SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549


FORM 6-K


Report of Foreign Private Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

5 March 2010



The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc


Gogarburn
PO Box 1000
Edinburgh EH12 1HQ
Scotland
United Kingdom

(Address of principal executive offices)



Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

Form 20-F                                                Form 40-F    

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1):__

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7):__

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes                                                                 No  X 

If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to
the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82-            

This report on Form 6-K shall be deemed incorporated by reference into the company's Registration Statement on Form F-3 (File No. 333-162219) and to be a part thereof from the date which it was filed, to the extent not superseded by documents or reports subsequently filed or furnished.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results


 
Contents

   
 
Page 
   
Forward-looking statements
   
Presentation of information
   
Condensed consolidated income statement
   
Highlights
   
Business and strategic update
   
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
17 
   
Commentary on condensed consolidated balance sheet
18 
   
Results summary
20 
   
Description of business
30 
   
Divisional performance
32 
UK Retail
34 
UK Corporate
37 
Wealth
40 
Global Banking & Markets
42 
Global Transaction Services
45 
Ulster Bank
47 
US Retail & Commercial
50 
RBS Insurance
55 
Central items
58 
Non-Core
59 
   
Allocation methodology for indirect costs
64 
   
Average balance sheet
66 
   
Condensed consolidated income statement
68 
   
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income
69 
   
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
70 
   
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
71 
   
Condensed consolidated cash flow statement
74 
   
Notes
75 
   
Analysis of non-interest income, expenses and impairment losses
102 
   
Capital resources and ratios
103 
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1


 
Contents (continued)

   
 
Page
   
Risk and capital management
104
   
Presentation of information
104
   
Risk capital and liquidity management
104
   
Capital resources
106
   
Credit risk
109
   
Funding and Liquidity risk
131
   
Market risk
137
   
Market turmoil exposures
143
   
Additional information
164
   
Other information
164
   
Selected financial data
165
   
Appendix 1  Article 11 proforma information
 
   
Appendix 2  Asset Protection Scheme
 
   
Appendix 3  Businesses outlined for disposal
 
   
Signature page
 
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2

 
 
Forward-looking statements


Certain sections in this document contain ‘forward-looking statements’ as that term is defined in the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, such as statements that include the words ‘expect’, ‘estimate’, ‘project’, ‘anticipate’, ‘believes’, ‘should’, ‘intend’, ‘plan’, ‘probability’, ‘risk’, ‘Value-at-Risk (VaR)’, ‘target’, ‘goal’, ‘objective’, ‘will’, ‘endeavour’, ‘outlook’, 'optimistic', 'prospects' and similar expressions or variations on such expressions.

In particular, this document includes forward-looking statements relating, but not limited, to the Group’s restructuring plans, capitalisation, portfolios, capital ratios, liquidity, risk weighted assets, return on equity, cost:income ratios, leverage and loan:deposit ratios, funding and risk profile; the Group’s future financial performance; the level and extent of future impairments and write-downs; the protection provided by the APS; and the Group’s potential exposures to various types of market risks, such as interest rate risk, foreign exchange rate risk and commodity and equity price risk.  Such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties.  For example, certain of the market risk disclosures are dependent on choices about key model characteristics and assumptions and are subject to various limitations.  By their nature, certain of the market risk disclosures are only estimates and, as a result, actual future gains and losses could differ materially from those that have been estimated.

Other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those estimated by the forward-looking statements contained in this document include, but are not limited to: general economic conditions in the UK and in other countries in which RBS has significant business activities or investments, including the United States; developments in the current crisis in the global financial markets, and their impact on the financial industry in general and on RBS in particular; the full nationalisation of RBS or other resolution procedures under the Banking Act 2009; the monetary and interest rate policies of the Bank of England, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and other G7 central banks; inflation; deflation; unanticipated turbulence in interest rates, foreign currency exchange rates, commodity prices and equity prices; changes in UK and foreign laws, regulations and taxes, including changes in regulatory capital regulations; a change of UK Government or changes to UK Government policy; changes in RBS’s credit ratings; RBS’s participation in the Asset Protection Scheme (APS) and the effect of such Scheme on RBS’s financial and capital position; the conversion of the B Shares in accordance with their terms; the ability to access the contingent capital from HM Treasury; limitations on, or additional requirements imposed on, RBS’s activities as a result of HM Treasury’s investment in RBS; changes in competition and pricing environments; the financial stability of other financial institutions, and RBS’s counterparties and borrowers; the value and effectiveness of any credit protection purchased by RBS; the extent of future write-downs and impairment charges caused by depressed asset valuations; the ability to achieve revenue benefits and cost savings from the integration of certain of ABN AMRO’s businesses and assets; natural and other disasters; the inability to hedge certain risks economically; the ability to access sufficient funding to meet liquidity needs; the ability to complete restructurings on a timely basis, or at all, including the disposal of certain non-core assets and assets and businesses required as part of the EC State Aid approval; the adequacy of loss reserves; acquisitions or restructurings; technological changes; changes in consumer spending and saving habits; and the success of RBS in managing the risks involved in the foregoing.

The forward-looking statements contained in this document speak only as of the date of this announcement, and the Group does not undertake to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.

The information, statements and opinions contained in this document do not constitute a public offer under any applicable legislation or an offer to sell or solicitation of any offer to buy any securities or financial instruments or any advice or recommendation with respect to such securities or other financial instruments.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
3

 
 
Presentation of information


Acquisition of ABN AMRO

On 17 October 2007, RFS Holdings B.V. ('RFS Holdings'), a company jointly owned by The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc (‘RBS’), Fortis Bank Nederland (Holding) N.V. ('Fortis') and Banco Santander S.A. ('Santander') (together, the 'Consortium Members'), completed the acquisition of ABN AMRO Holding N.V. ('ABN AMRO').

The Consortium Members have implemented an orderly separation of the business units of ABN AMRO with RBS retaining the following former ABN AMRO business units:

Continuing businesses of Business Unit North America;
   
Business Unit Global Clients and wholesale clients in the Netherlands (including former Dutch wholesale clients) and Latin America (excluding Brazil);
   
Business Unit Asia (excluding Saudi Hollandi); and
   
Business Unit Europe (excluding Antonveneta).

Some other remaining assets will continue to be shared by the Consortium Members until their orderly disposal or transfer.

On 3 October 2008, the State of the Netherlands acquired Fortis Bank Nederland (Holding) N.V. including Fortis's participation in RFS Holdings that represented the acquired activities of ABN AMRO.

The separation of the main platform shared between RBS and its Dutch state-owned partner was completed in 2009 and in February 2010 the majority of the businesses of ABN AMRO acquired by Dutch State were legally demerged from the RBS-acquired businesses. The Group expects that, subject to legal process and regulatory approvals, the full legal separation of the constituent parts of ABN AMRO will be completed in April. From that point RBS will cease to consolidate the Consortium Members’ interests in ABN AMRO in its results.
 
Statutory results

RFS Holdings is jointly owned by the Consortium Members.  It is controlled by RBS and is therefore fully consolidated in its audited financial statements.  The interests of the State of the Netherlands and Santander in RFS Holdings are included in minority interests.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
4


 
Presentation of information (continued)

 
Non-GAAP financial information

The financial statements are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the IASB and IFRS as adopted by the European Union. IFRS requires the Group to consolidate those entities that it controls, including RFS Holdings as described below. However, discussion of the Group’s performance focuses on performance measures that exclude the RFS Holdings minority interest as the Group believes that such measures allow a more meaningful analysis of the Group’s financial condition and the results of its operations.  These measures are non-GAAP financial measures.  A body of generally accepted accounting principles such as IFRS is commonly referred to as ‘GAAP’. A non-GAAP financial measure is defined as one that measures historical or future financial performance, financial position or cash flows but which excludes or includes amounts that would not be so adjusted in the most comparable GAAP measure. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures are presented throughout this document. These non-GAAP financial measures are not a substitute for GAAP measures, for which management has responsibility.
 
As described in section “Business and strategic update, RBS has divided its operations into “Core” and “Non-Core” for internal reporting purposes. Certain measures disclosed in this document for Core operations and used by RBS management are a non-GAAP financial measure.
 
Restatements

Divisional results for 2008 have been restated to reflect the Group’s new organisational structure that includes a Non-Core division comprising individual assets, portfolios and lines of business that the Group intends to run off or dispose.  The Non-Core division is reported separately from the divisions which form the Core Group.  In addition, separate reporting of Business Services (formerly Group Manufacturing) and Centre results has changed and, with the exception of certain items of a one off nature, costs incurred are now allocated to the customer-facing divisions and shown as ‘indirect expenses’ and are included in the measurement of the returns which they generate.  These changes do not affect the Group’s results.  Comparatives have been restated accordingly.

 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
5

 
 
Condensed consolidated income statement
for the year ended 31 December 2009


 
   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Interest receivable
    33,836       49,522  
Interest payable
    (17,332 )     (30,847 )
                 
Net interest income
    16,504       18,675  
                 
Fees and commissions receivable
    9,831       9,831  
Fees and commissions payable
    (2,822 )     (2,386 )
Income/(loss) from trading activities
    3,881       (8,477 )
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -  
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    1,962       1,899  
Insurance net premium income
    5,544       6,326  
                 
Non-interest income
    22,186       7,193  
                 
Total income
    38,690       25,868  
                 
Staff costs
               
- excluding pension schemes curtailment gains
    (11,783 )     (10,410 )
- pension schemes curtailment gains
    2,148       -  
Premises and equipment
    (3,087 )     (2,593 )
Other administrative expenses
    (5,584 )     (5,464 )
Depreciation and amortisation
    (2,809 )     (3,154 )
Write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets
    (363 )     (32,581 )
                 
Operating expenses*
    (21,478 )     (54,202 )
                 
Profit/(loss) before other operating charges and impairment losses
    17,212       (28,334 )
Insurance net claims
    (4,857 )     (4,430 )
Impairment losses
    (14,950 )     (8,072 )
                 
Operating loss before tax
    (2,595 )     (40,836 )
Tax credit
    371       2,323  
                 
Loss from continuing operations
    (2,224 )     (38,513 )
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
    (99 )     3,971  
                 
Loss for the year
    (2,323 )     (34,542 )
Minority interests
    (349 )     10,832  
Preference shareholders
    (878 )     (536 )
Paid-in equity holders
    (57 )     (60 )
                 
Loss attributable to ordinary and B shareholders
    (3,607 )     (24,306 )
                 
                 
*Operating expenses include:
               
                 
Integration and restructuring costs
               
- administrative expenses
    1,268       1,321  
- depreciation and amortisation
    18       36  
                 
      1,286       1,357  
Amortisation of purchased intangible assets
    272       443  
                 
      1,558       1,800  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
6


 
Highlights


2009 results summary
The Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS) reported a 2009 net attributable loss of £3,607 million, compared with a loss of £24,306 million in 2008. The Group reported a 2009 operating loss before tax of £2,595 million, compared with a loss of £40,836 million in 2008. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the Group reported a non-GAAP 2009 operating loss of £6,232 million, compared with a loss of £6,938 million in 2008.

Core bank operating profit rose to £8,325 million from £4,413 million in 2008. The improvement largely reflected the turnaround in Global Banking & Markets (GBM) trading profits, with a very strong first quarter and more sustainable levels of revenue over the remainder of the year. Pre-impairment profits in the Core retail and commercial banking businesses remained robust with margins improving in the second half, but impairments increased markedly from 2008. US Retail & Commercial recorded an operating loss, but has successfully refocused on its core customer franchises, with an improvement in margins and stable impairments in the second half. RBS Insurance operating profit was severely affected by rising bodily injury claims.

Non-Core achieved a reduction of £57 billion in third party assets, excluding derivatives, ahead of its announced targets, by running down exposures and pursuing opportunities to dispose of loan portfolios.  Losses on trading activities declined as underlying asset prices rallied, but impairment losses increased to £9,221 million.

Integration and restructuring costs of £1,286 million were offset by a £3,790 million gain on the redemption of the Group’s own debt and by gains of £2,148 million arising from the curtailment of prospective pension benefits, leaving operating loss before tax of £2,595 million, compared with £40,836 million in 2008, which included a £32,581 million write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets. The loss attributable to ordinary and B shareholders was £3,607 million, compared with £24,306 million in 2008.

Net tangible equity amounted to 48.5p per ordinary and B share at 31 December 2009, compared with 64.6p at 31 December 2008, primarily reflecting the issuance of B shares, the conversion of preference shares to ordinary shares and attributable losses over the course of the year. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP net tangible equity amounted to 51.3p per ordinary and B share at 31 December 2009, compared with 73.8p at 31 December 2008.
 
No Asset Protection Scheme fees have been charged to income in 2009. The APS is structured as a derivative, with movements in the fair value of the contract (including £1.4 billion of fees paid in 2009) netting to zero at the year end.  Changes in the fair value of the contract will be reflected in the income statement in future periods.

 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
7

 
 
Highlights (continued)

 
Net interest income
Net interest income declined by 12% as Group net interest margin narrowed by 26 basis points to 1.79%. Deposit margins have remained under pressure, with strong competition particularly for longer term deposits and rates on many products already at floors in the current low interest rate environment. Asset margins have been gradually rebuilt over the course of the year, helping to stem the erosion of net interest margin experienced over recent years, and overall net interest margins in the Core retail and commercial banking divisions started to recover in the second half. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP net interest margin declined by 14% as Group net interest margin narrowed by 32 basis points to 1.76%

Non-interest income
Non-interest income increased to £22,186 million from £7,193 million in 2008, largely reflecting the sharp improvement in income from trading activities, as improved asset valuations led to lower credit market losses and GBM benefited from the restructuring of its business to focus on core customer franchises. The Group also recorded a gain of £3,790 million on a liability management exercise to redeem a number of Tier 1 and upper Tier 2 securities. Fees and commissions receivable were as a result of the withdrawal of the single premium payment protection insurance product and the restructuring of UK current account overdraft fees, being offset by higher fees in businesses attributable to RFS Holdings minority interest. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP non-interest income increased to £15,858 million from £4,835 million in 2008.

Efficiency
The Group cost:income ratio improved to 55.5% from 209.5% in 2008. The Group has launched a substantial investment programme, targeting cost efficiencies across the Core divisions, enhanced customer service platforms and improved control systems.

Impairments
Impairment losses increased to £14,950 million from £8,072 million in 2008, with Core bank impairments rising by £2,182 million; Non-Core by £4,285 million and RFS Holdings minority interest by £411 million. Signs that impairments might have peaked appear to have been borne out in the fourth quarter, and there are indications that the pace of downwards credit rating migration for corporates is slowing. Nonetheless, the financial circumstances of many consumers and businesses remain fragile, and rising refinancing costs, whether as a result of monetary tightening or of increased regulatory capital requirements, could expose some customers to further difficulty.

Balance sheet
Significant progress has been achieved in reducing the Group balance sheet to a sustainable scale. Total assets have been cut by £705 billion over the course of 2009 to £1,696 billion at 31 December 2009.  Funded assets have declined by £154 billion, with both the Non-Core division and Global Banking & Markets making good progress in reducing exposures. Non-Core has exceeded its previously announced target for third party asset run-off in 2009 by £15 billion. Group risk-weighted assets have been reduced by £155 billion during the year, including £128 billion benefit from the Asset Protection Scheme (APS). For further details on the APS see Appendix 2.

 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
8


 
Business and strategic update

 
Capital
Following the issue of B shares to the UK Government and accession to the Asset Protection Scheme in December 2009, the Group’s core tier 1 capital ratio has increased to 11.0%, from 6.6% at 31 December 2008. The year-end core tier 1 ratio benefits by 130 basis points from the APS, with risk-weighted asset relief provided by the Scheme partially offset by related core tier 1 deductions. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the Group’s Core Tier 1 ratio has increased to 11.0% from 5.9% at 31 December 2008.
 
Key metrics

 
Year ended
 
31 December 
2009 
31 December 
2008 
 
£m 
£m 
     
Performance ratios
   
Net interest margin
1.79%
2.05%
Core cost:income ratio
47.7%
57.1%
Group cost:income ratio
55.5%
209.5%
Continuing operations:
   
Basic loss per ordinary and B share (1)
(6.3p)
(146.2p)

 
31 December 
2009 
31 December 
 2008 
     
Capital and balance sheet
   
Total assets
£1,696.5bn
£2,401.7bn
Funded balance sheet (2)
£1,255.0bn
£1,409.1bn
Loan:deposit ratio (net of provisions)
126%
144%
Risk-weighted assets – gross
£668.6bn
£695.8bn
Benefit of APS
(£127.6bn)
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs)
£541.0bn
£695.8bn
Total equity
£94.6bn
£80.5bn
Core Tier 1 ratio
11.0%
6.6%
Tier 1 ratio
14.1%
10.0%
Tangible equity leverage ratio (3)
4.2%
1.8%
Net tangible equity per share
48.5p
64.6p

For definitions of the notes see page 20.
 
 
9

 
Business and strategic update (continued)

 
Strategic plan

RBS has made a strong start on the implementation of the strategic plan first announced in February 2009, with good progress made against the targets set out for the Group.  The Group has sharply reduced risk in its balance sheet through rapid run-off of Non-Core exposures, disposals both of asset portfolios and of whole businesses, and enhancements to its risk control framework. At the same time, the core business franchises have shown resilience through difficult economic conditions, and are increasingly well positioned as the major economies in which they operate start to recover. Detailed plans for further improvements to the efficiency of these core businesses have been developed and are expected to yield both cost reductions and enhanced customer service over the next three years.

There remain, however, many uncertainties in the economic environment and the Group expects the process of rebuilding standalone strength and shareholder value to take several years.

Balance sheet management

Significant progress has been achieved in reducing the Group balance sheet to a sustainable scale. Total assets have been cut by £705 billion over the course of 2009 to £1,696 billion at 31 December 2009.  Funded assets have declined by £155 billion, with both the Non-Core division and Global Banking & Markets (GBM) making good progress in reducing exposures. Excluding Sempra, Non-Core has exceeded its previously announced target for third party asset run-off in 2009 by £15 billion. Group risk-weighted assets have decreased by £155 billion during the year, including a £128 billion benefit from the Asset Protection Scheme.

Following accession to the APS and the issue of B shares to the UK Government in December 2009, the Group’s core tier 1 capital ratio has increased to 11.0%, from 6.6% at 31 December 2008 and 6.5% at 30 September 2009. The year-end core tier 1 ratio benefits by 130 basis points from the APS, with risk-weighted asset relief provided by the Scheme partially offset by related core tier 1 deductions.
   
The Group’s loan deposit ratio, net of provisions, has improved to 126%, compared with 144% at the end of 2008. The Group’s loan:deposit ratio, excluding RFS Holdings minority interest and net of provisions (non-GAAP measure), has improved to 135%, compared with 151% at the end of 2008, with loans and advances sharply lower (principally in the GBM and Non-Core divisions) and good balance growth in the core deposit-gathering franchises. The Core loan:deposit ratio at 31 December 2009 was 104%, compared with 118% at the end of 2008.
   
Wholesale unsecured funding of less than one year duration, excluding RFS Holdings minority interest (non-GAAP measure), has declined to £250 billion, (including £109 billion of bank deposits) compared with £343 billion at the end of 2008 and £294 billion at the end of the third quarter of 2009.
   
Liquidity reserves, excluding RFS Holdings minority interest (non-GAAP measure), have increased to £171 billion, compared with £90 billion at the end of 2008 and £140 billion at 30 September 2009.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
10


 
Business and strategic update (continued)


Core Bank

The Group’s customer franchises have remained resilient through a difficult year. RBS has sustained its position in its core retail and corporate markets, with customer numbers steady or growing across the Group’s major businesses.

UK Retail added 60,000 current accounts customers during the fourth quarter, with current account numbers rising by 3% over the last year to 12.8 million at 31 December 2009. Over 1 million savings accounts have been added over the year.
   
UK Retail added 19,000 mortgage accounts during the fourth quarter, taking mortgage account numbers to 845,000, 10% up on December 2008.
   
UK Corporate and Commercial customer numbers held stable, including over 1.1 million SMEs.
   
GBM maintained its market position in core franchise areas through 2009, with top tier market rankings in foreign exchange, options, rates, equities and debt capital markets.
   
Ulster Bank held SME and corporate customer numbers stable over the last year and increased consumer accounts by 3%, compared with December 2008.
   
US Retail and Commercial’s consumer and commercial customer bases held steady in its core New England, mid-Atlantic and Midwest regional footprint during the quarter, with 58,000 personal checking accounts added over the course of the year. The division substantially improved its position in the mortgage origination market.
   
RBS Insurance has achieved good growth in policy numbers, driven by the success of its own brands. Churchill’s motor policy numbers grew by 19% and its home policies by 32% over the course of 2009, with Direct Line, which is not available on price comparison websites, achieving steadier growth – up 4% in motor and 2% in home over the same period.

The Core Bank performed strongly in 2009, with operating profit rebounding from 2008’s weak levels to £8,325 million, despite an 87% increase in impairments to £4,678 million.

The principal driver of the Core Bank performance was the turnaround in the performance of GBM, which was loss-making in 2008. Although the exceptionally buoyant market conditions experienced in the first quarter levelled off over the course of the year, the restructuring of the business to focus on core customer franchises has been successful, with returns improving as a result of disciplined use of capital to support targeted clients.

The retail and commercial banking divisions also made good progress in reshaping their businesses to benefit from economic recovery, with improvements to product offerings and customer service contributing to their performance. Each business has taken steps to stem the erosion of net interest margin experienced over recent years, and although the strong competition for deposits has substantially reduced liability margins, efforts to rebuild asset pricing have begun to bear fruit. Net interest margin for the Core retail and commercial banking divisions recovered to 3.04% in the fourth quarter, significantly better than 2.70% in the first quarter.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
11


 
Business and strategic update (continued)


Core Bank (continued)
Signs that impairments might have peaked appear to have been borne out in the fourth quarter, and there are indications that the pace of downwards credit rating migration for corporates is slowing. Nonetheless, the financial circumstances of many consumers and businesses remain fragile, and rising refinancing costs, whether as a result of monetary tightening or of increased regulatory capital requirements, could expose some customers to further difficulty.

Efficiency has improved substantially, with the Core Bank cost:income ratio, net of insurance claims, improving to 53.5% from 66.2% in 2008. The Group has launched a substantial investment programme, targeting cost efficiencies across the Core divisions, enhanced customer service platforms and improved control systems. A Core Bank cost:income ratio, net of insurance claims, below 50% is the target for 2013.

Group and detailed divisional targets, published in August 2009, have been reviewed and updated in the light of the APS and the EU-mandated disposals, although the impact of the Basel Committee’s proposals for changes to the bank capital regime has yet to be fully assessed, as has the effect of further changes to the regulatory environment.  The targets are generally unchanged, except for the 2011 cost:income ratio target for Global Transaction Services, which has been revised in view of the planned disposal of Global Merchant Services, the Group’s leading card acquisition business.

These targets do not constitute forecasts, but it is the Group’s intention to make measurable progress towards these goals in the period covered.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
12

 
 
Business and strategic update (continued)

 
EU restructuring remedies

To comply with the state aid requirements of the European Commission (EC), RBS has agreed to undertake a further set of restructuring measures, in addition to those set out in its original strategic plan.

These measures include a number of divestments by the end of 2013:

RBS Sempra Commodities, in which the Group has a 51% interest, has been moved into Non-Core. On 16 February 2010 an agreement to sell RBS Sempra Commodities’ metals, oil and European energy businesses to J.P.Morgan Chase for $1.7 billion was announced. RBS and its joint venture partner, Sempra Energy, are continuing to consider ownership alternatives for the remaining business lines.
   
A retail and business banking operation, whose principal components are the RBS branch network in England and Wales together with NatWest’s Scottish branches, is in the process of being prepared for sale. An information memorandum is being issued to potential buyers. An agreement on a sale is targeted for 2010, but there are complex separation issues and completion is not expected until 2011.
   
Global Merchant Services, the Group’s card payment acquiring business, has attracted considerable buyer interest and an information memorandum will be issued shortly. Closing is expected in the second half of 2010.
   
RBS Insurance is being prepared for eventual sale or flotation. The divestment will be timed to maximise value, but the current target date is 2012.

Other measures required by the EC include:

Prohibition of the payment of dividends or coupons on existing hybrid capital instruments until 2012, unless there is a legal obligation to pay them.
   
GBM to rank no higher than fifth in the combined global all debt league table for three years.
   
Accomplishment of balance sheet reduction targets implicit in the RBS Strategic Plan. (1)

In addition to the disposals required by the EC, RBS disposed of a number of holdings in 2009, despite difficult market conditions, including its equity stake in Bank of China, the 50% shareholding in Linea Directa, and parts of its retail and commercial banking operations in a number of Asian markets.

Since the end of the year, agreement has been reached on the sale of parts of RBS Asset Management to Aberdeen Asset Management.

Refer to Appendix 1 for further information on how the divestments of these businesses, to meet the European Commission’s State Aid requirements, will impact the Group.
 
Note:
(1)
Subject to adjustments. If RBS misses 2013 targeted reduction, further divestments will be required. For further details see Appendix 3.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
13

 
 
Business and strategic update (continued)


Remuneration policy

The Group Remuneration Committee has approved remuneration proposals in respect of 2009. Following its right under the Remuneration Commitments and the Accession Agreement of the Asset Protection Scheme, UK Financial Investments (UKFI) has given its consent to these proposals.

These proposals are consistent with the framework the Board has established to put RBS at the leading edge of pay reform. The basis of the framework is:

No reward for failure: pay awards are subject to challenging and measurable performance criteria directly linked to results and to RBS’s strategic plan. Senior executives responsible for the overall losses have left the Group.
   
Deferral: an extensive deferral policy, in line with G20 principles, has been introduced and agreed with the Financial Services Authority.
 
Executive directors have deferred the entirety of any 2009 bonus until 2012.
     
 
Holding periods have been extended to five years for shares forming part of the pay of the highest earners in the investment bank.
     
 
All 2009 bonuses awarded to those earning over £39,000 will be deferred and paid in three tranches over the period to June 2012.
   
Clawback: a robust clawback mechanism has been introduced for all discretionary bonus payments.

The pay awards agreed result in a compensation ratio of 27% for GBM, or 28% if adjusted for past and current year deferral accounting.

UK Lending Commitments

RBS is unambiguously open for business and the Group has many initiatives under way to promote this to its customers, many of whom are understandably nervous about financial matters in these challenging economic times. In February 2009, as a pre-requisite to participation in the APS, the Group agreed to make available an additional £25 billion of UK lending (£9 billion of mortgage lending and £16 billion of business lending) to creditworthy customers on commercial terms, and subject to market demand, over the ensuing 12 months.  Potential adjustments to the lending commitments to reflect economic circumstances over the 12 months from March 2010 are currently under discussion with the UK Government.The Group has the funding, the capital and the desire to make this lending available to customers, subject necessarily to their credit profile and to market pricing.

RBS believes that the lending commitments are being met.  However, their impact is currently masked by the fact that, in the current economic environment, many customers are reducing their borrowings.  As a result, demand for lending is subdued, especially from business customers. This phenomenon is being seen across most industrialised countries.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
14


 
Business and strategic update (continued)


UK Lending Commitments (continued)

Since entering into this commitment, RBS has achieved strong results in the UK mortgage market:

Gross lending in 2009 totalled £19.3 billion, including over £3.8 billion to first time buyers.
   
UK mortgage balances totalled £91.9 billion at 31 December 2009, 15% higher than at the end of 2008.  Net mortgage lending over the year was £11.8 billion and the Group is on target to surpass the £9 billion mortgage lending commitment.
   
Acceptance rates for mortgage lending, at over 88%, remain high.

In business markets, RBS has achieved gross new lending of £60.2 billion in 2009.  However, after taking account of loan repayments and overdraft movements, RBS’s business lending balances at 31 December 2009 totalled £151.2 billion, a decline of 8% since the end of 2008.

In the SME segment, gross lending in 2009 was £38.6 billion. Demand remains subdued, with term loan applications down 23% by value.  In addition, repayments increased significantly in the year (term loan repayments were 53% higher than in 2008) with businesses accelerating their repayments of existing borrowings.

The acceptance rate across all categories of SME credit remains stable at over 85%. The average interest rate on new lending to SMEs has fallen to 3.04% in the fourth quarter, compared with 5.86% in the fourth quarter of 2008. Overdraft utilisation rates across the SME and mid-corporate segments have reduced to 41% at the end of December 2009 from 43% at the end of June, providing further evidence that businesses are voluntarily reducing borrowings.

Among larger corporates, RBS advanced £21.6 billion of gross new lending in 2009.  Demand continues to be impacted by the macroeconomic environment and many larger corporates are actively deleveraging to repair their balance sheets.  Larger corporate customers had access to undrawn committed facilities of more than £42 billion at the end of 2009.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
15

 
 
Business and strategic update (continued)


UK Lending Commitments (continued)

Within this context, RBS has been a significant player in facilitating access to the debt and equity markets for its larger clients.  During the year, RBS was bookrunner for more debt issues by UK corporates than any other bank and participated in over 80% of the equity issues by UK corporates.  Much of this finance raised has been used to pay back bank borrowing.

   
31 December
2008
   
31 December
2009
   
Gross lending
during 2009
   
Net lending
during 2009
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
                         
Mortgages
    80.1       91.9       19.3       11.8  
                                 
Total Business
    163.4       151.2       60.2       (12.2 )
- SME
    68.0       67.0       38.6       (1.0 )
- Mid-corporate
    49.3       44.4       15.2       (4.9 )
- Large Corporate
    46.1       39.8       6.4       (6.3 )
                                 
Total lending
    243.5       243.1       79.5       (0.4 )
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
16

 
 
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
at 31 December 2009


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Assets
               
Cash and balances at central banks
    52,261       12,400  
Net loans and advances to banks
    56,656       79,426  
Reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing
    35,097       58,771  
Loans and advances to banks
    91,753       138,197  
Net loans and advances to customers
    687,353       835,409  
Reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing
    41,040       39,313  
Loans and advances to customers
    728,393       874,722  
Debt securities
    267,254       267,549  
Equity shares
    19,528       26,330  
Settlement balances
    12,033       17,832  
Derivatives
    441,454       992,559  
Intangible assets
    17,847       20,049  
Property, plant and equipment
    19,397       18,949  
Deferred taxation
    7,039       7,082  
Prepayments, accrued income and other assets
    20,985       24,402  
Assets of disposal groups
    18,542       1,581  
                 
Total assets
    1,696,486       2,401,652  
                 
Liabilities
               
Bank deposits
    104,138       174,378  
Repurchase agreements and stock lending
    38,006       83,666  
Deposits by banks
    142,144       258,044  
Customer deposits
    545,849       581,369  
Repurchase agreements and stock lending
    68,353       58,143  
Customer accounts
    614,202       639,512  
Debt securities in issue
    267,568       300,289  
Settlement balances and short positions
    50,876       54,277  
Derivatives
    424,141       971,364  
Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities
    30,327       31,482  
Retirement benefit liabilities
    2,963       2,032  
Deferred taxation
    2,811       4,165  
Insurance liabilities
    10,281       9,976  
Subordinated liabilities
    37,652       49,154  
Liabilities of disposal groups
    18,890       859  
                 
Total liabilities
    1,601,855       2,321,154  
                 
Equity
               
Minority interests
    16,895       21,619  
Owners’ equity*
               
  Called up share capital
    14,630       9,898  
  Reserves
    63,106       48,981  
                 
Total equity
    94,631       80,498  
                 
Total liabilities and equity
    1,696,486       2,401,652  
                 
                 
*Owners’ equity attributable to:
               
Ordinary and B shareholders
    69,890       45,525  
Other equity owners
    7,846       13,354  
                 
      77,736       58,879  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
17


 
Commentary on condensed consolidated balance sheet


Total assets of £1,696.5 billion at 31 December 2009 were down £705.2 billion, 29%, compared with 31 December 2008, principally reflecting substantial repayments of customer loans and advances as corporate customer demand fell and corporates looked to deleverage their balance sheets. Lending to banks also fell in line with significantly reduced wholesale funding activity. There were also significant falls in the value of derivative assets, with a corresponding fall in derivative liabilities.

Cash and balances at central banks were up £39.9 billion to £52.3 billion due to the placing of short-term cash surpluses, including the proceeds from the issue of B shares in December, with central banks.

Loans and advances to banks decreased by £46.4 billion, 34%, to £91.8 billion with reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing (‘reverse repos’) down by £23.7 billion, 40% to £35.1 billion and lower bank placings, down £22.7 billion, 29%, to £56.7 billion largely as a result of reduced wholesale funding activity in Global Banking & Markets.

Loans and advances to customers were down £146.3 billion, 17%, at £728.4 billion.  Within this, reverse repos increased by 4%, £1.7 billion to £41.0 billion.  Excluding reverse repos, lending decreased by £148.0 billion, 18%, to £687.4 billion or by £141.8 billion, 17%, before impairment provisions.  This reflected reductions in Global Banking & Markets of £71.4 billion, and planned reductions in Non-Core of £30.1 billion, including a £3.2 billion transfer to disposal groups in respect of RBS Sempra Commodities and the Asian and Latin American businesses. Reductions were also experienced in US Retail & Commercial, £7.4 billion; UK Corporate & Commercial, £5.4 billion; Ulster Bank, £1.8 billion; and the effect of exchange rate movements, £33.1 billion, following the strengthening of sterling during the year, partially offset by growth in UK Retail of £9.2 billion, and in Wealth of £1.4 billion.

Debt securities were flat at £267.3 billion and equity shares decreased by £6.8 billion, 26%, to £19.5 billion, principally due to the sale of the Bank of China investment and lower holdings in Global Banking & Markets and Non-Core, largely offset by growth in Group Treasury, in part reflecting an £18.0 billion increase in the gilt liquidity portfolio, and in the RFS Holdings minority interest.

Settlement balances were down £5.8 billion, 33%, at £12.0 billion as a result of lower customer activity.

Movements in the value of derivative assets, down £551.1 billion, 56%, to £441.5 billion, and liabilities, down £547.2 billion, 56%, to £424.1 billion, reflect the easing of market volatility, the strengthening of sterling and significant tightening in credit spreads in the continuing low interest rate environment.

Increases in assets and liabilities of disposal groups reflect the inclusion of the RBS Sempra Commodities business and the planned sale of a number of the Group’s retail and commercial activities in Asia and Latin America.

Deposits by banks declined by £115.9 billion, 45%, to £142.1 billion due to a decrease in repurchase agreements and stock lending (‘repos’), down £45.7 billion, 55%, to £38.0 billion and reduced inter-bank deposits, down £70.2 billion, 40% to £104.1 billion principally in Global Banking & Markets, reflecting reduced reliance on wholesale funding, and in the RFS Holdings minority interest.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
18

 
 
Commentary on condensed consolidated balance sheet (continued)


Customer accounts were down £25.3 billion, 4%, to £614.2 billion. Within this, repos increased £10.2 billion, 18%, to £68.4 billion.  Excluding repos, deposits were down £35.5 billion, 6%, to £545.8 billion, primarily due to; reductions in Global Banking & Markets, down £38.0 billion; Non-Core, £13.0 billion; including the transfer of £8.9 billion to disposal groups; and Ulster Bank, £1.2 billion; together with exchange rate movements, £26.9 billion, offset in part by growth across all other divisions, up £23.0 billion, and in the RFS Holdings minority interest, up £20.6 billion.

Debt securities in issue were down £32.7 billion, 11% to £267.6 billion mainly as a result of movements in exchange rates, together with reductions in Global Banking & Markets, Non-Core and the RFS Holdings minority interest.

Retirement benefit liabilities increased by £0.9 billion, 46%, to £3.0 billion, with net actuarial losses of £3.7 billion, arising from lower discount rates and higher assumed inflation, partially offset by curtailment gains of £2.1 billion due to changes in prospective pension benefits.

Subordinated liabilities were down £11.5 billion, 23% to £37.7 billion, reflecting the redemption of £5.0 billion undated loan capital, £1.5 billion trust preferred securities and £2.7 billion dated loan capital, together with the effect of exchange rate movements and other adjustments, £2.9 billion, partly offset by the issue of £2.3 billion undated loan capital within the RFS Holdings minority interest.

Equity minority interests decreased by £4.7 billion, 22%, to £16.9 billion.  Equity withdrawals of £3.1 billion, due to the disposal of the investment in the Bank of China attributable to minority shareholders and the redemption, in part, of certain trust preferred securities, exchange rate movements of £1.4 billion, the recycling of related available-for-sale reserves to income, £0.5 billion, and dividends paid of £0.3 billion, were partially offset by attributable profits of £0.3 billion.

Owners' equity increased by £18.9 billion, 32% to £77.7 billion.  The issue of B shares to HM Treasury in December 2009 raised £25.1 billion, net of expenses, and was offset in part by the creation of a £1.2 billion reserve in respect of contingent capital B shares.  The placing and open offer in April 2009 raised £5.3 billion to fund the redemption of the £5.0 billion preference shares issued to HM Treasury in December 2008.  Actuarial losses, net of tax, of £2.7 billion; the attributable loss for the period, £2.7 billion; exchange rate movements of £1.9 billion; the payment of other owners dividends of £0.9 billion including £0.3 billion to HM Treasury on the redemption of preference shares, and partial redemption of paid-in equity  £0.3 billion were partly offset by increases in available-for-sale reserves, £1.8 billion; cash flow hedging reserves, £0.6 billion; and the equity owners gain on withdrawal of minority interests, net of tax, of £0.5 billion arising from the redemption of trust preferred securities.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
19


 
Results summary


 
 
Year ended
 
31 December 
2009 
31 December 
2008 
     
Performance ratios
   
Net interest margin
1.79%
2.05%
Core cost:income ratio
47.7%
57.1%
Group cost:income ratio
55.5%
209.5%
Continuing operations:
   
Basic loss per ordinary and B share (1)
(6.3p)
(146.2p)


 
31 December 
2009 
31 December 
 2008 
     
Capital and balance sheet
   
Funded balance sheet (2)
£1,255.0bn
£1,409.1bn
Total assets
£1,696.5bn
£2,401.7bn
Risk-weighted assets - gross
£668.6bn
£695.8bn
Benefit of APS
(£127.6bn)
Risk-weighted assets
£541.0bn
£695.8bn
Core Tier 1 ratio
11.0%
6.6%
Tier 1 ratio
14.1%
10.0%
Risk elements in lending (REIL)
£38.2bn
£21.3bn
Risk elements in lending as a % of loans and
  advances
5.40%
2.51%
Provision balance as % of REIL/PPL
45%
51%
Loan:deposit ratio (net of provisions)
126%
144%
Tangible equity leverage ratio (3)
4.2%
1.8%
Net tangible equity per share
48.5p
64.6p
 
Notes:
(1)
Loss from continuing operations attributable to ordinary and B shareholders divided by weighted average number of shares in issue.
(2)
Funded balance sheet is defined as total assets less derivatives.
(3)
The tangible equity leverage ratio is based on total tangible equity divided by total tangible assets (after netting derivatives).
 
 
20

 
Results summary (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Net interest income
    £m       £m  
                 
Net interest income (1)
    16,220       18,231  
                 
Net interest margin
               
- Group
    1.79 %     2.05 %
- Global Banking & Markets
    1.38 %     1.34 %
- Rest of Core Group
    2.41 %     2.97 %
- Non-Core
    0.69 %     0.87 %
                 
Selected average balances
               
Loans and advances to banks
    53,747       50,589  
Loans and advances to customers
    710,726       714,790  
Debt securities
    139,365       121,815  
Interest earning assets
    903,838       887,194  
Deposits by banks
    129,233       159,809  
Customer accounts
    472,207       487,081  
Subordinated liabilities
    39,862       39,818  
Interest bearing liabilities
    818,422       832,350  
Non-interest bearing deposits
    43,605       37,421  
                 
Selected average yields (%)
               
Loans and advances to banks
    1.72       4.76  
Loans and advances to customers
    3.98       5.87  
Debt securities
    3.36       4.57  
Interest earning assets
    3.75       5.63  
Deposits by banks
    2.35       4.11  
Customer accounts
    1.69       3.36  
Subordinated liabilities
    3.78       5.42  
Interest bearing deposits
    2.16       3.81  
                 
Non-interest bearing deposits as a percentage of interest earning assets
    4.82       4.22  

Note:
(1)
Refer to notes on page 66.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
21


 
Results summary (continued)


Key points

2009 compared with 2008

Net interest margin declined by 26 basis points compared with 2008 primarily reflecting the pressure on liability margins, given rates on many deposit products at floors in the low interest rate environment and strong competition, particularly for longer term deposits and the build up of the Group’s liquidity portfolio. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP net interest margin declined by 32 basis points to 1.76% compared with 2008.
   
Asset margins have been gradually rebuilt over the course of the year helping to stem the erosion of net interest margin experienced over recent years, with the overall retail and commercial asset margin improving from c.1.4% in 2008 to c.1.75% in 2009. Improvement has been noted across all retail and commercial divisions.
   
GBM net interest margin increased modestly, reflecting higher margins on GBM banking assets, partially offset by lower money market income.
   
UK Corporate net interest margin declined, reflecting higher funding costs and continued competitive pricing due to strong demand for deposits. UK Retail held its net interest margin in line with 2008 as wider asset margins offset decreasing liability margins in a competitive deposit market.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
22

 
 
Results summary (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Non-interest income
    £m       £m  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    7,009       7,445  
                 
Income/(loss) from trading activities
    3,881       (8,477 )
                 
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -  
                 
Other operating income
    1,962       1,899  
                 
Non-interest income (excluding insurance premiums)
    16,642       867  
                 
Insurance net premium income
    5,544       6,326  
                 
Total non-interest income
    22,186       7,193  

Key points

2009 compared with 2008
Non-interest income increased to £22,186 million from £7,193 million in 2008. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP non-interest income increased to £15,858 from £4,835 million in 2008.
   
Net fees and commissions fell by £436 million primarily due to the withdrawal of the single premium payment protection insurance product and the restructuring of current account overdraft fees within UK Retail during the year, as well as to reduced fees received in Non-Core. This was partially offset by improved performance in GBM (£112 million) and US Retail & Commercial (£50 million).
   
Income from trading activities rose substantially during the year by £12,358 million, principally due to lower credit market losses reflecting improved underlying asset prices compared with 2008. Increased market volatility and strong customer demand in a positive trading environment also contributed to this improvement.
   
In the second quarter of 2009 the Group recorded a gain of £3,790 million on a liability management exercise to redeem a number of Tier 1 and upper Tier 2 securities.
   
Other operating income increased by £63 million. This improvement reflected a small gain in the fair value of securities and other assets and liabilities compared with a loss of £1.7 billion in 2008. This was partially offset by lower profits on sales of securities and properties and reduced dividend income, together with a loss on sale of subsidiaries and associates of £0.1 billion compared with a profit of £0.9 billion in 2008, which included a gain of £600 million on the sale of Angel Trains.
   
Insurance net premium income fell by £782 million principally reflecting lower bancassurance fees and lower general insurance premiums.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
23


 
Results summary (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Operating expenses
    £m       £m  
                 
Staff costs
               
- excluding pension schemes curtailment gains
    11,783       10,410  
- pension schemes curtailment gains
    (2,148 )     -  
Premises and equipment
    3,087       2,593  
Other
    5,584       5,464  
                 
Administrative expenses
    18,306       18,467  
Depreciation and amortisation
    2,809       3,154  
Write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets
    363       32,581  
                 
Operating expenses
    21,478       54,202  
                 
General insurance
    4,223       3,733  
Bancassurance
    634       697  
                 
Insurance net claims
    4,857       4,430  
                 
Staff costs as a percentage of total income
    24.9 %     40.2 %
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008

Operating expenses declined by 60% to £21,478 million largely reflecting a substantial decrease in the write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets. Excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, the non-GAAP operating expenses increased by 7% to £17,401 million.
   
Staff costs, excluding pension schemes curtailment gains, were up £1,373 million with most of the movement relating to adverse movements in foreign exchange rates and some salary inflation. Changes in incentive compensation, primarily in Global Banking & Markets, represented most of the remaining change.
   
Pension curtailment gains of £2,148 million were recognised during the fourth quarter of 2009 arising from changes to prospective pension benefits in the defined benefit scheme and certain other subsidiary schemes.
   
Premises and equipment costs rose by £494 million primarily due to the impact of expanded Group premises in London and the US.
   
Other expenses fell by £120 million due to integration benefits in GBM partially offset by increased deposit insurance levies in the US.
   
General insurance claims rose by £490 million primarily as a result of the rise in estimated costs of bodily injury claims within the motor lines of business.
   
Bancassurance claims fell by £63 million reflecting lower business volumes offset by improved returns on investment products being passed onto customers.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
24

 
 
Results summary (continued)

 
   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Impairment losses
    £m       £m  
                 
Impairment losses by division
               
UK Retail
    1,679       1,019  
UK Corporate
    927       319  
Wealth
    33       16  
Global Banking & Markets
    640       522  
Global Transaction Services
    39       54  
Ulster Bank
    649       106  
US Retail & Commercial
    702       437  
RBS Insurance
    8       42  
Central items
    1       (19 )
                 
Core
    4,678       2,496  
Non-Core
    9,221       4,936  
                 
      13,899       7,432  
RFS Holdings minority interest
    1,051       640  
                 
      14,950       8,072  
                 
Impairment losses by asset category
               
Loans and advances
    14,134       7,091  
Available-for-sale securities
    816       981  
                 
      14,950       8,072  
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross loans and advances excluding reverse repurchase
               
  agreements
    2.01 %     0.84 %

Key points

2009 compared with 2008

Impairment losses were £14,950 million compared with £8,072 million. Impairment losses in the Core divisions increased by £2,182 million, Non-Core losses increased by £4,285 million and RFS Holdings minority interest losses increased by £411 million.
   
In the Core business, the biggest increases were in UK Retail, UK Corporate and Ulster Bank, reflecting the difficult economic environment.
   
Non-Core losses also increased substantially, particularly across the corporate and property sectors.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
25

 
 
Results summary (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Credit and other market losses (1)
    £m       £m  
                 
Monoline exposures
    2,387       3,093  
CDPCs
    957       615  
Asset-backed products (2)
    288       4,778  
Other credit exotics
    558       947  
Equities
    47       948  
Leveraged finance
    -       1,088  
Banking book hedges
    1,727       (1,642 )
Other
    188       268  
                 
      6,152       10,095  
Notes:
(1)
Included in ‘Income/(loss) from trading activities’
(2)
Includes super senior asset-backed structures and other asset-backed products.
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
 
Losses relating to monoline exposures were £2,387 million in 2009 compared with £3,093 million in 2008.
     
 
The credit quality of the monolines has continued to deteriorate and the level of CVA held against exposures to monoline counterparties has increased from 52% to 62% during the year. This was driven by a combination of wider credit spreads and lower recovery rates.
     
 
The gross exposure to monoline counterparties has decreased primarily due to a combination of higher prices of underlying reference instruments and restructuring certain exposures.
     
 
The increase in CVA resulting from the credit quality deterioration was partially offset by the decrease in CVA requirement following the reduction in gross exposure due to higher prices of underlying reference instruments. Consequently the net losses incurred in this regard were lower than in 2008 when there was both an increase in gross exposure and deterioration in credit quality.
     
Losses relating to CDPC exposures were £957 million in 2009 compared with £615 million in 2008.
   
 
The credit quality of the CDPCs has continued to deteriorate and the level of CVA held against exposures to CDPC counterparties has increased from 27% to 39% during the year.
     
 
The gross exposure to CDPC counterparties has reduced primarily due to a combination of tighter credit spreads of the underlying reference loans and bonds, and a decrease in the relative value of senior tranches compared with the underlying reference portfolios.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
26

 
 
Results summary (continued)


Key points

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)

 
The decrease in CVA requirement following the reduction in gross exposure was partially offset by the increase in CVA requirement resulting from the credit quality deterioration. Consequently there were net gains in this regard in 2009 compared with losses in 2008 when there was both an increase in gross exposure and deterioration in credit quality.
   
 
Net losses were incurred in 2009 due to hedges put in place at the end of 2008 and during 2009 which effectively cap the exposure to certain CDPCs. As the exposure to these CDPCs has reduced, losses have been incurred on the hedges.
   
Losses relating to asset-backed products were £288m in 2009 compared with £4,778 million in 2008.
   
 
Losses reported in 2009 primarily relate to super senior CDOs. The significant price declines of the underlying predominantly mortgage-backed securities seen in 2008 were not repeated in 2009.
   
 
Losses on other mortgage backed securities were greatly reduced in 2009 as many of these positions were sold or substantially written down in 2008 resulting in reduced net exposure in 2009.
   
Losses relating to Credit exotics were £558 million in 2009 compared with £947 million in 2008. These losses were reduced in 2009 as hedges were put in place to mitigate the risk.
   
Leveraged finance assets were reclassified on 1 July 2009. Changes in the fair value of these assets are only recognised in the income statement to the extent that they are considered impairments.
   
Losses relating to banking book hedges were £1,727 million in 2009 compared with profits of £1,642 million in 2008. These trades hedge counterparty risk that arises from loans and bonds on the regulatory banking book. As credit spreads have generally tightened in 2009 the value of these hedges has decreased resulting in losses. These hedges gave rise to gains in 2008 due to credit spreads generally widening.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
27


 
Results summary (continued)


Capital resources and ratios
 
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Core Tier 1 capital
    £59.5bn       £46.2bn  
                 
Tier 1 capital
    £76.4bn       £69.8bn  
                 
Total capital
    £87.2bn       £98.2bn  
                 
Risk-weighted assets  – Gross
    £668.6bn       £695.8bn  
                 
Benefit of APS
 
(£127.6bn)
      -  
                 
Risk-weighted assets
    £541.0bn       £695.8bn  
                 
Core Tier 1 ratio
    11.0 %     6.6 %
                 
Tier 1 ratio
    14.1 %     10.0 %
                 
Total capital ratio
    16.1 %     14.1 %
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008

The significant increase in the Core Tier 1 Capital and ratio reflects the impact of the accession to the Asset Protection Scheme and issue of B shares to the UK Government in December.
   
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) have decreased by £155 billion from the end of 2008 with reductions due to APS of £128 billion, de-leveraging of £84 billion and movements in exchange rates of £20 billion partially offset by impacts of procyclicality, £75 billion and market risk volatility, £18 billion. There was a further reduction due to a decrease in the RWAs of RFS Holdings minority interest of £16 billion.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
28

 
 
Results summary (continued)


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Balance sheet
 
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Funded balance sheet
    1,255.0       1,409.1  
                 
Total assets
    1,696.5       2,401.7  
                 
Loans and advances to customers (excluding reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing)
    687.4       835.4  
                 
Customer accounts (excluding repurchase agreements and stock lending)
    545.8       581.4  
                 
Loan:deposit ratio (Core - net of provisions)
    104 %     118 %
                 
Loan:deposit ratio (Non-Core - net of provisions)
    1,121 %     683 %
                 
Loan:deposit ratio (Group-net of provisions)
    126  %     144 %
                 
Loan:deposit ratio (Group excluding RFS Holdings minority interest - net of provisions)
    135 %     151 %

Key points

2009 compared with 2008
Total assets were down significantly, ahead of the targets set out in the Group’s strategic plan.
   
 
Funded balance sheet was down 11% principally reflecting the substantial repayment of loans to banks and customers.
   
 
Total assets were down 29% principally reflecting substantial repayments of loans to banks and customers and a fall in mark-to-market derivative assets, with a corresponding fall in derivative liabilities.
   
The loan:deposit ratio (net of provisions) has improved to 126% from 144%. The loan:deposit ratio, excluding RFS Holdings minority interest, (net of provisions) has improved to 135%, as loans to customers, excluding reverse repos, fell by £148 billion, while deposits, excluding repos, fell by just £36 billion. The principal drivers were reduced loans and advances in GBM (down £96 billion) and Non-Core (down £42 billion), with UK Retail growing balances but reduced loan demand in other Core divisions. Good customer deposit growth was achieved in most Core divisions, with a particularly strong performance from UK Retail. GBM achieved a targeted reduction in short-term wholesale deposits.

A further analysis of the Group’s funding and liquidity positions is included on pages 131 to 136.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
29


 
Description of business


Following a comprehensive strategic review, changes were made to the Group’s operating segments in 2009. A Non-Core division was created comprising those lines of business, portfolios and individual assets that the Group intends to run off or sell. Furthermore, Business Services (formerly Group Manufacturing) is no longer reported as a separate division and its costs are now allocated to the customer-facing divisions along with certain central costs. UK Retail & Commercial Banking has been split into three segments (UK Retail, UK Corporate and Wealth). Ulster Bank has become a specific segment. The remaining elements of Europe & Middle East Retail & Commercial Banking, Asia Retail & Commercial Banking and RBS’s portion of shared ABN AMRO assets form part of Non-Core. The segmental measure is now Operating profit/(loss) before tax which differs from Contribution (used previously) and which excludes strategic disposals. Comparative data have been restated accordingly.

UK Retail offers a comprehensive range of banking products and related financial services to the personal market. It serves customers through the RBS and NatWest networks of branches and ATMs in the United Kingdom, and also through telephone and internet channels.

UK Corporate is a leading provider of banking, finance, and risk management services to the corporate and SME sector in the United Kingdom. It offers a full range of banking products and related financial services through a nationwide network of relationship managers, and also through telephone and internet channels. The product range includes asset finance through the Lombard brand.

Wealth provides private banking and investment services in the UK through Coutts & Co and Adam & Company; offshore banking through RBS International, NatWest Offshore and Isle of Man Bank; and international private banking through RBS Coutts.

Global Banking & Markets (GBM) is a leading banking partner to major corporations and financial institutions around the world, providing an extensive range of debt and equity financing, risk management and investment services to its customers. The division is organised along six principal business lines: money markets; rates flow trading; currencies and commodities; equities; credit markets and portfolio management & origination.

Global Transaction Services ranks among the top five global transaction services providers, offering global payments, cash and liquidity management, and trade finance and commercial card products and services. It includes the Group’s corporate money transmission activities in the United Kingdom and the United States as well as Global Merchant Services, the Group’s United Kingdom and international merchant acquiring business.

Ulster Bank is the leading retail and commercial bank in Northern Ireland and the third largest banking group on the island of Ireland.  It provides a comprehensive range of financial services through both its Retail Markets division, which has a network of branches and operates in the personal and bancassurance sectors, and its Corporate Markets division, which provides services to SME business customers, corporates and institutional markets.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
30


 
Description of business (continued)


US Retail & Commercial provides financial services primarily through the Citizens and Charter One brands.  US Retail & Commercial is engaged in retail and corporate banking activities through its branch network in 12 states in the United States and through non-branch offices in other states. It ranks among the top five banks in New England.

RBS Insurance sells and underwrites retail and SME insurance over the telephone and internet, as well as through brokers and partnerships. Its brands include Direct Line, Churchill and Privilege, which sell general insurance products direct to the customer, as well as Green Flag and NIG. Through its international division, RBS Insurance sells general insurance, mainly motor, in Germany and Italy. The Intermediary and Broker division sells general insurance products through independent brokers.

Business Services (formerly Group Manufacturing) supports the customer-facing businesses and provides operational technology, customer support in telephony, account management, lending and money transmission, global purchasing, property and other services. Business Services drives efficiencies and supports income growth across multiple brands and channels by using a single, scalable platform and common processes wherever possible. It also leverages the Group’s purchasing power and is the Group’s centre of excellence for managing large-scale and complex change.

Central Functions comprises group and corporate functions, such as treasury, funding and finance, risk management, legal, communications and human resources. The Centre manages the Group’s capital resources and Group-wide regulatory projects and provides services to the operating divisions.

Non-Core Division manages separately assets that the Group intends to run off or dispose. The division contains a range of businesses and asset portfolios primarily from the GBM division, including RBS Sempra Commodities, linked to proprietary trading, higher risk profile asset portfolios including excess risk concentrations, and other illiquid portfolios. It also includes a number of other portfolios and businesses, including regional markets businesses, that the Group has concluded are no longer strategic.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
31

 
 
Divisional performance

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Operating profit/(loss) by division
               
UK Retail
    229       723  
UK Corporate
    1,125       1,781  
Wealth
    420       348  
Global Banking & Markets
    5,709       (1,796 )
Global Transaction Services
    973       1,002  
Ulster Bank
    (368 )     218  
US Retail & Commercial
    (113 )     528  
RBS Insurance
    58       584  
Central items
    292       1,025  
                 
Core
    8,325       4,413  
Non-Core
    (14,557 )     (11,351 )
                 
Reconciling items:
    (6,232 )     (6,938 )
RFS Holdings minority interest
    (304 )     41  
Amortisation of purchased intangible assets
    (272 )     (443 )
Write-down of goodwill
    (363 )     (32,581 )
Integration and restructuring costs
    (1,286 )     (1,357 )
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -  
Strategic disposals
    132       442  
Gains on pensions curtailment
    2,148       -  
Bonus tax
    (208 )     -  
                 
Group operating loss
    (2,595 )     (40,836 )


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
%
   
%
 
             
Net interest margin by division
           
UK Retail
    3.59       3.58  
UK Corporate
    2.22       2.40  
Wealth
    4.38       4.51  
Global Banking & Markets
    1.38       1.34  
Global Transaction Services
    9.22       8.25  
Ulster Bank
    1.87       1.89  
US Retail & Commercial
    2.37       2.68  
Non-Core
    0.69       0.87  
                 
Group
    1.76       2.08  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
32


 
Divisional performance (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Risk-weighted assets by division
           
UK Retail
    51.3       45.7  
UK Corporate
    90.2       85.7  
Wealth
    11.2       10.8  
Global Banking & Markets
    123.7       151.8  
Global Transaction Services
    19.1       17.4  
Ulster Bank
    29.9       24.5  
US Retail & Commercial
    59.7       63.9  
Other
    9.4       7.1  
                 
Core
    394.5       406.9  
Non-Core
    171.3       170.9  
                 
      565.8       577.8  
Benefit of APS
    (127.6 )     -  
                 
      438.2       577.8  
                 
RFS Holdings minority interest
    102.8       118.0  
                 
Total
    541.0       695.8  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
33


 
UK Retail


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    3,452       3,187  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    1,320       1,577  
Other non-interest income
    309       358  
                 
Non-interest income
    1,629       1,935  
                 
Total income
    5,081       5,122  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (845 )     (924 )
- other
    (421 )     (421 )
Indirect expenses
    (1,773 )     (1,851 )
                 
      (3,039 )     (3,196 )
                 
      2,042    
1926
 
Insurance net claims
    (134 )     (184 )
Impairment losses
    (1,679 )     (1,019 )
                 
Operating profit
    229       723  
                 
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Personal advances
    1,192       1,244  
Personal deposits
    1,349       2,037  
Mortgages
    1,214       500  
Bancassurance
    380       401  
Cards
    869       831  
Other
    77       109  
                 
Total income
    5,081       5,122  
                 
                 
Analysis of impairment by sector
               
Mortgages
    124       31  
Personal
    1,023       568  
Cards
    532       420  
                 
Total impairment
    1,679       1,019  
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances by sector
               
Mortgages
    0.15 %     0.04 %
Personal
    7.52 %     3.71 %
Cards
    8.58 %     6.67 %
                 
      1.63 %     1.09 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
34


 
UK Retail (continued)


Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    4.2 %     13.1 %
Net interest margin
    3.59 %     3.58 %
Cost:income ratio
    59.8 %     62.4 %

   
31 December 2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Loans and advances to customers – gross
           
- mortgages
    83.2       72.2  
- personal
    13.6       15.3  
- cards
    6.2       6.3  
Customer deposits (excluding bancassurance)
    87.2       78.9  
Assets under management – excluding deposits
    5.3       5.7  
Risk elements in lending
    4.6       3.8  
Loan:deposit ratio (excluding repos)
    115 %     116 %
Risk-weighted assets
    51.3       45.7  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 7% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).

Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating profit of £229 million was £494 million lower than in 2008.  Profit before impairments was up £166 million or 10%, but impairments rose by £660 million as the economic environment deteriorated, albeit with signs of conditions stabilising in the second half of the year.
 
 
·
The division has focused in 2009 on growing secured lending to meet its Government targets while at the same time building customer deposits, thereby reducing the Group’s reliance on wholesale funding.  Loans and advances to customers grew 10%, with a change in mix from unsecured to secured as the Group sought actively to reduce its risk profile, with 15% growth in mortgage lending and an 8% reduction in unsecured lending.
 
 
 
Mortgage growth was due to good retention of existing customers and new business sourced predominantly from the existing customer base. Gross mortgage lending market share increased to 12% from 7% in 2008, with the Group on track to exceed its Government targets on net lending by £3 billion.
 
 
 
Customer deposits grew 11% on 2008 reflecting the strength of the UK Retail customer franchise, which outperformed the market in an increasingly competitive environment.  Savings balances grew by £6 billion or 11% and account acquisition saw a 20% increase, with 2.2 million accounts opened.  Personal current account balances increased by 12% on 2008 with a 3% growth in accounts to 12.8 million.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
35

 
 
UK Retail (continued)


Key points (continued)

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)
·
Net interest income increased significantly by 8% to £3,452 million, driven by strong balance sheet growth. Net interest margin was flat at 3.59%, with decreasing liability margins in the face of stiff competition for deposits offsetting wider asset margins.  The growth in mortgages and the reduction in higher margin unsecured balances also had a negative impact on the blended net interest margin.
   
·
Non-interest income declined 16% to £1,629 million, principally reflecting the withdrawal of the single premium payment protection insurance product and the restructuring of current account overdraft fees in the final quarter of 2009, with the annualised impact of the overdraft fee restructuring further affecting income in 2010.  The weak economic environment presented little opportunity in 2009 to grow credit card, private banking and bancassurance fees.
   
·
Expenses decreased by 5%, with the cost:income ratio improving from 62% to 60%.
 
 
Direct staff costs declined by 9%, as the division benefited from strong cost control, a focus on process re-engineering and a 10% reduction in headcount.
     
 
RBS continues to progress towards a more convenient, lower cost operating model, with over 4 million active users of online banking and a record share of new sales achieved through direct channels. More than 5.5 million accounts have switched to paperless statements and 254 branches now utilise automated cash deposit machines.
     
·
Impairment losses increased 65% to £1,679 million reflecting the deterioration in the economic environment, and its impact on customer finances.
     
 
The mortgage impairment charge was £124 million (2008 - £31 million) on a total book of £83.2 billion.  Mortgage arrears rates stabilised in the second half of 2009 and remain well below the industry average, as reported by the Council of Mortgage Lenders.  Repossessions show only a small increase on 2008, as the Group continues to support customers facing financial difficulties.
     
 
The unsecured lending impairment charge was £1,555 million (2008 - £988 million) on a book of £19.8 billion. Industry benchmarks for cards arrears showed a slightly improving trend in the final quarter of 2009, which is consistent with the Group’s experience. RBS continues to perform better than the market on arrears.
   
Risk weighted assets increased by 12% to £51.3 billion due to higher lending and the upward pressure from procyclicality, more than offsetting the adoption of a through-the-cycle loss given default approach for mortgages.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
36


 
UK Corporate


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    2,292       2,448  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    858       829  
Other non-interest income
    432       460  
                 
Non-interest income
    1,290       1,289  
                 
Total income
    3,582       3,737  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (753 )     (801 )
- other
    (268 )     (318 )
Indirect expenses
    (509 )     (518 )
                 
      (1,530 )     (1,637 )
                 
      2,052       2,100  
Impairment losses
    (927 )     (319 )
                 
Operating profit
    1,125       1,781  
                 
                 
Analysis of income by business
               
Corporate and commercial lending
    2,401       2,166  
Asset and invoice finance
    232       241  
Corporate deposits
    985       1,266  
Other
    (36 )     64  
                 
Total income
    3,582       3,737  
                 
                 
Analysis of impairment by sector
               
Banks and financial institutions
    15       9  
Hotels and restaurants
    98       25  
Housebuilding and construction
    106       42  
Manufacturing
    51       14  
Other
    150       53  
Private sector education, health, social work, recreational and community services
    59       15  
Property
    259       24  
Wholesale and retail trade, repairs
    76       37  
Asset and invoice finance
    113       100  
                 
Total impairment
    927       319  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
37

 
 
UK Corporate (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
             
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances
  (excluding reverse repurchase agreements) by sector
           
Banks and financial Institutions
    0.29 %     0.17 %
Hotels and restaurants
    1.75 %     0.41 %
Housebuilding and construction
    3.12 %     0.81 %
Manufacturing
    1.38 %     0.26 %
Other
    0.36 %     0.14 %
Private sector education, health, social work, recreational and community services
    0.80 %     0.20 %
Property
    0.93 %     0.08 %
Wholesale and retail trade, repairs
    0.97 %     0.41 %
Asset and invoice finance
    1.33 %     1.18 %
                 
      0.83 %     0.27 %

Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    10.3 %     18.0 %
Net interest margin
    2.22 %     2.40 %
Cost:income ratio
    42.7 %     43.8 %

   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Total assets
    114.9       121.0  
Loans and advances to customers – gross
               
- Banks and financial institutions
    5.2       5.4  
- Hotels and restaurants
    5.6       6.1  
- Housebuilding and construction
    3.4       5.2  
- Manufacturing
    3.7       5.3  
- Other
    42.0       38.1  
- Private sector education, health, social work, recreational and community services
    7.4       7.4  
- Property
    28.0       31.8  
- Wholesale and retail trade, repairs
    7.8       9.1  
- Asset and invoice finance
    8.5       8.5  
Customer deposits
    87.8       82.0  
Risk elements in lending
    2.3       1.3  
Loan:deposit ratio
    126 %     142 %
Risk-weighted assets
    90.2       85.7  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 8% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
38

 
 
UK Corporate (continued)


Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating profit of £1,125 million was £656 million lower than in 2008, largely due to an increase of £608 million in impairments.
   
·
Net interest margin levels were rebuilt during the second half as asset pricing was amended to reflect increased funding and credit costs. For the year as a whole net interest margin was 18 basis points lower than in 2008, reflecting higher funding costs and continued competitive pricing for deposits.
   
·
Gross new lending to customers remained resilient in 2009, with a noticeable acceleration of lending activity in the second half of the year. However, as customers have deleveraged and turned increasingly to capital markets, repayments have accelerated even more sharply. Loans and advances to customers, therefore, declined by 5% to £111.5 billion.
   
·
Initiatives aimed at increasing customer deposits have been successful, with balance growth of 7%, although margins declined as a result of increased competition for balances.
   
·
Non-interest income was flat, with stable fee income from refinancing and structuring activity.
   
·
A reduction in costs of 7% was driven by lower staff expenses as a result of the Group’s restructuring programme, together with restraint on discretionary spending levels.
   
·
Impairment losses increased substantially reflecting both a rise in the number of corporate delinquencies requiring a specific impairment and a higher charge to recognise losses not yet specifically identified.
   
·
Risk-weighted assets grew 5% despite the fall in customer lending, reflecting the impact of procyclicality, which was most pronounced in the first half of 2009.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
39


 
Wealth


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    663       578  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    363       405  
Other non-interest income
    83       76  
                 
Non-interest income
    446       481  
                 
Total income
    1,109       1,059  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (357 )     (377 )
- other
    (139 )     (156 )
Indirect expenses
    (160 )     (162 )
                 
      (656 )     (695 )
                 
      453       364  
Impairment losses
    (33 )     (16 )
                 
Operating profit
    420       348  
                 
                 
Analysis of income
               
Private Banking
    916       819  
Investments
    193       240  
                 
Total income
    1,109       1,059  

Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Net interest margin
    4.38 %     4.51 %
Cost:income ratio
    59.2 %     65.6 %


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Loans and advances to customers – gross
           
- mortgages
    6.5       5.3  
- personal
    4.9       5.0  
- other
    2.3       2.1  
Customer deposits
    35.7       34.1  
Assets under management – excluding deposits
    30.7       34.7  
Risk elements in lending
    0.2       0.1  
Loan:deposit ratio
    38 %     36 %
Risk-weighted assets
    11.2       10.8  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
40

 
 
Wealth (continued)

 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Wealth produced strong growth in operating profit, up 21% to £420 million, reflecting the increased value of the division’s healthy deposit base in an increasingly competitive market for funding. Deposit balances increased by 5% from 2008, though the deposit market remains highly competitive.
   
·
Total income was up 5% (1% in constant currency terms), with strong growth in net interest income, up 12% in constant currency terms reflecting the increased internal pricing applied to Wealth’s deposit base. This was offset by a marked decrease in investment income year on year as assets under management decreased by 8% at constant exchange rates during 2009, with investors turning to more liquid assets and away from longer term investments.
   
·
Loans and advances increased by 10% over 2008, primarily in the UK. Lending margins improved, particularly for mortgages, and credit metrics for new business remain satisfactory.
   
·
Expenses were down 6% (10% lower on a constant currency basis), reflecting a rigorous focus on cost management, with staff costs decreasing by 11% as a result of planned headcount reduction. The cost:income ratio improved from 65.6% to 59.2%.
   
·
Impairments increased by £17 million over 2008 reflecting some isolated difficulties in the UK and offshore mortgage books (representing mortgages for second properties for expatriates). Provisions as a percentage of lending to customers increased slightly to 0.25%.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
41

 
 
Global Banking & Markets


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income from banking activities
    2,424       2,390  
Funding costs of rental assets
    (49 )     (64 )
                 
Net interest income
    2,375       2,326  
                 
Net fees and commissions receivable
    1,144       973  
Income/(loss) from trading activities
    7,954       (493 )
Other operating income
    (464 )     (92 )
                 
Non-interest income
    8,634       388  
                 
Total income
    11,009       2,714  
                 
Direct expenses
               
-  staff
    (2,930 )     (2,056 )
-  other
    (965 )     (1,269 )
Indirect expenses
    (765 )     (663 )
                 
      (4,660 )     (3,988 )
                 
      6,349       (1,274 )
Impairment losses
    (640 )     (522 )
                 
Operating profit/(loss)
    5,709       (1,796 )
                 
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Rates - money markets
    1,714       1,641  
Rates - flow
    3,142       1,386  
Currencies & Commodities
    1,277       1,539  
Equities
    1,474       368  
Credit markets
    2,255       (3,435 )
Portfolio management and origination
    1,196       858  
Fair value of own debt
    (49 )     357  
                 
Total income
    11,009       2,714  
                 
                 
Analysis of impairment by sector
               
Manufacturing and infrastructure
    91       39  
Property and construction
    49       12  
Transport
    3       -  
Banks and financial institutions
    348       186  
Other
    149       285  
                 
Total impairment
    640       522  
                 
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances (excluding reverse repurchase agreements)
    0.59 %     0.29 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
42

 
 
Global Banking & Markets (continued)


Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    30.7 %     (8.4 %)
Net interest margin
    1.38 %     1.34 %
Cost:income ratio
    42.3 %     146.9 %


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Loans and advances (including banks)
    127.8       224.2  
Reverse repos
    73.3       88.8  
Securities
    106.0       127.5  
Cash and eligible bills
    74.0       20.2  
Other
    31.1       38.0  
                 
Total third party assets (excluding derivatives mark to market)
    412.2       498.7  
Net derivative assets (after netting)
    68.0       121.0  
Customer deposits (excluding repos)
    46.9       87.8  
Risk elements in lending
    1.8       0.9  
Loan:deposit ratio
    194 %     192 %
Risk-weighted assets
    123.7       151.8  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 10% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating profit improved to £5,709 million in 2009, compared with an operating loss of £1,796 million in 2008. Although the buoyant market conditions experienced in the first quarter levelled off over the course of the year, the refocusing of the business on its core franchises was successful. GBM has tightened its balance sheet management over the course of the year, with disciplined deployment of capital to support its targeted client base.
   
·
In an often volatile market environment, GBM responded quickly to its clients’ needs to strengthen their balance sheets and to take advantage of the attractive environment for debt and equity issues. RBS participated in the five largest equity issues worldwide in 2009, and in six out of the ten largest debt capital markets transactions.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
43

 
 
Global Banking & Markets (continued)


Key points (continued)

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)
·
Income grew significantly, reflecting a very strong first quarter benefiting from market volatility, client activity and a marked improvement from Credit Markets.  Rates flow business, up 127%, benefited from good client activity, while strong equity capital markets drove a fourfold increase in Equities.
   
·
Portfolio management and origination grew 39% as financial institutions and corporate clients refinanced through the debt capital markets. The refocused Credit Markets delivered a much improved result from greater liquidity and a more positive trading environment.
   
·
Despite quarterly movement in the Group’s credit spreads, overall spreads remained broadly flat over the year resulting in a small loss from movements in the fair value of own debt compared with a £357 million gain in 2008.
   
·
Expenses increased 17%, reflecting higher performance-related costs and the impact of adverse exchange rate movements, partly offset by restructuring and efficiency benefits. Less than half of the change in staff costs related to increases in 2009 bonus awards.
   
·
Staff costs represented 27% of income. The Group introduced new deferral policies in 2009, which have led to changes in accrual patterns. Adjusting for both 2008 and 2009 deferrals, GBM’s compensation ratio in 2009 would have been 28%.
   
·
Higher impairments principally reflected a large individual failure recognised in the third quarter. Impairments represented 0.59% of loans and advances to customers compared with 0.29% in the prior year, reflecting the marked reduction in loans and advances.
   
·
Total third party assets, excluding derivatives, were down 17%, or 13% at constant exchange rates, compared with 31 December 2008, driven by a 43% reduction in loans and advances as customers took advantage of favourable capital market conditions to raise alternative forms of finance to bank debt. This reduction was partially offset by an increase in liquid assets.
   
·
Risk-weighted assets decreased 19%, or 15% at constant exchange rates, reflecting the fall in third party assets and the Group’s continued focus on reducing its risk profile and balance sheet usage.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
44


 
Global Transaction Services


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    912       937  
Non-interest income
    1,575       1,494  
                 
Total income
    2,487       2,431  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (371 )     (362 )
- other
    (161 )     (149 )
Indirect expenses
    (943 )     (864 )
                 
      (1,475 )     (1,375 )
                 
      1,012       1,056  
Impairment losses
    (39 )     (54 )
                 
Operating profit
    973       1,002  
                 
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Domestic cash management
    805       795  
International cash management
    734       722  
Trade finance
    290       241  
Merchant acquiring*
    528       554  
Commercial cards
    130       119  
                 
Total income
    2,487       2,431  

* Comprises the Global Merchant Services business (see Appendix 3) and the Global Travel Money Services business. The Global Merchant Services business outlined in Appendix 3 includes business units in the Non-Core and Ulster Bank divisions.

Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Net interest margin
    9.22 %     8.25 %
Cost:income ratio
    59.3 %     56.6 %


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Total third party assets
    18.4       22.2  
Loans and advances
    12.7       14.8  
Customer deposits
    61.8       61.8  
Risk elements in lending
    0.2       0.1  
Loan:deposit ratio
    21 %     25 %
Risk-weighted assets
    19.1       17.4  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
45

 
 
Global Transaction Services (continued)


Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating profit declined by 3%, or 6% at constant foreign exchange rates, largely reflecting pressure on deposit income. The attrition of deposit balances experienced in the first half was reversed in the second, but margins remain compressed due to both a very competitive deposit market as well as the low rate environment.
   
·
Customer deposit balances at £61.8 billion were flat on the previous year, with growth in the UK and international business offset by weaker US domestic balances. At constant exchange rates balances were up 3%. Loans and advances were down 14% (11% in constant currency terms) due to reduced overdraft utilisation and lower trade volumes.
   
·
At constant exchange rates, international payment fees increased by 11%, while trade finance income increased by 8%, with improved penetration in the Asia-Pacific region. Merchant acquiring income, however, declined by 9% at constant exchange rates, as consumers continued to switch to lower margin debit card transactions in preference to using credit cards.
   
·
Expenses were up 7% in headline terms but flat in constant currency terms, as cost savings and efficiencies helped to mitigate the impact of investment in infrastructure.  Staff expenses were 2% lower in constant currency terms, with headcount down 5%. The cost:income ratio was 59.3%, a deterioration of 2.7 percentage points or 1.9 percentage points in constant currency terms.
   
·
Impairment losses were £39 million, down £15 million versus 2008. Overall defaults remain modest at 0.3% of loans and advances.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
46


 
Ulster Bank


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    780       773  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    228       238  
Other non-interest income
    26       28  
                 
Non-interest income
    254       266  
                 
Total income
    1,034       1,039  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (325 )     (330 )
- other
    (85 )     (93 )
Indirect expenses
    (343 )     (292 )
                 
      (753 )     (715 )
                 
      281       324  
Impairment losses
    (649 )     (106 )
                 
Operating (loss)/profit
    (368 )     218  
                 
                 
Analysis of income by business
               
Corporate
    580       618  
Retail
    412       396  
Other
    42       25  
                 
Total income
    1,034       1,039  
                 
                 
Analysis of impairment by sector
               
Mortgages
    74       17  
Corporate
               
  - Property
    306       37  
  - Other
    203       7  
Other
    66       45  
                 
Total impairment
    649       106  
                 
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances (excluding reverse repurchase agreements) by sector
               
Mortgages
    0.46 %     0.09 %
Corporate
               
  - Property
    3.03 %     0.34 %
  - Other
    1.85 %     0.05 %
Other
    2.75 %     2.14 %
                 
      1.63 %     0.24 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
47


 
Ulster Bank (continued)


Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    (13.3 %)     10.1 %
Net interest margin
    1.87 %     1.89 %
Cost:income ratio
    72.8 %     68.8 %

   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Loans and advances to customers – gross
           
- mortgages
    16.2       18.1  
- corporate
               
   - property
    10.1       10.9  
   - other
    11.0       12.9  
- other
    2.4       2.1  
Customer deposits
    21.9       24.3  
Risk elements in lending
               
- mortgages
    0.6       0.3  
- corporate
               
   - property
    0.7       0.5  
   - other
    0.8       0.3  
- other
    0.2       0.1  
Loan:deposit ratio
    177 %     179 %
Risk-weighted assets
    29.9       24.5  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 7% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating results were in line with expectations but deteriorated during 2009 as economic conditions across the island of Ireland worsened, with an operating loss for the year of £368 million.
   
·
Net interest income declined by 7% in constant currency terms, largely as a result of tightening deposit margins in an increasingly competitive market, partly offset by asset repricing initiatives. Net interest margin for the year at 1.87% remained broadly stable despite the challenging market conditions.
   
·
At constant exchange rates loans to customers decreased by 4% from the prior year as new business demand weakened. Customer deposits reduced by 5% in 2009 in constant currency terms, reflecting an increasingly competitive Irish deposit market and reductions in wholesale funding during Q1. During the second half of the year the market stabilised and the division recorded strong growth in customer balances resulting in an improved funding profile.
   
·
Non-interest income declined by 12% in constant currency terms due to lower fee income driven by reduced activity levels across all business lines.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
48

 
 
Ulster Bank (continued)


Key points (continued)

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)
·
Total costs for the year were flat on a constant currency basis.  Direct expenses were down 12% in constant currency terms during 2009, driven by the bank’s restructuring programme, which incorporates the merger of the First Active and Ulster Bank businesses. The rollout of the programme has resulted in a downward trend in direct expenses throughout 2009. The reduction in direct expenses has been offset by a 17% increase in indirect expenses primarily reflecting provisions relating to the bank’s own property recognised in the fourth quarter.
   
·
Impairment losses increased to £649 million from £106 million driven by the continued deterioration in the Irish economic environment and resultant impact on loan performance across the retail and wholesale portfolios.
   
·
Necessary fiscal budgetary action allied to the well-entrenched downturn in property markets in Ireland has fed through to higher loan losses. Mortgage impairments have been driven by rising unemployment and lower incomes. Loans to the property sector experienced a substantial rise in defaults as the Irish property market declined, reflecting the difficult economic backdrop and the uncertainty surrounding the possible effect of the Irish Government's National Asset Management Agency on asset values. Sectors driven by consumer spending have been affected by the double digit decline in 2009 with rising default rates evident.
   
·
Customer account numbers increased by 3% during 2009, with growth fuelled by strong current account activity and new-to-bank savings customers.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
49


 
US Retail & Commercial Sterling)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    1,775       1,726  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    714       664  
Other non-interest income
    235       197  
                 
Non-interest income
    949       861  
                 
Total income
    2,724       2,587  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (776 )     (645 )
- other
    (593 )     (354 )
Indirect expenses
    (766 )     (623 )
                 
      (2,135 )     (1,622 )
                 
      589       965  
Impairment losses
    (702 )     (437 )
                 
Operating (loss)/profit
    (113 )     528  
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Mortgages and home equity
    499       375  
Personal lending and cards
    451       333  
Retail deposits
    828       1,000  
Commercial lending
    542       405  
Commercial deposits
    398       377  
Other
    6       97  
                 
Total income
    2,724       2,587  
                 
                 
Average exchange rate –   US$/£
    1.566       1.853  

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
Analysis of impairment by sector
               
Residential mortgages
    72       41  
Home equity
    167       67  
Corporate & Commercial
    326       181  
Other consumer
    137       148  
                 
Total impairment
    702       437  
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances (excluding reverse repurchase agreements) by sector
               
Residential mortgages
    1.11 %     0.43 %
Home equity
    1.08 %     0.36 %
Corporate & Commercial
    1.67 %     0.76 %
Other consumer
    1.84 %     1.51 %
                 
      1.44 %     0.71 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
50

 
 

 
US Retail & CommercialSterling) (continued)


Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    (1.8 %)     7.7 %
Net interest margin
    2.37 %     2.68 %
Cost:income ratio
    78.3 %     62.7 %


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Total assets
    74.8       87.5  
Loans and advances to customers (gross):
               
- residential mortgages
    6.5       9.5  
- home equity
    15.4       18.7  
- corporate and commercial
    19.5       23.7  
- other consumer
    7.5       9.8  
Customer deposits (excluding repos)
    60.1       63.9  
Risk elements in lending
               
- retail
    0.4       0.2  
- commercial
    0.2       0.2  
Loan:deposit ratio
    80 %     96 %
Risk-weighted assets
    59.7       63.9  
                 
Spot exchange rate - US$/£
    1.622       1.460  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 7% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).
 
Key points

·
Sterling has strengthened over the course of the quarter, although the average exchange rate in Q409 has remained broadly stable. As a result the quarterly income statement trends are similar on a sterling and US dollar basis.
   
·
Variances are fully described in the US dollar based financials that follow.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
51

 
 
US Retail & Commercial (US Dollar)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      $m       $m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income
    2,777       3,200  
                 
Net fees and commissions
    1,119       1,231  
Other non-interest income
    368       362  
                 
Non-interest income
    1,487       1,593  
                 
Total income
    4,264       4,793  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (1,214 )     (1,194 )
- other
    (929 )     (654 )
Indirect expenses
    (1,196 )     (1,157 )
                 
      (3,339 )     (3,005 )
                 
      925       1,788  
Impairment losses
    (1,099 )     (811 )
                 
Operating (loss)/profit
    (174 )     977  
                 
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Mortgages and home equity
    781       695  
Personal lending and cards
    706       617  
Retail deposits
    1,296       1,853  
Commercial lending
    848       751  
Commercial deposits
    624       698  
Other
    9       179  
                 
Total income
    4,264       4,793  
             
Analysis of impairment by sector
           
Residential mortgages
    113       76  
Home equity
    261       125  
Corporate & Commercial
    510       335  
Other consumer
    215       275  
                 
Total impairment
    1,099       811  
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances (excluding reverse repurchase agreements) by sector
               
Residential mortgages
    1.07 %     0.55 %
Home equity
    1.04 %     0.46 %
Corporate & Commercial
    1.61 %     0.97 %
Other consumer
    1.77 %     1.92 %
                 
      1.39 %     0.90 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
52


 
US Retail & Commercial (US Dollar) (continued)


Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
Performance ratios
           
Return on equity (1)
    (1.7 %)     9.7 %
Net interest margin
    2.37 %     2.68 %
Cost:income ratio
    78.3 %     62.7 %


   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
   
$bn
   
$bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet
           
Total assets
    121.3       127.8  
Loans and advances to customers (gross):
               
- residential mortgages
    10.6       13.9  
- home equity
    25.0       27.2  
- corporate and commercial
    31.6       34.7  
- other consumer
    12.1       14.3  
Customer deposits (excluding repos)
    97.4       93.4  
Risk elements in lending
               
- retail
    0.6       0.3  
- commercial
    0.4       0.2  
Loan:deposit ratio
    80 %     96 %
Risk-weighted assets
    96.9       93.2  

Note:
(1)
Return on equity is based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on 7% of divisional risk-weighted assets, adjusted for capital deductions).

Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
The recessionary economic environment, historically low interest rates and deteriorating credit conditions resulted in an operating loss of $174 million. However, the business has now successfully refocused on its core customer franchises in New England, the Mid-Atlantic region and the Midwest.
   
·
The division achieved very strong growth in mortgage origination volumes, with significantly higher penetration through the branch network and improved profitability, particularly on recent origination vintages. Cross-selling of card, deposit and checking account products has increased substantially, with over 65% of new mortgage customers also taking out a checking account. The division has also increased commercial banking market penetration, with lead bank share within its footprint increasing from 6% to 7% in the $5 million to $25 million segment and from 6% to 8% in the $25 million to $500 million segment.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
53



US Retail & Commercial (US Dollar) (continued)


Key points (continued)

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)
·
Net interest income was down 13%. Net interest margin was down 31bps for the full year, reflecting the decline in deposit margins resulting from the low interest rate environment, though margins have been partially rebuilt in the second half from the lows experienced in the first half, as the business repriced lending rates and aggressively reduced pricing on term and time deposits.
   
·
Expenses increased by 11%, reflecting increased FDIC deposit insurance levies, higher employee benefit costs as well as increased costs relating to loan workout and collection activity.  Successful execution of restructuring activities resulted in approximately $75 million of cost savings.
   
·
Impairment losses increased to $1,099 million as charge-offs climbed to 0.90% of loans, an increase of 34bps compared with 2008.
   
·
Loans and advances were down 12%, reflecting subdued customer demand.
   
·
Customer deposits increased 4% from the prior year.  The deposit mix improved significantly, with strong growth in checking balances combined with migration away from higher priced term and time deposits as the division adjusted its pricing strategies. Over 58,000 consumer checking accounts were added over the course of the year, and more than 13,000 small business checking accounts. Consumer checking balances grew by 8% and small business balances by 12%.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
54

 
 
RBS Insurance

 
   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Earned premiums
    4,519       4,512  
Reinsurers' share
    (165 )     (206 )
                 
Insurance net premium income
    4,354       4,306  
Net fees and commissions
    (366 )     (396 )
Other income
    472       520  
                 
Total income
    4,460       4,430  
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (267 )     (286 )
- other
    (222 )     (225 )
Indirect expenses
    (270 )     (261 )
                 
      (759 )     (772 )
                 
Gross claims
    (3,690 )     (3,136 )
Reinsurers' share
    55       104  
                 
Net claims
    (3,635 )     (3,032 )
                 
      66       626  
Impairment losses
    (8 )     (42 )
                 
Operating profit/(loss)
    58       584  
                 
Analysis of income by product
               
Own-brand
               
-  Motor
    2,005       1,942  
-  Household and life
    849       806  
Partnerships and broker
               
-  Motor
    577       686  
-  Household and life
    330       354  
Other (international, commercial and central)
    699       642  
                 
Total income
    4,460       4,430  

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
55

 
 
RBS Insurance (continued)

 
Key metrics

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
             
In-force policies (thousands)
           
- Motor own-brand
    4,858       4,492  
- Own-brand non-motor (home, pet, rescue, HR24)
    6,307       5,560  
- Partnerships & broker (motor, home, pet, rescue, HR24)
    5,328       5,898  
- Other (International, commercial and central)
    1,217       1,206  
                 
Gross written premium (£m)
    4,480       4,384  
                 
Performance ratios
               
Return on equity (1)
    1.6 %     18.3 %
Cost:income ratio
    17.0 %     17.4 %
Adjusted cost:income ratio (2)
    92.0 %     55.2 %
                 
Balance sheet
               
General insurance reserves – total (£m)
    7,030       6,672  

Notes:
(1)
Based on divisional operating profit after tax, divided by divisional notional equity (based on regulatory capital).
(2)
Based on total income and operating expenses above and after netting insurance claims against income.
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Operating profit was severely affected by the rising costs of bodily injury claims, declining to £58 million. Significant price increases were implemented in the latter part of the year to mitigate the industry trend of rising claims costs.
   
·
Income grew by 1%, with premium income stable but lower reinsurance costs. Investment income was 16% lower, reflecting the impact of low interest rates and returns on the investment portfolio partially offset by gains realised on the sale of equity investments.
   
·
In-force policies grew by 3%, driven by the success of own brands, up 11%. Churchill and Privilege have benefited from deployment on selected price comparison websites, with motor policy numbers up 19% and 3% respectively, and home policies up 32% and 109% respectively, compared with prior year.  Direct Line motor and home policies grew by 4% and 2% respectively. The partnerships and broker segment declined by 10% in line with business strategy.
   
·
Expenses fell by 2% in 2009, with wage inflation, higher industry levies and professional fees offset by cost efficiencies, reduction in headcount and lower marketing expenditure.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
56


 
RBS Insurance (continued)


Key points (continued)

2009 compared with 2008 (continued)
·
Net claims were 20% higher than in 2008 driven by a £448 million increase in bodily injury claims as well as by adverse weather experienced in the fourth quarter.  Significant price increases were implemented in the latter part of the year to mitigate the industry trend of rising claims costs, and additional significant initiatives have also been undertaken to adapt pricing models and enhance claims management.
   
·
The UK combined operating ratio, including business services costs, was 105.9% compared with 93.6% in the previous year, with the impact of the increase in reserves for bodily injury claims and the bad weather experience only partially mitigated by commission and expense ratio improvement.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
57

 
 
Central items

 
   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Fair value of own debt
    (93 )     875  
Other
    385       150  
                 
Central items not allocated
    292       1,025  
 
Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Funding and operating costs have been allocated to operating divisions, based on direct service usage, requirement for market funding and other appropriate drivers where services span more than one division.
   
·
Residual unallocated items relate to volatile corporate items that do not naturally reside within a division.
   
·
Items not allocated during the year amounted to a net credit of £292 million. The Group’s credit spreads have fluctuated over the course of the year, but ended the year slightly tighter, resulting in an increase in the carrying value of own debt. This was offset by a net credit on unallocated Group treasury items, including the impact of economic hedges that do not qualify for IFRS hedge accounting.  2008’s results included some significant disposal gains.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
58

 
 
Non-Core


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Income statement
               
Net interest income from banking activities
    1,504       2,028  
Funding costs of rental assets
    (256 )     (380 )
                 
Net interest income
    1,248       1,648  
                 
Net fees and commissions receivable
    472       889  
Loss from trading activities
    (5,123 )     (7,716 )
Insurance net premium income
    784       986  
Other operating income
    318       1,161  
                 
Non-interest income
    (3,549 )     (4,680 )
                 
Total income
    (2,301 )     (3,032 )
                 
Direct expenses
               
- staff
    (851 )     (988 )
- other
    (1,044 )     (1,156 )
Indirect expenses
    (552 )     (539 )
                 
      (2,447 )     (2,683 )
                 
      (4,748 )     (5,715 )
Insurance net claims
    (588 )     (700 )
Impairment losses
    (9,221 )     (4,936 )
                 
Operating loss
    (14,557 )     (11,351 )
                 
Analysis of income
               
Banking & Portfolio
    (1,338 )     2,324  
International Businesses & Portfolios
    2,262       2,980  
Markets
    (3,225 )     (8,336 )
                 
      (2,301 )     (3,032 )
                 
Key metrics
               
                 
Performance ratios
               
Net interest margin
    0.69 %     0.87 %
Cost:income ratio
    (106.3 %)     (88.5 %)

   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Capital and balance sheet (1)
           
Total third party assets  (including derivatives) (2)
    220.9       342.9  
Loans and advances to customers - gross
    149.5       191.4  
Customer deposits
    12.6       27.4  
Risk elements in lending
    22.9       11.1  
Loan:deposit ratio
    1,121 %     683 %
Risk-weighted assets (3)
    171.3       170.9  
 
Notes:
(1)
Includes disposal groups.
(2)
Derivatives were £19.9 billion at 31 December 2009 (30 September 2009 - £30.9 billion; 31 December 2008 - £85.0 billion).
(3)
Includes Sempra: 31 December 2009 Third Party Assets (TPAs) £14.2 billion, RWAs £10.2 billion; (31 December 2008 TPAs £17.8billion, RWAs £10.6 billion).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
59

 
 
Non-Core (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Credit and other market write-downs (1)
               
Monoline exposures
    2,387       3,121  
CDPCs
    947       615  
Asset backed products (2)
    288       3,220  
Other credit exotics
    558       935  
Equities
    47       947  
Leveraged finance
    -       1,088  
Banking book hedges
    1,613       (1,690 )
Other
    (679 )     (497 )
                 
      5,161       7,739  
                 
Impairment losses
               
Banking & Portfolio
    4,215       938  
International Businesses & Portfolios
    4,494       1,832  
Markets
    512       2,166  
                 
      9,221       4,936  
                 
Loan impairment charge as % of gross customer loans and advances (3)
               
Banking & Portfolio
    4.91 %     0.90 %
International Businesses & Portfolios
    6.56 %     2.28 %
Markets
    5.34 %     13.32 %
                 
Total
    5.66 %     2.18 %
                 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
                 
Gross customer loans and advances
               
Banking & Portfolio
    82.0       97.0  
International Businesses & Portfolios
    65.6       79.9  
Markets
    1.9       14.5  
                 
      149.5       191.4  
                 
Risk-weighted assets
               
Banking & Portfolio
    58.2       63.1  
International Businesses & Portfolios
    43.8       50.1  
Markets
    69.3       57.7  
                 
      171.3       170.9  

Note:
(1)
Included in ‘Loss from trading activities’ on page 59.
(2)
Asset backed products include super senior asset backed structures and other asset backed products.
(3)
Includes disposal groups

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
60

 

Non-Core (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Loan impairment losses by donating division and sector
               
                 
UK Retail
               
Mortgages
    5       1  
Personal
    48       42  
Other
    -       62  
                 
Total UK Retail
    53       105  
                 
UK Corporate
               
Manufacturing & infrastructure
    87       42  
Property & construction
    637       281  
Transport
    10       (3 )
Banks & financials
    101       4  
Lombard
    122       61  
Invoice finance
    3       -  
Other
    717       142  
                 
Total UK Corporate
    1,677       527  
                 
Global Banking & Markets
               
Manufacturing & infrastructure
    1,405       1,280  
Property & construction
    1,413       710  
Transport
    178       12  
Telecoms, media & technology
    545       55  
Banks & financials
    567       870  
Other
    619       177  
                 
Total Global Banking & Markets
    4,727       3,104  
                 
Ulster Bank
               
Mortgages
    42       6  
Commercial investment & development
    302       9  
Residential investment & development
    716       229  
Other
    217       60  
Other EMEA
    107       116  
                 
Total Ulster Bank
    1,384       420  
                 
US Retail & Commercial
               
Auto & consumer
    136       140  
Cards
    130       63  
SBO/home equity
    445       321  
Residential mortgages
    55       6  
Commercial real estate
    228       54  
Commercial & other
    85       20  
                 
Total US Retail & Commercial
    1,079       604  
                 
Other
               
Wealth
    251       174  
Global Transaction Services
    49       (2 )
Central items
    1       4  
                 
Total Other
    301       176  
                 
Total impairment losses
    9,221       4,936  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
61


 
Non-Core (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
             
Gross loans and advances to customers by donating division and sector (excluding reverse repurchase agreements)
           
             
UK Retail
           
Mortgages
    1.9       2.2  
Personal
    0.7       1.1  
Other
    -       -  
                 
Total UK Retail
    2.6       3.3  
                 
UK Corporate
               
Manufacturing & infrastructure
    0.3       0.3  
Property & construction
    10.8       11.3  
Lombard
    2.7       3.7  
Invoice finance
    0.4       0.7  
Other
    20.7       22.1  
                 
Total UK Corporate
    34.9       38.1  
                 
Global Banking & Markets
               
Manufacturing & Infrastructure
    17.5          
Property & construction
    25.7          
Transport
    5.8          
Telecoms, media & technology
    3.2          
Banks & financials
    16.0          
Other
    13.5          
                 
Total Global Banking & Markets
    81.7       104.8  
                 
Ulster Bank
               
Mortgages
    6.0       6.5  
Commercial investment & development
    3.0       2.9  
Residential investment & development
    5.6       5.9  
Other
    1.1       1.1  
Other EMEA
    1.0       1.3  
                 
Total Ulster Bank
    16.7       17.7  
                 
US Retail & Commercial
               
Auto & consumer
    3.2       4.2  
Cards
    0.5       0.7  
SBO/home equity
    3.7       5.2  
Residential mortgages
    0.8       1.1  
Commercial real estate
    1.9       3.0  
Commercial & other
    0.9       1.4  
                 
Total US Retail & Commercial
    11.0       15.6  
                 
Other
               
Wealth
    2.6       3.6  
Global Transaction Services
    0.8       1.4  
RBS Insurance
    0.2       0.2  
Central items
    (3.2 )     -  
                 
Total Other
    0.4       5.2  
                 
Total loans and advances to customers
    147.3       184.7  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
62

 
 
Non-Core (continued)


Key points

2009 compared with 2008
·
Losses from trading activities have declined significantly as underlying asset prices rallied. Mark to market values for exposures such as monolines, super senior high grade collateralised debt obligations, and many negative basis trade asset classes have risen over the course of 2009. However, the £1.6 billion gain recorded on banking book hedging in 2008 unwound over the course of the year to a loss of £1.6 billion in 2009, as spreads continued to tighten throughout the year, ending almost in line with origination levels.
   
·
Impairment losses increased to £9.2 billion, reflecting continued weakness in the economic environment, particularly across the corporate and property sectors. There were signs of a slowdown in the rate of provisioning towards the end of the year.
   
·
Staff costs decreased by 14% over the year, or by 20% at constant exchange rates, due to headcount reductions and business divestments, notably Linea Directa and Tesco Personal Finance. Lower depreciation charges followed the 2008 sale of the Angel Trains business.
   
·
Third party assets, excluding derivatives, decreased by £56.9 billion in the year as the division has run down exposures and pursued opportunities to dispose of loan portfolios. Sales of equity stakes, including Bank of China, were concluded while further disposals announced in 2009, including Asian retail and commercial operations, are moving towards completion in 2010.
   
·
Risk weighted assets increased by 0.2% in 2009, and at constant exchange rates increased by 3%. The reduction of 15% since 30 September 2009, reflects active management to reduce trading book exposures, largely offset by the impact of procyclicality, monoline downgrades and adverse market risk.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
63


Allocation methodology for indirect costs


Business Services and Group Centre directly attributable costs have been allocated to the operating divisions, based on their service usage.  Where services span more than one division, an appropriate measure is used to allocate the costs on a basis which management considers reasonable.  Business Services costs are fully allocated and there are no residual unallocated costs. The residual unallocated costs remaining in the Group centre relate to volatile corporate items that do not naturally reside within a division.

Business Services costs were flat on a constant currency basis, compared with 2008. The increase in property costs was principally due to the impact of expanded Group premises in London and the US.

Treasury costs are allocated to operating divisions as follows: term funding costs are allocated or rewarded based on long-term funding gap or surplus; liquidity buffer funding costs are allocated based on share of overall liquidity buffer derived from divisional stresses; and capital cost or benefit is allocated based on share of divisional risk-adjusted RWAs.

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Business Services costs
               
Property
    1,931       1,705  
Operations
    1,471       1,474  
Technology services and support functions
    1,828       1,795  
                 
      5,230       4,974  
                 
Allocated to divisions:
               
UK Retail
    (1,579 )     (1,639 )
UK Corporate
    (436 )     (449 )
Wealth
    (121 )     (123 )
Global Banking & Markets
    (532 )     (472 )
Global Transaction Services
    (876 )     (811 )
Ulster Bank
    (306 )     (255 )
US Retail & Commercial
    (691 )     (560 )
RBS Insurance
    (227 )     (227 )
Non-Core
    (462 )     (438 )
                 
      -       -  
                 
Group centre costs
    851       799  
                 
Allocated to divisions:
               
UK Retail
    (194 )     (212 )
UK Corporate
    (73 )     (69 )
Wealth
    (39 )     (39 )
Global Banking & Markets
    (233 )     (191 )
Global Transaction Services
    (67 )     (53 )
Ulster Bank
    (37 )     (37 )
US Retail & Commercial
    (75 )     (63 )
RBS Insurance
    (43 )     (34 )
Non-Core
    (90 )     (101 )
                 
      -       -  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
64


 
Allocation methodology for indirect costs (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Treasury funding costs
    1,402       1,372  
                 
Allocated to divisions:
               
UK Retail
    (192 )     (182 )
UK Corporate
    (257 )     (213 )
Wealth
    96       (86 )
Global Banking & Markets
    241       (165 )
Global Transaction Services
    154       93  
Ulster Bank
    (49 )     (76 )
US Retail & Commercial
    (132 )     (91 )
RBS Insurance
    (42 )     (25 )
Non-Core
    (1,221 )     (627 )
                 
      -       -  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
65

 
 
Average balance sheet


   
Year ended
   
Year ended
 
   
31 December 2009
   
31 December 2008
 
   
Average
               
Average
             
   
Balance
   
Interest
   
Rate
   
Balance
   
Interest
   
Rate
 
      £m       £m    
%
      £m       £m    
%
 
Assets
                                       
Loans and advances to banks
    53,747     925     1.72       50,589       2,408       4.76  
Loans and advances to customers
    710,726     28,291     3.98       714,790       41,959       5.87  
Debt securities
    139,365     4,686     3.36       121,815       5,571       4.57  
                                             
Interest-earning assets – banking business
    903,838     33,902     3.75       887,194       49,938       5.63  
                                             
Trading business
    291,092                   425,454                  
Non-interest earning assets
    828,550                   728,037                  
                                             
Total assets
    2,023,480                   2,040,685                  
                                             
Liabilities
                                           
Deposits by banks
    129,233     3,041     2.35       159,809       6,576       4.11  
Customer accounts
    472,207     7,980     1.69       487,081       16,360       3.36  
Debt securities in issue
    252,249     5,662     2.24       249,396       10,788       4.33  
Subordinated liabilities
    39,862     1,508     3.78       39,818       2,157       5.42  
Internal funding of trading business
    (75,129 )   (509 )   0.68       (103,754 )     (4,174 )     4.02  
                                             
Interest-bearing liabilities – banking business
    818,422     17,682     2.16       832,350       31,707       3.81  
                                             
Trading business
    331,380                   466,610                  
Non-interest-bearing liabilities
                                           
- demand deposits
    43,605                   37,421                  
- other liabilities
    772,770                   645,760                  
Shareholders’ equity
    57,303                   58,544                  
                                             
Total liabilities and
  shareholders' equity
    2,023,480                   2,040,685                  

Notes:
(1)
Interest receivable and interest payable on trading assets and liabilities are included in income from trading activities.
(2)
Interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities exclude the Retail bancassurance long-term assets and liabilities, attributable to policyholders, in view of their distinct nature.  As a result, interest income has been increased by £20 million (2008 - £84 million).
(3)
Changes in the fair value of interest-bearing financial instruments designated as at fair value through profit or loss are recorded in other operating income in the consolidated income statement.  In the average balance sheet shown above, interest includes increased interest income and interest expense related to these instruments of £46 million (2008 - £332 million) and £350 million (2008 - £860 million) respectively and the average balances have been adjusted accordingly.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
66

 

Average balance sheet (continued)


   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
 2009
   
31 December
2008
 
   
%
   
%
 
             
Average yields, spreads and margins of the banking business
           
Gross yield on interest-earning assets of banking business
    3.75       5.63  
Cost of interest-bearing liabilities of banking business
    (2.16 )     (3.81 )
                 
Interest spread of banking business
    1.59       1.82  
Benefit from interest-free funds
    0.20       0.23  
                 
Net interest margin of banking business
    1.79       2.05  
                 
                 
Average interest rates
               
The Group's base rate
    0.64       4.67  
                 
London inter-bank three month offered rates
               
- Sterling
    1.21       5.51  
- Eurodollar
    0.69       2.92  
- Euro
    1.21       4.63  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
67


 
Condensed consolidated income statement
for the year ended 31 December 2009


 
   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Interest receivable
    33,836       49,522  
Interest payable
    (17,332 )     (30,847 )
                 
Net interest income
    16,504       18,675  
                 
Fees and commissions receivable
    9,831       9,831  
Fees and commissions payable
    (2,822 )     (2,386 )
Income/(loss) from trading activities
    3,881       (8,477 )
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -  
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    1,962       1,899  
Insurance net premium income
    5,544       6,326  
                 
Non-interest income
    22,186       7,193  
                 
Total income
    38,690       25,868  
                 
Staff costs
               
- excluding pension schemes curtailment gains
    (11,783 )     (10,410 )
- pension schemes curtailment gains
    2,148       -  
Premises and equipment
    (3,087 )     (2,593 )
Other administrative expenses
    (5,584 )     (5,464 )
Depreciation and amortisation
    (2,809 )     (3,154 )
Write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets
    (363 )     (32,581 )
                 
Operating expenses*
    (21,478 )     (54,202 )
                 
Profit/(loss) before other operating charges and impairment losses
    17,212       (28,334 )
Insurance net claims
    (4,857 )     (4,430 )
Impairment losses
    (14,950 )     (8,072 )
                 
Operating loss before tax
    (2,595 )     (40,836 )
Tax credit
    371       2,323  
                 
Loss from continuing operations
    (2,224 )     (38,513 )
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
    (99 )     3,971  
                 
Loss for the year
    (2,323 )     (34,542 )
Minority interests
    (349 )     10,832  
Preference shareholders
    (878 )     (536 )
Paid-in equity holders
    (57 )     (60 )
                 
Loss attributable to ordinary and B shareholders
    (3,607 )     (24,306 )
                 
                 
*Operating expenses include:
               
                 
Integration and restructuring costs
               
- administrative expenses
    1,268       1,321  
- depreciation and amortisation
    18       36  
                 
      1,286       1,357  
Amortisation of purchased intangible assets
    272       443  
                 
      1,558       1,800  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
68

 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income
for the year ended 31 December 2009


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Loss for the year
    (2,323 )     (34,542 )
                 
Other comprehensive income:
               
Available-for-sale financial assets
    2,016       (7,406 )
Cash flow hedges
    684       (1,456 )
Currency translation
    (3,300 )     15,425  
Actuarial losses on defined benefit plans
    (3,665 )     (2,287 )
Tax on other comprehensive income
    430       2,786  
                 
Other comprehensive (loss)/income for the year, net of tax
    (3,835 )     7,062  
                 
Total comprehensive loss for the year
    (6,158 )     (27,480 )
                 
Attributable to:
               
Minority interests
    (1,346 )     (4,332 )
Preference shareholders
    878       536  
Paid-in equity holders
    57       60  
Ordinary and B shareholders
    (5,747 )     (23,744 )
                 
      (6,158 )     (27,480 )


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
69

 
 
Condensed consolidated balance sheet
at 31 December 2009


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Assets
               
Cash and balances at central banks
    52,261       12,400  
Net loans and advances to banks
    56,656       79,426  
Reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing
    35,097       58,771  
Loans and advances to banks
    91,753       138,197  
Net loans and advances to customers
    687,353       835,409  
Reverse repurchase agreements and stock borrowing
    41,040       39,313  
Loans and advances to customers
    728,393       874,722  
Debt securities
    267,254       267,549  
Equity shares
    19,528       26,330  
Settlement balances
    12,033       17,832  
Derivatives
    441,454       992,559  
Intangible assets
    17,847       20,049  
Property, plant and equipment
    19,397       18,949  
Deferred taxation
    7,039       7,082  
Prepayments, accrued income and other assets
    20,985       24,402  
Assets of disposal groups
    18,542       1,581  
                 
Total assets
    1,696,486       2,401,652  
                 
Liabilities
               
Bank deposits
    104,138       174,378  
Repurchase agreements and stock lending
    38,006       83,666  
Deposits by banks
    142,144       258,044  
Customer deposits
    545,849       581,369  
Repurchase agreements and stock lending
    68,353       58,143  
Customer accounts
    614,202       639,512  
Debt securities in issue
    267,568       300,289  
Settlement balances and short positions
    50,876       54,277  
Derivatives
    424,141       971,364  
Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities
    30,327       31,482  
Retirement benefit liabilities
    2,963       2,032  
Deferred taxation
    2,811       4,165  
Insurance liabilities
    10,281       9,976  
Subordinated liabilities
    37,652       49,154  
Liabilities of disposal groups
    18,890       859  
                 
Total liabilities
    1,601,855       2,321,154  
                 
Equity
               
Minority interests
    16,895       21,619  
Owners’ equity*
               
  Called up share capital
    14,630       9,898  
  Reserves
    63,106       48,981  
                 
Total equity
    94,631       80,498  
                 
Total liabilities and equity
    1,696,486       2,401,652  
                 
                 
*Owners’ equity attributable to:
               
Ordinary and B shareholders
    69,890       45,525  
Other equity owners
    7,846       13,354  
                 
      77,736       58,879  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
70

 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the year ended 31 December 2009


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Called-up share capital
               
At beginning of year
    9,898       2,530  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of placing and open offers
    4,227       5,728  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of rights issue
    -       1,531  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of capitalisation issue
    -       101  
B shares issued
    510       -  
Preference shares issued in respect of placing and open offer
    -       5  
Other shares issued during the year
    -       3  
Preference shares redeemed during the year
    (5 )     -  
                 
At end of year
    14,630       9,898  
                 
Paid-in equity
               
At beginning of year
    1,073       1,073  
Securities redeemed during the year
    (308 )     -  
Transfer to retained earnings
    (200 )     -  
                 
At end of year
    565       1,073  
                 
Share premium account
               
At beginning of year
    27,471       17,322  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of placing and open offer, net of £95 million expenses
    1,047       -  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of rights issue, net of £246 million expenses
    -       10,469  
Ordinary shares issued in respect of capitalisation issue
    -       (101 )
Expenses of placing and open offer
    -       (265 )
Other shares issued during the year
    -       46  
Preference shares redeemed during the year
    (4,995 )     -  
                 
At end of year
    23,523       27,471  
                 
Merger reserve
               
At beginning of year
    10,881       10,881  
Issue of B shares, net of £399 million expenses
    24,591       -  
Placing and open offer
    -       14,273  
Transfer to retained earnings
    (9,950 )     (14,273 )
                 
At end of year
    25,522       10,881  
                 
Available-for-sale reserves
               
At beginning of year
    (3,561 )     1,032  
Unrealised gains/(losses) in the year
    1,202       (6,808 )
Realised losses in the year
    981       842  
Taxation
    (377 )     1,373  
                 
At end of year
    (1,755 )     (3,561 )
                 
Cash flow hedging reserve
               
At beginning of year
    (876 )     (555 )
Amount recognised in equity during the year
    380       (603 )
Amount transferred from equity to earnings in the year
    513       198  
Taxation
    (269 )     84  
                 
At end of year
    (252 )     (876 )
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
71

 
 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the year ended 31 December 2009 (continued)


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Foreign exchange reserve
               
At beginning of year
    6,385       (426 )
Retranslation of net assets
    (2,322 )     11,970  
Foreign currency gains/(losses) on hedges of net assets
    456       (5,801 )
Taxation
    9       642  
                 
At end of year
    4,528       6,385  
                 
Capital redemption reserve
               
At beginning and end of year
    170       170  
                 
Contingent capital reserve
               
At beginning of year
    -       -  
Contingent capital agreement - consideration payable
    (1,208 )     -  
                 
At end of year
    (1,208 )     -  
                 
Retained earnings
               
At beginning of year
    7,542       21,072  
Loss attributable to ordinary and B shareholders and other equity owners
    (2,672 )     (23,710 )
Ordinary dividends paid
    -       (2,312 )
Equity preference dividends paid
    (878 )     (536 )
Paid-in equity dividends paid, net of tax
    (57 )     (60 )
Transfer from paid-in equity
    200       -  
Equity owners gain on withdrawal of minority interest
               
- gross
    629       -  
- taxation
    (176 )     -  
Transfer from merger reserve
    9,950       14,273  
Actuarial losses recognised in retirement benefit schemes
               
- gross
    (3,756 )     (1,807 )
- taxation
    1,043       472  
Net cost of shares bought and used to satisfy share-based payments
    (16 )     (19 )
Share-based payments
               
- gross
    325       177  
- taxation
    -       (8 )
                 
At end of year
    12,134       7,542  
                 
Own shares held
               
At beginning of year
    (104 )     (61 )
Shares purchased during the year
    (33 )     (64 )
Shares issued under employee share schemes
    16       21  
                 
At end of year
    (121 )     (104 )
                 
Owners’ equity at end of year
    77,736       58,879  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
72

 
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity
for the year ended 31 December 2009 (continued)


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Minority interests
               
At beginning of year
    21,619       38,388  
Currency translation adjustments and other movements
    (1,434 )     9,256  
Acquisition of ABN AMRO
    -       356  
Profit/(loss) attributable to minority interests
    349       (10,832 )
Dividends paid
    (313 )     (285 )
Movements in available-for-sale securities
               
- unrealised gains/(losses) in the year
    299       (1,288 )
- realised gains in the year
    (466 )     (152 )
- taxation
    (36 )     (7 )
Movements in cash flow hedging reserves
               
- amount recognised in equity during the year
    (209 )     (1,015 )
- amount transferred from equity to earnings in the year
    -       (36 )
- taxation
    59       220  
Actuarial gains/(losses) recognised in retirement benefit schemes
               
- gross
    91       (480 )
- taxation
    1       2  
Equity raised
    9       1,071  
Equity withdrawn and disposals
    (2,445 )     (13,579 )
Transfer to retained earnings
    (629 )     -  
                 
At end of year
    16,895       21,619  
                 
Total equity at end of year
    94,631       80,498  
                 
Total comprehensive income recognised in the statement of changes in equity is attributable as follows:
               
Minority interests
    (1,346 )     (4,332 )
Preference shareholders
    878       536  
Paid-in equity holders
    57       60  
Ordinary and B shareholders
    (5,747 )     (23,744 )
                 
      (6,158 )     (27,480 )
 

RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
73

 
 
Condensed consolidated cash flow statement
for the year ended 31 December 2009


   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Operating activities
               
Operating loss before tax
    (2,595 )     (40,836 )
Operating (loss)/profit before tax on discontinued operations
    (101 )     4,208  
Adjustments for non-cash items
    18,387       5,049  
                 
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from trading activities
    15,691       (31,579 )
Changes in operating assets and liabilities
    (15,964 )     (42,219 )
                 
Net cash flows from operating activities before tax
    (273 )     (73,798 )
Income taxes paid
    (719 )     (1,540 )
                 
Net cash flows from operating activities
    (992 )     (75,338 )
                 
Net cash flows from investing activities
    54       16,997  
                 
Net cash flows from financing activities
    18,791       15,102  
                 
Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
    (8,592 )     29,209  
                 
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
    9,261       (14,030 )
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year
    134,925       148,955  
                 
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year
    144,186       134,925  

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
74

 

Notes


1. Basis of preparation
The directors have reviewed the Group's forecasts, projections and other relevant evidence. The directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future.  Thus, the results for the year ended 31 December 2009 have been prepared on a going concern basis.

2. Accounting policies
The annual accounts of the Group are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (“IASB”) and interpretations issued by the International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee of the IASB (together “IFRS”) as adopted by the European Union (“EU”).  It also complies with IFRS as issued by the IASB.

The Group has implemented Vesting Conditions and Cancellation amendments to IFRS 2 Share-based Payment.  The amendments change the way the cancellation of share schemes by an employee are treated.  Previously, cancellations resulted in credits as the charge was trued up to reflect the reduction in the number of shares that vest.  Under the amendments, cancellations result in the amount that would otherwise have been recognised over the remainder of the vesting period being charged to profit or loss immediately. Implementation of these amendments has increased the charge for the Group’s share schemes in 2009 by £325 million.  The Group’s income statement, related notes and cash flow statement for the year ended 31 December 2008 has been restated increasing loss before tax by £169 million.  There is no effect on the Group’s balance sheet at 31 December.

IAS 1 (Revised 2007) Presentation of Financial Statements has introduced a number of changes in the format and content of financial statements including a statement of changes in equity (showing the components of changes in equity for the period) as a primary financial statement and a statement of comprehensive income immediately following the income statement.

The Group has adopted Improving Disclosures about Financial Instruments (Amendments to IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures). They expand disclosures required about fair value measurement and liquidity risk.

The Group has extended its accounting policy on derecognition to cover the redemption or settlement of issued debt:

On the redemption or settlement of debt securities (including subordinated liabilities) issued by the Group, the Group derecognises the debt instrument and records a gain or loss being the difference between the debt’s carrying amount and the cost of redemption or settlement.  The same treatment applies where the debt is exchanged for a new debt issue that has terms substantially different from those of the existing debt.  The assessment of whether the terms of the new debt instrument are substantially different takes into account qualitative and quantitative characteristics including a comparison of the discounted present value of the cash flows under the new terms with the discounted present value of the remaining cash flows of the original debt issue.

There are a number of other changes to IFRS that were effective from 1 January 2009.  They have had no material effect on the Group’s financial statements.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
75

 
 
Notes (continued)


3. Restatements
Divisional results for 2008 have been restated to reflect the Group’s new organisational structure that includes a Non-Core division comprising individual assets, portfolios and lines of business that the Group intends to run off or dispose.  The Non-Core division is reported separately from the divisions which form the Core Group.  In addition, separate reporting of Business Services (formerly Group Manufacturing) and Centre results has changed and, with the exception of certain items of a one off nature, costs incurred are now allocated to the customer-facing divisions and included in the measurement of the returns which they generate.  The changes do not affect the Group’s results.  Comparatives have been restated accordingly.

The results for 2008 have been restated for the amendment to IFRS 2 ‘Share-based Payment’.  This has resulted in an increase in staff costs amounting to £169 million in 2008.

4. Goodwill

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Amortisation and write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets
    363       32,581  

The write-down of goodwill for the year ended 31 December 2009 principally relates to ABN AMRO and NatWest goodwill allocated to Non-Core businesses.

5. Pensions

   
2009
   
2008
 
Net pension deficit/(surplus)
    £m       £m  
                 
At 1 January
    1,996       (115 )
Currency translation and other adjustments
    (114 )     144  
Income statement
               
- Curtailment gains
    (2,148 )     -  
- Pension cost
    659       490  
Net actuarial losses
    3,665       2,287  
Contributions by employer
    (1,153 )     (810 )
                 
At 31 December
    2,905       1,996  
                 
Net assets of schemes in surplus
    (58 )     (36 )
Net liabilities of schemes in deficit
    2,963       2,032  

Curtailment gains of £2,148 million have been recognised in 2009 arising from changes to pension benefits in the main UK scheme and certain other subsidiaries schemes due to the capping of future salary increases that will count for pension purposes to the lower of 2% or the rate of inflation in any year.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
76

 
 
Notes (continued)


5. Pensions (continued)

   
2009
   
2008
 
Pension costs (excluding curtailment gains)
    £m       £m  
                 
Defined benefit schemes
    659       490  
Defined contribution schemes
    126       148  
                 
      785       638  

Excluding curtailment gains, total pension costs for the year ended 31 December 2009 amounted to £785 million (2008 - £638 million). Defined benefit schemes charges are based on the actuarially determined pension cost rates at 31 December 2008.

At 31 December 2009, increased benefit obligations, reflecting lower discount rates and higher assumed inflation, have been partially offset by increased asset values. This has resulted in net actuarial losses for the year of £3,665 million (2008 - £2,287 million) and net defined benefit pension liabilities of £2,905 million at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £1,996 million).

The most recent funding valuation of the main UK scheme, as at 31 March 2007, showed a surplus of assets over liabilities of £0.7 billion.  The next valuation is due as at 31 March 2010 and the Group expects this valuation to show that liabilities exceed the value of the assets.  Following this valuation, the Group and scheme Trustees will agree the level of contributions to be paid to the scheme.  This could result in the amount of contributions payable in 2010 and subsequent years being materially different from the current rates based on the previous valuation.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
77

 
 
Notes (continued)


6. Loan impairment provisions
Operating loss is stated after charging loan impairment losses of £14,134 million (2008 - £7,091 million). The balance sheet loan impairment provisions increased in the year from £11,016 million to £17,283 million and the movements thereon were:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
At beginning of year
    11,016       6,452  
Transfers to disposal groups
    (324 )     (767 )
Currency translation and other adjustments
    (530 )     1,441  
Disposals
    (65 )     (178 )
Amounts written-off
    (6,939 )     (3,148 )
Recoveries of amounts previously written-off
    399       319  
Charge to income statement
    14,134       7,091  
Unwind of discount
    (408 )     (194 )
                 
      17,283       11,016  

The provision at 31 December 2009 includes £157 million (2008 - £127 million) in respect of loans and advances to banks. The charge to the income statement in the table above excludes £816 million (2008 - £981 million) relating to available-for-sale securities.

7. Taxation
The credit for taxation differs from the tax credit computed by applying the standard UK corporation tax rate of 28% (2008 - 28.5%) as follows:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Loss before tax from continuing operations
    (2,595 )     (40,836 )
                 
Expected tax credit at 28% (2008 – 28.5%)
    (727 )     (11,638 )
Non-deductible goodwill impairment
    102       8,292  
Unrecognised timing differences
    (274 )     274  
Other non-deductible items
    508       378  
Non-taxable items:
               
- gain on redemption of own debt
    (693 )     -  
- other
    (410 )     (491 )
Taxable foreign exchange movements
    (1 )     80  
Foreign profits taxed at other rates
    320       203  
Losses in year not recognised
    780       942  
Losses brought forward and utilised
    (94 )     (11 )
Adjustments in respect of prior periods
    118       (352 )
                 
Actual tax credit
    (371 )     (2,323 )


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
78

 
 
Notes (continued)


8. Profit/(loss) attributable to minority interests

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Trust preferred securities
    39       65  
Investment in Bank of China
    359       78  
Sempra
    234       164  
ABN AMRO
    (295 )     (11,153 )
Other
    12       14  
                 
Profit/(loss) attributable to minority interests
    349       (10,832 )

9. Other owners’ dividends

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Preference shareholders
               
Non-cumulative preference shares of US$0.01
    342       293  
Non-cumulative preference shares of €0.01
    201       183  
Non-cumulative preference shares of £1
               
- issued to UK Financial Investments Limited (1)
    274       -  
- other
    61       60  
                 
Paid-in equity holders
               
Interest on securities classified as equity, net of tax
    57       60  
                 
      935       596  

Note:
(1)
Includes £50 million redemption premium on repayment of preference shares.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
79

 
Notes (continued)


10. Earnings per ordinary and B share
Earnings per ordinary and B share have been calculated based on the following:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Earnings
               
Loss from continuing operations attributable  to ordinary and B shareholders
    (3,535 )     (24,220 )
Gain on redemption of paid-in equity
    200       -  
                 
Adjusted loss from continuing operations attributable to ordinary and B shareholders
    (3,335 )     (24,220 )
Add back finance on dilutive convertible securities
    -       -  
                 
Diluted loss from continuing operations attributable to ordinary and B shareholders
    (3,335 )     (24,220 )
                 
Loss from discontinued operations  attributable to ordinary and B shareholders
    (72 )     (86 )
                 
Number of shares (millions)
               
Ordinary shares in issue during the year
    51,494       16,563  
B shares in issue during the year
    1,397       -  
                 
Weighted average number of ordinary and B shares in issue during the year
    52,891       16,563  
Effect of dilutive share options and convertible securities
    438       -  
                 
Diluted weighted average number of ordinary and B shares in issue during the year
    53,329       16,563  
                 
Basic loss per ordinary and B share from continuing operations
    (6.3p )     (146.2p )
                 
Diluted loss per ordinary and B share from continuing operations
    (6.3p )     (146.2p )
                 
Basic loss per ordinary and B share from discontinued operations
    (0.1p )     (0.5p )
                 
Diluted loss per ordinary and B share from discontinued operations
    (0.1p )     (0.5p )

11. Dividends
The Group has undertaken that, unless otherwise agreed with the European  Commission, neither the company nor any of its direct or indirect subsidiaries (excluding companies in the ABN AMRO Group) will pay external investors any dividends or coupons on existing hybrid capital instruments (including preference shares, B shares and upper and lower tier 2 instruments) from a date starting not later than 30 April 2010 and for a period of two years thereafter ("the Deferral period"), or exercise any call rights in relation to these capital instruments between 24 November 2009 and the end of the deferral period, unless there is a legal obligation to do so.  Hybrid capital instruments issued after 24 November 2009 will generally not be subject to the restriction on dividend or coupon payments or call options.
 

RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
80


 
Notes (continued)


12. Discontinued operations and assets and liabilities of disposal groups

(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
 
   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m        £m  
                 
Discontinued operations:
               
Total income
    -       2,571  
Operating expenses
    -       (1,407 )
Impairment losses
    -       (564 )
Profit before tax
    -       600  
Gain on disposal
    -       3,859  
Operating profit before tax
    -       4,459  
Tax on profit
    -       (204 )
Tax on gain on disposal
    -       (33 )
Profit after tax
    -       4,222  
                 
Business acquired exclusively with a view to disposal:
               
Loss after tax
    (99 )     (251 )
                 
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
    (99 )     3,971  

Discontinued operations for 2008 reflect the results of Banco Real sold to Santander on 24 July 2008.
 
Businesses acquired exclusively with a view to disposal comprise those ABN AMRO businesses, including Banca Antonveneta, Asset Management and Private Equity, classified as disposal groups on the acquisition of ABN AMRO on 17 October 2007. The Asset Management business was sold to Fortis on 3 April 2008. Banca Antonveneta, excluding its subsidiary Interbanca, was sold to Banca Monte dei Paschi de Siena S.p.A. on 30 May 2008.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
81

 
 
Notes (continued)


12. Discontinued operations and assets and liabilities of disposal groups (continued)

Assets and liabilities of disposal groups
 
   
2009
       
   
Sempra
   
Other
   
Total
   
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                             
Assets of disposal groups
                           
Cash and balances at central banks
    -     129     129       -  
Loans and advances to banks
    314     74     388       -  
Loans and advances to customers
    306     2,910     3,216       -  
Debt securities and equity shares
    56     848     904       -  
Derivatives
    6,361     -     6,361       -  
Intangible assets
    238     -     238       -  
Settlement balances
    1,579     -     1,579       -  
Property, plant and equipment
    92     44     136       66  
Other assets
    5,257     160     5,417       -  
                             
Discontinued operations and other disposal groups
    14,203     4,165     18,368       66  
Assets acquired exclusively with a view to disposal
    -     174     174       1,515  
                             
      14,203     4,339     18,542       1,581  
                             
Liabilities of disposal groups
                           
Deposits by banks
    560     58     618       -  
Customer accounts
    1,961     6,946     8,907       -  
Derivatives
    6,262     421     6,683       -  
Settlement balances
    950     -     950       -  
Subordinated liabilities
    -     6     6       -  
Other liabilities
    1,260     415     1,675       -  
                             
Discontinued operations and other disposal groups
    10,993     7,846     18,839       -  
Liabilities acquired exclusively with a view  to disposal
    -     51     51       859  
                             
      10,993     7,897     18,890       859  

At 31 December 2009, disposal groups comprise the assets and liabilities of:

·
RBS Sempra Commodities;
   
·
the Group’s retail and commercial businesses across Asia and wholesale banking business in Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan and Pakistan;
   
·
certain of the Group’s commercial lending business in Latin America; and
   
·
the remaining ABN AMRO business, primarily Private Equity, classified as disposal groups on the acquisition of ABN AMRO.

At 31 December 2008, disposal groups related principally to the assets and liabilities of the remaining ABN AMRO business, primarily Private Equity, classified as disposal groups on the acquisition of ABN AMRO.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
82


 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments

Classification
The following tables analyse the Group’s financial assets and liabilities in accordance with the categories of financial instruments in IAS 39 ‘Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement’.  Assets and liabilities outside the scope of IAS 39 are shown separately.

   
Held-for
trading
   
Designated at fair value
through
 profit or loss
   
Available-for-sale
   
Loans and receivables
   
Other financial instruments (amortised cost)
   
Finance
leases
   
Non
financial
 assets/
liabilities
   
Total
 
2009
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                   
Cash and balances at central banks
    -     -     -     52,261     -     -     -     52,261  
Loans and advances to banks
    45,449     -     -     46,304     -     -     -     91,753  
Loans and advances to customers
    42,277     1,981     -     671,037     -     13,098     -     728,393  
Debt securities
    111,482     2,603     143,298     9,871     -     -     -     267,254  
Equity shares
    14,443     2,192     2,893     -     -     -     -     19,528  
Settlement balances
    -     -     -     12,033     -     -     -     12,033  
Derivatives (1)
    441,454     -     -     -     -     -     -     441,454  
Intangible assets
    -     -     -     -     -     -     17,847     17,847  
Property, plant and equipment
    -     -     -     -     -     -     19,397     19,397  
Deferred taxation
    -     -     -     -     -     -     7,039     7,039  
Prepayments, accrued income and other assets
    -     -     -     1,421     -     -     19,564     20,985  
Assets of disposal groups
    -     -     -     -     -     -     18,542     18,542  
                                                   
Total assets
    655,105     6,776     146,191     792,927     -     13,098     82,389     1,696,486  
                                                   
Deposits by banks
    53,609     -     -     -     88,535     -     -     142,144  
Customer accounts
    52,868     8,580     -     -     552,754     -     -     614,202  
Debt securities in issue
    3,925     41,537     -     -     222,106     -     -     267,568  
Settlement balances and short positions
    40,463     -     -     -     10,413     -     -     50,876  
Derivatives (1)
    424,141     -     -     -     -     -     -     424,141  
Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities
    -     -     -     -     1,889     467     27,971     30,327  
Retirement benefit liabilities
    -     -     -     -     -     -     2,963     2,963  
Deferred taxation
    -     -     -     -     -     -     2,811     2,811  
Insurance liabilities
    -     -     -     -     -     -     10,281     10,281  
Subordinated liabilities
    -     1,277     -     -     36,375     -     -     37,652  
Liabilities of disposal groups
    -     -     -     -     -     -     18,890     18,890  
                                                   
Total liabilities
    575,006     51,394     -     -     912,072     467     62,916     1,601,855  
                                                                 
Equity
                                                            94,631  
                                                                 
                                                              1,696,486  

Note:
(1)
Held-for-trading derivatives include hedging derivatives.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
83


 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Classification (continued)
 
   
Held-for-trading
   
Designated at fair value
 through
 profit or
 loss
   
Available-for-sale
   
Loans and
receivables
   
Other financial instruments (amortised cost)
   
Finance
 leases
   
Non 
financial 
 assets/ 
liabilities
   
Total
 
2008
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                                 
Cash and balances at central banks
    -       -       -       12,400       -       -       -       12,400  
Loans and advances to banks
    56,234       -       -       81,963       -       -       -       138,197  
Loans and advances to customers
    51,501       2,141       -       806,627       -       14,453       -       874,722  
Debt securities
    116,280       5,428       132,856       12,985       -       -       -       267,549  
Equity shares
    17,054       2,101       7,175       -       -       -       -       26,330  
Settlement balances
    -       -       -       17,832       -       -       -       17,832  
Derivatives (1)
    992,559       -       -       -       -       -       -       992,559  
Intangible assets
    -       -       -       -       -       -       20,049       20,049  
Property, plant and equipment
    -       -       -       -       -       -       18,949       18,949  
Deferred taxation
    -       -       -       -       -       -       7,082       7,082  
Prepayments, accrued income  and other assets
    -       -       -       1,326       -       -       23,076       24,402  
Assets of disposal groups
    -       -       -       -       -       -       1,581       1,581  
                                                                 
Total assets
    1,233,628       9,670       140,031       933,133       -       14,453       70,737       2,401,652  
                                                                 
Deposits by banks
    81,154       -       -       -       176,890       -       -       258,044  
Customer accounts
    55,926       8,054       -       -       575,532       -       -       639,512  
Debt securities in issue
    3,992       47,451       -       -       248,846       -       -       300,289  
Settlement balances and short positions
    42,536       -       -       -       11,741       -       -       54,277  
Derivatives (1)
    971,364       -       -       -       -       -       -       971,364  
Accruals, deferred income and other liabilities
    260       -       -       -       1,619       22       29,581       31,482  
Retirement benefit liabilities
    -       -       -       -       -       -       2,032       2,032  
Deferred taxation
    -       -       -       -       -       -       4,165       4,165  
Insurance liabilities
    -       -       -       -       -       -       9,976       9,976  
Subordinated liabilities
    -       1,509       -       -       47,645       -       -       49,154  
Liabilities of disposal groups
    -       -       -       -       -       -       859       859  
                                                                 
Total liabilities
    1,155,232       57,014       -       -       1,062,273       22       46,613       2,321,154  
                                                                 
Equity
                                                            80,498  
                                                                 
                                                              2,401,652  

Note:
(1)
Held-for-trading derivatives include hedging derivatives.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
84


 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Valuation of financial instruments carried at fair value
Certain aspects relating to the valuation of financial instruments carried at fair value are discussed below.

Valuation reserves
When valuing financial instruments in the trading book, adjustments are made to mid-market valuations to cover bid-offer spread, liquidity, credit risk and future administrative costs.

Valuation reserves and adjustments comprise:

   
2009
   
 2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Credit valuation adjustments:
               
Monoline insurers
    3,796       5,988  
CDPCs
    499       1,311  
Other counterparties
    1,588       1,738  
                 
      5,883       9,037  
                 
Bid-offer and liquidity reserves
    2,814       3,260  
                 
      8,697       12,297  
Debit valuation adjustments:
               
Debt securities in issue
    (2,331 )     (2,373 )
Derivatives
    (467 )     (450 )
                 
Total debit valuation adjustments
    (2,798 )     (2,823 )
                 
Total reserves
    5,899       9,474  

Credit valuation adjustments (CVA) represent an estimate of the adjustment to fair value that a market participant would make to incorporate the credit risk inherent in counterparty derivative exposures. The Group makes such credit adjustments to derivative exposures it has to counterparties, as well as debit valuation adjustments (DVA) to liabilities issued by the Group. CVA is discussed in Risk and capital management - Market turmoil - Credit valuation adjustments (page 149). Bid-offer, liquidity reserves and own credit are discussed below.

Bid-offer and liquidity reserves
Fair value positions are adjusted to bid or offer levels by marking individual cash based positions directly to bid or offer or by taking bid-offer reserves calculated on a portfolio basis for derivatives exposures.

Bid-offer and liquidity reserves reduced during the year, driven mainly by the tightening of spread across all asset classes in the first half of the year and risk reductions in the second half of the year, most notably in the interest rate trading business, partly off-set by additional reserves reflecting the implementation of a revised derivative discounting approach.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
85


 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Own credit
In accordance with IFRS, when valuing financial liabilities recorded at fair value, the Group takes into account the effect of its own credit standing.  The categories of financial liabilities on which own credit spread adjustments are made are issued debt, including issued structured notes, and derivatives.  An own credit adjustment is applied to positions where it is believed that counterparties would consider the Group’s creditworthiness when pricing trades.

For issued debt and structured notes, this adjustment is based on independent quotes from market participants for the debt issuance spreads above average inter-bank rates, (at a range of tenors) which the market would demand when purchasing new senior or sub-debt issuances from the Group.  Where necessary, these quotes are interpolated using a curve shape derived from CDS prices.

The reserve movement between periods will not equate to the reported profit or loss for own credit. The balance sheet reserves are stated by conversion of underlying currency balances at spot rates for each period, however the income statement includes intra-period foreign exchange sell-offs.

The table below shows the own credit spread adjustments on liabilities recorded during the year ended 31 December 2009.

   
Debt securities in issue
             
   
Held-for
-trading (1)
   
Designated at fair
 value through
 profit and loss
   
Total
   
Derivatives (2)
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m     £m  
                                         
Cumulative own credit adjustment:
                                       
2009
    1,237     1,094     2,331     467     2,798  
                                         
2008
    1,346       1,027       2,373       450       2,823  
                                         
                                         
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
                                         
Book value of underlying liabilities:
                                       
2009
    36.6     13.3     49.9     16.8     66.7  
                                         
2008
    25.5       16.9       42.4       43.5       85.9  

Notes:
(1)
The held-for-trading portfolio consists of wholesale and retail note issuances.
(2)
The effect of changes in foreign exchange rates, new issues and redemptions are not captured separately.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
86


 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Valuation hierarchy
The table below shows the financial instruments carried at fair value, by valuation method.

   
Total
   
Level 1
   
Level 2
   
Level 3
   
Level 3 sensitivity
 
2009
 
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
      £m       £m  
                               
Assets
                             
Loans and advances:
                             
- banks
    45.4     -     45.4     -     -     -  
- customers
    44.3     -     43.2     1.1     80     (40 )
                                       
Debt securities
                                     
- government
    146.8     130.1     16.7     -     -     -  
- RMBS
    57.7     -     57.2     0.5     30     (10 )
- CMBS
    4.1     -     4.0     0.1     30     -  
- CDOs
    3.6     -     2.6     1.0     130     (80 )
- CLOs
    8.8     -     8.0     0.8     80     (50 )
- other ABS
    6.1     -     5.2     0.9     120     (40 )
- corporate
    11.4     -     10.8     0.6     70     (20 )
- other (3)
    18.9     0.2     18.5     0.2     10     (30 )
                                       
      257.4     130.3     123.0     4.1     470     (230 )
Equity shares
    19.5     15.4     2.6     1.5     280     (220 )
Derivatives
                                     
- foreign exchange
    69.4     -     69.2     0.2     10     -  
- interest rate
    323.6     0.3     321.8     1.5     80     (100 )
- equities
    6.5     0.4     5.8     0.3     20     (20 )
- commodities
    0.3     -     0.3     -     -     -  
- credit – APS
    1.4     -     -     1.4     1,370     (1,540 )
- credit – other
    40.3     0.1     37.2     3.0     420     (360 )
                                       
      441.5     0.8     434.3     6.4     1,900     (2,020 )
                                       
                                       
Total assets
    808.1     146.5     648.5     13.1     2,730     (2,510 )
                                       
Liabilities
                                     
Deposits:
                                     
- banks
    53.6     -     53.6     -     -     -  
- customers
    61.4     -     61.3     0.1     -     (10 )
Debt securities in issue
    45.5     -     43.2     2.3     50     (10 )
Short positions
    40.5     27.1     13.2     0.2     10     (20 )
Derivatives
                                   
- foreign exchange
    63.9     -     63.9     -     -     -  
- interest rate
    311.3     0.1     310.4   0.8     40     (60 )
- equities
    9.5     1.0     8.3     0.2     20     (70 )
- commodities
    0.2     -     0.2   -     -     -  
- credit
    39.2     -     38.2     1.0     80     (100 )
                                       
      424.1     1.1     421.0     2.0     140     (230 )
Other financial liabilities (4)
    1.3     -     1.3     -     -     -  
                                       
                                       
Total liabilities
    626.4     28.2     593.6     4.6     200     (270 )


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
87

 
 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Valuation hierarchy (continued)

   
Total
   
Level 1
   
Level 2
   
Level 3
   
Level 3 sensitivity
 
2008
 
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
      £m       £m  
                                         
Assets
                                       
Loans and advances:
                                       
- banks
    56.2       -       56.2       -       -       -  
- customers
    53.6       -       50.5       3.1       70       (50 )
                                                 
Debt securities
                                               
- government
    105.9       68.7       37.2       -       -       -  
- RMBS
    72.8       -       72.3       0.5       40       (90 )
- CMBS
    3.9       -       3.3       0.6       30       (30 )
- CDOs
    8.6       -       6.9       1.7       410       (440 )
- CLOs
    8.7       -       7.7       1.0       40       (40 )
- other ABS
    8.1       -       6.6       1.5       10       (10 )
- corporate
    18.0       0.9       15.8       1.3       40       (40 )
- other (3)
    28.5       4.1       24.1       0.3       -       -  
                                                 
      254.5       73.7       173.9       6.9       570       (650 )
Equity shares
    26.4       15.4       9.9       1.1       80       (160 )
Derivatives
                                               
- foreign exchange
    173.3       2.2       171.0       0.1       -       -  
- interest rate
    654.8       0.4       652.9       1.5       80       (80 )
- equities
    9.2       0.5       8.6       0.1       -       (10 )
- commodities: Sempra
    11.6       -       11.0       0.6       50       (50 )
- commodities : other
    1.4       -       1.4       -       -       -  
- credit
    142.3       0.8       133.5       8.0       1,030       (1,200 )
                                                 
      992.6       3.9       978.4       10.3       1,160       (1,340 )
                                                 
                                                 
Total assets
    1,383.3       93.0       1,268.9       21.4       1,880       (2,200 )
                                                 
Liabilities
                                               
Deposits:
                                               
- banks
    81.1       -       81.1       -       -       -  
- customers
    64.0       -       63.7       0.3       -       -  
Debt securities in issue
    51.4       -       47.0       4.4       190       (170 )
Short positions
    42.5       36.0       6.5       -       -       -  
Derivatives
                                               
- foreign exchange
    173.4       2.2       171.2       -       -       -  
- interest rate
    641.0       0.4       639.7       0.9       90       (90 )
- equities
    12.2       0.9       11.2       0.1       -       -  
- commodities: Sempra
    10.9       -       10.5       0.4       30       (30 )
- commodities: other
    1.2       -       1.2       -       -       -  
- credit
    132.7       0.1       130.0       2.6       180       (160 )
                                                 
      971.4       3.6       963.8       4.0       300       (280 )
Other financial liabilities (4)
    1.8       -       1.5       0.3       60       (40 )
                                                 
                                                 
Total liabilities
    1,212.2       39.6       1,163.6       9.0       550       (490 )


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
88

 
 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Valuation hierarchy (continued)

Amounts classified as available-for-sale comprise:

   
Total
   
Level 1
   
Level 2
   
Level 3
   
Level 3 sensitivity
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
      £m       £m  
                               
2009
                             
Debt securities
    143.3     70.3     71.7     1.3     90     (50 )
Equity shares
    2.9     0.5     1.7     0.7     100     (90 )
                                       
      146.2     70.8     73.4     2.0     190     (140 )
                                                 
2008
                                               
Debt securities
    132.8       20.9       108.9       3.0       90       (120 )
Equity shares
    7.2       4.8       2.1       0.3       60       (110 )
                                                 
      140.0       25.7       111.0       3.3       150       (230 )

Notes:
(1)
Level 1: valued using quoted prices in active markets, examples include G10 government securities listed equity shares, certain exchange-traded derivatives, and certain US agency securities.
 
Level 2: most government agency securities, investment-grade corporate bonds, most traded loans, repos and reverse repos, less liquid listed equities, state and municipal obligations, certain MBS, including CDOs and CLOs, most physical commodities, investment contracts issued by the Group’s life assurance businesses and certain money market securities and loan commitments and most OTC derivatives.
 
Level 3: includes cash instruments which trade infrequently, certain syndicated and commercial mortgage loans, unlisted equity shares, certain residual interests in securitisations, super senior tranches of high grade and mezzanine CDOs, other mortgage-based products and less liquid debt securities, certain structured debt securities in issue, and OTC derivatives where valuation depends upon unobservable inputs such as certain credit and exotic derivatives. No gain or loss is recognised on the initial recognition of a financial instrument valued using a technique incorporating significant unobservable data.
(2)
Sensitivity represents the reasonably possible favourable and unfavourable effect respectively on the income statement or the statement of comprehensive income due to reasonably possible changes to valuations using reasonably possible alternative inputs to the Group’s valuation techniques or models. Totals for sensitivities are not indicative of the total potential effect on the income statement or the statement of comprehensive income.
(3)
Primarily includes debt securities issued by banks and building societies.
(4)
Comprise subordinated liabilities and write downs relating to undrawn syndicated loan facilities


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
89

 
 
Notes (continued)


13. Financial instruments (continued)

Reclassification of financial instruments
During 2008, as permitted by amended IAS 39, the Group reclassified financial assets from the held-for-trading and available-for-sale categories into the loans and receivables category and from the held-for-trading category into the available-for-sale category. There were further reclassifications from the held-for-trading category to the loans and receivables category during 2009. The following tables detail the effect of the reclassifications and the balance sheet values of the assets.

       
   
Reduction in profit or loss as a result of
reclassifications for the year ended 2009
 
         
Reclassified in:
 
   
Total
   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m  
                     
From held-for-trading to:
                   
Available-for-sale
    1,280     -     1,280  
Loans and receivables
    1,705     37     1,668  
                     
      2,985     37     2,948  

   
Assets
reclassified in
 2009:
   
2009
All reclassifications
   
2008
All reclassifications (1)
 
   
Carrying value
   
Carrying value
   
Fair value
   
Carrying value
   
Fair value
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                     
From held-for-trading to:
                                   
Available-for-sale
    -     7,629     7,629       12,047       12,047  
Loans and receivables
    1,995     12,933     10,644       20,774       16,628  
                                     
      1,995     20,562     18,273       32,821       28,675  
                                     
From available-for-sale to:
                                   
Loans and receivables
    -     869     745       1,016       956  
                                     
      1,995     21,431     19,018       33,837       29,631  

Note:
(1)
31 December 2008 amounts have been restated

During the year ended 31 December 2009, the balance sheet value of reclassified assets reduced by £12.4 billion.  This was primarily due to disposals and repayments of £12.1 billion across a range of asset backed securities and loans including disposals through restructures of £3.4 billion on real estate and leverage financed positions. Other movements include impairment charges of £1.7 billion, foreign exchange rate losses of £2.0 billion offset by gains taken to the available-for-sale reserve of £1.1 billion, and reclassifications of £2.0 billion in 2009.

For assets reclassified from held-for-trading to available-for-sale, net unrealised losses recorded in equity at 31 December 2009 were £0.6 billion (2008 - £2.2 billion).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
90

 
 
Notes (continued)


14. Debt securities

   
UK central
 and local
 government
   
US central
 and local
 government
   
Other central
 and local
 government
   
Bank and
 building
 society
   
Asset
 backed
 securities
   
Corporate
   
Other
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m           £m  
                                                   
2009
                                                 
Held-for-trading
    8,128     10,427     50,219     6,103     28,820     6,892     893     111,482  
Designated as at fair value through profit or loss
    122     3     402     483     394     1,178     21     2,603  
Available-for-sale
    19,071     12,972     45,512     11,210     51,044     3,365     124     143,298  
Loans and receivables
    1     -     -     -     7,924     1,853     93     9,871  
                                                   
      27,322     23,402     96,133     17,796     88,182     13,288     1,131     267,254  
                                                                 
2008
                                                               
Held-for-trading
    5,372       9,859       37,519       11,021       39,879       11,057       1,573       116,280  
Designated as at fair value through profit or loss
    2,085       510       472       89       236       1,580       456       5,428  
Available-for-sale
    11,330       6,152       32,480       13,139       62,067       5,400       2,288       132,856  
Loans and receivables
    -       -       -       114       8,961       3,749       161       12,985  
                                                                 
      18,787       16,521       70,471       24,363       111,143       21,786       4,478       267,549  

15. Derivatives

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Assets
   
Liabilities
   
Assets
   
Liabilities
 
      £m       £m       £m        £m  
                               
Exchange rate contracts
                             
Spot, forwards and futures
    26,744     24,898       83,065       83,568  
Currency swaps
    25,883     23,466       53,398       54,728  
Options purchased
    16,656     -       36,762       -  
Options written
    -     15,555       -       35,017  
                               
Interest rate contracts
                             
Interest rate swaps
    265,528     253,793       548,040       532,180  
Options purchased
    55,976     -       99,192       -  
Options written
    -     55,589       -       102,216  
Futures and forwards
    2,088     2,033       7,600       6,620  
                               
Credit derivatives
    41,748     39,127       142,366       132,734  
                               
Equity and commodity contracts
    6,831     9,680       22,136       24,301  
                               
      441,454     424,141       992,559       971,364  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
91

 
 
Notes (continued)


15. Derivatives (continued)
The Group enters into master netting agreements in respect of its derivatives activities. These arrangements, which give the Group a legal right to set-off derivative assets and liabilities with the same counterparty, do not result in a net presentation in the Group’s balance sheet for which IFRS requires an intention to settle net or to realise the asset and settle the liability simultaneously as well as a legally enforceable right to set off.  They are, however, effective in reducing the Group’s credit exposure from derivative assets. The Group has executed master netting agreements with the majority of its derivative counterparties resulting in a significant reduction in its net exposure to derivative assets.  Of the £441 billion derivatives assets shown above, £359 billion (2008 - £834 billion) were subject to such agreements. Furthermore the Group holds substantial collateral against this net derivative asset exposure.

16. Available-for-sale reserves
Available-for-sale financial assets are initially recognised at fair value plus directly related transaction costs and subsequently measured at fair value with changes in fair value reported in shareholders’ equity until disposal, at which stage the cumulative gain or loss is recognised in profit or loss.  When there is objective evidence that an available-for-sale financial asset is impaired, any decline in its fair value below original cost is removed from equity and recognised in profit or loss.

Impairment losses are recognised when there is objective evidence of impairment.  The Group reviews its portfolios of available-for-sale financial assets for such evidence which includes: default or delinquency in interest or principal payments; significant financial difficulty of the issuer or obligor; and it becoming probable that the issuer will enter bankruptcy or other financial reorganisation.  However, the disappearance of an active market because an entity’s financial instruments are no longer publicly traded is not evidence of impairment.  Furthermore, a downgrade of an entity’s credit rating is not, of itself, evidence of impairment, although it may be evidence of impairment when considered with other available information.  A decline in the fair value of a financial asset below its cost or amortised cost is not necessarily evidence of impairment.  Determining whether objective evidence of impairment exists requires the exercise of management judgment.  The unrecognised losses on the Group’s available for sale debt securities are concentrated in its portfolios of mortgage-backed securities.  The losses reflect the widening of credit spreads as a result of the reduced market liquidity in these securities and the current uncertain macro-economic outlook in US and Europe.  The underlying securities remain unimpaired.

During 2009 impairment losses of £816 million (2008 - £981 million) were charged to profit or loss and net unrealised gains of £1,202 million (2008 - £6,808 million loss) were recognised directly in equity on available-for-sale financial assets. Available-for-sale reserves at 31 December 2009 amounted to net losses of £1,755 million (2008 - net losses £3,561 million).
 

RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
92


 
Notes (continued)


17. Capital resources
The Group’s regulatory capital resources at 31 December in accordance with Financial Services Authority (FSA) definitions were as follows:

   
2009
   
2008
 
Composition of regulatory capital
    £m       £m  
                 
Tier 1
               
Ordinary and B shareholders' equity
    69,890       45,525  
Minority interests
    16,895       21,619  
Adjustments for:
               
Goodwill and other intangible assets – continuing
    (17,847 )     (20,049 )
Goodwill and other intangible assets – discontinued business
    (238 )     -  
Unrealised losses on available-for-sale debt securities
    1,888       3,687  
Reserves arising on revaluation of property and unrealised gains on available-for-sale equities
    (207 )     (984 )
Reallocation of preference shares and innovative securities
    (656 )     (1,813 )
Other regulatory adjustments
    (1,184 )     (362 )
Less expected losses over provisions
    (2,558 )     (770 )
Less securitisation positions
    (1,353 )     (663 )
Less APS first loss
    (5,106 )     -  
                 
Core Tier 1 capital
    59,524       46,190  
Preference shares
    11,265       16,655  
Innovative Tier 1 securities
    5,213       7,383  
Tax on the excess of expected losses over provisions
    1,020       308  
Less deductions from Tier 1 capital
    (601 )     (689 )
                 
Total Tier 1 capital
    76,421       69,847  
                 
Tier 2
               
Reserves arising on revaluation of property and unrealised gains on available-for-sale equities
    207       984  
Collective impairment allowances
    796       666  
Perpetual subordinated debt
    4,950       9,829  
Term subordinated debt
    20,063       23,162  
Minority and other interests in Tier 2 capital
    11       11  
Less deductions from Tier 2 capital
    (5,532 )     (2,429 )
Less APS first loss
    (5,106 )     -  
                 
Total Tier 2 capital
    15,389       32,223  
                 
Tier 3
    -       260  
                 
Supervisory deductions
               
Unconsolidated investments
    (4,472 )     (4,044 )
Other deductions
    (93 )     (111 )
                 
Deductions from total capital
    (4,565 )     (4,155 )
                 
Total regulatory capital
    87,245       98,175  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
93

 
 
Notes (continued)


18. Analysis of contingent liabilities and commitments

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Contingent liabilities
               
Guarantees and assets pledged as collateral security
    40,008       49,262  
Other contingent liabilities
    14,012       22,275  
                 
      54,020       71,537  
                 
Commitments
               
Undrawn formal standby facilities, credit lines and other commitments to lend
    291,634       352,398  
Other commitments
    6,007       9,326  
                 
      297,641       361,724  
                 
Total contingent liabilities and commitments
    351,661       433,261  

Additional contingent liabilities arise in the normal course of the Group’s business.  It is not anticipated that any material loss will arise from these transactions.

19. Litigation
As a participant in the financial services industry, RBS Group operates in a legal and regulatory environment that exposes it to potentially significant litigation risks. As a result, RBS plc and other members of RBS Group are involved in various disputes and legal proceedings in the United Kingdom, the United States and other jurisdictions, including litigation. Such cases are subject to many uncertainties, and their outcome is often difficult to predict, particularly in the earlier stages of a case.

Other than as set out below in this section -“Litigation”, so far as RBS Group is aware, neither RBS plc nor any member of RBS Group is or has been engaged in or has pending or threatened any governmental, legal or arbitration proceedings, which may have or have had in the recent past (covering the 12 months immediately preceding the date of this document) a significant effect on RBS Group’s financial position or profitability.

Unarranged overdraft charges
In common with other banks in the United Kingdom, RBS plc and NatWest have received claims and complaints from a large number of customers in the United Kingdom seeking refunds of unarranged overdraft charges (the “Charges”). The vast majority of these claims and complaints have challenged the Charges on the basis that they contravene the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 (the “Regulations”) or are unenforceable under the common law penalty doctrine (or both).


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
94

 
 
Notes (continued)


19. Litigation (continued)

Unarranged overdraft charges (continued)
In July 2007, the Office of Fair Trading (“OFT”) issued proceedings in a test case in the English High Court against the banks which was intended to determine certain issues concerning the legal status and enforceability of contractual terms relating to the Charges.  The test case concluded in November 2009 with a judgment of the Supreme Court in favour of the banks. As a result of the court rulings made in the test case, RBS Group expects substantially all of the customer claims and complaints it has received relating to the Charges to fail. RBS Group cannot at this stage predict with any certainty the final outcome of all customer claims and complaints. It is unable reliably to estimate any liability that may arise as a result of or in connection with these matters or its effect on RBS Group’s consolidated net assets, operating results or cash flows in any particular period.

Shareholder litigation
RBS Group and a number of its subsidiaries and certain individual officers and directors have been named as defendants in a class action filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The consolidated amended complaint alleges certain false and misleading statements and omissions in public filings and other communications during the period 1 March 2007 to 19 January 2009, and variously asserts claims under Sections 11, 12 and 15 of the Securities Act 1933, Sections 10 and 20 of the Securities Exchange Act 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.

The putative class is composed of (1) all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired RBS Group securities between 1 March 2007 and 19 January 2009; and/or (2) all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired RBS Series Q, R, S, T and/or U non-cumulative dollar preference shares issued pursuant or traceable to the 8 April 2005 SEC registration statement and were damaged thereby. Plaintiffs seek unquantified damages on behalf of the putative class.

RBS Group has also received notification of similar prospective claims in the United Kingdom and elsewhere but no court proceedings have been commenced in relation to these claims.

RBS Group considers that it has substantial and credible legal and factual defences to these claims and will defend them vigorously. RBS Group is unable reliably to estimate the liability, if any, that might arise or its effect on RBS Group’s consolidated net assets, operating results or cash flows in any particular period.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
95


 
Notes (continued)


19. Litigation (continued)

Other securitisation and securities related litigation in the United States
RBS Group companies have been named as defendants in a number of purported class action and other lawsuits in the United States that relate to the securitisation and securities underwriting businesses. In general, the cases involve the issuance of mortgage backed securities, collateralised debt obligations, or public debt or equity where the plaintiffs have brought actions against the issuers and underwriters of such securities (including RBS Group companies) claiming that certain disclosures made in connection with the relevant offerings of such securities were false or misleading with respect to alleged “sub-prime” mortgage exposure. RBS Group considers that it has substantial and credible legal and factual defences to these claims and will continue to defend them vigorously. RBS Group cannot at this stage reliably estimate the liability, if any, that may arise as a result of or in connection with these lawsuits, individually or in the aggregate, or their effect on RBS Group’s consolidated net assets, operating results or cash flows in any particular period.

World Online International NV.
In November 2009 the Supreme Court in the Netherlands gave a declaratory judgment against World Online International NV, Goldmans Sachs International and ABN AMRO Bank NV in relation to claims arising out of the World Online initial public offering of 2000.  It held that these Defendants had committed certain wrongful acts in connection with the initial public offering. The judgment does not establish liability or the amount of any loss. RBS Group does not believe that any final liability or loss will have a significant effect on RBS Group’s financial position or profitability.

Summary of other disputes, legal proceedings and litigation
Members of RBS Group are engaged in other litigation in the United Kingdom and a number of overseas jurisdictions, including the United States, involving claims by and against them arising in the ordinary course of business. RBS Group has reviewed these other actual, threatened and known potential claims and proceedings and, after consulting with its legal advisers, does not expect that the outcome of these other claims and proceedings will have a material adverse effect on RBS Group’s financial position or profitability in any particular period.

20. Investigations
RBS Group’s businesses and financial condition can be affected by the fiscal or other policies and other actions of various governmental and regulatory authorities in the United Kingdom, the European Union, the United States and elsewhere. RBS Group has engaged, and will continue to engage, in discussions with relevant regulators, including in the United Kingdom and the United States, on an ongoing and regular basis informing them of operational, systems and control evaluations and issues as deemed appropriate or required. It is possible that any matters discussed or identified may result in investigatory actions by the regulators, increased costs being incurred by RBS Group, remediation of systems and controls, public or private censure or fines. Any of these events or circumstances could have a material adverse impact on RBS Group, its business, reputation, results of operations or the price of securities issued by it.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
96

 
 
Notes (continued)


20. Investigations (continued)
In particular there is continuing political and regulatory scrutiny of the operation of the retail banking and consumer credit industries in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. The nature and impact of future changes in policies and regulatory action are not predictable and are beyond RBS Group’s control but could have an adverse impact on RBS Group’s businesses and earnings.

Retail banking
In the European Union, regulatory actions included an inquiry into retail banking initiated on 13 June 2005 in all of the then 25 member states by the European Commission’s Directorate General for Competition. The inquiry examined retail banking in Europe generally. On 31 January 2007, the European Commission announced that barriers to competition in certain areas of retail banking, payment cards and payment systems in the European Union had been identified. The European Commission indicated that it will consider using its powers to address these barriers and will encourage national competition authorities to enforce European and national competition laws where appropriate.

Multilateral interchange fees
In 2007, the European Commission issued a decision that while interchange is not illegal per se, MasterCard’s current multilateral interchange fee (“MIF”) arrangement for cross border payment card transactions with MasterCard and Maestro branded consumer credit and debit cards in the European Union are in breach of competition law. MasterCard was required by the decision to withdraw the relevant cross-border MIFs (i.e. set these fees to zero) by 21 June 2008.

MasterCard appealed against the decision to the European Court of First Instance on 1 March 2008, and the Group has intervened in the appeal proceedings. In addition, in Summer 2008, MasterCard announced various changes to its scheme arrangements. The EC Commission was concerned that these changes might be used as a means of circumventing the requirements of the infringement decision. In April 2009 MasterCard agreed an interim settlement on the level of cross-border MIF with the European Commission pending the outcome of the appeal process and, as a result, the European Commission has advised it will no longer investigate the non-compliance issue (although MasterCard is continuing with its appeal).

Visa’s cross-border MIFs were exempted in 2002 by the European Commission for a period of five years up to 31 December 2007 subject to certain conditions. On 26 March 2008, the European Commission opened a formal inquiry into Visa’s current MIF arrangements for cross border payment card transactions with Visa branded debit and consumer credit cards in the European Union and on 6 April 2009 the European Commission announced that it had issued Visa with a formal Statement of Objections. At the same time Visa announced changes to its interchange levels and introduced some changes to enhance transparency. There is no deadline for the closure of the inquiry.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
97

 
 
Notes (continued)


20. Investigations (continued)

Multilateral interchange fees (continued)
In the UK, the OFT has carried out investigations into Visa and MasterCard domestic credit card interchange rates. The decision by the OFT in the MasterCard interchange case was set aside by the Competition Appeal Tribunal (the “CAT”) in June 2006. The OFT’s investigations in the Visa interchange case and a second MasterCard interchange case are ongoing. On 9 February 2007, the OFT announced that it was expanding its investigation into domestic interchange rates to include debit cards. In January 2010 the OFT advised that it did not anticipate issuing a Statement of Objections prior to the European Court’s judgment, although it has reserved the right to do so if it considers it appropriate.

The outcome of these investigations is not known, but they may have an impact on the consumer credit industry in general and, therefore, on RBS Group’s business in this sector.

Payment Protection Insurance
Having conducted a market study relating to Payment Protection Insurance (“PPI”), on 7 February 2007 the OFT referred the PPI market to the Competition Commission (“CC”) for an in-depth inquiry. The CC published its final report on 29 January 2009 and announced its intention to order a range of remedies, including a prohibition on actively selling PPI at point of sale of the credit product (and for 7 days thereafter), a ban on single premium policies and other measures to increase transparency (in order to improve customers’ ability to search and improve price competition). Barclays Bank PLC subsequently appealed certain CC findings to the Competition Appeal Tribunal (“CAT”). On 16 October 2009, the CAT handed down a judgment quashing the ban on selling PPI at the point of sale of credit products and remitted the matter back to the CC for review. The CC’s current Administrative Timetable is to publish a supplementary report by Summer 2010 and give further consideration to its full range of recommended remedies and a draft order to implement them during Autumn 2010.

The FSA has been conducting a broad industry thematic review of PPI sales practices and in September 2008, the FSA announced that it intended to escalate its level of regulatory intervention. Substantial numbers of customer complaints alleging the mis-selling of PPI policies have been made to banks and to the FOS and many of these are being upheld by the FOS against the banks.

In September 2009, the FSA issued a consultation paper on guidance on the fair assessment of PPI mis-selling complaints and, where necessary, the provision of an appropriate level of redress. The consultation also covers proposed rules requiring firms to re-assess (against the new guidance) all PPI mis-selling complaints received and rejected since 14 January 2005. A policy statement containing final guidance and rules is expected in early 2010. Separately, discussions continue between the FSA and RBS Group in respect of concerns expressed by the FSA over certain categories of historical PPI sales.

Personal current accounts
On 16 July 2008, the OFT published the results of its market study into personal current accounts in the United Kingdom. The OFT found evidence of competition and several positive features in the personal current account market but believes that the market as a whole is not working well for consumers and that the ability of the market to function well has become distorted.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
98

 
 
Notes (continued)


20. Investigations (continued)

Personal current accounts (continued)
On 7 October 2009, the OFT published a follow-up report summarising the initiatives agreed between the OFT and personal current account providers to address the OFT’s concerns about transparency and switching, following its market study. Personal current account providers will take a number of steps to improve transparency, including providing customers with an annual summary of the cost of their account and making charges prominent on monthly statements. To improve the switching process, a number of steps are being introduced following work with BACS, the payment processor, including measures to reduce the impact on consumers of any problems with transferring direct debits.

On 22 December 2009, the OFT published a further report in which it stated that it continued to have significant concerns about the operation of the personal current account market in the United Kingdom, in particular in relation to unarranged overdrafts, and that it believed that fundamental changes are required for the market to work in the best interests of bank customers. The OFT stated that it would discuss these issues intensively with banks, consumer groups and other organisations, with the aim of reporting on progress by the end of March 2010.

US dollar clearing activities
In connection with a previously disclosed investigation of ABN AMRO’s New York Branch by US regulatory authorities, ABN AMRO and members of ABN AMRO’s management continue to provide information to the United States Department of Justice relating to ABN AMRO’s dollar clearing activities, United States Department of Treasury compliance procedures and other Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 compliance matters.  ABN AMRO has reached an agreement in principle with the United States Department of Justice that would resolve all presently known aspects of the ongoing investigation, although no written agreement has yet been reached and negotiations continue. Under the terms of the agreement in principle, ABN AMRO and the United States would enter into a deferred prosecution agreement in which ABN AMRO would waive indictment and agree to the filing of information in the United States District Court charging it with certain violations of federal law based on information disclosed in an agreed factual statement. ABN AMRO would also agree to continue co-operating in the United States’ ongoing investigation and to settle all known civil and criminal claims currently held by the United States for the sum of US$500 million. The precise terms of the deferred prosecution agreement are still under negotiation.

Securitisation and collateralised debt obligation business
The New York State Attorney General has issued subpoenas to a wide array of participants in the securitisation and securities industry, focusing on the information underwriters obtained as part of the due diligence process from the independent due diligence firms. RBS Securities Inc. has produced documents requested by the New York State Attorney General, principally related to loans that were pooled into one securitisation transaction and will continue to cooperate with the investigation. More recently, the Massachusetts Attorney General has issued a subpoena to RBS Securities Inc. seeking information related to residential mortgage lending practices and sales and securitisation of residential mortgage loans. These respective investigations are in the early stages and therefore it is difficult to predict the potential exposure from any such investigation. RBS Group and its subsidiaries are co-operating with these various investigations and requests.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
99

 
 
Notes (continued)


20. Investigations (continued)

Other investigations
In the UK, the OFT has been investigating RBS Group for alleged conduct in breach of Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and/or the Chapter 1 prohibition of the Competition Act 1998 relating to the provision of loan products to professional services firms. RBS Group is co-operating fully with the OFT's investigation.

In April 2009 the FSA notified RBS Group that it was commencing a supervisory review of the acquisition of ABN AMRO in 2007 and the 2008 capital raisings and an investigation into conduct, systems and controls within the Global Banking & Markets division of the Group. RBS Group and its subsidiaries are cooperating fully with this review and investigation.

In November 2009, the FSA informed RBS Group that it was commencing an investigation into certain aspects of the policies of, and training and controls within, certain of RBS Group’s UK subsidiaries relating to compliance with UK money laundering regulations during the period from December 2007 to December 2008. RBS Group and its subsidiaries are cooperating fully with this investigation.

In January 2010, the FSA informed RBS Group that it intended to commence an investigation into certain aspects of the handling of customer complaints. The scope of the proposed investigation (including which businesses and subsidiaries are affected) is not yet clear. RBS Group and its subsidiaries intend to co-operate fully with this investigation.

In the United States, RBS Group and certain subsidiaries have received requests for information from various governmental agencies, self-regulatory organisations, and state governmental agencies including in connection with sub-prime mortgages and securitisations, collateralised debt obligations and synthetic products related to sub-prime mortgages. In particular, during March 2008, RBS Group was advised by the US Securities and Exchange Commission that it had commenced a non-public, formal investigation relating to RBS Group’s United States sub-prime securities exposures and United States residential mortgage exposures. RBS Group and its subsidiaries are cooperating with these various requests for information and investigations.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
100

 
 
 
Notes (continued)


21. The Financial Services Compensation Scheme
The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), the UK's statutory fund of last resort for customers of authorised financial services firms, pays compensation if a firm is unable to meet its obligations. The FSCS funds compensation for customers by raising management expenses levies and compensation levies on the industry. In relation to protected deposits, each deposit-taking institution contributes towards these levies in proportion to their share of total protected deposits on 31 December of the year preceding the scheme year (which runs from 1 April to 31 March), subject to annual maxima set by the Financial Services Authority (FSA). In addition, the FSCS has the power to raise levies (‘exit levies’) on firms who have ceased to participate in the scheme and are in the process of ceasing to be authorised for the amount that the firm would otherwise have been asked to pay during the relevant levy year.

FSCS has borrowed from HM Treasury to fund the compensation costs associated with Bradford & Bingley, Heritable Bank, Kaupthing Singer & Friedlander, Landsbanki ‘Icesave’ and London Scottish Bank plc. These borrowings are on an interest-only basis until September 2011. The annual limit on the FSCS management expenses levy for the three years from September 2008 in relation to these institutions has been capped at £1 billion per annum.

The FSCS will receive funds from asset sales, surplus cash flow, or other recoveries in relation to these institutions which will be used to reduce the principal amount of the FSCS's borrowings. Only after the interest only period, which is expected to end in September 2011, will a schedule for repayment of any remaining principal outstanding (after recoveries) on the borrowings be agreed between the FSCS and HM Treasury. It is expected that, from that point, the FSCS will begin to raise compensation levies (principal repayments). No provision has been made for these levies as the amount is not yet known and is unlikely to be determined before 2011.

22. Related party transactions
Full details of the Group’s related party transactions for the year ended 31 December 2009 are included in the Group’s 2009 Annual Report and Accounts.

23. Filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
A report on Form 20-F will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in the United States.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
101

 
 
Analysis of non-interest income, expenses and impairment losses

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Fees and commissions receivable
    9,831       9,831  
Fees and commissions payable
               
- banking
    (2,456 )     (1,985 )
- insurance related
    (366 )     (401 )
                 
Net fees and commissions
    7,009       7,445  
                 
Foreign exchange
    2,465       1,994  
Interest rate
    3,875       1,454  
Credit
    (4,108 )     (12,200 )
Other
    1,649       275  
                 
Income/(loss) from trading activities
    3,881       (8,477 )
                 
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -  
                 
Operating lease and other rental income
    1,391       1,525  
Changes in the fair value of own debt
    51       977  
Changes in the fair value of securities and other financial assets and liabilities
    101       (1,730 )
Changes in the fair value of investment properties
    (117 )     (86 )
Profit on sale of securities
    294       342  
Profit on sale of property, plant and equipment
    43       167  
(Loss)/profit on sale of subsidiaries and associates
    (135 )     943  
Life business profits/(losses)
    156       (52 )
Dividend income
    86       281  
Share of profits less losses of associated entities
    (195 )     69  
Other income
    287       (537 )
                 
Other operating income
    1,962       1,899  
                 
Non-interest income (excluding insurance premiums)
    16,642       867  
                 
Insurance net premium income
    5,544       6,326  
                 
Total non-interest income
    22,186       7,193  
                 
Staff costs
               
- wages, salaries and other staff costs
    10,063       9,076  
- bonus tax
    208       -  
- social security costs
    727       696  
- pension costs
               
   -  gains on pensions curtailment
    (2,148 )     -  
   -  other
    785       638  
Premises and equipment
    3,087       2,593  
Other
    5,584       5,464  
                 
Administrative expenses
    18,306       18,467  
Write-down of goodwill and other intangible assets
    363       32,581  
Depreciation and amortisation
    2,809       3,154  
                 
Operating expenses
    21,478       54,202  
                 
General insurance
    4,223       3,733  
Bancassurance
    634       697  
                 
Insurance net claims
    4,857       4,430  
                 
Loan impairment losses
    14,134       7,091  
Impairment of available-for-sale securities
    816       981  
                 
Impairment losses
    14,950       8,072  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
102

 
 
Capital resources and ratios

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Capital base
               
Core Tier 1 capital
    59,524       46,190  
Preference shares and tax deductible securities
    16,478       24,038  
Deductions from Tier 1 capital net of tax credit on expected losses
    419       (381 )
                 
Tier 1 capital
    76,421       69,847  
Tier 2 capital
    15,389       32,223  
Tier 3 capital
    -       260  
                 
      91,810       102,330  
Less: Supervisory deductions
    (4,565 )     (4,155 )
                 
Total regulatory capital
    87,245       98,175  
                 
Risk-weighted assets
               
Credit risk
    513,200       551,300  
Counterparty risk
    56,500       61,100  
Market risk
    65,000       46,500  
Operational risk
    33,900       36,900  
                 
      668,600       695,800  
APS relief
    (127,600 )     -  
                 
      541,000       695,800  
                 
Risk asset ratio
               
Core Tier 1
    11.0     6.6 %
Tier 1
    14.1     10.0 %
Total
    16.1     14.1 %


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
103

 
 
Risk and capital management
 
Presentation of information
The data in this section excludes RFS Holdings minority interest unless otherwise indicated.

Risk, capital and liquidity management

Overview
Conditions during the year continued to prove challenging as the ongoing deterioration in economic conditions and financial markets seen during 2008 continued into 2009.  Market stress peaked during the first quarter of 2009 with broad improvement since then. This reflects a global effort by many governments and central banks to ease monetary conditions, increase liquidity within the financial system and support banks with a combination of increased capital, guarantees and strengthened deposit insurance.  One resulting benefit for banks generally has been a significant improvement in the liquidity of money and debt markets.  At the same time regulatory oversight of the banking sector has increased globally and is expected to continue at a heightened level.

More recently the major economies have started to demonstrate a gradually improving macroeconomic position although conditions remain fragile.  Areas of particular uncertainty include possible effects from governments ending their financial stimulus initiatives and central banks moving to exit from positions of historically very low interest rates, as well as reversing quantitative easing.  These look likely to occur against a backdrop of heightened personal and corporate insolvency as well as rising unemployment.

The Group has been developing and adapting to an evolving economic environment, against a background of the strategic review which includes a clearly stated ambition to achieve standalone strength.  The core aims of the strategic plan are to improve the risk profile of the Group and to reposition the balance sheet around the Group’s core strengths.  The Group level risk appetite statements and limits have been reviewed to ensure they are in line with the strategy.  Any potential areas of misalignment between risk appetite and the Group strategy have been discussed by the Executive Risk Forum and remediation plans have been put in place.
 
Enhancements have been made to a number of the risk frameworks, including:

A new credit approval process has been introduced during the year, based on a pairing of business and risk managers authorised to approve credit.  This replaced the former credit committee process;
   
Exposure to higher risk countries has been reduced and a new risk limits framework has been implemented across the Group;
   
Single name and sector wide credit concentrations continue to receive a high level of attention and further enhancements to the risk frameworks were agreed in the fourth quarter of the year;
   
In addition to the move to value-at-risk (VaR) based on a 99% confidence level, from 95%, the Group has improved and strengthened its market risk limit framework, increasing the transparency of market risk taken across the Group’s businesses in both the trading and non-trading portfolios;
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
104


 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Risk, capital and liquidity management (continued)
 
Overview (continued)
 
The Group’s funding and liquidity profile is supported by explicit targets and metrics to control the size and extent of both short-term and long-term liquidity risk; and
   
An improved reporting programme has been implemented to increase transparency and improve the management of risk exposures.

Credit impairments in 2009 were materially higher than the previous year.  As the year progressed, the level of impairments moderated, with the highest quarterly charge incurred in the second quarter.  It is expected that the results for 2010 and 2011 will continue to be affected by a heightened level of credit impairments as exposures in the Non-Core division are managed down and the economic environment continues to impact the Core businesses.  The risk weightings applied to assets are also expected to increase due to procyclicality and as a result the amount of capital that banks generally are required to hold will increase.  Future regulatory changes are also expected to increase the capital requirements of the banking sector.  Against this background, the Non-Core portfolio is reducing and the Group has materially strengthened its capital base through the B share issuance in December 2009.

Capital
The Group aims to maintain an appropriate level of capital to meet business needs and regulatory requirements.  Capital adequacy and risk management are closely aligned. The Group’s regulatory capital resources as calculated in accordance with FSA definitions are set out on the following page.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
105

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Capital (continued)

Capital resources
   
31 December
 2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
Composition of regulatory capital (Proportional)
    £m       £m  
                 
Tier 1
               
Ordinary shareholders' equity
    69,890       45,525  
Minority interests
    2,227       5,436  
Adjustments for:
               
- Goodwill and other intangible assets - continuing
    (14,786 )     (16,386 )
- Goodwill and other intangible assets of discontinued businesses
    (238 )     -  
- Unrealised losses on available-for-sale (AFS) debt securities
    1,888       3,687  
- Reserves: revaluation of property and unrealised gains on AFS equities
    (207 )     (984 )
- Reallocation of preference shares and innovative securities
    (656 )     (1,813 )
- Other regulatory adjustments
    (950 )     9  
Less excess of expected losses over provisions net of tax
    (2,558 )     (770 )
Less securitisation positions
    (1,353 )     (663 )
Less APS first loss
    (5,106 )     -  
                 
Core Tier 1 capital
    48,151       34,041  
Preference shares
    11,265       16,655  
Innovative Tier 1 securities
    2,772       6,436  
Tax on the excess of expected losses over provisions
    1,020       308  
Less deductions from Tier 1 capital
    (310 )     (316 )
                 
Total Tier 1 capital
    62,898       57,124  
                 
Tier 2
               
Reserves: revaluation of property and unrealised gains on AFS equities
    207       984  
Latent impairment provisions
    796       666  
Perpetual subordinated debt
    4,200       9,079  
Term subordinated debt
    18,120       20,282  
Minority and other interests in Tier 2 capital
    11       11  
Less deductions from Tier 2 capital
    (5,241 )     (2,055 )
Less APS first loss
    (5,106 )     -  
                 
Total Tier 2 capital
    12,987       28,967  
                 
Tier 3
    -       260  
                 
Supervisory deductions
               
Unconsolidated Investments
               
- RBS Insurance
    (4,068 )     (3,628 )
- Other investments
    (404 )     (416 )
Other
    (93 )     (111 )
                 
Deductions from total capital
    (4,565 )     (4,155 )
                 
Total regulatory capital
    71,320       82,196  
                 
Risk weighted assets
               
Credit risk
    410,400       433,400  
Counterparty risk
    56,500       61,100  
Market risk
    65,000       46,500  
Operational risk
    33,900       36,800  
                 
      565,800       577,800  
APS relief
    (127,600 )     -  
                 
      438,200       577,800  

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
106

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Capital (continued)

Capital resources (continued)
 
   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Risk asset ratio (Group before RFS Holdings minority interest)
 
%
   
%
 
             
Core Tier 1
    11.0       5.9  
Tier 1
    14.4       9.9  
Total
    16.3       14.2  
                 
Risk asset ratio
               
                 
Core Tier 1
    11.0       6.6  
Tier 1
    14.1       10.0  
Total
    16.1       14.1  

The Group has seen a continuation of challenging financial market and economic conditions during 2009.  Although some signs of improvement have started to emerge, the performance of key economies remains uncertain and the Group has continued to experience material impairment losses and credit market write-downs, including further write-downs in respect of monoline exposures.  The majority of these are in the Non-Core division, which in time will be run down, significantly reducing the size of the Group’s balance sheet and associated capital requirements.

In April 2009, £5 billion of preference shares were redeemed and replaced by ordinary shares using the proceeds of the Second Placing and Open Offer.  This strengthened the Group’s Core Tier 1 capital, enhancing its financial stability during a tough economic and market period.

As an interim measure pending full compliance with Basel 2, the Group, with the agreement of the regulators, consolidates the RWAs of ABN AMRO on the basis of Basel 1 plus an adjustment factor. The Group is advanced in its preparation for moving to a Basel 2 compliant approach for the ABN AMRO businesses it will retain.  As part of this transition the Group has agreed with the FSA to increase the adjustment factor with effect from 31 December 2009 to reflect changing circumstances. This change has increased RWAs by approximately £8 billion thereby reducing the Core Tier 1 ratio at 31 December 2009 by 20 basis points.

Asset Protection Scheme
On 22 December 2009, RBS acceded to the Asset Protection Scheme (‘APS’ or ‘the Scheme’).  The key commercial terms and details of the assets covered by the Scheme are set out in Appendix 2 of this document.

Following the accession to the APS, HM Treasury provides loss protection against potential losses arising in a pool of assets.  HM Treasury also subscribed to £25.5 billion of capital in the form of B shares and a Dividend Access Share, with a further £8 billion of capital in the form of B shares, potentially available as contingent capital.  The Group pays annual fees in respect of the protection and contingent capital.  The Group has the option, subject to HM Treasury consent, to pay the annual premium, contingent capital and the exit fee payable in connection with any termination of the Group’s participation in the APS, in whole or in part, by waiving the entitlements of members of the Group to certain UK tax reliefs.
 
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
107

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

Following accession to the APS, arrangements were put in place within the Group that extended effective APS protection to all other regulated entities holding assets covered by the APS.
 
Capital (continued)

On 19 January 2009, the FSA announced that it expects each bank participating in the UK Government’s recapitalisation scheme to have a minimum Core Tier 1 ratio of 4% on a stressed basis.  As at 31 December 2009 the Group’s Core Tier 1 ratio was 11.0% (2008 - 5.9%).  While the RWA relief from the APS scheme enabled the Group to maintain robust capital ratios, it is clear that the next few years pose continuing challenges in respect of impairment levels, trading performance and the return to profitability, RWA volatility including procyclical effects, and increasing regulatory demands.

The subscription for £25.5 billion of B shares and APS improved the Group’s Core Tier 1 capital ratio by 580 basis points at 31 December 2009.

Regulatory developments
European Directives
The Group is undertaking the necessary preparations to comply with the new European Directives which will, or are expected to, come into force on or before 1 January 2011.  These deal with inter alia, the eligibility of hybrid capital; restrictions on large exposures; enhanced risk management of securitisation exposures (including a requirement that banks cannot invest in a securitisation where the originator has not retained an economic interest); higher capital requirements for re-securitisations; and strengthening capital requirements for the trading book.

Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
In December 2009, the Basel Committee issued proposals to strengthen capital and liquidity of banks.  The key elements include: raising the quality, consistency and transparency of regulatory capital; increased capital requirements for counterparty exposures on derivatives, repurchase agreements and securities financing activities; the introduction of a leverage ratio; promotion of countercyclical measures to encourage build up of capital buffers and a more forward-looking provisioning based on expected losses instead of the current ‘incurred loss’ provisioning model; and the introduction of a global minimum liquidity standard for internationally active banks, including a short-term liquidity coverage ratio requirement underpinned by a longer-term structural liquidity ratio.  The Committee is carrying out an impact assessment in the first part of 2010 to calibrate the new requirements before issuing final proposals by the end of 2010 for phased implementation commencing in 2012.

The Group is working with the trade bodies in responding to the various consultations and will participate fully in the impact assessment.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
108

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk arising from the possibility that the Group will incur losses owing to the failure of customers to meet their financial obligations.  The quantum and nature of credit risk assumed in the Group’s different businesses varies considerably, while the overall credit risk outcome usually exhibits a high degree of correlation to the macroeconomic environment.

Credit risk assets
Credit risk assets consist of loans and advances (including overdraft facilities), instalment credit, finance lease receivables and traded instruments across all customer types.  Reverse repurchase agreements and issuer risk (primarily debt securities - see page 91) are excluded.  Where relevant, and unless otherwise stated, data reflect the effect of credit mitigation techniques.

   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
 2008 (1)
 
      £m       £m  
                 
UK Retail
    103,029       97,069  
UK Corporate
    109,908       126,736  
Wealth
    15,951       17,604  
Global Banking & Markets
    224,355       450,321  
Global Transaction Services
    7,152       8,995  
Ulster Bank
    42,042       64,695  
US Retail & Commercial
    52,104       82,862  
Other
    2,981       6,594  
                 
Core
    557,522          
Non-Core
    151,264          
                 
Group before RFS Holdings minority interest
    708,786       854,876  

Note:
(1)
The 2008 split between Core and Non-Core is not available.

Key points
 
Total credit risk assets reduced by £146 billion, or 17%, during 2009 or 13% on a constant currency basis.
   
Reductions occurred across industry sectors and in most regions.  The largest reductions were in lending balances and derivatives.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
109

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Credit concentration risk (including country risk)
The Group defines four key areas of concentration in credit risk that are monitored, reported and managed at both Group and divisional levels.  These are single name, industry/sector, country and product/asset class.  Frameworks to address single name, industry/sector and country concentrations are established and continue to be enhanced and embedded into business processes across the Group.  Aspects of the product/asset class framework are in place whilst others will be developed during the course of 2010.

Country risk arises from sovereign events (for example, default or restructuring); economic events (for example, contagion of sovereign default to other parts of the economy, cyclical economic shock); political events (for example, convertibility restrictions and expropriation or nationalisation); and natural disaster or conflict.  Losses are broadly defined and include credit, market, liquidity, operational and franchise risk related losses.

The Group’s appetite for country risk is set by the Executive Risk Forum in the form of limits by country risk grade, with sub-limits on term exposure.  Countries where exposures exceed this limit framework are approved by the ERF while authority is delegated to the Group Country Risk Committee (GCRC) to manage exposures within the framework.  Specific limits are set for each country based on a risk assessment taking into account the Group’s franchise and business mix in that country.  Additional limitations – on product types with higher loss potential, for example – are established to address specific vulnerabilities in the context of a country's outlook and/or the Group's business strategy in a particular country.  A country watch list framework is in place to proactively monitor emerging issues and facilitate the development of mitigation strategies.

The country risk table below shows credit risk assets exceeding £1 billion by borrowers domiciled in countries with an external rating of A+ and below from either Standard & Poor’s or Moody’s, and is stated gross of mitigating action which may have been taken to reduce or eliminate exposure to country risk events.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
110

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Credit concentration risk (including country risk) (continued)

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Personal
   
Sovereign
   
Banks and financial institutions
   
Corporate
   
Total
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Personal
   
Sovereign
   
Banks and financial institutions
   
Corporate
   
Total
 
                                                                         
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                                                         
Italy
    27     104     1,999     5,636       7,766       3,827     3,939       23       131       3,263       7,555       10,972  
India
    547     5     476     2,578       3,606       2,887     719       1,020       6       738       3,800       5,564  
Russia
    41     -     395     2,928       3,364       2,803     561       51       -       362       5,361       5,774  
South Korea
    1     -     1,038     2,308       3,347       3,238     109       2       -       1,743       1,104       2,849  
Turkey
    11     301     590     1,906       2,808       2,412     396       25       364       603       3,035       4,027  
Poland
    6     62     113     1,840       2,021       1,847     174       7       38       309       1,309       1,663  
China
    21     49     798     1,096       1,964       1,695     269       25       61       1,146       2,027       3,259  
Romania
    512     47     452     874       1,885       64     1,821       584       145       160       917       1,806  
Portugal
    5     42     281     1,119       1,447       943     504       6       34       405       1,914       2,359  
Chile
    -     41     447     865       1,353       526     827       -       26       384       1,251       1,661  
Brazil
    3     -     767     439       1,209       1,151     58       4       -       1,012       642       1,658  
Mexico
    1     7     227     934       1,169       740     429       4       57       211       2,000       2,272  
Kazakhstan
    45     15     365     646       1,071       91     980       69       17       901       859       1,846  
Hungary
    3     23     56     956       1,038       579     459       5       74       101       831       1,011  

Key points

There has been a sustained focus on country exposures, both in terms of those countries that represent a larger concentration and those that, under the country watch list process, have been identified as exhibiting signs of actual or potential stress.
   
This process, coupled with the Group’s strategic focus on a reduced number of countries, has yielded material reductions in exposure.
   
The reductions are magnified by the relative strength of sterling in the year, when it gained 9% on a trade weighted basis against other currencies.

Most economies enter 2010 in a tentative recovery phase, attributed largely to official stimulus, resilient consumption and global restocking.  International prospects vary and significant risks remain, particularly around exiting government support, advanced sovereign debt levels and rising inflationary pressures. Currently low yields may not last as these trends play out.  Asia remains the best performing region, thanks to limited sovereign and corporate leverage. However, growth prospects remain linked to global trade flows.  Middle East sovereigns are generally strong, but the private sector continues to feel the impact of weakness in real estate and construction.  Latin America proved relatively insulated from the crisis, and policy gains look set to be sustained.  Peripheral Euro zone sovereigns with heavy debt burdens face increased risks, with credible adjustment programmes needed.  Eastern Europe has made some progress in addressing key weaknesses, but vulnerabilities in some countries remain and growth prospects are modest.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
111

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Asset quality by industry and geography
Industry analysis plays an important part in assessing potential concentration risk in the loan portfolio.  Particular attention is given to industry sectors where the Group believes there is a high degree of risk or potential for volatility in the future.

The table below analyses credit risk assets by industry sector and geography.

   
2009
       
   
UK
   
Western Europe
 (excl.
 UK)
   
North
 America
   
Asia
 Pacific
   
Latin
 America
   
Other (1)
   
Total
   
of which
 Core
   
2008(3)
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                               
Personal
    120,720     23,530     37,680     2,948     63     1,361       186,302       165,562       197,888  
Banks & financial institutions
    38,775     66,698     18,817     13,158     10,216     5,305       152,969       133,900       180,504  
Property
    61,779     27,736     8,315     2,478     2,924     507       103,739       57,073       112,980  
Transport and storage (2)
    14,565     7,954     7,514     5,841     2,917     7,370       46,161       30,863       58,995  
Manufacturing
    9,309     14,646     7,965     3,627     1,643     3,948       41,138       31,199       67,846  
Wholesale and retail trade
    15,584     7,458     5,497     945     829     1,704       32,017       25,180       35,180  
Telecom, media & technology
    8,956     7,956     5,312     2,232     804     1,528       26,788       18,554       42,374  
Public sector
    11,091     4,448     6,016     2,109     279     760       24,703       21,823       39,890  
Building
    10,303     7,494     1,852     836     183     1,098       21,766       16,642       29,297  
Tourism and leisure
    11,396     3,268     2,700     755     586     481       19,186       15,583       19,528  
Power, water & waste
    4,745     6,197     3,502     1,179     1,215     941       17,779       12,055       26,628  
Natural resources and nuclear
    2,554     3,546     5,511     1,861     844     2,895       17,211       12,479       25,318  
Business services
    8,981     2,056     2,324     675     1,029     588       15,653       13,395       14,497  
Agriculture and fisheries
    921     618     1,671     18     64     82       3,374       3,214       3,951  
                                                               
2009 Total
    319,679     183,605     114,676     38,662     23,596     28,568       708,786       557,522       854,876  
                                                               
of which Core
    271,758     133,824     89,487     28,718     14,048     19,687       557,522                  
                                                                       
2008 Total
    326,639       225,870       178,139       56,074       31,235       36,919       854,876                  

Notes:
(1)
Other comprises Central and Eastern Europe, Middle East, Central Asia and Africa.
(2)
Excludes net investment in operating leases in Shipping and Aviation portfolios as they are accounted for as part of property, plant and equipment; however operating leases are included in the monitoring and management of these portfolios.
(3)
Certain sector and sub-sector classes were refined in 2009.

Key points

Exposures have decreased materially across industry sectors and geographies, with the exception of the UK where exposure is only 2% lower at 31 December 2009 compared with a year earlier.
   
Within the UK, exposure to corporate sectors was down 8%.  Banks and financial institutions, and public sector were unchanged and exposure to personal customers was up 6% in 2009.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
112

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Single name concentrations
During the first half of the year, the Group implemented an enhanced framework to address the risk arising from concentrations of exposure to related groups of borrowers.  Despite market illiquidity that reduced the scope for exposure management strategies against certain assets and negative credit migration that created additional cases in excess of the framework’s parameters, some progress was made against exceptions arising from the framework.  Overall there were 9% fewer exceptions at the end of the period than at the beginning.  Plans have been developed and continue to be refined to deliver alignment with the framework over the course of the Group’s strategic plan.

Credit risk asset quality
Internal reporting and oversight of risk assets is principally differentiated by credit grades.  Customers are assigned credit grades, based on various credit grading models that reflect the key drivers of default for the customer type.  All credit grades across the Group map to both a Group level asset quality scale, used for external financial reporting, and a master grading scale for wholesale exposures used for internal management reporting across portfolios.  Accordingly, measurement of risk is easily aggregated and can be reported at increasing levels of granularity depending on audience and business need.

         
2009
       
Asset quality band
 
 Probability of default range
 
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
   
2008 Total
 
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                             
AQ1
   0% - 0.03%     124,172     20,570     144,742     20.3       208,033       24.4  
AQ2
   0.03% - 0.05%     13,470     1,958     15,428     2.2       29,939       3.5  
AQ3
   0.05% - 0.10%     27,456     6,462     33,918     4.8       44,724       5.2  
AQ4
   0.10% - 0.38%     84,594     17,032     101,626     14.3       159,067       18.6  
AQ5
   0.38% - 1.08%     107,960     27,135     135,095     19.1       157,138       18.5  
AQ6
   1.08% - 2.15%     78,048     19,050     97,098     13.7       107,191       12.5  
AQ7
   2.15% - 6.09%     42,611     14,449     57,060     8.1       48,271       5.6  
AQ8
   6.09% - 17.22%     21,484     4,479     25,963     3.7       25,682       3.0  
AQ9
   17.22% - 100%     10,597     5,845     16,442     2.3       12,034       1.4  
AQ10
   100%     16,316     23,118     39,434     5.6       19,130       2.2  
Other (1)
        30,814     11,166     41,980     5.9       43,667       5.1  
                                                   
              557,522     151,264     708,786     100.0       854,876       100.0  

Note:
(1)
‘Other’ largely comprises assets covered by the standardised approach for which a probability of default (PD) equivalent to those assigned to assets covered by the internal ratings based approach is not available.

Key points

In addition to the overall portfolio contraction, the table above evidences the negative rating migration observed across the Group’s portfolios during the course of 2009, with the lower quality bands (AQ7 and below) all showing increased exposure.
   
A significant majority of this increase occurred in the first half of 2009.  Exposure in bands AQ7 and below grew by 23% in the first six months of the year and by a further 6% since 30 June 2009.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
113

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Key credit portfolios

Personal lending
   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
UK Retail:
               
- Mortgage
    85,529       74,528  
- Cards, loans and overdrafts
    20,316       22,475  
Ulster Bank:
               
- Mortgage
    22,304       24,531  
- Other personal
    1,172       1,350  
Citizens:
               
- Mortgage
    26,534       34,394  
- Auto and cards
    6,917       9,126  
- Other (1)
    4,205       5,286  
EMEA and Asia Pacific Non-Core
    3,084       3,942  
Other (2)
    16,241       22,256  
                 
      186,302       197,888  

Notes:
(1)
Mainly student loans and recreational vehicles/marine.
(2)
Personal exposures in other divisions, including Wealth and RBS Insurance.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
114


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Key credit portfolios (continued)

Residential mortgages

The table below analyses the distribution of residential mortgages by loan-to-value (LTV) (indexed).

   
UK Retail
   
Ulster Bank
   
Citizens
 
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
 
   
%
   
%
   
%
   
%
   
%
   
%
 
                                     
<= 50%
    39.2       46.0       40.7       47.1       26.3       29.7  
> 50% and <= 60%
    10.1       10.9       7.6       8.7       7.9       9.0  
> 60% and <= 70%
    10.9       10.6       7.6       8.4       9.0       10.7  
> 70% and <= 80%
    13.3       10.6       7.5       8.6       12.7       16.3  
> 80% and <= 90%
    11.2       9.2       8.0       9.6       14.5       15.5  
> 90% and <= 100%
    7.6       7.8       9.0       8.5       12.2       9.5  
> 100%
    7.7       4.9       19.6       9.1       17.4       9.3  
                                                 
Total portfolio average LTV at 31 December 2009
    59.1       54.5       62.5       54.3       72.0       69.1  
                                                 
Average LTV on new originations during the year
    67.2       67.2       72.8       71.1       62.4       64.3  

Notes:
(1)
Analysis covers the main mortgage brands in each of the Group’s three main consumer markets and covers 96% of total mortgage portfolio.
(2)
LTV averages calculated by transaction volume.
 
The table below details the residential mortgages three months or more in arrears (by volume).

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
%
   
%
 
             
UK Retail(1)
    1.8       1.5  
Ulster Bank
    3.3       1.6  
Citizens
    1.5       0.9  

Note:
(1)
UK Retail analysis covers the Royal Bank and NatWest brands and 77% of the UK Retail mortgage portfolio (the remainder operates under the same credit policies).


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
115

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Key credit portfolios (continued)

UK residential mortgages
The UK mortgage portfolio totalled £85.5 billion at 31 December 2009, an increase of 15% from 31 December 2008, due to strong growth and lower redemption rates.  Of the total portfolio, 98% is designated as Core business with the primary brands being the Royal Bank, NatWest, the One Account, and First Active.  The assets comprise prime mortgage lending and include 6.6% (£5.6 billion) of exposure to residential buy-to-let.  There is a small legacy self certification book (0.4% of total assets) which was withdrawn from sale in 2004.

UK net new mortgage lending in 2009 was strong at £11 billion and the Group has exceeded its commitment to the UK Government on net mortgage lending.  The average LTV for new business during 2009 was unchanged at 67.2%.  The maximum LTV available to new customers remains at 90%.

The arrears rate (three or more payments missed) on the combined Royal Bank of Scotland and NatWest brands was 1.8% at 31 December 2009.  After a period of deterioration driven by the economic environment this stabilised in the second half of 2009 (arrears rate stood at 1.8% as at 30 June 2009 and 1.5% as at 31 December 2008).  The arrears rate on the buy-to-let portfolio was 1.6% at 31 December 2009 (1.6% at 30 June 2009 and 1.5% at 31 December 2008).

The mortgage impairment charge was £129 million in 2009 compared with £33 million in 2008, attributable to declining house prices driving lower recoveries and an increase in defaults reflecting the difficult economic environment.  Default rates remain sensitive to economic developments, notably unemployment rates.  Provisions as a proportion of balances at 31 December 2009 were 0.3% and 0.2% at 31 December 2008.

A number of initiatives aimed at increasing the levels of support to customers experiencing difficulties were implemented in 2008 and will continue in 2010.  The Group does not initiate repossession proceedings for at least six months after arrears are evident and participates in various Government-led initiatives such as the mortgage rescue scheme and homeowner mortgage support.

Ulster Bank residential mortgages
The residential mortgage portfolio across the Ulster Bank and First Active brands totalled £22.3 billion at 31 December 2009; 91% is in the Republic of Ireland and 9% in Northern Ireland.  This represents a decline of 4% in the Republic of Ireland and an increase of 13% in Northern Ireland from 31 December 2008.  27% of the portfolio is in Non-Core.

The arrears rate increased to 3.3% at 31 December 2009 from 1.6% at 31 December 2008.  As a result, the impairment charge for 2009 was £115 million versus £23 million for 2008.  Repossessions totalled 96 in 2009, compared with 37 in 2008 with the majority of these being voluntary.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
116



Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Key credit portfolios (continued)

Ulster Bank residential mortgages (continued)
During 2009 new business originations in the Republic of Ireland were very low across all segments. The bank introduced new products - Momentum and SecureStep - in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland which aim to support market activity for new build properties.  In Northern Ireland, lending increased in the second half of 2009 as a degree of confidence returned to the property market.

Citizens real estate
Citizens total residential real estate portfolio totalled $42 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - $50 billion).  The real estate portfolio comprises $11 billion of first lien mortgages and $31 billion of home equity loans and lines (Core portfolio 48% first lien).  83% of the portfolio is Core business; $10 billion of mortgages and $25 billion of home equity loans and lines (48% of the latter being first lien).  The serviced by others (SBO) portfolio (96% second lien) is the largest component of the Non-Core portfolio.

Citizens has focused its origination efforts in the more mature and stable markets of New England and Mid Atlantic (Citizens ‘footprint states’), targeting low risk products and adopting conservative risk policies. Loan acceptance criteria were tightened during 2009 to address deteriorating economic and market conditions.  As at 31 December 2009, the portfolio consisted of $34 billion (80% of the total portfolio) in these footprint states.

The SBO portfolio consists of purchased pools of home equity loans and lines whose current LTV (95.6% on a weighted average basis at 31 December 2009) and geographic profiles (74% outside of Citizens footprint states and a 30% concentration in California, Arizona and Nevada) have, in the current economic climate, resulted in an annualised write-off rate of 10.7% in 2009.  The SBO book has been closed to new purchases since the third quarter of 2007 and is in run-off, with exposure down from $7.0 billion at 31 December 2008 to $5.5 billion at 31 December 2009.

The current weighted average LTV of the real estate portfolio rose slightly during the year to 72.0% at 31 December 2009 (67.5% excluding the SBO portfolio), driven by significant price declines throughout the US.  Based on the latest Case-Shiller forecast for the US market, economists still anticipate significant decreases in the first half of 2010 with improvements expected in late 2010 or early 2011.

The arrears rate increased significantly from 0.9% at 31 December 2008 to 1.5% at 31 December 2009. In part, this reflects the contraction of the portfolio caused by fewer new loans added, Citizens choosing to exercise its option to sell certain mortgages to the secondary market under long-term agreements, and higher run-off or pay-down rates across all residential products.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
117


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Personal lending

The Group’s personal lending portfolio includes credit cards, unsecured loans, auto finance and overdrafts.  The majority of personal lending exposures exist in the UK and the US.  New defaults as a proportion of average loans and receivables were:
   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Average loans
 & receivables
   
Impairment
charge as a %
 of loans
 & receivables
   
Average loans
 & receivables
   
Impairment
charge as a %
of loans
 & receivables
 
   
millions
   
%
   
millions
   
%
 
                       
UK Personal lending: (1)
                     
UK Retail cards
 
 
£6,101
    8.7    
 
£6,617
      6.4  
UK Retail loans
 
 
£12,062
    5.9    
 
£13,545
      3.3  
                 
 
           
US Personal lending: (2)
                             
Citizens cards
 
 
$2,286
    8.9    
 
$2,275
      4.9  
Citizens auto loans
       
$9,759
    1.2    
 
$11,386
      1.1  

Notes:
(1)
The charge for UK Retail assets refers to impairment on assets in the year.
(2)
The charge for Citizens assets refers to charge-offs in the year net of recoveries realised in the year.
 
The UK personal lending portfolio, of which 97% is in Core businesses, comprises credit cards, unsecured loans and overdrafts and totalled £20.3 billion at 31 December 2009, a decrease of 10% from 31 December 2008 (£22.5 billion) due to general market trend of customers repaying debt on credit cards and loan balances and a reduction in new lending.

Risk appetite continues to be actively managed across all unsecured products, reflecting the challenging economic environment.  Support continues for customers in financial difficulties through breathing space initiatives on all unsecured products, whereby a thirty day breathing space allows customers to work with a not-for-profit debt advice agency to establish a debt repayment plan. During this time the Group suspends collection activity.  A further extension of thirty days can be granted if progress is made and discussions are continuing. Investment in collection and recovery processes continues addressing both the continued support for our customers and the management of impairments.

Default rates on both cards and loans in the UK increased in 2009, driven by the deterioration in economic environment and, to a lesser extent, the reduction in total balances.  Default rates are still sensitive to economic developments, notably unemployment rates.

The Citizens credit card portfolio totalled US$2.3 billion, at 31 December 2009.  Core assets comprised 58% of the portfolio.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
118


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Personal lending (continued)

The Citizens cards business adopts conservative risk strategies compared to the US market as illustrated by the business generally performing better than industry benchmarks (provided by VISA).  The latest available metrics (December 2009) show the rate for 60+ days delinquency as a percentage of total outstandings at 4.4% (compared to an industry figure of 4.7%) and net contractual charge-offs as a percentage of total outstandings at 7.1 % (compared to an industry figure of 7.4%).

For new customers, lending criteria have been tightened and initial credit lines reduced.  Existing customers are regularly monitored for changes in asset quality and behaviour and, where appropriate, proactive measures are taken to limit or reduce credit exposure.

Citizens is a leading provider of retail auto financing to US consumers through a network of 3,500 auto dealers located in 23 US states.  It maintains a conservative, prime indirect auto lending credit programme with loss rates that have historically been below national averages.  Current outstanding retail auto loan balances totalled $8.8 billion as of 31 December 2009, with the 30-day delinquency rate at 2.6%.  This compares to data reported by the American Bankers' Association (latest available is at 30 September 2009) showing the nationwide indirect auto lending delinquency rate at 2.8%.  Citizens recently shifted its focus on auto financing, moving from a nationwide emphasis to its regional lending footprint.  This, together with enhanced collection activities, has resulted in better than expected loss results.  Total portfolio losses fell from $129.6 million in 2008 to $120.6 million in 2009.
 
Corporate sectors
This section discusses the components of property, transport and storage (automotive, shipping, aviation) and retail sectors, given their significance in the current market environment.

Wholesale Property (unaudited)
The Group's exposure to the wholesale property sector totals £104 billion, of which £85 billion is commercial property financing and analysed in detail below.  The remainder comprises lending to property related sectors, including housing associations, estate agents and management companies, and non-lending exposures on off-balance sheet instruments and FX/derivatives.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
119


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Commercial property
The commercial property lending portfolio totalled £85 billion at 31 December 2009, an £11 billion or 12% decrease during the year.  The Non-Core portion of the portfolio totalled £38 billion or 44% of the portfolio.

   
2009
   
2008
 
Domicile of obligor
    £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                           
UK
    55,904     66       55,986       58  
Western Europe
    19,212     22       28,439       30  
Americas
    6,520     8       7,996       8  
RoW
    3,575     4       4,250       4  
                               
      85,211     100       96,671       100  

   
2009
   
2008
 
Segment
    £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                           
Investment:
                         
- commercial
    47,371     56       54,028       56  
- residential
    12,921     15       13,937       14  
                               
      60,292     71       67,965       70  
                               
Development:
                             
- commercial
    11,081     13       11,843       12  
- residential
    11,271     13       12,154       13  
                               
      22,352     26       23,997       25  
                               
Other
    2,567     3       4,709       5  
                               
      85,211     100       96,671       100  

Speculative lending represents less than 1% of the portfolio.  The Group’s appetite for originating speculative commercial property lending is limited and any such business requires exceptional approval under the credit approval framework.

The decrease in asset valuations has placed pressure on the portfolio with more clients seeking renegotiations of LTV covenants in the context of granting structural enhancements or equity injections.  The average LTV is 91% while the average interest coverage ratios for GBM and UK Corporate originated investment portfolios (Core and Non-Core combined) are 1.60 times and 1.64 times respectively.

Whilst asset valuations stabilised during the latter part of 2009, the outlook remains challenging with liquidity to support refinancing still reduced and high levels of concern regarding tenant failures. Wherever feasible, the Group works closely with clients to restructure loans while achieving mutual benefits.

Portfolios are subject to close monitoring within the originating division and a dedicated unit in the GRG focuses on commercial real estate to ensure that expertise is readily available to manage this portfolio actively on a coordinated basis globally.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
120

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)
 
Transport and storage
The automotive, shipping and aviation portfolios form part of the transport and storage industry sector which stood at £46.2 billion at 31 December 2009, down 22% during the year.  The remainder of the portfolio largely comprises land-based freight, storage and logistics companies.
 
Automotive
Exposure to the automotive sector decreased from £13.3 billion at 31 December 2008 to £8.9 billion at 31 December 2009.

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
Segment
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs)
    1,204     60     1,264     14       2,681       20  
Captive finance companies
    609     84     693     8       1,131       9  
Component suppliers
    750     81     831     9       1,854       14  
Retailers/services
    4,040     766     4,806     54       5,099       38  
Rental
    1,150     147     1,297     15       2,533       19  
                                           
      7,753     1,138     8,891     100       13,298       100  

 
   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
Domicile of obligor
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Americas
    1,325     402     1,727     19       3,520       26  
Central Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa
    373     152     525     6       872       7  
UK
    3,530     426     3,956     45       3,884       29  
Western Europe
    1,949     97     2,046     23       4,098       31  
Asia
    576     61     637     7       924       7  
                                           
      7,753     1,138     8,891     100       13,298       100  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
121

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Automotive (continued)
The global automotive industry continues to face long-term structural challenges of overcapacity, weakened consumer demand owing to economic conditions, reduced credit availability and high input costs. The global OEMs are experiencing changing demand patterns with a greater focus on developing markets versus their established markets. Shifting production capacity to lower cost overseas locations remains a priority but one that risks labour force issues. The industry is also challenged by increasingly stringent environmental legislation that is forcing a shift to smaller, lower emission vehicles.  In 2009 the automotive industry benefited from considerable government support in the form of direct intervention (US manufacturers) and other forms (for example, car scrappage schemes).  Whilst there are some emerging signs of recovery and stability, albeit with volumes at historically low levels, the outlook remains fragile as government support is withdrawn and with underlying demand likely to remain subdued.
 

The portfolio has reduced in size by a third since 31 December 2008 and whilst average credit quality was impacted by the restructuring of the large US manufacturers at the start of 2009, this restructuring provided a degree of stability to the portfolio that was largely maintained for the remainder of the year. Impairment provisions to date have not been material.

Shipping

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
Sector
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Dry bulk
    2,568     777     3,345     28       3,775       28  
Tankers
    3,103     1,640     4,743     39       4,975       37  
Container
    756     685     1,441     12       1,256       10  
Gas/offshore
    137     1,851     1,988     16       1,786       13  
Other
    168     419     587     5       1,549       12  
                                           
Total
    6,732     5,372     12,104     100       13,341       100  

Note:
(1)
Figures shown relate to direct shipping financing exposure and do not include related operating lease and counterparty exposures of £1.1 billion in 2009 and £3.3 billion in 2008.

The Group’s shipping portfolio, is primarily focussed on fully secured mortgage finance business in the dry bulk and tanker sectors with a limited exposure to container vessels.

The performance of the sector over the past twelve months has been materially impacted by both the global downturn and the high volume of new capacity that has been delivered and will continue to come on stream into 2011.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
122


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Shipping (continued)
The Group’s strategy is to focus on cash flows relating to the ships financed and to work with long- term industry participants in Europe and North America where the Group has long-standing relationships and where the companies have a demonstrated ability to withstand cyclical downturns.  Asset selection has been to focus on modern tonnage (average vessel age is eight years).

The performance of the portfolio reflects a rising level of stress with a number of transactions restructured in response to asset price reductions and security covenant breaches.  The value of the fleet is reviewed on a quarterly basis and a large majority of deals remain fully secured. There have been few instances of payment default and in the majority of cases owners have supported transactions through cash injections.  Cases on the Group’s watch list that are more closely monitored and controlled have increased and now stand at £1 billion, or 7% of the total portfolio.

Aviation

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
      £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Operating leases (1)
    -     7,126     7,126     46       10,270       50  
Secured debt
    1,360     3,352     4,712     30       5,252       26  
Sovereign guaranteed debt
    -     2,774     2,774     18       3,324       17  
Unsecured debt
    910     -     910     6       1,093       5  
Other
    -     -     -     -       405       2  
                                           
      2,270     13,252     15,522     100       20,344       100  

Note:
(1)
Operating lease assets, which are included in property, plant and equipment, represents the net investment in aircraft owned and on order. A smaller figure, £1 billion, is included within credit risk assets, representing the risk of customer default on lease arrangements.

The aviation portfolio comprises a number of activities, but is primarily focussed on the Dublin based Aviation Capital business, which has been designated as Non-Core.

The aviation sector has been under considerable pressure owing to the global downturn and compounded by the impact of the H1N1 virus (particularly in South America), overcapacity (notably in India and North America) and intense competition.  Despite the publicised failure of several airlines, within the Group’s portfolio there have been very low incidences of payment defaults and exposures requiring restructuring.

The Group’s strategy is to focus on modern assets that are widely used across airlines and to maintain relationships with the strongest operators with the most flexible cost base.  The majority of the portfolio is secured on modern aircraft and, although asset prices have weakened, exposures remain fully secured.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
123

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Aviation (continued)
Aviation exposure on the Group’s watch list, where there is an increased level of management control and oversight, totalled £1.4 billion at 31 December 2009.  Notwithstanding reduced passenger volumes, the leased fleet remains fully utilised.  The young age and commodity nature of the assets and the quality of the lessees result in a limited expectation of aircraft being returned.
 
Retail

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
Domicile
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Americas
    2,406     146     2,552     15       4,088       22  
Central Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa
    394     74     468     3       589       3  
UK
    6,810     1,180     7,990     49       7,483       41  
Western Europe
    3,160     1,889     5,049     31       5,531       30  
Asia
    211   64     275     2       643       4  
                                           
      12,981     3,353     16,334     100       18,334       100  


   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
                   
Segment
    £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Household goods
    2,127     338     2,465     15       3,117       17  
Food, beverages and tobacco
    3,191     162     3,353     21       4,235       23  
Clothing and footwear
    1,176     379     1,555     9       2,345       13  
Pharmaceutical, health and beauty
    1,424     236     1,660     10       2,049       11  
Other retail
    5,063     2,238   7,301   45       6,588       36  
                                           
      12,981     3,353     16,334     100       18,334       100  

The Group’s exposure to the retail sector was £16.3 billion at 31 December 2009, down 11% on the prior year.  The portfolio is well spread geographically and across sub-sectors.

Economic weakness and reduced consumer confidence is affecting the sector, with the impact most severe for stores reliant on high discretionary spend and for smaller retailers.  Food retailers generally fared well during the year, as did the ‘value’ end of the sector in the context of reduced household spending.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
124


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)
 
Retail (continued)
Whilst there has been some flow of retail customers into the Global Restructuring Group, the total value of debt managed by that team remains low.  Economic conditions are increasingly bringing to light those in the sector with poor operating models and stretched balance sheets.  The more successful operators continue to adapt their customer proposition, operating models and capital structure to the new environment whilst keeping tight control on working capital.

Debt securities

Analysis of debt securities by external ratings, mapped onto Standard & Poor's ratings scale are set out below.

   
UK and US
 government
   
 
Other
 government
   
Bank and
 building
 society
   
 
Asset-backed
 securities
   
 
 
Corporate
   
 
 
Other
   
 
 
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                             
2009
                                           
AAA
    49,820     44,396     4,012     65,067     2,263     -     165,558  
BBB- and above
    -   39,009     9,523     17,071     5,476     -     71,079  
Non-investment grade
    -     353     169     3,515     2,042   -     6,079  
Unrated
    -     504     289   1,949     2,601     1,036     6,379  
                                             
      49,820     84,262     13,993     87,602     12,382     1,036     249,095  
                                                       
2008
                                                       
AAA
    35,301       43,197       8,126       93,853       3,953       -       184,430  
BBB- and above
    -       15,862       13,013       11,437       10,172       -       50,484  
Non-investment grade
    -       242       127       3,678       2,259       -       6,306  
Unrated
    -       409       1,445       2,175       4,517       3,393       11,939  
                                                         
      35,301       59,710       22,711       111,143       20,901       3,393       253,159  
 
Key points
 
66% of the portfolio is AAA rated; 95% is investment grade.
   
Securities issued by central and local governments comprised 54% of the portfolio at 31 December 2009.
   
63% of corporate debt securities are investment grade. Of £2.6 billion unrated corporate securities, £1.1 billion relates to US funds derivatives portfolio.
   
See Market turmoil section on page 143 for further analysis of asset-backed securities.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
125


 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Risk elements in lending (REIL) and potential problem loans (PPL)
The table below sets out the Group's loans that are classified as REIL and PPL.

   
31 December 2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                             
Loans accounted for on a non-accrual basis:
                           
Domestic
    6,348     7,221     13,569       8,579  
Foreign
    4,383     13,859     18,242       8,503  
                             
      10,731     21,080     31,811       17,082  
                             
Accruing loans which are contractually overdue 90 days or more as to principal interest:
                           
Domestic
    1,135   1,089     2,224       1,201  
Foreign
    223     731     954       508  
                             
      1,358   1,820     3,178       1,709  
                             
Total REIL
    12,089   22,900     34,989       18,791  
                             
PPL
                           
Domestic
    137     287     424       218  
Foreign
    135     365     500       8  
                             
Total PPL
    272     652     924       226  
                             
Total REIL and PPL
    12,361     23,552     35,913       19,017  
                             
REIL as a % of gross lending to customers excluding reverse repos (1)
    2.8 %   15.1 %   6.1 %     2.7 %
                             
REIL and PPL as a % of gross lending to customers excluding reverse repos (1)
    2.9 %   15.5 %   6.2 %     2.7 %

Note:
(1)
Includes gross loans relating to disposal groups.

Key points

At 31 December 2009 REIL was 86% greater than at 31 December 2008. The majority of this growth was attributable to property assets, particularly in Non-Core which had a 107% increase in REIL.
   
PPL also increased compared with 31 December 2008.
   
REIL growth slowed in the second half of the year (14%) compared with the first half (64%), reflecting the moderating asset quality trend observed as the year progressed.  REIL levels in the fourth quarter were flat to the third quarter.
   
REIL and PPL represented 6.2% of gross lending to customers, up from 2.7% at the end of 2008.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
126

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Risk elements in lending and potential problem loans (continued)
 
   
REIL
   
PPL
   
REIL
 & PPL
   
Total
 provision
   
Total
 provision as
 % of REIL
   
Total
 provision
 as % of
 REIL & PPL
 
      £m         £m       £m       £m    
%
   
%
 
                                   
31 December 2009
                                 
UK Retail
    4,641     -     4,641     2,677     58     58  
UK Corporate
    2,330     97     2,427     1,271     55     52  
Wealth
    218     38     256     55     25     21  
Global Banking & Markets
    1,800   131     1,931     1,289   72     67  
Global Transaction Services
    197     4     201     189   96     94  
Ulster Bank
    2,260   2     2,262   962     43     43  
US Retail & Commercial
    643     -     643     478     74     74  
                                   
Core
    12,089     272   12,361     6,921     57     56  
Non-Core
    22,900     652     23,552     8,252     36     35  
                                       
      34,989     924     35,913     15,173     43     42  
                                             
31 December 2008
                                             
UK Retail
    3,832       -       3,832       2,086       54       54  
UK Corporate
    1,254       74       1,328       696       56       52  
Wealth
    107       24       131       34       32       26  
Global Banking & Markets
    869       18       887       621       71       70  
Global Transaction Services
    53       -       53       43       81       81  
Ulster Bank
    1,196       1       1,197       491       41       41  
US Retail & Commercial
    424       -       424       298       70       70  
                                                 
Core
    7,735       117       7,852       4,269       55       54  
Non-Core
    11,056       109       11,165       5,182       47       46  
                                                 
      18,791       226       19,017       9,451       50       50  

Key points

Provision coverage fell during the year from 50% to 43% as a consequence of the growth in REIL being concentrated in secured, property-related loans. These loans require relatively lower provisions in view of their collateralised nature. With many of these being in Non-Core, the provision coverage ratio is lower in Non-Core than in Core.
   
Provision coverage in Core business improved from 55% to 57%.
   
REIL in the Core businesses increased by £4.4 billion to £12.1 billion while REIL in Non-Core more than doubled to £22.9 billion.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
127


 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Credit risk (continued)

Impairment charge
The following table shows total impairment losses charged to the income statement.

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
 2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
       £m       £m  
                 
New loan impairment losses
    14,224       7,693  
less: recoveries of amounts previously written-off
    (325 )     (261 )
                 
Charge to income statement
    13,899       7,432  
                 
Comprising:
               
Loan impairment losses
    13,090       6,478  
Impairment losses on available-for-sale securities
    809       954  
                 
Charge to income statement
    13,899       7,432  

Impairment charge by division

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
 2009
   
31 December
 2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
UK Retail
    1,679       1,019  
UK Corporate
    927       319  
Wealth
    33       16  
Global Banking & Markets
    640       522  
Global Transaction Services
    39       54  
Ulster Bank
    649       106  
US Retail & Commercial
    702       437  
RBS Insurance
    8       42  
Central items
    1       (19 )
                 
Core
    4,678       2,496  
Non-Core
    9,221       4,936  
                 
Total
    13,899       7,432  

Key points

Impairment losses increased by £6.5 billion to £13.9 billion.  Non-Core accounted for 66% or £4.3 billion of the increase.  Retail and commercial business in UK, Ireland and the US also recorded significant increases in loans impairments.
   
Loan impairment losses in the fourth quarter were 7% lower than in the third quarter principally in Non-Core and GBM partially off-set by an increase in Ulster Bank.
   
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
128


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Analysis of loan impairment charge

   
Year ended
 
   
31 December
 2009
   
31 December
2008
 
       £m       £m  
                 
Latent loss
    1,184       769  
Collectively assessed
    3,994       2,391  
Individually assessed (1)
    7,878       3,200  
                 
Charge to income statement (2)
    13,056       6,360  
                 
Charge as a % of customer loans and advances – gross (3)
    2.3 %     0.9 %

Notes:
(1)
Excludes loan impairment charge against loans and advances to banks of £34 million (2008 - £118 million).
(2)
Excludes impairment of available-for-sale securities of £809 million (2008 - £954 million).
(3)
Gross of provisions and excluding reverse repurchase agreements.  Includes gross loans relating to disposal groups.

Analysis of loan impairment provisions on loans to customers

   
31 December 2009
       
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
   
31 December
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                             
Latent loss
    2,005     735     2,740       1,719  
Collectively assessed provision
    3,509     1,266     4,775       3,692  
Individually assessed provision
    1,272     6,229     7,501       3,913  
                             
Total (1)
    6,786     8,230     15,016       9,324  

Note:
(1)
Excludes £157 million relating to loans and advances to banks (2008 - £127 million).


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
129

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Credit risk (continued)

Movement in loan impairment provisions
The following table shows the movement in the provision for impairment losses for loans and advances to customers and banks.

   
2009
       
   
Individually assessed
   
Collectively
Assessed
   
Latent
   
Total
   
2008
 
   
Banks
   
Customers
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
At 1 January
    127     3,913     3,692     1,719     9,451       4,972  
Transfers to disposal groups
    -     (152 )   (111 )   (58 )   (321 )     -  
Currency translation and other adjustments
    (4 )   (263 )   (56 )   (105 )   (428 )     1,007  
Disposals
    -     (65 )   -     -     (65 )     (178 )
Amounts written-off
    -     (3,609 )   (2,869 ) -     (6,478 )     (2,897 )
Recoveries of amounts previously written-off
    -     38     287     -     325       261  
Charge to income statement
    34     7,878     3,994     1,184     13,090       6,478  
Discount unwind
    -     (239 )   (162 )   -     (401 )     (192 )
                                         
At 31 December
    157     7,501     4,775     2,740     15,173       9,451  
 
Key points

The provision charge for 2009 was more than double than the previous year.
   
The charge for the fourth quarter was 7% lower than the previous quarter and 23% lower than the fourth quarter of 2008.
   
Wholesale portfolios continue to drive the trend in provisions, with a notable concentration in the property sector.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
130

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Funding and liquidity risk

The Group’s liquidity policy is designed to ensure that the Group can at all times meet its obligations as they fall due.

Liquidity management within the Group addresses the overall balance sheet structure and the control, within prudent limits, of risk arising from the mismatch of maturities across the balance sheet and from exposure to undrawn commitments and other contingent obligations.

Following a difficult first quarter of 2009, most indicators of stress in financial markets are close to or better than in late 2008.  Liquidity conditions in money and debt markets have improved significantly since the beginning of the second quarter of 2009.  Contributing to the improvement has been a combination of ongoing central bank and other official liquidity support schemes, guarantee schemes and rate cuts.  Signs of underlying macroeconomic trends such as stabilisation of the UK economy also helped to sustain a recovery in debt markets.

Structural management
The Group regularly evaluates its structural liquidity risk and applies a variety of balance sheet management and term funding strategies to maintain this risk within its policy parameters.  The degree of maturity mismatch within the overall long-term structure of the Group’s assets and liabilities is managed within internal policy guidelines, aimed at ensuring term asset commitments are funded on an economic basis over their life.  In managing its overall term structure, the Group analyses and takes into account the effect of retail and corporate customer behaviour on actual asset and liability maturities where they differ materially from the underlying contractual maturities.

The Group targets diversification in its funding sources to reduce funding risk.  A key source of funds for the Group is core customer deposits gathered by its retail banking, private client, corporate and small and medium enterprises franchises.  The Group’s multi-brand offering and strong client focus is a key part of the funding strategy and continues to benefit the Group’s funding position.

The Group also accesses the wholesale funding market to provide additional flexibility in funding sources.  The Group has actively sought to manage its liquidity position through increasing the duration of wholesale funding, continued diversification of wholesale debt investors and depositors, supplemented by long-term issuance, government guaranteed debt, and a programme of ensuring that assets held are eligible as collateral to access central bank liquidity schemes.
 
Cash flow management
The short-term maturity structure of the Group’s liabilities and assets is managed daily to ensure that all material or potential cash flows, undrawn commitments and other contingent obligations can be met. The primary focus of the daily management activity is to ensure access to sufficient liquidity to meet cash flow obligations within key time horizons, including out to one month ahead and FSA target horizons such as 90 days.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
131

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Funding liquidity risk (continued)
 
Cash flow management (continued)
Potential sources of liquidity include cash inflows from maturing assets, new borrowings or the sale of various debt securities held.  Short-term liquidity risk is generally managed on a consolidated basis with liquidity mismatch limits in place for subsidiaries and non-UK branches which have material local treasury activities, thereby assuring that the daily maintenance of the Group’s overall liquidity risk position is not compromised.
 
Volume management
The Group also actively monitors and manages future business volumes to assess funding and liquidity requirements and ensure that the Group operates within the risk appetite and metrics set by the Board.  This includes management of undrawn commitments, conduits and liquidity facilities within acceptable levels.
 
Liquidity reserves
The Group holds a diversified stock of highly marketable liquid assets including highly rated central government debt that can be used as a buffer against unforeseen impacts on cash flows or in stressed environments.  The make up of this portfolio of assets is sub-divided into tiers on the basis of asset liquidity with haircuts applied to ensure that realistic liquidation values are used in key metrics.  This portfolio includes a centrally held buffer against severe liquidity stresses and locally held buffers to meet self sufficiency needs.

Stress testing
The Group performs stress tests to simulate how events may impact its funding and liquidity capabilities.  Such tests assist in the planning of the overall balance sheet structure, help define suitable limits for control of the risk arising from the mismatch of maturities across the balance sheet and from undrawn commitments and other contingent obligations, and feed into the risk appetite and contingency funding plan.  The form and content of stress tests are updated where required as market conditions evolve.  These stresses include the following scenarios:

Idiosyncratic stress: an unforeseen, name-specific, liquidity stress, with the initial short-term period of stress lasting for at least two weeks;
   
Market stress: an unforeseen, market-wide liquidity stress of three months duration;
   
Idiosyncratic and market stress: a combination of idiosyncratic and market stress;
   
Rating downgrade: one and two notch long-term credit rating downgrade scenarios; and
   
Daily market lockout: no access to unsecured funding and no funding rollovers are possible.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
132


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Funding and liquidity risk (continued)

Contingency planning
Contingency funding plans have been developed which incorporate early warning indicators to monitor market conditions.  The Group reviews its contingency funding plans in the light of evolving market conditions and stress test results.  The contingency funding plans cover: the available sources of contingent funding to supplement cash flow shortages; the lead times to obtain such funding; the roles and responsibilities of those involved in the contingency plans, the communication and escalation requirements when early warning indicators signal deteriorating market conditions; and the ability and circumstances within which the Group accesses central bank liquidity.

Monitoring
Liquidity risk is constantly monitored to evaluate the Group’s position having regard to its risk appetite and key metrics.  Daily, weekly and monthly monitoring and control processes are in place, which allow management to take appropriate action.  Actions taken to improve the liquidity risk include a focus on reducing the loan to deposit ratio, issuing longer-term wholesale funding, both guaranteed and unguaranteed, and the size of the conduit commitments. Metrics include, but are not limited to:

Wholesale funding > 1 year
As the wholesale funding markets have improved over the course of 2009 the Group has been better able to manage both its short and longer-term funding requirements and has significantly reduced its reliance on central bank funding.  In 2009, the Group issued £21 billion of public, private and structured unguaranteed debt securities with a maturity greater than one year, including issuances with maturities of ten years and five years of £3 billion and £2 billion respectively.  To provide protection from liquidity risk in these markets the Group targets the ratio of wholesale funding greater than one year.  The proportion of outstanding debt instruments issued with a remaining maturity of greater than 12 months has increased from 45% at 31 December 2008 to 50% at 31 December 2009, reflecting a lengthening of the maturity profile of debt issuance over the period.  The Group is also targeting an absolute funding reliance (unsecured wholesale funding with a residual maturity of less than one year) of less than £150 billion by 2013.  The 2013 target can also be segmented further into bank deposits of less than £65 billion and other unsecured wholesale funding of less than £85 billion.  The reliance on wholesale funding has improved from £343 billion as at 31 December 2008 to £249 billion at 31 December 2009 (and this figure includes £109 billion of bank deposits).

In common with other UK banks, the Group has benefited from the UK Government’s scheme to guarantee debt issuance.  At 31 December 2009 the Group had issued debt securities amounting to £52 billion (2008 - £32 billion), which is approximately 38% of the total UK Government guaranteed debt.

Loan to deposit ratio (net)
The Group monitors the loan to deposit ratio as a key metric.  This ratio has decreased from 118% at 31 December 2008 to 104% at 31 December 2009 for Core and from 151% at 31 December 2008 to 134% at 31 December 2009 for the Group. The Group has a target of 100% for 2013.  The gap between customer loans and customer deposits (excluding repos) narrowed by £91 billion from £233 billion as at 31 December 2008 to £142 billion as at 31 December 2009.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
133


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Funding and liquidity risk (continued)

Monitoring (continued)

Undrawn commitments: The Group has been actively managing down the amount of undrawn commitments that it is exposed to.  Undrawn commitments have decreased from £349 billion as at 31 December 2008 to £289 billion as at 31 December 2009.

Conduit commitments: The Group has taken additional measures to improve the balance sheet structure.  One area of focus has been reducing the size of the multi-seller conduits business, which relies upon funding assets through the issuance of short-term asset backed commercial paper.  Total facilities have declined by £17.9 billion to £25.0 billion at 31 December 2009.  This has reduced the liquidity risk to the Group through the commitments provided for this type of business.

Liquidity reserves: The total stock of liquid assets has increased by £81 billion during 2009 from £90 billion at 31 December 2008 to £171 billion at 31 December 2009; this reflects the injection of £25.5 billion of B Shares at the end of December 2009 provided as treasury bills and cash.  The Group is targeting a liquidity pool of £150 billion by 2013.  The table below shows the breakdown of these assets.  In addition to available liquid assets, the Group has a pool of unencumbered assets that are available for securitisation to raise funds if and when required.

   
31 December
2009
   
31 December
2008
 
Liquidity reserves
    £m       £m  
                 
Government securities
    57,407       27,303  
Cash and central bank balances
    51,500       11,830  
Unencumbered collateral (1)
    42,055       30,054  
Other liquid assets
    19,699       20,647  
                 
      170,661       89,834  

Note:
(1)
Includes secured assets which are eligible for discounting at central banks.


Repo agreements: At 31 December 2009 the Group had £68 billion of customer secured funding and £38 billion of bank secured funding, which includes borrowing using central bank funding schemes. With markets continuing to stabilise through the course of 2009, the Group has significantly reduced its reliance on secured funding from central bank liquidity schemes.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
134


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Wholesale funding breakdown

Funding and liquidity risk (continued)

The table below shows the composition of the Group’s sources of wholesale funding.  The Group has implemented its funding strategy of reducing its reliance on short-term wholesale funding.  Deposits by banks have decreased by £63 billion to £116 billion; comprising 14.3% of total funding sources as at 31 December 2009, down from 18.8% as at 31 December 2008. Short term debt securities such as commercial paper and certificates of deposits in issue have also reduced by £41 billion to £103 billion as at 31 December 2009 from £144 billion as at 31 December 2008.

   
31 December 2009
   
31 December 2008
 
      £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                           
Deposits by banks (1)
    115,642     14.3       178,943       18.8  
Debt securities in issue:
                             
- Commercial paper
    44,307     5.5       69,891       7.3  
- Certificates of deposits
    58,195     7.2       73,925       7.8  
- Medium term notes and other bonds
    125,800     15.6       108,529       11.4  
- Securitisations
    18,027     2.2       17,113       1.8  
                               
      246,329     30.5       269,458       28.3  
Subordinated debt
    31,538     3.9       43,678       4.6  
                               
Total wholesale funding
    393,509     48.7       492,079       51.7  
Customer deposits (1)
    414,251     51.3       460,318       48.3  
                               
      807,760     100.0       952,397       100.0  

Note:
(1)
Excluding repurchase agreements and stock lending.

The total level of the Group’s wholesale funding has reduced year on year by £99 billion with the majority of the reduction attributable to a reduced reliance on inter-bank funding.

The table below shows the maturity profile of the Group’s debt securities in issue and subordinated debt. The composition of the profile reflects the increased proportion of the Group’s debt securities in issue of greater than 1 year maturity.  Debt securities with a remaining maturity of less than 1 year has reduced by £33 billion to £139 billion as at 31 December 2009 down from £172 billion as at 31 December 2008.

   
31 December 2009
       
   
Debt securities in issue
   
Subordinated debt
   
Total
         
31 December 2008
 
      £m       £m       £m    
%
      £m    
%
 
                                       
Less than one year
    136,901     2,144     139,045     50.0       172,234       55.0  
1-5 years
    70,437     4,235     74,672     26.9       61,842       19.8  
More than 5 years
    38,991     25,159     64,150     23.1       79,060       25.2  
                                           
Total
    246,329     31,538     277,867     100.0       313,136       100.0  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
135

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Funding and liquidity risk (continued)

Net stable funding ratio
The net stable funding ratio shown below is assessed using the proposed Basel measure.  This measure seeks to show the proportion of structural term assets which are funded by stable funding including customer deposits, long-term wholesale funding, and equity. Through the course of 2009, the measure has improved from 79% at 31 December 2008 to 90% at 31 December 2009.  Over time this will be reviewed as proposals are developed and industry standards implemented.

   
2009
   
2008
       
   
£bn
   
ASF(1)
 £bn
   
£bn
   
ASF(1)
 £bn
   
Weighting
%
 
                             
Equity
    80     80       62       62       100  
Wholesale lending > 1 year
    144     144       149       149       100  
Wholesale lending < 1 year
    249     -       343       -       -  
Derivatives
    422     -       969       -       -  
Repos
    106     -       142       -       -  
Customer deposits
    415     353       460       391       85  
Others (deferred tax, insured liabilities, etc)
    106     -       94       -       -  
                                       
Total liabilities and equity
    1,522     577       2,219       602          
                                         
                                         
                                       
Cash
    52     -       12       -       -  
Inter bank lending
    49     -       71       -       -  
Government and corporate bonds
    249     50       253       51       20  
Derivatives
    438     -       991       -       -  
Reverse repos
    76     -       98       -       -  
Advances < 1 year
    139     69       173       87       50  
Advances >1 year
    416     416       518       518       100  
Others (Prepayments, accrued income, deferred taxation)
    103     103       103       103       100  
                                       
Total assets
    1,522     638       2,219       759          
                                       
Net stable funding ratio
          90 %             79 %        

Note:
(1)
 ASF means available stable funding.

Outlook for 2010

Whilst there have been improvements in the state of the global economy over the course of 2009, the outlook for 2010 remains uncertain.  In line with meeting the objectives of the Strategic Plan, the Group is actively focusing on closing the customer funding gap, continuing to exit Non-Core businesses and focusing on reducing undrawn and contingent commitments.  This will reduce the absolute need for wholesale funding, with the Group targeting £150 billion in 2013.  In addition, the Group will continue to make progress in terming out its remaining wholesale funding.  The Group will continue to reduce reliance on government supported schemes, and be governed by the state of the markets and the economies in which it operates.  These strategies will ensure that the Group will be more resilient to any further disruptions in the market and will be better placed to take advantage of favourable trading conditions as they return.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
136

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

Market risk

Market risk arises from changes in interest rates, foreign currency, credit spread, equity prices and risk related factors such as market volatilities.  The Group manages market risk centrally within its trading and non-trading portfolios through a comprehensive market risk management framework.  This framework includes limits based on, but not limited to VaR, scenario analysis, position and sensitivity analyses.

Measurement
At the Group level the risk appetite is expressed in the form of a combination of VaR, sensitivity and scenario limits.  VaR is a technique that produces estimates of the potential change in the market value of a portfolio over a specified time horizon at given confidence levels.  For internal risk management purposes, the Group’s VaR assumes a time horizon of one trading day and in June 2009 the Group changed the VaR confidence level from 95% to 99% as it considers this provides greater clarity in respect of more severe potential economic outcomes.  The Group's VaR model is based on a historical simulation model, utilising data from the previous two years trading results.

The VaR disclosure is broken down into trading and non-trading, where trading VaR relates to the main trading activities of the Group and non-trading reflects the VaR associated with reclassified assets, money market business and the management of internal funds flow within the Group’s businesses.

As part of the Strategic Review, the designation of assets between Core and Non-Core divisions was completed during 2009.  As the Non-Core division was not established until the conclusion of the Strategic Review in the first quarter of 2009, constitution of the average, maximum and minimum VaR for Core and Non-Core has been prepared on a best efforts basis as these measures require daily data.

All VaR models have limitations, which include:

Historical simulation VaR may not provide the best estimate of future market movements.  It can only provide a prediction of the future based on events that occurred in the time series horizon.  Therefore, events more severe than those in the historical data series cannot be predicted;
   
VaR that uses a 99% confidence level does not reflect the extent of potential losses beyond that percentile;
   
VaR that uses a one-day time horizon will not fully capture the profit and loss implications of positions that cannot be liquidated or hedged within one day; and
   
The Group computes the VaR of trading portfolios at the close of business.  Positions may change substantially during the course of the trading day and intra-day profit and losses will be incurred.

These limitations mean that the Group cannot guarantee that losses will not exceed the VaR.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
137


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market risk (continued)

Traded portfolios
The VaR for the Group’s 2009 trading portfolios segregated by type of market risk exposure is shown below.

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Average
   
Period end
   
Maximum
   
Minimum
   
Average
   
Period end
   
Maximum
   
Minimum
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                           
Interest rate
    57.0     50.5     112.8     28.1       38.7       54.4       94.0       18.2  
Credit spread
    148.3     174.8     231.2     66.9       71.5       61.5       130.8       51.7  
Currency
    17.9     20.7     35.8     9.2       7.6       17.0       18.0       3.5  
Equity
    13.0     13.1     23.2     2.7       22.4       18.3       42.6       11.0  
Commodity
    14.3     8.9     32.1     6.5       9.9       10.0       25.8       0.2  
Diversification
          (86.1 )                         (52.4 )                
                                                           
      155.2     181.9     229.0     76.8       82.3       108.8       155.7       49.3  
                                                           
Core
    101.5     127.3     137.8     54.8                                  
CEM (1)
    29.7     38.6     41.3     11.5                                  
                                                           
Core excluding CEM
    86.7     97.4     128.5     54.9                                  
Non-Core
    86.3     84.8     162.1     29.3                                  

Note:
(1)
CEM: Counterparty exposure management.
(2)
The VaR above excludes super senior tranches of asset backed CDOs as VaR no longer produces an appropriate measure of risk for these exposures due to the illiquidity and opaqueness of the pricing of these instruments over an extended period.  For these exposures, the maximum potential loss is equal to the aggregate net exposure, which was £910 million as at 31 December 2009.
 
Non-traded portfolios
The VaR for the Group’s non-trading portfolios and segregated by type of market risk exposure, is shown below.

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Average
   
Period end
   
Maximum
   
Minimum
   
Average
   
Period end
   
Maximum
   
Minimum
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m        £m       £m  
                                                           
Interest rate
    15.5     16.5     26.1     9.5       10.6       24.4       32.9       5.2  
Credit spread
    211.2     213.3     270.3     65.4       10.5       65.2       65.2       5.5  
Currency
    1.4     0.6     7.0     0.2       0.6       2.2       5.7       0.1  
Equity
    3.6     2.3     7.2     1.7       3.4       7.0       8.0       0.8  
Diversification
          (26.0 )                         (22.7 )                
                                                           
      207.1     206.7     274.9     76.1       14.8       76.1       76.1       7.7  
                                                           
Core
    105.1     129.4     142.7     55.0                                  
Non-Core
    112.6     87.6     145.3     20.2                                  


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
138


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market risk (continued)

Traded and non-traded portfolios (continued)
 
Key points
 
The average total VaR utilisation increased in 2009 compared with 2008 largely as a result of the increased market volatility experienced since the credit crisis began in August 2007 being more fully incorporated into the two year time series used by the Group in its VaR model.  This volatility is particularly pronounced in respect of credit spreads and has a marked impact on credit spread VaR.  This increase is partially off-set by a reduction in trading book exposure throughout the period, due to a reduction in the size of the inventory held on the balance sheet as a result of sales, reclassification of assets to the non-trading book and write-downs.
   
The credit spread VaR increased significantly during May 2009 due to the purchasing of additional protection against the risk of counterparty failure on CDPC exposures.  As this counterparty risk is itself not in VaR these hedges have the effect of increasing the reported VaR.
   
The credit spread VaR decreased significantly at the end of August 2009 due to the positions relating CDPCs, being capitalised under Pillar II approach and hence excluded from the VaR measure from this date.
   
The Counterparty Exposure Management (CEM) trading book exposure and the exposure of Core without CEM have been disclosed separately.  CEM manages the OTC derivative counterparty credit risk in GBM, by actively controlling risk concentrations and reducing unwanted risk exposures. The hedging transactions CEM enters into are recorded in the trading book, and therefore contribute to the market risk VaR exposure of the Group. The counterparty exposures themselves are not captured in VaR for regulatory capital.  In the interest of transparency, CEM trading book exposure is disclosed separately.
   
The average total non-trading VaR utilisation was higher in 2009 at £207 million, compared with £15 million in 2008.  This is primarily due to assets from the Group's now dissolved securitisation arbitrage conduit, which was transferred from ABN AMRO to RBS, being included in the Group’s VaR measure from January 2009 and the increased market volatility being incorporated into the two year time series as noted above. If both of these factors are excluded, the non-trading VaR would decrease to reflect actions taken through the course of the year to dynamically reduce the underlying risk sensitivity.
 

RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
139

 

Risk and capital management (continued)

Market risk (continued)
 
Structural interest rate VaR
Non-trading interest rate VaR for the Group’s retail and commercial banking activities at a 99% confidence level was £101.3 million at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £76.7 million).  During 2009, the maximum VaR was £123.2 million (2008 - £197.4 million), the minimum was £53.3 million (2008 - £76.7 million) and the average was £85.5 million (2008 - £130.0 million).  A breakdown by currency of the Group’s non-trading VaR (including RFS Holdings minority interest) is shown below.

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
EUR
    32.2       30.9  
GBP
    111.2       26.0  
USD
    42.1       57.9  
Other
    9.0       14.0  

At year end the GBP VaR was increased by the impact of the B share issuance.
 
Sensitivity of net interest income
There have been no material changes to the Group’s measurement of, and management philosophy towards, the sensitivity of net interest income to movement in interest rates. The Group aims to be relatively neutral to directional shifts in interest rates and it seeks to mitigate the effect of prospective interest movements which could reduce future net interest income, whilst balancing the cost of such hedging activities on the current net revenue stream.  The following table shows the sensitivity of net interest income over the next twelve months to an immediate up and down 1% change to all interest rates.

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
+ 100bp shift in yield curves
    510       139  
– 100bp shift in yield curves
    (687 )     (234 )

The base case projected net interest income is based on the Group’s current balance sheet, forward rate paths implied by the yield curve as at 31 December and using contractual repricing dates.  Where contractual repricing dates are not held an estimate of the likely timing and extent of any rate change is used. The projection also includes the expected effects of behavioural options such as the prepayment of residential mortgages.  The above sensitivities show how this projected NII would change in response to an immediate parallel shift to all market rates.

The scenarios used are simplified in that they assume all interest rates for all currencies and maturities move at the same time and by the same amount and therefore do not reflect the potential effect on net interest income of some rates changing whilst others remain the same. The scenarios also do not incorporate actions that would be taken by the business units to mitigate the effect of this interest rate risk.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
140


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market risk (continued)
 
Sensitivity of net interest income (NII) (continued)
 
The projections do not take into account the effect on net interest income of anticipated differences in changes between interest rates and interest rates linked to other bases (such as central bank rates or product rates for which the entity has discretion over the timing and extent of rate changes).  The projections make other simplifying assumptions, including that all positions run to maturity and that there are no negative interest rates.

The Group’s asset sensitive position has increased in 2009.  The primary contributors to the change are enhanced modelling of embedded deposit floors, active position management to benefit from the impact of a tightening US monetary policy regime by Citizens and the impact of not fully hedging the interest rate exposure related to the APS capital proceeds which were received in late December.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
141

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market risk (continued)

Currency risk
The Group does not maintain material non-trading open currency positions other than the structural foreign currency translation exposures arising from its investments in foreign subsidiaries and associated undertakings and their related currency funding.  The Group’s policy in relation to structural positions is to match fund the structural foreign currency exposure arising from net asset value, including goodwill in foreign subsidiaries, equity accounted investments and branches, except where to do so would materially increase the sensitivity of either the Group’s or the subsidiary’s regulatory capital ratios to currency movements.  The policy requires structural foreign exchange positions to be reviewed regularly by Group Asset and Liability Committee.  Foreign exchange differences arising on the translation of foreign operations are recognised directly in equity, together with the effective portion of foreign exchange differences arising on hedging instruments.  Equity classification of foreign currency denominated preference share issuances means that these shares are recorded on the balance sheet at historic cost.  Consequently, these share issuances have the effect of increasing the Group’s structural foreign currency position.

The tables below set out the Group’s structural foreign currency exposures.
   
Net assets
 of overseas
 operations
   
Minority
 interests
   
Net
investments
in foreign
 operations
   
Net
 investment
 hedges
   
Structural
 foreign
 currency
 exposures
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                 
2009
                               
US dollar
    15,589     (2 )   15,591     (3,846 )   11,745  
Euro
    21,900     13,938     7,962     (2,351 )   5,611  
Other non-sterling
    5,706     511     5,195     (4,001 )   1,194  
                                 
      43,195     14,447     28,748     (10,198 )   18,550  
                                         
2008
                                       
US dollar
    17,480       (19 )     17,499       (3,659 )     13,840  
Euro
    26,943       15,431       11,512       (7,461 )     4,051  
Chinese renminbi
    3,928       1,898       2,030       (1,082 )     948  
Other non-sterling
    5,088       621       4,467       (3,096 )     1,371  
                                         
      53,439       17,931       35,508       (15,298 )     20,210  
 
Key points
 
Retranslation gains and losses on the Group’s net investment in operations together with those on instruments hedging these investments are recognised directly in equity.
   
Changes in foreign currency exchange rates will affect equity in proportion to the structural foreign currency exposure.  A 5% strengthening in foreign currencies against sterling would result in a gain of £980 million (2008 - £1,010 million) recognised in equity, while a 5% weakening in foreign currencies would result in a loss of £880 million (2008 - £960 million) recognised in equity.
   
These movements in equity would off-set retranslation effects on the Group's foreign currency denominated RWAs, reducing the sensitivity of the Group's Tier 1 capital ratio to movements in foreign currency exchange rates.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
142


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures

Explanatory note
These disclosures provide information on certain elements of the Group’s business activities affected by the unprecedented market events of the second half of 2007 and through 2008 and 2009, the majority of which reside within Non-Core and, to a lesser extent, Global Banking & Markets (‘GBM’), US Retail & Commercial and Group Treasury.  For certain disclosures the information presented has been analysed into the Group’s Core and Non-Core businesses.

Asset-backed securities
The Group structures, originates, distributes and trades debt in the form of loan, bond and derivative instruments, in all major currencies and debt capital markets in North America, Western Europe, Asia and major emerging markets. The carrying value of the Group’s debt securities at 31 December 2009 was £249.1 billion (2008 - £253.2 billion).  This comprised:

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Group before
 RFS Holdings
 minority interest
   
Group
   
Group before
 RFS Holdings minority interest
   
Group
 
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
                       
Securities issued by central and local governments
    134.1     146.9       95.1       105.8  
Asset-backed securities
    87.6     88.1       111.1       111.1  
Securities issued by corporates, US federal agencies and other entities
    13.4     14.4       24.3       26.2  
Securities issued by banks and building societies
    14.0     17.8       22.7       24.4  
                               
Total debt securities
    249.1     267.2       253.2       267.5  

This section focuses on asset-backed securities, an area of interest following the market dislocations in 2007 and 2008.  Asset-backed securities (ABS) are securities with an interest in an underlying pool of referenced assets.  The risks and rewards of the referenced pool are passed onto investors by the issue of securities with varying seniority, by a special purpose entity.

The Group has exposures to ABS which are predominantly debt securities but can also be held in derivative form. These positions had been acquired primarily through the Group’s activities in the US leveraged finance market which expanded during 2007.  These include residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS), commercial mortgage backed securities (CMBS), ABS collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) and collateralised loan obligations (CLOs) and other ABS.  In many cases the risk on these assets is hedged by way of credit derivative protection, purchased over the specific asset or relevant ABS indices.  The counterparty to some of these hedge transactions are monoline insurers (see Monoline insurers on page 149).

The following table summarises the gross and net exposures and carrying values of these securities by geography – US, UK, other Europe and rest of the world (RoW) and by the measurement classification – held-for-trading (HFT), available-for-sale (AFS), loans and receivables (LAR) and designated at fair value through profit or loss (DFV) - of the underlying assets at 31 December 2009.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
143

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures: Asset-backed securities (continued)

Asset-backed securities by geography and measurement classification

   
US
   
UK
   
Other
Europe (4)
   
RoW
     
Total
   
HFT
   
AFS
   
LAR
   
DFV
 
      £m       £m         £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                             
2009
                                                           
Gross exposure:(1)
                                                           
RMBS: G10 governments(2)
    26,693     314     16,594   94       43,695       13,536     30,159     -     -  
RMBS: prime
    2,965     5,276     4,567     222       13,030       6,274     5,761     848     147  
RMBS: non-conforming
    1,341     2,138     128     -       3,607       635     1,498     1,474     -  
RMBS: sub-prime
    1,668     724     195     561       3,148       1,632     1,020     479     17  
CMBS
    3,422     1,781     1,420     75       6,698       2,936     1,842     1,711     209  
CDOs
    12,382     329     571     27       13,309       9,080     3,923     305     1  
CLOs
    9,092     166     2,169     1,173       12,600       5,346     6,581     673     -  
Other ABS
    3,587     1,980     5,031     1,569       12,167       2,912     5,252     3,985     18  
                                                             
Total
    61,150     12,708     30,675     3,721       108,254       42,351     56,036     9,475     392  
                                                             
Carrying value:
                                                           
RMBS: G10 governments(2)
    27,034     305     16,183     33       43,555       13,397     30,158     -     -  
RMBS: prime
    2,697     4,583     4,009     212       11,501       5,133     5,643     583     142  
RMBS: non-conforming
    958     1,957     128     -       3,043       389     1,180     1,474     -  
RMBS: sub-prime
    977     314     146     387       1,824       779     704     324     17  
CMBS
    3,237     1,305     924     43       5,509       2,279     1,638     1,377     215  
CDOs
    3,275     166     400   27       3,868       2,064     1,600     203     1  
CLOs
    6,736     112     1,469     999       9,316       3,296     5,500     520     -  
Other ABS
    2,886     1,124     4,369     1,187       9,566       1,483     4,621     3,443     19  
                                                             
Total
    47,800     9,866     27,628     2,888       88,182       28,820     51,044     7,924     394  
                                                             
Net exposure:(3)
                                                           
RMBS: G10 governments(2)
    27,034     305     16,183     33       43,555       13,397     30,158     -     -  
RMBS: prime
    2,436     3,747     3,018     172       9,373       3,167     5,480     584     142  
RMBS: non-conforming
    948     1,957     128     -       3,033       379     1,180     1,474     -  
RMBS: sub-prime
    565     305     137     290       1,297       529     427     324     17  
CMBS
    2,245     1,228     595     399       4,467       1,331     1,556     1,377     203  
CDOs
    743     124     382     26       1,275       521     550     203     1  
CLOs
    1,636     86     1,104     39       2,865       673     1,672     520     -  
Other ABS
    2,117     839     4,331     1,145       8,432       483     4,621     3,309     19  
                                                             
Total
    37,724     8,591     25,878     2,104       74,297       20,480     45,644     7,791     382  

For notes to this table refer to page 145.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
144



Risk and capital management (continued)

Market turmoil exposures: Asset-backed securities (continued)

Asset-backed securities by geography and measurement classification (continued)

The table below summarises ABS carrying values and net exposures by geography and measurement classification at 31 December 2008.

   
US
   
UK
   
Other
Europe
(4)
   
RoW
   
Total
   
HFT
   
AFS
   
LAR
   
DFV
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                                         
2008
                                                                       
Carrying value:
                                                                       
RMBS: G10 governments (2)
    33,508       321       17,682       46       51,557       18,631       32,926       -       -  
RMBS: prime
    5,623       4,754       6,154       246       16,777       7,272       8,769       570       166  
RMBS: non-conforming
    1,111       2,906       -       -       4,017       352       2,183       1,482       -  
RMBS: sub-prime
    1,824       445       439       381       3,089       1,594       913       566       16  
CMBS
    2,145       1,395       1,646       141       5,327       2,751       1,126       1,437       13  
CDOs
    8,275       259       441       45       9,020       4,389       4,280       351       -  
CLOs
    6,428       329       2,605       255       9,617       3,385       5,299       933       -  
Other ABS
    3,582       1,622       5,098       1,437       11,739       1,505       6,572       3,621       41  
                                                                         
      62,496       12,031       34,065       2,551       111,143       39,879       62,068       8,960       236  
                                                                         
Net exposure: (3)
                                                                       
RMBS: G10 governments (2)
    33,508       321       17,682       46       51,557       18,631       32,926       -       -  
RMBS: prime
    5,548       3,667       5,212       215       14,642       5,138       8,768       570       166  
RMBS: non-conforming
    1,106       2,906       -       -       4,012       346       2,184       1,482       -  
RMBS: sub-prime
    358       408       380       313       1,459       346       571       526       16  
CMBS
    1,147       1,225       1,095       79       3,546       1,178       918       1,437       13  
CDOs
    2,402       127       311       -       2,840       1,618       873       349       -  
CLOs
    874       259       2,139       171       3,443       845       1,665       933       -  
Other ABS
    3,507       1,367       4,299       1,256       10,429       196       6,572       3,621       40  
                                                                         
      48,450       10,280       31,118       2,080       91,928       28,298       54,477       8,918       235  

Notes:
(1)
Gross exposures represent the principal amounts relating to asset-backed securities.
(2)
RMBS: G10 government securities comprises securities that are:
 
(a)
Guaranteed or effectively guaranteed by the US government, by way of its support for US federal agencies and Government sponsored enterprises (GSEs);
 
(b)
Guaranteed by the Dutch government; and
 
(c)
Covered bonds, referencing primarily Dutch and Spanish government-backed loans.
(3)
Net exposures represent the carrying value after taking account of hedge protection purchased from monoline insurers and other counterparties but exclude the effect of counterparty credit valuation adjustments.  The hedges provide credit protection of principal and interest cashflows in the event of default by the counterparty.  The value of this protection is based on the underlying instrument being protected.
(4)
Includes prime RMBS in RFS Holdings minority interests at 31 December 2009 comprising gross exposure: £558 million, carrying value: £579 million, and net exposure: £579 million. There was no ABS in RFS Holdings minority interest at 31 December 2008.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
145

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures: Asset-backed securities (continued)

Asset-backed securities by rating and valuation hierarchy level

The table below summarises the ratings and valuation hierarchy levels of ABS carrying values.

   
Ratings (1)
   
Of which carried at fair value (2)
 
   
AAA
 rated (1)
   
BBB-
 rated and
 above (1)
   
Non-
Investment grade
   
Not
 publicly
 rated
   
Total
   
Level 2
   
Level 3
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m     £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                     
2009
                                                   
RMBS: G10 governments
    43,005     550     -     -     43,555       43,555     -     43,555  
RMBS: prime
    9,211     1,731     558     1     11,501       10,696     221     10,917  
RMBS: non-conforming
    1,980     467     594     2     3,043       1,549     21     1,570  
RMBS: sub-prime
    578     514     579     153     1,824       1,371     128     1,499  
CMBS
    3,440     1,920     147     2     5,509       4,000     134     4,134  
CDOs
    616     2,141     849     262     3,868       2,640     1,025     3,665  
CLOs
    2,718     5,232     636     730     9,316       7,978     818     8,796  
Other ABS
    4,099     4,516     152     799     9,566       5,177     946     6,123  
                                                     
      65,647     17,071     3,515     1,949     88,182       76,966     3,293     80,259  
                                                             
2008
                                                             
RMBS: G10 governments
    51,548       -       -       9     51,557       51,322       235       51,557  
RMBS: prime
    15,252       1,417       106       2     16,777       16,061       146       16,207  
RMBS: non-conforming
    3,532       337       146       2     4,017       2,486       50       2,536  
RMBS: sub-prime
    1,362       936       790       1     3,089       2,459       64       2,523  
CMBS
    3,702       1,586       38       1     5,327       3,315       574       3,889  
CDOs
    4,510       2,041       2,088       381     9,020       6,922       1,748       8,670  
CLOs
    7,299       1,601       268       449     9,617       7,721       963       8,684  
Other ABS
    6,649       3,519       242       1,329     11,739       6,676       1,442       8,118  
                                                               
      93,854       11,437       3,678       2,174     111,143       96,962       5,222       102,184  

Notes:
(1)
Credit ratings are based on those from rating agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P).  Moody’s and Fitch have been mapped onto the S&P scale.
(2)
Fair value hierarchy levels 2 and 3 as defined by IFRS.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
146


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures: Asset-backed securities (continued)

Key points
 
·
Total asset-backed securities decreased from £111.1 billion at 31 December 2008 to £88.2 billion at 31 December 2009, due principally to exchange rate movements and the significant sell-down activity which took place in the first half of the year. In addition, credit spreads widened in the first half of the year, further reducing carrying values, although this was off-set to some extent by spreads tightening in the second half of the year.  Sales have been limited in the second half of the year, however maturities have continued to reduce the balance sheet exposures.
       
·
Life-to-date net valuation losses on ABS held at 31 December 2009, including impairment provisions, were £20.1 billion comprising:
       
 
·
RMBS: £3.6 billion, of which £0.7 billion was in US sub-prime and £2.3 billion in European assets;
       
 
·
CMBS: £1.2 billion;
       
 
·
CDOs: £9.4 billion and CLOs: £3.3 billion, significantly all in Non-Core; and
       
 
·
Other ABS: £2.6 billion.
       
·
The majority of the Group’s exposure to ABS is through government-backed RMBS, amounting to £43.6 billion at 31 December  2009 (2008 - £51.6 billion), and includes:
       
 
·
US government-backed securities, comprising mainly current year vintage positions, were £27.0 billion (2008 - £33.5 billion). Due to the US government backing, explicit or implicit, for these securities, the counterparty credit risk exposure is low.  This is comprised of:
       
   
·
HFT securities of £13.4 billion (2008 - £18.6 billion).  These securities are actively transacted and possess a high degree of liquidity. Trading in this portfolio has shifted to more recent vintages;
       
   
·
AFS securities of £13.6 billion (2008 - £14.9 billion) relating to liquidity portfolios held by US Retail & Commercial; and
       
   
·
The decrease in exposure over the year were due to foreign exchange movements driven by the strengthening of sterling against the US dollar in the first half of the year and a decrease in the balances in the second half of the year.
       
 
·
Other European government-backed exposures of £16.2 billion. This largely comprises liquidity portfolios of £15.6 billion held by Group Treasury (2008 - £17.7 billion) in European government-backed RMBS, referencing primarily Dutch and Spanish government-backed loans and covered mortgage bonds. The portfolio reduced during the year, driven primarily by exchange rate movements partially off-set by improved prices mainly during the second half of the year.
       
·
The Group has other portfolios of RMBS from secondary trading activities, warehoused positions previously acquired with the intention of securitisation, and a portfolio of assets from the unwinding of the Group’s securities arbitrage conduit in 2008.
       
·
Material disposals of prime RMBS occurred in the first half of the year, in particular £1.5 billion of 2005 vintage US securities, £0.5 billion of Spanish and Portuguese mortgages and £0.6 billion of positions which were hedged.
       

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
147

 

Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Asset-backed securities (continued)

Key points (continued)

·
CDOs decreased from £9.0 billion at 31 December 2008 to £3.9 billion at 31 December 2009, driven primarily by significant declines in prices, together with foreign exchange movements, in the first half of the year.
   
·
Subprime balances decreased across ratings, geographies and vintages, due to pay-downs, maturities and sales during the year, while non-conforming exposures fell mainly due to UK AAA-rated AFS redemptions. During the third quarter, improved prices off-set the effect of redemptions in some portfolios.
   
·
US Mortgage trading in GBM, US Retail and Commercial are in Core.
   
·
Many of the assets, primarily CDOs and CLOs, in Non-Core Trading have market hedges in place which gives rise to a significant difference between the carrying value and the net exposure.
   
·
AAA-rated assets decreased from £93.9 billion at 31 December 2008 to £65.6 billion at 31 December 2009 primarily as a result of the sell-down activity of prime and government-backed securities.
   
·
There was no significant change in the percentage of asset-backed securities classified as level 2 and level 3 assets year-on-year (2009 - 87% and 4% respectively, 2008 - 87% and 5% respectively).
   
·
There were significant downgrades of AAA-rated CLOs to BBB during the year.


RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
148

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments

Credit valuation adjustments (CVA)
CVA represents an estimate of the adjustment to arrive at fair value that a market participant would make to incorporate the credit risk inherent in counterparty derivative exposures. The Group makes credit adjustments to derivative exposures it has to counterparties as well as debit valuation adjustments (DVA) to liabilities issued by the Group. The Group’s methodology used for deriving DVA is different to that used for CVA and is discussed within Note 13 Financial Instruments – own credit on page 86.

The Group has purchased protection on its asset-backed exposures from monoline insurers ('monolines'), credit derivative product companies (CDPCs) and other counterparties. The Group makes CVAs to exposures it has to these counterparties.  The CVAs at 31 December 2009 are set out below.

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Monoline insurers
    3,796       5,988  
CDPCs
    499       1,311  
Other counterparties
    1,588       1,738  
                 
Total CVA adjustments
    5,883       9,037  

Key points

·
During 2009, there was a significant reduction in the level of CVA held against exposures to monoline insurers and CDPCs, primarily driven by a reduction in the gross exposures to these counterparties due to a combination of restructuring certain trades and higher prices of underlying reference instruments;
 
 
·
The reduction in CVA held against exposures to other counterparties was primarily driven by a reduction in counterparty risk due to credit spreads tightening.

Monoline insurers
The Group has purchased protection from monolines, mainly against specific asset-backed securities. Monolines specialise in providing credit protection against the principal and interest cash flows due to the holders of debt instruments in the event of default by the debt instrument counterparty.  This protection is typically held in the form of derivatives such as credit default swaps (CDSs) referencing underlying exposures held directly or synthetically by the Group.

The gross mark-to-market of the monoline protection depends on the value of the instruments against which protection has been bought.  A positive fair value, or a valuation gain, in the protection is recognised if the fair value of the instrument it references decreases.  For the majority of trades the gross mark-to-market of the monoline protection is determined directly from the fair value price of the underlying reference instrument.  For the remainder of the trades the gross mark-to-market is determined using industry standard models.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
149


 
Risk and capital management (continued)


Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

Monoline insurers (continued)
The methodology employed to calculate the monoline CVA uses CDS spreads and recovery levels to determine the market implied level of expected loss on monoline exposures of different maturities. CVA is calculated at a trade level by applying the expected loss corresponding to each trade’s expected maturity to the gross mark-to-market of the monoline protection.  The expected maturity of each trade reflects the scheduled notional amortisation of the underlying reference instruments and whether payments due from the monoline insurer are received at the point of default or over the life of the underlying reference instruments.

The table below summarises the Group’s exposure to monolines, all of which are in the Non-Core division.

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Gross exposure to monolines
    6,170       11,581  
Hedges with financial institutions
    (531 )     (789 )
Credit valuation adjustment
    (3,796 )     (5,988 )
                 
Net exposure to monolines
    1,843       4,804  
                 
CVA as a % of gross exposure
    62 %     52 %

Key points

·
The exposure to monoline insurers has decreased considerably during 2009 due to a combination of restructuring certain exposures and higher prices of underlying reference instruments. The trades with monoline insurers are predominantly denominated in US dollars, and the strengthening of sterling against the US dollar during 2009 has further reduced the exposure.
   
·
The overall level of CVA has decreased, in line with the reduction in exposure to these counterparties. However, relative to the exposure to monoline counterparties, the CVA has increased from 52% to 62% due to a combination of wider credit spreads and lower recovery rates. These moves have been driven by deterioration in the credit quality of the monoline insurers as evidenced by rating downgrades (as shown in the following table, together with the Group’s exposure to monoline insurers by asset category).
   
·
Counterparty and credit RWAs relating to risk structures incorporating gross monoline exposures increased from £7.3 billion to £13.7 billion over the year.  The increase was driven by revised credit assessments of these counterparties in the first nine months of the year, partially off-set by reductions in Q4 due to restructuring.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
150

 
 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

Monoline insurers (continued)
The table below summarises monoline exposures by rating.

   
Notional
 amount:
 protected
 assets
   
Fair value:
protected
 assets
   
Gross
 exposure
   
Credit
 valuation
 adjustment
   
Hedges
   
Net exposure
 to monoline
 insurers
 
      £m         £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                       
2009
                                     
AA rated
    7,143     5,875     1,268     378     -     890  
Sub-investment grade
    12,598     7,696     4,902     3,418     531     953  
                                       
Total
    19,741     13,571     6,170     3,796     531     1,843  
                                           
Of which:
                                         
CDOs
    2,284     797     1,487     1,059                  
RMBS
    82     66     16     2                  
CMBS
    4,253     2,034     2,219     1,562                  
CLOs
    10,007     8,584     1,423     641                  
Other ABS
    2,606     1,795     811     410                  
Other
    509     295     214     122                  
                                           
      19,741     13,571     6,170     3,796                  
                                             
2008
                                               
AA rated
    8,937       6,537       2,400       1,067       -       1,333  
BBB rated
    16,895       8,396       8,499       4,426       768       3,305  
Sub-investment grade
    2,188       1,506       682       495       21       166  
                                                 
Total
    28,020       16,439       11,581       5,988       789       4,804  
                                                 
Of which:
                                               
CDOs
    5,779       1,395       4,384       2,201                  
RMBS
    93       65       28       10                  
CMBS
    4,849       2,388       2,461       1,429                  
CLOs
    12,865       9,673       3,192       1,556                  
Other ABS
    3,666       2,460       1,206       617                  
Other
    768       458       310       175                  
                                                 
      28,020       16,439       11,581       5,988                  

Credit ratings are based on those from rating agencies Standard & Poor’s (S&P) and Moody’s. Where the ratings differ, the lower of the two is taken.

Key points

·
The majority of the current exposure is to sub-investment grade monoline counterparties.  Nearly all such counterparties were down-graded during the year.
 
·
The main exposure relates to CMBS, CDOs and CLOs.
 
·
CDO and CLO prices improved during the year, mostly in the last quarter, whilst CMBS deteriorated slightly overall during the year, with a slight improvement in Q4.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
151

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

Monoline insurers (continued)
A number of debt instruments with monoline protection were reclassified from held-for-trading to available-for-sale with effect from 1 July 2008.  Changes in the fair value since the reclassification are only recognised in the income statement to the extent that they are considered impairments. Changes in the fair value of the related monoline protection continue to be recorded in the income statement.  Higher prices of these debt securities in 2009 gave rise to net losses from the corresponding decrease in the gross mark-to-market of the related monoline protection.  The reclassification gave rise to profits in 2008.  A summary of the reclassified debt securities held at 31 December 2009 is shown in the table below:

      £m  
         
Fair value at 1 July 2008 (1)
    6,248  
Fair value at 31 December 2009 (2)
    5,022  

Notes:
(1)
Represents the fair value of the reclassified debt securities, adjusted for principal based cash flows between 1 July 2008 and 31 December 2009.
(2)
Of the net change in fair value, fair value losses of £563 million have not been recognised in the income statement.

If the debt securities had not been reclassified, all changes in fair value would have been recognised in the income statement and would be off-set by changes in the fair value of the related monoline CDS. The extent to which the level of impairments recorded differs from the fair value changes gives rise to a net profit or loss that, but for the reclassification, would have been recorded for accounting purposes.

The net income statement effect relating to monoline exposures is shown below.
      £m  
         
Credit valuation adjustment  at 1 January 2009
    (5,988 )
Credit valuation adjustment at 31 December 2009
    (3,796 )
         
Decrease in credit valuation adjustment
    2,192  
Net debit relating to realisation, hedges, foreign exchange and other movements
    (3,290 )
Net debit relating to reclassified debt securities
    (1,468 )
         
Net debit to income statement (1)
    (2,566 )
 
Note:
(1)
Comprises a loss of £2,387 million recorded as income from trading activities, £239 million of impairment losses and £60 million of other income relating to reclassified debt securities.

Key points

·
Realised losses arising from restructuring certain exposures, together with the impact of the US dollar weakening against sterling, are the primary components of the £3.3 billion above.
 
·
The net loss arising from the reclassification of debt securities is due to the difference between   impairment losses on these available-for-sale securities and the gains that would have been reported in the income statement if these assets had continued to be accounted for as held-for-trading.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
152


 
Risk and capital management (continued) 


Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

Monoline insurers (continued)

The Group also has indirect exposures to monoline insurers through wrapped securities and other assets with credit enhancement monoline insurers.  These securities are traded with the benefit of this credit enhancement.  Any deterioration in the credit rating of the monoline is reflected in the fair value of these assets.
 
Credit derivative product companies (CDPC)
A CDPC is a company that sells protection on credit derivatives. CDPCs are similar to monoline insurers, however they are not regulated as insurers.

The Group has purchased credit protection from CDPCs through tranched and single name credit derivatives.  The Group’s exposure to CDPCs is predominantly due to tranched credit derivatives (tranches).  A tranche references a portfolio of loans and bonds and provides protection against total portfolio default losses exceeding a certain percentage of the portfolio notional (the attachment point) up to another percentage (the detachment point).  The Group has predominantly traded senior tranches with CDPCs, the average attachment and detachment points are 15% and 51% respectively (2008 – 16% and 50% respectively), and the majority of the loans and bonds in the reference portfolios are investment grade.

The gross mark-to-market of the CDPC protection is determined using industry standard models.  The methodology employed to calculate the CDPC CVA is different to that outlined above for monolines, as there are no market observable credit spreads and recovery levels for these entities. The level of expected loss on CDPC exposures is estimated by analysing the underlying trades and the cost of hedging expected default losses in excess of the capital available in each vehicle.

A summary of the Group’s exposure to CDPCs is detailed below:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Gross exposure to CDPCs
    1,275       4,776  
Credit valuation adjustment
    (499 )     (1,311 )
                 
Net exposure to CDPCs
    776       3,465  
                 
CVA as a % of gross exposure
    39 %     27 %
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
153


 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

Credit derivative product companies (continued)

Key points

·
The exposure to CDPCs reduced significantly during the year mainly due to a combination of tighter credit spreads of the underlying reference loans and bonds, and a decrease in the relative value of senior tranches compared with the underlying reference portfolios. The trades with CDPCs are predominantly US and Canadian dollar denominated, and the strengthening of sterling against the US dollar has further reduced the exposure, partially off-set by the weakening of sterling against the Canadian dollar.
 
·
The overall level of CVA decreased, in line with the reduction in exposure to these counterparties, however on a relative basis the CVA has increased from 27% to 39%.  This reflects the perceived deterioration of the credit quality of the CDPCs as reflected by ratings down-grades. Further analysis of the Group’s exposure to CDPCs by counterparty credit rating is shown in the following table.
 
·
Counterparty and credit RWAs relating to gross CDPC exposures increased from £5.0 billion to £7.5 billion over the year. In addition, regulatory capital deductions of £347 million were taken at the end of the year (2008 - nil).

The table below summarises CDPC exposures by rating.

   
Notional
 amount:
protected assets
   
Fair value:
protected
reference assets
   
Gross
exposure
   
Credit
 valuation
 adjustment
   
Net exposure
 to CDPCs
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                 
2009
                               
AAA rated
    1,658     1,637     21     5     16  
BBB rated
    1,070     1,043     27     9     18  
Sub-investment grade
    17,696     16,742     954     377     577  
Rating withdrawn
    3,926     3,653     273     108     165  
                                 
      24,350     23,075     1,275     499     776  
                                         
2008
                                       
AAA rated
    6,351       4,780       1,571       314       1,257  
AA rated
    12,741       10,686       2,055       594       1,461  
A rated
    1,546       1,321       225       79       146  
BBB rated
    4,601       3,676       925       324       601  
                                         
      25,239       20,463       4,776       1,311       3,465  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
154

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)
 
Credit derivative product companies (continued)

Key points

·
Nearly all of the current exposure is to CDPCs that are either sub-investment grade or have had their rating withdrawn in 2009. The majority of CDPC counterparties suffered rating downgrades during the year.
 
·
£750 million of the net exposure at 31 December 2009 is in the Non-Core division, including all of the sub-investment grade exposure.

The net income statement effect arising from CDPC exposures is shown below.

      £m  
         
Credit valuation adjustment  at 1 January 2009
    (1,311 )
Credit valuation adjustment at 31 December 2009
    (499 )
         
Decrease in credit valuation adjustment
    812  
Net debit relating to hedges, foreign exchange and other movements
    (1,769 )
         
Net debit to income statement (income from trading activities)
    (957 )

Key points

·
The Group has additional hedges in place which effectively cap the exposure to CDPCs where the Group has significant risk. As the exposure to these CDPCs has reduced, losses have been incurred on the additional hedges.
 
·
These losses, together with losses arising on trades hedging CVA, are the primary components of the £1.8 billion above.

CVA attributable to other counterparties
CVA for all other counterparties is calculated on a portfolio basis reflecting an estimate of the amount a third party would charge to assume the credit risk.

Expected losses are determined from market implied probability of defaults and internally assessed recovery levels.  The probability of default is calculated with reference to observable credit spreads and observable recovery levels.  For counterparties where observable data does not exist, the probability of default is determined from the average credit spreads and recovery levels of baskets of similarly rated entities.  A weighting of 50% to 100% is applied to arrive at the CVA.  The weighting reflects portfolio churn and varies according to the counterparty credit quality.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
155

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

CVA attributable to other counterparties (continued)
Expected losses are applied to estimated potential future exposures which are modelled to reflect the volatility of the market factors which drive the exposures and the correlation between those factors. Potential future exposures arising from vanilla products (including interest rate and foreign exchange derivatives) are modelled jointly using the Group’s Core counterparty risk systems. At 31 December 2009, over 75% of the Group’s CVA held in relation to other counterparties arises on these vanilla products.  The exposures arising from all other product types are modelled and assessed individually.  The potential future exposure to counterparties is the aggregate of the exposures arising on the underlying product types.

Correlation between exposure and counterparty risk is also incorporated within the CVA calculation where this risk is considered significant.  The risk primarily arises on trades with emerging market counterparties where the gross mark-to-market value of the trade, and therefore the counterparty exposure, increases as the strength of the local currency declines.

Collateral held under a credit support agreement is factored into the CVA calculation.  In such cases where the Group holds collateral against counterparty exposures, CVA is held to the extent that residual risk remains.

CVA is held against exposures to all counterparties with the exception of the CDS protection that the Group has purchased from HM Treasury, as part of its participation in the Asset Protection Scheme, due to the unique features of this derivative.

The net income statement effect arising from the change in level of CVA for all other counterparties and related trades is shown in the table below.

      £m  
         
Credit valuation adjustment  at 1 January 2009
    (1,738 )
Credit valuation adjustment at 31 December 2009
    (1,588 )
         
Decrease in credit valuation adjustment
    150  
Net debit relating to hedges, foreign exchange and other movements
    (841 )
         
Net debit to income statement (income from trading activities)
    (691 )
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
156

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Credit valuation adjustments (continued)

CVA attributable to other counterparties (continued)

Key points

·
Losses arose on trades hedging the CVA held against other counterparties due to credit spreads tightening. These losses, together with realised losses from counterparty defaults, are the primary cause of the loss arising on foreign exchange, hedges, realisations and other movements.
 
·
The net income statement effect was driven by updates to the CVA methodology, hedges and realised defaults off-setting CVA movements.
   
 
·
The primary update applied to the CVA methodology reflected a market wide shift in the approach to pricing and managing counterparty risk.  The methodology change related to the calculation of the probability of default.  The basis for this calculation moved from a blend of market implied and historic measure to the market implied methodology set out above.  Other updates to the methodology were made to reflect the correlation between exposure and counterparty risk.
 
 
·
Prior to the update to the CVA methodology, CVA moves driven by changes to the historic element of the blended measure were not hedged, resulting in losses during the year arising from related CVA increases.
   
 
·
The CVA is calculated on a portfolio basis and reflects an estimate of the losses that will arise across the portfolio due to counterparty defaults. It is not possible to perfectly hedge the risks driving the CVA and this leads to differences between CVA and hedge movements. Differences also arise between realised default losses and the proportion of CVA held in relation to individual counterparties.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
157

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Leveraged finance

Leveraged finance is commonly employed to facilitate corporate finance transactions, such as acquisitions or buy-outs, and is so called due to the high ratio of debt to equity (leverage) common in such transactions.  A bank acting as a lead manager for a leveraged finance transaction will typically underwrite a loan, alone or with others, and then syndicate the loan to other participants.  The Group typically held a portion of these loans as part of its long-term portfolio once primary syndication is completed (‘hold portfolio’).  Most of the leveraged finance loans held as part of syndicated lending portfolio were reclassified from held-for-trading to loans and receivables with effect from 1 July 2008.

Leveraged finance provided by the Group that has been drawn down by the counterparty is reported on the balance sheet in loans and advances.  Undrawn amounts of the facility provided to the borrower are reported in memorandum items - commitments to lend.

The table below shows the Group’s global markets sponsor-led leveraged finance exposures by industry and geography.  The gross exposure represents the total amount of leveraged finance committed by the Group (drawn and undrawn).  The net exposure represents the balance sheet carrying values of drawn leveraged finance and the total undrawn amount.  The difference between gross and net exposures is principally due to the cumulative effect of impairment provisions and historic write-downs on assets prior to reclassification.
 
   
2009
    
2008
 
   
Americas
   
UK
   
Other
Europe
   
RoW
   
Total
   
Americas
   
UK
   
Other
Europe
   
RoW
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m         £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                                         
Gross exposure:
                                                                       
TMT (2)
    1,781     1,656     1,081     605     5,123       2,507       1,484       2,001       535       6,527  
Industrial
    1,584     1,523     1,781     207     5,095       1,686       1,612       1,924       188       5,410  
Retail
    17     476     1,354     71     1,918       268       1,285       1,440       89       3,082  
Other
    244     1,527     1,168     191     3,130       487       1,391       1,282       126       3,286  
                                                                         
      3,626     5,182     5,384     1,074     15,266       4,948       5,772       6,647       938       18,305  
                                                                         
Net exposure:
                                                                       
TMT (2)
    1,502     1,532     1,045     590     4,669       2,247       1,385       1,982       534       6,148  
Industrial
    524     973     1,594     205     3,296       607       1,157       1,758       186       3,708  
Retail
    17     445     1,282     68     1,812       223       978       1,424       89       2,714  
Other
    244     1,461     1,147     191     3,043       484       1,307       1,281       127       3,199  
                                                                         
      2,287     4,411   5,068     1,054     12,820       3,561       4,827       6,445       936       15,769  
                                                                         
Of which:
                                                                       
Drawn
    1,944     3,737     3,909     950     10,540       2,511       4,125       5,159       824       12,619  
Undrawn
    343     674     1,159     104     2,280       1,050       702       1,286       112       3,150  
                                                                         
      2,287     4,411     5,068     1,054     12,820       3,561       4,827       6,445       936       15,769  

Notes:
(1)
All the above exposures are in Non-Core.
(2)
Telecommunications, media and technology.
(3)
There were no held-for-trading exposures at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £102 million).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
158

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Leveraged finance (continued)

The table below analyses the movements in leveraged finance exposures for the year ended 31 December 2009.

   
Drawn
   
Undrawn
   
Total
 
      £m       £m       £m  
                         
Balance at 1 January 2009
    12,619       3,150       15,769  
Transfers in (from credit trading business)
    563       41       604  
Sales
    (247 )     (144 )     (391 )
Repayments and facility reductions
    (934 )     (392 )     (1,326 )
Funded deals
    166       (166 )     -  
Lapsed/collapsed deals
    -       (19 )     (19 )
Changes in fair value
    (31 )     -       (31 )
Accretion of interest
    100       -       100  
Impairment provisions
    (1,041 )     -       (1,041 )
Exchange and other movements
    (655 )     (190 )     (845 )
                         
Balance at 31 December 2009
    10,540       2,280       12,820  

Key points

·
Since the beginning of the credit market dislocation in the second half of 2007, investor appetite for leveraged loans and similar risky assets has fallen dramatically, with higher perceived risk of default due to the leverage involved. Furthermore, secondary prices of leveraged loans traded fell due to selling pressure and margins increasing, as well as reduced activity in the primary market.
 
·
During 2009 the Group's sterling exposure has declined, largely as a result of the weakening of the US dollar and euro against sterling during the period.
 
·
There have also been a number of credit impairments and write-offs during 2009, including some names which the Group previously held as part of its syndicate portfolio.
 
·
Early repayments as a result of re-financings have further reduced the exposure.

Not included in the table above are:
·
UK Corporate leveraged finance net exposures of £7.1 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £6.9 billion) related to debt and banking facilities provided to UK mid-corporates. Of this, £1.4 billion related to facilities provided to clients in the retail sector and £2.1 billion to the industrial sector (2008 - £1.4 billion and £2.5 billion respectively).
 
·
Ulster Bank leveraged finance net exposures of £0.6 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £0.7 billion).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
159

 

Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Special purpose entities

The Group arranges securitisations to facilitate client transactions and undertakes securitisations to sell financial assets or to fund specific portfolios of assets.  The Group also acts as an underwriter and depositor in securitisation transactions involving both client and proprietary transactions.  In a securitisation, assets, or interests in a pool of assets, are transferred generally to a special purpose entity (SPE) which then issues liabilities to third party investors.  SPEs are vehicles established for a specific, limited purpose, usually do not carry out a business or trade and typically have no employees. They take a variety of legal forms – trusts, partnerships and companies – and fulfil many different functions.  As well as being a key element of securitisations, SPEs are also used in fund management activities to segregate custodial duties from the fund management advice provided by the Group.

The table below sets out the asset categories together with the carrying amount of the assets and associated liabilities for those securitisations and other asset transfers, other than conduits (discussed below), where the assets continue to be recorded on the Group’s balance sheet.

   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Assets
   
Liabilities
   
Assets
   
Liabilities
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                               
Residential mortgages
    69,927     15,937       55,714 *     20,075  
Credit card receivables
    2,975     1,592       3,004       3,197  
Other loans
    36,448     1,010       1,679       1,071  
Finance lease receivables
    597     597       1,077       857  
* revised

Key points

·
The increase in both residential mortgages and other loan assets in the year principally relates to assets securitised to facilitate access to central bank liquidity schemes.
 
·
As all notes issued by own-asset securitisation SPEs are purchased by Group companies, assets are significantly greater than securitised liabilities.

Conduits
Group-sponsored conduits can be divided into multi-seller conduits and own-asset conduits.  The Group consolidates both types of conduit where the substance of the relationship between the Group and the conduit vehicle is such that the vehicle is controlled by the Group.  The total assets held by Group-sponsored conduits were £27.4 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £49.9 billion). Liquidity commitments from the Group to the conduit exceed the nominal amount of assets funded by the conduit as liquidity commitments are sized to cover the funding cost of the related assets.

Group-sponsored multi-seller conduits
Multi-seller conduits account for 43% of the total liquidity and credit enhancements committed by the Group at 31 December 2009 (2008 - 69.4%).
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
160

 

Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Special purpose entities (continued)

Key points

·
The maturity of commercial paper issued by the Group’s conduits is managed to mitigate the short-term contingent liquidity risk of providing back-up facilities. The Group’s limits sanctioned for such liquidity facilities at 31 December 2009 totalled approximately £25.0 billion (2008 - £42.9 billion).  For a very small number of transactions within one multi-seller conduit the liquidity facilities have been provided by third-party banks. This typically occurs on transactions where the third-party bank does not use, or have, its own conduit vehicles.
 
·
The Group’s maximum exposure to loss on its multi-seller conduits is £25.2 billion (2008 - £43.2 billion), being the total amount of the Group’s liquidity commitments plus the extent of programme-wide credit enhancements of conduit assets for which liquidity facilities were provided by third parties.
 
·
The Group’s multi-seller conduits have continued to fund the vast majority of their assets solely through ABCP issuance.  There have been no significant systemic failures within the financial markets similar to that experienced in the second half of 2008 following Lehman Brothers bankruptcy filing in September 2008. The improvement in market conditions has allowed these conduits to move towards more normal ABCP funding and reduced the need for backstop funding from the Group.


Group-sponsored own-asset conduits
The Group’s own-asset conduit programmes have been established to diversify the Group’s funding sources.  The conduits allow the Group to access central government funding schemes and the external ABCP market.

The Group holds three own-asset conduits which have assets that have previously been funded by the Group.  These vehicles represent 56% (2008 - 25%) of the Group’s conduit business (as a percentage of the total liquidity and credit enhancements committed by the Group), with £7.7 billion of ABCP outstanding at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £14.8 billion).  The Group’s maximum exposure to loss on its own-asset conduits is £34.2 billion (2008 - £15.9 billion), being the total drawn and undrawn amount of the Group’s liquidity commitments to these conduits.  This comprises committed liquidity of $40.8 billion (£25.1 billion) to an own-asset conduit established to access the Bank of England’s open market operations and £9.1 billion to other own-asset conduits.  One of these conduits was established for contingent funding and at 31 December 2009 it had no commercial paper outstanding, the Group’s liquidity commitment to this conduit is not included in the table below.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
161

 

Risk and capital management (continued) 

 
Market turmoil exposures: Special purpose entities (continued)

Group exposure to consolidated conduits
The exposure to conduits which are consolidated by the Group is set out below.

   
2009
       
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
   
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                             
Total assets held by the conduits
    23,409     3,957     27,366       49,857  
                             
Commercial paper issued
    22,644     2,939     25,583       48,684  
                             
Liquidity and credit enhancements:
                           
Deal specific liquidity:
                           
-  drawn
    738     1,059     1,797       1,172  
-  undrawn
    28,628     3,852     32,480       57,929  
PWCE (1)
    1,167     341     1,508       2,391  
                             
      30,533     5,252     35,785       61,492  
                             
Maximum exposure to loss (2)
    29,365     4,911     34,276       59,101  

Notes:
(1)
Programme-wide credit enhancement.
(2)
Maximum exposure to loss is determined as the Group’s total liquidity commitments to the conduits and additionally programme-wide credit support which would absorb first loss on transactions where liquidity support is provided by a third party. Third party maximum exposure to loss is reduced by repo trades conducted with an external counterparty.

During the period both multi-seller and own asset conduit assets have been reduced in line with the wider Group balance sheet management.

Third-party-sponsored conduits
The Group also extends liquidity commitments to multi-seller conduits sponsored by other banks, but typically does not consolidate these entities as the Group does not retain the majority of risks and rewards.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
162

 
 
Risk and capital management (continued)

 
Market turmoil exposures: Special purpose entities (continued)

Third-party-sponsored conduits (continued)

The Group’s exposure from third-party conduits is analysed below.

   
2009
       
   
Core
   
Non-Core
   
Total
   
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                             
Liquidity and credit enhancements:
                           
Deal specific liquidity:
                           
- drawn
    223     120     343       3,078  
- undrawn
    206     38     244       198  
Programme-wide liquidity:
                           
- drawn
    -     -     -       102  
- undrawn
    -     -     -       504  
                             
      429     158     587       3,882  
                             
                             
Maximum exposure to loss (1)
    429     158     587       3,882  

Note:
(1)
Maximum exposure to loss is determined as the Group’s total liquidity commitments to the conduits and additionally programme-wide credit support which would absorb first loss on transactions where liquidity support is provided by a third party.

Structured investment vehicles
The Group does not sponsor any structured investment vehicles.

Investment funds set up and managed by the Group
The Group has established and manages a number of money market funds for its customers.  When a new money market fund is launched, the Group typically provides a limited amount of seed capital to the funds.  The Group has investments in these funds of £776 million at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £107 million).  The investors in both money market and non-money market funds have recourse to the assets of the funds only.  These funds are not consolidated by the Group. At 31 December 2009 the Group had exposure to one fund amounting to £145 million (2008 - £144 million).

The Group’s money market funds held assets of £9.6 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £13.6 billion).

The Group has also established a number of non-money market funds to enable investors to invest in a range of assets including bonds, equities, hedge funds, private equity and real estate. The Group’s non-money market funds had total assets of £14.9 billion at 31 December 2009 (2008 - £18.7 billion).  In January 2010, the Group entered into a sale agreement with Aberdeen Asset Management plc for assets of £13.3 billion in these funds.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
163

 

Additional information

 
 
Other information
 
2009
   
2008
 
             
Ordinary share price
 
 
£0.292
   
 
£0.494
 
                 
Number of ordinary shares in issue
    56,366 m     39,456 m
                 
Market capitalisation
 
 
£16.5bn
     
£19.5bn
 
                 
Net asset value per ordinary share
 
 
£0.65
   
 
£1.15
 
                 
Employee numbers in continuing operations
               
(full time equivalents rounded to the nearest hundred)
               
UK Retail
    25,500       28,400  
UK Corporate
    12,300       13,400  
Wealth
    4,600       5,200  
Global Banking & Markets
    16,800       16,500  
Global Transaction Services
    3,500       3,900  
Ulster Bank
    4,500       5,400  
US Retail & Commercial
    15,500       16,200  
RBS Insurance
    13,900       14,500  
Group Centre
    4,200       4,300  
                 
Core
    100,800       107,800  
Non-Core
    15,100       19,000  
                 
      115,900       126,800  
Business services
    44,200       47,600  
Integration
    500       900  
RFS Holdings minority interest
    23,100       24,500  
                 
Group total
    183,700       199,800  

Statutory results
Financial information contained in this document does not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of section 435 of the United Kingdom Companies Act 2006 (‘the Act’).  The statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2009 will be filed with the Registrar of Companies in the United Kingdom following the company’s Annual General Meeting.  The auditors have reported on these accounts: their report was unqualified and did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Act.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
164

 
 
Selected financial data

 
The dollar financial information included below has been translated for convenience at a rate of £1.00 to US$1.6167, being the Noon Buying Rate on 31 December 2009.

Summary consolidated income statement

   
2009
   
2008
 
      $m       £m       £m  
                       
Net interest income
    26,682     16,504       18,675  
Non-interest income
    35,868     22,186       7,193  
                       
Total income
    62,550     38,690       25,868  
Operating expenses
    (34,723 )   (21,478 )     (54,202 )
Profit/(loss) before other operating charges and impairment losses
    27,827     17,212       (28,334 )
Insurance net claims
    (7,852 )   (4,857 )     (4,430 )
Impairment losses
    (24,170 )   (14,950 )     (8,072 )
                       
Operating loss before tax
    (4,195 )   (2,595 )     (40,836 )
Tax
    600     371       2,323  
                       
Loss from continuing operations
    (3,595 )   (2,224 )     (38,513 )
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations, net of tax
    (160 )   (99 )     3,971  
                       
Loss for the year
    (3,755 )   (2,323 )     (34,542 )
                       
Profit/(loss) attributable to:
                     
Minority interests
    564     349       (10,832 )
Preference shareholders
    1,420     878       536  
Paid-in equity holders
    92     57       60  
Ordinary and B shareholders
    (5,831 )   (3,607 )     (24,306 )
                         
                         


Summary consolidated balance sheet

   
2009
   
2008
 
      $m       £m       £m  
                       
Loans and advances
    1,325,930     820,146       1,012,919  
Debt securities and equity shares
    463,641     286,782       293,879  
Derivatives and settlement balances
    733,152     453,487       1,010,391  
Other assets
    219,986     136,071       84,463  
                       
Total assets
    2,742,709     1,696,486       2,401,652  
                       
Owners equity
    125,676     77,736       58,879  
Minority interests
    27,314     16,895       21,619  
Subordinated liabilities
    60,872     37,652       49,154  
Deposits
    1,222,785     756,346       897,556  
Derivatives, settlement balances and short positions
    767,960     475,017       1,025,641  
Other liabilities
    538,102     332,840       348,803  
                       
Total liabilities and equity
    2,742,709     1,696,486       2,401,652  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
165

 
 
Selected financial data (continued)

 
Other financial data

   
2009
   
2008
 
             
Loss per ordinary and B share from continuing operations – pence
    (6.3 )     (146.2 )
Diluted loss per ordinary and B share from continuing operations – pence
    (6.3 )     (146.2 )
Dividends per ordinary share – pence
    -       19.3  
Dividend payout ratio
    -       -  
Share price per ordinary share at year end – £
    0.292       0.494  
Market capitalisation at year end – £bn
    16.5       19.5  
Net asset value per ordinary share – £
    0.65       1.15  
Return on average total assets
    (0.18 %)     (1.19 %)
Return on average ordinary and B shareholders’ equity
    (7.2 %)     (50.1 %)
Average owners’ equity as a percentage of average total assets
    2.8 %     2.9 %
Risk asset ratio – Tier 1
    14.1 %     10.0 %
Risk asset ratio – Total
    16.1 %     14.1 %
Ratio of earnings to combined fixed charges and preference share dividends
               
– including interest on deposits
    0.81       (0.29 )
– excluding interest on deposits
    (0.19 )     (11.96 )
Ratio of earnings to fixed charges only
               
– including interest on deposits
    0.85       (0.30 )
– excluding interest on deposits
    (0.28 )     (14.71 )
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
166

 
 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information

 
Unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial information

Basis of preparation

The unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial information (the "unaudted pro forma financial information") comprises the unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated balance sheet as at 30 June 2009 (the "unaudited pro forma balance sheet") and the unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated income statements for the six months ended 30 June 2009 and years ended 31 December 2008, 31 December 2007 and 31 December 2006 (the "pro forma income statements") based on the published audited and unaudited financial statements of RBS, prepared in accordance with IFRS, after giving effect to:

(a) the distribution of those ABN AMRO businesses attributable to Santander and the Dutch government (the "other Consortium members"); and
(b) the divestment of certain businesses to meet the European Commission's State Aid requirements (see below).

To comply with the European Commission's State Aid requirements, RBS has agreed to make a series of divestments to be completed within four years from December 2009, as follows:

·  
RBS Insurance
·  
Global Merchant Services
·  
RBS Sempra Commodities (acquired April 2008)
·  
the RBS branch based business in England and Wales, the NatWest branch network in Scotland, along with the Direct SME customers across the UK (termed the 'UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal')

Collectively, the above are defined as the EC State Aid Divestments.

The pro forma financial information has been prepared assuming the following:
 
·
pro forma balance sheet: the distribution to the other Consortium members and EC State Aid Divestments had occurred on 30 June 2009.
·
pro forma income statements: the distribution to the other Consortium members had occurred on acquisition of ABN AMRO on 17 October 2007 and the EC State Aid Divestments had occurred on 1 January 2006.
·  
sale proceeds in respect of the EC State Aid Divestments are received in cash and are equal to the net asset values of the businesses to be disposed of.
·
Global Merchant Services and the UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal represent carve-outs from existing RBS businesses and therefore discrete financial information for these divestments which is factually supportable is not currently available. Accordingly, the pro forma financial information in respect of the EC State Aid Divestments excludes these businesses.
 
The tables below show estimates regarding certain key line items in respect of Global Merchant Services and the UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal. Detailed financial Information about these businesses on a stand alone basis is currently being prepared and therefore the estimates are subject to change.
 
   
6 months ended
30 June
2009
£m
   
Year ended 31 December
2008
£m
 
Global Merchant Services(1)
           
             
Total income
    264       535  
Operating profit before impairment losses
    121       281  
Operating profit before tax
    121       267  
                 
Total assets at 31 December 2008 were estimated to be £1.5 billion.
               
                 
UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal
               
                 
Total income
            1,082  
Operating profit before impairment losses
            567  
Operating profit before tax
            347  
                 
Total assets at 31 December 2008 were estimated to be £24.2 billion.
               
 
Note:
 
(1)
Global Merchant Services business units are reported within the Global Transaction Services, Ulster Bank and Non-Core divisions.

 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-1


 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information

 
Unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial information (continued)

Basis of preparation (continued)

The pro forma financial information and accompanying notes should be read in conjunction with the unaudited financial statements of RBS for the six months ended 30 June 2009 and the audited financial statements of RBS included in its Form 6-K, both as filed with the SEC on 30 September 2009.

The pro forma financial information is presented for information purposes only and does not represent what the results of operations would actually have been had the distribution to other Consortium members and EC State Aid Divestments occurred on the dates indicated nor is it necessarily indicative of the results of operations of financial position that may or may be expected to be achieved in the future.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-2

 
 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information (continued)

 
Unaudited pro forma income statement for the six months ended 30 June 2009
   
RBS (1)
   
RFS 
 Minority 
Interest (2)
   
RBS excluding RFS Minority Interest (3)
   
EC 
State Aid 
Divest-
ments (4)
   
Proforma 
RBS (5)
 
Continuing operations
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
Net interest income
    8,169       (1,514 )     6,655       (236 )     6,419  
                                         
Net fees and commissions
    3,648       (533 )     3,115       286       3,401  
Income from trading activities
    1,994       49       2,043       (472 )     1,571  
Gain on redemption of own debt
    3,790       -       3,790       -       3,790  
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    1,419       (645 )     774       (251 )     523  
Insurance net premium income
    2,821       (164 )     2,657       (2,580 )     77  
Non-interest income
    13,672       (1,293 )     12,379       (3,017 )     9,362  
Total income
    21,841       (2,807 )     19,034       (3,253 )     15,781  
Operating expenses
    (11,891 )     1,973       (9,918 )     662       (9,256 )
                                         
Profit before other operating charges and impairment losses
    9,950       (834 )     9,116       (2,591 )     6,525  
Insurance net claims
    (2,134 )     243       (1,891 )     1,865       (26 )
Impairment losses
    (8,060 )     539       (7,521 )     6       (7,515 )
Operating loss before tax
    (244 )     (52 )     (296 )     (720 )     (1,016 )
Tax
    441       (29 )     412       98       510  
Profit/(loss) from continuing operations
    197       (81 )     116       (622 )     (506 )
Profit/(loss) attributable to:
                                       
Minority interests
    635       (81 )     554       (144 )     410  
Preference shareholders
    510       -       510       -       510  
Paid-in equity holders
    36       -       36       -       36  
Ordinary shareholders
    (984 )     -       (984 )     (478 )     (1,462 )
                                         
      197       (81 )     116       (622 )     (506 )
                                         
Per 25p ordinary share (pence)
                                       
Continuing operations
                                       
                                         
Basic
    (2.1 )             (2.1 )             (3.1 )
Fully diluted
    (2.1 )             (2.1 )             (3.1 )
                                         
Number of shares (million)
                                       
Weighted average ordinary shares
    46,719               46,719               46,719  
Weighted average diluted ordinary shares
    46,719               46,719               46,719  
 
Notes:
(1)
The financial information for RBS has been extracted from the unaudited financial statements for the six months ended 30 June 2009 included in its Interim Results 2009.
(2)
The financial information for the RFS Minority Interest has been extracted from RBS's unaudited accounting records for the six months ended 30 June 2009 without adjustment and represent those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(3)
Pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the six months ended 30 June 2009 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(4)
The financial information for the EC State Aid Divestments has been extracted from RBS's unaudited accounting records for the six months ended 30 June 2009 without adjustment and represent those parts of RBS attributable to the businesses agreed with the European Commission as being for disposal for which information is currently available, namely RBS Insurance and RBS Sempra Commodities.
(5)
Adjusted pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the six months ended 30 June 2009 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members and the EC State Aid Divestments.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-3

 
 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information (continued)

 
Unaudited pro forma income statement for the year ended 31 December 2008
   
RBS (1)
   
RFS 
 Minority 
Interest (2)
   
RBS excluding RFS Minority Interest (3)
   
EC 
State Aid 
Divest-
ments (4)
   
Proforma 
RBS (5)
 
Continuing operations
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
Net interest income
    18,675       (2,911 )     15,764       (635 )     15,129  
Net fees and commissions
    7,445       (1,011 )     6,434       426       6,860  
Income from trading activities
    (8,477 )     (352 )     (8,829 )     (792 )     (9,621 )
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    1,899       64       1,963       (25 )     1,938  
Insurance net premium income
    6,326       (617 )     5,709       (5,293 )     416  
Non-interest income
    7,193       (1,916 )     5,277       (5,684 )     (407 )
Total income
    25,868       (4,827 )     21,041       (6,319 )     14,722  
Operating expenses
    (54,202 )     19,303       (34,899 )     1,403       (33,496 )
Loss before other operating charges and impairment losses
    (28,334 )     14,476       (13,858 )     (4,916 )     (18,774 )
Insurance net claims
    (4,430 )     513       (3,917 )     3,733       (184 )
Impairment losses
    (8,072 )     640       (7,432 )     45       (7,387 )
Operating loss before tax
    (40,836 )     15,629       (25,207 )     (1,138 )     (26,345 )
Tax
    2,323       (328 )     1,995       230       2,225  
Loss from continuing operations
    (38,513 )     15,301       (23,212 )     (908 )     (24,120 )
Loss attributable to:
                                       
Minority interests
    (14,889 )     15,301       412       (164 )     248  
Preference shareholders
    536       -       536       -       536  
Paid-in equity holders
    60       -       60       -       60  
Ordinary shareholders
    (24,220 )     -       (24,220 )     (744 )     (24,964 )
                                         
      (38,513 )     15,301       (23,212 )     (908 )     (24,120 )
                                         
Per 25p ordinary share (pence)
                                       
Continuing operations
                                       
                                         
Basic
    (146.2 )             (146.2 )             (150.7 )
Fully diluted
    (146.2 )             (146.2 )             (150.7 )
                                         
Number of shares (million)
                                       
Weighted average ordinary shares
    16,563               16,563               16,563  
Weighted average diluted ordinary shares
    16,563               16,563               16,563  

Notes:
(1)
The financial information for RBS has been extracted from the audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2008 included on page 158 of the Form 6-K filed with the SEC on 30 September 2009.
(2)
The financial information for the RFS Minority Interest has been extracted from RBS's accounting records for the year ended 31 December 2008 without adjustment and represent those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(3)
Pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the year ended 31 December 2008 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(4)
The financial information for the EC State Aid Divestments has been extracted from RBS's accounting records for the year ended 31 December 2008 without adjustment and represent those parts of RBS attributable to the businesses agreed with the European Commission as being for disposal for which information is currently available, namely RBS Insurance and RBS Sempra Commodities.
(5)
Adjusted pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the year ended 31 December 2008 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members and the EC State Aid Divestments.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-4

 
 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information (continued)

 
Unaudited pro forma income statement for the year ended 31 December 2007

   
RBS (1)
   
RFS 
 Minority 
Interest (2)
   
RBS excluding RFS Minority Interest (3)
   
EC 
State Aid 
Divest-
ments (4)
   
Proforma 
RBS (5)
 
Continuing operations
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
Net interest income
    12,069       (545 )     11,524       (599 )     10,925  
Net fees and commissions
    6,085       (224 )     5,861       465       6,326  
Income from trading activities
    1,292       139       1,431       6       1,437  
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    4,833       (97 )     4,736       (196 )     4,540  
Insurance net premium income
    6,087       (105 )     5,982       (5,387 )     595  
Non-interest income
    18,297       (287 )     18,010       (5,112 )     12,898  
Total income
    30,366       (832 )     29,534       (5,711 )     23,823  
Operating expenses
    (13,942 )     620       (13,322 )     952       (12,370 )
Profit before other operating charges and impairment losses
    16,424       (212 )     16,212       (4,759 )     11,453  
Insurance net claims
    (4,624 )     96       (4,528 )     4,010       (518 )
Impairment losses
    (1,968 )     38       (1,930 )     -       (1,930 )
Operating profit before tax
    9,832       (78 )     9,754       (749 )     9,005  
Tax
    (2,044 )     (6 )     (2,050 )     204       (1,846 )
Profit from continuing operations
    7,788       (84 )     7,704       (545 )     7,159  
                                         
Profit attributable to:
                                       
Minority interests
    239       (84 )     155       -       155  
Preference shareholders
    246       -       246       -       246  
Ordinary shareholders
    7,303       -       7,303       (545 )     6,758  
                                         
      7,788       (84 )     7,704       (545 )     7,159  
                                         
Per 25p ordinary share (pence)
                                       
Continuing operations
                                       
                                         
Basic
    64.0               64.0               59.2  
Fully diluted
    63.4               63.4               58.7  
                                         
Number of shares (million)
                                       
Weighted average ordinary shares
    11,413               11,413               11,413  
Weighted average diluted ordinary shares
    11,611               11,611               11,611  

Notes:
(1)
The financial information for RBS has been extracted from the audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2008 included on page 158 of the Form 6-K filed with the SEC on 30 September 2009.
(2)
The financial information for the RFS Minority Interest has been extracted from RBS's accounting records for the year ended 31 December 2007 without adjustment and represent those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(3)
Pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the year ended 31 December 2007 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(4)
The financial information for the EC State Aid Divestments has been extracted from RBS's accounting records for the year ended 31 December 2007 without adjustment and represent those parts of RBS attributable to the businesses agreed with the European Commission as being for disposal for which information is currently available, namely RBS Insurance.
(5)
Adjusted pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the year ended 31 December 2007 excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members and the EC State Aid Divestments.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-5

 
 
Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information (continued)

 
Unaudited pro forma income statement for the year ended 31 December 2006
 
   
RBS (1)
   
EC 
State Aid 
Divest-
ments (4)
   
Proforma 
RBS (5)
 
Continuing operations
    £m       £m       £m  
                         
Net interest income
    10,596       (496 )     10,100  
                         
Net fees and commissions
    5,194       486       5,680  
Income from trading activities
    2,675       -       2,675  
Other operating income (excluding insurance premium income)
    3,564       (79 )     3,485  
Insurance net premium income
    5,973       (5,501 )     472  
                         
Non-interest income
    17,406       (5,094 )     12,312  
                         
Total income
    28,002       (5,590 )     22,412  
Operating expenses
    (12,480 )     950       (11,530 )
                         
Profit before other operating charges and impairment losses
    15,522       (4,640 )     10,882  
Insurance net claims
    (4,458 )     3,970       (488 )
Impairment losses
    (1,878 )     7       (1,871 )
                         
Operating profit before tax
    9,186       (663 )     8,523  
Tax
    (2,689 )     225       (2,464 )
                         
Profit from continuing operations
    6,497       (438 )     6,059  
                         
Profit attributable to:
                       
Minority interests
    104       -       104  
Preference shareholders
    191       -       191  
Ordinary shareholders
    6,202       (438 )     5,764  
                         
      6,497       (438 )     6,059  
                         
Per 25p ordinary share (pence)
                       
                         
Continuing operations
                       
                         
Basic
    54.4               50.5  
                         
Fully diluted
    53.9               50.2  
                         
Number of shares (million)
                       
                         
Weighted average ordinary shares
    11,411               11,411  
                         
Weighted average diluted ordinary shares
    11,619               11,619  
 
Notes:
(1)
The financial information for RBS has been extracted from the audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2008 included on page 158 of the Form 6-K filed with the SEC on 30 September 2009.
(2)
The financial information for the EC State Aid Divestments has been extracted from RBS's accounting records for the year ended 31 December 2006 without adjustment and represent those parts of RBS attributable to the businesses agreed with the European Commission as being for disposal for which information is currently available, namely RBS Insurance.
(3)
Pro forma unaudited income statement of RBS for the year ended 31 December 2006 excluding the EC State Aid Divestments.
 
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-6



Appendix 1 Article 11 unaudited pro forma information (continued) 

 
Unaudited pro forma balance sheet at 30 June 2009
 
   
RBS (1)
   
RFS 
 Minority 
Interest (2)
   
RBS excluding RFS Minority Interest (3)
   
EC 
State Aid 
Divest-
ments (4)
   
Proforma 
RBS (5)
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
Assets
                                       
Cash and balances at central banks
    39,946       (5,644 )     34,302       4,536       38,838  
Loans and advances to banks
    95,406       (11,706 )     83,700       (2,786 )     80,914  
Loans and advances to customers
    769,774       (129,012 )     640,762       (485 )     640,277  
Debt securities and equity shares
    261,669       (18,390 )     243,279       (6,658 )     236,621  
Derivatives
    557,284       (1,394 )     555,890       (8,103 )     547,787  
Intangible assets
    18,180       (3,063 )     15,117       (588 )     14,529  
Property, plant and equipment
    17,895       (1,603 )     16,292       (241 )     16,051  
Other assets
    58,769       (3,666 )     55,103       (6,614 )     48,489  
                                         
Total assets
    1,818,923       (174,478 )     1,644,445       (20,939 )     1,623,506  
                                         
Liabilities
                                       
Deposits by banks
    170,994       8,749       179,743       (446 )     179,297  
Customer accounts
    615,689       (125,407 )     490,282       (1,586 )     488,696  
Debt securities in issue
    274,180       (25,470 )     248,710       -       248,710  
Settlement balances and short positions
    60,287       (5 )     60,282       (1,222 )     59,060  
Derivatives
    537,064       (2,432 )     534,632       (7,323 )     527,309  
Subordinated liabilities
    35,703       (3,597 )     32,106       -       32,106  
Other liabilities
    52,914       (12,013 )     40,901       (9,088 )     31,813  
                                         
Total liabilities
    1,746,831       (160,175 )     1,586,656       (19,665 )     1,566,991  
                                         
Minority interests
    16,426       (14,303 )     2,123       (1,274 )     849  
Equity owners
    55,666       -       55,666       -       55,666  
                                         
Total equity
    72,092       (14,303 )     57,789       (1,274 )     56,515  
                                         
Total liabilities and equity
    1,818,923       (174,478 )     1,644,445       (20,939 )     1,623,506  
 
Notes:
(1)
The financial information for RBS has been extracted from the unaudited financial statements for the six months ended 30 June 2009 included in its Interim Results 2009.
(2)
The financial information for the RFS Minority Interest has been extracted from RBS's unaudited accounting records for the six months ended 30 June 2009 without adjustment and represent those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(3)
Pro forma unaudited balance sheet of RBS excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members.
(4)
The financial information for the EC State Aid Divestments has been extracted from RBS's unaudited accounting records for the six months ended 30 June 2009 without adjustment and represent those parts of RBS attributable to the businesses agreed with the European Commission as being for disposal for which information is currently available, namely RBS Insurance and RBS Sempra Commodities.
(5)
Adjusted pro forma unaudited balance sheet of RBS excluding those parts of the ABN AMRO businesses attributable to the other Consortium members and the EC State Aid Divestments.
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
1-7


 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme

 
   
Page
1.
Key aspects of the Scheme
2-2
     
2.
Basis of asset selection
2-3
     
3.
Covered assets
 
 
3.1 Roll forward to 31 December 2009
2-4
 
3.2 Credit impairments and write downs
2-5
 
3.3 First loss utilisation
2-6
 
3.4 Risk-weighted assets
2-7
 
3.5 Divisional analysis
2-8
 
3.6 Asset classes
2-9
 
3.7 Sector analysis
2-12
 
3.8 Geographical breakdown
2-13
 
3.9 Currency breakdown
2-13
 
3.10 Risk elements in lending and potential problem loans
2-14
 
3.11 Credit quality of loans
2-14
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-1


 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
1. Key aspects of the Scheme

On 22 December 2009, the Group acceded to the Asset Protection Scheme (‘APS’ or ‘the Scheme’) with HM Treasury acting on behalf of the UK Government. Under the Scheme, the Group purchased credit protection over a portfolio of specified assets and exposures (“covered assets”) from HM Treasury. The portfolio of covered assets had a par value of approximately £282 billion as at 31 December 2008 and the protection is subject to a first loss of £60 billion and covers 90% of,  subsequent losses. Once through the first loss, when a covered asset has experienced a trigger event(1) losses and recoveries in respect of that asset are included in the balance receivable under the APS. Receipts from HM Treasury will, over time, amount to 90% of cumulative losses (net of cumulative recoveries) on the portfolio of covered assets less the first loss amount.

The Group has the right to terminate the Scheme at any time provided that the Financial Services Authority has confirmed in writing to HM Treasury that it has no objection to the proposed termination. On termination, the Group is liable to pay HM Treasury a termination fee. The termination fee would be the difference between £2.5 billion (or, if higher, a sum related to the economic benefit of regulatory capital relief obtained as a result of having entered APS) and the aggregate fees paid. In addition, the Group would have to repay any amounts received from HM Treasury under the terms of the APS (or as otherwise agreed with HM Treasury). In consideration for the protection provided by the APS, the Group paid an initial premium of £1.4 billion on 31 December 2009 for the years 2009 and 2010. A further premium of £700 million is payable on 1 January 2011 and subsequently annual premiums of £500 million until the earlier of 31 December 2099 or the termination of the agreement.

The APS is a single contract providing credit protection in respect of a portfolio of financial assets: the unit of account is the contract as a whole.  Under IFRS, credit protection is either treated as a financial guarantee contract (‘FGC’) or a derivative depending on the terms of the agreement and the nature of the protected assets and exposures. The portfolio contains more than an insignificant element of derivatives and limited recourse assets, and hence the contract does not meet the definition of an FGC. The APS contract is therefore treated as a derivative and is recognised at fair value, with changes in fair value recognised in profit or loss. The APS derivative did not have any effect on the Group’s 2009 income statement; however in future period’s changes in value of the APS derivative will have an effect on the Group’s profit or loss.

There is no change in the recognition and measurement of the covered assets as a result of the APS. Impairment provisions on covered assets measured at amortised cost are assessed and charged in accordance with the Group’s accounting policy; held-for-trading assets, assets designated at fair value and available-for-sale assets within the APS portfolio continue to be measured at fair value with no adjustments to reflect the protection provided by the APS. There is no change in how gains and losses on the covered assets are recognised in the income statement or in other comprehensive income.

·
Trigger events (subject to specific rules detailed in the terms of the APS) comprise:
 
·
failure to pay: the counterparty to the covered asset has (subject to specified grace periods) failed to pay an amount due under the terms of its agreement with the Group.
 
·
bankruptcy: the counterparty is subject to a specified insolvency or bankruptcy-related event.
 
·
restructuring: a covered asset which is individually impaired and is subject to a restructuring.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-2


 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
2. Basis of asset selection

 
The selection of assets was carried out primarily between February and April 2009 and was driven by three principal criteria:
 

(1)
Risk and degree of impairment in base case and stressed scenarios;
   
(2)
Liquidity of exposure; and
   
(3)
Capital intensity under procyclicality.
 
The approach for high volume commercial and retail exposures was on a portfolio basis.  Selection for large corporates and GBM was at the counterparty/asset level. Set out below are the selection criteria for the contributing divisions.

   
Global Banking & Markets (GBM)*
 
Banking book:  selection by individual asset pool (corporate loans, real estate finance, and leveraged finance), Global Restructuring Group work-out unit counterparties/assets and high risk counterparties/assets. Additional counterparties/assets were selected through an individual risk review of the total portfolio.
 
Trading book:  selection by individual assets (monolines, derivatives, mortgage trading).
   
UK Corporate*
 
Commercial & Corporate real estate:  all defaulted assets in the work-out/restructuring unit or in high risk bands.
 
Corporate:  all defaulted assets in the work-out/restructuring unit.  Corporate banking clients in high risk sectors or with high concentration risk.
 
Business Banking:  portfolios in the work out/restructuring unit or in high risk bands.
   
UK Retail*
 
Mortgages:  assets with a higher loan-to-value (LTV) and in higher risk segments (e.g. LTV >97% on general book, LTV >85% on buy-to-let book), and those assets in arrears (at 31 December 2008).
 
Loans and overdrafts:  higher risk customers based on internal bandings, and those assets in arrears (at 31 December 2008).
   
Ulster Bank*
(Corporate & Retail)
 
Mortgages:  assets with a greater than 85% LTV, broker mortgages and interest only with a higher probability of default.
 
Retail:  portfolios of accounts in default, >1 month arrears, <2 years old and a higher probability of default.
 
Corporate:  counterparties/assets in work-out/restructuring groups or in high risk bands, and other assets identified as part of an individual review of cases.
* including assets transferred to Non-Core division
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-3

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets

3.1 Roll forward to 31 December 2009

The table below details the movement in covered assets in the year.

   
£bn
 
       
Covered assets at 31 December 2008 – at accession to the Scheme
    282.0  
Disposals
    (3.0 )
Non-contractual early repayments
    (8.9 )
Amortisations
    (9.4 )
Maturities
    (16.7 )
Rollovers and covered amount cap adjustments
    (1.7 )
Effect of foreign currency movements
    (11.8 )
         
Covered assets at 31 December 2009
    230.5  

Note:
(1)
The covered amount at 31 December 2009 above includes approximately £2.1 billion of assets in the derivatives and structured finance asset classes which, for technical reasons, do not currently satisfy, or are anticipated at some stage not to satisfy, the eligibility requirements of the Scheme.  HMT and the Group continue to negotiate in good faith whether (and, if so, to what extent) coverage should extend to these assets. Also, the Group and HMT are in discussion over the HMT classifications of some structured credit assets and this may result in adjustments to amounts for some asset classes; however underlying risks will be unchanged.
 
Key point
 
·
The majority of the reduction (68%) in the covered assets reflects repayments by customers.
 
 
·
Additionally the Group took advantage of market conditions and executed a number of loan sales.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-4

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.2 Credit impairments and write downs

The table below analyses the cumulative credit impairment losses and adjustments to par value (including AFS reserves) relating to covered assets:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
Loans and advances
    14,240       7,705  
Debt securities
    7,816       7,942  
Derivatives
    6,834       6,575  
                 
      28,890       22,222  
                 
By division:
               
UK Retail
    2,431       1,492  
UK Corporate
    1,007       285  
Global Banking & Markets
    1,628       1,640  
Ulster Bank
    486       234  
Non-Core
    23,338       18,571  
                 
      28,890       22,222  

Note:
(1)
Total available-for-sale reserves on debt securities of £1,113 million at 31 December 2009 (£1,315 million as at 31 December 2008 was previously included in undrawn commitments and other adjustments).

Key point

·
Of the increase in cumulative losses of £6,668 million, the largest was loan impairments in Non-Core.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-5

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.3 First loss utilisation

The triggered amount is equivalent to the aggregate outstanding principal amount on the trigger date excluding interest, fees, premium or any other non-principal sum that is accrued or payable, except where it was capitalised on or before 31 December 2008.  At trigger date, in economic terms, there is an exchange of assets, with the Group receiving a two year interest bearing government receivable in exchange for the asset.

APS recoveries include any return of value on a triggered asset, although these are only recognised for Scheme reporting purposes when they are realised in cash.  The net triggered amount at any point in time, therefore, only takes into account cash recoveries to date. The capturing of triggered amounts has required extensive new processes and controls to be put in place. These continue to be work in progress. Additionally,  as with any bespoke and highly complex legal agreement there are various areas of interpretation which still need to be clarified and agreed between the Group and the Asset Protection Agency (‘APA’), some of which could have a material impact on the triggered amount identified to date. Also as part of the APS terms and conditions it was agreed to re-characterise certain assets and their closely related hedges under the scheme and the Group continues to negotiate with APA in good faith to finalise this.

The Scheme Rules are designed to allow for data correction over the life of the scheme, and the Group has a grace period during 2010 to implement processes to capture triggers and restate quarterly claims statements to HMT retrospectively.

The table below summarises the total triggered amount and related cash recoveries by division at 31 December 2009.

   
Triggered
 amount
   
Cash recoveries
 to date
   
Net triggered
 amount
 
      £m       £m       £m  
                     
UK Retail
    3,340     129     3,211  
UK Corporate
    3,570     604     2,966  
Global Banking & Markets
    1,748     108     1,640  
Ulster Bank
    704     47     657  
Non-Core
    18,905     777     18,128  
                     
      28,267     1,665     26,602  

Note:
(1)
The triggered amount on a covered asset is calculated when an asset is triggered (due to bankruptcy, failure to pay after a grace period, and restructuring with an impairment) and is the lower of the covered amount and the outstanding amount for each covered asset. Given the grace period for triggering assets, the Group expects additional assets to trigger based on the current risk rating and level of impairments on covered assets.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-6

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)


3. Covered assets (continued)

3.3 First loss utilisation (continued)

Key points

·
APS recoveries include almost any return of value on a triggered asset but are only recognised when they are realised in cash, hence there will be a time lag for the realisation of recoveries.
 
 
·
The Group expects recoveries on triggered amounts to be approximately 45% over the life of the relevant assets.
 
 
·
On this basis, expected loss on triggered assets at 31 December 2009 is approximately £15 billion (25%) of the £60 billion first loss threshold under the APS.
 
 
·
In case the net triggered amount exceeds a specified threshold level for each covered asset class, HMT retains step-in rights as defined in the Scheme rules.

3.4 Risk weighted assets

Risk-weighted assets were as follows:

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m         £m  
                 
APS
    127.6       158.7  
Non-APS
    438.2       419.1  
                 
Group before APS benefit
    565.8       577.8  


   
31 December 2009
 
   
APS
   
Non APS
   
Total
 
Risk-weighted assets by division:
    £m       £m       £m  
                     
UK Retail
    16.3     35.0     51.3  
UK Corporate
    31.0     59.2     90.2  
Global Banking & Markets
    19.9     103.8     123.7  
Ulster
    8.9     21.0     29.9  
Non-Core
    51.5     119.8     171.3  
Other divisions
    n/a     99.4     99.4  
                     
Group before APS benefit
    127.6     438.2     565.8  

Key points

·
Over the year RWAs covered by APS declined overall due to the restructuring of certain exposures,, including monoline related assets, and decrease in covered amount partly off-set by credit downgrade and procyclicality,
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-7

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.5 Divisional analysis
The following table analyses covered assets by the asset classes defined by the Scheme conditions and by division:
   
UK
Retail
   
UK
Corporate
   
Global
 Banking &
 Markets
   
Ulster
Bank
   
Non-Core
   
Covered
 amount
 
      £m     £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                       
2009
                                     
Residential mortgages
    9,646     -     113     2,512     1,934     14,205  
Consumer finance
    11,596     24,818     -     5,538     11,309     53,261  
Commercial real estate finance
    -     9,143     -     1,073     21,921     32,137  
Leveraged finance
    -     4,899     621     291     17,465     23,276  
Lease finance
    -     449     -     -     1,080     1,529  
Project finance
    -     -     255     -   1,562     1,817  
Structured finance
    -     -     4,114     -     11,061     15,175  
Loans
    -     9,918     25,815     2,237   16,972     54,942  
Bonds
    -     -     153     -   545     698  
Derivatives
    -     -     12,946     218     20,326     33,490  
                                       
      21,242     49,227     44,017     11,869     104,175     230,530  
                                                 
2008
                                               
Residential mortgages
    10,280       -       128       2,837       2,182       15,427  
Consumer finance
    11,609       25,031       -       5,776       12,127       54,543  
Commercial real estate finance
    -       12,436       -       1,268       26,146       39,850  
Leveraged finance
    -       4,978       993       329       21,434       27,734  
Lease finance
    -       594       -       -       1,844       2,438  
Project finance
    -       -       425       -       1,818       2,243  
Structured finance
    -       -       6,897       -       12,294       19,191  
Loans
    -       9,097       45,610       2,663       22,607       79,977  
Bonds
    -       -       455       -       1,108       1,563  
Derivatives
    -       -       16,349       229       22,415       38,993  
                                                 
      21,889       52,136       70,857       13,102       123,975       281,959  
                                                 
Movements
                                               
Residential mortgages
    (634 )     -       (15 )     (325 )     (248 )     (1,222 )
Consumer finance
    (13 )     (213 )     -       (238 )     (818 )     (1,282 )
Commercial real estate finance
    -       (3,293 )     -       (195 )     (4,225 )     (7,713 )
Leveraged finance
    -       (79 )     (372 )     (38 )     (3,969 )     (4,458 )
Lease finance
    -       (145 )     -       -       (764 )     (909 )
Project finance
    -       -       (170 )     -       (256 )     (426 )
Structured finance
    -       -       (2,783 )     -       (1,233 )     (4,016 )
Loans
    -       821       (19,795 )     (426 )     (5,635 )     (25,035 )
Bonds
    -       -       (302 )     -       (563 )     (865 )
Derivatives
    -       -       (3,403 )     (11 )     (2,089 )     (5,503 )
                                                 
      (647 )     (2,909 )     (26,840 )     (1,233 )     (19,800 )     (51,429 )

Notes:
(1)
Per the Scheme rules, the definition of consumer finance includes personal loans, as well as business and commercial loans to SMEs
(2)
UK Corporate leveraged finance does not include lending to sponsors but, reflects certain loans to corporate customers per Scheme rules.
(3)
The net increase in UK Corporate loans reflects transfers of shipping assets from GBM.
(4)
There have been some minor divisional refinements to 31 December 2008 data, primarily between Core businesses and Non-Core division.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-8

 

Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.6 Asset classes
The following tables detail the balances by asset classes, as defined by the Scheme, with underlying product categories, at 31 December 2009 and 31 December 2008.

   
Carrying
value (2)
   
Provisions and
adjustments to
par value (3)
   
Par value (4)
   
Undrawn
commitments
and other
adjustments (5)
   
Covered
Amount
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
2009
 
(a)
   
(b)
   
(a)+(b)=(c)
   
(d)
   
(c)+(d)=(e)
 
                                 
Residential mortgages
    14,092     253     14,345     (140 )   14,205  
                                 
Consumer finance
    38,101     4,574     42,675     10,586     53,261  
- personal loans
    7,986     2,610     10,596     2,613     13,209  
- business and commercial loans
    30,115     1,964     32,079     7,973     40,052  
                                 
Commercial real estate finance
    28,777     1,656     30,433     1,704     32,137  
                                 
Leveraged finance
    16,045     4,425     20,470     2,806     23,276  
                                 
Lease finance
    1,229     232     1,461     68     1,529  
                                 
Project finance
    1,601     44     1,645     172     1,817  
                                 
Structured finance
    6,884     7,677     14,561     614     15,175  
- structured loans
    625     17     642     29     671  
- RMBS
    1,251     1,657     2,908     55     2,963  
- CMBS
    1,281     466     1,747     (6 )   1,741  
- CDOs & CLOs
    1,568     4,641     6,209     119     6,328  
- other ABS
    2,159     896     3,055     417     3,472  
                                 
Loans
    34,375     3,039     37,414     17,528     54,942  
                                 
Bonds (6)
    545     156     701     (3 )   698  
                                 
Derivatives
    12,510     6,834     19,344     14,146     33,490  
- monoline insurers
    2,607     6,335     8,942     10,852     19,794  
- other counterparties
    9,903   499     10,402     3,294     13,696  
                                 
      154,159   28,890     183,049     47,481     230,530  
                                 
                                 
Further analysed:
                               
Loans and advances
    134,845     14,240     149,085     32,753     181,838  
Debt securities
    6,804     7,816     14,620     582     15,202  
Derivatives
    12,510     6,834     19,344     14,146     33,490  
                               
      154,159     28,890     183,049     47,481     230,530  
                                 
By division:
                               
UK Retail
    16,599     2,431     19,030     2,212     21,242  
UK Corporate
    37,710     1,007     38,717     10,510     49,227  
Global Banking & Markets
    26,141     1,628     27,769     16,248     44,017  
Ulster Bank
    10,152     486     10,638     1,231     11,869  
Non-Core
    63,557     23,338     86,895     17,280     104,175  
                                 
      154,159     28,890     183,049     47,481     230,530  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-9

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.6 Asset classes (continued)

   
Carrying
value (2)
   
Provisions and
adjustments to
par value (3)
   
Par value (4)
   
Undrawn
Commitments
and other
adjustments (5)
   
Covered
amount
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
2008
 
(a)
   
(b)
   
(a)+(b)=(c)
   
(d)
   
(c)+(d)=(e)
 
                                         
Residential mortgages
    15,283       144       15,427       -       15,427  
                                         
Consumer finance
    45,691       2,346       48,037       6,506       54,543  
- personal loans
    10,267       1,687       11,954       1,440       13,394  
- business and commercial loans
    35,424       659       36,083       5,066       41,149  
                                         
Commercial real estate finance
    32,131       847       32,978       6,872       39,850  
                                         
Leveraged finance
    19,792       2,875       22,667       5,067       27,734  
                                         
Lease finance
    2,012       138       2,150       288       2,438  
                                         
Project finance
    1,761       58       1,819       424       2,243  
                                         
Structured finance
    10,370       8,012       18,382       809       19,191  
- structured loans
    2,761       155       2,916       597       3,513  
- RMBS
    1,232       1,547       2,779       -       2,779  
- CMBS
    1,481       371       1,852       -       1,852  
- CDOs & CLOs
    2,390       5,168       7,558       212       7,770  
- other ABS
    2,506       771       3,277       -       3,277  
                                         
Loans
    50,563       1,142       51,705       28,272       79,977  
                                         
Bonds (6)
    1,467       85       1,552       11       1,563  
                                         
Derivatives
    21,093       6,575       27,668       11,325       38,993  
- monoline insurers
    5,620       5,892       11,512       10,758       22,270  
- other counterparties
    15,473       683       16,156       567       16,723  
                                         
      200,163       22,222       222,385       59,574       281,959  
                                         
                                         
Further analysed:
                                       
Loans and advances
    169,994       7,705       177,699       48,026       225,725  
Debt securities
    9,076       7942       17,018       223       17,241  
Derivatives
    21,093       6,575       27,668       11,325       38,993  
                                         
      200,163       22,222       222,385       59,574       281,959  
                                         
By division:
                                       
UK Retail
    18,982       1,492       20,474       1,415       21,889  
UK Corporate
    39,608       285       39,893       12,243       52,136  
Global Banking & Markets
    47,230       1,640       48,870       21,987       70,857  
Ulster Bank
    11,705       234       11,939       1,163       13,102  
Non-Core
    82,638       18,571       101,209       22,766       123,975  
                                         
      200,163       22,222       222,385       59,574       281,959  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-10

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)


3. Covered assets (continued)

3.6 Asset classes (continued)

Notes:
(1)
The balances at 31 December 2008 and 31 December 2009 within specific asset classes reflect the Group’s application of the asset class definitions in the Scheme rules, particularly in relation to consumer finance, commercial real estate finance and loans.
   
(2)
Carrying value represents the amounts recorded on the balance sheet and includes assets classified as loans and receivables (LAR), fair valued through profit or loss (FVTPL) and available-for-sale (AFS).
   
(3)
Provisions and adjustments to par value comprises:
   
 
·
impairments on LAR and AFS debt securities;
     
 
·
credit valuation adjustments relating to derivatives;
     
 
·
adjustment to par value on other FVTPL assets;
     
 
·
add-back of write-offs of £6,079 million, as these are covered by the Scheme rules; and
     
 
·
available-for-sale reserves on debt securities of £1,113 million (2008 - £1,315 million).
   
(4)
Undrawn commitments and other adjustments include:
   
 
·
undrawn commitments and other contingent liabilities;
     
 
·
potential future exposures and other adjustments to covered amount relating to derivative contracts; and
     
 
·
adjustments to covered amount in accordance with the Scheme rules (restriction of cover for rollovers (loans and commercial real estate), maintenance of covered amount as at 31 December 2008 for two years (consumer finance).
     
(5)
Comprises non asset-backed securities.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-11

 
 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

3. Covered assets (continued)

3.7 Sector analysis

The tables below analyse covered assets by sector and division; and by sector and HMT asset class at 31 December 2009 and 31 December 2008.

   
2009
       
   
UK Retail
   
UK
 Corporate
   
GBM
   
Ulster
 Bank
   
Non-Core
   
Covered
 amount
   
2008
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                               
Financial institutions
    -     1,427     11,303     35     35,985     48,750       64,027  
Manufacturing
    -     1,673     6,849     230     8,127     16,879       20,053  
Natural resources
    -     629     2,530     45     2,117     5,321       8,122  
Property
    -     9,990     8,349     1,550     27,931     47,820       60,217  
Retail and leisure
    -     4,292     4,608     964     4,305     14,169       17,975  
Services
    -     1,885     1,159     324     2,689     6,057       8,484  
TMT
    -     608     3,985     263     5,852     10,708       14,535  
Transport
    -     3,962     5,118     116     3,579     12,775       15,726  
Personal and SME
    21,242     24,761     116     8,342     13,590     68,051       72,820  
                                             
      21,242     49,227     44,017     11,869     104,175     230,530       281,959  

   
Residential mortgage
   
Consumer finance
   
Commercial real estate
   
Leveraged finance
   
Lease finance
   
Project finance
   
Structured finance
   
Loan
 
 
Bonds
   
Derivative
   
Covered amount
 
      £m        £m         £m          £m         £m           £m          £m        £m        £m        £m        £m  
                                                                     
2009
                                                                   
Financial institutions
    -     -     818     1,620   18     -     13,769     9,741     337     22,447     48,750  
Manufacturing
    -     -     -     5,906     120     6     6     9,782     48     1,011     16,879  
Natural resources
    -     -     -     1,260     41     1,065     9     2,458     46     442     5,321  
Property
    -     -     30,636     1,810     564     298     486     9,058     53     4,915     47,820  
Retail and leisure
    -     -     616     3,510     40     142     369     7,819     74   1,599     14,169  
Services
    -     -     29     3,213     320     104     191     1,572     6     622     6,057  
TMT
    -     -     -     5,490     9     -     3     3,908   11     1,287     10,708  
Transport
    -     -     35     465     273     202     342     10,171     123     1,164   12,775  
Personal and SME
    14,205   53,261     3     2     144     -     -   433     -     3     68,051  
                                                                   
      14,205     53,261     32,137     23,276     1,529     1,817     15,175     54,942     698     33,490     230,530  
                                                                                     
2008
                                                                                   
Financial Institutions
    -       -       638       4,196       28       138       17,288       15,478       514       25,747       64,027  
Manufacturing
    -       -       -       4,895       196       14       7       13,233       60       1,648       20,053  
Natural resources
    -       -       -       1,484       60       1,261       11       4,699       53       554       8,122  
Property
    -       -       38,467       2,188       876       388       550       12,289       128       5,331       60,217  
Retail and leisure
    -       -       679       4,067       63       151       443       10,417       165       1,990       17,975  
Services
    -       -       31       3,773       556       66       519       2,832       13       694       8,484  
TMT
    -       -       -       6,591       13       -       3       5,918       406       1,604       14,535  
Transport
    -       -       35       537       369       225       370       12,619       149       1,422       15,726  
Personal and SME
    15,427       54,543       -       3       277       -       -       2,492       75       3       72,820  
                                                                                         
      15,427       54,543       39,850       27,734       2,438       2,243       19,191       79,977       1,563       38,993       281,959  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-12


 
Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.8 Geographical breakdown

The table below provides a geographical breakdown of covered assets, based on the country of domicile or incorporation of the obligor, and by HM Treasury asset class.

   
Residential mortgage
   
Consumer finance
   
Commercial real estate
   
Leveraged finance
   
Lease finance
   
Project finance
   
Structured finance
   
Loan
   
Bonds
   
Derivative
   
Covered amount
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                                     
2009
                                                                   
United Kingdom
    10,102     46,027     15,285     8,406     997     167     2,433     15,879     53     8,379     107,728  
Western Europe
    3,971     6,814     12,080     9,448     485     904     2,963     21,273     105     2,369     60,412  
North America
    118     46     1,702     4,039     2     228     3,406     8,019     25     17,325     34,910  
Latin America
    1     282     2,042     476     17     40     5,628     2,593     7     4,068     15,154  
Other
    13     92     1,028     907     28     478     745     7,178     508     1,349     12,326  
                                                                     
      14,205     53,261     32,137     23,276     1,529     1,817     15,175     54,942     698     33,490     230,530  
                                                                                         
2008
                                                                                       
United Kingdom
    10,799       46,459       20,127       9,617       1,537       264       2,778       21,050       115       10,074       122,820  
Western Europe
    4,468       7,654       13,848       11,685       845       1,004       4,226       31,461       370       3,231       78,792  
North America
    139       46       2,381       4,880       4       261       4,187       12,493       499       19,567       44,457  
Latin America
    1       287       2,201       601       19       45       6,550       4,365       18       4,486       18,573  
Other
    20       97       1,293       951       33       669       1,450       10,608       561       1,635       17,317  
                                                                                         
      15,427       54,543       39,850       27,734       2,438       2,243       19,191       79,977       1,563       38,993       281,959  

3.9 Currency breakdown

   
2009
   
2008
 
      £m       £m  
                 
GBP
    107,731       121,440  
Euro
    56,586       72,989  
USD
    58,489       77,298  
AUD
    3,276       3,981  
JPY
    1,725       2,157  
Other
    2,723       4,094  
                 
      230,530       281,959  

This analysis by currency does not reflect any hedges that the Group may have in place.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-13

 

Appendix 2 The Asset Protection Scheme (continued)

 
3. Covered assets (continued)

3.10 Risk elements in lending and potential problem loans
Risk elements in lending (REIL) and potential problem loans (PPL) for the Group and the amount relating to assets in the Scheme are set out below.
 
   
2009
   
2008
 
   
Group
   
APS
   
Group
   
APS
 
      £m       £m       £m       £m  
                               
Non-performing loans
    31,811     22,335       17,082       12,679  
Other REIL
    3,178     2,092       1,709       1,498  
                               
Total REIL
    34,989     24,427       18,791       14,177  
PPL
    924     580       226       187  
                               
REIL and PPL
    35,913     25,007       19,017       14,364  
                               
Core
    12,361     7,170                  
Non-Core
    23,552     17,837                  
                               
REIL and PPL
    35,913     25,007                  

Key point

Approximately 70% of the Group and 76% of Non-Core REIL and PPL loans are covered by the scheme.

3.11 Credit quality of loans

The table below analyses the credit quality of the Group’s credit risk assets by risk bands and the proportion relating to assets in the Scheme.
       
2009
   
2008
 
Asset quality band
 
Probability of default
 
Group
   
% relating to assets in scheme
   
Group
   
% relating to assets in scheme
 
                           
AQ1
  0% - 0.034%     95     2 %     127       3 %
AQ2
  0.034% - 0.048%     12     9 %     26       16 %
AQ3
  0.048% - 0.095%     29     7 %     38       17 %
AQ4
  0.095% - 0.381%     97     12 %     150       15 %
AQ5
  0.381% - 1.076%     130     24 %     148       28 %
AQ6
  1.076% - 2.153%     95     28 %     103       36 %
AQ7
  2.153% - 6.089%     55     37 %     46       52 %
AQ8
  6.089% - 17.222%     23     44 %     26       46 %
AQ9
  17.222% - 100%     15     66 %     12       69 %
AQ10
  100%     38     76 %     18       72 %
Other (1)
        41     5 %     41       8 %
                                   
              630     23 %     735       24 %

Note:
(1)
‘Other’ largely comprises assets covered by the standardised approach for which a probability of default (PD) equivalent to those assigned to assets covered by the internal ratings based approach is not available.
 
Reverse repurchase agreements, carrying value relating to net derivative positions and debt securities are excluded from both Group numbers and APS covered assets above.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
2-14


 
Appendix 3 Businesses outlined for disposal

 
To comply with EC State Aid requirements the Group agreed to make a series of divestments to be completed within four years from December 2009: the sale of RBS Insurance, Global Merchant Services and RBS Sempra Commodities. The Group also agreed to dispose of the RBS branch based business in England and Wales, the NatWest branch network in Scotland, along with the Direct SME customers across the UK (termed below ‘UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal’).  The disposal of UK Retail and UK Corporate business banking businesses will reduce the Group’s market share by 2% of the UK retail market, 5% in the SME market and 5% of the mid-corporate market.

RBS Insurance is being prepared for disposal by way of a trade sale or public flotation targeted for 2012. It will continue to be managed and reported as a separate division for the foreseeable future.

The sale of Global Merchant Services has already attracted considerable interest.  We anticipate a sale during the second half of this year, and the transfer of the business to Non-Core division during the first half of 2010.

Negotiations for the sale of RBS Sempra Commodities were well advanced at the end of 2009 and the business was transferred to the Non-Core division from GBM in December 2009. On 16 February the Group announced that RBS Sempra Commodities had reached the agreement to sell the Oil, Metals, European Power and Gas businesses to JP Morgan Chase. Alternatives for the remaining North American Power and Gas businesses are being considered.

The UK retail and business banking businesses are currently being structured for disposal; we do not expect to complete a sale until 2011. These activities will continue to be included in UK Retail and UK Corporate as appropriate. It is estimated that the income of these businesses for the year ended 31 December 2009 was approximately £946 million and that, broadly, they broke even during the year before the allocation of Business Services and Central costs. Estimated loans and deposits as at 31 December 2009 for these businesses are £23.5 billion and £22.5 billion respectively.

The table below shows the estimated Total income and Operating profit of RBS Insurance, Global Merchant Services, RBS Sempra Commodities and the UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses that have been outlined for disposal.

   
Total income
   
Operating profit before impairments
   
Operating profit/(loss)
 
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
 
Businesses outlined for disposal
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                                 
RBS Insurance (1)
    4,460       4,430       66       626       58       584  
Global Merchant Services (2)
    527       535       266       281       249       267  
RBS Sempra Commodities (3)
    746       765       52       212       52       209  
UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal (4)
    946       1,082       468       567       (146 )     347  
                                                 
Total
    6,679       6,812       852       1,686       213       1,407  
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
3-1


 
Appendix 3 Businesses outlined for disposal (continued)

 
The table below shows the estimated associated risk-weighted assets, total assets and estimated capital of the businesses currently identified for disposal.

   
RWAs
   
Total assets
   
Estimated capital
 
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
   
2009
   
2008
 
Businesses outlined for disposal
 
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
   
£bn
 
                                     
RBS Insurance (1)
    n/m       n/m       11.8       10.8       4.1       3.6  
Global Merchant Services (2)
    1.6       1.5       1.6       1.5       0.1       0.1  
RBS Sempra Commodities (3)
    10.2       10.7       14.2       17.8       1.0       1.0  
UK Retail and UK Corporate businesses outlined for disposal (4)
    18.2       14.5       23.5       24.2       1.5       1.2  
                                                 
Total
    30.0       26.7       51.1       54.3       6.7       5.9  

Notes:
(1)
As reported in the Annual Results for the year ended 31 December 2009 and excluding non-core business. Estimated capital includes approximately £1.0 billion of goodwill.
(2)
Global Merchant Services business units are reported within the Global Transaction Services, Ulster Bank and Non-Core divisions. Estimated notional capital based on 7% of RWAs.
(3)
Sempra Commodities was acquired in April 2008 and the 2008 income statement data are from the date of acquisition.  The figures shown, other than total income, are net of the minority interest attributable to Sempra for the years ended 31 December 2009 and 2008.  The operating profit before minority interest of the business was £286 million and £373 million respectively for the periods shown. Estimated capital is based on the Group’s cost of its 51% interest.
(4)
Estimated notional equity based upon 8% of RWAs.

The full income statement of RBS Sempra Commodities business is set out below.
 
   
2009
   
2008
 
      Q1       Q2       Q3       Q4       Q4  
Income statement
    £m       £m       £m       £m       £m  
                                         
Net fees and commissions payable
    (6 )     (3 )     (2 )     (2 )     (3 )
Income from trading activities
    248       206       156       160       404  
Other operating income
    5       4       (40 )     20       3  
                                         
Total income
    247       207       114       178       404  
                                         
Direct expenses
                                       
- staff
    (113 )     (82 )     (39 )     (111 )     (160 )
- other
    (26 )     (27 )     (21 )     (41 )     (24 )
                                         
Total expenses
    (139 )     (109 )     (60 )     (152 )     (184 )
                                         
Operating profit before impairment losses
    108       98       54       26       220  
Impairment losses
    -       -       -       -       (3 )
                                         
Operating profit
    108       98       54       26       217  

 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
3-2

 

Appendix 3 Businesses outlined for disposal (continued)

 
Other measures required by the EC include:

·  
Prohibition of the payment of dividends or coupons on existing capital instruments until 2012, unless there is a legal obligation to pay them.
 
·  
GBM to rank no higher than fifth in the combined global all debt league table for three years.
 
·  
Implementation of leading edge reforms to remuneration policy.
 
·  
Unless the cumulative purchase price is less than £500 million, RBS will not acquire any financial institution and will not make any other acquisitions that expand RBS’s activities outside its business model until the later of 31 December 2012 or the date on which the last of its divestments has been completed.
 
·  
RBS will not restart (including by acquisition) any activity that it only carries on by virtue of the Non-Core activities.
 
·  
RBS will not restart or re-acquire any interest that competes with the businesses that it is required to divest until 2014, and will not engage as a principal in any business that competes with these businesses for a two year period following their disposal.

·  
If either:
 
·  
RBS misses its targeted balance sheet reduction (as planned within the RBS Strategic Review) by 2013 by more than £30 billion; or
 
·  
The RBS Core Tier 1 capital ratio falls below 5% at any time before 31 December 2014, RBS will be required to divest a further £60 billion of RWAs from its balance sheet.

The European Commission will appoint a Monitoring Trustee to ensure compliance with EU restructuring requirements and behavioural conditions. We expect this appointment to be completed by March.
 
 
RBS Group - 2009 Annual results
3-3


 
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 authorised.




The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc
Registrant






 
 
/s/ Bruce Van Saun                  
Bruce Van Saun
Group Finance Director
5 March 2010



RBS Group - 2009 Annual results