Receive free Metro Bank updates
We’ll send you a myFT Daily Digest email rounding up the latest Metro Bank news every morning.
Shares in Metro Bank tumbled 27 per cent on Thursday after reports that the group was in talks about raising funds from investors.
The UK challenger bank is in negotiations about raising £250mn in equity funding and £350mn in debt to shore up its balance sheet, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.
The shares, which had already fallen sharply in recent weeks, dropped to 37.05p in early trading, leaving the bank’s market capitalisation at £62mn.
“Metro Bank notes the recent press speculation regarding a potential capital raise,” the bank said in a statement on Thursday.
“The company is evaluating the merits of a range of options, including a combination of equity issuance, debt issuance and/or refinancing and asset sales. No decision has been made on whether to proceed with any of these options,” it said.
Rating agency Fitch put Metro on negative watch on Wednesday, citing increased risks to its business model, capital position and funding.
Metro’s shares have now fallen more than 60 per cent since September 12, when the bank said UK regulators had failed to approve a plan that would allow it to run its mortgage business at a lower cost.
Metro had spent five years seeking permission from regulators at the Bank of England to use its own models to estimate the risk on its mortgage book.
Metro became the first new high street bank in more than a century when it launched in 2010, but was rocked by a 2019 misreporting scandal that led to the exit of its chair and chief executive. Last year, the Financial Conduct Authority fined the bank and censured two former top executives over the episode.
Once the highest-profile of a wave of new lenders seeking to challenge the UK’s established banks, Metro has been beset by problems in recent years. The bank was co-founded by Vernon Hill, an American who promised to revolutionise UK banking by improving customer service and introducing longer opening hours at branches.
The bank said on Thursday that it “continues to be well positioned for future growth”, pointing to its underlying profits for the past three quarters.