The news: The UK’s eight largest banks have sufficient capital to withstand a crisis more severe than the Great Recession, per the Bank of England’s annual bank stress test results. Banks would also be capable of supporting consumers and businesses throughout this scenario.
The report card: The stress tests used data on banks’ balance sheets as of June 2022. Since then, major UK banks’ capital ratios have risen 0.4 percentage points to 14.6% in Q1 2023
The tests covered Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds, Nationwide, NatWest, Santander, Standard Chartered, and Virgin Money. These eight banks account for roughly 75% of lending to the UK economy, per Bloomberg.
Bank strength doesn’t equal consumer health: A typical mortgage holder coming off a fixed-rate deal in 2023 will face a £220 ($271) increase to their monthly mortgage payments —and by the end of 2026, nearly 1 million homeowners will face £500 ($616) increases, per the BOE results. Renters would also suffer as landlords pass on higher mortgage rates to them.
Our take: Banks that offer better value can win big on deposits.
Offering similar rates would mean significantly higher cost of funds for the average UK bank. Instead of doing this across the board, UK banks can target certain demographics—like those who are likely to use other banking products—with their best offers. This would also help them create sticky relationships that won’t be severed as soon as a better rate comes along.
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