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REG - Manx Financial Group - Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2025

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RNS Number : 5983E  Manx Financial Group PLC  18 May 2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
 
    18 May 2026

 

 

Manx Financial Group PLC (the 'Group')

Report and accounts for the year ended 31 December 2025

Manx Financial Group PLC (LSE: MFX), the financial services group which
includes Conister Bank Limited, Conister Finance & Leasing Ltd, Payment
Assist Limited, Blue Star Business Solutions Limited, Edgewater Associates
Limited and MFX Limited presents its audited final results for the year ended
31 December 2025.

Jim Mellon, Executive Chair, commented: "Net interest income increased by
14.3% to £37.5 million (2024: £32.8 million), reflecting both balance sheet
growth and an improved funding mix".

 

Financial highlights

·      net assets increased by 16.7% to £43.6 million (2024: £37.3
million). These increases reflect the continuing strength of the Group's
financial position.

·      reported profit before tax decreased to £7.3 million (2024:
£9.9 million) reflecting a weaker contribution from The Business Lending
Exchange Limited together with the impact of non-recurring provisions

·      normalised profit before tax increased to £8.6 million (2024:
£8.3 million)

·      basic earnings per share was 5.33 pence (2024: 6.87 pence) and
normalised basic earnings per share increased by 10% to 6.28 pence (2024: 5.70
pence)

·      net assets per share rose to 35.4p (2024:31.1p) and tangible net
assets per share increased to 22.2p (2024: 17.9p)

·      return on equity was 15.8% (2024: 22.4%) and normalised return on
equity was maintained at 18.6% (2024: 18.6%)

·      normalised return on tangible equity remained high at 30.9%
(2024: 32.4%)

·      total capital ratio of 15.8% (2024: 17.0%), safely above its
regulatory minimum, reflecting growth in risk weighted assets

 

Strategic highlights

 

·      the Board remains focused on disciplined execution and remains
well placed to capture attractive opportunities while continuing to manage the
business prudently and efficiently

·      the Conister Overdraft remains in user acceptance testing ahead
of an anticipated launch later in 2026

·      the Group submitted an Irish consumer credit licence application.
A decision from the Central Bank of Ireland is anticipated by late summer 2026

 

The 2025 Audited Annual Report and Accounts will be posted to Shareholders and
will be available from the Company's website www.mfg.im
(https://protect.checkpoint.com/v2/r02/___http:/www.mfg.im/___.YXAxZTpzaG9yZWNhcDpjOm9mZmljZTM2NV9lbWFpbHNfYXR0YWNobWVudDo3ODgzOWY0ZmYzZmYzMzUzMTc0ZWI5NTgxMzZkODAzMjo3OmFmMTU6YTQxMTNjN2FhMTM1MWQ5OTczZmM4YWVkNWQzY2MxOWE0NjMwNDU5YjFiMDAyNmFhNTgzNzdmYWIzMzlhZmIzZjpwOkY6Tg)
 shortly. Details concerning the 2026 Annual General Meeting will be
announced in due course.

Douglas Grant, Group Chief Executive Officer, and James Smeed, Group Finance
Director, will host a live presentation for retail investors relating to the
FY25 Results via Investor Meet Company on Wednesday 20 May 2026 at 10.00 a.m.
UK time.

The presentation is open to all existing and potential shareholders. Questions
can be submitted pre-event via your Investor Meet Company dashboard up until
9.00 a.m. on Tuesday 19 May 2026 or at any time during the live presentation.

Investors can sign up to Investor Meet Company for free and register to meet
Manx Financial Group PLC
via: https://www.investormeetcompany.com/manx-financial-group-plc/register-investor
(https://protect.checkpoint.com/v2/r02/___https:/eu-west-1.protection.sophos.com?d=investormeetcompany.com&u=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuaW52ZXN0b3JtZWV0Y29tcGFueS5jb20vbWFueC1maW5hbmNpYWwtZ3JvdXAtcGxjL3JlZ2lzdGVyLWludmVzdG9y&i=NjM3NGJiYjVlZjA3YTMxM2NhNzgzNDVk&t=cE1jM08zYzl3L0VwMkNaVGpiYktVRTZVOG9PSVRoN3dVSlB4VDJaSW83MD0=&h=8e53560a59ba4d6eb7b930de5487b2a2&s=AVNPUEhUT0NFTkNSWVBUSVYu3r6go3fnaU6u5pQabZ-xhhpEz06YJ1MkzFFTlVT1vA___.YXAxZTpzaG9yZWNhcDpjOm9mZmljZTM2NV9lbWFpbHNfYXR0YWNobWVudDo3ODgzOWY0ZmYzZmYzMzUzMTc0ZWI5NTgxMzZkODAzMjo3OmNjZDI6YWU1ZmQzNTM3ZWRiOWM5ZjhlNjY1ZTljZTc3ZTEzNGNjZDY1MjE4ZThmZWJjZGVmNzZhOGVmOWYxZWM2ZWU5OTpwOkY6Tg)

Investors who already follow Manx Financial Group PLC on the Investor Meet
Company platform will automatically be invited.

THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION FOR THE PURPOSES OF THE MARKET
ABUSE REGULATION (EU No. 596/2014) AS IT FORMS PART OF UK DOMESTIC LAW BY
VIRTUE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018. UPON THE PUBLICATION OF
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT, VIA A REGULATORY INFORMATION SERVICE, THIS INSIDE
INFORMATION IS NOW CONSIDERED TO BE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN.

For further information, please contact:

 Manx Financial Group PLC  Beaumont Cornish Limited   Shore Capital              Tavistock Communications Limited

 Denham Eke                Roland Cornish/            Tony Gibbs/

                           James Biddle               Oliver Jackson             Simon Hudson/

                                                                                 Adam Baynes
 Tel: +44 (0) 1624 694694  Tel: +44 (0) 20 7628 3396  Tel: +44 (0) 20 7408 4090

                                                                                 Tel: +44 (0) 20 7920 3150

                                                                                 mfg@tavisock.co.uk

 

About Manx Financial

Manx Financial Group (AIM: MFX) is a diversified UK banking and financial
services group with a proud Manx heritage. The Group holds Isle of Man and
UK banking licences, allowing it to provide flexible funding solutions across
both territories focused on SME lending. Knowledge of the SME sector has
enabled MFX to build a portfolio of valuable subsidiaries, from start-ups to
selective and accretive acquisitions, which are creating significant value for
shareholders. These entrepreneurial subsidiaries are grouped under our
entrepreneurial subsidiary Manx Ventures Limited.

Nominated Adviser

Beaumont Cornish Limited ("Beaumont Cornish") is the Company's Nominated
Adviser and is authorised and regulated by the FCA. Beaumont Cornish's
responsibilities as the Company's Nominated Adviser, including a
responsibility to advise and guide the Company on its responsibilities under
the AIM Rules for Companies and AIM Rules for Nominated Advisers, are owed
solely to the London Stock Exchange. Beaumont Cornish is not acting for and
will not be responsible to any other persons for providing protections
afforded to customers of Beaumont Cornish nor for advising them in relation to
the proposed arrangements described in this announcement or any matter
referred to in it.

 

Chair's Statement

Introduction

2025 was yet another year of steady strategic and operational progress for the
Group, notwithstanding a still challenging external environment. Whilst our
reported results in the current and prior year reflect the effect of certain
non-recuring and accounting items, the Board remains encouraged by the Group's
underlying performance and prospects. Our principal subsidiaries continued to
perform well, our robust balance sheet strengthened still further, and we
maintained positive momentum in the development of the business.

 

The Isle of Man and UK economies have remained more resilient than many
anticipated, despite continued inflationary pressures and wider geopolitical
and macroeconomic uncertainty. Against this backdrop, demand for short-term
funding solutions from both consumers and SMEs, our core markets, has remained
robust. We also continue to see evidence that these segments are underserved
following the retreat of a number of UK banks from short-term lending,
creating a meaningful opportunity for the Group which we are well placed to
address.

 

Results

Reported profit before tax for 2025 decreased to £7.3 million (2024: £9.9
million). This primarily reflected a weaker contribution from The Business
Lending Exchange Limited ("BLX"), together with two non-recurring items: a
£1.3 million provision in connection with the Financial Conduct Authority's
Discretionary Commission Arrangement review concerning the sale of legacy UK
car loans (bringing the total provision to £1.5 million), and a £1.8 million
provision release in 2024 relating to Payment Assist Limited following an
enhancement to expected credit loss modelling and arrears management actions,
which benefited the prior year comparator. Excluding these two latter items,
but including the weaker BLX performance, normalised profit before tax
increased to £8.6 million (2024: £8.3 million), representing like-for-like
growth of approximately 3.6% and demonstrating the Group's underlying
resilience.

 

Total assets at the year-end increased by 12.8% to £561.3 million (2024:
£497.8 million), while the Group's well-diversified, largely secured net loan
book grew by 9.5% to £407.9 million (2024: £372.4 million). Net assets
increased by 16.7% to £43.6 million (2024: £37.3 million). These increases
reflect the continuing strength of the Group's financial position. Further
detail on financial performance is set out in the CEO's Review below.

 

Dividend

The Group's dividend policy is to pay an annual dividend equivalent to 10% of
profit attributable to the shareholders of the Company and, in respect of 2025
(payable in 2026), the Board has maintained that policy. Accordingly, the
Board is proposing a basic dividend for 2025 of £639,000 (2024: £810,000),
representing 0.5197 pence per share. This reflects the Board's confidence in
the Group's cash generation, capital position and long-term earnings outlook.
Shareholders will again have the option to receive their entitlement in cash
or in scrip. In addition, following consultation with shareholders, we are
proposing an additional bonus distribution of 5% on the same qualifying basis,
payable in shares only. Taken together, this represents a total dividend of
15% of profit attributable to shareholders at 0.7796 pence per share. The
dividend will be payable on 20 August 2026 to shareholders on the register at
the close of business on 10 July  2026.

 

Strategic objectives

The Group's strategic objectives remain unchanged. In an environment shaped by
continuing inflationary pressures, a more prolonged higher interest-rate
backdrop and broader economic uncertainty, the Board remains focused on
disciplined execution. We will continue to:

 

·      provide the highest quality of service throughout our operations
to all customers, ensuring that their treatment is both fair and appropriate;

·      adopt a pro-active strategy to managing risk, including credit
and climate risk, within a structured and compliant manner;

·      concentrate on developing our core business by considered
acquisitions, increasing prudential lending, and augmenting the range of
financial services we offer;

·      prudently progress the implementation of our IT infrastructure to
better service the operational requirements of a growing Group without the
requirement for a disproportionate increase in headcount and other associated
operational costs;

·      continue to develop our treasury management to improve the return
on the liability side of our balance sheet; and

·      manage our balance sheet to exceed the regulatory requirements
for capital adequacy.

 

The Board believes that delivery against these objectives will support further
growth in shareholder value, strengthen cash generation for reinvestment in
new products and services and underpin returns to shareholders. Further
details are set out in the Corporate Governance Report, together with our
approach to the Quoted Companies Alliance ("QCA) Corporate Governance Code.

 

Environmental, Social and Governance

The Board believes that ESG considerations are integral to the delivery of
sustainable long-term value, effective risk management and the resilience of
the Group. Our approach is proportionate to our scale as an AIM-listed
financial services business and is focused on clear governance, responsible
business practices and positive outcomes for customers, colleagues and the
communities in which we operate.

 

The Board retains ultimate responsibility for ESG and climate-related matters,
supported by the Group Audit, Risk and Compliance Committee within the Group's
established risk management framework. This approach is aligned with the
Quoted Companies Alliance ("QCA") Corporate Governance Code and applies across
the Group's lending, wealth management and leasing operations. Further details
are provided in the Environmental, Social and Governance Report.

 

Board changes

In March this year, I was pleased to welcome Jennifer Quirke to the Group
Board as a non-executive director. Jennifer is currently Chair of the Audit
Committee of Vernon Building Society, a role from which she will retire later
this year and also serves as Chair and non-executive director of the Mersey
Gateway Crossings Board. She is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of
Management Accountants ("CIMA") and will chair the Group Audit, Risk and
Compliance Committee. Jennifer succeeds Alan Clarke, who retired last year
after 18 years of service. I am also pleased to welcome Tanya Beckett and Bill
Shimmins to the board of Conister Bank Limited.

 

Outlook

The economic backdrop in the Isle of Man and the UK remains uncertain, with
inflationary pressures and the prospect of interest rates remaining higher for
longer continuing to affect household and business budgets. At the same time,
these conditions are creating opportunities for the Group to support customers
through both our existing and new short-term financing products. The wider
business environment will also continue to be influenced by government policy
and the pace at which announced measures are implemented.

 

Against this backdrop, the Group remains well placed to capture attractive
opportunities while continuing to manage the business prudently and
efficiently. My executive colleagues and I look forward to continued
engagement with existing and prospective shareholders as we further raise the
profile of the Group.

 

In closing, I would like to thank my colleagues on the Board and all our staff
in the Isle of Man and the UK for their continued hard work and commitment.
Their contribution has been central to the Group's progress during the year.

 

 

 

Jim Mellon

Executive Chair

15 May 2026

 

Chief Executive Officer's review

As noted in the Chair's statement, cost of living pressures remained evident
throughout 2025 and continued to influence demand across both retail and
corporate markets. At the same time, the availability of short-term finance
from traditional banking providers remained constrained. More recently,
geopolitical developments in the Middle East have contributed to renewed
inflationary pressure and increased the prospect of interest rates remaining
elevated for longer. Despite this, our operating income continued to grow.

 

Against this backdrop, the Group continued to operate in a relatively
challenging environment while benefiting from sustained demand for short-term
credit solutions from individuals and small and medium-sized enterprises
("SMEs").

 

The Group operates a diversified portfolio of subsidiaries across banking,
asset finance, point-of-sale lending, wealth management, foreign exchange and
leasing. This breadth of activity reduces concentration risk and provides
multiple drivers of income and medium-term growth.

 

The following sections review the Group's performance in 2025, and the
contribution made by its principal businesses in supporting SMEs and
individual customers through the provision of finance for everyday purchases,
insurance premiums and broader cash flow requirements.

 

Financial review

 

Key metrics

 

 Metric                                             2025 Actual              2024 Actual

                                                    £'m                      £'m

 Net interest income                                   £37.5                   £32.8
 Profit before tax payable                               £7.3                     £9.9
 Total comprehensive income attributable to owners       £6.6                     £7.8
 Basic earnings per share                                  5.33 pence               6.87 pence
 Tangible net assets per share                      22.2 pence               17.9 pence
 Return on equity                                        15.8%                    22.4%
 Normalised return on tangible equity               30.9%                    32.4%
 Net loan book                                      £407.9                   £372.4
 Total capital ratio                                     15.8%                    17.0%
 Liquidity ratio                                         27.0%                    24.0%
 Dividend per share                                 0.7796 pence             0.6768 pence

 

In addition to reported results, management also reviews performance on a
normalised trading basis. For 2025, this includes adjusting for the £1.3
million exceptional provision relating to certain UK vehicle commissions paid
between 2007 and 2024, which is discussed further later in this report. In
2024, the Group benefited from a £1.8 million release of Payment Assist
Limited provisions following an enhancement to expected credit loss modelling
and arrears management actions.

 

On a reported basis, the Group delivered the largest balance sheet in its
history, record net interest income, an improved funding cost profile and a
strong liquidity position. As noted in the Chair's statement, the Board has
proposed an increased dividend. The reduction in reported profit before tax
principally reflected two non-recurring items. Excluding these items,
underlying performance remained in line with the Group's strategic priorities.

 

In addition to reported results, management reviews performance on a
normalised trading basis. For 2025, this includes adjusting for the £1.3
million (2024: £0.2 million) exceptional provision relating to certain UK
vehicle commissions paid between 2007 and 2024, which is discussed further
later in this report. In 2024, the Group benefited from a £1.8 million
release of Payment Assist Limited provisions following an enhancement to
expected credit loss modelling and arrears management actions. At present, we
do not expect further UK Discretionary Commission Arrangement motor related
provisioning.

 

Operating income increased by £2.9 million to £37.3 million (2024: £34.4
million). Profit before tax, excluding the impact of non-recurring provisions
in 2024 and 2025, was £8.6 million (2024: £8.3 million). On the same basis,
earnings per share increased by 10% to 6.28 pence and return on equity
remained at 18.6%. The return on tangible equity on this basis was 30.9%. The
Group's total capital ratio and liquidity ratio remained within management's
risk appetite at 15.8% and 27.0% respectively.

 

Total assets increased by 12.8% to £561.3 million (2024: £497.8 million),
reflecting disciplined growth across the Group's core lending categories. The
net loan book increased by 9.5% to £407.9 million (2024: £372.4 million),
driven principally by growth in unsecured personal lending and block
discounting, while remaining well diversified and predominantly secured.
Customer deposits increased by 11.7% to £452.5 million (2024: £405.2
million), reflecting the continued strength of the Group's retail funding
franchise in both the Isle of Man and the UK.

 

Net interest income increased by 14.3% to £37.5 million (2024: £32.8
million), reflecting both balance sheet growth and an improved funding mix.
Despite an increase of £47.3 million in customer deposits, total interest
expense decreased by £1.7 million, from £23.1 million to £21.4 million, as
the average cost of retail deposits reduced from 5.0% in 2024 to 4.1% in 2025.
Asset yields were maintained and net interest margin increased to 9.6% (2024:
8.9%).

 

The cumulative UK Discretionary Commission Arrangements provision at the
year-end was £1.5 million. Based on management's assessment, and having
regard to the FCA's announced redress scheme, the provision is considered
appropriate. The incremental charge recognised in 2025 was £1.3 million
(2024: £0.2 million) and management currently expects 2025 to represent the
peak year of provisioning.

 

Conister Bank Limited

Gross loans, net of deferred income and before the provisions referred to
above, increased by 11.7% to £420.3 million (2024: £376.4 million). Customer
deposits increased by 11.7% to £452.5 million (2024: £405.2 million). These
movements further strengthened liquidity and the loan-to-deposit ratio
remained broadly stable at 90.1%.

 

As announced in February 2026, following the FCA's overdraft reforms
introduced in 2020, an estimated 16.5 million individuals have lost access to
unarranged overdrafts, with a further 6 to 8 million losing arranged
facilities since 2022. These reforms, which introduced a single interest rate
and prohibited fixed fees, have reduced overdraft availability across a number
of banks for both consumers and SMEs. The Group continues to respond to this
market need through a range of products, including the Conister Overdraft
being developed in partnership with Fiinu plc.

 

The Conister Overdraft is intended to allow customers to access the facility
without switching banks. Following regulatory approval in December 2025, the
product remains in user acceptance testing ahead of an anticipated launch
later in 2026. The initial launch is expected to target Payment Assist
Limited's customer base of more than 1.3 million customers.

 

At 31 December 2025, the Bank's total capital ratio was 15.8% (2024: 17.0%),
very safely above its regulatory minimum. The reduction reflected growth in
risk-weighted assets arising from planned loan book expansion. The Tier 1
capital ratio was 11.7% against a minimum requirement of 8.5%. The Bank's
liquidity ratio decreased to 21.1% (2024: 22.5%) and remained comfortably
above the regulatory minimum of 10%. Total liquidity reserves were £95.5
million (2024: £91.1 million).

 

Payment Assist Limited

Payment Assist Limited ("PAL"), the Group's buy-now-pay-later subsidiary,
delivered growth in 2025, with annual advances increasing by £49.2 million to
£219.7 million (2024: £170.5 million). As previously announced in February
2026, PAL invested in new collections software, which became fully operational
in April 2026. The Group continues to support PAL in arranging additional
liquidity facilities and implementing further automation to improve
efficiency, support profitability and enable future scale.

 

PAL notes the planned introduction of FCA regulation for the buy-now-pay-later
("BNPL") sector, which is expected to commence in July 2026. The business has
continued its readiness programme in anticipation of the enhanced regulatory
framework.

 

The Group has submitted an Irish consumer credit licence application,
initially focused on the automotive sector. A decision from the Central Bank
of Ireland ("CBI") is anticipated by late summer 2026. Subject to the outcome
of the application and any further regulatory approvals that may be required,
this may provide the Group with a route into additional EU markets without
significant upfront balance sheet deployment.

 

Edgewater Associates Limited

The Group's Isle of Man-based wealth management business performed resiliently
during the year, with assets under advisement increasing by 3% to £334
million (2024: £325 million). The business remains an important component of
the Group's diversification strategy, complementing its deposit, lending,
foreign exchange and general insurance activities on the Island.

 

The business remains sustainably profitable and continues to generate
introductions across the wider Group.

 

Manx Ventures Limited

The Group's other lending subsidiaries continued to deliver organic growth
within their respective niche markets, with the exception of The Business
Lending Exchange Limited, which reported a loss of £0.3 million compared with
a profit of £0.6 million in 2024. This business operates in the non-standard
SME credit market and, in response to performance, the Group has tightened
credit criteria and strengthened collections processes.

 

The Group's foreign exchange businesses delivered results in line with
expectations in 2025. Management notes that volatility in the current economic
environment has supported performance in the first quarter of 2026. CAM Wealth
became a wholly owned subsidiary in January 2025, strengthening the Group's
wealth management proposition and enhancing cross-referral opportunities.
During the year, CAM Wealth also extended its FCA permissions to offer general
insurance products in the UK and has commenced offering these products to
customers across the wider Group.

 

In addition to PAL, the Group holds a 30% shareholding in another Buy Now Pay
Later business, PayitMonthly Limited. PayitMonthly provides a flexible finance
platform to businesses ranging from independent operators to national brands,
enabling them to offer customers the option to pay by instalments. The
business has signed approximately 10,000 UK businesses to its platform.

 

The Board continues to evaluate strategic options in respect of the
subsidiaries and investments held within Manx Ventures Limited, with the
objective of realising value over time and enhancing shareholder returns.
These options may include partial or full disposals, joint ventures and, for
more mature businesses, potential initial public offerings, subject to market
conditions. The Group will provide further updates as appropriate.

 

Investor relations

During the year, the Group continued to develop its investor relations
activity and engaged with shareholders through a number of investor events. In
April 2026, the Group attended a ShareSoc event in Leeds and also made its
annual appearance at the Master Investor Show.

 

The Group is hosting an Investor Meet Company presentation in connection with
the publication of these results. It intends to continue broadening engagement
with existing and prospective shareholders, together with relevant wealth
management and small-cap institutional investor audiences.

 

Outlook

The macroeconomic environment remains a little fragile, with inflationary
pressures and interest rates expected to remain elevated for longer than
previously anticipated as geopolitical developments continue to affect
financial markets. Nonetheless, the Manx and UK economies seem pretty robust
in the face of adverse international backdrops. Against this backdrop, the
Group remains focused on providing flexible, short-term funding solutions in
underserved markets across the UK and Isle of Man and on delivering those
products efficiently in order to support margin progression.

 

The Group intends to broaden its portfolio of financing products through
organic development and selective acquisitions. Management believes that
current market conditions may present opportunities for value-accretive
transactions. The Group also looks forward to entering the Irish consumer
credit market subject to the outcome of its licence application.

 

MFG remains well positioned to deliver continued organic growth and to pursue
further opportunities as they arise. I look forward to updating shareholders
further on the Group's progress during 2026.

 

 

Douglas Grant

Group CEO

15 May 2026

Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income

                                                                         2025      2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                   Notes  £000      £000
 Interest revenue calculated using the effective interest method         58,906    55,930
 Interest expense                                                        (21,411)  (23,139)
 Net interest income                                              9      37,495    32,791
 Fee and commission income                                        10     4,002     3,923
 Fee and commission expense                                       10     (6,795)   (7,181)
 Net trading income                                                      34,702    29,533
 Other operating income                                                  41        585
 Gain on financial instruments                                    19     35        18
 Realised gain on debt securities                                 18     2,561     4,266
 Operating income                                                        37,339    34,402
 Personnel expenses                                               11     (13,373)  (12,495)
 Other expenses                                                   12     (11,856)  (9,053)
 Provision for impairment on loans and advances to customers      13     (3,335)   (1,752)
 Depreciation                                                     22     (879)     (949)
 Amortisation and impairment of intangibles                       23     (647)     (340)
 Share of profit of equity accounted investees, net of tax        30     87        119
 Profit before tax payable                                        14     7,336     9,932
 Income tax expense                                               15     (944)     (1,384)
 Profit for the year                                                     6,392     8,548

 

                                                                          2025   2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                    Notes  £000   £000
 Profit for the year                                                      6,392  8,548
 Other comprehensive income:
 Items that will be reclassified to profit or loss
 Unrealised gain/(loss) on debt securities                         18     171    (395)
 Related tax                                                              (17)   40
 Items that will never be reclassified to profit or loss
 Actuarial gain on defined benefit pension scheme                  28     57     67
 Related tax                                                              (6)    (7)
 Other comprehensive income/(loss), net of tax                            205    (295)
 Total comprehensive income for the period attributable to owners         6,597  8,253
 Profit attributable to:
 Owners of the Company                                                    6,390  8,102
 Non-controlling interests                                         32     2      446
                                                                          6,392  8,548
 Total comprehensive income attributable to:
 Owners of the Company                                                    6,594  7,807
 Non-controlling interests                                         32     3      446
                                                                          6,597  8,253
 Earnings per share - Profit for the year
 Basic earnings per share (pence)                                  16     5.33   6.87
 Diluted earnings per share (pence)                                16     4.25   5.39
 Earnings per share - Total comprehensive income for the year
 Basic earnings per share (pence)                                  16     5.50   6.62
 Diluted earnings per share (pence)                                16     4.39   5.20

The Directors believe that all results derive from continuing activities.

Company Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income

                                                                        2025   2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                  Notes  £000   £000
 Interest income calculated using the effective interest method         1,067  998
 Interest expense                                                       (147)  (89)
 Dividend income                                                        125    450
 Other income                                                           794    700
 Operating income                                                       1,839  2,059
 Personnel expenses                                              11     (130)  (40)
 Administration expenses                                                (198)  (74)
 Depreciation expense                                            22     (119)  (128)
 Amortisation expense                                            23     (264)  (2)
 Profit before tax payable                                              1,128  1,815
 Tax payable                                                            -      -
 Profit for the year                                                    1,128  1,815
 Total comprehensive income for the year                                1,128  1,815

The Directors believe that all results derive from continuing activities.

Consolidated Statement of Financial Position

                                                          2025     2024
 As at 31 December                                 Notes  £000     £000
 Assets
 Cash and cash equivalents                         17     24,310   16,199
 Debt securities                                   18     84,912   79,140
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  33     188      154
 Loans and advances to customers                   20     407,872  372,358
 Trade and other receivables                       21     21,526   7,312
 Property, plant and equipment                     22     5,816    6,433
 Intangible assets                                 23     5,049    5,301
 Investment in associates                          30     404      317
 Pension asset                                     28     99       -
 Goodwill                                          34     11,144   10,576
 Total assets                                             561,320  497,790
 Liabilities
 Deposits from customers                           24     452,461  405,166
 Creditors and accrued charges                     25     11,511   9,679
 Contingent consideration                          26     590      -
 Loan notes                                        27     52,895   45,292
 Pension liability                                 28     -        46
 Deferred tax liability                            15     308      294
 Total liabilities                                        517,765  460,477
 Equity
 Called up share capital                           29     19,932   19,626
 Profit and loss account                                  23,594   17,632
 Revaluation reserve                               22     -        -
 Non-controlling interest                          32     29       55
 Total equity                                             43,555   37,313
 Total liabilities and equity                             561,320  497,790

Company Statement of Financial Position

                                             2025     2024
 As at 31 December                    Notes  £000     £000
 Assets
 Cash and cash equivalents            17     7,774    718
 Trade and other receivables          21     71       130
 Amounts due from Group undertakings  35     15,088   14,421
 Property, plant and equipment        22     665      87
 Intangible assets                    23     1,745    1,983
 Investment in subsidiaries           31     31,097   31,097
 Subordinated loans                   35     14,228   14,228
 Total assets                                70,668   62,664
 Liabilities
 Creditors and accrued charges        25     1,007    1,603
 Loan notes                           27     52,895   45,292
 Total liabilities                           53,902   46,895
 Equity
 Called up share capital              29     19,932   19,626
 Profit and loss account                     (3,166)  (3,857)
 Total equity                                16,766   15,769
 Total liabilities and equity                70,668   62,664

Consolidated and Company Statements of Changes in Equity

                                                    Attributable to owners of the Company
                                                                Profit                               Non-
                                                    Share       and loss    Revaluation              controlling  Total
                                                    capital     account     reserve      Total       interests    equity
 Group                                              £000        £000        £000         £000        £000         £000
 Balance as at 1 January 2024                       19,384      15,544      15           34,943      1,041        35,984
 Profit for the year                                -           8,102       -            8,102       446          8,548
 Other comprehensive income                         -           (295)       -            (295)       -            (295)
 Transactions with owners
 Dividends declared (see note 29)                   -           (337)       -            (337)       (1,817)      (2,154)
 Scrip dividend shares (see note 29)                193         (193)       -            -           -            -
 Share options exercised (see note 29)              49          -           -            49          -            49
 Share-based payment expense (see notes 16 and 29)  -           196         -            196         -            196
 Revaluation loss                                   -           -           (15)         (15)        -            (15)
 Acquisition of NCI net without change of control   -           (5,385)     -            (5,385)     385          (5,000)
 Balance as at 31 December 2024                     19,626      17,632      -            37,258      55           37,313
 Profit for the year                                -           6,390       -            6,390       2            6,392
 Other comprehensive income                         -           205         -            205         -            205
 Transactions with owners
 Dividend declared (see note 29)                    -           (504)       -            (504)       -            (504)
 Scrip dividend shares (see note 29)                306         (306)       -            -           -            -
 Share-based payment expense                        -           373         -            373         -            373
 Acquisition of NCI net without change of control   -           (196)       -            (196)       (28)         (224)
 Balance as at 31 December 2025                     19,932      23,594      -            43,526      29           43,555

 

                                                                   Profit
                                                          Share    and loss  Total
                                                          capital  account   equity
 Company                                                  £000     £000      £000
 Balance as at 1 January 2024                             19,384   (5,338)   14,046
 Profit for the year                                      -        1,815     1,815
 Transactions with owners
 Dividends declared (see note 29)                         -        (337)     (337)
 Scrip dividend shares (see note 29)                      193      (193)     -
 Share options exercised (see note 29)                    49       -         49
 Share-based payment expense (see notes 16 and 29)        -        196       196
 Balance as at 31 December 2024                           19,626   (3,857)   15,769
 Profit for the year                                      -        1,128     1,128
 Transaction with owners
 Dividend declared (see note 29)                          -        (504)     (504)
 Scrip dividend shares (see note 29)                      306      (306)     -
 Share options exercised (see note 29)                    -        -         -
 Share-based payment expense (see notes 16 and 29)        -        373       373
 Balance as at 31 December 2025                           19,932   (3,166)   16,766

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows

                                                                          2025      2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                    Notes  £000      £000
 Reconciliation of profit before taxation to operating cash flows
 Profit before tax                                                        7,336     9,932
 Adjustments for:
 Depreciation                                                      22     879       949
 Amortisation of intangibles                                       23     647       340
 Impairment of loans and advances to customers                     13     3,335     1,752
 Net interest income                                                      (37,495)  (35,614)
 Realised gains on debt securities                                        (2,561)   (4,266)
 RSU expense taken to reserves                                            373       196
 Share of profit of Equity Accounted Investees                            (87)      (119)
 Lease interest                                                           191       132
 Pension charge included in personnel expenses                     28     1         8
 Gain on financial instruments                                     19     (35)      (18)
                                                                          (27,416)  (26,708)
 Changes in:
 Trade and other receivables                                       21     (14,217)  915
 Creditors and accrued charges                                     25     1,680     (5,628)
 Net cash flow from trading activities                                    (39,953)  (31,421)
 Changes in:
 Loans and advances to customers                                   20     (42,856)  (13,691)
 Deposits from customers                                           24     45,855    16,818
 Pension contribution                                              28     (85)      (57)
 Cash used in operating activities                                        (37,039)  (28,351)

 

                                                                                2025      2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                       Notes     £000      £000
 CASH FLOW STATEMENT
 Cash from operating activities
 Cash used in operating activities                                              (37,039)  (28,351)
 Interest received                                                              62,915    58,164
 Interest paid                                                                  (19,971)  (22,389)
 Income taxes paid                                                              (582)     (1,095)
 Net cash from operating activities                                             5,323     6,329
 Cash flows from investing activities
 Acquisition of property, plant and equipment                         22        (844)     (228)
 Sale proceeds from disposal of property, plant and equipment         22        582       -
 Acquisition of intangible assets                                     23        (421)     (1,373)
 Sale proceeds from disposal of intangible assets                     23        26        -
 Acquisition of a subsidiary net of cash acquired                     26        (129)     -
 Purchase of debt securities                                                    (3,040)   (860)
 Settlement of contingent consideration on acquisition of subsidiary  6(ii),26  -         (20)
 Net cash used in investing activities                                          (3,826)   (2,481)
 Cash flows from financing activities
 Receipt of loan notes                                                27        7,603     5,975
 Acquisition of non-controlling interest                              32        (206)     (5,000)
 Payment of lease liabilities                                         37        (279)     (443)
 Dividend paid                                                        29        (504)     (337)
 Proceeds from issue of share                                         29        -         49
 Net cash from financing activities                                             6,614     244
 Net increase / (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents                         8,111     4,092
 Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January                                         16,199    12,107
 Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December                                       24,310    16,199

Company Statement of Cash Flows

                                                                          2025     2024
 For the year ended 31 December                                    Notes  £000     £000
 Reconciliation of profit before taxation to operating cash flows
 Profit before tax                                                        1,128    1,815
 Adjustments for:
 Depreciation                                                      22     119      128
 Amortisation                                                      23     264      2
 Interest income                                                          (1,069)  (998)
 RSU expense taken to reserves                                            373      196
 Dividend income                                                          (125)    (450)
                                                                          690      693
 Changes in:
 Amounts due from group undertakings                               35     (667)    (3,727)
 Trade and other receivables                                       21     59       (7)
 Creditors and accrued charges                                     25     (444)    1,206
 Amounts due to Group undertakings                                        -        (608)
 Cash used in operating activities                                        (362)    (2,443)
 CASH FLOW STATEMENT
 Cash from operating activities
 Cash used in operating activities                                        (362)    (2,443)
 Interest received                                                        1,069    998
 Dividends received                                                       125      450
 Net cash from / (used in) operating activities                           832      (995)
 Cash flows from investing activities
 Acquisition of property, plant and equipment                      22     (697)    (76)
 Acquisition of intangible assets                                  23     (26)     (1,123)
 Investment in group undertakings                                         -        (3,000)
 Net cash used in investing activities                                    (723)    (4,199)
 Cash flows from financing activities
 Proceeds from issue of loan notes                                 27     7,603    5,975
 Payment of finance lease liabilities                              37     (152)    (148)
 Proceeds from issue of shares                                     29     -        49
 Dividend paid                                                     29     (504)    (337)
 Net cash from financing activities                                       6,947    5,539
 Net increase in cash and cash equivalents                                7,056    345
 Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January                                   718      373
 Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December                                 7,774    718

Notes to the Consolidated and Company Financial Statements

For the year ended 31 December 2025

1. Reporting entity

Manx Financial Group PLC ("Company") is a company incorporated in the Isle of
Man. The Company's registered office is at Clarendon House, Victoria Street,
Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 2LN. The consolidated financial statements of the
Company for the year ended 31 December 2025 comprise the Company and its
subsidiaries ("Group") including Conister Bank Limited (the "Bank"). The Group
is primarily involved in the provision of financial services.

The Company's financial statements are the separate financial statements of
the Company.

2. Basis of accounting

The consolidated and the separate financial statements of the Company have
been prepared in accordance with international accounting standards in
accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards ("UK-adopted
IFRS" or "IFRSs"), on a going concern basis as disclosed in the Directors'
Report.

3. Functional and presentation currency

These financial statements are presented in pounds sterling, which is the
Company's functional currency. All amounts have been rounded to the nearest
thousand, unless otherwise indicated. All subsidiaries of the Group have
pounds sterling as their functional currency.

4. Use of judgements and estimates

The preparation of financial statements requires management to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of
accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income
and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

Estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis.
Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the
estimate is revised and in any future periods affected.

Assumptions and estimation uncertainties

Information about assumptions and estimation uncertainties at year-end that
have a significant risk of resulting in a material adjustment to the carrying
amounts of assets and liabilities in the next financial year is included in
the following notes:

§  Note 45(G)(vi) and Note 7(A) - key assumptions of Expected Credit Loss
("ECL") allowance for loans and advances to customers and assessment of
impairment allowances where loans are in default or arrears.

5. Financial instruments - Classification

For description of how the Group classifies financial assets and liabilities,
see note 45(G)(ii).

The following table provides reconciliation between line items in the
statement of financial position and categories of financial instruments.

                                                             FVOCI -                 Total
                                                   Measured  debt         Amortised  carrying
 Group                                             at FVTPL  instruments  cost       amount
 31 December 2025                                  £000      £000         £000       £000
 Cash and cash equivalents                         -         -            24,310     24,310
 Debt securities                                   -         84,912       -          84,912
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  188       -            -          188
 Loans and advances to customers                   -         -            407,872    407,872
 Trade and other receivables                       -         -            21,526     21,526
 Total financial assets                            188       84,912       453,708    538,808
 Deposits from customers                           -         -            452,461    452,461
 Creditor and accrued charges                      -         -            11,511     11,511
 Contingent consideration                          590       -            -          590
 Loan notes                                        -         -            52,895     52,895
 Total financial liabilities                       590       -            516,867    517,457

 

                                                                FVOCI -                 Total
                                                   Designated   debt         Amortised  carrying
 Group                                             as at FVTPL  instruments  cost       amount
 31 December 2024                                  £000         £000         £000       £000
 Cash and cash equivalents                         -            -            16,199     16,199
 Debt securities                                   -            79,140       -          79,140
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  154          -            -          154
 Loans and advances to customers                   -            -            372,358    372,358
 Trade and other receivables                       -            -            7,312      7,312
 Total financial assets                            154          79,140       395,869    475,163
 Deposits from customers                           -            -            405,166    405,166
 Creditor and accrued charges                      -            -            9,679      9,679
 Loan notes                                        -            -            45,292     45,292
 Total financial liabilities                       -            -            460,137    460,137

At 31 December 2025 and 31 December 2024, all financial instruments, being
cash and cash equivalents, trade and other receivables, amounts due from Group
undertakings, investment in subsidiaries and subordinated loans were carried
at amortised cost in the separate financial statements.

6. Financial instruments - Fair values

For description of the Group's fair value measurement accounting policy, see
note 44(G)(v).

The following table shows the carrying amounts and fair values of Group
financial assets and financial liabilities, including their levels in the fair
value hierarchy. It does not include fair value information for financial
assets and financial liabilities not measured at fair value if the carrying
amount is a reasonable approximation of fair value.

                                                   Carrying           Fair value

                                                   amount

                                                   Total     Level 1  Level 2     Level 3  Total
 31 December 2025                                  £000      £000     £000        £000     £000
 Financial assets measured at fair value
 Debt securities                                   84,912    -        84,912      -        84,912
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  188       -        -           188      188
                                                   85,100    -        84,912      188      85,100
 Financial liabilities measured at fair value
 Contingent consideration                          590       -        -           590      590
                                                   590       -        -           590      590

 

                                                   Carrying           Fair value

                                                   amount

                                                   Total     Level 1  Level 2     Level 3  Total
 31 December 2024                                  £000      £000     £000        £000     £000
 Financial assets measured at fair value
 Debt securities                                   79,140    -        79,140      -        79,140
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  154       -        -           154      154
                                                   79,294    -        79,140      154      79,294
 Financial liabilities measured at fair value
 Contingent consideration                          -         -        -           -        -
                                                   -         -        -           -        -

All Company financial assets and liabilities carrying amounts are a reasonable
approximation of their fair value.

Measurement of fair values

i. Valuation techniques and significant unobservable inputs

 Type                                           Valuation technique                                                            Significant unobservable inputs                                  Inter-relationship between significant unobservable inputs and fair value
                                                                                                                                                                                                measurement
 Debt securities                                Market comparison / discounted cash flow: The fair value is estimated          Not applicable.                                                  Not applicable.
                                                considering a net present value calculated using discount rates derived from
                                                quoted yields of securities with similar maturity and credit rating that are
                                                traded in active markets.
 Equities at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  Net asset value                                                                Expected net cash flows derived from the entity                  The estimated fair value would increase (decrease) if the expected cash flows
                                                                                                                                                                                                were higher (lower).
 Contingent consideration                       Discounted cash flows                                                          Expected cash net flows derived from the entity, discount rates  The estimated fair value would increase (decrease) if forecast earnings or
                                                                                                                                                                                                revenue were higher (lower).

ii. Level 3 recurring fair values

Reconciliation of Level 3 fair values

The following table shows a reconciliation from the opening balances to the
closing balances for Level 3 fair values.

                                        2025   2024
                                        £000   £000
 Balance at 1 January                   154    158
 Acquisition of a subsidiary            568    -
 Finance costs                          22     -
 Net change in fair value (unrealised)  34     16
                                        624    174
 Payment (note 26)                      -      (20)
 Balance at 31 December                 778    154

Sensitivity analysis

For the fair value of contingent consideration, reasonably possible changes at
the reporting date to one of the significant unobservable inputs, holding
other inputs constant would have the following effects.

                                              Profit or loss
                                              Increase  Decrease
 31 December 2025                             £000      £000
 Expected cash flows (10.0% movement)         59        59
 Risk-adjusted discount rate (1.0% movement)  7         7

 

                                              Profit or loss
                                              Increase  Decrease
 31 December 2024                             £000      £000
 Expected cash flows (10.0% movement)         -         -
 Risk-adjusted discount rate (1.0% movement)  -         -

7. Financial risk review

Risk management

This note presents information about the Group's exposure to financial risks
and the Group's management of capital. For information on the Group and
Company's financial risk management framework, see note 43.

A. Group Credit risk

For definition of credit risk and information on how credit risk is mitigated
by the Group, see note 43.

i. Credit quality analysis

Loans and advances to customers

Explanation of the terms 'Stage 1', 'Stage 2' and 'Stage 3' is included in
note 44(G)(vi).

An analysis of the credit risk on loans and advances to customers is as
follows:

                                    2025                                  2024
                           Stage 1  Stage 2  Stage 3   Total     Stage 1  Stage 2  Stage 3   Total
 Group                     £000     £000     £000      £000      £000     £000     £000      £000
 Grade A                   366,957  -        -         366,957   327,561  3,968    -         331,529
 Grade B                   -        9,094    -         9,094     -        19,836   5,932     25,768
 Grade C                   -        -        54,713    54,713    -        5        35,268    35,273
 Gross value               366,957  9,094    54,713    430,764   327,561  23,809   41,200    392,570
 Allowance for impairment  (2,216)  (213)    (20,463)  (22,892)  (688)    (36)     (19,488)  (20,212)
 Carrying value            364,741  8,881    34,250    407,872   326,873  23,773   21,712    372,358

Loans are graded A to C depending on the level of risk. Grade A relates to
agreements with the lowest risk, Grade B with medium risk and Grade C relates
to agreements with the highest of risk.

The following table sets out information about the overdue status of loans and
advances to customers in Stage 1, 2 and 3:

                                2025                                2024
 Group                 Stage 1  Stage 2  Stage 3  Total    Stage 1  Stage 2  Stage 3  Total
 31 December           £000     £000     £000     £000     £000     £000     £000     £000
 Current               348,383  -        -        348,383  314,542  -        -        314,542
 Overdue < 30 days     18,574   -        -        18,574   13,019   -        -        13,019
 Overdue > 30 days     -        9,094    54,713   63,807   -        23,809   41,200   65,009
 Gross value           366,957  9,094    54,713   430,764  327,561  23,809   41,200   392,570

For Stage 3 loans and advances that are overdue for more than 90 days, the
Group holds collateral value of £9,470,000 (2024: £11,982,000) representing
security cover of 60% (2024: 66%).

The contractual amount outstanding on financial assets that were written off
during the reporting period and are still subject to enforcement activity are
£nil (2024: £nil).

Debt securities, cash and cash equivalents

The following table sets out the credit quality of liquid assets:

 Group                                2025     2024
                                      £000     £000
 Government bonds and treasury bills
 Rated A to A+                        84,912   79,140
 Cash and cash equivalents
 Rated A to A+                        24,310   16,199
 Trade and other receivables
 Unrated                              21,526   7,312
                                      130,748  102,651

The analysis has been based on Standard & Poor's ratings. The above debt
securities, cash and cash equivalents and trade and other receivables are
considered to be Stage 1 as there is no evidence of significant deterioration
in credit quality and hence no material expected credit loss allowance is
observed.

ii. Collateral and other credit enhancements

The Group holds collateral in the form of the underlying assets (typically
private and commercial vehicles, plant and machinery) to loan arrangements as
security for HP, finances leases, vehicle stocking plans, block discounting,
wholesale funding arrangements, integrated wholesale funding arrangements and
secured commercial loan balances, which are sub-categories of loans and
advances to customers. In addition, the Group will take debentures, mortgages,
personal and corporate guarantees, fixed and floating charges on specific
assets such as cash and shares.

The terms of enforcing such security can only occur on default, and when
realised can only be used to settle the amount of debt and related collection
fees. On occasion the Bank may realise a surplus if the defaulting party loses
title to the underlying security as part of enforcement. In addition, the
commission share schemes have an element of capital indemnified.

As at 31 December 2025, 32.5% of loans and advances had an element of capital
indemnification (2024: 28.7%). At the time of granting credit within the
sub-categories listed above, the loan balances due are secured over the
underlying assets held as collateral.

At the time of granting credit within the sub-categories listed above, the
loan balances due are secured over the underlying assets held as collateral
(see note 20 for further details). Collateral is valued at the time of
borrowing, and is not individually valued at each reporting date but fair
value groups of similar collateral are considered as part of the impairment
testing model.

For portfolios where the Group has never had a default in its history or has
robust credit enhancements such as credit insurance or default indemnities for
the entire portfolio, then no IFRS 9 provision is made. At 2025 year-end,
32.8% had such credit enhancements (2024: 31.0%).

The following table sets out the principal types of collateral held against
different types of financial assets.

 Group                           2025      2024
                                 %         %         Principal type of collateral held
 HP balances                     100       100       Property and equipment
 Finance lease balances          100       100       Property and equipment
 Unsecured personal loans        -         -         None
 Vehicle stocking plans          100       100       Motor vehicles
 Wholesale funding arrangements  100       100       Floating charges over corporate assets
 Block discounting               100       100       Floating charges over corporate assets
 Secured commercial loans        100       100       Floating charges over corporate assets
 Secured personal loans          100       100       Property
 Government backed loans         70 - 100  70 - 100  Government guarantee
 Property secured                100       100       Property

There have been no significant changes in the quality of collateral as a
result of a deterioration or changes to the Group's collateral policies during
the reporting period.

iii. Amounts arising from ECL

Inputs, assumptions and techniques used for estimating impairment

See accounting policy in note 45(G)(vi).

Significant increase in credit risk

When determining whether the risk of default on a financial instrument has
increased significantly since initial recognition, the Group considers
reasonable and supportable information that is relevant and available without
undue cost or effort. This includes both quantitative and qualitative
information and analysis, based on the Group's historical experience and
expert credit assessment and including forward looking information.

▪       A Significant Increase in Credit Risk ("SICR") is always
deemed to occur when the borrower is 30 days past due on its contractual
payments. If the Group becomes aware ahead of this time of non-compliance or
financial difficulties of the borrower, such as loss of employment, avoiding
contact with the Group then a SICR has also deemed to occur.

▪       A receivable is always deemed to be in default and
credit-impaired when the borrower is 90 days past due on its contractual
payments or earlier if the Group becomes aware of severe financial
difficulties such as bankruptcy, individual voluntary arrangements, abscond or
disappearance, fraudulent activity or other similar events.

Credit risk grades

The Group allocates each exposure to a credit risk grade based on a variety of
data that is determined to be predictive of the risk of default and applying
experienced credit judgement. Credit risk grades are defined using qualitative
and quantitative factors that are indicative of risk of default. These factors
vary depending on the nature of the exposure and the type of borrower.

Credit risk grades are defined and calibrated such that the risk of default
occurring increases exponentially as the credit risk grade deteriorates. Loans
are graded A to C depending on the level of risk. Grade A relates to
agreements with the lowest risk, Grade B with medium risk and Grade C relates
to agreements with the highest risk.

Each exposure is allocated to a credit risk grade on initial recognition based
on available information about the borrower. Exposures are subject to ongoing
monitoring, which may result in an exposure being moved to a different credit
risk grade. The monitoring typically involves the use of the following data:

 Corporate exposures                                                            Retail exposures                                                            All exposures
 Information obtained during periodic review of customer files - e.g. audited   Internally collected data on customer behaviour - e.g. repayment behaviour  Payment record - this includes overdue status as well as a range of variables
 financial statements, management accounts, budgets and projections. Examples                                                                               about payment ratios
 of areas of particular focus are: gross profit margins, financial leverage
 ratios, debt service coverage, compliance with covenants
 Data from credit reference agencies                                            Affordability matrix                                                        Requests for and granting of forbearance
                                                                                External data from credit reference agencies, including industry-standard   Existing forecast changes in business, financial and economic conditions
                                                                                credit scores

Definition of default

The Group considers a financial asset to be in default when:

▪       the borrower is unlikely to pay its credit obligations to the
Group in full, without recourse by the Group to actions such as realising
security (if any is held);

▪       the borrower is more than 90 days past due on any material
credit obligation to the Group; or

▪       it is becoming probable that the borrower will restructure the
asset as a result of bankruptcy due to the borrower's inability to pay its
credit obligations.

In assessing whether a borrower is in default, the Group considers indicators
that are:

▪       qualitative: e.g. breaches of covenant;

▪       quantitative: e.g. overdue status and non-payment by another
obligation of the same Borrower to the Group; and

▪       based on data developed internally and obtained from external
sources.

Inputs into the assessment of whether a financial instrument is in default and
their significance may vary over time to reflect changes in circumstances. The
definition of default largely aligns with that applied by the Group for
regulatory capital purposes.

Incorporation of forward-looking information

The Group incorporates forward looking information into the measurement of
ECL.

The Group has identified and documented key drivers of credit risk and credit
losses within its financial instruments and using an analysis of historical
data, has estimated the relationship between macroeconomic variables and
credit risk and credit losses. The key drivers for credit risk for corporate,
retail and wholesale portfolios include gross domestic product (GDP) growth,
unemployment rates and interest rates. The Group estimates each key driver for
credit risk over the active forecast period of three years. The table below
lists the UK macroeconomic assumption used in the base scenarios over the
three-year forecast period:

 31 December 2025   2026  2027  2028
 GDP growth rate    1.4   1.3   1.1
 Interest rates     3.7   3.5   3.5
 Unemployment rate  5.4   5.3   5.1

 

 31 December 2024   2025  2026  2027
 GDP growth rate    2.0   1.0   1.3
 CPI inflation      4.2   2.4   1.8
 Unemployment rate  4.8   4.9   4.9

Predicted relationships between the key indicators and default and loss rates
on various portfolios of financial assets have been developed based on
analysing historical data over the past 3 years.

Changes to ECL assumptions from the prior year

As of 31 December 2025, the Group has updated its economic projections
utilised in the expected credit loss calculation, shifting from the 2024
figures. A key indicator - interest rates, has been added and was ultimately
selected as a macroeconomic forward-looking adjustment instead of GDP which
was used in prior year. This adjustment is prompted by a higher correlation
between default rates and interest rates. These changes did not result in a
material impact to the expected credit losses.

iv. Concentration of credit risk

Geographical

Lending is restricted to individuals and entities with Isle of Man and UK
addresses.

Segmental

The Bank is exposed to credit risk with regard to customer loan accounts,
comprising HP and finance lease balances, unsecured personal loans, secured
commercial loans, block discounting, vehicle stocking plan loans and wholesale
funding agreements. In addition, the Bank lends via significant introducers
into the UK. There was one introducer that accounted for more than 5% of the
Bank's total lending portfolio at the end of 31 December 2025 (2024: one).
Advances to a single distribution partner under IWFA, WFA and block
discounting is restricted to 25% of the Bank's Large Exposure Capital Buffer
(LECB) in line with FSA direction.

B. Group Liquidity risk

For the definition of liquidity risk and information on how liquidity risk is
managed by the Group, see note 43.

i. Exposure to liquidity risk

The key measure used by the Bank for managing liquidity risk is the ratio of
net liquid assets to deposits from customers and short-term funding. The Group
aims to maintain the ratio at no less than 13.7% compared to FSA requirement
of not less than 10%. For this purpose, net liquid assets includes cash and
cash equivalents and investment-grade debt securities for which there is an
active and liquid market.

Details of the reported Group ratio of net liquid assets to deposits from
customers at the reporting date and during the reporting year were as follows:

                       2025   2024
 At 31 December        27.0%  24.0%
 Average for the year  22.0%  23.0%
 Maximum for the year  27.0%  27.0%
 Minimum for the year  19.0%  20.0%

ii. Maturity analysis for financial liabilities and financial assets

The table below shows the Group's financial liabilities classified by their
earliest possible contractual maturity, on an undiscounted basis including
interest due at the end of the deposit term. Based on historical data, the
Group's expected actual cash flow from these items varies from this analysis
due to the expected re-investment of maturing customer deposits.

Residual contractual maturities of financial liabilities as at the reporting
date (undiscounted):

                    Sight-  >8 days     >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years
 31 December 2025   8 days  - 1 month   - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Total
                    £000    £000        £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000
 Deposits           19,438  10,251      40,163       113,147       219,970       62,810      -            -            465,779
 Other liabilities  5,127   715         2,920        8,443         24,736        21,079      7,455        308          70,783
 Total liabilities  24,565  10,966      43,083       121,590       244,706       83,889      7,455        308          536,562

 

                    Sight-  >8 days     >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years
 31 December 2024   8 days  - 1 month   - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Total
                    £000    £000        £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000
 Deposits           9,016   13,010      44,111       97,353        166,118       79,123      16,561       -            425,292
 Other liabilities  71      204         8,073        4,246         13,657        24,402      9,719        340          60,712
 Total liabilities  9,087   13,214      52,184       101,599       179,775       103,525     26,280       340          486,004

The table below shows the carrying amount of the Group's assets and
liabilities by their expected maturities.

Expected maturity of assets and liabilities at the reporting date
(discounted):

                     Sight-  >8 days     >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years
 31 December 2025    8 days  - 1 month   - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Total
                     £000    £000        £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000
 Assets
 Cash                24,310  -           -            -             -             -           -            -            24,310
 Debt securities     2,000   7,984       24,835       41,384        -             1,532       6,165        1,012        84,912
 Loans and advances  28,783  29,017      42,519       56,655        78,664        135,357     34,939       1,938        407,872
 Other assets        188     -           -            -             23,612        -           3,730        16,696       44,226
 Total assets        55,281  37,001      67,354       98,039        102,276       136,889     44,834       19,646       561,320
 Liabilities
 Deposits            19,040  9,173       37,366       109,664       216,426       60,792      -            -            452,461
 Other liabilities   5,090   490         2,350        7,700         23,608        18,668      7,090        308          65,304
 Total liabilities   24,130  9,663       39,716       117,364       240,034       79,460      7,090        308          517,765

 

                     Sight-  >8 days     >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years
 31 December 2024    8 days  - 1 month   - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Total
                     £000    £000        £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000
 Assets
 Cash                16,199  -           -            -             -             -           -            -            16,199
 Debt securities     4,997   16,461      47,624       -             4,993         -           5,065        -            79,140
 Loans and advances  21,559  35,642      45,541       48,415        57,042        125,667     37,316       1,176        372,358
 Other assets        154     -           -            -             9,063         -           4,682        16,194       30,093
 Total assets        42,909  52,103      93,165       48,415        71,098        125,667     47,063       17,370       497,790
 Liabilities
 Deposits            8,639   11,993      41,477       93,949        161,428       72,352      15,328       -            405,166
 Other liabilities   -       -           7,600        3,597         12,427        22,002      9,345        340          55,311
 Total liabilities   8,639   11,993      49,077       97,546        173,855       94,354      24,673       340          460,477

Company

All the Company's assets (excluding Investment in subsidiaries, Property,
plant and equipment, Intangible assets, Investment in subsidiaries and
Subordinated loans) are due within one year. The Subordinated loans are due in
more than five years.

All the Company's creditors (excluding Loan notes) are due within one year.
The maturity profile indicates that £29 million of loan notes are due within
one year, £17 million within 3 years, £2 million within 4 years and £5
million within five years.

iii. Liquidity reserves

The following table sets out the components of the Group's liquidity reserves:

                               2025      2025     2024      2024
                               Carrying  Fair     Carrying  Fair
                               amount    value    amount    value
                               £000      £000     £000      £000
 Balances with other banks     24,310    24,310   16,199    16,199
 Unencumbered debt securities  84,912    84,912   79,140    79,140
 Total liquidity reserves      109,222   109,222  95,339    95,339

C. Group Market risk

For the definition of market risk and information on how the Group manages the
market risks of trading and non‑trading portfolios, see note 43.

The following table sets out the allocation of assets and liabilities subject
to market risk between trading and non- trading portfolios:

                                                             Market risk measure
                                                   Carrying  Trading              Non-trading
 31 December 2025                                  amount    portfolios           portfolios
                                                   £000      £000                 £000
 Assets subject to market risk
 Debt securities                                   84,912    -                    84,912
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  188       -                    188
 Total                                             85,100    -                    85,100

 

                                                             Market risk measure
                                                   Carrying  Trading              Non-trading
 31 December 2024                                  amount    portfolios           portfolios
                                                   £000      £000                 £000
 Assets subject to market risk
 Debt securities                                   79,140    -                    79,140
 Equity held at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss  154       -                    154
 Total                                             79,294    -                    79,294

i. Exposure to interest rate risk

The following tables present the interest rate mismatch position between
assets and liabilities over the respective maturity dates. The maturity dates
are presented on a worst-case basis, with assets being recorded at their
latest maturity and deposits from customers at their earliest.

                                                        >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years     >5 years     Non-       Total

                                                                                                             £000         Interest   £000

                                                                                                                          Bearing

                                                                                                                          £000
                                  Sight-   >1 month
                                  1 month  - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years
 31 December 2025                 £000     £000         £000          £000          £000        £000
 Assets
 Cash & cash equivalents          24,310   -            -             -             -           -            -            -          24,310
 Debt securities                  9,984    24,835       41,384        -             1,532       6,165        1,012        -          84,912
 Loans and advances to customers  57,800   42,519       56,655        78,664        135,357     34,939       1,938        -          407,872
 Other assets                     -        -            -             -             -           -            -            44,226     44,226
 Total assets                     92,094   67,354       98,039        78,664        136,889     41,104       2,950        44,226     561,320
 Liabilities
 Deposits from customers          28,213   37,366       109,664       216,426       60,792      -            -            -          452,461
 Other liabilities                5,580    2,350        7,700         14,300        18,668      7,090        308          9,308      65,304
 Total liabilities                33,793   39,716       117,364       230,726       79,460      7,090        308          9,308      517,765
 Interest rate sensitivity gap    58,301   27,638       (19,325)      (152,062)     57,429      34,014       2,642        34,918     43,555
 Cumulative                       58,301   85,939       66,614        (85,448)      (28,019)    5,995        8,637        43,555     43,555

 

                                                                                                                          Non-
                                  Sight-   >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years                  Interest
 31 December 2024                 1 month  - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Bearing   Total
                                  £000     £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000      £000
 Assets
 Cash & cash equivalents          16,199   -            -             -             -           -            -            -         16,199
 Debt securities                  21,458   47,624       -             4,993         -           5,065        -            -         79,140
 Loans and advances to customers  57,201   45,541       48,415        57,042        125,667     37,316       1,176        -         372,358
 Other assets                     -        -            -             -             -           -            -            30,093    30,093
 Total assets                     94,858   93,165       48,415        62,035        125,667     42,381       1,176        30,093    497,790
 Liabilities
 Deposits from customers          20,632   41,477       93,949        161,428       72,352      15,328       -            -         405,166
 Other liabilities                -        7,600        3,597         4,540         22,002      9,345        46           8,181     55,311
 Total liabilities                20,632   49,077       97,546        165,968       94,354      24,673       46           8,181     460,477
 Interest rate sensitivity gap    74,226   44,088       (49,131)      (103,933)     31,313      17,708       1,130        21,912    37,313
 Cumulative                       74,226   118,314      69,183        (34,750)      (3,437)     14,271       15,401       37,313    37,313

The Bank monitors the impact of changes in interest rates on interest rate
mismatch positions using a method consistent with the FSA required reporting
standard. The methodology applies weightings to the net interest rate
sensitivity gap in order to quantify the impact of an adverse change in
interest rates of 2% per annum (2024: 2.0%). The following tables set out the
estimated total impact of such a change based on the mismatch at the reporting
date:

                                                                                                                        Non-
                                Sight-   >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years                  Interest
                                1 month  - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Bearing   Total
 31 December 2025               £000     £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000      £000
 Interest rate sensitivity gap  58,301   27,638       (19,325)      (152,062)     57,429      34,014       2,642        34,918    43,555
 Weighting                      -        0.003        0.007         0.014         0.027       0.054        0.115        -         -
                                -        83           (135)         (2,129)       1,551       1,837        304          -         1,511

 

                                                                                                                        Non-
                                Sight-   >1 month     >3 months     >6 months     >1 year     >3 years                  Interest
 31 December 2024               1 month  - 3 months   - 6 months    - 1 year      - 3 years   - 5 years    >5 years     Bearing   Total
                                £000     £000         £000          £000          £000        £000         £000         £000      £000
 Interest rate sensitivity gap  74,226   44,088       (49,131)      (103,933)     31,313      17,708       1,130        21,912    37,313
 Weighting                      -        0.003        0.007         0.014         0.027       0.054        0.115        -         -
                                -        132          (344)         (1,455)       845         956          130          -         264

The interest rate profile of the Group's interest-bearing financial
instruments as reported to the management of the Group is as follows;

                         2025     2024
                         £000     £000
 Fixed-rate instruments
 Financial assets        517,094  467,697
 Financial liabilities   508,457  452,296
                         8,637    15,401

The Group does not account for any fixed-rate financial assets or liabilities
at FVTPL. A change of 1% in interest rates would have increased or decreased
equity by £441,000 (2024: £306,000). This analysis assumes that all other
variables remain constant.

D. Group Capital Management

i. Regulatory capital

MFG and its subsidiaries maintain sufficient capital stock to cover risks
inherent in their principal operating activities. The lead regulator of the
Group's wholly owned subsidiary, the Bank, is the FSA. The FSA sets and
monitors capital requirements for the Bank. The Bank maintains a capital base
to meet the capital adequacy requirements of the FSA. There have been no
changes to its approach to capital management from the prior year.

The Bank's regulatory capital consists of the following elements.

▪       Common Equity Tier 1 ("CET1") capital, which includes ordinary
share capital, retained earnings and reserves after adjustment for deductions
for goodwill, intangible assets and intercompany receivable.

▪       Tier 2 capital, which includes collective impairment
allowances up to the level set by the FSA, subordinated loan liabilities and
gains on financial instruments carried at fair value.

The Bank's Tier 1 and Total Capital regulatory ratios stood at 11.7% (2024:
12.50%) and 15.80% (2024: 17.00%) respectively as at 31 December 2025. The
Bank complied with all capital requirements externally imposed on it in the
year with minimum Tier 1 and Overall Capital ratio of 8.52% (2024: 8.73%) and
15.10% (2024: 15.29%) respectively.

The FSA's approach to the measurement of capital adequacy is primarily based
on monitoring the relationship of the capital resources requirement to
available capital resources. The FSA sets individual capital guidance ("ICG")
for the Bank in excess of the minimum capital resources requirement. A key
input to the ICG setting process is the Bank's internal capital adequacy
assessment process ("ICAAP").

The Bank is also regulated by the FCA in the UK for credit and brokerage
related activities.

Further details of the Bank's management of capital are described in the Risk
Management Report on page 15.

ii. Capital allocation

Management uses regulatory capital ratios to monitor its capital base. The
allocation of capital between specific operations and activities is, to a
large extent, driven by optimisation of the return achieved on the capital
allocated. The amount of capital allocated to each operation or activity is
based primarily on regulatory capital requirements.

E. Company Financial Risk Review

i. Credit risk

The Company is exposed to credit risk primarily from deposits with banks and
from its financing activities of Group entities. These balances include Trade
and other receivables, Amounts due from Group undertakings, Investment in
subsidiaries and Subordinated loans. Cash balances are held with institutions
with a credit rating of A to A+. The Group's primary credit exposure is to the
Bank and Payment Assist Ltd. The Investment in subsidiary and subordinated
loan balance counterparties are disclosed in Notes 31 and 35 respectively.
Amounts due from Group undertakings relate to balances advanced to the Group's
subsidiary (MVL) for the acquisition of other subsidiaries including PAL,
BBSL, BLX and NRF. The Group manages its credit risk by ensuring that
sufficient resources are allocated to credit management and capital allocation
and using reputable financial institutions to hold its cash balances.

ii. Liquidity risk

The value and term of short-term assets are monitored against those of the
Company's liabilities. The Company maintains sufficient liquid assets to meet
liabilities as they fall due either by retaining Interest income from the
Subordinated loan, Dividend income from subsidiary companies or raising funds
through the issue of Loan notes. Amounts due to / from Group undertakings are
unsecured, interest-free and repayable on demand. £13.6m capital on
subordinated loan notes is repayable to the Company in more than 5 years.
£29.3m (2024: £16.0m) of loan notes are repayable within one year.

iii. Market risk

The Company does not have exposure to foreign exchange risk as transactions
are made in, and balances held in Sterling. The Company has both
interest-bearing assets and liabilities. In order to manage interest rate
risk, the Companies loans and advances to customers, subordinated loans, and
loan notes are charged exclusively at fixed rates.

8. Operating segments

Segmental information is presented in respect of the Group's business
segments. The Directors consider that the Group currently operates in one
geographic segment comprising of the Isle of Man and UK. The primary format,
business segments, is based on the Group's management and internal reporting
structure. The Directors consider that the Group operates in three (2024:
three) product orientated segments in addition to its investing activities:
Asset and Personal Finance (including provision of HP contracts, finance
leases, personal loans, commercial loans, block discounting, vehicle stocking
plans and wholesale funding agreements); Edgewater Associates Limited
(provision of financial advice); and MFX Limited (provision of foreign
currency transaction services).

                                                                  Asset and
                                                                  Personal   Edgewater   MFX      Investing
 For the year ended 31 December 2025                              Finance    Associates  Limited  Activities  Total
                                                                  £000       £000        £000     £000        £000
 Interest revenue calculated using the effective interest method  58,906     -           -        -           58,906
 Interest expense                                                 (21,264)   -           -        (147)       (21,411)
 Net interest income                                              37,642     -           -        (147)       37,495
 Components of Net Trading Income                                 (5,721)    2,049       879      -           (2,793)
 Net trading income                                               31,921     2,049       879      (147)       34,702
 Components of Operating Income                                   3,183      9           6        (561)       2,637
 Operating Income                                                 35,104     2,058       885      (708)       37,339
 Depreciation                                                     (667)      (16)        (1)      (195)       (879)
 Amortisation and impairment of intangibles                       (306)      (75)        (2)      (264)       (647)
 Share of profit of equity accounted investees, net of tax        87         -           -        -           87
 Provision for impairment on loans and advances                   (3,318)    (17)        -        -           (3,335)
 All other expenses                                               (22,577)   (1,640)     (249)    (763)       (25,229)
 Profit / (loss) before tax payable                               8,323      310         633      (1,930)     7,336
 Capital expenditure                                              657        -           1        596         1,254
 Total assets                                                     469,773    1,539       166      89,842      561,320
 Total liabilities                                                447,135    123         33       70,474      517,765

 

                                                                  Asset and
                                                                  Personal   Edgewater   MFX      Investing
 For the year ended 31 December 2024                              Finance    Associates  Limited  Activities  Total
                                                                  £000       £000        £000     £000        £000
 Interest revenue calculated using the effective interest method  55,930     -           -        -           55,930
 Interest expense                                                 (23,044)   -           -        (95)        (23,139)
 Net interest income                                              32,886     -           -        (95)        32,791
 Components of Net Trading Income                                 (6,341)    2,048       1,035    -           (3,258)
 Net trading income                                               26,545     2,048       1,035    (95)        29,533
 Components of Operating Income                                   4,818      11          5        35          4,869
 Operating Income                                                 31,363     2,059       1,040    (60)        34,402
 Depreciation                                                     (715)      (23)        (1)      (210)       (949)
 Amortisation and impairment of intangibles                       (256)      (78)        (4)      (2)         (340)
 Share of profit of equity accounted investees, net of tax        119        -           -        -           119
 All other expenses                                               (20,586)   (1,570)     (1,020)  (124)       (23,300)
 Profit / (loss) before tax payable                               9,925      388         15       (396)       9,932
 Capital expenditure                                              401        1           -        1,199       1,601
 Total assets                                                     446,771    1,614       310      49,095      497,790
 Total liabilities                                                428,540    377         9        31,551      460,477

All revenues are earned from the entity's one geographic segment. All
non-current assets are located in the entity's one geographic segment.

9. Net interest income

                                                                       2025      2024
                                                                       £000      £000
 Interest income
 Loans and advances to customers                                       58,906    55,930
 Total interest income calculated using the effective interest method  58,906    55,930
 Total interest income                                                 58,906    55,930
 Interest expense
 Deposits from customers                                               (18,732)  (20,184)
 Loan note interest                                                    (2,466)   (2,823)
 Contingent consideration                                              (22)      -
 Lease liability                                                       (191)     (132)
 Total interest expense                                                (21,411)  (23,139)
 Net interest income                                                   37,495    32,791

10. Net fee and commission income

In the following table, fee and commission income from contracts with
customers in the scope of IFRS 15 - Revenue from Contracts with Customers is
disaggregated by major type of services. The table includes a reconciliation
of the disaggregated fee and commission income with the Group's reportable
segments. See note 45D regarding revenue recognition.

                                                        2025     2024
                                                        £000     £000
 Major service lines
 Independent financial advice income                    2,049    2,048
 Foreign exchange trading income                        879      1,035
 Asset and personal finance: Brokerage services income  356      267
 Debt collection                                        718      573
 Fee and commission income                              4,002    3,923
 Fee and commission expense                             (6,795)  (7,181)
 Net fee and commission income                          (2,793)  (3,258)

Fee and commission expense relates to commission paid to Brokerages which
introduce new business to the Bank.

11. Personnel expenses

                                                                   Group               Company
                                                                   2025      2024      2025   2024
                                                                   £000      £000      £000   £000
 Staff gross salaries                                              (9,990)   (9,309)   -      -
 Executive Directors' remuneration                                 (647)     (615)     -      -
 Non-executive Directors' fees                                     (235)     (244)     (130)  (40)
 Executive Directors' performance related pay                      (195)     (131)     -      -
 Executive Directors' pensions                                     (53)      (49)      -      -
 Staff pension costs                                               (571)     (545)     -      -
 National insurance and payroll taxes                              (1,084)   (1,050)   -      -
 Staff training and recruitment costs                              (326)     (300)     -      -
 Equity Settled Restricted Stock Units - key management personnel  (272)     (206)     -      -
 Equity Settled Restricted Stock Units - employees                 -         (46)      -      -
                                                                   (13,373)  (12,495)  (130)  (40)

The Company's personnel expenses consist exclusively of Directors'
remuneration and fees for services rendered to the Company.

12. Other expenses

                                         2025      2024
                                         £000      £000
 Professional and legal fees             (3,008)   (2,478)
 Marketing costs                         (712)     (429)
 IT costs                                (2,358)   (1,987)
 Establishment costs                     (911)     (655)
 Communication costs                     (275)     (326)
 Travel costs                            (277)     (283)
 Bank charges                            (1,633)   (1,394)
 Insurance                               (275)     (321)
 Irrecoverable VAT                       (566)     (492)
 Discretionary commission redress costs  (1,300)   (202)
 Other costs                             (541)     (486)
                                         (11,856)  (9,053)

13. Impairment on loans and advances to customers

The charge in respect of allowances for impairment comprises, excluding loss
allowances on financial assets managed on a collective basis.

                                        2025     2024
                                        £000     £000
 Impairment allowances made             (8,735)  (4,076)
 Release of allowances previously made  6,193    3,771
                                        (2,542)  (305)

The charge in respect of allowances for impairment on financial assets managed
on a collective basis comprises:

                                                                              2025     2024
                                                                              £000     £000
 Collective impairment allowances made                                        (2,030)  (1,475)
 Release of allowances previously made                                        1,237    28
 Total charge for allowances for impairment on financial assets managed on a  (793)    (1,447)
 collective basis
 Total charge for allowances for impairment                                   (3,335)  (1,752)

14. Profit before tax payable

The profit before tax payable for the year is stated after charging:

                                                                                Group         Company
                                                                                2025   2024   2025   2024
                                                                                £000   £000   £000   £000
 Fees payable to the Company's auditor for the: Audit of the Group's financial  (86)   (92)   (86)   (59)
 statements
 Audit of the Company's subsidiary undertakings                                 (486)  (280)  -      -
                                                                                (572)  (372)  (86)   (59)
 Other assurance service fees                                                   (11)   (7)    -      -
 Other services - tax compliance                                                (18)   (4)    -      -
 Pension cost defined benefit scheme                                            (1)    (8)    -      -
 Expenses relating to short-term leases and low value assets                    (121)  (92)   -      -

15. Income tax expense

 Group                                              2025   2024
                                                    £000   £000
 Current tax expense
 Current year                                       (930)  (1,482)
                                                    (930)  (1,482)
 Deferred tax expense
 Origination and reversal of temporary differences  (14)   98
 Tax expense                                        (944)  (1,384)

 

 Group                                                                      2025           2024
                                                                    %       £000   %       £000
 Reconciliation of effective tax rate
 Profit before tax                                                          7,336          9,932
 Tax using the Bank's domestic tax rate                             (10.0)  (734)  (10.0)  (993)
 Effect of tax rates in foreign jurisdictions                       (4.7)   (342)  (7.1)   (702)
 Origination and reversal of temporary differences in deferred tax  0.2     (14)   1.0     98
 Tax exempt income                                                  2.1     152    2.2     213
 Non-deductible expenses                                            (0.1)   (6)    -       -
 Tax expense                                                        (12.9)  (944)  (13.9)  (1,384)

The main rate of corporation tax in the Isle of Man is 0.0% (2024: 0.0%).
However, the profits of the Group's Isle of Man banking activities are taxed
at 10.0% (2024: 10.0%). The profits of the Group's subsidiaries that are
subject to UK corporation tax are taxed at a rate of 25% (2024: 25.0%). The
Company is subject to 0.0% corporation tax.

The value of tax losses carried forward reduced to nil and there is now a
temporary difference related to accelerated capital allowances resulting in a
£308,000 liability (2024: £294,000 liability). This resulted in a reversal
of an expense of £14,000 (2024: £98,000 expense) to the Consolidated Income
Statement.

16. Earnings per share

                                                                                2025         2024
 Profit for the year attributable to owners of the Company                      £6,390,000   £8,101,700
 Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (basic)                    119,891,760  117,923,558
 Basic earnings per share (pence)                                               5.33         6.87
 Diluted earnings per share (pence)                                             4.25         5.39
 Total comprehensive income for the year attributable to owners of the Company  £6,594,000   £7,807,000
 Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (basic)                    119,891,760  117,923,558
 Basic earnings per share (pence)                                               5.50         6.62
 Diluted earnings per share (pence)                                             4.39         5.20

The basic earnings per share calculation is based upon the profit for the year
after taxation and the weighted average of the number of shares in issue
throughout the year.

 As at:                                                                          2025         2024
 Reconciliation of weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue between
 basic and diluted
 Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares (basic)                              119,891,760  117,923,558
 Number of shares issued if all convertible loan notes were exchanged for        35,138,889   35,138,889
 equity
 Dilutive element of share options if exercised                                  400,000      399,352
 Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares (diluted)                            155,430,649  153,461,799
 Reconciliation of profit for the year between basic and diluted
 Profit for the year (basic)                                                     £6,390,000   £8,101,700
 Interest expense saved if all convertible loan notes were exchanged for equity  £221,250     £171,415
 Profit for the year (diluted)                                                   £6,611,250   £8,273,115

The diluted earnings per share calculation assumes that all convertible loan
notes and share options have been converted / exercised at the beginning of
the year where they are dilutive.

 As at:                                                                          2025         2024
 Reconciliation of total comprehensive income for the year between basic and
 diluted
 Total comprehensive income for the year (basic)                                 £6,594,000   £7,807,000
 Interest expense saved if all convertible loan notes were exchanged for equity  £221,250     £171,415
 Total comprehensive income for the year (diluted)                               £6,815,250   £7,978,415

The weighted average number of ordinary shares and earnings per share have
been adjusted retrospectively.

17. Cash and cash equivalents

                           Group           Company
                           2025    2024    2025   2024
                           £000    £000    £000   £000
 Cash at bank and in hand  24,310  16,199  7,774  718
                           24,310  16,199  7,774  718

Cash at bank includes an amount of £nil (2024: £nil) representing receipts
which are in the course of transmission.

18. Debt securities

                                               Group           Company
                                               2025    2024    2025   2024
                                               £000    £000    £000   £000
 Financial assets at fair value through other
 comprehensive income:
 UK Government treasury bills                  84,912  79,140  -      -
                                               84,912  79,140  -      -

UK Government Treasury Bills are stated at fair value and unrealised changes
in the fair value are reflected in other comprehensive income. There were
realised gains of £2,561,000 (2024: £4,266,000) and unrealised loss of
£171,000 (2024: £395,000 unrealised gain) during the year.

19. Financial assets

                             Group         Company
                             2025   2024   2025     2024
                             £000   £000   £000     £000
 Financial assets at FVTPL:
 Gain on equity instrument   35     18     -        -
                             35     18     -        -

20. Loans and advances to customers

                                 2025                                    2024
                                 Gross    Impairment  Carrying  Gross    Impairment  Carrying
                                 Amount   Allowance   Value     Amount   Allowance   Value
 Group                           £000     £000        £000      £000     £000        £000
 HP balances                     97,299   (3,812)     93,487    115,403  (4,503)     110,900
 Finance lease balances          16,220   (2,750)     13,470    23,163   (3,033)     20,130
 Unsecured personal loans        158,343  (13,911)    144,432   119,209  (10,936)    108,273
 Vehicle stocking plans          1,472    -           1,472     1,714    -           1,714
 Wholesale funding arrangements  19,297   -           19,297    23,851   -           23,851
 Block discounting               49,408   -           49,408    40,845   -           40,845
 Secured commercial loans        31,509   (642)       30,867    30,940   (575)       30,365
 Secured personal loans          39,677   -           39,677    901      -           901
 Government backed loans         16,079   (1,777)     14,302    25,760   (1,165)     24,595
 Property secured                1,460    -           1,460     10,784   -           10,784
                                 430,764  (22,892)    407,872   392,570  (20,212)    372,358

Collateral is held in the form of underlying assets for HP, finance leases,
vehicles stocking plans, block discounting, secured commercial and personal
loans and wholesale funding arrangements.

 Allowance for impairment               2025     2024
                                        £000     £000
 Balance at 1 January                   18,576   19,426
 Allowance for impairment made          8,735    4,076
 Release of allowances previously made  (6,193)  (3,771)
 Write-offs                             (655)    (1,155)
 Balance at 31 December                 20,463   18,576

 

 Collective allowance for impairment       2025     2024
                                           £000     £000
 Balance at 1 January                      1,636    189
 Collective allowance for impairment made  2,030    1,475
 Release of allowances previously made     (1,237)  (28)
 Balance at 31 December                    2,429    1,636
 Total allowances for impairment           22,892   20,212

The following table provides an explanation of how significant changes in the
gross carrying amount of financial instruments during the period contributed
to changes in loss allowance:

                                                        2025     2024
                                                        £000     £000
 Loans and advances to customers
 Unsecured personal loans originated during the period  120,800  5,138

The contractual amount outstanding on financial assets that were written off
during the reporting period and are still subject to enforcement activity are
£nil (2024: £nil). Advances on preferential terms are available to all
Directors, management and staff. As at 31 December 2025 £1,822,000 (2024:
£2,211,000) had been lent on this basis. In the Group's ordinary course of
business, advances may be made to Shareholders, but all such advances are made
on normal commercial terms (see note 36).

Undrawn loan commitments are £60,182,000 (2024: £47,816,000), of which
£50,551,000 (2024: £44,395,000) are unconditionally cancellable without
prior notice, and there is no ECL provision made on such commitments in both
financial years.

At the end of the current financial year 14 loan exposures (2024: 12) exceeded
10.0% of the capital base of the Bank:

                              Outstanding  Outstanding  Facility  Facility
                              Balance      Balance      Limit     Limit
 Exposure                     2025         2024         2025      2024
                              £000         £000         £000      £000
 Block discounting facility   49,408       40,845       100,850   83,700
 Wholesale funding agreement  19,297       23,851       22,003    26,330

HP and finance lease receivables

Loans and advances to customers include the following HP and finance lease
receivables:

                                                       2025     2024
                                                       £000     £000
 Less than one year                                    47,294   63,483
 Between one and two years                             33,653   45,171
 Between two and three years                           19,839   26,629
 Between three and four years                          9,701    13,022
 Between four and five years                           2,694    3,616
 Greater than five years                               338      454
 Gross investment in HP and finance lease receivables  113,519  152,375

The investment in HP and finance lease receivables net of unearned income
comprises:

                                                     2025     2024
                                                     £000     £000
 Less than one year                                  44,561   57,730
 Between one and two years                           31,707   41,078
 Between two and three years                         18,692   24,216
 Between three and four years                        9,141    11,842
 Between four and five years                         2,538    3,288
 Greater than five years                             318      412
 Net investment in HP and finance lease receivables  106,957  138,566

21. Trade and other receivables

                Group          Company
                2025    2024   2025   2024
                £000    £000   £000   £000
 Other debtors  16,390  6,649  27     1
 Prepayments    5,136   663    44     129
                21,526  7,312  71     130

22. Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets

                                     Buildings and
                                     Leasehold      IT         Furniture and  Motor     Right-of-use
 Group                               Improvements   Equipment  Equipment      Vehicles  assets        Total
                                     £000           £000       £000           £000      £000          £000
 Cost
 As at 1 January 2025                415            449        4,526          198       2,660         8,248
 Additions                           4              27         65             52        696           844
 Disposals                           (172)          (9)        (788)          (38)      -             (1,007)
 As at 31 December 2025              247            467        3,803          212       3,356         8,085
 Accumulated depreciation
 As at 1 January 2025                128            340        391            47        909           1,815
 Charge for year                     50             61         371            36        361           879
 Disposals                           (45)           (28)       (350)          (2)       -             (425)
 As at 31 December 2025              133            373        412            81        1,270         2,269
 Carrying value at 31 December 2025  114            94         3,391          131       2,086         5,816
 Carrying value at 31 December 2024  287            109        4,135          151       1,751         6,433

 

                                     Leasehold     IT         Furniture and  Right-of-use
 Company                             Improvements  Equipment  Equipment      assets        Total
                                     £000          £000       £000           £000          £000
 Cost
 As at 1 January 2025                234           21         18             500           773
 Additions                           -             2          -              695           697
 As at 31 December 2025              234           23         18             1,195         1,470
 Accumulated depreciation
 As at 1 January 2025                234           7          14             431           686
 Charge for year                     -             1          2              116           119
 As at 31 December 2025              234           8          16             547           805
 Carrying value at 31 December 2025  -             15         2              648           665
 Carrying value at 31 December 2024  -             14         4              69            87

23. Intangible assets

                                                Intellectual  IT Software
                                     Customer   Property      and Website
 Group                               Contracts  Rights        Development  Total
                                     £000       £000          £000         £000
 Cost
 As at 1 January 2025                2,937      2,074         5,334        10,345
 Additions                           -          124           297          421
 Disposals                           -          -             (42)         (42)
 As at 31 December 2025              2,937      2,198         5,589        10,724
 Accumulated amortisation
 As at 1 January 2025                1,470      873           2,701        5,044
 Charge for year                     72         148           427          647
 Disposals                           -          -             (16)         (16)
 As at 31 December 2025              1,542      1,021         3,112        5,675
 Carrying value at 31 December 2025  1,395      1,177         2,477        5,049
 Carrying value at 31 December 2024  1,467      1,201         2,633        5,301

 

                                     IT Software
                                     and Website
 Company                             Development
                                     £000
 Cost
 As at 1 January 2025                2,048
 Additions                           26
 As at 31 December 2025              2,074
 Accumulated amortisation
 As at 1 January 2025                65
 Charge for year                     264
 As at 31 December 2025              329
 Carrying value at 31 December 2025  1,745
 Carrying value at 31 December 2024  1,983

24. Deposits from customers

                                     2025     2024
                                     £000     £000
 Retail customers: term deposits     432,595  386,526
 Corporate customers: term deposits  19,866   18,640
                                     452,461  405,166

25. Creditors and accrued charges

                               Group          Company
                               2025    2024   2025     2024
                               £000    £000   £000     £000
 Other creditors and accruals  8,019   7,032  341      1,541
 Commission creditors          479     333    -        -
 Lease liability               2,203   1,792  666      62
 Taxation creditors            810     522    -        -
                               11,511  9,679  1,007    1,603

26. Contingent consideration

Deferred consideration relates to contingent payments due to the sellers on
the acquisition of CAM Wealth.

On 21 January 2025, CAM Wealth was acquired for total cash consideration of
£135,000. In the third year, the Group has agreed to pay 5 times the relevant
profits for the UK IFA business for the year ended 21 January 2028 should
certain performance conditions be met.

Based on the forecasts when the Company was acquired, the Group estimates an
additional contingent consideration of £640,000 payable in the final year.
The Group has included £590,000 as contingent consideration related to the
additional consideration, which represents its fair value as at 31 December
2025 determined through a discounted cash flow valuation technique.

 As at       2025   2024
             £000   £000
 CAM Wealth  590    -
             590    -

27. Loan notes

                                   Group           Company
                                   2025    2024    2025    2024
                            Notes  £000    £000    £000    £000
 Related parties
 J Mellon                   JM     2,750   1,750   2,750   1,750
 Burnbrae Limited           BL     5,200   3,200   5,200   3,200
 Culminant Reinsurance Ltd  CR     1,000   1,000   1,000   1,000
 John Spellman              JS     400     400     400     400
 Ian Morley                 IM     250     250     250     250
 Alan Clarke                AC     150     100     150     100
                                   9,750   6,700   9,750   6,700
 Unrelated parties          UP     43,145  38,592  43,145  38,592
                                   52,895  45,292  52,895  45,292

JM - Three loans, one loan of £1,250,000 maturing on 26 February 2030 with
interest payable of 7.5% per annum, convertible to ordinary shares of the
Company at a rate of 9.0 pence, one of £500,000 maturing on 31 July 2027,
paying interest of 7.5% per annum and convertible to ordinary shares of the
Company at a rate of 8.0 pence and one of £1,000,000 maturing on 31 December
2028, paying interest of 8% per annum.

BL - Five loans, one of £1,000,000 maturing on 25 February 2030, paying
interest of 7.5% one of £1,200,000 maturing on 31 July 2027, paying interest
of 7.5% per annum, convertible to ordinary shares of the Company at a rate of
8.0 pence, one of £1,000,000 maturing 1 July 2026, paying interest of 7.5%
per annum, one of £1,000,000 maturing 28 September 2030 paying interest of
8.0% per annum and one of £1,000,000 maturing on 20 November 2028, paying
interest of 8.0% per annum. Jim Mellon is the beneficial owner of BL and
Denham Eke is also a director.

CR - One loan consisting of £1,000,000 maturing on 12 October 2030, paying
interest of 8.0% per annum. Greg Bailey, a director, is the beneficial owner
of CR.

JS - One loan consisting of £400,000 maturing on 3 May 2029, paying interest
of 8.5% per annum.

IM - One loan consisting of £250,000 maturing on 3 June 2026, paying interest
of 8.0% per annum.

AC - Two loans consisting of £150,000 maturing on 6 May 2026, paying interest
of 7.8% per annum. One loan note of £50,000 matured on 6 May 2026 and the
other £100,000 renewed at 5.75% for one year.

UP - Sixty-six loans (2024: Fifty-four), the earliest maturity date was 19
January 2026, and the latest maturity is 30 April 2030. The average interest
payable is 6.99% (2024: 6.71%)

With respect to the convertible loans, the interest rate applied was deemed by
the Directors to be equivalent to the market rate at the time with no
conversion option.

28. Pension liability

The Conister Trust Pension and Life Assurance Scheme ("Scheme") operated by
the Bank is a funded defined benefit arrangement which provides retirement
benefits based on final pensionable salary. The Scheme is closed to new
entrants and the last active member of the Scheme left pensionable service in
2011.

The Scheme is approved in the Isle of Man by the Assessor of Income Tax under
the Income Tax (Retirement Benefit Schemes) Act 1978 and must comply with the
relevant legislation. In addition, it is registered as an authorised scheme
with the FSA in the Isle of Man under the Retirement Benefits Scheme Act 2000.
The Scheme is subject to regulation by the FSA but there is no minimum funding
regime in the Isle of Man.

The Scheme is governed by two corporate trustees, Conister Bank Limited and
Boal & Co (Pensions) Limited. The trustees are responsible for the
Scheme's investment policy and for the exercise of discretionary powers in
respect of the Scheme's benefits.

Exposure to risk

The Company is exposed to the risk that additional contributions will be
required in order to fund the Scheme as a result of poor experience. Some of
the key factors that could lead to shortfalls are:

▪       investment performance - the return achieved on the Scheme's
assets may be lower than expected; and

▪       mortality - members could live longer than foreseen. This
would mean that benefits are paid for longer than expected, increasing the
value of the related liabilities.

In order to assess the sensitivity of the Scheme's pension liability to these
risks, sensitivity analysis have been carried out. Each sensitivity analysis
is based on changing one of the assumptions used in the calculations, with no
change in the other assumptions. The same method has been applied as was used
to calculate the original pension liability and the results are presented in
comparison to that liability. It should be noted that in practice it is
unlikely that one assumption will change without a movement in the other
assumptions; there may also be some correlation between some of these
assumptions. It should also be noted that the value placed on the liabilities
does not change on a straight-line basis when one of the assumptions is
changed. For example, a 2.0% change in an assumption will not necessarily
produce twice the effect on the liabilities of a 1.0% change.

Exposure to risk

No changes have been made to the method or to the assumptions stress-tested
for these sensitivity analyses compared to the previous period. The investment
strategy of the Scheme has been set with regard to the liability profile of
the Scheme. However, there are no explicit asset-liability matching strategies
in place.

Restriction of assets

No adjustments have been made to the statement of financial position items as
a result of the requirements of IFRIC 14 - IAS 19: The Limit on a Defined
Benefit Asset, Minimum Funding Requirements and their Interaction, issued by
IASB's International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee.

Scheme amendments

There have not been any past service costs or settlements in the financial
year ending 31 December 2025 (2024: none).

Funding policy

The funding method employed to calculate the value of previously accrued
benefits is the Projected Unit Method. Following the cessation of accrual of
benefits when the last active member left service in 2011, regular future
service contributions to the Scheme are no longer required. However,
additional contributions will still be required to cover any shortfalls that
might arise following each funding valuation.

The most recent triennial full actuarial valuation was carried out at 31 March
2025, which showed that the market value of the Scheme's assets was
£1,404,000 representing 74% of the benefits that had accrued to members,
after allowing for expected future increases in earnings. As required by IAS
19: Employee Benefits, this valuation has been updated by the actuary as at
31 December 2025.

The amounts recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position are
as follows:

 Total underfunding in funded plans recognised as a liability  2025     2024
                                                               £000     £000
 Fair value of plan assets                                     1,497    1,361
 Present value of funded obligations                           (1,398)  (1,407)
                                                               99       (46)

 

 Movement in the liability for defined benefit obligations  2025   2024
                                                            £000   £000
 Opening defined benefit obligations at 1 January           1,407  1,521
 Benefits paid by the plan                                  (78)   (80)
 Interest on obligations                                    76     71
 Actuarial loss / (gain)                                    21     (105)
 Prior year overprovision                                   (28)   -
 Liability for defined benefit obligations at 31 December   1,398  1,407

 

 Movement in plan assets                           2025   2024
                                                   £000   £000
 Opening fair value of plan assets at 1 January    1,361  1,359
 Interest on plan assets                           79     63
 Contribution by employer                          57     57
 Return on plan assets                             78     (38)
 Benefits paid                                     (78)   (80)
 Closing fair value of plan assets at 31 December  1,497  1,361

 

 Expense recognised in income statement                            2025   2024
                                                                   £000   £000
 Net interest cost recognised in the statement of profit and loss  1      8

 

 Actuarial gain / (loss) recognised in other comprehensive income  2025   2024
                                                                   £000   £000
 Return on plan assets                                             78     (38)
 Actuarial (loss) / gain on defined benefit obligations            (21)   105
                                                                   57     67

 

 Plan assets consist of the following  2025  2024
                                       %     %
 Equity securities                     45    44
 Corporate bonds                       19    18
 Government bonds                      29    27
 Cash                                  2     6
 Other                                 5     5
                                       100   100

The actuarial assumptions used to calculate Scheme liabilities under IAS19 are
as follows:

                                                       2025  2024
                                                       %     %
 Rate of increase in pension in payment:
    Service from 6 April 1997 to 13 September 2005     2.8   3.1
    Service from 14 September 2005                     2.0   2.1
 Rate of increase in deferred pensions                 5.0   5.0
 Discount rate applied to scheme liabilities           5.6   5.7
 Inflation                                             5.7   5.0
 Life expectancy                                       2025  2024
 Current pensioner aged 65 (male)                      21.4  21.2
 Current pensioner aged 65 (female)                    23.7  23.8
 Future pensioner aged 65 in 10 years (male)           21.9  21.7
 Future pensioner aged 65 in 10 years (female)         24.4  24.5

The assumptions used by the actuary are best estimates chosen from a range of
possible assumptions, which due to the timescale covered, may not necessarily
be borne out in practice.

Sensitivity analysis

Reasonably possible changes at the reporting date to one of the relevant
actuarial assumptions, holding other assumptions constant, would have affected
the defined benefit obligation by the amounts shown below.

                                    2025                2024
 Effect in £'000                    Increase  Decrease  Increase  Decrease
 Discount rate (0.5% movement)      (60)      66        (70)      77
 Inflation rate (0.5% movement)     17        (17)      18        (17)
 Life expectancy (1 year movement)  50        (50)      53        (53)

29. Called up share capital

 Ordinary shares of no par value available for issue  Number
 At 31 December 2025                                  200,200,000
 At 31 December 2024                                  200,200,000

 

 Issued and fully paid: Ordinary shares of no par value  Number       £000
 At 31 December 2025                                     122,950,726  19,932
 At 31 December 2024                                     119,715,757  19,626

A. Analysis of changes in financing during the year

                                     Group           Company
                                     2025    2024    2025    2024
                                     £000    £000    £000    £000
 Balance at 1 January                65,843  60,059  64,861  58,792
 Issue of loan notes                 7,603   5,975   7,603   5,975
 Issue of shares via scrip dividend  306     193     306     193
 Issue of shares                     -       49      -       49
 Payment of lease liabilities        (470)   (433)   (152)   (148)
 Balance at 31 December              73,282  65,843  72,618  64,861

The 2025 Group closing balance is represented by £19,932,000 share capital
(2024: £19,626,000), £52,895,000 loan notes (2024: £42,292,000) and
£2,203,000 lease liability (2024: £1,085,000).

The 2025 Company closing balance is represented by £19,932,000 share capital
(2024: £19,626,000), £52,895,000 of loan notes (2024: £42,292,000) and
£666,000 lease liability (2024: £91,000).

B. Dividends

On 16 September 2025, MFG declared a dividend of £810,000 (2024: £530,000)
which could either be taken up in cash or new ordinary shares. 1,162,469 new
shares (2024: 1,013,821 new shares) were admitted to the Alternative
Investment Market ("AIM") at 26.349 pence per share (2024: 19.0 pence per
share), at a total cost of £306,000 (2024: £193,000).

C. Convertible loans

There are three convertible loans totalling £2,950,000 (2024: £2,950,000)
(refer to note 27).

D. Share options and Restricted Stock Units

On 5 July 2022, 27 October 2022, 29 November 2023, 16 December 2024 and 25
June 2025 MFG granted Restricted Stock Units ("RSUs") under its 2022 RSU Plan.
The Group has issued, in total, RSUs over 5,087,500 ordinary shares
representing 4.14% of the issued share capital of the Group, including
2,400,000 to certain directors and 2,687,500 to certain employees. The RSUs
issued before 2024 have a 2-year term while those issued post 2024 have a
3-year term and are subject to certain vesting conditions based upon an
overall growth in profitability. Any RSUs granted will fall away should the
recipient leave employment before the 2‑year or 3-year term expires. Should
the individual vesting conditions be satisfied at the end of the term, the
stock can be exercised at nil cost.

The Group directors who received RSUs are as follows:

§  Douglas Grant, Group Chief Executive Officer, was issued 1,925,000 RSUs.
On 23 December 2025, he exercised his options and was issued with 850,000 New
Ordinary Shares of no par value at nil cost. Following this, the total number
of Ordinary Shares held by Mr Grant is 3,258,212, representing 2.65% of the
issued ordinary share capital of the Company;

§  James Smeed, Group Finance Director, was issued 475,000 RSUs. On 23
December 2025, James Smeed exercised his options and was issued with 175,000
New Ordinary Shares of no par value respectively at nil cost. Following this,
the total number of Ordinary Shares held by Mr Smeed is 500,000, representing
0.41% of the issued ordinary share capital of the Company;

                                                    2025             2024             Contractual
 Grant date/employees entitled                      Number of Units  Number of Units  life of options
 RSUs granted to key employees at 5 July 2022       1,020,000        1,020,000        2 years
 RSUs granted to directors at 5 July 2022           1,100,000        1,100,000        2 years
 RSUs granted to key employees at 27 October 2022   165,000          165,000          2 years
 RSUs granted to directors at 27 October 2022       150,000          150,000          2 years
 RSUs granted to directors at 29 November 2023      1,150,000        1,150,000        2 years
 RSUs granted to key employees at 29 November 2023  1,102,500        1,102,500        2 years
 RSUs granted to key employees at 16 December 2024  200,000          200,000          3 years
 RSUs granted to key employees at 25 June 2025      200,000          -                3 years
 Total RSUs                                         5,087,500        4,887,500
 Lapsed RSUs                                        (455,000)        (425,000)
 Exercised                                          (4,232,500)      (2,160,000)
 Remaining RSUs                                     400,000          2,302,500

The fair value of employee services received in return for restricted stock
units granted is based on the fair value of them measured using the
Black-Scholes formula. Service related and non-market performance conditions
were not taken into account in measuring fair value. The inputs used in
measuring the fair values at the grant of the equity-settled restricted stock
unit payment plans were as follows.

                                                          Grant at   Grant at    Grant at     Grant at     Grant at
 Fair value of restricted stock units and assumptions     5 July     27 October  29 November  16 December  25 June
                                                          2022       2022        2023         2024         2025
 Share price at grant date                                8.5 pence  14.0 pence  17.5 pence   14.5 pence   25.5 pence
 Exercise price                                           nil        nil         nil          nil          nil
 Expected volatility * ^                                  55.14%     107.71%     638.12%      560.10%      611.26%
 Expected life (weighted average)                         2 years    2 years     2 years      3 years      3 years
 Risk-free interest rate (based on government bonds) * ^  1.65%      3.15%       4.43%        4.49%        4.46%
 Forfeiture rate                                          0.00%      0.00%       0.00%        0.00%        0.00%
 Fair value at grant date                                 8.5 pence  14.0 pence  17.5 pence   14.5 pence   25.6 pence

^ Based on past 3 years

* Annual rates

The expected volatility is based on both historical average share price
volatility and implied volatility derived from traded options over the group's
ordinary shares of maturity similar to those of the employee options.

The charge for the year for RSUs granted was £373,000 (2024: £196,000).

The fair value of services received in return for share options granted is
based on the fair value of share options granted, measured using a binomial
probability model with the following inputs for each award:

 Date of grant                                        23 June 2014
 Fair value at date of grant                          £0.08
 Share price at date of grant                         £0.14
 Exercise price                                       £0.14
 Expected volatility                                  55.0%
 Option life                                          3
 Risk-free interest rate (based on government bonds)  0.5%
 Forfeiture rate                                      33.3%

30. List of associates

Set out below is a list of associates of the Group:

                                          Group  Group
                                          2025   2024
                                          £000   £000
 Payitmonthly Ltd ("PIML")                331    260
 Lesley Stephen & Co Limited ("LSC")      73     57
                                          404    317

In August 2018, 30% of the share capital of PIML was acquired for £90,000
consideration. The Group's resulting share of the associate's total
comprehensive income during the year was £87,000 (2024: £119,000).

As part of the Bank providing loan finance to LSC, on 29 June 2023 the Group
acquired 10% of its issued share capital for nil consideration. The receipt of
the issued share capital is considered to be linked to the loan facilities
financed and therefore its term and interest rate implicit in the finance
agreement have been used as the basis to discount the fair value of the gratis
shares issued.

The Group possesses the capacity to engage in policy-making processes within
LSC through its right to designate an individual to attend all board meetings
as an observer. Via its representative, the Group also holds the ability to
introduce topics for discussion on the agenda, although it does not have
voting rights in this regard. Moreover, the Group has introduced constraints
on LSC's board, effectively preventing specified significant actions from
being taken without the Group's consent. The fair value of the financial
instrument received has been determined as £42,000 at initial recognition
based on the proportionate share of the net asset value of LSC. As part of the
transaction, the Group has been granted two warrants to acquire further
shares. The first warrant is for 10% of the share capital and the second
warrant is for a further 10% of the share capital. The two warrants are
exercisable dependent upon the profit before tax achieved by LSC relative to
target profit before tax for the relevant financial period. The fair value of
the two warrants has been determined to be nil due to the significant
uncertainty that exists at acquisition date of achieving such targets. For
these reasons, the financial instrument is accounted for as an Associate in
accordance with IAS 28. The Group's resulting share of the associate's total
comprehensive income during the year was £nil (2024: £nil).

31. List of subsidiaries

Set out below is a list of direct subsidiaries of the Group:

                                                            31 December
                                                            2025         Date of        2025    2024
 Carrying value of investments  Nature of Business          % Holding    Incorporation  £000    £000
 Conister Bank Limited          Asset and Personal Finance  100          05/12/1935     29,092  29,092
 Edgewater Associates Limited   Wealth Management           100          24/12/1996     2,005   2,005
 TransSend Holdings Limited     Holding Company             100          05/11/2007     -       -
 Manx Ventures Limited          Holding Company             100          15/05/2009     -       -
                                                                                        31,097  31,097

All subsidiaries are incorporated in the Isle of Man.

Set out below is a list of indirect significant subsidiaries of the Group:

                                                                                                               Cost of     Cost of
                                                                                                               investment  investment
                                        Nature of                   Principal place  Country of                2025        2024
 Carrying value of investments          business                    of business      incorporation  % Holding  £000        £000
 Conister Finance & Leasing Ltd         Asset and Personal Finance  UK               IOM            100.0%     1           1
 CAM Wealth Group Limited               Private Wealth Management   UK               UK             100.0%     814         -
 Finova Limited                         Treasury solutions          IOM              IOM            100.0%     1           -
 MFX Limited                            Foreign exchange advisory   IOM              IOM            100.0%     1           1
 Payment Assist Ltd                     Point of Sale Lender        UK               UK             100.0%     9,244       9,244
 Blue Star Leasing Limited              SME Asset Finance           UK               UK             100.0%     2,275       2,275
 Ninkasi Rentals & Finance Limited      SME Asset Finance           UK               UK             95.0%      1,480       1,275
 Manx Collection Limited                Debt Collection             UK               IOM            100.0%     1           1
 Manx Financial Limited                 Asset and Personal Finance  IOM              IOM            100.0%     1,001       1,001
 Conister Insurance Services Limited    General insurance           IOM              IOM            100.0%     1           -
 The Business Lending Exchange Limited  SME Asset Lender            UK               UK             100.0%     2,186       2,186

32. Non-controlling interests in subsidiaries

The following table summarises the information about the Group's subsidiary
that has material NCI, before any intra-group eliminations.

 31 December 2025                 NRF      Total

 £'000
 NCI percentage                   5%
 Cash and cash equivalents        321
 Loans and advances to customers  -
 Trade and other receivables      2,392
 Property, plant and equipment    3,064
 Stocks                           39
 Intangible assets                8
 Creditors and accrued charges    (4,978)
 Deferred tax                     (266)
 Net assets                       580
 Carrying amount of NCI           29       29
 Revenue                          1,448
 Profit                           49
 OCI                              -
 Total comprehensive income       49
 Profit allocated to NCI          2        2
 Operating activities cashflows   718
 Investing activities cashflows   (706)
 Financing activities cashflows   -
 Net increase in cashflows        12

On 28 March 2025, the Group acquired an additional 5% interest in Ninkasi
Rentals & Finance Limited ("NRFL"), increasing its ownership to 95%. The
carrying amount of NRFL's net assets in the Group's consolidated financial
statements on the date of acquisition was £580,049. The following table
summarises the effect of changes in the Group's ownership interest in NRFL.

                                                           2025
                                                           £000
 Carrying amount of NCI acquired (£580,409*5%)             29
 Consideration paid to NCI in cash                         (206)
 Decrease in equity attributable to owners of the Company  (177)

 

                                                           2025   2024
                                                           £000   £000
 NCI brought forward (49.9%)                               55     -
 Pre-acquisition profits in the year                       1      -
 Dividends paid                                            -      -
                                                           56     -
 Carrying amount of NCI acquired                           29     -
 Consideration paid to NCI                                 (206)  -
 Decrease in equity attributable to owners of the Company  (177)  -

 

 31 December 2024                 NRF      Total

 £'000
 NCI percentage                   10%
 Cash and cash equivalents        309
 Loans and advances to customers  -
 Trade and other receivables      1,863
 Property, plant and equipment    3,725
 Intangible assets                12
 Loans and borrowings             (547)
 Creditors and accrued charges    (4,569)
 Deferred tax                     (244)
 Net assets                       549
 Carrying amount of NCI           55       55
 Revenue                          1,539
 Profit                           20
 OCI                              -
 Total comprehensive income       20
 Profit allocated to NCI          2        2
 OCI allocated to NCI             -        -
 Operating activities cashflows   40
 Investing activities cashflows   (151)
 Financing activities cashflows
 Net (decrease) in cashflows      (111)

In September 2024, the Group acquired the remaining 49.9% interest in PAL,
increasing its ownership to 100%. The movement in NCI in relation to the
acquisition is explained below.

                                                           2025   2024
                                                           £000   £000
 NCI brought forward (49.9%)                               -      987
 Pre-acquisition profits in the year                       -      445
 Dividends paid                                            -      (1,817)
                                                           -      (385)
 Carrying amount of NCI acquired                           -      (385)
 Consideration paid to NCI                                 -      (5,000)
 Decrease in equity attributable to owners of the Company  -      (5,385)

33. Financial Instruments

Rivers Finance Group PLC ("RFG")

On 9 June 2021, the Group acquired 10% of the issued share capital of RFG for
nil consideration. The receipt of the issued share capital is considered to be
a commitment fee receivable by the Group in order to originate loan facilities
in aggregate not exceeding £6,250,000 to RFG. The commitment fee is an
integral part of the effective interest rate of the associated loan facilities
issued to RFG.

The Group is not considered to have a significant influence over RFG as it
holds less than a 20% shareholding and is not considered to participate in the
policy making decisions of the entity. The 10% shareholding has thus been
classified as a financial instrument.

The Group continues to obtain information necessary to measure the fair value
of the shares obtained. The fair value of the financial instrument received
has been determined as £188,000 (2024: £154,000) based on the proportionate
share of the net asset value of RFG.

As part of the transaction, the Group has been granted two warrants to acquire
further shares. The first warrant is for 5% of the share capital and the
second warrant is for a further 5% of the share capital.

The two warrants are exercisable dependent upon the Group's banking
subsidiary, the Bank, contracting with RFG, for a larger facility. The fair
value of the two warrants has been determined to be nil due to the significant
uncertainty that exists at acquisition date and the period end in issuing a
further debt facility.

34. Goodwill

                                                          Group   Group   Company  Company
 Cash generating unit                                     2025    2024    2025     2024
                                                          £000    £000    £000     £000
 PAL                                                      4,456   4,456   4,456    4,456
 EAL                                                      1,649   1,649   1,649    1,649
 BLX                                                      1,908   1,908   1,908    1,908
 BBSL                                                     1,390   1,390   1,390    1,390
 NRFL                                                     678     678     678      678
 CAM Wealth                                               568     -       568      -
 Manx Collections Limited ("MCL")                         454     454     454      454
 Three Spires Insurance Services Limited("Three Spires")  41      41      41       41
                                                          11,144  10,576  11,144   10,576

Management has determined that a reasonably possible change in the key
assumptions would not result in the carrying amount to exceed the recoverable
amount of the following CGU's and accordingly no impairment of goodwill.

Acquisition of a subsidiary- CAM Wealth

On 22 January 2025, the Group announced the acquisition of the UK FCA licenced
Wealth Management business, CAM Wealth Group Holdings and its subsidiary CAM
Wealth Group Limited, (together "CAM Wealth" trading as CAM Wealth). This
acquisition links to the Group's growth strategy of accretive acquisition to
continue developing a robust and diversified financial services group to
support the ongoing objective of continuously enhancing shareholder value.

In the eleven months to 31 December 2025, CAM Wealth contributed revenue of
£80,000 and a loss of £164,000 to the Group's results. If the acquisition
had happened on 01 January 2025, management estimates that the impact on the
consolidated income would have been £87,000 and the impact on the
consolidated profit for the period would have been a loss of £179,000.

A. Consideration transferred

The following table summarises the acquisition date fair value of each major
class of consideration transferred:

                                     2025
                                     £000
 Cash                                135
 Contingent consideration (Note 26)  568
                                     703

B. Identifiable assets acquired, and liabilities assumed

The following table summarises the recognised amounts of assets acquired, and
liabilities assumed at the date of acquisition:

                                         2025
                                         £000
 Intangible asset acquired               100
 Cash and cash equivalents               6
 Trade and other receivables             35
 Creditors and accrued charges           (6)
 Total identifiable net assets acquired  135

The trade and other receivables comprise gross contractual amounts due of
£35,000, of which £nil was expected to be uncollectable at the date of
acquisition.

C. Goodwill

The goodwill arising from the acquisition has been recognised as follows:

                                        2025
                                        £000
 Total consideration transferred        703
 Fair value of identifiable net assets  (135)
 Goodwill                               568

General

The key assumptions used in the estimation of the recoverable amount are set
out in this note. The recoverable amount of the CGUs discussed in this note
were each based on value in use. The values assigned to key assumptions
represents management's assessment of future trends in the relevant industries
and have been based on historical data from both external and internal
sources.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the goodwill generated on the
purchase of PAL is based on 10-year forecast cash flow projections and then
discounted using a 15.3% (2024: 15.3%) discount factor. The sensitivity of the
analysis was tested using additional discount factors of up to 20.0% on single
interest income growth rates.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the EAL CGU (including also
goodwill generated on acquisition of EAL) is based on 10-year forecast cash
flow projections using a 2.0% annual increment and then discounted using a 13%
(2024: 13.0%) discount factor. The sensitivity of the analysis was tested
using additional discount factors of 15.0% and 20.0% on stable profit levels.
An impairment loss on EAL goodwill of £200,000 was recognised in 2022.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the goodwill generated on the
purchase of BLX is based on 10-year forecast cash flow projections using a 0%
annual increment and then discounted using a 15.3% (2024: 15.3%) discount
factor. The sensitivity of the analysis was tested using additional discount
factors of up to 20.0% on single interest income growth rates.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the goodwill generated on the
purchase of BBSL is based on 10-year forecast cash flow projections using a 2%
annual increment, with a terminal value calculated using a 2.0% growth rate of
net income and then discounted using a 15.3% (2024: 15.3%) discount factor.
The sensitivity of the analysis was tested using additional discount factors
of up to 20.0% on single interest income growth rates.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the goodwill generated on the
purchase of NRFL is based on 10-year forecast cash flow projections using a 0%
annual increment and then discounted using a 15.3% (2024: 15.3%) discount
factor. The sensitivity of the analysis was tested using additional discount
factors of up to 20.0%. On the basis of the above reviews no impairment to
goodwill has been made in the current year.

The estimated recoverable amount in relation to the goodwill generated on the
purchase of MCL is based on 10-year forecast cash flow projection using a 2.0%
annual increment and then discounted using a 15.3% (2024: 15.3%) discount
factor. The sensitivity of the analysis was tested using additional discount
factors up to 20.0%.

The goodwill generated on the purchase of Three Spires has been reviewed at
the current year end and is considered adequate given its income streams
referred to EAL. Based on the above no impairment to goodwill has been made in
the current year.

35. Loans and amounts due from Group undertakings

Amounts due from and to Group undertakings

Amounts due from and to Group undertakings relate to intra-group transactions
and are unsecured, interest-free and repayable on demand. The amounts will be
settled either through cash or net settlement.

Subordinated loans

MFG has issued several subordinated loans as part of its equity funding into
the Bank and EAL.

                                                  Interest rate  2025    2024
 Creation                      Maturity           % p.a.         £000    £000
 Conister Bank Limited
 11 February 2014              11 February 2034   7.0            500     500
 27 May 2014                   27 May 2034        7.0            500     500
 9 July 2014                   9 July 2034        7.0            500     500
 17 September 2014             17 September 2026  7.0            400     400
 22 July 2013                  22 July 2033       7.0            1,000   1,000
 25 October 2013               22 October 2033    7.0            1,000   1,000
 23 September 2016             23 September 2036  7.0            1,100   1,100
 14 June 2017                  14 June 2037       7.0            450     450
 12 June 2018                  12 June 2038       7.0            2,000   2,000
 23 March 2023                 23 March 2043      7.0            6,500   6,500
 Edgewater Associates Limited
 21 February 2017              21 February 2027   7.0            150     150
 14 May 2017                   14 May 2027        7.0            128     128
                                                                 14,228  14,228

36. Related party transactions

Cash deposits

During the year, the Bank held cash on deposit on behalf of Jim Mellon
(Executive Chair of MFG) and Douglas Grant (Group CEO). Total deposits
amounted to £302,885 and £23,659 (2024: £36,280 and £24,898) respectively,
at normal commercial interest rates in accordance with the standard rates
offered by the Bank.

Key management remuneration including Executive Directors

                                                      2025   2024
                                                      £000   £000
 Remuneration - executive Directors                   647    615
 Remuneration - non-executive Directors               235    243
 Performance Related Pay                              195    131
 Pension                                              53     49
 Equity Settled Restricted Stock Units (see note 11)  272    113
                                                      1,402  1,151

Employment benefits include gross salaries, performance related pay, employer
defined contributions and restricted stock units (See note 29D).

Directors' loans

At 31 December 2025, Douglas Grant had three amortising loans outstanding to
Conister Bank Limited with capital outstanding of £302,061 (2024: £285,072).
The maximum original term of the three loans is 61 months and the average
interest is 7.91% (2024: 2.57%). James Smeed had one amortising loan
outstanding to Conister Bank with capital outstanding of £41,418 (2024:
£nil). The original term of the loan is 49 months, and the average interest
is 7.75%. No impairment is held in respect of these amounts.

Intercompany recharges

Various intercompany recharges are made during the course of the year as a
result of the Bank settling debts in other Group companies.

Loan advance to PIML

At 31 December 2025, £nil (2024: £5,000,000) had been advanced to PIML and
interest is charged at commercial rates. No impairment is held in respect of
these amounts. This loan facility is repayable in cash.

Loan advance to Rivers Finance Group PLC ("RFG")

A total of £9,930,000 loan facility is available to RFG, a financial
instrument of Manx Ventures Limited ("MVL"), to provide the finance required
to expand its operations. Interest is charged at commercial rates. At 31
December 2025, £9,642,000 (2024: £8,512,000) had been advanced to RFG. This
loan facility is repayable in cash.

Loan advance to Lesley Stephen & Co Limited ("LSC")

A total £11,500,000 loan facility is available to LSC to provide the finance
required to expand its operations. Interest is charged at commercial rates. At
31 December 2025, £11,279,837 (2024: £10,783,914) had been advanced to LSC.
As part of a finance arrangement between the Bank and LSC, Manx Ventures
Limited ("MVL") (a related entity) acquired a 10% shareholding in LSC. This
loan facility is repayable in cash.

Subordinated loans

The Company has advanced £13,950,000 (2024: £13,950,000) of subordinated
loans to the Bank and £278,000 (2024: £278,000) to EAL as at 31 December
2025. See note 35 for more details.

37. Leases

A. Leases as lessee

The Group leases the head office building in the Isle of Man. The lease's term
is 10 years with an option to renew the lease after that date. Lease payments
are renegotiated every 10 years to reflect market rentals.

The Group leases an office unit in the United Kingdom and IT equipment with
contract terms of 2 to 3 years. These leases are short-term and / or low-value
items. The Group has elected not to recognise right-of-use assets and lease
liabilities for these leases.

Information about leases for which the Group is a lessee is presented below.

i. Right-of-use assets

Right-of-use assets related to leased properties that do not meet the
definition of investment property are presented as property, plant and
equipment.

                                     Land and
 Group                               Buildings  Total
                                     £000       £000
 Cost
 As at 1 January 2025                2,660      2,660
 Additions                           695        695
 As at 31 December 2025              3,355      3,355
 Accumulated depreciation
 As at 1 January 2025                909        909
 Charge for the year                 360        360
 As at 31 December 2025              1,269      1,269
 Carrying value at 31 December 2025  2,086      2,086
 Carrying value at 31 December 2024  1,751      1,751

ii. Amounts recognised in profit or loss

                                                              Group         Company
                                                              2025   2024   2025   2024
                                                              £000   £000   £000   £000
 Interest on lease liabilities                                191    132    38     17
 Depreciation expense                                         361    351    116    126
 Expenses relating to short-term leases and low-value assets  -      81     -      -

iii. Amounts recognised in statement of cash flows

                                Group         Company
                                2025   2024   2025   2024
                                £000   £000   £000   £000
 Interest paid                  191    132    38     17
 Capital paid                   279    311    152    131
 Total cash outflow for leases  470    443    190    148

38. Regulators

Certain Group subsidiaries are regulated by the FSA and the FCA as detailed
below.

The Bank and EAL are regulated by the FSA under a Class 1(1) - Deposit Taking
licence and Class 2 - Investment Business licence respectively. The Bank is
also regulated by the UK's Prudential Regulatory Authority ("PRA") and the
UK's Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA"). CAM Wealth is licensed by FCA to
offer wealth management services.

39. Contingent liabilities

The Bank is required to be a member of the Isle of Man Government Depositors'
Compensation Scheme which was introduced by the Isle of Man Government under
the Banking Business (Compensation of Depositors) Regulations 1991 and creates
a liability on the Bank to participate in the compensation of depositors
should it be activated. In addition, the Bank is a member of UK's FSCS.

The possibility of an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits for all
other contingent liabilities of the Group are considered remote and thus do
not require separate disclosure.

40. Provision for Discretionary Commission Arrangements

Following publication of the FCA's consultation paper on a proposed Motor
Finance redress scheme, the Group has reassessed its provision relating to
historical motor‑finance commission arrangements. The provision, initially
£202,920 in the 2024 Annual Report, has been increased to £1,502,920 as at
31 December 2025. The additional £1,300,000 charge reflects the increased
likelihood that a higher number of cases fall within the scope of the FCA's
proposed scheme, and that redress amounts may be higher than previously
anticipated. The Group believes that its historical practices were compliant
with the law and regulations in place at the time and is willing to cooperate
with FCA through its revised customer-engagement approach. The provision
includes commission models and calculations in line with the FCA's published
redress scheme. No redress settlements were made as at 31 December 2025.

41. Non-IFRS measures

Non-IFRS measures included in the financial statements include the following:

 Measure             Description
 Net trading income  Net trading income represents net interest income and contributions from
                     non-interest income activities.
 Operating income    Operating income represents net trading income, other operating income and
                     gains or losses on financial instruments.

42. Subsequent events

There were no subsequent events occurring after 31 December 2025.

43. Financial risk management

A. Introduction and overview

The Group has exposure to the following risks from financial instruments:

§  credit risk;

§  liquidity risk;

§  market risk; and

§  operational risk.

Risk management framework

The Board has overall responsibility for the establishment and oversight of
the Group's risk management framework. The Board has established the GARCC,
which is responsible for approving and monitoring Group risk management
policies. The GARCC is assisted in its oversight role by Internal Audit.
Internal Audit undertakes both regular and ad hoc reviews of risk management
controls and procedures, the results of which are reported to the GARCC.

The Group's risk management policies are established to identify and analyse
the risks faced by the Group, to set appropriate risk limits and controls, and
to monitor risks and adherence to limits. The risk management policies and
systems are reviewed regularly to reflect changes in market conditions and the
Group's activities. The Group, through its training and management standards
and procedures, aims to develop a disciplined and constructive control
environment in which all employees understand their roles and obligations.

B. Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group if a customer or
counterparty to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual
obligations and arises principally from the Group's loans and advances to
customers and investment debt securities. Credit risk includes counterparty,
concentration, underwriting and credit mitigation risks.

Management of credit risk

The Bank's Board of Directors created the Credit Committee which is
responsible for managing credit risk, including the following:

§  Formulating credit policies in consultation with business units, covering
collateral requirements, credit assessments, risk grading and reporting,
documentary and legal procedures, and compliance with regulatory and statutory
requirements;

§  Establishing the authorisation structure for the approval and renewal of
credit facilities. Authorisation limits are allocated in line with credit
policy;

§  Reviewing and assessing credit risk: The Credit Committee or High Value
Loan Committee assesses all credit exposures in excess of designated limits
before facilities are committed to customers. Renewals and reviews of
facilities are subject to a clearly documented process.

§  Limiting concentrations of exposures to counterparties, geographies and
industries, by issuer, credit rating band, market liquidity and country (for
debt securities);

§  Developing and maintaining risk gradings to categorise exposures
according to the degree of risk of default. The current risk grading consists
of 3 grades reflecting varying degrees of risk of default;

§  Developing and maintaining the Group's process for measuring ECL: This
includes processes for:

o  initial approval, regular validation and back-testing of the models used;

o  determining and monitoring significant increase in credit risk; and

o  the incorporation of forward-looking information; and

§  Reviewing compliance with agreed exposure limits. Regular reports on the
credit quality of portfolios are provided to the Credit Committee which may
require corrective action to be taken.

C. Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will encounter difficulty in meeting
obligations associated with its financial liabilities that are settled by
delivering cash or another financial asset. Liquidity risk arises from
mismatches in the timing and amounts of cash flows, which is inherent to the
Group's operations and investments.

Management of liquidity risk

The Group's approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible,
that it will always have enough liquidity to meet its liabilities when they
are due, under both normal and stressed conditions, without incurring
unacceptable losses or risking damage to the Group's reputation. The key
elements of the Group's liquidity strategy are as follows:

§  Funding base: offering six-months to five-year fixed term deposit
structure with no early redemption option. This means the Bank is not subject
to optionality risk where customers redeem fixed rate products where there may
be a better rate available within the market;

§  Funding profile: the Bank has a matched funding profile and does not
engage in maturity transformation which means that on a cumulative mismatch
position the Bank is forecast to be able to meet all liabilities as they fall
due;

§  Monitoring maturity mismatches, behavioural characteristics of the
Group's financial assets and financial liabilities, and the extent to which
the Group's assets are encumbered and so not available as potential collateral
for obtaining funding;

§  Liquidity buffer: the Bank maintains a liquidity buffer of 10.0% of its
deposit liabilities, with strict short-term mismatch limits of 0.0% for sight
to three months and -5.0% for sight to six months. This ensures that the Bank
is able to withstand any short-term liquidity shock; and

§  Interbank market: the Bank has no exposure to the interbank lending
market. The Bank has no reliance on liquidity via the wholesale markets. In
turn, if market conditions meant access to the wholesale funding was
constrained as per the 2008 credit crisis, this would have no foreseeable
effect on the Bank.

The Bank's liquidity position is monitored daily against internal and external
limits agreed with the FSA and according to the Bank's Liquidity Policy. The
Bank also has a Liquidity Contingency Policy and Liquidity Contingency
Committee in the event of a liquidity crisis or potential liquidity disruption
event occurring.

The Treasury department receives information from other business units
regarding the liquidity profile of their financial assets and financial
liabilities and details of other projected cash flows arising from projected
future business. Treasury then maintains a portfolio of short-term liquid
assets, largely made up of short-term liquid investment securities, loans and
advances to banks and other inter-bank facilities, to ensure that sufficient
liquidity is maintained within the Group as a whole.

Regular liquidity stress testing is conducted under a variety of scenarios
covering both normal and more severe market conditions. The scenarios are
developed considering both Group-specific events and market-related events
(e.g. prolonged market illiquidity).

D. Market risk

Market risk is the risk that of changes in market prices; e.g. interest rates,
equity prices, foreign exchange rates and credit spreads (not relating to
changes in the obligor's / issuer's credit standing), will affect the Group's
income or value of its holdings of financial instruments. The objective of the
Group's market risk management is to manage and control market risk exposures
within acceptable parameters to ensure the Group's solvency while optimising
the return on risk.

Management of market risks

Overall authority for market risk is vested in the Assets and Liabilities
Committee ("ALCO") which sets up limits for each type of risk. Group finance
is responsible for the development of risk management policies (subject to
review and approval by the ALCO) and for the day-to-day review of their
implementation.

Foreign exchange risk

The Bank is not subject to foreign exchange risks and its business is
conducted in pounds sterling.

Equity risk

The Group has investment in associates which are carried at cost adjusted for
the Group's share of net asset value. The Bank has access to these accounts.
The Bank's exposure to market risk is not considered significant given the low
carrying amount of the investment.

The Group does not hold any investments in listed equities.

Interest rate risk

The principal potential interest rate risk that the Bank is exposed to is the
risk that the fixed interest rate and term profile of its deposit base differs
materially from the fixed interest rate and term profile of its asset base, or
basis and term structure risk.

Additional interest rate risk may arise for banks where (a) customers are able
to react to market sensitivity and redeem fixed rate products and (b) where a
bank has taken out interest rate derivate hedges especially against
longer-term interest rate risk, where the hedge moves against the bank.
However, neither of these risks apply to the Bank.

Any interest rate risk assumed by the Bank will arise from a reduction in
interest rates, in a rising environment due to the nature of the Bank's
products and its matched funded profile. The Bank should be able to increase
its lending rate to match any corresponding rise in its cost of funds,
notwithstanding its inability to vary rates on its existing loan book. The
Bank attempts to efficiently match its deposit taking to its funding
requirements.

E. Operational risk

Operational risk is the risk of direct or indirect loss arising from a wide
variety of causes associated with the Group's processes, personnel, technology
and infrastructure, and from external factors other than credit, market and
liquidity risks - e.g. those arising from legal and regulatory requirements
and generally accepted standards of corporate behaviour. Operational risks
arise from all of the Group's operations.

Management of operational risk

The Group's objective is to manage operational risk so as to balance the
avoidance of financial losses and damage to the Group's reputation with
overall cost effectiveness and innovation. In all cases, Group policy requires
compliance with all applicable legal and regulatory requirements.

The Group has developed standards for the management of operational risk in
the following areas:

§  Business continuity planning;

§  Requirements for appropriate segregation of duties, including the
independent authorisation of transactions;

§  Requirements for the reconciliation and monitoring of transactions;

§  Compliance with regulatory and other legal requirements;

§  Documentation of controls and procedures;

§  Periodic assessment of operational risks faced, and the adequacy of
controls and procedures to address the risks identified;

§  Requirements for the reporting of operational losses and proposed
remedial action;

§  Development of contingency plans;

§  Training and professional development;

§  Ethical and business standards;

§  Information technology and cyber risks; and

§  Risk mitigation, including insurance where this is cost-effective.

Compliance with Group standards is supported by a programme of periodic
reviews undertaken by Internal Audit. The results of Internal Audit reviews
are reported to the GARCC.

44. Basis of measurement

The financial statements are prepared on a historical cost basis, except for
the following material items:

 Items                          Measurement basis
 FVTPL - Trading asset          Fair value
 FVOCI - Debt securities        Fair value
 Land and buildings             Fair value
 Deferred consideration         Fair value
 Net defined benefit liability  Fair value of plan assets less the present value of the defined benefit
                                obligation

45. Material accounting policies

A. New currently effective requirements

The Group has adopted the following new standards and amendments to standards,
including any consequential amendments to other standards, with a date of
initial application of 1 January 2025:

§  Amendments to IAS 21 - Lack of Exchangeability

No significant changes followed the implementation of these standards and
amendments.

B. Forthcoming requirements

The Group has not early adopted any standard, interpretation or amendment that
has been issued but is not yet effective. New standards and amendments to
standards, not yet effective:

§  Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments - Amendments to
IFRS 9 and IFS 7

§  Annual improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards - Volume 11

§  Contracts Referencing Nature-dependent Electricity (Amendments to IFRS 9
& IFRS 7)

§  IFRS 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements

The Group has assessed and is still assessing the impact of these amendments
on the Group Financial Statements.

The Group has consistently applied the following accounting policies to all
periods presented in these financial statements.

Set out below is an index of the material accounting policies, the details of
which are available on the pages that follow:

 Ref.  Note description                                                             No.
 A.    Basis of consolidation of subsidiaries and separate financial statements of  100
       the Company
 B.    Interest in equity accounted investees                                       101
 C.    Interest                                                                     101
 D.    Fee and commission income                                                    101
 E.    Leases                                                                       102
 F.    Income tax                                                                   103
 G.    Financial assets and financial liabilities                                   104
 H.    Cash and cash equivalents                                                    108
 I.    Loans and advances                                                           108
 J.    Property, plant and equipment                                                108
 K.    Intangibles assets and goodwill                                              109
 L.    Impairment of non-financial assets                                           109
 M.    Employee benefits                                                            110
 N.    Share capital and reserves                                                   111
 O.    Earnings per share ("EPS")                                                   111
 P.    Segmental reporting                                                          111

A. Basis of consolidation of subsidiaries and separate financial statements of
the Company

i. Business combinations

The Group accounts for business combinations using the acquisition method when
control is transferred to the Group.

Any contingent consideration is measured at fair value at the date of
acquisition. Contingent consideration is remeasured at fair value at each
reporting date and subsequent changes in the fair value of the contingent
consideration are recognised in profit or loss.

ii. Subsidiaries

Subsidiaries are entities controlled by the Group. The Group controls an
entity if it is exposed to, or has rights to, variable returns from its
involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those returns
through its control over the entity. The Group reassesses whether it has
control if there are changes to one or more of the elements of control. This
includes circumstances in which protective rights held (e.g. those resulting
from a lending relationship) become substantive and lead to the Group having
power over an investee. The financial statements of subsidiaries are included
in the consolidated financial statements from the date on which control
commences until the date on which control ceases.

iii. Non-controlling interests ("NCI")

NCI are measured initially at their proportionate share of the acquiree's
identifiable net assets at the date of acquisition.

Changes in the Group's interest in a subsidiary that do not result in a loss
of control are accounted for as equity transactions.

iv. Transactions eliminated on consolidation

Intra-group balances and transactions, and any unrealised income and expenses
arising from intra-group transactions, are eliminated in preparing the
consolidated financial statements. Unrealised gains arising from transactions
with equity-accounted investees are eliminated against the investment to the
extent of the Group's interest in the investee. Unrealised losses are
eliminated in the same way as unrealised gains but only to the extent that
there is no evidence of impairment.

v. Separate financial statements of the Company

In the separate financial statements of the Company, interests in
subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures are accounted for at cost less
impairment.

B. Interests in equity accounted investees

The Group's interests in equity accounted investees may comprise interests in
associates and joint ventures.

Associates are those entities in which the Group has significant influence,
but not control or joint control, over the financial and operating policies. A
joint venture is an arrangement in which the Group has joint control, whereby
the Group has rights to the net assets of the arrangement, rather than rights
to its assets and obligations for its liabilities.

Interests in associates and joint ventures are accounted for using the equity
method. They are initially recognised at cost, which includes transaction
costs. Subsequent to initial recognition, the consolidated financial
statements include the Group's share of the profit or loss and OCI of equity
accounted investees, until the date on which significant influence or joint
control ceases.

C. Interest

Interest income and expense are recognised in profit or loss using the
effective interest method.

i. Effective interest rate

The effective interest rate is the rate that exactly discounts estimated
future cash payments or receipts of the financial instrument to the gross
carrying amount of the financial asset or amortised cost of the financial
liability. When calculating the effective interest rate for financial assets,
the Group estimates future cash flows considering all contractual terms of the
financial instruments, including origination fees, loan incentives, broker
fees payable, estimated early repayment charges, balloon payments and all
other premiums and discounts. It also includes direct incremental transaction
costs related to the acquisition or issue of the financial instrument. The
calculation does not consider future credit losses.

ii. Amortised cost and gross carrying amount

The amortised cost of a financial asset or financial liability is the amount
at which the financial asset or financial liability is measured on initial
recognition minus the principal repayments, plus or minus the cumulative
amortisation using the effective interest method of any difference between
that initial amount and the maturity amount and, for financial assets,
adjusted for any expected credit loss allowance.

The gross carrying amount of a financial asset is the amortised cost of a
financial asset before adjusting for any expected credit loss allowance.

iii. Calculation of interest income and expense

In calculating interest income and expense, the effective interest rate is
applied to the gross carrying amount of the asset (when the asset is not
credit-impaired) or to the amortised cost of the liability.

However, for financial assets that have become credit-impaired subsequent to
initial recognition, interest income is calculated by applying the effective
interest rate to the net carrying amount of the financial asset. If the asset
is no longer credit-impaired, then the calculation of interest income reverts
to the gross basis.

D. Fee and commission income

The Group generates fee and commission income through provision of independent
financial advice, insurance brokerage agency, introducer of foreign exchange
services and commissions from brokering business finance for small and medium
sized enterprises.

Independent financial advice and insurance brokerage agency

Income represents commission arising on services and premiums relating to
policies and other investment products committed during the year, as well as
renewal commissions having arisen on services and premiums relating to
policies and other investment products committed during the year and previous
years and effective at the reporting date. Income is recognised on the date
that policies are submitted to product providers with an appropriate discount
being applied for policies not completed. As a way to estimate what is due at
the year-end, a "not proceeded with" rate of 10.0% for pipeline life insurance
products and 0.0% for non-life insurance pipeline is assumed. Renewal
commissions are estimated by taking the historical amount written pro-rata to
3 months.

Other income other than that directly related to the loans is recognised over
the period for which service has been provided or on completion of an act to
which the fee relates.

E. Leases

At inception of a contract, the Group assesses whether a contract is, or
contains, a lease. A contract is, or contains, a lease if the contract conveys
the right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in
exchange for consideration.

i. As a lessee

At commencement or on modification of a contract that contains a lease
component, the Group allocates the consideration in the contract to each lease
component on the basis of its relative stand-alone prices. However, for the
leases of property the Group has elected not to separate non-lease components
and as a result, accounts for the lease and non-lease components as a single
lease component.

The Group recognises a right-of-use asset and a lease liability at the lease
commencement date. The right-of-use asset is initially measured at cost, which
comprises the initial amount of the lease liability adjusted for any lease
payments made at or before the commencement date, plus any initial direct
costs incurred, less any lease incentives received.

The right-of-use asset is subsequently depreciated using the straight-line
method from the commencement date to the end of the lease term, unless the
lease transfers ownership of the underlying asset to the Group by the end of
the lease term or the cost of the right-of-use asset reflects that the Group
will exercise a purchase option. In that case the right-of-use asset will be
depreciated over the useful life of the underlying asset, which is determined
on the same basis as those of property and equipment. In addition, the
right-of-use asset is periodically reduced by impairment losses, if any, and
adjusted for certain remeasurements of the lease liability.

The lease liability is initially measured at the present value of the lease
payments that are not paid at the commencement date, discounted using the
interest rate implicit in the lease or, if that rate cannot be readily
determined, the Group's incremental borrowing rate. Generally, the Group uses
its incremental borrowing rate as the discount rate.

The Group determines its incremental borrowing rate by obtaining interest
rates from various external financing sources and makes certain adjustments to
reflect the terms of the lease and the type of the asset leased.

Lease payments included in the measurement of the lease liability comprise the
following:

§  Fixed payments, including in-substance fixed payments;

§  Variable lease payments that depend on an index or a rate, initially
measured using the index or rate as at the commencement date;

§  Amounts expected to be payable under a residual value guarantee; and

§  The exercise price under a purchase option that the Group is reasonably
certain to exercise, lease payments in an optional renewal period if the Group
is reasonably certain to exercise an extension option, and penalties for early
termination of a lease unless the Group is reasonably certain not to terminate
early.

The lease liability is measured at amortised cost using the effective interest
method. It is remeasured when there is a change in future lease payments
arising from a change in an index or rate, if there is a change in the Group's
estimate of the amount expected to be payable under a residual value
guarantee, if the Group changes its assessment of whether it will exercise a
purchase, extension or termination option or if there is a revised
in‑substance fixed lease payment.

When the lease liability is remeasured in this way, a corresponding adjustment
is made to the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset, or is recorded in
profit or loss if the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset has been
reduced to zero.

The Group presents right-of-use assets that do not meet the definition of
investment property in 'property, plant and equipment' and lease liabilities
in 'loans and borrowings' in the statement of financial position.

Short-term leases and leases of low-value assets

The Group has elected not to recognise right-of-use assets and lease
liabilities for leases of low-value assets and short-term leases, including IT
equipment. The Group recognises the lease payments associated with these
leases as an expense on a straight-line basis over the lease term.

ii. As a lessor

At inception or on modification of a contract that contains a lease component,
the Group allocates the consideration in the contract to each lease component
on the basis of their relative stand-alone prices.

When the Group acts as a lessor, it determines at lease inception whether each
lease is a finance or an operating lease.

To classify each lease, the Group makes an overall assessment of whether the
lease transfers substantially all of the risks and rewards incidental to
ownership of the underlying asset. If this is the case, then the lease is a
finance lease; if not, then it is an operating lease. As part of this
assessment, the Group considers certain indicators such as whether the lease
is for the major part of the economic life of the asset.

Finance leases and HP contracts

When assets are subject to a finance lease or HP contract, the present value
of the lease payments is recognised as a receivable. The difference between
the gross receivable and the present value of the receivable is recognised as
unearned finance income. HP and lease income is recognised over the term of
the contract or lease reflecting a constant periodic rate of return on the net
investment in the contract or lease. Initial direct costs, which may include
commissions and legal fees directly attributable to negotiating and arranging
the contract or lease, are included in the measurement of the net investment
of the contract or lease at inception.

Operating leases

Leases in which a significant portion of the risks and rewards of ownership
are retained by the lessor are classified as operating leases. Payments made
under operating leases (net of any incentives received from the lessor) are
charged to profit or loss and other comprehensive income on a straight-line
basis over the period of the lease.

F. Income tax

Current and deferred taxation

Current taxation relates to the estimated corporation tax payable in the
current financial year. Deferred taxation is provided in full, using the
liability method, on temporary differences arising between the tax bases of
assets and liabilities and their carrying amounts. Deferred tax is not
recognised for taxable temporary differences arising on the initial
recognition of goodwill and temporary differences related to investments in
subsidiaries and associates to the extent that the Group is able to control
the timing of the reversal of the temporary differences and it is probable
that they will not reverse in the foreseeable future.

Deferred taxation is determined using tax rates, and laws that have been
enacted or substantially enacted by the reporting date and are expected to
apply when the related deferred tax is realised. Deferred taxation assets are
recognised to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profit will
be available against which the temporary differences can be utilised.

G. Financial assets and financial liabilities

i. Recognition and initial measurement

The Group initially recognises loans and advances, deposits, debt securities
issued and subordinated liabilities on the date on which they are originated.
All other financial instruments, including regular-way purchases and sales of
financial assets are recognised on the trade date, which is the date on which
the Group becomes party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.

A financial asset or financial liability is measured initially at fair value
plus, for an item not at FVTPL, transaction costs that are directly
attributable to its acquisition or issue.

ii. Classification

Financial assets

On initial recognition, a financial asset is classified as measured at
amortised cost, FVOCI or FVTPL.

A financial asset is measured at amortised cost if it meets both of the
following conditions and is not designated as at FVTPL:

§  The asset is held within a business model whose objective is to hold
assets to collect contractual cash flows; and

§  The contractual terms of the financial asset give rise on specified dates
to cash flows that are solely payments of principal and interest ("SPPI").

A debt instrument is measured at FVOCI only if it meets both of the following
conditions and is not designated as FVTPL:

§  The asset is held within a business model whose objective is achieved by
both collecting contractual cash flows and selling financial assets; and

§  The contractual terms of the financial asset give rise on specified dates
to cash flows that are SPPI.

On initial recognition of an equity investment that is not held for trading,
the Group may irrevocably elect to present subsequent changes in fair value in
OCI. This election is made on an investment-by-investment basis.

All other financial assets are classified as measured at FVTPL.

In addition, on initial recognition, the Group may irrevocably designate a
financial asset that otherwise meets the requirements to be measured at
amortised cost or at FVOCI as at FVTPL if doing so eliminates or significantly
reduces an accounting mismatch that would otherwise arise.

Business model assessment

The Group makes an assessment of the objective of a business model in which an
asset is held at a portfolio level because this best reflects the way the
business is managed and information provided to management.

Assessment of whether contractual cash flows are solely payments of principal
and interest

For the purposes of this assessment, 'principal' is defined as the fair value
of the financial asset on initial recognition. 'Interest' is defined as
consideration for the time value of money and for the credit risk associated
with the principal amount outstanding during a particular period of time and
for other basic lending risks and costs (e.g. liquidity risk and
administrative costs), as well as profit margin.

In assessing whether the contractual cash flows are SPPI, the Group considers
the contractual terms of the instrument. This includes assessing whether the
financial asset contains a contractual term that could change the timing or
amount of contractual cash flows such that it would not meet this condition.

Financial liabilities

The Group classifies its financial liabilities, other than financial
guarantees and loan commitments, as measured at amortised cost.

iii. Derecognition

Financial assets

The Group derecognises a financial asset when the contractual rights to the
cash flows from the financial asset expire, or when it transfers the rights to
receive the contractual cash flows in a transaction in which substantially all
of the risks and rewards of ownership of the financial asset are transferred
or in which the Group neither transfers nor retains substantially all of the
risks and rewards of ownership and it does not retain control of the financial
asset.

On derecognition of a financial asset, the difference between the carrying
amount of the asset (or the carrying amount allocated to the portion of the
asset derecognised) and the sum of (i) the consideration received (including
any new asset obtained less any new liability assumed) and (ii) any cumulative
gain or loss that had been recognised in OCI is recognised in profit or loss.

Financial liabilities

The Group derecognises a financial liability when its contractual obligations
are discharged or cancelled, or expire.

iv. Offsetting

Financial assets and financial liabilities are offset and the net amount
presented in the statement of financial position when, and only when, the
Group currently has a legally enforceable right to set off the amounts and it
intends either to settle them on a net basis or to realise the asset and
settle the liability simultaneously.

Income and expenses are presented on a net basis only when permitted under
IFRS, or for gains and losses arising from a group of similar transactions
such as in the Group's trading activity.

v. Fair value measurement

Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to
transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at
the measurement date in the principal or, in its absence, the most
advantageous market to which the Group has access at the date. The fair value
of a liability reflects its non‑performance risk.

The Group recognises transfers between levels of the fair value hierarchy as
of the end of the reporting period during which the change has occurred.

The Group measures fair values using the following fair value hierarchy, which
reflects the significance of the inputs used in making the measurements:

§  Level 1: inputs that are quoted market prices (unadjusted) in active
markets for identical instruments;

§  Level 2: inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are
observable either directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from
prices). This category includes instruments valued using: quoted market prices
in active markets for similar instruments; quoted prices for identical or
similar instruments in markets that are considered less than active; or other
valuation techniques in which all significant inputs are directly or
indirectly observable from market data; and

§  Level 3: inputs that are unobservable. This category includes all
instruments for which the valuation technique includes inputs not based on
observable data and the unobservable inputs have a significant effect on the
instrument's valuation. This category includes instruments that are valued
based on quoted prices for similar instruments for which significant
unobservable adjustments or assumptions are required to reflect differences
between the instruments.

The fair values of financial assets and financial liabilities that are traded
in active markets are based on quoted market prices or dealer price
quotations. For all other financial instruments, the Group determines fair
values using other valuation techniques.

For financial instruments that trade infrequently and have little price
transparency, fair value is less objective, and requires varying degrees of
judgement depending on liquidity, concentration, uncertainty of market
factors, pricing assumptions and other risks affecting the specific
instrument.

vi. Impairment

A financial instrument that is not credit-impaired on initial recognition is
classified in 'Stage 1' and has its credit risk continuously monitored by the
Group.

If a SICR since initial recognition is identified, the financial instrument is
moved to 'Stage 2' but is not yet deemed to be credit impaired.

§  An SICR is always deemed to occur when the borrower is 30 days past due
on its contractual payments. If the Group becomes aware ahead of this time of
non-compliance or financial difficulties of the borrower, such as loss of
employment, avoiding contact with the Group then an SICR has also deemed to
occur; and

§  A receivable is always deemed to be in default and credit-impaired when
the borrower is 90 days past due on its contractual payments or earlier if the
Group becomes aware of severe financial difficulties such as bankruptcy,
individual voluntary arrangement, abscond or disappearance, fraudulent
activity and other similar events.

If the financial instrument is credit-impaired, the financial instrument is
then moved to 'Stage 3'. Financial instruments in Stage 3 have their ECL
measured based on expected credit losses on a lifetime basis.

Loss allowances for lease receivables are always measured at an amount equal
to lifetime ECL.

12-month ECL are the portion of ECL that result from default events on a
financial instrument that are possible within the 12 months after the
reporting date. Financial instruments for which a 12-month ECL is recognised
are referred to as 'Stage 1 financial instruments'.

Lifetime ECL are the ECL that result from all possible default events over the
expected life of a financial instrument. Financial instruments for which a
lifetime ECL is recognised but which are not credit-impaired are referred to
as 'Stage 2 financial instruments'.

Measurement of ECL

After a detailed review, the Group devised and implemented an impairment
methodology in light of the IFRS 9 requirements outlined above noting the
following:

§  The Group has identified and documented key drivers of credit risk and
credit losses its financial instruments and using an analysis of historical
data has estimated the relationship between macroeconomic variables and credit
risk and credit losses;

§  The ECL is derived by reviewing the Group's loss rate and loss given
default over the past 8 years by product and geographical segment; and

§  If the Group holds objective evidence through specifically assessing a
credit-impaired receivable and believes it will go on to completely recover
the debt due to the collateral held and cooperation with the borrower, then no
IFRS 9 provision is made.

ECL are probability-weighted estimates of credit losses. They are measured as
follows:

§  Financial assets that are not credit-impaired at the reporting date: as
the present value of all cash shortfalls (i.e. the difference between the cash
flows due to the entity in accordance with the contract and the cash flows
that the Group expects to receive);

§  Financial assets that are credit-impaired at the reporting date: as the
difference between the gross carrying amount and the present value of
estimated future cash flows; and

§  Undrawn loan commitments: as the present value of the difference between
the contractual cash flows that are due to the Group if the commitment is
drawn down and the cash flows that the Group expects to receive.

Credit-impaired financial assets

At each reporting date, the Group assesses whether financial assets carried at
amortised cost and debt financial assets carried at FVOCI, and finance lease
receivables are credit-impaired (referred to as 'Stage 3 financial assets'). A
financial asset is credit-impaired when one or more events that have a
detrimental impact on the estimated future cash flows of the financial asset
have occurred.

Evidence that a financial asset is credit-impaired includes the following
observable date:

§  Significant financial difficulty of the borrower or issuer;

§  A breach of contract such as a default or past due event;

§  The restructuring of a loan or advance by the Group on terms that the
Group would not consider otherwise;

§  It is becoming probable that the borrower will enter bankruptcy or
another type of financial reorganisation; or

§  The disappearance of an active market for a security because of financial
difficulties.

A loan that has been renegotiated due to a deterioration in the borrower's
condition is usually considered to be credit-impaired unless there is evidence
that the risk of not receiving contractual cash flows has reduced
significantly and there are no other indicators of impairment. In addition, a
retail loan that is overdue for 90 days or more is considered credit-impaired
even when the regulatory definition of default is different.

In assessing of whether an investment in sovereign debt is credit impaired,
the Group considers the following factors:

§  The market's assessment of creditworthiness as reflected in the bond
yields;

§  The rating agencies' assessments of creditworthiness;

§  The country's ability to access the capital markets for new debt
issuance;

§  The probability of debt being restructured, resulting in holders
suffering losses through voluntary or mandatory debt forgiveness; and

§  The international support mechanisms in place to provide the necessary
support as 'lender of last resort' to that country, as well as the intention,
reflected in public statements, of governments and agencies to use those
mechanisms. This includes an assessment of the depth of those mechanisms and,
irrespective of the political intent, whether there is the capacity to fulfil
the required criteria.

Presentation of allowance for ECL in the statement of financial position

Loss allowances for ECL are presented in the statement of financial position
as follows:

§  Financial assets measured at amortised cost: as a deduction from the
gross carrying amount of the assets;

§  Loan commitments: generally, as a provision; and

§  Debt instruments measured at FVOCI: no loss allowance is recognised in
the statement of financial position because the carrying amount of these
assets is their fair value. However, the loss allowance is disclosed and is
recognised in the fair value reserve.

Write-off

Loans and debt securities are written off (either partially or in full) when
there is no reasonable expectation of recovering a financial asset in its
entirety or a portion thereof. This is generally the case when the Group
determines that the borrower does not have assets or sources of income that
could generate sufficient cash flows to repay the amounts subject to the
write-off. This assessment is carried out at the individual asset level.

Recoveries of amounts previously written off are included in 'impairment
losses on financial instruments' in the statement of profit or loss and OCI.

Financial assets that are written off could still be subject to enforcement
activities in order to comply with the Group's procedures for recovery of
amounts due.

H. Cash and cash equivalents

For the purpose of the statement of cash flows, cash and cash equivalents
comprise cash and deposit balances with an original maturity date of three
months or less.

I. Loans and advances

Loans and advances' captions in the statement of financial position include:

§  Loans and advances measured at amortised cost (see note 44 (G)). They are
initially measured at fair value plus incremental direct transaction costs,
and subsequently at their amortised cost using the effective interest method;
and

§  Finance lease receivables (see note 44 (E)).

J. Property, plant and equipment

Items of property, plant and equipment are stated at historical cost less
accumulated depreciation (see below). Historical cost includes expenditure
that is directly attributable to the acquisition of the items. Buildings are
carried at a revalued amount, being fair value at the date of revaluation,
less subsequent depreciation and impairment.

If an asset's carrying amount is increased as a result of a revaluation, the
increase shall be recognised in other comprehensive income and accumulated in
equity under the heading of revaluation surplus. However, the increase shall
be recognised in profit or loss to the extent that it reverses a revaluation
decrease of the same asset previously recognised in profit or loss.

If an asset's carrying amount is decreased as a result of a revaluation, the
decrease shall be recognised in profit or loss. However, the decrease shall be
recognised in other comprehensive income to the extent of any credit balance
existing in the revaluation surplus in respect of that asset. The decrease
recognised in other comprehensive income reduces the amount accumulated in
equity under the heading of revaluation surplus.

The assets' residual values and useful economic lives are reviewed, and
adjusted if appropriate, at each reporting date. An asset's carrying amount is
written down immediately to its recoverable amount if the asset's carrying
amount is greater than its estimated recoverable amount.

When parts of an item of property, plant and equipment have different useful
lives, those components are accounted for as separate items of property, plant
and equipment.

Depreciation

Assets are depreciated on a straight-line basis, so as to write off the book
value over their estimated useful lives. The estimated useful lives of
property, plant and equipment are as follows:

Property, plant and equipment

 Leasehold improvements   to expiration of the lease
 IT equipment             4 - 5 years
 Motor vehicles           2 - 5 years
 Furniture and equipment  4 - 10 years
 Plant and machinery      5 - 20 years

K. Intangible assets and goodwill

i. Goodwill

Goodwill that arises on the acquisition of subsidiaries is measured at cost
less accumulated impairment losses.

ii. Software

Software acquired by the Group is measured at cost less accumulated
amortisation and any accumulated impairment losses.

Expenditure on internally developed software is recognised as an asset when
the Group is able to demonstrate: that the product is technically feasible,
its intention and ability to complete the development and use the software in
a manner that will generate future economic benefits, and that it can reliably
measure the costs to complete the development. The capitalised costs of
internally developed software include all costs directly attributable to
developing the software and capitalised borrowing costs, and are amortised
over its useful life. Internally developed software is stated at capitalised
cost, less accumulated amortisation and any accumulated impairment losses.

Software is amortised on a straight-line basis in profit or loss over its
estimated useful life, from the date on which it is available for use.
Amortisation methods, useful lives and residual values are reviewed at each
reporting date and adjusted if appropriate.

iii. Other

Intangible assets that are acquired by an entity and having finite useful
lives are measured at cost less accumulated amortisation and any accumulated
impairment losses.

Intangible assets with indefinite useful lives that are acquired or built are
carried at cost less accumulated impairment losses. Intangible assets with
indefinite useful lives are not amortised but instead are subject to
impairment testing at least annually.

The useful lives of intangibles are as follows:

Intangible assets

 Customer contracts and lists               to expiration of the agreement
 Intellectual property rights               4 years - indefinite
 Website development costs                  indefinite
 IT Software and website development costs  5 years

Included in intellectual property rights is capitalised costs for acquiring a
UK Banking licence. The banking licence is assumed to have an indefinite life
as there is no foreseeable limit to the period over which the asset is
expected to generate benefits for the business. Costs related to obtaining
this asset are held at cost and are not being amortised.

L. Impairment of non-financial assets

At each reporting date, the Group reviews the carrying amounts of its
non-financial assets (other than deferred tax assets) to determine whether
there is any indication of impairment. If any such indication exists, the
asset's recoverable amount is estimated. Goodwill and indefinite useful life
intangible assets are tested annually for impairment.

For impairment testing, assets are grouped together into the smallest group of
assets that generates cash inflows from continuing use that is largely
independent of the cash inflows of other assets or Cash Generating Units
("CGUs"). Goodwill arising from a business combination is allocated to CGUs or
groups of CGUs that are expected to benefit from the synergies of the
combination.

The recoverable amount of an asset or CGU is the greater of its value in use
and its fair value less cost to sell. Value in use is based on the estimated
future cash flows, discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount
rate that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money and
the risks specific to the asset or CGU.

An impairment loss is recognised if the carrying amount of an asset or CGU
exceeds its recoverable amount.

The Group's corporate assets do not generate separate cash inflows and are
used by more than one CGU. Corporate assets are allocated to CGUs on a
reasonable and consistent basis and tested for impairment as part of the
testing of the CGUs to which the corporate assets are located.

Impairment losses are recognised in profit or loss. They are allocated first
to reduce the carrying amount of any goodwill allocated to the CGU, and then
to reduce the carrying amounts of the other assets in the CGU on a pro rata
basis.

An impairment loss in respect of goodwill is not reversed. For other assets,
an impairment loss is reversed only to the extent that the asset's carrying
amount does not exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined,
net of depreciation or amortisation, if no impairment loss had been
recognised.

M. Employee benefits

i. Long-term employee benefits

Pension obligations

The Group has pension obligations arising from both defined benefit and
defined contribution pension plans.

A defined contribution pension plan is one under which the Group pays fixed
contributions into a separate fund and has no legal or constructive
obligations to pay further contributions. Defined benefit pension plans define
an amount of pension benefit that an employee will receive on retirement,
usually dependent on one or more factors such as age, years of service and
remuneration.

Remeasurements of the net defined benefit liability, which comprise actuarial
gains and losses, the return on plan assets (excluding interest) and the
effect of the asset ceiling (if any, excluding interest), are recognised
immediately in OCI. The Group determines the net interest expense (income) on
the net defined benefit liability (asset) for the period by applying the
discount rate used to measure the defined benefit obligation at the beginning
of the annual period to the then-net defined benefit liability (asset), taking
into account any changes in the net defined benefit liability (asset) during
the period as a result of contributions and benefit payments. Net interest
expense and other expenses related to defined benefit plans are recognised in
profit or loss.

The statement of financial position records as an asset or liability as
appropriate, the difference between the market value of the plan assets and
the present value of the accrued plan liabilities. The defined benefit pension
plan obligation is calculated by independent actuaries using the projected
unit credit method and a discount rate based on the yield on high quality
rated corporate bonds.

The Group's defined contribution pension obligations arise from contributions
paid to a Group personal pension plan, an ex gratia pension plan, employee
personal pension plans and employee co-operative insurance plans. For these
pension plans, the amounts charged to the income statement represent the
contributions payable during the year.

ii. Share-based compensation

The Group maintains a share option programme which allows certain Group
employees to acquire shares of the Group. The change in the fair value of
options granted is recognised as an employee expense with a corresponding
change in equity. The fair value of the options is measured at grant date and
spread over the period during which the employees become unconditionally
entitled to the options.

At each reporting date, the Group revises its estimate of the number of
options that are expected to vest and recognises the impact of the revision to
original estimates, if any, in the income statement, with a corresponding
adjustment to equity.

The fair value is estimated using a proprietary binomial probability model.
The proceeds received, net of any directly attributable transaction costs, are
credited to share capital (nominal value) and share premium when the options
are exercised.

N. Share capital and reserves

Share issue costs

Incremental costs that are directly attributable to the issue of an equity
instrument are deducted from the initial measurement of the equity
instruments.

O. Earnings per share ("EPS")

The Group presents basic and diluted EPS data for its Ordinary Shares. Basic
EPS is calculated by dividing the profit or loss that is attributable to
ordinary Shareholders of MFG by the weighted-average number of Ordinary Shares
outstanding during the period. Diluted EPS is determined by adjusting profit
or loss that is attributable to Ordinary Shareholders and the weighted-average
number of Ordinary Shares outstanding for the effects of all dilutive
potential Ordinary Shares, which comprise share options granted to employees.

P. Segmental reporting

A segment is a distinguishable component of the Group that is engaged either
in providing products or services (business segment), or in providing products
or services within a particular economic environment (geographical segment),
which is subject to risks and rewards that are different from those of other
segments. The Group's primary format for segmental reporting is based on
business segments.

An operating segment is a component of the Group that engages in business
activities from which it may earn revenues and incur expenses, including
revenues and expenses relating to transactions with any of the Group's other
components, whose operating results are regularly reviewed by the CEO who is
the chief operating decision maker ("CODM") to make decisions about resources
to be allocated to the segment and assess its performance, and for which
discrete financial information is available.

Segment results reported to the CEO include items that are directly
attributable to a segment as well as those that can be allocated on a
reasonable basis.

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