logo
Monzo boss plays down IPO rumours after jump in profits

Monzo boss plays down IPO rumours after jump in profits

Times03-06-2025
In 2015 Monzo, or Mondo as it was then called, was little more than a twinkle in the eye of its founder Tom Blomfield. Aged 30 at the time, Blomfield could boast just 500 holders of his 'hot coral pink' payment cards and the backing of a single venture capital firm, Passion Capital.
His claim at the time, 'We're trying to be the Facebook for banking', sounded ambitious if not downright deluded. But fast-forward ten years and Monzo has come a long way and on a spectacular growth trajectory not so dissimilar to Mark Zuckerberg's.
Results on Monday showed customers at the digital bank rising by 2.4 million to more than 12 million in the year to March. Revenues were up by 48 per cent to £1.2 billion. Deposits pushed through the £16 billion mark. Underlying profits grew eightfold to £114 million.
Even after including the one-off cost of a scheme to allow staff to cash in share options in December, pre-tax profits were still up a healthy fourfold to £60.5 million.
London-based Monzo claims to be Britain's seventh largest bank by customer numbers and the nation's biggest digital bank. It is also far more popular with customers than most of its incumbent branch-based rivals: the latest independent study by the Competition and Markets Authority scored it second for overall service quality, beating every other bank except Chase.
Blomfield is long gone, having left in 2021 to farm alpacas and launch other ventures, but his successor TS Anil hailed the latest results as the product of 'bringing the best in tech together with the best in banking'.
The standout growth engine last year was business banking, which grew its customer base by 49 per cent to 625,000 small business clients. One in six new business start-ups in the UK were now banking with Monzo, Anil said.
Monzo is much more than the banking app with clever tools that helped customers to budget and share bills, which in the early days became the coolest way of paying, for millennials and Gen Zs. It has expanded into personal loans, contents insurance and even pensions in a joint venture with BlackRock. It has launched in the United States and is preparing a foray into the European Union, via Ireland.
Not everything is going well. Like most other retail banks, Monzo reported a slimming in its net interest margin — the difference between deposit rates and lending rates — from 4.41 per cent to 4.09 per cent. Margins have been falling in the wake of base rate cuts.
But Anil played down the hit, saying Monzo's success was built on volume growth and that it had other income streams including subscription services such as Monzo Perks, where customers pay a £7-a-month fee in return for benefits including railcards and free sausage rolls at Greggs. About 900,000 Monzo customers pay for subscription services.
Another blemish in the latest results was the disclosure of possible failings in its anti-money laundering controls. An investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority was now 'at an advanced stage' and was 'likely to have a financial cost to Monzo', it disclosed.
A flotation now sounds some way off. 'Honestly, an IPO is not something we're focused on right now,' Anil said. 'We're oriented entirely around scaling the business and taking it to greater heights.'
Speculation that Monzo was heading for an imminent public listing had intensified after Morgan Stanley was used to introduce it to potential investors and it started recruiting to build an in-house investor relations team. Last month Emma Reynolds, the economic secretary to the Treasury, met Monzo executives to press the case for a London float.
Anil, however, played down the IPO option on Monday, while adding, 'We believe it [Monzo] would make a great public company one day.'
There is no urgency. Last year Monzo raised £500 million from institutional investors and is now capital-accretive. Its backers include Alphabet, the owner of Google, and Tencent, the Chinese video games and social media company. It also has a fan club of early users who bought shares through crowdfunding platforms. A secondary share sale in December, enabling staff to cash in share options, valued the company at £4.5 billion, it has said.
Putting that claim to the test through a flotation is, it seems, still some way off.
Rise of the Monzonauts
Monzo and its 2,500 employees, whom it dubs Monzonauts, have been on an epic journey over the past ten years. With an £18 billion balance sheet and a £4.5 billion valuation (by its own measure), the company is no longer a tiddler in any sense.
Through the offering of helpful and imaginative app-based budgeting and spending tools, it has won over millions of loyal customers. It has started to cross-sell them other services, whether mortgage-broking or pension-finding or contents insurance.
It has also managed to bulldoze its way into small business banking, catering not just to sole traders but in some cases to companies with dozens of staff, and grabbing market share from the incumbent banks.
It has already shown itself capable of persuading consumers to make it their main bank, into which at least half their salaries are paid. Primary account holders account for 33 per cent of the total and it is growing.
There are, however, three tests still to come before Monzo can be said to have fully come of age. The first is finding a home for all those deposits, most of which get parked at the Bank of England. Monzo needs to get more fully into the lending business, though its caution till now suits its capital-light model.
The second is exporting the formula overseas. Monzo is for now still tiny in the US and only just thinking about the EU, though it has established an office in Dublin. There's no guarantee the Monzo product will travel, though there is plenty of room for growth still in the UK, of course.
The third is the test of a full-blooded recession. The 2020/21 downturn was hugely softened by government support for households and business. Monzo's credit-scoring techniques, and the potential for a blowout in borrower defaults, have yet to be assessed.
In their first decade the Monzonauts have proved themselves creative and painstaking innovators but they have not yet been fully tested.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Moon Lane Books launches fundraiser after financial issues
Moon Lane Books launches fundraiser after financial issues

BBC News

time29 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Moon Lane Books launches fundraiser after financial issues

A bookshop in south-east London which was crowned Children's Bookseller of the Year two years in a row has started a fundraiser to help with its financial Lane Books in Catford says the rising cost-of-living as well as shrinking school budgets - which it works with for collaborations - were impacting its far, more than £11,000 of its £40,000 target has been raised. It will use the money to help to cover business costs and organise free community to the Booksellers Association, the number of bookshops in the UK fell from 1,063 to 1,052 in 2024 in the UK, In London, seven independent stores closed last year however ten new ones were set up. The store, which opened in 2018, runs workshops, storytelling sessions and school outreach owners say the store specialises in "promoting equity and inclusion" within children's literature, and aims to ensure "every child has access to books that enable them to feel seen, reflected, respected and valued."The majority of the £40,000 target is required to cover rent, business rates and other overheads, according to the store's rest will go towards running free in-store events and a monthly book club. One of their key goals is to fundraise to pay authors to run workshops and events."This particular goal is all the more important for us, because people are often pushed out of the creative industries when they are not adequately paid for their work and time," they said. The shop says it supports authors from all backgrounds, and aims to represent different cultures, disabilities, socio-economic situations and family dynamics in the books on was awarded Children's Bookseller of the Year in 2020 and 2021, and British Bookseller of the Year in 2021, by the British Book manager Jasmine Dellimore said: "It's great to see how happy these kids are to see themselves reflected in the books we stock."The aim is to continue holding events so that kids can come in, read stories, have stories be told to them, and be inspired to tell their own stories and share their own experiences." 'A little oasis' Lauren Webb, who frequently visits the shop with her two daughters, said it would be "such a shame" if it were to close."We come in here a lot and it's like a little oasis in here. It's a really important part of the local community."Ruby Tipper, one of the children who is a regular customer at the shop, said she found it "very welcoming and inviting with all its colours and books laid out".

OPEC+ agrees in principle another large oil output hike, sources say
OPEC+ agrees in principle another large oil output hike, sources say

Reuters

time29 minutes ago

  • Reuters

OPEC+ agrees in principle another large oil output hike, sources say

LONDON, Aug 3 (Reuters) - OPEC+ agreed in principle to boost oil output by 548,000 barrels per day in September, two OPEC+ sources said on Sunday as the group finishes unwinding its biggest tranche of production cuts amid fears of further supply disruptions from Russia. A decision is expected at a meeting scheduled to begin at 1100 GMT, amid fresh U.S. demands for India to stop buying Russian oil as Washington seeks ways to push Moscow for a peace deal with Ukraine. Fresh EU sanctions have also pushed Indian state refiners to suspend Russian oil purchases. OPEC+, which pumps about half of the world's oil, had been curtailing production for several years to support the market. But it reversed course this year to regain market share, and as U.S. President Donald Trump demanded OPEC pump more oil. OPEC+ began output increases in April with a modest hike of 138,000 bpd, followed by larger hikes of 411,000 bpd in May, June and July and 548,000 bpd in August. If the group agrees to the 548,000-bpd September increase, it will have fully unwound its previous production cut of 2.2 million bpd, while allowing the United Arab Emirates to raise output by 300,000 bpd. OPEC+ still has in place a separate, voluntary cut of about 1.65 million bpd from eight members and a 2-million-bpd cut across all members, which expire at the end of 2026. Sources have said previously the group had no plans to discuss other tranches of cuts on Sunday.

Bank of England forecast to cut interest rates amid rising unemployment and Trump tariffs
Bank of England forecast to cut interest rates amid rising unemployment and Trump tariffs

The Guardian

time29 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Bank of England forecast to cut interest rates amid rising unemployment and Trump tariffs

Bank of England policymakers are widely expected to cut interest rates this week to prevent the economy sliding backwards amid rising unemployment and the hit to global trade from Donald Trump's fresh round of import tariffs. City traders are betting that the Bank's nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC) will reduce the headline rate on Thursday by 0.25 percentage points to 4%, marking the fifth cut since last August and taking interest rates back to where they were in March 2023. Financial markets have put the chance of a reduction at the August meeting at more than 80% and are pencilling in a further quarter-point reduction before the end of the year. The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will welcome the move, which will push down mortgages rates and cut the cost of borrowing for cash-strapped businesses. However, the decision is likely to illustrate the difficult situation confronting the UK as the government struggles to boost growth while trying to limit Whitehall spending before the autumn budget. The economy shrank in May by 0.1% and in April by 0.3%, which many economists blamed on the uncertainty caused by Trump's tariffs and extra business taxes in last October's budget, which came into effect in April. In a sign of weaker growth over the next year, the number of vacancies fell below its pre-pandemic level and the unemployment rate rose to 4.7% in the three months to May, reaching the highest level since June 2021. Trump has signed a trade deal with the UK capping tariffs on most goods to 10%, but on Friday the US president announced extra import tariffs on trading partners of up to 50%, harming global growth. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently said the UK economy would struggle to expand by more than 0.1% in the third and fourth quarters of the year, before a slight increase in the quarterly growth rate to 0.3% next year. The MPC will publish fresh forecasts on Thursday that could prove to be even gloomier, indicating that a period of stagflation is imminent, brought on by a slowdown in growth over the next year while inflation remains high. The consumer prices index (CPI) increased by 3.6% in the year to June, according to the latest official figures, well above the MPC's 2% target. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion Matt Swannell, chief economic adviser to the EY Item Club said an increase in vacancies and higher unemployment showed the labour market was weakening while pay growth had cooled more quickly than the Bank of England's May forecast. But he forecast a split in the MPC vote after a jump in food inflation in June. 'Signs of lingering price pressures will mean the committee remains cautious, with two of the hawkish MPC members expected to favour no change,' he said. Inflation has risen by more than the Bank of England expected three months ago after significant increases in the cost of some basic items such as meat and butter. 'The increase in food prices is particularly important to the MPC as it feeds through to households' inflation expectations – one of the committee's key gauges around the risk of inflation persistence,' Swannell added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store