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Higher interest rates help Virgin Money UK post annual profit surge

By Scott Kanowsky

Investing.com -- Virgin Money UK PLC (LON:VMUK) posted a rise in full-year income, as the bank was given a boost from elevated interest rates and credit card spending that helped offset provisions against bad loans that remained above pre-pandemic levels.

Statutory profit on ordinary activities before tax grew by 43% in the twelve-month period to September 30 to £595 million (£1 = $1.1826), which the Newcastle-based lender said was based on the higher rate backdrop. The Bank of England has hiked borrowing costs aggressively in a bid to curb soaring inflation, including a sharp 75 basis point increase earlier this month - the BoE's biggest rate rise in three decades.

Unsecured balances jumped by 13.8% to £6.2B thanks to strong performance in Virgin Money UK's credit cards business, where balances expanded by more than a fifth annually. Analysts have previously suggested that this trend could be a sign that more consumers in Britain are taking out bridge loans to pay for essential items that have recently become far more expensive.

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Meanwhile, mortgage lending returned to growth in the second half of the year despite a slide in demand for new homes in the U.K.

Net interest margin - a gauge of the difference between what a bank receives from loans and securities investments and the amount it pays for deposits - moved up to 1.85%, at the higher end of the company's full-year guidance.

However, Britain's cost of living crisis and the impact it could have on consumer activity led Virgin Money UK to book an impairment charge of £52M. Despite provisions for COVID-19 impacts being unwound, the level of coverage also remained above pandemic levels, which the firm said reflected "worsening macroeconomic forecasts."

"While not directly exposed to Ukraine, we have seen second-order impacts on the broader UK economy from higher costs, higher interest rates and potential pressure on our customers and asset quality," said Chief Executive Officer David Duffy in a statement.

"As we enter a more volatile environment, with higher inflation and rates, we are carefully monitoring for any impacts. We enter this phase with a prudently underwritten loan book, robust coverage, and a defensive asset mix."

Underlying operating costs also ticked up to £914M due to surging inflation and increased investment.

But the cautious outlook for the broader economy did not stop Virgin Money UK from delivering a 30% annual dividend payout, while predicting a further increase in net interest margin in its 2023 fiscal year.

London-listed shares in the company rallied in early trading on Monday.

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