º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Professional Services

The Co-operative Bank's profit hit by one-off costs as takeover talks move ahead

The Manchester based lender said it is still in talks with Coventry Building Society

Co-op

The Co-operative Bank has seen its yearly profit nearly halve after it set aside cash to compensate mortgage customers from more than a decade ago, while the lender said it is still in talks with Coventry Building Society over a possible tie-up.

The Manchester based bank, which has about 2.6 million customers and says it is the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's leading ethical bank, said 2023 had been "a year of transformation" as it spent more money on improving its own systems. It reported a pre-tax profit of £71.4m for 2023, shrinking from the £132.6m it made in 2022.

The business said the decline was driven by one-off costs during the year. It set aside nearly £29m to cover the costs of a redress scheme to compensate mortgage customers from 2011 and 2012.

Read more: AI medical device testing specialist adsilico secures £3.5m investment

Read more: Sony to cut Liverpool jobs as part of PlayStation restructuring

It followed complaints being upheld by the Financial Ombudsman Service relating to an increase in the rate of its standard variable mortgage rate, which most people move to once their fixed-term deal comes to an end.

Co-op Bank said it had decided to compensate customers who might have been affected, regardless of whether or not they had complained. It also revealed it spent about £15 million on improving how it manages savings and loans, and around £8 million on advisory costs relating to a strategic review of the business. Staff costs jumped by a fifth as it invested in contact centres, and wages were pushed higher by inflation.

Chief executive Nick Slape said: "2023 has been a year of transformation and I am extremely proud of what we have achieved. We are ever mindful of the financial challenges that the current economic climate poses for a number of customers and we will continue to support them where needed."