rbs201102246k7.htm
 
FORM 6-K
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington D.C. 20549
 
 
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
 
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
 
For February 24, 2011
 
Commission File Number: 001-10306
 
The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc
 
RBS, Gogarburn, PO Box 1000
Edinburgh EH12 1HQ
 
(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 X
 
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- ________
 

 
The following information was issued as a Company announcement in London, England and is furnished pursuant to General Instruction B to the General Instructions to Form 6-K:
 

 
 

Risk and balance sheet management

Risk management: Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk of financial loss owing to the failure of customers or counterparties to meet payment obligations. The quantum and nature of credit risk assumed across the Group’s different businesses varies considerably, while the overall credit risk outcome usually exhibits a high degree of correlation to the macroeconomic environment.

Loans and advances to customers by geography and industry
The table below analyses loans and advances to customers excluding reverse repos and disposal groups.


 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
Group
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
Central and local government
6,781 
1,671 
8,452 
 
9,766 
1,204 
10,970 
 
6,128 
1,532 
7,660 
Finance
46,910 
7,651 
54,561 
 
54,723 
8,650 
63,373 
 
50,673 
9,713 
60,386 
Residential mortgages
140,359 
6,142 
146,501 
 
139,457 
6,351 
145,808 
 
127,975 
12,932 
140,907 
Personal lending
33,581 
3,891 
37,472 
 
34,129 
4,183 
38,312 
 
35,313 
6,358 
41,671 
Property
42,455 
47,651 
90,106 
 
42,269 
49,919 
92,188 
 
49,054 
50,372 
99,426 
Construction
8,680 
3,352 
12,032 
 
8,994 
3,623 
12,617 
 
9,502 
5,258 
14,760 
Manufacturing
25,797 
6,520 
32,317 
 
26,255 
9,339 
35,594 
 
30,272 
14,402 
44,674 
Service industries and
  business activities
95,127 
22,383 
117,510 
 
97,738 
25,983 
123,721 
 
100,438 
33,638 
134,076 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
3,758 
135 
3,893 
 
3,952 
158 
4,110 
 
3,726 
553 
4,279 
Finance leases and
  instalment credit
8,321 
8,529 
16,850 
 
8,233 
9,541 
17,774 
 
8,147 
11,956 
20,103 
Interest accruals
831 
278 
1,109 
 
847 
278 
1,125 
 
1,179 
549 
1,728 
                       
Gross loans
412,600 
108,203 
520,803 
 
426,363 
119,229 
545,592 
 
422,407 
147,263 
569,670 
Loan impairment provisions
(7,740)
(10,315)
(18,055)
 
(7,664)
(9,879)
(17,543)
 
(6,786)
(8,230)
(15,016)
                       
Net loans
404,860 
97,888 
502,748 
 
418,699 
109,350 
528,049 
 
415,621 
139,033 
554,654 


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk

Credit risk: Loans and advances to customers by geography and industry (continued)

Key points
·
Residential mortgages increased by £6 billion during 2010 with increases in UK Retail, reflecting continued strong sales growth and lower redemption rates, partially offset by reduced lending in both Ulster Bank and US Retail & Commercial (US R&C), reflecting low new business originations and tightened loan acceptance criteria respectively.
   
·
Reduction in unsecured personal lending reflects subdued recruitment activity and the continuing market trend of repaying unsecured loans in UK Retail and lower personal auto loans in US R&C.
   
·
The Group’s loans and advances to property and construction sectors reduced by £12 billion, primarily in the UK and Europe in both development and investment portfolios. Underlying Non-Core property loans declined by £7.7 billion during the year. This was partly offset by a transfer of £5.0 billion development property loans as part of Ulster Bank’s strategic decision to cease early stage development property lending.
   
·
Exposure to the manufacturing sector is concentrated in industrial, agriculture and food & consumer subsectors. The overall reduction in exposure in the year was partly due to the run off and restructuring of assets in Europe and in the Non-Core portfolio.
   
·
Service industries and business activities comprise transport, retail & leisure, telecommunication, media and technology and business services. Transport primarily comprises loans to borrowers in the shipping, automotive and aviation segments. Aviation Capital and a portfolio of shipping loans are held within Non-Core. Core portfolios in UK Corporate and GBM are well diversified geographically. Global economic conditions and related trends in trade flows and discretionary consumer spending continue to inform the Group’s cautious stance.
   
·
Shipping continued to experience difficult market conditions in 2010. Whilst there have been no material shipping impairments to date, the exposures subject to a heightened level of monitoring currently stand at £2.8 billion (out of a total portfolio of £13 billion). Recent quarterly vessel valuations undertaken by external shipbrokers show that the majority of the Group’s exposures remain fully secured. Conditions are expected to remain challenging for the foreseeable future.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk

Loans and advances to customers by geography and industry (continued)
The table below analyses loans and advances to customers including reverse repos and disposal groups by geography (by location of office).

 
 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
UK domestic
                     
Central and local government
3,785 
134 
3,919 
 
3,942 
147 
4,089 
 
2,951 
223 
3,174 
Finance
12,884 
3,265 
16,149 
 
17,122 
3,506 
20,628 
 
14,658 
2,365 
17,023 
Residential mortgages
99,527 
1,630 
101,157 
 
97,615 
1,695 
99,310 
 
90,687 
1,896 
92,583 
Personal lending
22,651 
585 
23,236 
 
23,395 
706 
24,101 
 
24,109 
1,136 
25,245 
Property
14,850 
27,107 
41,957 
 
14,995 
27,862 
42,857 
 
18,057 
30,802 
48,859 
Construction
4,330 
2,010 
6,340 
 
4,390 
2,235 
6,625 
 
4,493 
3,287 
7,780 
Manufacturing
8,252 
859 
9,111 
 
7,604 
2,052 
9,656 
 
8,747 
2,678 
11,425 
Service industries and
  business activities
36,725 
8,960 
45,685 
 
38,669 
10,801 
49,470 
 
39,188 
12,472 
51,660 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
2,691 
67 
2,758 
 
2,891 
77 
2,968 
 
2,775 
138 
2,913 
Finance leases and
  instalment credit
5,589 
7,785 
13,374 
 
5,487 
8,683 
14,170 
 
5,343 
10,843 
16,186 
Interest accruals
412 
98 
510 
 
447 
99 
546 
 
718 
175 
893 
                       
 
211,696 
52,500 
264,196 
 
216,557 
57,863 
274,420 
 
211,726 
66,015 
277,741 
                       
UK international (1)
                     
Central and local government
1,943 
39 
1,982 
 
4,260 
40 
4,300 
 
1,402 
53 
1,455 
Finance
15,111 
2,758 
17,869 
 
19,435 
3,082 
22,517 
 
14,615 
3,640 
18,255 
Residential mortgages
401 
35 
436 
 
439 
439 
 
Personal lending
384 
384 
 
334 
341 
 
504 
505 
Property
20,120 
3,385 
23,505 
 
19,867 
4,085 
23,952 
 
18,350 
4,585 
22,935 
Construction
2,711 
300 
3,011 
 
2,695 
336 
3,031 
 
2,471 
353 
2,824 
Manufacturing
4,048 
651 
4,699 
 
4,099 
770 
4,869 
 
5,715 
577 
6,292 
Service industries and
  business activities
21,540 
2,781 
24,321 
 
22,980 
2,747 
25,727 
 
23,558 
3,393 
26,951 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
181 
181 
 
168 
10 
178 
 
171 
171 
Interest accruals
 
 
                       
 
66,442 
9,949 
76,391 
 
74,279 
11,077 
85,356 
 
66,787 
12,604 
79,391 
                       
Europe
                     
Central and local government
365 
1,017 
1,382 
 
351 
967 
1,318 
 
334 
1,164 
1,498 
Finance
2,642 
1,019 
3,661 
 
3,430 
645 
4,075 
 
3,973 
904 
4,877 
Residential mortgages
19,473 
621 
20,094 
 
19,726 
634 
20,360 
 
15,055 
6,718 
21,773 
Personal lending
2,270 
600 
2,870 
 
2,264 
631 
2,895 
 
1,877 
1,009 
2,886 
Property
5,139 
12,636 
17,775 
 
5,490 
13,072 
18,562 
 
10,812 
9,417 
20,229 
Construction
1,014 
873 
1,887 
 
1,303 
845 
2,148 
 
1,946 
1,167 
3,113 
Manufacturing
5,853 
4,181 
10,034 
 
6,646 
5,011 
11,657 
 
7,311 
8,609 
15,920 
Service industries and
  business activities
17,537 
6,072 
23,609 
 
17,233 
7,066 
24,299 
 
19,088 
9,883 
28,971 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
849 
68 
917 
 
843 
70 
913 
 
737 
356 
1,093 
Finance leases and
  instalment credit
370 
744 
1,114 
 
377 
831 
1,208 
 
379 
1,094 
1,473 
Interest accruals
143 
101 
244 
 
129 
97 
226 
 
165 
246 
411 
                       
 
55,655 
27,932 
83,587 
 
57,792 
29,869 
87,661 
 
61,677 
40,567 
102,244 

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk

Loans and advances to customers by geography and industry (continued)

 
 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
US
                     
Central and local government
263 
53 
316 
 
214 
45 
259 
 
196 
64 
260 
Finance
9,522 
587 
10,109 
 
8,440 
643 
9,083 
 
9,524 
1,771 
11,295 
Residential mortgages
20,548 
3,653 
24,201 
 
21,271 
3,829 
25,100 
 
21,842 
4,317 
26,159 
Personal lending
6,816 
2,704 
9,520 
 
6,747 
2,837 
9,584 
 
7,373 
3,599 
10,972 
Property
1,611 
3,318 
4,929 
 
1,203 
3,510 
4,713 
 
1,498 
3,788 
5,286 
Construction
442 
78 
520 
 
455 
95 
550 
 
490 
132 
622 
Manufacturing
5,459 
143 
5,602 
 
5,358 
678 
6,036 
 
5,895 
1,200 
7,095 
Service industries and
  business activities
14,075 
2,724 
16,799 
 
13,670 
3,161 
16,831 
 
14,078 
4,505 
18,583 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
31 
31 
 
32 
32 
 
27 
27 
Finance leases and
  instalment credit
2,315 
2,315 
 
2,323 
2,323 
 
2,417 
2,417 
Interest accruals
183 
73 
256 
 
181 
78 
259 
 
204 
94 
298 
                       
 
61,265 
13,333 
74,598 
 
59,894 
14,876 
74,770 
 
63,544 
19,470 
83,014 
                       
RoW (2)
                     
Central and local government
425 
428 
853 
 
999 
1,004 
 
1,245 
28 
1,273 
Finance
6,751 
22 
6,773 
 
6,296 
774 
7,070 
 
7,903 
1,033 
8,936 
Residential mortgages
410 
203 
613 
 
406 
193 
599 
 
390 
391 
Personal lending
1,460 
1,462 
 
1,389 
1,391 
 
1,450 
613 
2,063 
Property
735 
1,205 
1,940 
 
714 
1,390 
2,104 
 
337 
1,780 
2,117 
Construction
183 
91 
274 
 
151 
112 
263 
 
102 
319 
421 
Manufacturing
2,185 
686 
2,871 
 
2,548 
828 
3,376 
 
2,604 
1,338 
3,942 
Service industries and
  business activities
5,250 
1,846 
7,096 
 
5,186 
2,208 
7,394 
 
4,526 
3,385 
7,911 
Agriculture, forestry and
  fishing
 
18 
19 
 
16 
59 
75 
Finance leases and
  instalment credit
47 
47 
 
46 
27 
73 
 
19 
27 
Interest accruals
90 
96 
 
88 
92 
 
92 
32 
124 
                       
 
17,542 
4,489 
22,031 
 
17,841 
5,544 
23,385 
 
18,673 
8,607 
27,280 

Notes:
(1)
Represents transactions concluded through offices in the UK which service international banking transactions.
(2)
Rest of the World.



 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: REIL and PPL

The table below analyses the Group's risk element in lending (REIL) and potential problem loans (PPL) and takes no account of the value of any security held which could reduce the eventual loss should it occur, nor of any provisions.

 
 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
Impaired loans (1)
                     
  - UK
7,903 
7,835 
15,738 
 
7,462 
8,717 
16,179 
 
6,558 
7,311 
13,869 
  - Overseas
5,608 
14,355 
19,963 
 
5,035 
13,648 
18,683 
 
4,173 
13,769 
17,942 
                       
 
13,511 
22,190 
35,701 
 
12,497 
22,365 
34,862 
 
10,731 
21,080 
31,811 
                       
Accruing loans past due
  90 days or more (2)
                     
  - UK
1,434 
939 
2,373 
 
1,619 
1,210 
2,829 
 
1,146 
1,089 
2,235 
  - Overseas
262 
262 
524 
 
222 
282 
504 
 
212 
731 
943 
                       
 
1,696 
1,201 
2,897 
 
1,841 
1,492 
3,333 
 
1,358 
1,820 
3,178 
                       
Total REIL
15,207 
23,391 
38,598 
 
14,338 
23,857 
38,195 
 
12,089 
22,900 
34,989 
                       
PPL (3)
473 
160 
633 
 
368 
249 
617 
 
272 
652 
924 
                       
Total REIL and PPL
15,680 
23,551 
39,231 
 
14,706 
24,106 
38,812 
 
12,361 
23,552 
35,913 
                       
REIL as a % of gross loans to
  customers (4)
3.7% 
20.7% 
7.3% 
 
3.3% 
19.5% 
6.9% 
 
2.8% 
15.1% 
6.1% 
                       
REIL and PPL as a % of
  gross loans to customers (4)
3.8% 
20.8% 
7.4% 
 
3.4% 
19.7% 
7.1% 
 
2.9% 
15.5% 
6.2% 
                       
Closing provision for
  impairment as a % of total
  REIL
51% 
44% 
47% 
 
53% 
42% 
47% 
 
56% 
37% 
44% 
                       
Closing provision for
  impairment as a % of total
  REIL and PPL
49% 
44% 
46% 
 
52% 
42% 
46% 
 
55% 
36% 
43% 
 
Notes:
(1)
Loans which have defaulted and against which an impairment provision is held.
(2)
Loans where an impairment event has taken place but no impairment provision recognised. This category is used for fully collateralised non-revolving credit facilities.
(3)
Loans for which an impairment event has occurred but no impairment provision is necessary. This category is used for advances and revolving credit facilities where the past due concept is not applicable.
(4)
Includes gross loans relating to disposal groups but excludes reverse repos.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Loans, REIL and impairment provisions

Movement in REIL and PPL
The table below details the movement in REIL and PPL for the year ended 31 December 2010.

 
REIL
 
PPL
 
Total
 
Core 
Non- 
Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non- 
Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non- 
Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
At 1 January 2010
12,089 
22,900 
34,989 
 
272 
652 
924 
 
12,361 
23,552 
35,913 
Intra-group transfers
(142)
142 
 
147 
(147)
 
(5)
Currency translation and
  other adjustments
22 
(124)
(102)
 
(1)
 
21 
(122)
(101)
Additions
11,435 
11,915 
23,350 
 
1,539 
502 
2,041 
 
12,974 
12,417 
25,391 
Transfers
69 
(185) 
(116) 
 
(85)
(61)
(146)
 
(16)
(246)
(262)
Disposals, restructurings
  and repayments
(5,385)
(6,694)
(12,079)
 
(1,399)
(788)
(2,187)
 
(6,784)
(7,482)
(14,266)
Amounts written-off
(2,881)
(4,563)
(7,444)
 
 
(2,881)
(4,563)
(7,444)
                       
At 31 December 2010
15,207 
23,391 
38,598 
 
473 
160 
633 
 
15,680 
23,551 
39,231 

Key points
·
REIL increased by £3.1 billion or 26% in Core reflecting net increases in impaired loans in UK Corporate (£1.6 billion) and Ulster Bank (£1.4 billion).
   
·
In UK Corporate impaired loans increased reflecting a number of specific cases which resulted in REIL/PPL as a % of loans increasing from 2.2% to 3.7%.
   
·
Provisions, REIL and related coverage ratios in Ulster Bank increased reflecting a deterioration in customer credit quality due to a fall in Irish property prices.
   
·
In US Retail & Commercial, impairment losses declined following a gradual improvement in the underlying credit environment through 2010.
   
·
Increase in provisions and related REIL in Non-Core reflected difficult conditions in specific sectors, particularly UK and Irish commercial property.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Loans, REIL and impairment provisions (continued)

Movement in loan impairment provisions
The following table shows the movement in impairment provisions for loans and advances to customers and banks.
 
Quarter ended
31 December 2010
 
Nine months 
 ended 30 
 September 
2010 
Year ended 
31 December 
2010 
Year ended 
31 December 
2009 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
               
At beginning of period
7,791 
9,879 
17,670 
 
15,173 
15,173 
9,451 
Transfers to disposal groups
(5)
(5)
 
(67)
(72)
(321)
Intra-group transfers
(217)
217 
 
Currency translation and other
  adjustments
147 
(235)
(88)
 
131 
43 
(428)
Disposals
(3)
(3)
 
(17)
(20)
(65)
Amounts written-off
(745)
(771)
(1,516)
 
(4,526)
(6,042)
(6,478)
Recoveries of amounts previously
  written-off
29 
67 
96 
 
315 
411 
325 
Charge to income statement
912 
1,243 
2,155 
 
6,989 
9,144 
13,090 
Unwind of discount
(51)
(76)
(127)
 
(328)
(455)
(401)
               
At end of period
7,866 
10,316 
18,182 
 
17,670 
18,182
15,173 

Loan impairment provisions on loans and advances

 
 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                       
Latent loss
1,653 
997 
2,650 
 
1,804 
954 
2,758 
 
2,005 
735 
2,740 
Collectively assessed
4,139 
1,157 
5,296 
 
4,163 
1,134 
5,297 
 
3,509 
1,266 
4,775 
Individually assessed
1,948 
8,161 
10,109 
 
1,697 
7,791 
9,488 
 
1,272 
6,229 
7,501 
                       
Customers loans
7,740 
10,315 
18,055 
 
7,664 
9,879 
17,543 
 
6,786 
8,230 
15,016 
Banks loans
126 
127 
 
127 
127 
 
135 
22 
157 
                       
Total loans
7,866 
10,316 
18,182 
 
7,791 
9,879 
17,670 
 
6,921 
8,252 
15,173 
                       
% of loans (1)
1.88% 
9.14% 
3.44% 
 
1.80% 
8.19% 
3.22% 
 
1.61% 
5.79% 
2.69% 

Note:
(1)
Customer provisions as a % of gross customer loans including disposal groups and excluding reverse repurchase agreements.

Key points
·
During the year the provisions for loan impairments increased by £3 billion, as impairments exceeded net write-offs.
   
·
Provisions are 3.44% of loans and advances at 31 December 2010, compared with 2.69% at 31 December 2009. Non-Core comparable figures were 9.14% versus 5.79%.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Loans, REIL and impairment provisions (continued)

Impairment charge

 
Quarter ended
 
Year ended
 
31 December 
2010 
30 September 
2010 
31 December 
2009 
 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
2009 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
 £m 
             
Latent loss
(116)
40 
224 
 
(121)
1,184 
Collectively assessed
729 
748 
956 
 
3,070 
3,994 
Individually assessed - customer loans
1,555 
1,120 
1,842 
 
6,208 
7,878 
             
Customer loans
2,168 
1,908 
3,022 
 
9,157 
13,056 
Bank loans
(13)
10 
 
(13)
34 
Securities
(14)
45 
67 
 
112 
809 
             
Charge to income statement
2,141 
1,953 
3,099 
 
9,256 
13,899 
             
Charge relating to customer loans as a % of
  gross customer loans (1)
1.6% 
1.4% 
2.1% 
 
1.7% 
2.3% 

Note:
(1)
Customer loans excluding reverse repurchase agreements are gross of provisions and include gross loans relating to disposal groups.

See page 16 for discussion on impairment losses. Additional disclosures on loans, REIL, impairments and related ratios are set out in Appendix 3.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Debt securities

The table below analyses debt securities by issuer and external ratings.

 
Central and local government
Banks and 
building 
societies 
ABS 
Corporate 
Other 
Total 
% of 
 total 
 
UK 
US 
Other 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                   
31 December 2010
                 
AAA
13,486 
33,846 
44,784 
2,374 
51,235 
846 
17 
146,588 
67 
AA to AA+
18,025 
3,036 
6,335 
779 
28,175 
13 
A to AA-
9,138 
4,185 
3,244 
1,303 
17,875 
BBB- to A-
2,843 
1,323 
3,385 
2,029 
9,586 
Non-investment grade
1,766 
1,766 
4,923 
2,786 
11,245 
Unrated
52 
310 
1,703 
1,722 
224 
4,011 
                   
 
13,486 
33,846 
76,608 
12,994 
70,825 
9,465 
256 
217,480 
100 
                   
30 September 2010
                 
AAA
14,825 
34,768 
48,561 
2,914 
50,026 
1,153 
152,247 
68 
AA to AA+
19,237 
2,913 
6,591 
855 
29,599 
13 
A to AA-
10,604 
4,593 
3,911 
2,112 
41 
21,261 
BBB- to A-
3,386 
1,002 
3,898 
3,342 
395 
12,023 
Non-investment grade
877 
190 
4,213 
2,020 
101 
7,401 
Unrated
215 
197 
1,373 
1,682 
412 
3,879 
                   
 
14,825 
34,768 
82,880 
11,809 
70,012 
11,164 
952 
226,410 
100 
                   
31 December 2009
                 
AAA
26,601 
23,219 
44,396 
4,012 
65,067 
2,263 
165,558 
66 
AA to AA+
22,003 
4,930 
8,942 
1,429 
37,304 
15 
A to AA-
13,159 
3,770 
3,886 
1,860 
22,675 
BBB- to A-
3,847 
823 
4,243 
2,187 
11,100 
Non-investment grade
353 
169 
3,515 
2,042 
6,079 
Unrated
504 
289 
1,949 
2,601 
1,036 
6,379 
                   
 
26,601 
23,219 
84,262 
13,993 
87,602 
12,382 
1,036 
249,095 
100 

Key points
·
The proportion of AAA rated securities were broadly unchanged during the year whilst the proportion of non-investment grade and unrated securities increased from 5% to 7%.
   
·
Holdings of debt securities issued by non-investment grade governments comprised: Greece £1.0 billion; Romania £0.3 billion; Turkey £0.2 billion and Indonesia £0.2 billion.
   
·
Increase in non-investment grade securities reflects purchases by GBM’s mortgage trading business. Non-investment grade securities also increased as a result of credit down grades and rating withdrawals of certain ABS structures in Non-Core during the year.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Debt securities (continued)

The table below analyses debt securities by issuer and measurement classification.

 
Central and local government
Banks and 
building 
societies 
ABS 
Corporate 
Other 
Total 
 
UK 
US 
Other 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                 
31 December 2010
               
Held-for-trading
5,097 
15,956 
43,224 
5,778 
21,988 
6,590 
236 
98,869 
DFV (1)
262 
119 
16 
402 
Available-for-sale
8,377 
17,890 
33,122 
7,198 
42,515 
2,011 
17 
111,130 
Loans and receivables
11 
15 
6,203 
848 
7,079 
                 
 
13,486 
33,846 
76,608 
12,994 
70,825 
9,465 
256 
217,480 
Short positions
(4,200)
(11,398)
(18,909)
(1,853)
(1,335)
(3,288)
(34)
(41,017)
                 
 
9,286 
22,448 
57,699 
11,141 
69,490 
6,177 
222 
176,463 
                 
30 September 2010
               
Held-for-trading
5,302 
17,164 
49,204 
4,884 
20,475 
7,733 
628 
105,390 
DFV (1)
353 
227 
18 
603 
Available-for-sale
9,511 
17,604 
33,323 
6,910 
42,923 
2,654 
226 
113,151 
Loans and receivables
11 
12 
6,387 
759 
97 
7,266 
                 
 
14,825 
34,768 
82,880 
11,809 
70,012 
11,164 
952 
226,410 
Short positions
(4,494)
(11,815)
(17,902)
(1,771)
(916)
(3,581)
(660)
(41,139)
                 
 
10,331 
22,953 
64,978 
10,038 
69,096 
7,583 
292 
185,271 
                 
31 December 2009
               
Held-for-trading
8,128 
10,427 
50,150 
6,103 
28,820 
6,892 
893 
111,413 
DFV (1)
122 
385 
418 
394 
1,087 
20 
2,429 
Available-for-sale
18,350 
12,789 
33,727 
7,472 
50,464 
2,550 
30 
125,382 
Loans and receivables
7,924 
1,853 
93 
9,871 
                 
 
26,601 
23,219 
84,262 
13,993 
87,602 
12,382 
1,036 
249,095 
Short positions
(5,805)
(8,957)
(14,491)
(1,951)
(3,616)
(2,199)
(512)
(37,531)
                 
 
20,796 
14,262 
69,771 
12,042 
83,986 
10,183 
524 
211,564 

Note:
(1)
Designated as at fair value.

Key point
·
Debt securities continued to decline during 2010, primarily in GBM’s European sovereign exposures as well as in ABS. Reduction in ABS in US Retail & Commercial and Non-Core reflected balance sheet reduction strategies whereas GBM’s sell down followed increased liquidity in US RMBS market, primarily in the first half of the year.

Refer to page 118 for country analysis of available-for-sale debt securities.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk

Derivatives
The table below analyses the fair value of the Group's derivative assets by internal grading scale and residual maturity. Master netting arrangements in respect of mark-to-market (mtm) values and collateral do not result in a net presentation in the Group’s statutory balance sheet under IFRS.

   
31 December 2010
31 December 
2009 
Total 
 
Probability
of default range
0-3 
months 
3-6 
months 
6-12 
months 
1-5 
years 
Over 5 
years 
Total 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                 
AQ1
0% - 0.034%
30,840 
10,755 
17,554 
135,311 
214,029 
408,489 
389,019 
AQ2
0.034% - 0.048%
319 
105 
212 
1,561 
462 
2,659 
11,550 
AQ3
0.048% - 0.095%
1,284 
391 
626 
610 
406 
3,317 
10,791 
AQ4
0.095% - 0.381%
989 
155 
240 
1,726 
281 
3,391 
8,296 
AQ5
0.381% - 1.076%
1,016 
81 
201 
1,447 
2,115 
4,860 
8,270 
AQ6
1.076% - 2.153%
134 
46 
71 
653 
166 
1,070 
2,548 
AQ7
2.153% - 6.089%
150 
29 
44 
375 
259 
857 
2,181 
AQ8
6.089% - 17.222%
10 
118 
272 
403 
1,448 
AQ9
17.222% - 100%
104 
39 
110 
189 
450 
2,030 
AQ10
100%
170 
11 
52 
353 
995 
1,581 
2,026 
Accruing past due
40 
                 
   
35,008 
11,582 
19,049 
142,264 
219,174 
427,077 
438,199 
                 
Counterparty mtm netting
         
(330,397)
(358,917)
Cash collateral held against derivative exposures
     
(31,096)
(33,667)
                 
Net exposure
           
65,584 
45,615 

As at 31 December 2010, in addition to cash collateral, the Group holds collateral in the form of securities of £2.9 billion (31 December 2009 - £3.6 billion) against derivative positions.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Derivatives (continued)
The table below analyses the Group's derivative assets by contract type and residual maturity. Master netting arrangements in respect of mark-to-market (mtm) values and collateral do not result in a net presentation in the Group’s balance sheet under IFRS.
 
0-3 
 months 
3-6 
 months 
6-12 
 months 
1-5 
 years 
over 5 
 years 
Total 
Counterparty 
mtm netting 
Net 
 exposure 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                 
31 December 2010
               
Exchange rate
28,938 
7,820 
9,360 
23,174 
13,961 
83,253 
(69,509)
13,744 
Interest rate
4,822 
3,533 
7,927 
104,026 
191,423 
311,731 
(236,513)
75,218 
Credit derivatives
497 
99 
313 
12,374 
13,589 
26,872 
(22,728)
4,144 
Equity and commodity
751 
130 
1,449 
2,690 
201 
5,221 
(1,647)
3,574 
                 
 
35,008 
11,582 
19,049 
142,264 
219,174 
427,077 
(330,397)
96,680 
                 
Cash collateral held against derivative exposures
       
(31,096)
                 
Net exposure
             
65,584 
                 
30 September 2010
               
Exchange rate
31,943 
8,260 
10,033 
24,551 
14,741 
89,528 
(65,366)
24,162 
Interest rate
5,598 
8,177 
11,781 
117,241 
279,380 
422,177 
(358,824)
63,353 
Credit derivatives
1,323 
83 
337 
13,678 
15,389 
30,810 
(22,719)
8,091 
Equity and commodity
1,782 
566 
284 
3,078 
580 
6,290 
(2,443)
3,847 
                 
 
40,646 
17,086 
22,435 
158,548 
310,090 
548,805 
(449,352)
99,453 
                 
Cash collateral held against derivative exposures
       
(39,507)
                 
Net exposure
             
59,946 
                 
31 December 2009
               
Exchange rate
19,127 
5,824 
7,603 
23,831 
11,967 
68,352 
(47,885) 
20,467 
Interest rate
8,415 
8,380 
16,723 
111,144 
176,799 
321,461 
(270,791) 
50,670 
Credit derivatives
201 
112 
390 
19,859 
21,186 
41,748 
(36,411) 
5,337 
Equity and commodity
1,562 
436 
1,109 
3,057 
474 
6,638 
(3,830) 
2,808 
                 
 
29,305 
14,752 
25,825 
157,891 
210,426 
438,199 
(358,917) 
79,282 
                 
Cash collateral held against derivative exposures
       
(33,667)
                 
Net exposure
             
45,615 

Key points
·
Whilst gross exchange rate contracts increased due to the trading fluctuations and favourable movements in forward rates and volume, the mix in counterparty netting arrangements reduced the net exposure.
·
In a year of significant quarterly interest rate volatility, the overall annual interest rate trend was downwards, with all major rate indices moving down by at least 30 basis points in the medium to long end, with USD and GBP dropping approximately 70 basis points in the 5 year yield curve. The increase in gross asset values caused by the drop in interest rates was offset by the greater use of London Clearing House (LCH) as a counterparty, up from 56% at the end of 2009 to 60% by end of 2010. Reduction in non-LCH related netting increased the net exposure, excluding the effect of collateral arrangements.
·
The reduction in credit derivatives primarily reflected the APS credit derivative reducing from £1.4 billion at the start of the year to £550 million at end of 2010. The effect of credit spread widening in GBM and Non-Core were offset by portfolio reductions, as part of de-risking, and currency movements.


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Credit risk assets

Credit risk assets consist of:
·
Lending: cash and balances at central banks, loans and advances to banks and customers (including overdraft facilities, instalment credit and finance leases);
   
·
Rate risk management (RRM); and
   
·
Contingent obligations, primarily letters of credit and guarantees.

Reverse repurchase agreements and issuer risk (primarily debt securities - see page 111) are excluded. Where relevant, and unless otherwise stated, the data reflects the effect of credit mitigation techniques.

Country risk
Under the Group’s country risk framework, country exposures are actively managed both from countries that represent a larger concentration or which, using the Group’s country watch list process, have been identified as exhibiting signs of actual or potential stress.

The table below shows the Group’s exposure in terms of credit risk assets, to countries where the total exposure for borrowers domiciled in that country exceed £1 billion and where the country had an external rating of A+ or below from Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s or Fitch and selected eurozone countries at 31 December 2010. The numbers are stated gross of mitigating action which may have been taken to reduce or eliminate exposure to country risk events.

 
Lending
 
RRM and 
contingent  obligations 
Central 
and local 
government 
Central 
 bank 
Other 
financial 
institution 
Corporate 
Personal 
Total 
Core 
Non-Core 
31 December 2010
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
                     
Republic of Ireland
61 
2,119 
900 
19,881 
20,228 
43,189 
32,431 
10,758 
 
3,496 
Italy
45 
78 
1,086 
2,483 
27 
3,719 
1,817 
1,902 
 
2,312 
India
262 
1,614 
2,590 
273 
4,739 
4,085 
654 
 
1,249 
China
17 
298 
1,240 
753 
64 
2,372 
2,136 
236 
 
1,572 
Turkey
282 
68 
485 
1,365 
12 
2,212 
1,520 
692 
 
547 
South Korea
276 
1,039 
555 
1,872 
1,822 
50 
 
643 
Russia
110 
251 
1,181 
58 
1,600 
1,475 
125 
 
216 
Mexico
149 
999 
1,157 
854 
303 
 
148 
Brazil
825 
315 
1,145 
1,025 
120 
 
120 
Romania
36 
178 
42 
426 
446 
1,128 
1,121 
 
142 
Poland
168 
13 
655 
842 
736 
106 
 
381 
Portugal
86 
63 
611 
766 
450 
316 
 
537 
                     
Additional selected eurozone countries
               
                     
Spain
19 
258 
6,962 
407 
7,651 
3,130 
4,521 
 
2,447 
Greece
14 
36 
49 
188 
16 
303 
173 
130 
 
214 


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Credit risk assets (continued)

Country risk (continued)

 
Lending
 
RRM and 
 contingent 
 obligations 
Central 
and local 
government 
Central 
 bank
Other 
financial 
institution 
Corporate 
Personal 
Total 
Core 
Non-Core 
 
31 December 2009
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
                     
Republic of Ireland
78 
1,830 
1,693 
21,518 
22,348 
47,467 
32,479 
14,988 
 
4,820 
Italy
10 
119 
751 
4,465 
27 
5,372 
1,877 
3,495 
 
2,146 
India
109 
499 
2,752 
63 
3,423 
3,240 
183 
 
1,691 
China
50 
296 
780 
947 
42 
2,115 
1,845 
270 
 
425 
Turkey
255 
335 
207 
1,870 
10 
2,677 
1,918 
759 
 
274 
South Korea
903 
656 
1,566 
1,467 
99 
 
1,458 
Russia
58 
84 
1,578 
27 
1,747 
1,275 
472 
 
511 
Mexico
45 
161 
1,262 
1,471 
594 
877 
 
112 
Brazil
623 
420 
1,046 
833 
213 
 
282 
Romania
49 
392 
46 
637 
507 
1,631 
37 
1,594 
 
169 
Poland
22 
40 
1,038 
1,106 
996 
110 
 
625 
Portugal
51 
861 
917 
582 
335 
 
461 
                     
Additional selected eurozone countries
               
                     
Spain
30 
17 
373 
7,658 
438 
8,516 
2,957 
5,559 
 
2,325 
Greece
21 
37 
52 
290 
16 
416 
245 
171 
 
194 

Key points
·
Credit risk assets relating to most of the countries above declined in 2010, reflecting active exposure management. In addition to the overall exposure reductions, granular portfolio reviews have been and continue to be undertaken with a view to adjusting the tenor profile and better alignment of the Group’s country risk appetite to the risk of adverse economic and political developments.
   
·
Reductions were seen in corporate and personal exposures, particularly in the Non-Core portfolios. This contrasted with increases in financial institutions in a number of countries, mostly due to increases in RRM exposure. Some countries in Asia have seen increased exposures during 2010, including two of the Group’s strategically important countries in this region, China and India, following reductions in 2008/2009.
   
·
The Group broadened its country risk framework in 2010, to capture advanced as well as emerging market countries. Cross-country assessments were conducted to identify portfolio vulnerabilities to a number of risk scenarios, including a eurozone sovereign debt crisis. Limit controls are being applied on a risk differentiated basis and selected exposure actions have been taken. Further scenario stress testing is continuing, and covers the potential for economic and political shocks in the eurozone and in the broader global environment.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Credit risk assets (continued)

Country risk (continued)

Key points (continued)
·
For selected eurozone countries, the general trend in lending was lower, due in part to a depreciation of the euro against sterling by 3% over the year.
   
·
Republic of Ireland (ROI): lending fell by £4.3 billion in 2010, resulting from reductions in personal lending by £2.1 billion, financial institutions by £0.5 billion and corporate clients by £1.6 billion. An increase was seen in Ulster Bank’s central bank exposure due to higher cash balances as part of its liquidity portfolio. The general trend in exposure remains downward.  Divisional analysis is set out below:
   
 
·
Ulster Bank represents more than 95% (£32 billion) of the Group’s Core lending to ROI and has seen a minimal increase of £0.64 billion in 2010, largely due to a rise of £0.3 billion in central bank placing due to increased cash holdings. Ulster Bank Core provisions at 31 December 2010 increased by 70% due to the continuing deterioration in the Irish economy.
   
 
·
Non-Core lending to ROI (£10.8 billion) declined by £4.2 billion in 2010, mainly due to a reduction in exposure to corporates and financial institutions of £3 billion during the year. In addition, customer advances in Lombard Ireland decreased by 30% during the year to £0.9 billion. Overall default levels have continued to show signs of stabilisation.
   
 
·
Global Banking & Markets (GBM) accounts for a further £0.6 billion of the Core lending, largely relating to domestic and foreign owned financial institutions. In addition, overall limits to the major Irish domestic banks have halved since 31 December 2008 to £1.2 billion, with the majority representing collateralised RRM or guarantees for third-party obligations. Overall credit quality remains acceptable with the majority of the exposure to investment grade entities.
   
·
Spain: lending fell by £0.9 billion, due to a reduction in corporate activity. During the fourth quarter, this reduction accelerated. Non-Core represents 59% of the Group’s total exposure to Spain at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 – 65%). In the course of 2010, progress was made towards increased collateralisation of the portfolio.
   
·
Italy: lending decreased by £1.7 billion, as a result of a net reduction in corporate lending of £2.0 billion and an increase to financial institutions of £0.3 billion. In addition, there was an increase in RRM exposure to financial institutions by £0.7 billion; the non-lending portfolio is comprised predominantly of collateralised trading activity.
   
·
Portugal: lending decreased slightly by £0.1 billion related to reductions in corporate activity. Non-Core represents 41% of the total exposure; The structure of the exposure was enhanced through a shift to short-term and collateralised products to support hedging needs of customers.
   
·
Greece: lending fell by £0.1 billion, due to a reduction in corporate activity. Continuous close scrutiny of the portfolio throughout the year and divestment of selected assets have improved the overall quality of the portfolio, available-for-sale (AFS) debt securities (see below) represent the primary concentration.
   
·
Total exposure to Egypt was £253 million at 31 December 2010, including lending of £124 million. The Group has minimal exposure to North African countries.


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Country risk - available-for-sale debt securities
The table below analyses available-for-sale (AFS) debt securities by issuer and related AFS reserves, for countries exceeding £0.5 billion at any reporting date below, together with the total of those individually less than £0.5 billion.

 
31 December 2010
 
30 September 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Government 
ABS 
Other 
Total 
AFS 
 reserves 
 
Government 
ABS 
Other 
Total 
AFS 
 reserves 
 
Government 
ABS 
Other 
Total 
AFS 
 reserves 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                                   
US
17,890 
20,872 
763 
39,525 
(116)
 
17,604 
20,140 
824 
38,568 
127 
 
12,789 
24,788 
668 
38,245 
(302)
UK
8,377 
4,002 
2,284 
14,663 
(106)
 
9,511 
4,317 
2,487 
16,315 
(114)
 
18,350 
4,372 
3,267 
25,989 
(169)
Germany
10,653 
1,360 
535 
12,548 
(35)
 
11,166 
1,409 
553 
13,128 
151 
 
12,283 
1,036 
406 
13,725 
(24)
Netherlands
3,469 
6,773 
713 
10,955 
(59)
 
3,246 
6,939 
513 
10,698 
(31)
 
4,329 
7,522 
1,558 
13,409 
(115)
France
5,912 
575 
900 
7,387 
33 
 
6,645 
598 
874 
8,117 
171 
 
6,456 
543 
812 
7,811 
Spain
88 
6,773 
169 
7,030 
(939)
 
97 
7,087 
222 
7,406 
(898)
 
162 
8,070 
355 
8,587 
(117)
Japan
4,354 
82 
4,436 
 
3,379 
66 
3,445 
 
1,426 
100 
1,526 
(7)
Australia
486 
1,586 
2,072 
(34)
 
445 
1,724 
2,169 
(32)
 
581 
1,213 
1,794 
(85)
Italy
906 
243 
24 
1,173 
(86)
 
968 
251 
45 
1,264 
(75)
 
1,007 
380 
72 
1,459 
(39)
Belgium
763 
34 
243 
1,040 
(34)
 
815 
34 
234 
1,083 
(26)
 
788 
34 
397 
1,219 
(24)
Hong Kong
905 
913 
 
859 
868 
 
975 
975 
Greece
895 
895 
(517)
 
977 
977 
(517)
 
1,389 
1,389 
(196)
Singapore
649 
209 
858 
 
715 
13 
197 
925 
 
564 
13 
105 
682 
Switzerland
657 
156 
813 
11 
 
876 
149 
1,025 
12 
 
653 
28 
681 
11 
Denmark
629 
172 
801 
 
646 
171 
817 
 
659 
256 
915 
South Korea
261 
429 
690 
(2)
 
500 
500 
(19)
 
526 
526 
(3)
Republic of Ireland
104 
177 
408 
689 
(74)
 
120 
180 
468 
768 
(59)
 
150 
529 
319 
998 
(154)
India
548 
139 
687 
 
615 
253 
868 
 
480 
­- 
480 
Luxembourg
253 
78 
226 
557 
20 
 
150 
79 
264 
493 
27 
 
222 
307 
529 
11 
Austria
274 
51 
152 
477 
(20)
 
292 
42 
232 
566 
(27)
 
249 
202 
142 
593 
(17)
Portugal
92 
106 
43 
241 
(36)
 
100 
103 
55 
258 
(32)
 
552 
125 
45 
722 
(18)
Other  (individually
  <£0.5 billion)
1,710 
556 
414 
2,680 
(71)
 
1,657 
786 
450 
2,893 
(18)
 
1,605 
1,521 
3,128 
(654)
                                   
 
59,389 
42,515 
9,226 
111,130 
(2,061)
 
60,438 
42,923 
9,790 
113,151 
(1,347)
 
64,866 
50,464 
10,052 
125,382 
(1,888)

Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Country risk - available-for-sale debt securities (continued)

Key points
·
Exposure to Spain reduced by £1.6 billion during 2010, largely in residential mortgage-backed covered bond exposures to financial institutions.
   
·
Italian exposures declined by £0.3 billion during 2010 from a combination of reductions in corporate clients and financial institutions, primarily in GBM.
   
·
The £500 million reductions in both Greek and Portuguese exposures primarily reflect disposals.



 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios

Commercial real estate
The definition of commercial real estate was revised during 2010 to include commercial investment properties, residential investment properties, commercial development properties and residential development properties (including house builders); 2009 data are presented on a consistent basis.

The commercial real estate lending portfolio totalled £87 billion at 31 December 2010, an 11% decrease over the prior year (31 December 2009 - £98 billion). The Non-Core portion of the portfolio totalled £46 billion (52% of the portfolio) at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - £47 billion, or 48% of the portfolio) and includes exposures in Ulster Bank Group as discussed on page 129.   The analysis below excludes RRM and contingent obligations.

 
 
31 December 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Investment 
Development 
Total 
 
Investment 
Development 
Total 
By division (1)
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
               
Core
             
UK Corporate
24,879 
5,819 
30,698 
 
27,143 
7,331 
34,474 
Ulster Bank
4,284 
1,090 
5,374 
 
6,131 
3,838 
9,969 
US Retail & Commercial
3,061 
653 
3,714 
 
2,812 
1,084 
3,896 
GBM
1,131 
644 
1,775 
 
1,997 
818 
2,815 
               
 
33,355 
8,206 
41,561 
 
38,083 
13,071 
51,154 
               
Non-Core
             
UK Corporate
7,591 
3,263 
10,854 
 
7,390 
3,959 
11,349 
Ulster Bank
3,854 
8,760 
12,614 
 
2,061 
6,271 
8,332 
US Retail & Commercial
1,202 
220 
1,422 
 
1,409 
431 
1,840 
GBM
20,502 
417 
20,919 
 
24,638 
873 
25,511 
               
 
33,149 
12,660 
45,809 
 
35,498 
11,534 
47,032 
               
 
66,504 
20,866 
87,370 
 
73,581 
24,605 
98,186 

 
 
Investment
 
Development
 
 
Commercial 
Residential 
 
Commercial 
Residential 
Total 
By geography (1)
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
             
31 December 2010
           
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
32,979 
7,255 
 
1,520 
8,296 
50,050 
Island of Ireland
5,056 
1,148 
 
2,785 
6,578 
15,567 
Western Europe
10,359 
707 
 
25 
46 
11,137 
US
6,010 
1,343 
 
542 
412 
8,307 
RoW
1,622 
25 
 
138 
524 
2,309 
             
 
56,026 
10,478 
 
5,010 
15,856 
87,370 
             
31 December 2009
           
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
36,731 
7,042 
 
1,875 
10,155 
55,803 
Island of Ireland
5,384 
1,047 
 
3,484 
6,305 
16,220 
Western Europe
12,565 
840 
 
184 
225 
13,814 
US
6,522 
1,355 
 
881 
778 
9,536 
RoW
2,068 
27 
 
239 
479 
2,813 
             
 
63,270 
10,311 
 
6,663 
17,942 
98,186 

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios

Commercial real estate (continued)


 
Investment
 
Development
 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
 
Core 
Non-Core 
Total 
By geography (1)
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
             
31 December 2010
           
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
26,168 
14,066 
 
5,997 
3,819 
50,050 
Island of Ireland
3,159 
3,044 
 
963 
8,401 
15,567 
Western Europe
409 
10,657 
 
25 
46 
11,137 
US
3,375 
3,978 
 
733 
221 
8,307 
RoW
244 
1,404 
 
488 
173 
2,309 
             
 
33,355 
33,149 
 
8,206 
12,660 
87,370 
             
31 December 2009
           
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
29,195 
14,578 
 
7,482 
4,548 
55,803 
Island of Ireland
4,699 
1,732 
 
3,702 
6,087 
16,220 
Western Europe
905 
12,500 
 
215 
194 
13,814 
US
3,193 
4,684 
 
1,289 
370 
9,536 
RoW
91 
2,004 
 
383 
335 
2,813 
             
 
38,083 
35,498 
 
13,071 
11,534 
98,186 
 
 
Note:
(1)
Excludes RRM and contingent obligations.

Key points
·
The decrease in exposure occurred primarily in the UK and Europe in the development and investment books. The asset mix remains relatively unchanged.
   
·
Commercial real estate will remain challenging for key markets, such as UK, ROI and US; new business will be accommodated within a reduced limit framework.
   
·
Liquidity in the market remains low with the focus on refinancing and support for the existing client base.
   
·
The Ulster Bank Non-Core increase relative to 2009 reflects the swapping of the residential mortgage portfolio for the commercial real estate portfolio with Ulster Bank Core in the third quarter of 2010.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Commercial real estate (continued)
By sub-sector (1)
UK
(excl NI) 
£m 
Island of Ireland 
£m 
Western 
Europe 
£m 
US 
£m 
RoW 
£m 
Total 
£m 
             
31 December 2010
           
Residential
15,551 
7,726 
753 
1,755 
549 
26,334 
Office
8,551 
1,402 
4,431 
1,311 
891 
16,586 
Retail
4,928 
674 
711 
529 
106 
6,948 
Industrial
10,413 
1,780 
3,309 
2,193 
284 
17,979 
Mixed/Other
10,607 
3,985 
1,933 
2,519 
479 
19,523 
             
 
50,050 
15,567 
11,137 
8,307 
2,309 
87,370 
             
31 December 2009
 
Residential
17,197 
7,352 
1,065 
2,134 
505 
28,253 
Office
9,381 
1,536 
5,034 
1,614 
975 
18,540 
Retail
5,760 
686 
998 
492 
700 
8,636 
Industrial
11,378 
2,599 
3,592 
2,053 
402 
20,024 
Mixed/Other
12,087 
4,047 
3,125 
3,243 
231 
22,733 
             
 
55,803 
    16,220 
13,814 
9,536 
2,813 
  98,186 

 
31 December 2010 
£m 
Maturity profile of portfolio (1)
   
< 1 year (2)
22,514
1-2 years
18,085
2-3 years
12,848
>3 years
33,923

Notes:
(1)
Excludes RRM and contingent obligations.
(2)
Includes on demand and past due assets.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Credit risk assets: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Commercial real estate (continued)

Key points
·
Of the total portfolio at 31 December 2010, £45.5 billion (31 December 2009 - £58.1 billion) is managed normally with annual reviews, £9.2 billion (31 December 2009 - £17.9 billion) is receiving heightened credit oversight under the Group watchlist process (“watch”) and £32.6 billion (31 December 2009 - £22.2 billion) is managed within the Global Restructuring Group (GRG).
   
·
As at 31 December 2010, 55% of the Group’s credit risk assets rated AQ10 related to the property sector, up from 51% at 31 December 2009.  Consistent with the trend seen in the total portfolio, the rate of migration to default slowed during the second half of 2010 in most portfolios. In Non-Core and Ulster Bank property remains the primary driver of growth in the defaulted loan book.
   
·
Short-term lending to property developers without firm long-term financing in place is characterised as speculative. Speculative lending at origination represents less than 2% of the portfolio. The Group’s appetite for originating speculative commercial real estate lending is very limited and any such business requires senior management approval. Current market conditions have resulted in some borrowers experiencing difficulty in finalising long-term finance arrangements. These borrowers are managed within the problem debt management process in ”watch” or the GRG.
   
·
Tighter risk appetite criteria for new business origination have been implemented during the year but will take time to be reflected in the performance of the portfolio. Whilst there has been some recovery in the value of prime properties in the UK, the Group observes that it has been selective. To date this improvement has not fed through into lower quality properties in the UK and has not been evident in other regions, notably the eurozone, Republic of Ireland and the US.




 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Retail assets

The Group's retail lending portfolio includes mortgages, credit cards, unsecured loans, auto finance and overdrafts. The majority of personal lending exposures are in the UK, Ireland and the US. The analysis below includes both Core and Non-Core balances.

 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
2009 (1) 
Personal credit risk assets
£m 
£m 
£m 
     
UK Retail
   
  - mortgages
92,592 
85,529 
  - cards, loans and overdrafts
18,072 
20,316 
Ulster Bank
   
  - mortgages
21,162 
22,304 
  - other personal
1,017 
1,172 
Citizens
   
  - mortgages
24,575 
26,534 
  - auto and cards
6,062 
6,917 
  - other (2)
3,455 
4,205 
Other (3)
18,123 
16,827 
     
 
185,058 
183,804 

Notes:
(1)
Revised to reflect improvements in data categorisation.
(2)
Mainly student loans and recreational vehicles/marine.
(3)
Personal exposures in other divisions.

See the section on Ulster Bank Group on page 129 for discussion on Ulster Bank residential mortgages.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Residential mortgages
The table below details the distribution of residential mortgages by indexed LTV. Ulster Bank Group is discussed on page 129.

 
UK Retail
 
Citizens
 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
2009 
 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
2009 (2)
By average LTV (1)
 
           
<= 50%
38.5 
39.2 
 
25.8 
26.4 
> 50% and <= 70%
23.2 
21.0 
 
17.3 
16.6 
> 70% and <= 90%
26.2 
24.5 
 
27.4 
26.3 
> 90%
12.1 
15.3 
 
29.5 
30.7 
           
Total portfolio average LTV
58.2 
59.1 
 
75.3 
74.5 
           
Average LTV on new
  originations during the period
64.2 
67.2 
 
64.8 
62.6 

Notes:
(1)
LTV averages are calculated by transaction volume.
(2)
Revised to reflect updated data and analysis completed after the reporting date.
(3)
Analysis covers the main mortgage brands in each of the Group’s three consumer markets and covers 96% of total mortgage portfolio.

The table below details the residential mortgages which are three months or more in arrears (by volume).

 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
 2009 
 
     
UK Retail (1)
1.7 
1.6 
Citizens
1.4 
1.5 

Note:
(1)
Based on the 3+ months arrears rate for RBS and NatWest (81% of standard mortgages as at December 2010) together with the equivalent manually appliedcollectionsstatus flag for RBS/NatWest ‘Offset’ and other brandmortgages; in total 93% of total mortgage assets. The ‘One Account’ current account mortgage is excluded (£6.7 billion of assets - 7% of assets) of which 0.8% of accounts were 90 days continually in excess of the limit at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - 0.6%). Consistent with the way the Council of Mortgage Lenders publishes member arrears information the 3+ month’s arrears rate now excludes accounts in repossession and cases with shortfalls post property sale;  2009 data have been revised accordingly.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Residential mortgages (continued)

UK residential mortgages

Key points
·
The UK mortgage portfolio totalled £92.6 billion at 31 December 2010, an increase of 8% from 31 December 2009, due to continued strong sales growth and lower redemption rates in historical terms. Of the total portfolio, 98% is designated as Core business with the primary brands being the Royal Bank of Scotland, NatWest, the One Account and First Active (Non-Core is made up of Direct Line Mortgages). The assets comprise prime mortgage lending and include 6.8% (£6.2 billion) of exposure to residential buy-to-let at 31 December 2010. There is a small legacy self certification book (0.3% of total assets); which was withdrawn from sale in 2004.
   
·
Gross new mortgage lending in 2010 was strong at £15.9 billion. The average LTV for new business during 2010 was 64.2% compared with 67.2% in 2009. The maximum LTV available to new customers remains at 90%. Based on the Halifax House Price index as at September 2010, the book averaged indexed LTV has reduced to 58.2% at 31 December 2010 from 59.1% at 31 December 2009 influenced by favourable house price movements with the proportion of balances in negative equity at 31 December 2010 standing at 6.9% down from 10.9% at 31 December 2009.
   
·
The arrears rate (more than 3 payments in arrears, excluding repossessions and shortfalls post property sale) increased slightly to 1.7% at 31 December 2010 from 1.6% at 31 December 2009. After a period of deterioration the arrears rate has stabilised and has remained broadly stable since late 2009. The arrears rate on the buy-to-let portfolio was 1.3% as at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - 1.4%).
   
·
The mortgage impairment charge was £183 million for the year ended 31 December 2010 compared with £129 million for 2009, with a proportion of the 2010 charge (approximately £70 million) being the result of adjustments reflecting reduced expectations of recovery on prior period defaulted debt and refinement of provision methodology. Underlying default trends improved throughout 2010 compared with 2009. Provisions as a percentage of loans and receivables have increased to 0.37% at 31 December 2010 compared with 0.25% at 31 December 2009. Default and arrears rates remain sensitive to economic developments and are currently supported by the low interest rate environment and strong book growth with recent business yet to mature.
   
·
A number of initiatives aimed at supporting customers experiencing temporary financial difficulties remain in place. Forbearance activities include offering reduced or deferred payment terms on a temporary basis for a period of up to 12 months during which arrears will continue to accrue on the account. Forbearance activities in the performing book amounted to £0.6 billion during 2010. It is Group policy not to initiate repossession proceedings for at least six months after arrears are evident. The number of properties repossessed in 2010 was 1,392 compared with 1,251 in 2009.




 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Residential mortgages (continued)

Citizens real estate

Key points
·
Citizens total residential real estate portfolio totalled $38.2 billion at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - $42.5 billion). The real estate portfolio comprises $9.7 billion (Core - $8.6 billion; Non-Core - $1.1 billion) of first lien residential mortgages and $28.5 billion (Core - $23.7 billion; Non-Core - $4.8 billion) of home equity loans and lines (first and second lien). Home Equity Core consists of 46% first lien position while Non-Core consists of 97% second lien position. The Core business comprises 84% of the portfolio and Non-Core comprising 16%, with the serviced by others (SBO) portfolio being the largest component at 75% of the Non-Core portfolio.
   
·
Citizens continue to focus primarily on the ‘footprint states’ of New England, Mid-Atlantic and Mid-West targeting low risk products and maintaining conservative risk policies. Loan acceptance criteria were tightened during 2009 to address deteriorating economic and market conditions. As at 31 December 2010, the portfolio consists of $31.5 billion (82% of the total portfolio) in these footprint states.
   
·
The SBO portfolio is part of Non-Core and consists of purchased pools of home equity loans and lines (96% second lien) with current LTV (105%) and geographic profiles (73% outside of Citizens footprint) leading to an annualised charge-off rate of 10.6% in 2010. The SBO book has been closed to new purchases since the third quarter of 2007 and is in run-off, with exposure down from $5.5 billion at 31 December 2009 to $4.5 billion at 31 December 2010. The arrears rate of the SBO portfolio decreased from 3.1% at 31 December 2009 to 2.7% at 31 December 2010 due to more effective account servicing and collections, following a service conversion in 2009.
   
·
The current weighted average LTV of the real estate portfolio increased from 74.5% at 31 December 2009 to 75.3% at 31 December 2010, driven by a down turn in home prices. The current weighted average LTV of the real estate portfolio excluding SBO is 70.0%.
   
·
The arrears rate decreased slightly from 1.5% at 31 December 2009 to 1.4% at 31 December 2010. Delinquency rates have stabilised in recent months for both residential mortgages and home equity loans and lines. Citizens’ participates in the US Government Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) alongside other bank sponsored initiatives. Under HAMP, any borrower requesting a modification must be first reviewed to see if they meet the criteria of this programme. If the borrower does not qualify for HAMP, then they are reviewed for internal modification programmes. The HAMP programme is available only for first lien loans to owner-occupied. All second lien home equity lines and loans are modified using internal programmes.
   
·
The cumulative effect of these arrangements has helped the Group’s customers. Modified loan balances were $566 million at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - $235 million).



 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Key credit portfolios (continued)

Personal lending
The Group's personal lending portfolio includes credit cards, unsecured loans, auto finance and overdrafts. The majority of personal lending exposures are in the UK and the US. New defaults as a proportion of average loans and receivables are shown in the following table.

 
31 December 2010
 
31 December 2009
 
Average 
 loans and 
 receivables 
£m 
Impairment 
 charge 
 as a % of 
 loans and 
 receivables 
%
 
Average 
 loans and 
 receivables 
£m 
Impairment 
 charge 
as a % of 
loans and 
 receivables 
%
Personal lending
 
           
UK Retail cards (1)
6,025 
5.0 
 
6,101 
8.7 
UK Retail loans (1)
9,863 
4.8 
 
12,062 
5.9 
           
 
$m 
 
$m 
Citizens cards (2,3)
1,555 
9.9 
 
1,772 
9.7 
Citizens auto loans (2)
8,133 
0.6 
 
9,759 
1.2 

Notes:
(1)
The ratio for UK Retail assets refers to the impairment charges for the year.
(2)
The ratio for Citizens refers to charge offs in the year, net of recoveries realised in the year.
(3)
The 2009 data have been revised to exclude the Kroger Personal Finance portfolio, which was sold in 2010.

Key points
·
The UK personal lending portfolio, of which 98% is in Core businesses, comprises credit cards, unsecured loans and overdrafts and totalled £18 billion at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - £20.3 billion), a decrease of 11% due to continued subdued loan recruitment activity and a continuing general market trend of customers repaying unsecured loan balances with cards and current account balances remaining stable. The Non-Core portfolio consists of the direct finance loan portfolios (Direct Line, Lombard, Mint and Churchill), and totalled £0.45 billion at 31 December 2010 (31 December 2009 - £0.7 billion).
   
·
Risk appetite continues to be actively managed across all products. Support continues for customers in financial difficulties through “breathing space initiatives” on all unsecured products, whereby a thirty day period is given to allow customers 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 continued support for the Group’s customers and the management of impairments.
   
·
Benefiting from a combination of risk appetite tightening and a more favourable economic environment, impairment losses on unsecured lending have reduced significantly during 2010 from £1,603 million at 31 December 2009 to £991 million at 31 December 2010 with the downward trajectory moderating significantly in the latter part of the year. Impairments will remain sensitive to the external environment.
   
·
Industry benchmarks for cards arrears remain stable, with RBS continuing to perform favourably.
   
·
Outstanding balances for the Citizens credit card portfolio totalled US$1.53 billion, at 31 December 2010. This figure excludes the Kroger Personal Finance portfolio, which was sold on 27 May 2010. Core assets comprised 86.3% of the portfolio.

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core)

Ulster Bank Group accounts for 8% of the Group’s total credit risk assets or 7% of the Group’s Core credit risk assets. The Irish economy has experienced severe economic headwinds resulting in a substantial rise in unemployment and a steep property value correction over the last 2 years. Ulster Bank Group has not been immune to the downturn which has resulted in a significant migration of credit quality to lower grades and a substantial increase in loan impairments. Ulster Bank Group’s commercial real estate and mortgage portfolios have been acutely affected and these account for 81% of the 2010 impairment charge (31 December 2009 - 75%).

Core
Impairment charges increased by £512 million at 31 December 2009 to £1,161 million at 31 December 2010, reflecting the deteriorating economic environment in Ireland with rising default levels across both personal and corporate portfolios. Lower asset values, particularly property related, together with pressure on borrowers with a dependence on consumer spending have resulted in higher corporate loan losses while higher unemployment, lower incomes and increased taxation have driven mortgage impairment increases. Ulster Bank Group is helping customers in this difficult environment. Forbearance policies which are deployed through the 'Flex' initiative are aimed at assisting customers in financial difficulty. These policies have been reviewed in 2010 given the structural problem that exists in Ireland with the scale and duration of customers in financial difficulty. The industry definition in the Republic of Ireland of an unsustainable mortgage (18 months accumulated interest) has been used to underpin the policy which will improve identification of customers where forbearance may not be appropriate. The forbearance portfolios account for 5.8% (7,383 mortgages) of the Ulster Bank Group mortgage portfolio (by value) at 31 December 2010 with 75% of these customers (by value) in amortising or interest only agreements.

Non-Core
Impairment charges increased from £1,277 million at 31 December 2009 to £2,682 million at 31 December 2010, reflecting the deteriorating economic environment in Ireland with rising default levels across the portfolio. Lower asset values, in property related lending and most specifically in development lending have resulted in higher corporate loan losses.

In the third quarter of 2010, £6.1 billion of residential mortgages and some corporate exposures were transferred from Non-Core to Core; at the same time £5 billion of commercial real estate loans were transferred from Core to Non-Core.

Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core) (continued)

Credit risk assets by industry and geography

Credit risk assets include £51 billion and £3 billion of lending to customers and financial institutions respectively, with the remaining exposure comprising RRM and contingent obligations.

 
Republic of Ireland
 
UK
 
Other
 
Total
 
Core 
Non-core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-core 
Total 
 
Core 
Non-core 
Total 
Industry sector (1)
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m 
£m 
                               
2010 
                             
Personal
20,064 
120 
20,184 
 
2,730 
22 
2,752 
 
 
22,799 
142 
22,941 
Banks
107 
107 
 
 
14 
14 
 
124 
124 
Non-banks and financial institutions
167 
88 
255 
 
46 
24 
70 
 
 
217 
112 
329 
Sovereign (2)
2,174 
2,174 
 
672 
672 
 
 
2,846 
2,846 
Property
3,609 
8,431 
12,040 
 
2,704 
4,281 
6,985 
 
305 
770 
1,075 
 
6,618 
13,482 
20,100 
Retail and leisure
1,923 
608 
2,531 
 
795 
75 
870 
 
108 
108 
 
2,826 
683 
3,509 
Other corporate
4,033 
338 
4,371 
 
1,089 
88 
1,177 
 
198 
198 
 
5,320 
426 
5,746 
                               
 
32,077 
9,585 
41,662 
 
8,039 
4,490 
12,529 
 
634 
770 
1,404 
 
40,750 
14,845 
55,595 
                               
2009
                             
Personal
16,008 
6,302 
22,310 
 
2,782 
24 
2,806 
 
 
18,794 
6,326 
25,120 
Banks
99 
99 
 
 
28 
28 
 
131 
131 
Non-banks and financial institutions
190 
19 
209 
 
170 
16 
186 
 
 
363 
35 
398 
Sovereign (2)
1,909 
1,909 
 
347 
347 
 
 
2,256 
2,256 
Property
6,686 
5,852 
12,538 
 
4,540 
2,635 
7,175 
 
759 
413 
1,172 
 
11,985 
8,900 
20,885 
Retail and leisure
2,638 
288 
2,926 
 
579 
22 
601 
 
126 
126 
 
3,343 
310 
3,653 
Other corporate
4,145 
228 
4,373 
 
894 
72 
966 
 
132 
132 
 
5,171 
300 
5,471 
                               
 
31,675 
12,689 
44,364 
 
9,316 
2,769 
12,085 
 
1,052 
413 
1,465 
 
42,043 
15,871 
57,914 

Notes:
(1)
In the third quarter of 2010, £6.1 billion of residential mortgages and some corporate exposures were transferred from Non-Core; at the same time £5 billion of commercial real estate loans were transferred from Core to Non-Core.
   
(2)
Includes central bank exposures.


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core) (continued)

Risk elements in lending and impairments by sector

 
Gross 
 loans (1) 
REIL 
Provisions 
REIL 
as a % of 
gross loans 
Provisions 
 as a % of 
 REIL 
Provisions 
 as a % of 
 gross loans 
Impairment 
charge 
Amounts 
 written-off 
31 December 2010
£m 
£m 
£m 
%
%
%
£m 
£m 
                 
Ulster Bank Group
               
Mortgages
21,162 
1,566 
439 
7.4 
28.0 
2.1 
336 
Personal unsecured
1,282 
185 
158 
14.4 
85.4 
12.3 
48 
30 
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
8,138 
2,989 
1,332 
36.7 
44.6 
16.4 
889 
  - development
9,850 
6,406 
2,820 
65.0 
44.0 
28.6 
1,875 
Other corporate
11,009 
2,515 
1,228 
22.8 
48.8 
11.2 
695 
11 
                 
 
51,441 
13,661 
5,977 
26.6 
43.8 
11.6 
3,843 
48 
                 
Core
               
Mortgages
21,162 
1,566 
439 
7.4 
28.0 
2.1 
294 
Personal unsecured
1,282 
185 
158 
14.4 
85.4 
12.3 
48 
30 
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
4,284 
598 
332 
14.0 
55.5 
7.7 
259 
  - development
1,090 
65 
37 
6.0 
56.9 
3.4 
116 
Other corporate
9,039 
1,205 
667 
13.3 
55.4 
7.4 
444 
11 
                 
 
36,857 
3,619 
 1,633 
9.8 
45.1 
4.4 
1,161 
48 
                 
Non-Core
               
Mortgages
42 
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
3,854 
2,391 
1,000 
62.0 
41.8 
25.9 
630 
  - development
8,760 
6,341 
2,783 
72.4 
43.9 
31.8 
1,759 
Other corporate
1,970 
 1,310 
561 
66.5 
42.8 
28.5 
251 
                 
 
14,584 
 10,042 
 4,344 
68.9 
43.3 
29.8 
2,682 

 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core) (continued)

Risk elements in lending and impairments by sector (continued)

 
Gross 
 loans (1) 
REIL 
Provisions 
REIL 
as a % of 
 loans 
Provisions 
 as a % of 
 REIL 
Provisions 
 as a % of 
 gross loans 
Impairment 
charge 
Amounts 
 written-off 
31 December 2009
£m 
£m 
£m 
%
%
%
£m 
£m 
                 
Ulster Bank Group
               
Mortgages
22,201 
882 
153 
4.0 
17.3 
0.7 
116 
Personal unsecured
2,433 
174 
145 
7.2 
83.3 
6.0 
66 
27 
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
8,192 
1,748 
413 
21.3 
23.6 
5.0 
370 
  - development
10,109 
4,268 
1,106 
42.2 
25.9 
10.9 
953 
Other corporate
12,479 
1,976 
648 
15.8 
32.8 
5.2 
421 
                 
 
55,414 
9,048 
2,465 
16.3 
27.2 
4.4 
1,926 
34 
                 
Core
               
Mortgages
16,199 
558 
102 
3.4 
18.3 
0.6 
74 
3
Personal unsecured
2,433 
174 
145 
7.2 
83.3 
6.0 
66 
27
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
6,131 
250 
105 
4.1 
42.0 
1.7 
84 
  - development
3,838 
428 
284 
11.2 
66.4 
7.4 
221 
Other corporate
11,106 
850 
326 
7.7 
38.4 
2.9 
204 
                 
 
39,707 
2,260 
 962 
5.7 
42.6 
2.4 
649 
34 
                 
Non-Core
               
Mortgages
6,002 
324 
51 
5.4 
15.7 
0.8 
42 
Commercial real estate
               
  - investment
2,061 
1,498 
308 
72.7 
20.6 
14.9 
286 
  - development
6,271 
3,840 
822 
61.2 
21.4 
13.1 
 732 
Other corporate
1,373 
1,126 
322 
82.0 
28.6 
23.5 
217 
                 
 
15,707 
6,788 
 1,503 
43.2 
22.1 
9.6 
1,277 

Note:
(1)
Funded loans.

Key points
·
Increases in REIL reflect difficult conditions in both commercial and residential sectors in the Republic of Ireland. Of the REIL at 31 December 2010, 74% was in Non-Core.
   
·
Provisions increased from £2.5 billion to £6.0 billion and the coverage ratio increased to 44% from 27% at 31 December 2009. 69% of the provision at 31 December 2010 relates to property.


 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core) (continued)

Key credit portfolios (continued)

Residential mortgages

The table below shows how the steep property value correction has affected the distribution of residential mortgages by loan-to-value (LTV) (indexed). LTV is based upon gross loan amounts and, whilst including defaulted loans, does not account for impairments already taken.


 
31 December 
2010 
31 December 
2009 
By average LTV (1)
     
<= 50%
35.9 
40.7 
> 50% and <= 70%
13.5 
15.2 
> 70% and <= 90%
13.5 
15.5 
> 90%
37.1 
28.6 
     
Total portfolio average LTV
71.2 
62.5 
     
Average LTV on new originations during the period
75.9 
72.8 

Note:
(1) LTV averages calculated by transaction volume.

Key points
·
The residential mortgage portfolio across Ulster Bank Group totalled £21.2 billion at 31 December 2010; with 90% in the Republic of Ireland and 10% in Northern Ireland. The portfolio size has declined by 4% in the Republic of Ireland since 31 December 2009 with Northern Ireland increasing by 12% over the same period. New business originations continue to be very low, especially in the Republic of Ireland. In 2010, 3,557 new mortgages were originated of which, 92% were in Northern Ireland.
   
·
The arrears rate continues to increase due to the continued challenging economic environment. As at 31 December 2010, the arrears rate was 6.0%, compared to 3.3% at 31 December 2009. As a result, the impairment charge for 2010 was £336 million compared with £116 million for 2009. Repossessions totalled 76 in 2010, compared with 96 in 2009; 75% of the repossessions were voluntary.
   
·
Ulster Bank Group has a number of initiatives in place aimed at increasing the level of support to customers experiencing temporary financial difficulties. As at 31 December 2010, forbearance arrangements had been agreed in respect of 5.8% (£1.2 billion) of Ulster Bank Group’s residential mortgage portfolio. The majority (79%) relates to customers in the performing book. Loans in respect of which forbearance arrangements were agreed during 2010 amounted to £1.7 billion in the performing book and £0.5 billion in the impaired book.



 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


Risk and balance sheet management (continued)

Risk management: Credit risk: Ulster Bank Group (Core and Non-Core) (continued)

Commercial real estate
Commercial real estate lending portfolio for Ulster Bank Group totalled £18 billion at 31 December 2010 and decreased by 2% during the year. The Non-Core portion of the portfolio totalled £12.6 billion (70% of the portfolio). Of the total Ulster Commercial real estate portfolio 24% is in Northern Ireland, 63% is in Republic of Ireland and 13% is in the UK. The definition of commercial real estate was revised during 2010 to include commercial investment properties, residential investment properties, commercial development properties and residential development properties which include house builders.


 
Development
 
Investment
   
 
Commercial 
Residential 
 
Commercial 
Residential  
 
Total 
Exposure by geography
£m 
£m 
 
£m 
£m  
 
£m 
               
2010
             
Island of Ireland
2,785 
6,578 
 
5,072 
1,098  
 
15,533 
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
110 
359 
 
1,831 
115  
 
2,415 
RoW
17 
 
22 
1  
 
40 
               
 
2,895 
6,954 
 
6,925 
1,214  
 
17,988 
               
2009
             
Island of Ireland
3,404 
6,305 
 
5,453 
1,047  
 
16,209 
UK (excluding Northern Ireland)
240 
153 
 
 1,586 
83  
 
2,062 
RoW
 - 
 
22  
 
30 
               
 
3,644 
6,465 
 
7,040 
1,152  
 
18,301 

 
 

 


Property remains the primary driver of growth in the defaulted loan book for Ulster Bank Group. The outlook remains challenging with limited liquidity in the marketplace to support refinancing. The decrease in asset valuations has placed pressure on the portfolio with more clients seeking renegotiation of terms in the context of granting structural enhancements.




 


RBS Group – Annual Results                                                                 2010
 
 

 


 
 
Signatures

 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
 
 

 
 
Date: 24 February 2011
 
 
THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND GROUP plc (Registrant)
 
 
 
By:
/s/ Jan Cargill
 
 
Name:
Title:
Jan Cargill
Deputy Secretary
 

 

 

*