
High street banks lose £100bn in deposits as UK savers shift to online rivals
Experts at KPMG said rival banks – including new challenger banks, specialist lenders and building societies – had lured customers away from incumbent banking groups with higher savings rates. The traditional banks' market share in deposits dropped from 84% in 2019 to 80% in 2024, it added.
Meanwhile the banking sector collectively suffered a £3.7bn combined drop in total pre-tax profits last year, marking the first major downturn since the rebound in the wake of the pandemic.
The sector's average return on equity, a key performance measure, is expected to fall by more than a third, from a peak of 13% in 2023 to 8% by 2027. That is equivalent to an £11bn drop in annual profits.
KPMG warned that banks were under pressure to adapt to major changes in the sector, including increased competition and rising costs.
The flight of customers from high street lenders follows a period in which banks were accused of 'profiteering' from rising interest rates by offering paltry returns for savers.
Sign up to Business Today
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
after newsletter promotion
Executives from big high street names such as Lloyds Banking Group, NatWest, HSBC and Barclays were hauled into meetings with regulators and MPs in 2023, amid concerns that interest offered on savings lagged far behind the soaring interest rates for mortgages and loans.
These concerns sparked debate over whether the government should impose a windfall tax on banks, to recoup costs for consumers during the cost of living crisis. Similar policies were introduced in the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Spain, but UK politicians have so far refused to follow suit.
Peter Westlake, a partner in KPMG UK's banking strategy team, said: 'Banks are facing a lower-growth, higher-cost environment that demands transformation at pace. While we can expect profitability to broadly remain sound this year, the entire sector needs to show how they are preparing for challenges ahead.'
Bank costs rose by 6% in 2024, which – together with falling productivity among workers – could put bank profits under further pressure, according to KPMG's report.
Westlake suggested that banks could turn to less conventional methods to boost profits, including by embracing artificial intelligence. 'The winners will be those that move beyond tactical cost-cutting and proactively address oncoming market headwinds through business model transformation,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
7 minutes ago
- Reuters
India's Gland Pharma posts quarterly profit rise on Cenexi recovery, Europe sales growth
Aug 5 (Reuters) - India's Gland Pharma ( opens new tab reported a nearly 50% jump in first-quarter profit on Tuesday, driven by better margins and a recovery at its European unit Cenexi. The company reported a consolidated net profit of 2.15 billion rupees ($24.50 million) for the quarter ended June 30, from 1.44 billion rupees in the year-ago quarter. Revenue from operations rose 7.4% to 15.06 billion rupees. While sales from its U.S. business, which accounts for nearly half of the total, fell 2%, its Europe business posted a 29% rise. For further results highlights, click KEY CONTEXT Gland and several Indian pharma companies that make generic drugs derive a significant share of revenue from the United States and has continued to face pricing pressure in that market following U.S. President Donald Trump's imposition of hefty tariffs on goods imported from India. Rivals Sun Pharma ( opens new tab and Cipla ( opens new tab and Dr Reddy's ( opens new tab reported subdued U.S. sales in the quarter. However, Gland Pharma said improved margins and Cenexi's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) break-even supported quarterly performance, marking a turnaround after production setbacks at its Paris and Belgium units weighed on earnings over the past year. The company's EBITDA margin rose to 35% in the June quarter from 29% a year earlier. PEER COMPARISON * Mean of analysts' ratings standardised to a scale of Strong Buy, Buy, Hold, Sell, and Strong Sell ** Ratio of the stock's last close to analysts' mean price target; a ratio above 1 means the stock is trading above the PT APRIL TO JUNE STOCK PERFORMANCE -- All data from LSEG -- $1 = 87.7570 Indian rupeesthe


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
National living wage likely to rise to £12.71 next year, advisory body estimates
The national living wage could rise by as much as 65p an hour next year, an advisory body has estimated, as the terms of its annual review of wage rates were published. Ministers are determined to deliver 'a genuine living wage', according to the Low Pay Commission's (LPC) latest remit for increasing the so-called national living wage – the UK minimum wage for workers aged 21 and older. At the moment, the national living wage is £12.21 an hour. The LPC estimates that this will need to increase to £12.71 in 2026 to not fall below two-thirds of median earnings: the threshold which the Government expects it to stay above. But the LPC acknowledged the national living wage could rise to as much as £12.86 an hour, or as little as £12.55 an hour, depending on changing economic conditions. Founded in 1997, the advisory body provides recommendations to ministers each autumn regarding how it believes the minimum wage should be changed. The Government ultimately sets minimum wage rates for the following April after this advice. A letter from Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the committee must take into account the cost of living as it reviews the national living wage. The two senior ministers insisted the Government was 'committed to ensuring that the minimum wage is a genuine living wage'. They added: 'We continue to recognise that our ambition should be backed by evidence, and that the minimum wage rate should be consistent with delivering inclusive growth for working people and businesses alike. 'We are therefore asking the LPC to recommend a national living wage rate that is at least two-thirds of UK median earnings for workers aged 21 and over, to apply from next April, which takes into account the cost of living, effects on employment and developments in the wider economy.' Elsewhere, the Government is pushing forward with plans to end 'discriminatory' age banding for the minimum wage, and has extended the LPC's remit to examine this. It said the LPC will consult with employers, trade unions and workers on narrowing the gap between the national living wage and the minimum wage rate for 18 to 20-year-olds, which is currently £10. There is also a minimum wage for those aged under 18, and apprentices, of £7.55. The LPC will report back in October with advice to the Government on how much the minimum wage should rise by in 2026. The Resolution Foundation, a think tank which works to improve living standards, suggested the Government was using 'ambitious language' on increasing the minimum wage, but in reality was adopting a cautious approach. Nye Cominetti, principal economist at the think tank, said: 'Despite the Government's ambitious language around 'delivering a genuine living wage', the new remit for the Low Pay Commission represents a steady-as-she-goes approach to the adult rate, after faster increases in the years preceding 2024. 'This caution is warranted given worrying labour market data, which is thanks in part to the Government's increase in employer national insurance contributions in April.'


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
This is now UK's cheapest supermarket
Lidl has surpassed Aldi to become the UK 's cheapest supermarket for the first time in nearly two years, according to a July price analysis by consumer group Which?. The analysis of 76 grocery products revealed Lidl's average basket cost £128 with a loyalty card, marginally less than Aldi's £129.25. Both discount retailers were significantly more affordable than other supermarkets, with Tesco costing approximately £17 more and Waitrose, the most expensive, costing £40 more at £170.91. Which? noted that loyalty cards offer substantial savings, particularly at supermarkets such as Tesco and Sainsbury 's, while Morrisons did not outperform competitors on price. The ongoing price competition among supermarkets is driven by high food inflation and the cost of living crisis, leading many consumers to alter their shopping habits in search of better value.