversee functions
(including any outsourced functions); ensure no detriment is caused
to customers; and ensure no increased risk of financial
crime.
In
addition, the UK’s Net Zero Strategy and NatWest
Group’s strategy relating to climate and sustainability are
important drivers as to how NatWest Group integrates climate
(including physical and transition risks) and other
sustainability-related risks into its risk management framework and
practices (including for financing activities or engaging with
counterparties (including suppliers)). Furthermore, legislative and
regulatory authorities are publishing expectations as to how banks
should prudently manage and transparently disclose climate and
other sustainability-related risks. Any failure of NatWest Group to
fully and timely embed climate and other sustainability-related
risks into its risk management practices and framework to
appropriately identify, assess, prioritise and monitor such risks
may have an adverse effect on NatWest Group. Similarly, if the
Group is unable to apply the appropriate product governance
processes in line with NatWest Group’s strategy and
applicable legal and regulatory requirements and expectations it
may have an adverse effect on NatWest Group.
NatWest
Group seeks to embed a risk awareness culture across the
organisation and has implemented policies and allocated new
resources across all levels of the organisation to manage and
mitigate conduct risk and expects to continue to invest in risk
management, including the ongoing development of a risk management
strategy in line with regulatory expectations. However, such
efforts may not insulate NatWest Group from instances of misconduct
and no assurance can be given that NatWest Group’s strategy
and control framework will be effective. Any failure in NatWest
Group’s risk management framework may result in the inability
to achieve its strategic objectives for its customers, employees
and wider stakeholders.
Any of the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group’s operations are subject to inherent
reputational risk.
Reputational
risk relates to stakeholder and public perceptions of NatWest Group
arising from an actual or perceived failure to meet stakeholder or
the public’s expectations, including with respect to NatWest
Group’s strategy and related targets or due to any events,
behaviour, action or inaction by NatWest Group, its employees or
those with whom NatWest Group is associated. Refer to ‘NatWest Group’s
businesses are subject to substantial regulation and oversight,
which are constantly evolving and may adversely affect NatWest
Group.’ This includes harm to its brand, which may be
detrimental to NatWest Group’s business, including its
ability to build or sustain business relationships with customers,
stakeholders and regulators, and may cause low employee morale,
regulatory censure or reduced access to, or an increase in the cost
of, funding. Reputational risk may arise whenever there is, or
there is perceived to be, a material lapse in standards of
integrity, controls, compliance, customer or operating efficiency,
or regulatory or press scrutiny, and may adversely affect NatWest
Group’s ability to attract and retain customers.
In
particular, NatWest Group’s ability to attract and retain
customers (particularly, corporate/institutional and retail
depositors), and talent, and engage with counterparties may be
adversely affected by factors including: negative public opinion
resulting from the actual or perceived manner in which NatWest
Group conducts or modifies its business activities and operations,
media coverage (whether accurate or otherwise), employee
misconduct, NatWest Group’s financial performance, IT systems
failures or cyberattacks, data breaches, financial crime and fraud,
the level of direct and indirect government support, or the actual
or perceived practices in the banking and financial industry in
general, or a wide variety of other factors.
Technologies,
in particular online social networks and other broadcast tools that
facilitate communication with large audiences in short timeframes
and with minimal costs, may also significantly increase and
accelerate the impact of damaging information and
allegations.
Although
NatWest Group has a Reputational Risk Policy and framework to
identify, measure and manage material reputational risk exposures,
there is a risk that it may not be successful in avoiding or
mitigating damage to its business or its various brands from
reputational risk.
Any of
the above aspects of reputational risk may have a material adverse
effect on NatWest Group’s future results, financial
condition, prospects, and/or reputation.
Legal and regulatory risk
NatWest Group’s businesses are subject to substantial
regulation and oversight, which are constantly evolving and may
adversely affect NatWest Group.
NatWest
Group is subject to extensive laws, regulations, guidelines,
corporate governance practice and disclosure requirements,
administrative actions and policies in each jurisdiction in which
it operates, which represents ongoing compliance and conduct risks.
Many of these are constantly evolving and are subject to further
material changes, which may increase compliance and conduct risks,
particularly as the laws of different jurisdictions (including
those of the EU/EEA and UK) diverge. NatWest Group expects
government and regulatory intervention in the financial services
industry to remain high for the foreseeable future.
Regulators
and governments continue to focus on reforming the prudential
regulation of the financial services industry and the way financial
services are conducted. Measures have included: enhanced capital,
liquidity and funding requirements, through initiatives such as the
Basel 3.1 standards implementation (and any resulting effect on
RWAs and models), the UK ring-fencing regime, the strengthening of
the recovery and resolution framework applicable to financial
institutions in the UK, EU and US, financial industry reforms (such
as the FSMA 2023), corporate governance requirements, rules
relating to the compensation of senior management and other
employees, enhanced data protection and IT resilience requirements
(such as DORA), financial market infrastructure reforms, enhanced
regulations in respect of the provision of ‘investment
services and activities’.
There
is also increased regulatory focus in certain areas, including
conduct, model risk governance, consumer protection in retail or
other financial markets (such as the FCA’s rules governing
interactions with and the provision of services to retail
customers, the ‘Consumer Duty’), competition and
disputes regimes, anti-money laundering, anti-corruption,
anti-bribery, anti-tax evasion, payment systems, sanctions and
anti-terrorism laws and regulations.
In
addition, there is significant oversight by competition
authorities. The competitive landscape for banks and other
financial institutions in the UK, EU/EEA, US and Asia is rapidly
changing. Recent regulatory and legal changes have resulted, and
may continue to result, in new market participants and changed
competitive dynamics in certain key areas. Regulatory and
competition authorities, including the CMA, are also looking at and
focusing more on how they can support competition and innovation in
digital and other markets. Future competition investigations,
market reviews, or regulation of mergers may lead to the imposition
of financial penalties or market remedies that may adversely affect
NatWest Group’s competitive or financial position. Recent
regulatory changes and heightened levels of public and regulatory
scrutiny in the UK, EU and US have resulted in increased capital,
funding and liquidity requirements, changes in the competitive
landscape, changes in other regulatory requirements and increased
operating costs, and have impacted, and will continue to impact,
product offerings and business models.
Moreover,
uncertainties remain as to the extent to which EU/EEA laws will
diverge from UK law. For example, bank regulation in the UK may
diverge from European bank regulation following the enactment of
the Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 (‘FSMA
2023’) and the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act
2023. In particular, FSMA 2023 provides for the revocation of
retained EU laws relating to financial services regulation, but
sets out that this process will likely take a number of years and
the intention is that specific retained EU laws will not be revoked
until such time as replacement regulatory rules are in
place.
The
actions taken by regulators in response to any new or revised bank
regulation and other rules affecting financial services, may
adversely affect NatWest Group, including its business, non-UK
operations, group structure, compliance costs, intragroup
arrangements and capital requirements.
Other
areas in which, and examples of where, governmental policies,
regulatory and accounting changes, and increased public and
regulatory scrutiny may have an adverse effect (some of which could
be material) on NatWest Group include, but are not limited
to:
–
general changes in
government, regulatory, competition, or central bank policy (such
as changes to the BoE levy (including as a result of the proposed
Bank Resolution (Recapitalisation) Bill), or changes in regulatory
regimes that may influence investor decisions in the jurisdictions
in which NatWest Group operates;
–
rules relating to
foreign ownership, expropriation, nationalisation and confiscation
or appropriation of assets;
–
increased scrutiny
including from the CMA, FCA and Payment Systems Regulator
(‘PSR’) for the protection and resilience of, and
competition and innovation in, digital and other markets, UK
payment systems (with the development of the government’s
National Payments Vision and Strategy) and retail banking
developments relating to the UK initiative on Open Banking, Open
Finance and the European directive on payment
services;
–
the ongoing
compliance with CMA’s Market Orders including the Retail
Banking Market Order 2017 and SME Undertakings;
–
ongoing competition
litigation in the English courts around payment card interchange
fees, combined with increased regulatory scrutiny (from the PSR) of
the Visa and Mastercard card schemes
–
increased risk of
new class action claims being brought against NatWest Group in the
Competition Appeal Tribunal for breaches of competition
law;
–
increased risk of
legal action against NatWest Group for financing or contributing to
climate change and nature-related degradation;
–
new or increased
regulations relating to customer data protection as well as IT
controls and resilience, such as the India Digital Personal Data
Protection Act 2023;
–
the introduction
of, and changes to, taxes, levies or fees applicable to NatWest
Group’s operations, such as changes in tax rates (including
changes to the taxation of non-UK domiciled individuals), changes
in the scope and administration of the Bank Levy, increases in the
bank corporation tax surcharge in the UK, restrictions on the tax
deductibility of interest payments or further restrictions imposed
on the treatment of carry-forward tax losses that reduce the value
of deferred tax assets and require increased payments of
tax;
–
the potential
introduction by the BoE of a Central Bank Digital Currency which
could result in deposit outflows, higher funding costs, and/or
other implications for UK banks;
–
regulatory
enforcement in the form of PRA imposed financial penalties for
failings in banks’ regulatory reporting governance and
controls, and ongoing regulatory scrutiny, and the PRA’s
thematic reviews of the governance, controls and processes for
preparing regulatory returns of selected UK banks, including
NatWest Group;
–
increased
regulatory scrutiny from the ECB in relation to NatWest
Group’s EU based activities;
–
changes in policy
and practice regarding enforcement, investigations and sanctions,
supervisory activities and reviews;
–
the introduction of
regulatory requirements to ensure sufficient access by the general
public to cash services such as branches and ATMs;
–
‘Dear
CEO’ and similar letters issued by supervisors and regulators
from time to time;
–
recent or proposed
US regulations around cybersecurity incidents, climate disclosures
and other climate and sustainability-related rules, or
greenwashing;
–
new or increased
regulations relating to financial crime, and
–
any regulatory
requirements relating to the use of artificial intelligence and
large language models across the financial services industry (such
as the European Union Artificial Intelligence Act).
Any of
these developments (including any failure to comply with or
correctly interpret new rules and regulations) could also have an
adverse effect on NatWest Group’s authorisations and
licences, the products and services that it may offer, its
reputation and the value of its assets, NatWest Group’s
operations or legal entity structure, and the manner in which it
conducts its business.
Material
consequences could arise should NatWest Group be found
non-compliant with these regulatory requirements. Regulatory
developments may also result in an increased number of regulatory
investigations and proceedings and have increased the risks
relating to NatWest Group’s ability to comply with the
applicable body of rules and regulations in the manner and within
the timeframes required.
Changes
in laws, rules or regulations, or in their interpretation or
enforcement, or the implementation of new laws, rules or
regulations, including contradictory or conflicting laws, rules or
regulations by key regulators or policymakers in different
jurisdictions, or failure by NatWest Group to comply with such
laws, rules and regulations, may adversely affect NatWest
Group’s business, results of operations and outlook. In
addition, uncertainty and insufficient international regulatory
coordination as enhanced supervisory standards are developed and
implemented may adversely affect NatWest Group’s ability to
engage in effective business, capital and risk management
planning.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
NatWest Group is exposed to the risks of various litigation
matters, regulatory and governmental actions and investigations as
well as remedial undertakings, the outcomes of which are inherently
difficult to predict, and which could have an adverse effect on
NatWest Group.
NatWest
Group’s operations are diverse and complex and it operates in
legal and regulatory environments that expose it to potentially
significant civil actions (including those following on from
regulatory sanction), as well as criminal, regulatory and
governmental proceedings. NatWest Group has resolved a number of
legal and regulatory actions over the past several years but
continues to be, and may in the future be, involved in such actions
in the US, the UK, Europe, Asia and other
jurisdictions.
NatWest
Group is, has been or will likely be involved in a number of
significant legal and regulatory actions, including investigations,
proceedings and ongoing reviews (both formal and informal) by
governmental law enforcement and other agencies and litigation
proceedings, including in relation to the offering of securities,
conduct in the foreign exchange market, the setting of benchmark
rates such as LIBOR and related derivatives trading, the issuance,
underwriting, and sales and trading of fixed-income securities
(including government securities), product mis-selling, customer
mistreatment, anti-money laundering, antitrust, VAT recovery,
record keeping, reporting and various other issues. There is also
an increasing risk of new class action claims being brought against
NatWest Group in the Competition Appeal Tribunal for breaches of
competition law, as well as a risk of activist actions,
particularly relating to climate change and sustainability-related
matters. Legal and regulatory actions are subject to many
uncertainties, and their outcomes, including the timing, amount of
fines, damages or settlements or the form of any settlements, which
may be material and in excess of any related provisions, are often
difficult to predict, particularly in the early stages of a case or
investigation. NatWest Group’s expectation for resolution may
change and substantial additional provisions and costs may be
recognised in respect of any matter.
The
resolution of significant investigations includes NWM Plc’s
December 2021 spoofing-related guilty plea in the United States
that was agreed with the US Department of Justice
(‘DOJ’), and involves a multi-year period of probation,
an independent corporate monitor and the ongoing implementation of
recommendations made by it, and commitments to compliance programme
reviews and improvements, and reporting obligations. In the event
that NWM Plc does not meet its obligations to the DOJ, this may
lead to adverse consequences such as findings that NWM Plc violated
its probation term and possible re-sentencing, increased costs from
any extension of monitorship and/or the period of the probation,
amongst other consequences. For additional information relating to
this and other legal and regulatory proceedings and matters to
which NatWest Group is currently exposed, see ‘Litigation and
regulatory matters’ at Note 26 to the consolidated
accounts.
Recently
resolved matters or adverse outcomes or resolution of current or
future legal, regulatory or other matters, including
conduct-related reviews and redress projects, could increase the
risk of greater regulatory and third-party scrutiny and/or result
in future legal or regulatory actions, and could have material
financial, reputational, or collateral consequences for NatWest
Group’s business and result in restrictions or limitations on
NatWest Group’s operations.
These
may include the effective or actual disqualification from carrying
on certain regulated activities and consequences resulting from the
need to reapply for various important licences or obtain waivers to
conduct certain existing activities of NatWest Group, particularly
but not solely in the US, which may take a significant period of
time and the results and implications of which are
uncertain.
Disqualification
from carrying on any activities, whether automatically as a result
of the resolution of a particular matter or as a result of the
failure to obtain such licences or waivers could adversely affect
NatWest Group’s business, in particular in the US. This in
turn and/or any fines, settlement payments or penalties may have an
adverse effect on NatWest Group.
Failure
to comply with undertakings made by NatWest Group to its
regulators, or the conditions of probation resulting from the
spoofing-related guilty plea, may result in additional measures or
penalties being taken against NatWest Group. In addition, any
failure to administer conduct redress processes adequately, or to
handle individual complaints fairly or appropriately, could result
in further claims as well as the imposition of additional measures
or limitations on NatWest Group’s operations, additional
supervision by NatWest Group’s regulators, and loss of
investor confidence.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Changes in tax legislation (or application thereof) or failure to
generate future taxable profits may impact the recoverability of
certain deferred tax assets recognised by NatWest
Group.
In
accordance with the accounting policies set out in ‘Critical
accounting policies and sources of estimation uncertainty’,
NatWest Group has recognised deferred tax assets on losses
available to relieve future profits from tax only to the extent it
is probable that they will be recovered. The deferred tax assets
are quantified on the basis of current tax legislation and
accounting standards and are subject to change in respect of the
future rates of tax or the rules for computing taxable profits and
offsetting allowable losses.
Failure
to generate sufficient future taxable profits or further changes in
tax legislation or the application thereof (including with respect
to rates of tax), or changes in accounting standards may reduce the
recoverable amount of the recognised tax loss deferred tax assets,
amounting to £1.106 billion as at 31 December 2024. Changes to
the treatment of certain deferred tax assets may impact NatWest
Group’s capital position. In addition, NatWest Group’s
interpretation or application of relevant tax laws may differ from
those of the relevant tax authorities and provisions are made for
potential tax liabilities that may arise on the basis of the
amounts expected to be paid to tax authorities. The amounts
ultimately paid may differ materially from the amounts provided
depending on the ultimate resolution of such matters.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation.
Climate and sustainability-related risks
NatWest Group and its Value Chain face climate and
sustainability-related risks that may adversely affect NatWest
Group.
Climate
change has been identified as a source of systemic risk, with
potentially severe consequences for financial institutions. The
financial impacts of climate and sustainability-related risks are
expected to be widespread and may disrupt the orderly functioning
of financial markets and have an adverse effect on financial
institutions, including NatWest Group.
Financial
and non-financial risks from climate change can arise through
physical and transition risks. In addition, physical and transition
risks can trigger further losses, stemming directly or indirectly
from legal claims, litigation and conduct liability (referred to as
‘liability risk’).
Whilst
there are significant uncertainties relating to the location,
magnitude and timing of climate-related physical risks, scientific
research suggests physical risks may occur in increasing frequency
and severity. Climate-related events like flood, wildfires and
climatic changes can damage assets and disrupt operations, leading
to increased costs, changes in asset values and loan
defaults.
Damage
or disruption to NatWest Group customers’ and
counterparties’ (including suppliers’) properties,
premises and operations could disrupt business, result in the
deterioration of the value of collateral or insurance shortfalls,
impair asset values and negatively impact the creditworthiness of
customers and their ability and/or willingness to pay fees, afford
new products or repay their debts, leading to increased default
rates, delinquencies, write-offs and impairment charges in NatWest
Group’s portfolios. In addition, NatWest Group’s
premises and operations, or those of its critical outsourced
functions may experience damage or disruption leading to increased
costs for NatWest Group.
To meet
the goals of the UK’s Net Zero Strategy by 2050 will require
a net-zero transition across all sectors of the UK economy. The
timing and pace of the transition to a net-zero economy will depend
on many factors and uncertainties and may be near-term, gradual and
orderly, or delayed, rapid and disorderly, or a combination of
these. A transition to a net-zero economy requires significant and
timely policy and regulatory changes, immediate actions from
national and regional governments, new technological innovations
and changes to supply and demand systems within industries. The
transition to a net-zero economy may also trigger changes in
consumer behaviour and market sentiment. In addition, there is
significant uncertainty about how climate change and the
world’s transition to a net-zero economy will unfold over
time and how and when climate and other sustainability-related
risks will manifest. These timeframes are considerably longer than
NatWest Group’s historical and current strategic, financial,
resilience and investment planning horizons.
NatWest Group and its value chain (including its investors,
customers, counterparties (including its suppliers), business
partners and employees) (‘NatWest Group’s Value
Chain’) may face financial and non-financial risks arising
from broader (i.e. non-climate-related) sustainability issues such
as risks relating to nature loss (such as the loss and/or decline
of the state of nature including but not limited to, the reduction
of any aspect of biological diversity and other forms of
environmental degradation such as air, water and land pollution,
soil quality degradation and water stress). NatWest Group
recognises that climate and nature-related risks are interlinked
and therefore NatWest Group aims to work towards enhancing
processes and capabilities to include assessments of nature-related
risks and opportunities within governance, risk management and
stakeholder engagement practices.
Climate and nature-related risks may:
–
adversely affect
the broader economy, influencing interest rates, inflation and
growth, impacting profitability and stability;
–
adversely affect
asset pricing and valuations of NatWest Group’s own and other
securities and, in turn, the wider financial system;
–
adversely affect
economic activities directly (for example through lower corporate
profitability or the devaluation of assets) or indirectly (for
example through macro-financial changes);
–
adversely affect
the viability or resilience of business models over the medium to
longer term, particularly those business models most vulnerable to
climate and sustainability-related risks;
–
trigger losses
stemming directly or indirectly from liability risks and/or
reputational damage, including as a result of adverse media
coverage, or activists, the public or NatWest Group’s Value
Chain associating NatWest Group or its customers with adverse
climate and sustainability-related issues;
–
adversely affect
NatWest Group’s ability to deliver on its strategy, including
achieving its climate ambitions and targets; and
–
exacerbate other
risk categories to which NatWest Group is exposed, including credit
risk, operational risk (including business continuity), market risk
(both traded and non-traded), liquidity and funding risk (for
example, net cash outflows or depletion of liquidity buffers),
reputational risk, pension risk, regulatory compliance risk and
conduct risk.;
In
addition to nature-related risks, NatWest Group and NatWest
Group’s Value Chain may face financial and non-financial
risks arising from other sustainability-related issues such as: (i)
risks related to social issues (including human rights), for
example, negative impact on people’s standard of living and
health, political and geopolitical tensions and conflict
endangering people’s lives and security, displacement of
communities, the violation of indigenous people’s rights,
unjust working conditions and labour rights breaches (including
discrimination, lack of diversity and inclusion, inequality,
gender/ethnicity pay gap and payments under the minimum wage),
modern slavery, accessible banking and financial inclusion,
financial crime, data privacy breaches, innovation, digitalisation
and AI, and lack of support for the vulnerable; and (ii)
governance-related risks (including board diversity, ethical
corporate culture, executive compensation and management
structure).
There
is also growing expectation from customers, investors,
policymakers, regulators and society of the need for a ”just
transition”– in recognition that the transition to net
zero should happen in a way that is as fair and inclusive as
possible to everyone concerned. Although NatWest Group continues to
evaluate and assess whether and, if so, how it integrates
‘just transition’ considerations into its strategy and
decision-making, a failure (or perception of failure) by NatWest
Group to sufficiently factor these considerations into existing
products and service offerings may adversely affect NatWest Group,
including NatWest Group’s reputation.
If
NatWest Group fails to identify, assess, prioritise, monitor, react
to and prevent appropriately: (i) climate and
sustainability-related impacts, risks and opportunities; and (ii)
changing regulatory and market expectations and societal
preferences that NatWest Group and NatWest Group’s Value
Chain face, in a timely manner or at all, this may have a material
adverse effect on NatWest Group’s business, future results,
financial condition, prospects (including cash flows, access to
finance or cost of capital over the short, medium or long term),
reputation or the price of its securities.
NatWest Group’s strategy relating to climate change,
ambitions, targets and transition plan entail significant execution
and/or reputational risks and are unlikely to be achieved without
significant and timely government policy, technology and customer
behavioural changes.
At
NatWest Group’s Annual General Meeting in April 2022,
ordinary shareholders passed an advisory ‘Say on
Climate’ resolution endorsing NatWest Group’s
previously announced strategic direction on climate change,
including its ambitions to at least halve the climate impact of its
financing activity by 2030, achieve alignment with the 2015 Paris
Agreement and reach net zero across its financed emissions, assets
under management and operational value chain by 2050. NatWest Group
may also announce other climate and sustainability-related
ambitions, targets and initiatives and/or retire or change existing
ones.
Making
the changes necessary to achieve NatWest Group’s climate
ambitions and targets and executing its transition plan, together
with the active management of climate and sustainability-related
risks and other regulatory, policy and market changes, is likely to
necessitate material changes to NatWest Group’s business,
operating model, its existing exposures and the products and
services NatWest Group provides to its customers (potentially on
accelerated timescales). NatWest Group may be required to: (i) in
the medium and long term significantly reduce its financed
emissions and its exposure to customers that do not align with a
transition to net zero or do not have a credible transition plan in
place, and (ii) divest or discontinue certain activities for
regulatory or legal reasons or in response to the transition to a
less carbon-dependent economy. Increases in lending and financing
activities may wholly or partially offset some or all these
reductions, which may increase the extent of changes and reductions
necessary.
Making
the necessary changes, or failing to make the necessary changes in
a timely manner, or at all to achieve NatWest Group’s climate
ambitions and targets and executing its transition plan, together
with the active management of climate and sustainability-related
risks and other regulatory, policy and market changes may have an
adverse effect on NatWest Group and NatWest Group’s ability
to achieve its climate and financial ambitions and targets, take
advantage of climate change-related opportunities and generate
sustainable returns.
NatWest
Group’s ability to achieve its strategy, including its
climate ambitions and targets, will significantly depend on many
factors and uncertainties beyond NatWest Group’s control.
These include: (i) the extent and pace of climate change, including
the timing and manifestation of physical and transition risks; (ii)
the macroeconomic environment; (iii) the effectiveness of actions
of governments, legislators, regulators and businesses; (iv) the
response of the wider society, NatWest Group’s Value Chain
and other stakeholders to mitigate the impact of climate and
sustainability-related risks; (v) changes in customer behaviour and
demand; (vi) appetite for new markets, credit appetite,
concentration risk appetite, lending opportunities; (vii)
developments in the available technology; (viii) the rollout of low
carbon infrastructure; and (ix) the availability of accurate,
verifiable, reliable, auditable, consistent and comparable data.
These external factors and other uncertainties will make it
challenging for NatWest Group to meet its climate ambitions and
targets and there is a significant risk that all or some of these
ambitions and targets will not be achieved or not achieved within
the intended timescales.
NatWest
Group’s ability to achieve its climate ambitions and targets
depends to a significant extent on the timely implementation and
integration of appropriate government policies. The UK Climate
Change Committee (the ‘UK CCC’) 2024 Progress Report to
the UK Parliament states that the UK is not on track to hit its
legislated target to reduce emissions in 2030 by 68% compared to
1990 levels, and only a third of the emission reductions required
to achieve the UK’s 2030 target are currently covered by
credible plans, with action needed across all sectors of the
economy. NatWest Group’s climate ambitions are unlikely to be
achieved without timely and appropriate government policy and
technology developments, as well as supplier, customer and societal
response required to support the transition.
The UK
CCC is expected to publish its Seventh Carbon Budget on 26 February
2025. NatWest Group expects this to take into account new UK policy
initiatives announced by the UK government in November 2024 and
NatWest Group plans to review its climate ambitions in the context
of the of the UK’s Seventh Carbon Budget, once
released.
Climate
and sustainability matters are also becoming increasingly
politicised and polarised.
Some of
NatWest Group’s customers, investors or other stakeholders
may decide not to do business with NatWest Group because, according
to their own assessment, NatWest Group’s strategy, ambitions
and targets related to climate and sustainability do not meet their
expectations, either for lacking the necessary ambition or progress
or for being perceived as overly concerned about
sustainability.
Any
delay or failure in putting into effect, making progress against or
meeting NatWest Group’s climate-related ambitions, targets
and plans may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s future results, financial condition, prospects,
and/or reputation and may increase the climate and
sustainability-related risks NatWest Group faces.
There are significant limitations related to accessing accurate,
reliable, verifiable, auditable, consistent and comparable climate
and other sustainability-related data that contribute to
substantial uncertainties in accurately modelling and reporting on
climate and sustainability information, as well as making
appropriate important internal decisions.
Accurate
assessment and reporting of climate and sustainability-related
impacts, risks, opportunities and other climate and
sustainability-related matters, and related metrics depends on
access to accurate, reliable, verifiable, auditable, consistent and
comparable data from counterparties (including suppliers),
customers, or other third parties. Data of adequate quality may not
be generally available or, if available, may not be accurate,
reliable, verifiable, auditable, consistent, or comparable. In the
absence of other sources, reporting on climate and
sustainability-related matters (including reporting on NatWest
Group’s financed emissions) may be based on estimated or
aggregated information developed by third parties that may be
prepared in an inconsistent way using different methodologies,
interpretations, or assumptions that may not be accurate for a
given counterparty (including supplier) or customer. There may also
be data gaps and limitations that are addressed using estimates
based on assumptions about matters that are inherently uncertain or
proxy data, such as sectoral averages or use of emissions estimated
by a third party, again developed in a variety of ways and in some
cases not in a timely manner causing data to be potentially
outdated at the time when they are used.
Significant
risks, uncertainties and variables are inherent in the assessment,
measurement and mitigation of climate and sustainability-related
risks. These include data quality gaps and limitations mentioned
above, as well as the pace at which climate science, greenhouse gas
accounting standards and various emissions reduction solutions
develop. In addition, there is significant uncertainty about how
climate change and the world’s transition to a net-zero
economy will unfold over time and how and when climate and
sustainability-related risks will manifest. These timeframes are
considerably longer than NatWest Group’s historical and
current strategic, financial, resilience and investment planning
horizons.
As a
result, NatWest Group’s assessment of climate and
sustainability impacts, risks, opportunities and other climate and
sustainability-related matters is likely to evolve and its climate
and sustainability-related disclosures may be amended, updated or
restated in the future as the quality and completeness of NatWest
Group’s data and methodologies continue to
improve.
These
data quality challenges, gaps and limitations may also have a
material impact on NatWest Group’s ability to make effective
business decisions about climate and sustainability-related
impacts, risks, opportunities and other climate and
sustainability-related matters, including risk management
decisions, to comply with disclosure requirements and to monitor
and report progress in meeting ambitions, targets and pathways all
of which may have an adverse effect on NatWest
Group.
Climate-related
risks are challenging to model due to their forward-looking nature,
the lack of and/or quality of historical testing capabilities, lack
of accuracy, standardisation and incompleteness of emissions and
other climate and sub-sector related data and the immature nature
of risk measurement and modelling methodologies. As a result, it is
very difficult to predict and model the impact of climate-related
risks into precise financial and economic outcomes.
The
evaluation of climate-related risk exposure and the development of
associated potential risk mitigation techniques also largely depend
on the choice of climate scenario modelling methodology and the
assumptions made which involves a number of risks and
uncertainties.
Accordingly,
these risks and uncertainties coupled with significantly long
timeframes make the outputs of climate-related risk modelling,
climate-related targets (including emission reduction targets) and
pathways, inherently more uncertain than outputs modelled for
traditional financial planning cycles based on historical financial
information.
Capabilities
within NatWest Group to appropriately assess, model, report and
manage climate and sustainability-related impacts and risks and the
suitability of the assumptions required to model and manage climate
and sustainability-related risks appropriately continue to mature
and develop. Even when those capabilities are appropriately
developed, the high level of uncertainty regarding any assumptions
modelled, the highly subjective nature of risk measurement and
mitigation techniques, incorrect or inadequate assumptions and
judgements and data quality gaps and limitations may lead to
inadequate risk management information and frameworks, or
ineffective business adaptation or mitigation strategies or
regulatory non-compliance.
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s business, future results, financial condition,
prospects, reputation and the price of its securities.
NatWest Group is becoming subject to more extensive, and
sophisticated climate and other sustainability-related laws,
regulation and oversight and there is an increasing risk of
regulatory enforcement, investigation and litigation.
NatWest
Group plc and its subsidiaries are increasingly becoming subject to
more extensive, and sophisticated sustainability-related laws and
regulations in the UK, EU and the US, including in relation to
mandatory climate and other sustainability reporting and due
diligence, climate transition plan, product labelling and
combatting “greenwashing”.
Compliance
with these complex, evolving and often diverging legal, regulatory
and supervisory requirements and voluntary standards and
initiatives is likely to require NatWest Group to implement
significant changes to its business models, IT systems, products,
governance, internal controls over financial and non-financial
reporting, disclosure controls and procedures, modelling capability
and risk management systems, which may increase the cost of doing
business, result in higher capital requirements, and entail
additional change risk and increased compliance, regulatory
sanctions, conduct and litigation (including settlements) costs. A
failure by NatWest Group or any of its subsidiaries to comply with
these climate and sustainability-related legal, regulatory and
supervisory requirements and standards and meet expectations of
NatWest Group’s Value Chain in this respect may result in
investigations and regulatory sanction each of which may have an
adverse effect on NatWest Group and the successful implementation
of NatWest Group’s strategy relating to climate and
sustainability.
Certain
non-UK subsidiaries of NatWest Group in the EU and elsewhere may
also be subject to EU, national and other climate and
sustainability laws and regulations which in some cases may differ.
Divergence between UK, EU, US and other climate and
sustainability-related legal, regulatory and supervisory
requirements and their interpretation may increase the cost of
doing business (including increased operating costs) and may result
in regulatory non-compliance and litigation risk. Failure by
NatWest Group to comply with these divergent legal, regulatory and
supervisory requirements (if applicable to NatWest Group) may have
an adverse effect on NatWest Group’s successful
implementation of its strategy relating to climate change including
when setting up its climate ambitions and targets and executing its
transition plan and may result in NatWest Group and/or its
subsidiaries not meeting investors’
expectations.
Increasing
new climate and sustainability-related jurisprudence, laws and
regulations in the UK and other jurisdictions, regulatory scrutiny,
expose financial institutions, including NatWest Group, to face
increasing litigation, conduct, enforcement and contract liability
risks related to climate change, nature-related degradation, human
rights violations and other social, governance and
sustainability-related issues. Furthermore, regulatory and
enforcement activity around climate and sustainability initiatives
that promote more extensive sustainability-related requirements and
those that impose divestment and other sanctions against financial
institutions that implement climate and sustainability-related
initiatives is becoming increasingly divergent and conflicting
between jurisdictions, in particular in the United
States.
Any
failure of NatWest Group to develop and implement robust and
effective governance, controls and procedures over climate and
sustainability-related impact assessment, disclosure, reporting and
other communications and sustainability-related claims (including
in relation to NatWest Group’s products, services and
strategy) and comply with them in line with applicable legal and
regulatory requirements and expectations, may give rise to
increased complaints, regulatory enforcement (including sanctions),
investigation and litigation and may adversely affect NatWest
Group’s regulatory compliance, investor base and
reputation.
Furthermore,
there is a risk that shareholders, campaign groups, customers and
activist groups could seek to take legal action against NatWest
Group for financing or contributing to actual or perceived harm to
the environment or people, climate change, nature-related
degradation and human rights violations, failure to implement or
follow adequate governance procedures and for not supporting the
principles of ‘just transition’ (i.e. maximising the
social benefits of the transition, mitigating the social risks of
the transition, empowering those affected by the change,
anticipating future shifts to address issues up front and
mobilising investments from the public and private
sectors).
Any of
the above may have a material adverse effect on NatWest
Group’s business, future results, financial condition,
prospects, reputation and the price of its securities.
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.
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NatWest Group plc
(Registrant)
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Date:
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14
February 2025
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By:
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/s/
Mark Stevens
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Name:
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Mark
Stevens
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Title:
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Assistant
Secretary
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