Bank of America Merrill Lynch 28 September, 2016 Jan Erik Back CFO 1
Well diversified business in a strong economic environment Operates principally in economically robust AAA rated European countries Finland Norway Sweden Estonia Denmark Latvia Lithuania Germany Lithuania Universal banking in Sweden and the Baltics Principally corporate banking in the other Nordic countries and Germany Baltic Banking Corporate & Private Customers Diversified Business mix Share of operating profit - full year 2015 Excluding one-off Life & Investment Management 7% 32% 13% 48% Lithuania Germany* Estonia Latvia 4% 6% 2% Finland 5% 1% Sweden Denmark 12% 11% 59% Norway Geography excluding International Network and Eliminations, Business divisions excluding Other and eliminations. * Excluding Treasury operations Large Corporates & Financial Institutions 2
SEB s diversified business mix sustains earnings Lowest Real Estate & Mortgage exposure Sector credit exposure composition (EAD) 1) FY 2015 Least dependent on NII Operating income by revenue stream, FY 2015 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 6% 5% 29% 3% 14% 41% 2% 12% 9% 33% 1% 11% 31% 4% 8% 8% 39% 6% 14% 22% 6% 6% 37% 25% 18% 0% SEB Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 3 Other Institutions Other retail loans (SME and households) Household mortgages Housing co-operative associations Real estate Corporates SEB corporate exposure is to 83% large Swedish, other Nordic and German international corporates with geographically diversified sales and income streams SEB has the lowest total real estate and mortgage exposure 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 1) EAD = Risk Exposure Amount / Risk Weight Source: Companies Pillar 3 reports 8% 3% 3% 2% 6% 7% 6% 2) 11% 14% 30% 23% 37% 42% SEB Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 2 Net interest income Net financial income 30% 50% 61% Net fee & commission income Net insurance income 69% Net other income SEB has its roots in servicing large corporates and institutions and high net worth individuals which is reflected in the broadest income generation base with less dependence on NII Some of SEB s domestic peers are more heavily focused on households and real estate lending rendering a greater dependence on NII 2) Excluding one-off Swiss withholding tax cost 3
Operating leverage, excluding one-offs Average quarterly income (SEK bn) 9,2 9,4 9,8 10,4 11,0 11,3 10,4 Average quarterly expenses (SEK bn) 5,8 5,9 5,7 5,6 5,5 5,5 5,4 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Jan-Jun 2016 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Jan-Jun 2016 Average quarterly profit before credit losses (SEK bn) 3,4 3,5 4,1 4,8 5,5 5,7 5,0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Jan-Jun 2016 Notes: Excluding one-offs (restructuring in 2010, bond buy-back and IT impairment in 2012, sale of MasterCard shares and Euroline in 2014, Swiss withholding tax in 2015, Goodwill impairment, other one-off cost items and SEB Baltic VISA transaction in 2016). Estimated IAS 19 costs in 2010. 4
Strong capital position in an uncertain landscape Capital, liquidity and asset quality CET1 Basel III 18.7% LCR 129% Liquid resources ~25% NPL coverage ratio 64% Loan to deposit ratio 143% Credit loss level 7 bps Corporate risk weights Bank tax Basel IV 5
A new vision has been established for the bank Key beliefs about banking SEB strengths in future market Competitive landscape To deliver world-class service to our customers 6
Accelerate growth in Sweden Continue to grow in the Nordics and Germany Savings & pension growth Service leadership Digitisation Next generation competences Grow in areas of strength Resilience and flexibility Leading customer experience 7
Example Growth: Corporate customers and volumes continue to increase C&PC: Continued inflow of SMEs +6,000 New customers H1 SEB Pension & Försäkring Market shares total pension market, rolling 12-months % 25 20 180 160 Customers (thousands) Market share (SME) 16% 15% 15 10 Peer 1 15.8 % Peer 2 13.2 % Peer 3 12.2 % 9.4 % 140 120 14% 13% 5 Peer 4 9.1 % 100 80 2012 2013 2014 2015 Q2 2016 12% 11% 0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 2014 2014 2014 2014201520152015201520162016 8
Digitisation isn t something new in banking SEBs customers no. of visits (monthly) 16m Mobile 14m 12m 10m 8m 6m 4m Internet 2m 0m jan-12 jul-12 jan-13 jul-13 jan-14 jul-14 jan-15 jul-15 jan-16 jul-16 Branch offices Telephone 9
45% Fintechs and banks are good at different things What fintechs do well What banks do well 24% 37% 17% 35% 14% V S 14% 33% 32% 16% 11% 29% Innovation Agility Experimentation & Risk Start-ups Incumbents Capital Brand Customers Source: Global Center for Digital Business Transformation at IMD, 2015 10
Example Transform: Delivery Highlights Q2 2016 Digitisation Simplification Tink Channel Transformation New Fund Account System New Private Banking Platform Payment Infra Centralised Youth App Annual letters digitised German Customers migrated to global platform 11
The trajectory of profitable growth continues I L L U S T R A T I V E ~27 ~21 Operating profit CAGR (2015-2018) +7% +10% +5% +8% Large Corporates & Fin. Institutions Corporate & Private Customers Life & IM Baltic 2015 RoE 2018 14 % CET1 18 % 12
Increased leverage on existing cost caps Activities Decentralisation Synergies and streamlining Investments in growth and customer interface Agile IT development Transfer of business operations to Riga and Vilnius Self-financing growth Operating expenses (SEK bn) 24,0 23,5 23,0 22,5 22,0 21,5 21,0 23,5 22,9 <22.5bn 22,3 22,1 22,2 <22.0bn Including 2017 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016-2017 Note: 2015 and earlier not restated 13
Financial ambitions Dividend payout 40% or above Common Equity Tier 1 with ~150bps buffer Cost cap SEK 22.0bn (until 2017) RoE long-term aspiration 15% competitive with peers 14
Going forward Focus on meeting changing customer behaviour Continued disciplined execution Increased emphasis on resilience and long-term perspective in challenging economic climate 15