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PRIVACY
Professional Services

High street bank triples profits by shifting focus to small business loans

The bank recorded an underlying profit before tax of £45m in the six months to the end of June, up from £12.8m in the second half of 2024

Metro Bank on Paradise Street in Liverpool

Metro Bank has reported a more than threefold increase in its profit for the first half of the year, as its transformation strategy accelerates.

The high street bank posted an underlying pre-tax profit of £45m, a significant rise from £12.8m in the second half of 2024, as reported by .

Revenue saw a 22 per cent increase to £286m, while operating costs dropped by eight per cent year-on-year to £234.7m.

The bank also recorded a record £1bn in new corporate lending for the half, double the amount originated in the same period last year.

This comes as the firm continues to shift from retail banking towards specialist lending, targeting small- and medium-sized enterprises.

The bank's net interest margin – a crucial measure of a firm's profitability from lending – climbed to 2.87 per cent, a sharp increase from 1.64 per cent in the first half of 2024.

This was driven by an improvement in the average interest rate the bank earns on its loans, which rose to 5.67 per cent, and lower deposit costs.

Metro's CET1 ratio, indicating the core capital a bank holds to absorb losses and protect depositors, remained robust at 12.8 per cent.