1st Quarter Results

Source: RNS
RNS Number : 3188D
Lion Finance Group PLC
07 May 2026
 

 

 



 

Contents

1Q26 consolidated unaudited results

Earnings call on 7 May 2026, 14:00 BST

Segmentation guide

CEO statement

Macroeconomic developments: Georgia

Macroeconomic developments: Armenia

1Q26 unaudited consolidated results

Business Division results

Georgian Financial Services (GFS)

Armenian Financial Services (AFS)

Other Businesses

Unaudited consolidated financial information

Non-financial information

Additional information

Glossary

Lion Finance Group PLC profile

Further information

Forward-looking statements

 

1Q26 consolidated unaudited results

Lion Finance Group PLC announces its unaudited consolidated financial results for the first quarter of 2026 (1Q26). Unless otherwise noted, 1Q26 results are compared year-on-year with 1Q25 results and quarter-on-quarter with 4Q25 results adjusted for one-off items.

The results are prepared in accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards, are unaudited and derived from management accounts.

Earnings call on 7 May 2026, 14:00 BST

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iPgFBAz5Sbe6lUYzqfdr7w

Webinar ID: 983 6026 0923 | Passcode: 331608

Segmentation guide

The Group's results are presented by the following Business Divisions: 1) Georgian Financial Services (GFS), 2) Armenian Financial Services (AFS), and 3) Other Businesses.

• 

GFS mainly comprises JSC Bank of Georgia and the investment bank JSC Galt and Taggart.

• 

AFS includes Ameriabank CJSC.

• 

Other Businesses includes JSC Belarusky Narodny Bank (BNB), which serves retail and SME clients in Belarus; JSC Digital Area, a digital ecosystem in Georgia including e-commerce, ticketing, and inventory management SaaS; Lion Finance Group PLC, the holding company; and other small entities and intragroup eliminations.

Lion Finance Group PLC delivered consolidated 1Q26 profit of GEL 585.0 million (+14.0% y-o-y), with return on average equity of 27.4%.

The Company declared a quarterly dividend of GEL 2.85 per share in respect of 1Q26 and announced a further GEL 55.0m share buyback and cancellation programme.

Group performance highlights

Driven by the sustained expansion of our customer franchises in Georgia and Armenia, the Group delivered another set of strong results in the first quarter of 2026. This expansion, reflected in a growing active customer base and a larger balance sheet, supported a 15.7% increase in operating income before cost of risk to GEL 735.9m and a 14.0% y-o-y increase in profit to GEL 585.0 million. Consequently, the Group achieved a high return on average equity (ROAE) of 27.4% for the period.

The Group's loan book reached GEL 41,881.9m as at 31 March 2026, up 23.1% y-o-y in constant currency (cc). The growth was fuelled by loan book expansion across both the Georgian (GFS) and Armenian (AFS) operations, which recorded year-on-year constant currency increases of 17.8% and 34.6%, respectively. Compared with 31 December 2025, the GFS loan book was up 3.8%, while the AFS loan book increased by 6.2%, resulting in a total Group loan growth of 4.4% (in cc). 

Client deposits and notes totalled GEL 39,699.0m as at 31 March 2026, reflecting a 17.5% y-o-y increase in constant currency (cc). GFS deposits rose by 13.0% y-o-y, while AFS deposits increased by 29.7% y-o-y. Compared with 31 December 2025, GFS deposits were up 2.4%, while AFS deposits increased by 5.7%, resulting in a total Group deposit growth of 2.6% (in cc).

The Group maintained healthy asset quality, with the cost of credit risk ratio at 0.3% in 1Q26 (0.2% in 1Q25 and 0.3% in 4Q25), while the NPL ratio was stable at 2.1% as at 31 March 2026 (2.0% as at 31 March 2025 and 2.1% as at 31 December 2025).

Operating income was up 15.0% y-o-y to GEL 1,125.8m in 1Q26. The annual top-line growth was primarily driven by net interest income generated by both GFS and AFS, complemented by net fee and commission income generation across both operations.


In 1Q26, non-interest income increased by 7.2% y-o-y to GEL 316.2m, driven by net fee and commission income growth across both GFS and AFS. GFS delivered a 25.4% y-o-y growth in net fee and commission income. At AFS, net fee and commission income rose by 46.4% y-o-y, supported by significant items in 1Q26 (a GEL 5.5m advisory fee and a GEL 2.0m currency conversion fee reclassification from net FX income aligned with Group accounting policies; see details on pages 11 to 12). Net foreign currency gains declined across the board, reflecting lower income at GFS on the back of lower currency volatility and the reclassification effect mentioned above at AFS.

The Group's operating expenses increased by 13.8% y-o-y to GEL 390.3m in 1Q26. The y-o-y growth was driven primarily by GFS, which saw expenses rise by 16.6% y-o-y, mainly driven by higher staff costs (see details on page 9).  

Capital adequacy and liquidity positions for both Bank of Georgia and Ameriabank remained comfortably above the minimum regulatory requirements (for details, see pages 10 and 12).

The Group continued to demonstrate sustained customer franchise growth. On a year-on-year basis, Bank of Georgia's Retail Digital Monthly Active Users (Digital MAU) grew by 13.6% to 1.9 million individuals, while Ameriabank's Retail Digital MAU surged by 47.8%, reaching over 362 thousand individuals. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, these figures increased by 1.9% and 7.7% at Bank of Georgia and Ameriabank, respectively.

CEO statement

This quarter was marked by a historic event for the Group: our inclusion into the FTSE 100 index, validating two decades of consistent execution. Over this period, we have built a highly profitable regional banking platform, expanding our total assets more than fifty-fold as we deepened customer relationships, strengthened digital capabilities, and established leading market positions.

The sustained track record of strong performance that has defined the last two decades has continued into the first quarter of 2026. The Group delivered an ROAE of 27.4% on profits of GEL 585.0 million (an increase of 14.0% year-on-year), driven by customer franchise growth and a 23.1% year-on-year expansion of our loan book in constant currency. Consequently, our book value per share rose by 21.5% year-on-year to GEL 207.82.

Macroeconomic conditions in Georgia and Armenia remained strong in early 2026, underpinned by solid domestic demand and resilient external inflows. Reflecting the sustained resilience of both economies and their strong early-year performance, we have revised our 2026 real GDP growth forecasts upward, to 7.0% for Georgia and 6.0% for Armenia. Although conflict escalation in the Middle East may weigh on the near-term outlook primarily through energy market volatility and higher inflation, both economies remain well positioned, supported by ample reserves, prudent fiscal policies, and credible monetary management. A prolonged conflict could also create upside through the Middle Corridor and shifting capital and tourism flows.

In Georgia, our business delivered a solid first-quarter, driven by a deeply embedded customer-centric approach and our continued focus on being the main bank in customers' daily lives. This focus is clearly evidenced by our customer Net Promoter Score of 75, maintaining the momentum from 2025. Our digital leadership also advanced, with Retail Digital Monthly Active Users rising by 13.6% year-on-year to 1.9 million individuals. Importantly, digital engagement stood at 52.7%, meaning that, on average, over half of our digitally active users interact with our platforms daily. Overall, on the financial front, our loan book grew by 17.8% year-on-year in constant currency, while profit reached GEL 452.1m, up 11.6% year-on-year, with an ROAE of 31.5%.

Amidst energy price volatility and subsequent inflationary pressures in Georgia, we expect the National Bank to maintain a moderately tight monetary policy stance throughout the year. Ongoing strong loan demand in key segments positions us to capitalise on this favorable rate environment, which will support our net interest income. At the same time, we see lower currency volatility translating into reduced foreign exchange gains. Beyond our core activities, we continue to experiment and deploy different AI applications, including personalised product recommendations and process automations, to improve customer experience and operational efficiency. While it is too early to exactly pinpoint the financial impact of these initiatives, we are focused on developing technologies that create tangible value for both our customers and investors.

In Armenia, Ameriabank continued to build on its established market position while advancing its strategic priorities in retail banking. The franchise demonstrated sustained momentum throughout the quarter, with retail Digital MAU surpassing 362 thousand individuals - a 47.8% increase year-on-year. This digital adoption reflects the successful rollout of enhanced capabilities across our MyAmeria platform, including a loyalty programme and product and user experience improvements. The loan book expanded by 34.6% year-on-year in constant currency, while deposits grew by 29.7%, reinforcing Ameriabank's market leadership. This performance generated a profit of GEL 129.4m, up 35.5% year-on-year, with an ROAE of 21.8%. Armenia's vibrant economy and the substantial runway for retail banking development position AFS as an important growth engine for the Group in the years ahead.

Reflecting our continued financial strength and commitment to shareholder returns, the Board today declared a quarterly dividend of GEL 2.85 per share in respect of 1Q26 and approved a further GEL 55.0m share buyback and cancellation programme.

Georgia and Armenia remain among the broader region's fastest-growing economies, solidifying their reputations as stable, business-friendly markets and emerging regional hubs for technology, transport, and services. The economic resilience and prudent macroeconomic management demonstrated by both nations provide a strong foundation for growth as regional connectivity improves. Our established presence and customer loyalty in both markets place us in an excellent position to benefit from their continued economic expansion.

I thank our colleagues for their continued commitment and all our stakeholders for their ongoing support.

Archil Gachechiladze                                                                                                      

CEO, Lion Finance Group PLC

6 May 2026

Our key targets for the medium term remain:

c.15% annual growth of the Group's loan book.

20%+ return on average equity.

30-50% payout ratio (dividends and share buyback and cancellation programme).

Macroeconomic developments: Georgia

Sustained economic growth momentum

Georgia's economy demonstrated a strong start to 2026, with real GDP expanding, according to preliminary data, by 9.1% y-o-y in the first quarter, driven mainly by services. We have therefore revised our full-year real GDP growth forecast upward, from 6.0% to 7.0%. This outlook is supported by consumption, resilient external inflows, and a projected rebound in public capital spending.

While the recent escalation in the Middle East has introduced downside risks mainly via higher energy prices, Georgia's direct exposure to the region is limited. The country's diversified external inflows and ample policy buffers provide resilience against potential shocks. Furthermore, the conflict could create upside potential through the diversion of capital and tourism flows towards Georgia.

Strong external flows

External inflows remained strong and diversified in 1Q26. The trade deficit narrowed as merchandise exports increased by 23.4% y-o-y, while imports declined by 7.1% y-o-y (or grew 5.0% excluding prior year's one-offs). International tourism revenues grew modestly by 0.5% y-o-y, with increased arrivals from Europe offsetting a decline from the Middle East and South Asia. Inbound money transfers remained robust, rising by 14.2% y-o-y, reflecting strong remittance inflows from the EU, the US, and Russia.

Stable GEL and ample international reserves

1Q26, the Georgian Lari (GEL) remained stable against the US dollar, while appreciating by 2.2% against the Euro and by 2.0% against the Pound Sterling. The GEL's resilience against the US dollar was underpinned by strong external inflows, deposit de-dollarisation, and prudent macroeconomic policies. The National Bank of Georgia (NBG) continued its foreign currency purchases in January and February and was broadly neutral in March, supporting a robust level of international reserves at USD 6.3 billion by the end of March 2026 (up 2.6% q-o-q). We expect the GEL to remain broadly stable in the medium term, supported by sound macroeconomic fundamentals and external liquidity buffers.

Above-target inflation and moderately tight monetary policy

Inflationary pressures persisted in early 2026, primarily due to rising food prices and emerging fuel price pressures. This drove headline CPI inflation to 5.9% year-over-year in April 2026, up from 4.0% in December 2025. We expect inflation to average 4.8% for the year, remaining above the NBG's 3% target, before returning to target next year provided that supply-side pressures ease.

In May 2026, the NBG raised its refinancing rate by 25 bps to 8.25% to keep inflation expectations well-anchored amid elevated inflation risks from global energy markets. We expect the NBG to maintain a moderately tight monetary policy stance throughout 2026.

Strong fiscal discipline

Georgia's fiscal position remains strong, supported by sustained economic activity. The government remains committed to fiscal discipline, targeting a fiscal deficit of 2.5% of GDP in 2026, unchanged from 2025. The government's debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to decline further from 34.1% at end-2025 to 33.5% by end-2026. The successful rollover of the USD 500 million Government Eurobond in January highlights strong investor confidence in the country's macroeconomic stability and policy framework.

Healthy bank lending

The banking sector continues to demonstrate sound fundamentals, high liquidity, and strong capitalisation. Lending growth remained broadly in line with nominal economic activity, expanding by 14.9% y-o-y in 1Q26 on a constant currency basis, following a 14.0% growth in the previous quarter. Business and consumer lending continued to drive credit expansion. Loan dollarisation stood at 42.5% at end-March 2026, broadly unchanged from the previous quarter. Deposit dollarisation declined further by 1.1 pp over the same period to 46.6%.

More information on the Georgian economy and financial sector can be found at Galt & Taggart, the Group's investment banking and brokerage subsidiary.

Macroeconomic developments: Armenia

Strong economic growth

The Armenian economy sustained its strong growth momentum in early 2026, with the preliminary economic activity indicator increasing by 7.1% y-o-y in 1Q26, supported by resilient consumption, expansionary fiscal policy, and healthy credit growth. Considering this strong performance, we have revised our full-year real GDP growth forecast to 6.0%, the upper end of our previously expected range. Economic activity is expected to be driven by continued growth in services, ongoing fiscal stimulus, and a planned new gold mine that should boost industrial output.

The escalation in the Middle East has also increased downside risks for the Armenian economy. Despite limited direct exposure to the region, economic performance could be adversely affected via higher inflation, weaker external demand, and elevated geopolitical risks. However, prudent macroeconomic policies and ongoing structural reforms underpin Armenia's economic resilience. The medium-term outlook remains positive, with significant upside potential from the historic 2025 peace accord with Azerbaijan and the normalisation of relations with Türkiye, which could unlock further growth.

Resilient external inflows and strong Dram

Following a previous surge in re-exports of precious metals and stones, Armenia's external trade continued to normalise, with goods exports and imports growing by 4.5% and 4.6% y-o-y in 1Q26, respectively. Inflows remained resilient, supported by strong growth in non-commercial money transfers (15.5% y-o-y) and international tourist arrivals (18.3% y-o-y).

Supported by these inflows and prudent macroeconomic policies, the Armenian Dram (AMD) appreciated by an additional 1.0% against the US dollar in 1Q26, building on a 3.8% gain in 2025. Over the same period, the AMD remained broadly stable against the GEL, appreciating by a modest 0.6%. The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) continued its foreign exchange purchases, lifting its gross reserves by 41.3% y-o-y to a record USD 5.5 billion by end-March 2026.

Above-target inflation and neutral monetary stance

Inflation edged up in early 2026, driven mainly by food prices. Headline CPI reached 4.5% y-o-y in March, up from 3.3% in December 2025. Although inflation is expected to remain elevated in 2026 until food and fuel pressures ease, expectations appear anchored, evidenced by lower services inflation and slow wage growth. The CBA has kept its policy rate at 6.5% following a 25 bps cut in December 2025, and it is expected to hold this rate through 2026, reflecting a broadly neutral monetary policy stance.

Continued fiscal expansion

In 2026, fiscal policy is set to remain growth-supportive, as the deficit is planned to widen to 4.5% of GDP from 3.7% in 2025. Despite higher spending, strong tax revenues are expected to limit the rise in public debt to approximately 49.0% of GDP, up from 47.3% in 2025. The country's IMF Stand-By Arrangement continues to anchor fiscal discipline.

Sound banking sector

The Armenian banking sector remains sound, with strong capital and liquidity buffers. Bank lending grew by an estimated 22.9% y-o-y in 1Q26 on a constant currency basis, following a 24.7% growth in the previous quarter. Consumer and business lending were the primary drivers of credit expansion. Loan dollarisation remained broadly stable at 34.2% at end-March 2026, following significant declines in prior years. Meanwhile, deposit dollarisation continued to decrease, reaching 43.4%, down 0.5 pp q-o-q.

1Q26 unaudited consolidated results

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q26

1Q26

1Q26

 

1Q25

1Q25

1Q25

1Q25

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS

Group

GFS

AFS

Other

 

Group

GFS

AFS

Other

Interest income

 1,466,122

 1,042,379

 388,682

 35,061


 1,237,407

 907,259

 305,924

 24,224

Interest expense

 (656,510)

 (471,492)

(162,881)

 (22,137)


 (553,706)

 (425,453)

(115,409)

(12,844)

Net interest income

 809,612

 570,887

 225,801

 12,924

 

 683,701

 481,806

 190,515

 11,380

Net fee and commission income

 176,049

 142,859

 29,995

 3,195


 138,072

 113,955

 20,491

 3,626

Net foreign currency gain

 130,124

 75,954

 33,435

 20,735


 145,594

 82,730

 34,018

 28,846

Net other income

 9,978

 2,778

 3,570

 3,630


 11,285

 6,975

 3,150

 1,160

Operating income

 1,125,763

 792,478

 292,801

 40,484

 

 978,652

 685,466

 248,174

 45,012

Salaries and other employee benefits

 (252,077)

 (140,892)

 (93,395)

 (17,790)


 (213,075)

 (113,596)

 (85,796)

(13,683)

Administrative expenses

 (73,619)

 (45,499)

 (17,406)

 (10,714)


 (70,109)

 (43,244)

 (18,138)

 (8,727)

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

 (57,050)

 (36,948)

 (15,883)

 (4,219)


 (51,167)

 (33,788)

 (14,554)

 (2,825)

Other operating expenses

 (7,540)

 (6,130)

 (1,081)

 (329)


 (8,542)

 (6,194)

 (2,006)

 (342)

Operating expenses

 (390,286)

 (229,469)

(127,765)

 (33,052)

 

 (342,893)

 (196,822)

(120,494)

(25,577)

Profit from associates

 386

 386

-

-


271

 271

-

-

Operating income before cost of risk

 735,863

 563,395

 165,036

 7,432

 

 636,030

 488,915

 127,680

 19,435

Cost of risk

 (38,840)

 (32,266)

 (5,804)

 (770)


 (26,913)

 (17,990)

 (8,173)

 (750)

Profit before income tax expense

 697,023

 531,129

 159,232

 6,662

 

 609,117

 470,925

 119,507

 18,685

Income tax expense

 (112,035)

 (79,078)

 (29,804)

 (3,153)


 (96,053)

 (65,856)

 (23,993)

 (6,204)

Profit before one-off items

 584,988

 452,051

 129,428

 3,509

 

 513,064

 405,069

 95,514

 12,481

One-off items

-

-

-

-


-

-

-

-

Profit

 584,988

 452,051

 129,428

 3,509

 

 513,064

 405,069

 95,514

 12,481

 

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q25

Change

y-o-y

4Q25

Change

q-o-q

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS






Net interest income 

 809,612

 683,701

18.4%

 795,895

1.7%

Net fee and commission income 

 176,049

 138,072

27.5%

 226,248

-22.2%

Net foreign currency gain

 130,124

 145,594

-10.6%

 150,626

-13.6%

Net other income

 9,978

 11,285

-11.6%

 28,526

-65.0%

Operating income

 1,125,763

 978,652

15.0%

1,201,295

-6.3%

Operating expenses (2025: adjusted)

 (390,286)

(342,893)

13.8%

(422,581)*

-7.6%

Gain on bargain purchase[1]

-

-

NMF

 1,488

NMF

Profit from associates

 386

 271

42.4%

 111

NMF

Operating income before cost of risk (2025: adjusted)

 735,863

 636,030

15.7%

 780,313*

-5.7%

Cost of risk 

 (38,840)

 (26,913)

44.3%

 (36,410)

6.7%

Profit before income tax expense and one-off items (2025: adjusted)

 697,023

 609,117

14.4%

 743,903*

-6.3%

Income tax expense

 (112,035)

 (96,053)

16.6%

(124,589)

-10.1%

Profit before one-off items

 584,988

 513,064

14.0%

 619,314*

-5.5%

One-off items[2]

-

-

NMF

 (29,590)

NMF

Profit 

 584,988

 513,064

14.0%

 589,724

-0.8%







Basic earnings per share

 13.72

 11.81

16.2%

 13.84

-0.9%

Diluted earnings per share

 13.61

 11.73

16.0%

 13.62

-0.1%

Basic earnings per share adjusted for one-offs

 13.72

 11.81

16.2%

 14.53

-5.6%

Diluted earnings per share adjusted for one-offs

 13.61

 11.73

16.0%

 14.30

-4.8%

 

*These figures differ from the unaudited consolidated financial information (on page 14) as they exclude a one-off item to better illustrate underlying performance. The excluded item is GEL 29.6m in 4Q25 (see endnote 2).

BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q







Liquid assets

16,530,688

17,490,685

-5.5%

18,318,956

-9.8%

 Cash and cash equivalents

 3,440,364

 4,151,524

-17.1%

 4,572,046

-24.8%

 Amounts due from credit institutions

 3,764,046

 3,596,111

4.7%

 3,552,257

6.0%

 Investment securities

 9,326,278

 9,743,050

-4.3%

10,194,653

-8.5%

Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

41,881,946

34,137,143

22.7%

40,065,664

4.5%

Property and equipment

 616,135

 554,208

11.2%

 616,839

-0.1%

All remaining assets

 1,953,033

 1,617,265

20.8%

 1,868,397

4.5%

Total assets

60,981,802

53,799,301

13.4%

60,869,856

0.2%

Client deposits and notes

39,699,016

33,969,258

16.9%

38,629,974

2.8%

Amounts owed to credit institutions

 7,722,100

 9,006,255

-14.3%

 9,499,106

-18.7%

 Borrowings from DFIs

 3,545,490

 3,322,500

6.7%

 3,708,770

-4.4%

 Short-term loans from the National Bank of Georgia

 1,130,502

 3,426,723

-67.0%

 2,667,471

-57.6%

 Short-term loans from the Central Bank of Armenia

 135,054

 144,536

-6.6%

 136,912

-1.4%

 Loans and deposits from commercial banks

 2,911,054

 2,112,496

37.8%

 2,985,953

-2.5%

Debt securities issued

 3,298,758

 2,257,270

46.1%

 2,999,871

10.0%

All remaining liabilities

 1,392,258

 1,145,023

21.6%

 1,318,662

5.6%

Total liabilities

52,112,132

46,377,806

12.4%

52,447,613

-0.6%

Total equity

 8,869,670

 7,421,495

19.5%

 8,422,243

5.3%

Book value per share

 207.82

 170.99

21.5%

 197.85

5.0%

 

KEY RATIOS

1Q26

1Q25

 

4Q25






ROAA (adjusted for one-off items)2

3.9%

3.9%


4.2%

ROAE (adjusted for one-off items)2

27.4%

28.7%


30.1%

Net interest margin

6.1%

5.9%


6.1%

Loan yield[3]

12.3%

12.2%


12.4%

Liquid assets yield

5.2%

4.9%


5.1%

Cost of funds

5.2%

5.0%


5.2%

Cost of client deposits and notes

4.6%

4.1%


4.6%

Cost of amounts owed to credit institutions

6.7%

7.8%


7.0%

Cost of debt securities issued

8.3%

7.6%


7.7%

Cost:income ratio (adjusted for one-off items)2

34.7%

35.0%


35.2%

NPLs to gross loans

2.1%

2.0%


2.1%

NPL coverage ratio

58.9%

59.3%


57.8%

NPL coverage ratio adjusted for the discounted value of collateral

117.2%

117.1%


116.3%

Cost of credit risk ratio

0.3%

0.2%


0.3%

 

 

GEL thousands

NON-PERFORMING LOANS

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q

Group (consolidated)






NPLs to gross loans 

2.1%

2.0%


2.1%


NPL coverage ratio

58.9%

59.3%


57.8%


NPL coverage ratio adjusted for the discounted value of collateral

117.2%

117.1%


116.3%


Georgian Financial Services (GFS)






NPLs to gross loans

2.0%

2.2%


2.1%


NPL coverage ratio

56.1%

59.3%


54.8%


NPL coverage ratio adjusted for the discounted value of collateral

116.0%

113.2%


114.6%


Ameriabank (standalone figures)






NPLs to gross loans

2.0%

1.5%


2.1%


NPL coverage ratio

68.5%

63.3%


68.5%


NPL coverage ratio adjusted for the discounted value of collateral

125.0%

134.3%


125.5%


Returns to shareholders (dividends and share buyback and cancellation programme)

In August 2025, the Board took the decision to move to a quarterly distribution schedule, with the Group's total capital repatriation policy unchanged at a target payout range of 30-50% of annual Group profits. Considering the strong performance of the Group during the first quarter of 2026 and robust capital levels, today the Board declared an interim dividend of GEL 2.85 per ordinary share in respect of the first quarter of 2026, payable according to the following timetable:


Ex-Dividend Date: 25 June 2026


Record Date: 26 June 2026


Currency Conversion Date: 26 June 2026


Payment Date: 10 July 2026

The NBG's Lari/Pound Sterling average exchange rate for the period of 22 June to 26 June 2026 will be used as the exchange rate on the Currency Conversion Date and will be announced in due course.

In addition, today the Board has approved an extension to the share buyback and cancellation programme of GEL 55.0 million.

The previous GEL 53.5 million share buyback and cancellation programme, announced on 25 February 2026, has been completed. As a result, the total number of voting rights in issue following the cancellation of shares was 43,223,929 as at 31 March 2026.

Business Division results

The Group results are presented by the following Business Divisions: 1) Georgian Financial Services (GFS), 2) Armenian Financial Services (AFS), and 3) Other Businesses.

Georgian Financial Services (GFS)

Georgian Financial Services (GFS) mainly comprises JSC Bank of Georgia and the investment bank JSC Galt and Taggart. GFS is organised across the following business segments: Retail Banking (RB), Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Banking, Corporate and Investment Banking (CIB), and Corporate Center (CC).

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q25

Change

y-o-y

4Q25

Change

q-o-q

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS






Interest income

 1,042,379

 907,259

14.9%

 1,040,286

0.2%

Interest expense

 (471,492)

 (425,453)

10.8%

 (486,175)

-3.0%

Net interest income

 570,887

 481,806

18.5%

 554,111

3.0%

Net fee and commission income

 142,859

 113,955

25.4%

 169,810

-15.9%

Net foreign currency gain

 75,954

 82,730

-8.2%

 91,895

-17.3%

Net other income

 2,778

 6,975

-60.2%

 20,953

-86.7%

Operating income

 792,478

 685,466

15.6%

 836,769

-5.3%

Salaries and other employee benefits (2025: adjusted)

 (140,892)

 (113,596)

24.0%

(140,375)*

0.4%

Administrative expenses

 (45,499)

 (43,244)

5.2%

 (71,450)

-36.3%

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

 (36,948)

 (33,788)

9.4%

 (40,657)

-9.1%

Other operating expenses

 (6,130)

 (6,194)

-1.0%

 (7,603)

-19.4%

Operating expenses (2025: adjusted)

 (229,469)

 (196,822)

16.6%

(260,085)*

-11.8%

Profit from associates

 386

 271

42.4%

 111

NMF

Operating income before cost of risk (2025: adjusted)

 563,395

 488,915

15.2%

 576,795*

-2.3%

Cost of risk

 (32,266)

 (17,990)

79.4%

 (30,274)

6.6%

Profit before income tax expense (2025: adjusted)

 531,129

 470,925

12.8%

 546,521*

-2.8%

Income tax expense

 (79,078)

 (65,856)

20.1%

 (86,583)

-8.7%

Profit before for one-off items

 452,051

 405,069

11.6%

 459,938*

-1.7%

One-off items2

-

-

NMF

 (29,094)

NMF

Profit

 452,051

 405,069

11.6%

 430,844

4.9%

 

*These figures exclude a one-off item of GEL 29.1m in 4Q25 to better illustrate underlying performance (see endnote 2).

 

BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q







Cash and cash equivalents

 2,065,638

 2,465,779

-16.2%

 2,720,691

-24.1%

Amounts due from credit institutions

 1,881,992

 2,586,850

-27.2%

 2,139,551

-12.0%

Investment securities

 7,674,184

 8,180,808

-6.2%

 8,236,145

-6.8%

Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

28,261,957

 24,049,085

17.5%

27,288,607

3.6%

 Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables, LC

16,276,415

 13,971,277

16.5%

15,822,353

2.9%

 Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables, FC

11,985,542

 10,077,808

18.9%

11,466,254

4.5%

Property and equipment

 519,438

 465,059

11.7%

 519,892

-0.1%

All remaining assets

 1,257,904

 1,174,534

7.1%

 1,225,254

2.7%

Total assets

41,661,113

 38,922,115

7.0%

42,130,140

-1.1%

Client deposits and notes

27,942,563

 24,820,659

12.6%

27,312,550

2.3%

 Client deposits and notes, LC

15,178,604

 11,675,339

30.0%

14,595,833

4.0%

 Client deposits and notes, FC

12,763,959

13,145,320

-2.9%

12,716,717

0.4%

Amounts owed to credit institutions

 5,025,118

7,161,810

-29.8%

 6,562,242

-23.4%

Debt securities issued

 1,915,124

 1,144,275

67.4%

 1,800,502

6.4%

All remaining liabilities

 791,016

 527,112

50.1%

 769,455

2.8%

Total liabilities

35,673,821

 33,653,856

6.0%

36,444,749

-2.1%

Total equity

 5,987,292

 5,268,259

13.6%

 5,685,391

5.3%

Risk-weighted assets (JSC Bank of Georgia standalone)

32,923,955

 29,867,785

10.2%

32,187,358

2.3%

 

KEY RATIOS

1Q26

1Q25

 

4Q25






ROAA (adjusted for one-off items)2

4.4%

4.3%


4.4%

ROAA (unadjusted)

4.4%

4.3%


4.1%

ROAE (adjusted for one-off items)2

31.5%

32.0%


32.7%

ROAE (unadjusted)

31.5%

32.0%


30.7%

Net interest margin

6.2%

5.7%


5.9%

Loan yield

12.7%

12.6%


12.8%

 Loan yield, GEL

15.5%

15.0%

 

15.5%

 Loan yield, FC

8.9%

9.2%

 

8.9%

Cost of funds

5.4%

5.3%


5.5%

Cost of client deposits and notes

4.8%

4.4%


4.9%

 Cost of client deposits and notes, GEL

7.7%

7.7%

 

7.9%

 Cost of client deposits and notes, FC

1.4%

1.4%

 

1.5%

Cost of time deposits

7.0%

6.6%


7.2%

 Cost of time deposits, GEL

9.9%

10.1%

 

10.3%

 Cost of time deposits, FC

2.5%

2.6%

 

2.6%

Cost of current accounts and demand deposits

3.0%

2.4%


2.9%

 Cost of current accounts and demand deposits, GEL

5.5%

5.0%

 

5.3%

 Cost of current accounts and demand deposits, FC

0.6%

0.6%

 

0.7%

Cost:income ratio (adjusted for one-off items)2

29.0%

28.7%


31.1%

Cost:income ratio (unadjusted)

29.0%

28.7%


34.6%

Cost of credit risk ratio

0.4%

0.2%


0.4%

Performance highlights

GFS delivered 15.6% y-o-y growth in 1Q26 operating income, driven by strong net interest income and net fee and commission income performance. Net interest margin expanded 30 bps to 6.2% q-o-q, supported by a 10 bps decrease in the cost of client deposits and an increased share of loans in the interest-earning assets mix.

Net fee and commission income increased by 25.4% y-o-y. Q-o-q, renegotiated terms with international payment systems, which had a significant positive impact on 4Q25, created an elevated comparative base; adjusting for this effect, normalised net fee and commission income remained broadly flat, in line with seasonality.

Net foreign currency gains declined by 8.2% y-o-y, mainly reflecting a more stable currency environment.

Operating income decreased q-o-q, reflecting elevated 4Q25 comparative base in net fee and commission income and net other income. Normalising for these base effects, operating income would have been broadly flat q-o-q.

In 1Q26, operating expenses increased by 16.6% y-o-y, mainly driven by higher staff costs. Staff costs included a GEL 3.5m accelerated recognition of unvested, previously granted share-based awards due to the voluntary departure of an executive manager.

The portfolio quality remained healthy across the board, with the cost of credit risk ratio standing at 0.4% in 1Q26 (0.2% in 1Q25 and 0.4% in 4Q25) and the NPL ratio declining to 2.0% as at 31 March 2026 (2.2% as at 31 March 2025 and 2.1% as at 31 December 2025).

Portfolio highlights


Portfolio highlights: loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

 


Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Change y-o-y

(constant currency)

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q

Change q-o-q (constant currency)

Total GFS

28,261,957

24,049,085

17.5%

17.8%

27,288,607

3.6%

3.8%

Retail

12,678,797

10,518,379

20.5%

20.6%

12,190,163

4.0%

4.1%

 Mortgages

 5,288,406

 4,599,335

15.0%

15.0%

 5,139,094

2.9%

3.1%

 Consumer loans

 6,472,542

 5,185,540

24.8%

25.1%

 6,190,599

4.6%

4.6%

 Other loans

 917,849

 733,504

25.1%

23.2%

 860,470

6.7%

6.9%

SME

5,511,393

5,114,504

7.8%

7.6%

5,447,299

1.2%

1.6%

CIB

10,071,767

8,416,202

19.7%

20.4%

9,651,145

4.4%

4.7%


 

Portfolio highlights: customer deposits and notes

 


Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Change y-o-y

(constant currency)

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q

Change q-o-q (constant currency)

Total GFS

 27,942,563

 24,820,659

12.6%

 27,312,550

2.3%

2.4%

Retail

 16,543,701

 14,850,250

11.4%

 16,385,011

1.0%

1.2%

SME

 2,402,216

 2,117,025

13.5%

 2,526,790

-4.9%

-4.7%

CIB

 7,963,850

 6,663,303

19.5%

 8,081,092

-1.5%

-1.4%

Corporate Center

 1,118,524

 1,268,036

-11.8%


 421,957

165.1%


Eliminations

 (85,728)

 (77,955)

10.0%


 (102,300)

-16.2%



 

Loan portfolio quality: cost of credit risk ratio

 

 


1Q26

1Q25

 

 

4Q25

 

Total GFS

0.4%

0.2%

 

 

0.4%

 

Retail

0.8%

0.3%

 

 

0.7%


SME

0.6%

0.2%

 

 

0.0%


CIB

-0.3%

0.1%

 

 

0.2%



 

Loan portfolio quality: NPL ratio

 


Mar-26

Mar-25

 

 

Dec-25

 

Total GFS

2.0%

2.2%

 

 

2.1%


Retail

1.3%

1.5%



1.4%


SME

4.2%

3.5%



4.0%


CIB

1.7%

2.3%



2.0%


Customer lending growth remained strong, driven primarily by RB and CIB, with SME also contributing.


•    Within the RB segment, consumer lending showed particularly strong growth, rising by 25.1% y-o-y and 4.6% q-o-q in cc. Mortgage lending grew by 15.0% y-o-y and 3.1% q-o-q in cc, now accounting for 41.7% of the retail loan book - below the share of consumer loans at 51.1%.

Client deposits and notes demonstrated broad-based y-o-y growth across deposit types. As at 31 March 2026, current & demand deposits and time deposits accounted for 53.5% and 46.5% of the total deposit portfolio, respectively. Notably, the share of GEL deposits in total deposits increased significantly y-o-y from 47.0% to 54.3% (53.4% as at 31 December 2025).

Liquidity

 

Mar-26

Mar-25

Dec-25

IFRS-based NBG Liquidity Coverage Ratio (Bank of Georgia)

140.0%

133.5%

147.7%

IFRS-based NBG Net Stable Funding Ratio (Bank of Georgia)

130.3%

131.4%

134.1%

Both our Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) and Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) were well above the regulatory minimum requirements of 100%.

Capital position

Bank of Georgia maintains robust levels of capital, with all ratios comfortably above the minimum regulatory requirements. The movement in capital adequacy ratios in 1Q26 and the potential impact of a 10% devaluation of GEL are as follows:


31 Dec

2025

1Q26

profit

Business growth

Currency impact

Dividend payment

Tier 1- Tier 2

31 Mar

2026

 

Min requirement

Buffer above min requirement

Potential impact

of a 10% GEL devaluation










 



CET 1 capital adequacy

17.6%

1.4%

-0.5%

0.0%

-0.6%

0.0%

17.9%


15.4%

2.5%

-0.7%

Tier 1 capital adequacy

20.5%

1.4%

-0.6%

0.1%

-0.6%

0.0%

20.8%


17.6%

3.2%

-0.6%

Total capital adequacy

22.0%

1.4%

-0.7%

0.0%

-0.6%

0.0%

22.2%


20.5%

1.7%

-0.5%

Armenian Financial Services (AFS)

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q25

Change

y-o-y

4Q25

Change

q-o-q

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS

 

 

 

 

 

Interest income

 388,682

 305,924

27.1%

 375,000

3.6%

Interest expense

(162,881)

 (115,409)

41.1%

 (149,644)

8.8%

Net interest income

 225,801

 190,515

18.5%

 225,356

0.2%

Net fee and commission income

 29,995

 20,491

46.4%

 53,343

-43.8%

Net foreign currency gain

 33,435

 34,018

-1.7%

 35,042

-4.6%

Net other income

 3,570

 3,150

13.3%

 3,706

-3.7%

Operating income

 292,801

 248,174

18.0%

 317,447

-7.8%

Salaries and other employee benefits

 (93,395)

 (85,796)

8.9%

 (92,907)

0.5%

Administrative expenses

 (17,406)

 (18,138)

-4.0%

 (19,321)

-9.9%

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

 (15,883)

 (14,554)

9.1%

 (15,360)

3.4%

Other operating expenses

 (1,081)

 (2,006)

-46.1%

 (920)

17.5%

Operating expenses

(127,765)

 (120,494)

6.0%

 (128,508)

-0.6%

Operating income before cost of risk

 165,036

 127,680

29.3%

 188,939

-12.7%

Cost of risk

 (5,804)

 (8,173)

-29.0%

 (6,170)

-5.9%

Profit before income tax expense

 159,232

 119,507

33.2%

 182,769

-12.9%

Income tax expense

 (29,804)

 (23,993)

24.2%

 (33,181)

-10.2%

Profit

 129,428

 95,514

35.5%

 149,588

-13.5%

 

BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Cash and cash equivalents

 694,989

 1,060,250

-34.5%

 950,577

-26.9%

Amounts due from credit institutions

 1,851,418

 985,407

87.9%

 1,389,444

33.2%

Investment securities

 1,509,123

 1,449,374

4.1%

 1,794,826

-15.9%

Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

 12,551,342

 9,337,589

34.4%

11,818,695

6.2%

 Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables, LC

 7,026,474

 5,560,441

26.4%

 6,770,754

3.8%

 Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables, FC

 5,524,868

 3,777,148

46.3%

 5,047,941

9.4%

Property and equipment

 78,479

 75,690

3.7%

 78,285

0.2%

All remaining assets

 567,237

 351,344

61.4%

 520,441

9.0%

Total assets

 17,252,588

 13,259,654

30.1%

16,552,268

4.2%

Client deposits and notes

 10,188,812

 7,866,942

29.5%

 9,630,051

5.8%

 Client deposits and notes, LC

 6,190,453

 4,401,119

40.7%

 5,832,351

6.1%

 Client deposits and notes, FC

 3,998,359

 3,465,823

15.4%

 3,797,700

5.3%

Amounts owed to credit institutions

 2,648,168

 1,854,080

42.8%

 2,909,876

-9.0%

Debt securities issued

 1,370,433

 1,096,307

25.0%

 1,186,478

15.5%

All remaining liabilities

 550,056

 577,770

-4.8%

 496,458

10.8%

Total liabilities

 14,757,469

 11,395,099

29.5%

14,222,863

3.8%

Total equity

 2,495,119

 1,864,555

33.8%

 2,329,405

7.1%

Risk-weighted assets (Ameriabank CJSC standalone)

 16,818,447

 12,395,897

35.7%

15,054,624

11.7%

 

KEY RATIOS

1Q26

1Q25

 

4Q25

 

 

 

 

 

ROAA

3.1%

2.9%


3.8%

ROAE

21.8%

21.1%


26.8%

Net interest margin

5.9%

6.6%


6.3%

Loan yield

11.3%

11.5%


11.5%

 Loan yield, AMD

14.1%

13.7%

 

14.1%

 Loan yield, FC

7.6%

8.4%

 

8.0%

Cost of funds

4.7%

4.3%


4.6%

Cost of client deposits and notes

4.0%

3.3%


3.9%

 Cost of client deposits and notes, AMD

5.5%

4.7%

 

5.5%

 Cost of client deposits and notes, FC

1.7%

1.4%

 

1.5%

Cost of time deposits

6.9%

5.8%


6.8%

 Cost of time deposits, AMD

9.6%

9.3%

 

9.9%

 Cost of time deposits, FC

2.9%

2.2%

 

2.6%

Cost of current accounts and demand deposits

1.8%

1.7%


1.7%

 Cost of current accounts and demand deposits, AMD

2.4%

2.3%

 

2.3%

 Cost of current accounts and demand deposits, FC

0.7%

0.8%

 

0.7%

Cost:income ratio

43.6%

48.6%


40.5%

Cost of credit risk ratio

0.2%

0.2%


0.2%

Performance highlights

AFS delivered operating income growth of 18.0% y-o-y in 1Q26, driven by solid growth in net interest income, with net fee and commission income also contributing. Q-o-q, operating income declined 7.8%, driven by a decrease in net fee and commission income, coupled with a modest net interest income growth.

NIM declined by 40bps q-o-q to 5.9%, reflecting a 20bps decrease in the loan yield to 11.3% and a 10bps increase in the cost of funds to 4.7%. The higher cost of funds was driven by higher cost of deposits (up 10bps q-o-q to 4.0%) as well as higher cost of debt securities issued following the placement of new AT1 bonds in February.

Net fee and commission income rose by 46.4% y-o-y. This quarter included a GEL 5.5m advisory fee and a GEL 2.0m reclassification of currency conversion fees from net foreign currency gains to align with Group accounting policies. Excluding these items, growth would have been 9.8% y-o-y. Net fee and commission income declined 43.8% q-o-q, reflecting an elevated 4Q25 base from a GEL 13.6m advisory fee as well as seasonality.

Net foreign currency gains declined modestly y-o-y, primarily reflecting the currency conversion fee reclassification mentioned above. Excluding this reclassification effect, net FX gains would have increased by 4.2% y-o-y.

Operating expenses increased by 6.0% y-o-y. Group-level adjustments related to management retention bonus were present in the prior year, which elevated the expense base in 1Q25.

Portfolio highlights[4]


Portfolio highlights: loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

 

 

 


Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Change y-o-y

(constant currency)

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Change q-o-q (constant currency)

Total AFS

12,551,342

9,337,589

34.4%

34.6%

11,818,695

6.2%

6.2%

Retail

5,489,135

4,365,215

25.7%

25.1%

5,281,641

3.9%

3.4%

Mortgages

2,821,132

2,466,529

14.4%

13.7%

 2,759,125

2.2%

1.6%

Consumer loans

2,002,157

1,347,443

48.6%

47.6%

 1,862,265

7.5%

6.9%

Retail SME

665,846

551,243

20.8%

20.9%

 660,251

0.8%

0.6%

Corporate

7,062,207

4,972,374

42.0%

43.0%

6,537,054

8.0%

8.6%


 

Portfolio highlights: customer deposits and notes

 

 

 


Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Change y-o-y

(constant currency)

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Change q-o-q (constant currency)

 

Total AFS

10,188,812

7,866,942

29.5%

29.7%

 9,630,051

5.8%

5.7%

 

Retail

5,531,736

4,385,697

26.1%

26.7%

 5,183,973

6.7%

6.8%

 

Corporate

4,657,076

3,481,245

33.8%

33.6%

 4,446,078

4.7%

4.4%

 


 

Loan portfolio quality: cost of credit risk ratio

 

 


 


1Q26

1Q25

 

 

4Q25

 

 

 

Total AFS

0.2%

0.2%

 

 

0.2%

 

 

 

Retail

0.6%

0.8%

 


0.8%



 

Corporate

-0.1%

-0.3%

 


-0.3%



 

                                                                                                                                           

Customer loans grew strongly by 34.6% y-o-y and 6.2% q-o-q in cc, with broad-based growth across both Corporate and Retail segments. Within the Retail portfolio, consumer loans maintained the strongest growth trajectory, posting 47.6% y-o-y and 6.9% q-o-q growth in cc. Mortgage lending grew by 13.7% y-o-y and 1.6% q-o-q in cc, now representing 51.4% of the total retail loan book. Ameriabank strengthened its market leadership, with its lending share rising to 22.0% as at 31 March 2026 (#1 position), up 1.7pp y-o-y and 0.3pp q-o-q.

Client deposits and notes also grew strongly, rising by 29.7% y-o-y and by 5.7% q-o-q in cc. The share of time deposits increased over the year to 44.9% of the total (40.2% as at 31 March 2025 and 41.5% as at 31 December 2025). The bank's deposit market share (including local bonds) expanded by 1.0pp y-o-y to reach 19.5% as at March-end 2026 (#2 position) (flat q-o-q).

AFS maintained a diversified funding structure with customer deposits and local debt securities representing 78.3% of total liabilities, and the ratio of net loans, factoring and finance lease receivables to customer deposits and notes, local debt securities and DFI funding standing at 97.9% as at 31 March 2026.

Liquidity

Capital position

 


31 Dec 2025

1Q26 profit

Business growth

Currency impact

Dividend payment

Regulatory deductions

Tier 1 - Tier 2

 

Other

31 Mar 2026

 

Minimum requirement

Buffer above min requirement

Potential impact of a 10% AMD devaluation















CET 1 capital adequacy

14.4%

1.0%

-1.4%

0.1%

0.0%

0.1%

0.0%

-0.1%

14.1%


12.0%

2.1%

-0.6%

Tier 1 capital adequacy

14.4%

1.0%

-1.4%

0.1%

0.0%

0.1%

0.9%

-0.1%

14.9%


14.1%

0.8%

-0.6%

Total capital adequacy

17.0%

1.0%

-1.6%

0.0%

0.0%

0.1%

1.5%

-0.1%

17.9%


16.8%

1.1%

-0.5%

Other Businesses

The Business Division 'Other Businesses' includes JSC Belarusky Narodny Bank (BNB) serving retail and SME clients in Belarus, JSC Digital Area - a digital ecosystem in Georgia including e-commerce, ticketing, and inventory management SaaS, Lion Finance Group PLC - the holding company, and other small entities and intragroup eliminations.

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q25

Change

y-o-y

4Q25

Change

q-o-q

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS






Interest income 

 35,061

 24,224

44.7%

 32,627

7.5%

Interest expense 

 (22,137)

 (12,844)

72.4%

 (16,199)

36.7%

Net interest income 

 12,924

 11,380

13.6%

 16,428

-21.3%

Net fee and commission income 

 3,195

 3,626

-11.9%

 3,095

3.2%

Net foreign currency gain

 20,735

 28,846

-28.1%

 23,689

-12.5%

Net other income

 3,630

 1,160

NMF

 3,867

-6.1%

Operating income

 40,484

 45,012

-10.1%

 47,079

-14.0%

Salaries and other employee benefits (2025: adjusted)

 (17,790)

 (13,683)

30.0%

 (18,123)*

-1.8%

Administrative expenses

 (10,714)

 (8,727)

22.8%

 (11,671)

-8.2%

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

 (4,219)

 (2,825)

49.3%

 (3,876)

8.8%

Other operating expenses 

 (329)

 (342)

-3.8%

 (318)

3.5%

Operating expenses (2025: adjusted)

 (33,052)

 (25,577)

29.2%

 (33,988)*

-2.8%

Gain on bargain purchase1

 -  

 -  

NMF

 1,488

NMF

Operating income before cost of risk (2025: adjusted) 

 7,432

 19,435

-61.8%

 14,579*

-49.0%

Cost of risk 

 (770)

 (750)

2.7%

 34

NMF

Profit before income tax expense (2025: adjusted)

 6,662

 18,685

-64.3%

 14,613*

-54.4%

Income tax expense

 (3,153)

 (6,204)

-49.2%

 (4,825)

-34.7%

Profit before one-off items

 3,509

 12,481

-71.9%

 9,788*

-64.1%

One-off items2

 -  

 -  

 NMF  

 (496)

NMF

Profit

 3,509

 12,481

-71.9%

 9,292

-62.2%

* These figures exclude a one-off item of GEL 0.5m in 4Q25 to better illustrate underlying performance (see endnote 2).

BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change

y-o-y

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q







Cash and cash equivalents

 679,737

 625,495

8.7%

 900,778

-24.5%

Amounts due from credit institutions

 30,636

 23,854

28.4%

 23,262

31.7%

Investment securities

 142,971

 112,868

26.7%

 163,682

-12.7%

Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

 1,068,647

 750,469

42.4%

 958,362

11.5%

Property and equipment

 18,218

 13,459

35.4%

 18,662

-2.4%

All remaining assets

 127,892

 91,387

39.9%

 122,702

4.2%

Total assets

 2,068,101

 1,617,532

27.9%

 2,187,448

-5.5%

Client deposits and notes

 1,567,641

 1,281,657

22.3%

 1,687,373

-7.1%

Amounts owed to credit institutions

 48,814

 (9,635)

NMF

 26,988

80.9%

Debt securities issued

 13,201

 16,688

-20.9%

 12,891

2.4%

All remaining liabilities

 51,186

 40,141

27.5%

 52,749

-3.0%

Total liabilities

 1,680,842

 1,328,851

26.5%

 1,780,001

-5.6%

Total equity

 387,259

 288,681

34.1%

 407,447

-5.0%

 

In 1Q26, operating income declined by 10.1% y-o-y, primarily reflecting lower dealing income at BNB due to increased competition and lower volatility in the FX market.

BNB's capital ratios, calculated in accordance with the National Bank of the Republic of Belarus' standards, were above the minimum requirements as at 31 March 2026: Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio at 11.1% (minimum requirement of 7.0%) and Total capital adequacy ratio at 14.7% (minimum requirement of 12.5%).

Unaudited consolidated financial information

GEL thousands

1Q26

1Q25

Change y-o-y

4Q25

Change q-o-q

INCOME STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS






Interest income

 1,466,122

 1,237,407

18.5%

 1,447,913

1.3%

Interest expense

 (656,510)

 (553,706)

18.6%

 (652,018)

0.7%

Net interest income

 809,612

 683,701

18.4%

 795,895

1.7%

Fee and commission income

 305,011

 247,662

23.2%

 336,392

-9.3%

Fee and commission expense

 (128,962)

 (109,590)

17.7%

 (110,144)

17.1%

Net fee and commission income

 176,049

 138,072

27.5%

 226,248

-22.2%

Net foreign currency gain

 130,124

 145,594

-10.6%

 150,626

-13.6%

Net other income

 9,978

 11,285

-11.6%

 28,526

-65.0%

Operating income

 1,125,763

 978,652

15.0%

 1,201,295

-6.3%

Salaries and other employee benefits

 (252,077)

 (213,075)

18.3%

 (280,995)

-10.3%

  Salaries and other employee benefits without one-offs

 (252,077)

 (213,075)

18.3%

 (251,405)

0.3%

  Employee Stock Ownership (ESOP) catch-up2

-

-

NMF

 (29,590)

NMF

Administrative expenses

 (73,619)

 (70,109)

5.0%

 (102,442)

-28.1%

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

 (57,050)

 (51,167)

11.5%

 (59,893)

-4.7%

Other operating expenses

 (7,540)

 (8,542)

-11.7%

 (8,841)

-14.7%

Operating expenses

 (390,286)

 (342,893)

13.8%

 (452,171)

-13.7%

Gain on bargain purchase1

-

-

NMF

 1,488

NMF

Acquisition related costs

-

-

NMF

-

NMF

Profit from associates

 386

 271

42.4%

 111

NMF

Operating income before cost of risk

 735,863

 636,030

15.7%

 750,723

-2.0%

Expected credit loss on loans to customers and factoring receivables

 (34,758)

 (17,479)

98.9%

 (30,521)

13.9%

Expected credit loss on finance lease receivables

 666

 (209)

NMF

 (2,050)

NMF

Other expected credit loss and impairment charge on other assets and provisions

 (4,748)

 (9,225)

-48.5%

 (3,839)

23.7%

Cost of risk

 (38,840)

 (26,913)

44.3%

 (36,410)

6.7%

Profit before income tax expense

 697,023

 609,117

14.4%

 714,313

-2.4%

Income tax expense

 (112,035)

 (96,053)

16.6%

 (124,589)

-10.1%

Profit

 584,988

 513,064

14.0%

 589,724

-0.8%

 






Attributable to:






- shareholders of the Group

 584,973

 511,135

14.4%

 589,712

-0.8%

- non-controlling interests

 15

 1,929

-99.2%

 12

25.0%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Basic earnings per share

 13.72

 11.81

16.2%

 13.84

-0.9%

Diluted earnings per share

 13.61

 11.73

16.0%

 13.62

-0.1%

 

GEL thousands

Mar-26

Mar-25

 

Change

y-o-y

Dec-25

Change

q-o-q

BALANCE SHEET HIGHLIGHTS






Cash and cash equivalents

 3,440,364

 4,151,524

-17.1%

 4,572,046

-24.8%

Amounts due from credit institutions

 3,764,046

 3,596,111

4.7%

 3,552,257

6.0%

Investment securities

 9,078,699

 9,373,413

-3.1%

 10,047,237

-9.6%

Investment securities pledged under sale and repurchase agreements

 247,579

 369,637

-33.0%

 147,416

67.9%

Loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables

 41,881,946

 34,137,143

22.7%

 40,065,664

4.5%

Accounts receivable and other loans

 10,935

 10,890

0.4%

 11,470

-4.7%

Prepayments

 161,586

 105,860

52.6%

 200,767

-19.5%

Foreclosed assets

 382,441

 397,387

-3.8%

 374,659

2.1%

Right-of-use assets

 323,191

 262,205

23.3%

 332,630

-2.8%

Investment properties

 102,078

 133,801

-23.7%

 107,573

-5.1%

Property and equipment

 616,135

 554,208

11.2%

 616,839

-0.1%

Goodwill

 41,253

 41,253

0.0%

 41,253

0.0%

Intangible assets

 389,142

 332,622

17.0%

 376,402

3.4%

Income tax assets

 207

 2,304

-91.0%

 41

NMF

Other assets

 528,162

 314,742

67.8%

 407,958

29.5%

Assets held for sale

 14,038

 16,201

-13.4%

 15,644

-10.3%

Total assets

 60,981,802

 53,799,301

13.4%

 60,869,856

0.2%

Client deposits and notes

 39,699,016

 33,969,258

16.9%

 38,629,974

2.8%

Amounts owed to credit institutions

 7,722,100

 9,006,255

-14.3%

 9,499,106

-18.7%

Debt securities issued

 3,298,758

 2,257,270

46.1%

 2,999,871

10.0%

Lease liability

 339,316

 276,564

22.7%

 348,114

-2.5%

Accruals and deferred income

 277,532

 324,940

-14.6%

 301,067

-7.8%

Income tax liabilities

 195,988

 127,988

53.1%

 108,805

80.1%

Other liabilities

 579,422

 415,531

39.4%

 560,676

3.3%

Total liabilities

 52,112,132

 46,377,806

12.4%

 52,447,613

-0.6%

Share capital

 1,423

 1,454

-2.1%

 1,431

-0.6%

Additional paid-in capital

 561,529

 457,615

22.7%

 569,887

-1.5%

Treasury shares

 (18)

 (49)

-63.3%

 (31)

-41.9%

Capital redemption reserve

 196

 164

19.5%

 187

4.8%

Other reserves

 158,589

 92,816

70.9%

 72,048

120.1%

Retained earnings

 8,145,881

 6,867,987

18.6%

 7,776,662

4.7%

Total equity attributable to shareholders of the Group

 8,867,600

 7,419,987

19.5%

 8,420,184

5.3%

Non-controlling interests

 2,070

 1,508

37.3%

 2,059

0.5%

Total equity

 8,869,670

 7,421,495

19.5%

 8,422,243

5.3%

Total liabilities and equity

 60,981,802

 53,799,301

13.4%

 60,869,856

0.2%

Book value per share

 207.82

 170.99

21.5%

 197.85

5.0%

Non-financial information

Customer engagement

 

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Retail (thousands):






Monthly active customers:






    Bank of Georgia (standalone)

 2,233.2

 2,038.0

9.6%

 2,199.1

1.6%

    Ameriabank (standalone)

 495.7

 372.2

33.2%

 479.2

3.4%

Digital MAU:

 

 

 

 

 

    Bank of Georgia (standalone)

 1,868.3

 1,644.6

13.6%

 1,833.1

1.9%

    Ameriabank (standalone)

 362.4

 245.1

47.8%

 336.5

7.7%

Digital DAU:

 

 

 

 

 

    Bank of Georgia (standalone)

 984.9

 833.1

18.2%

 993.4

-0.9%

    Ameriabank (standalone)

 160.2

 102.4

56.5%

 146.9

9.1%

Share of products sold through retail digital channels:

 

 

 

 

 

     Bank of Georgia (standalone)

71%

67%

 

71%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Businesses (thousands):

 

 

 

 

 

Monthly active customers:

 

 

 

 

 

    Bank of Georgia (standalone)

 129.8

 115.3

12.6%

 132.6

-2.1%

    Ameriabank (standalone)

 40.3

 33.7

19.8%

 37.3

8.1%

Digital MAU:






    Bank of Georgia (standalone)

 108.4

 93.3

16.2%

 111.2

-2.5%

    Ameriabank (standalone)

 32.8

 27.0

21.3%

 31.2

5.2%

Payments business

Bank of Georgia (standalone)

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q







Payment MAU - retail (issuing) (thousands)

1,668.3

1,486.5

12.2%

1,639.8

1.7%

Market share in acquiring volumes[5]

56.9%

55.8%


55.8%

 

Active merchants (thousands)

26.7

22.8

17.0%

26.5

1.0%

 


1Q26

1Q25

Change y-o-y

4Q25

Change q-o-q

 

 

 

 

 

 

Volume of payment transactions (acquiring)5(millions):

Bank of Georgia (standalone)

5,788.2

4,834.1

19.7%

6,396.3

-9.5%

    POS

3,563.0

2,952.6

20.7%

4,044.3

-11.9%

   E-comm

2,225.2

1,881.5

18.3%

2,352.0

-5.4%

Additional information

 

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

Employees (period-end)

 

 

 

 

 

Bank of Georgia

 8,708

 8,160

6.7%

8,628

0.9%

Ameriabank

 2,442

 2,053

18.9%

2,326

5.0%

Other

2,359

2,118

11.4%

2,296

2.7%

Group

13,509

12,331

9.6%

13,250

2.0%

 

Branch-network

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bank of Georgia

205

188

9.0%

200

2.5%

Of which:

 

 

 

 

 

    Full-scale branches

109

97

12.4%

104

4.8%

    Transactional branches

96

91

5.5%

96

0.0%

Ameriabank

29

25

16.0%

29

0.0%

 

Unadjusted ratios of the Group  

1Q26

1Q25


4Q25

 







ROAA

3.9%[6]

3.9%6


4.0%


ROAE

27.4%6

28.7%6


28.7%


Cost:income ratio

34.7%6

35.0%6


37.6%


 

FX rates

Mar-26

Mar-25


Dec-25






GEL/USD exchange rate (period-end)

 2.70

 2.77


 2.70

GEL/GBP exchange rate (period-end)

 3.57

 3.58


 3.64

GEL/1000AMD exchange rate (period-end)

 7.12

 7.06


 7.07

 

Shares outstanding

Mar-26

Mar-25

Change y-o-y

Dec-25

Change q-o-q




 


 

Ordinary shares outstanding (period-end)

 42,669,622

 43,393,964

-1.7%

 42,557,763

0.3%

Treasury shares outstanding (period-end)

 554,307

 796,076

-30.4%

 916,570

-39.5%

Total shares outstanding (period-end)

 43,223,929

 44,190,040

-2.2%

 43,474,333

-0.6%

Glossary

Operational terms

MAC (Monthly active customer - retail or business) Number of customers who satisfied pre-defined activity criteria within the past month.

Digital monthly active user (Digital MAU) Number of retail customers who logged into our mobile or internet banking channels at least once within a given month; when referring to business customers, Digital MAU means number of business customers who logged into our business mobile or internet banking channels at least once within a given month.

Digital daily active user (Digital DAU) Average daily number of retail customers who logged into our mobile or internet banking channels within a given month.

Payment MAU Number of retail customers who made at least one payment with a BOG card within the past month. 

Net Promoter Score (NPS) NPS asks: on a scale of 0-10, how likely is it that you would recommend an entity to a friend or a colleague? The responses: 9 and 10 - are promoters; 7 and 8 - are neutral; 1 to 6 - are detractors. The final score equals the percentage of the promoters minus the percentage of the detractors.

Ratio definitions and abbreviations

Alternative performance measures (APMs) In this announcement the management uses various APMs, which we believe provide additional useful information for understanding the financial performance of the Group. These APMs are not defined by International Financial Reporting Standards, and also may not be directly comparable with other companies who use similar measures. We believe that these APMs provide the best representation of our financial performance as these measures are used by the management to evaluate the Group's operating performance and make day-to-day operating decisions.

Basic earnings per share Profit for the period attributable to shareholders of the Group divided by the weighted average number of outstanding ordinary shares over the same period.

Book value per share Total equity attributable to shareholders of the Group divided by ordinary shares outstanding at period-end; Ordinary shares outstanding at period-end equals number of ordinary shares at period-end less number of treasury shares at period-end.

CBA Central Bank of Armenia.

CBA Common Equity Tier 1 (CET 1) capital adequacy ratio Common Equity Tier 1 capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the CBA. Calculations are made for Ameriabank standalone.

CBA Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio Tier 1 capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the CBA. Calculations are made for Ameriabank standalone.

CBA Total capital adequacy ratio Total regulatory capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the CBA. Calculations are made for Ameriabank standalone.

CBA Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) High-quality liquid assets divided by net cash outflows over the next 30 days (as defined by the CBA). Calculations are made for Ameriabank standalone.

CBA Net stable funding ratio (NSFR) Available amount of stable funding divided by the required amount of stable funding (as defined by the CBA). Calculations are made for Ameriabank standalone.

Constant currency basis (CC) To eliminate the impact of foreign exchange fluctuations, constant currency growth for loans and deposits was calculated using the exchange rates as at 31 December 2025 for quarter-over-quarter growth and as at 31 March 2025 for year-over-year growth. These calculations were performed separately for the GFS and AFS segments.

Cost of credit risk ratio Expected loss on loans to customers, factoring and finance lease receivables for the period divided by monthly average gross loans to customers, finance lease and factoring over the same period (annualised where applicable).

Cost of deposits Interest expense on client deposits and notes for the period divided by monthly average client deposits and notes over the same period (annualised where applicable).

Cost of funds Interest expense for the period divided by monthly average interest-bearing liabilities over the same period (annualised where applicable).

Cost:income ratio Operating expenses divided by operating income.

FC Foreign currency.

Full-scale branch A banking branch that provides all banking services.

Interest-bearing liabilities Amounts owed to credit institutions, client deposits and notes, and debt securities issued.

Interest-earning assets (excluding cash) Amounts due from credit institutions, investment securities (but excluding corporate shares) and loans to customers, factoring and finance lease receivables.

NBG Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) High-quality liquid assets divided by net cash outflows over the next 30 days (as defined by the NBG). Calculations are made for Bank of Georgia standalone, based on IFRS.

NBG Net stable funding ratio (NSFR) Available amount of stable funding divided by the required amount of stable funding (as defined by the NBG). Calculations are made for Bank of Georgia standalone, based on IFRS.

LC Local currency.

Leverage (times) Total liabilities divided by total equity.

Liquid assets Cash and cash equivalents, amounts due from credit institutions and investment securities.

Loan yield Interest income from loans to customers, factoring and finance lease receivables for the period divided by monthly average gross loans to customers, factoring and finance lease receivables over the same period (annualised where applicable).

NBG National Bank of Georgia.

NBG (Basel III) Common Equity Tier 1 (CET 1) capital adequacy ratio Common Equity Tier 1 capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the NBG. Calculations are made for Bank of Georgia standalone, based on IFRS.

NBG (Basel III) Tier 1 capital adequacy ratio Tier 1 capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the NBG. Calculations are made for Bank of Georgia standalone, based on IFRS.

NBG (Basel III) Total capital adequacy ratio Total regulatory capital divided by total risk weighted assets, both calculated in accordance with the requirements of the NBG. Calculations are made for Bank of Georgia standalone, based on IFRS.

Net interest margin (NIM) Net interest income for the period divided by monthly average interest earning assets excluding cash and cash equivalents and corporate shares over the same period (annualised where applicable).

NMF Not meaningful; used when percentage changes are distorted by zero or missing comparatives, or when the resulting change is above 200 percent.

Non-performing loans (NPLs) The principal and/or interest payments on loans overdue for more than 90 days; or the exposures experiencing substantial deterioration of their creditworthiness and the debtors assessed as unlikely to pay their credit obligation(s) in full without realisation of collateral.

NPL coverage ratio Allowance for expected credit loss for loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables divided by NPLs.

NPL coverage ratio adjusted for discounted value of collateral Allowance for expected credit loss on loans to customers, finance lease and factoring receivables, plus the discounted value of collateral for the NPL portfolio (capped at the respective loan amount), divided by total NPLs.

One-off items Significant items that do not arise during the ordinary course of business.

Operating leverage Percentage change in operating income less percentage change in operating expenses.

Return on average total assets (ROAA) Profit for the period divided by monthly average total assets for the same period (annualised where applicable).

Return on average total equity (ROAE) Profit for the period attributable to shareholders of the Group divided by monthly average equity attributable to shareholders of the Group for the same period (annualised where applicable).

Transactional branch Bank branch that is mostly used for transactional services by clients. Such branches do not provide complex banking services, such as issuing mortgages, services to legal clients, etc.

Lion Finance Group PLC profile

Lion Finance Group PLC (formerly Bank of Georgia Group PLC; the "Company" or the "Group" when referring to the group companies as a whole) is an LSE-listed company whose main subsidiaries provide banking and financial services focused in the high-growth Georgian and Armenian markets through leading, customer-centric, universal banks - Bank of Georgia in Georgia and Ameriabank in Armenia. By building on our competitive strengths, we are committed to driving business growth, sustaining high profitability, and generating strong returns, while creating opportunities for our stakeholders and making a positive contribution in the communities where we operate.

Lion Finance Group PLC is listed on the London Stock Exchange's main market in the Equity Shares (Commercial Companies) category and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 index. Ticker: BGEO.

Legal entity identifier: 213800XKDG12NQG8VC53

Registered address: 29 Farm Street, London, W1J 5RL, United Kingdom; Registered under number 10917019 in England and Wales

Company secretary: Computershare Company Secretarial Services Limited (The Pavilions, Bridgwater Road, Bristol BS13 8FD, United Kingdom)

Registrar: Computershare Investor Services PLC (The Pavilions Bridgwater Road, Bristol BS99 6ZZ, United Kingdom)

Please note that Investor Centre is a free, secure online service run by our Registrar, Computershare, giving you convenient access to information on your shareholdings.

Investor Centre Web Address: www.uk.computershare.com/Investor/#Home

Investor Centre Shareholder Helpline: +44 (0)370 873 5866

Auditors: Ernst & Young LLP (25 Churchill Place Canary Wharf, London E14 5EY, United Kingdom)

Contacts:

Email: ir@lfg.uk

Telephone: +44(0) 203 178 4052

Sam Goodacre (Advisor to the CEO): sgoodacre@lfg.uk; +44 745 398 8513  

Nini Arshakuni (Head of Investor Relations): narshakuni@lfg.uk;  +44 203 178 4034

Further information

For more on results publications, go to Results Centre on https://lionfinancegroup.uk/results-center/quarterly-earnings/

For more on investor information, go to https://lionfinancegroup.uk/investor-information/shareholder-meetings/  

For news updates, go to https://lionfinancegroup.uk/news/news-announcements/  

For share price information, go to https://lionfinancegroup.uk/investor-information/share-price/

Forward-looking statements

This announcement contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, statements concerning expectations, projections, objectives, targets, goals, strategies, future events, future revenues or performance, capital expenditures, financing needs, plans or intentions relating to acquisitions, competitive strengths and weaknesses, plans or goals relating to financial position and future operations and development. Although Lion Finance Group PLC believes that the expectations and opinions reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, no assurance can be given that such expectations and opinions will prove to have been correct. By their nature, these forward-looking statements are subject to a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and contingencies, and actual results and events could differ materially from those currently being anticipated as reflected in such statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in forward-looking statements, certain of which are beyond our control, include, among other things: macro risk, including domestic instability; geopolitical risk; credit risk; liquidity and funding risk; capital risk; market risk; regulatory and legal risk; conduct risk; financial crime risk; information security and data protection risks; operational risk; human capital risk; model risk; strategic risk; reputational risk; climate-related risk; and other key factors that could adversely affect our business and financial performance, as indicated elsewhere in this document and in past and future filings and reports of the Group, including the 'Principal risks and uncertainties' included in Lion Finance Group PLC's Annual Report and Accounts 2025. No part of this document constitutes, or shall be taken to constitute, an invitation or inducement to invest in Lion Finance Group PLC or any other entity within the Group, and must not be relied upon in any way in connection with any investment decision. Lion Finance Group PLC and other entities within the Group undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except to the extent legally required. Nothing in this document should be construed as a profit forecast.



[1] In 4Q25, Other Businesses recorded a GEL 1.5m gain on bargain purchase following Digital Area's acquisition of Fina Ltd., an ERP and business management platform.

[2] In 4Q25, a one-off item totalling GEL 29.6m was recorded, relating to the Group's revised accounting treatment of annual discretionary share-based awards (Employee Stock Ownership Plan, or ESOP), accelerating expense recognition to reflect services rendered prior to the official grant date and resulting in a one-off ESOP catch-up recognised in 4Q25. As a result, a one-off expense of GEL 29.1m was recognised in the GFS segment and GEL 0.5m in the Other businesses division, allocated proportionately based on the respective service contributions. Salaries and other employee benefits, operating expenses and all subsequent lines, as well as ROAA, ROAE and Cost:income ratio were adjusted for this one-off in 4Q25.

[3] Throughout this announcement, gross loans to customers and the related allowance for impairment are presented net of expected credit loss (ECL) on contractually accrued interest income. These do not have an effect on the net loans to customers' balance. Management believes that netted-off balances provide the best representation of the loan portfolio position.

[4] As per Ameriabank's internal classification, the Retail segment includes all individuals and those legal entities serviced by the bank's branches. The Corporate segment includes all legal entities not serviced by the branches.

[5] To provide a clearer view of our business performance, we have excluded instant Peer-to-Peer (P2P) transactions from our acquiring volume figures. Although previously classified as e-commerce activity due to the technical nature of card-to-card transfers, these transactions do not reflect our core merchant acquiring business. Accordingly, we have restated all prior period figures for consistency and comparability.

[6] No adjustments were made to the figures during this period; Adjusted and unadjusted figures are identical.

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