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PRIVACY
Professional Services

Swansea Building Society posts record results through pandemic

The society says it benefited from staying open during the pandemic

Alun Williams, Chief Executive Officer, Swansea Building Society(Image: HOOSH)

Swansea Building Society has posted its best-ever set of results.

Its total assets, mortgage balances, savings, capital and profits all reached record highs last year despite the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic. The company puts this down to a result of a comprehensive investment plan kickstarted in 2015, which has seen it open three new branches, upgrade back-office systems and hire new talent across the business.

Employees in the financial services sector were classed as key workers throughout the pandemic as government wanted to ensure individuals had access to their finances. By keeping all of its branch offices open for face-to-face and telephone/e-mail contact, Swansea Building Society was able to welcome many new savers and mortgage customers despite the challenges of the past 12 months.

For the 12 months to December 31, 2020, the society’s total assets increased by £44m to £414.4m, a growth rate of 12%; its mortgage balances increased by £29.6m to £302.9m, an increase of 11%; and its savings balances increased by £41.1m to £386.8m, a 12% rise. All of the growth in net mortgage lending was funded by increases in retail savings balances from personal customers deposits.

The society posted a pre-tax profit of £3.3m compared with the £2.3m it made a year earlier in 2019. Although its levels of mortgage lending were slightly down due to the disruption of the pandemic (£67.1m versus £74.3m a year earlier) it also reduced its expenses to £4.8m compared with £5m in 2019. The society has now delivered annual pre‐tax profits greater than £2m in each of the past seven years.

Swansea Building Society remains one of the few financial institutions in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ that receives no wholesale funding or support from the Bank of England in the form of cheap funding. Its balance sheet is funded entirely by customer savings balances and its own capital reserves built up from retained profits over many years.

The society continued with its ethos of ‘opening not closing’ branches, in contrast to most financial institutions. It has opened new branches in Carmarthen, Cowbridge and Swansea city centre in recent years. This benefitted it through the pandemic as more customers sought a personal, friendly and local service, and many savers, worried by economic crisis, also looked to spread their assets.