The Journal

Virgin Money takeover moves ‘a step closer’

- COREENA FORD Business writer coreena.ford@reachplc.com

A£2.9BN takeover of North East challenger bank Virgin Money has moved a step closer after details on the offer were issued to shareholde­rs.

Nationwide Building Society’s proposed the acquisitio­n of the Newcastle business last month, with the boards of both companies saying they had agreed on a cash acquisitio­n that would deliver shareholde­rs 220p per share.

The deal for Virgin Money – formed in 2020 when Clydesdale and Yorkshire Bank owner CYBG snapped up the company that had taken over the former Northern Rock bank – would create the second largest provider of mortgages and savings in the UK.

Now shareholde­rs at the business, which has its main bases in Newcastle, Glasgow and Leeds, have been sent documents outlining the terms of the deal.

The deal would create a combined group with total assets of around £366.3bn and total lending and advances of around £283.5bn.

Following the announceme­nt of the deal Virgin Money staff were told that Nationwide, based in Swindon, “values Virgin Money’s ongoing presence in Glasgow and Newcastle” and that it was committed to the bank’s 7,300 current staff, saying it was not looking at any job cuts in the short term.

Nationwide said it will remain a mutual building society if the deal goes ahead.

Virgin Money has also updated shareholde­rs on current trading, highlighti­ng how it has continued to perform broadly as anticipate­d in the remainder of the second quarters of the 2024 financial year.

Over the first half of the year, the firm said: “Virgin Money delivered continued growth in relationsh­ip deposits and target lending segments, whilst maintainin­g a broadly stable margin, with ongoing cost efficienci­es mitigating inflation.”

It said its net interest margin continued to be resilient, despite competitio­n and the interest rate backdrop, supported by its interest rate outperform­ance in its credit cards portfolio.

Looking ahead it said: “For the remainder of FY 2024, lower interest rates and competitiv­e market dynamics are expected to be a headwind to net interest margin, offset by reinvestme­nt of the structural hedge, growth in target segments and ongoing credit cards effective interest rate outperform­ance.

“The impact of persistent inflation and ongoing investment are expected to be headwinds to cost performanc­e, partially mitigated by Virgin Money’s existing cost saving programme.”

Shareholde­rs will vote on the Nationwide proposal on May 22.

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