Principality Building Society Explained

Principality Building Society
Cymdeithas Adeiladu'r Principality
Type:Building society (mutual)
Industry:Banking and financial services
Products:Savings, Mortgages, Investments
Revenue: (2022)
Operating Income: (2022)
Net Income: (2022)
Assets: (2022)
Equity: (2022)
Location:Cardiff, Wales, UK
Locations:71

The Principality Building Society (Welsh: Cymdeithas Adeiladu'r Principality) is a building society based in Cardiff, Wales. At December 2022, the Society had total assets of more than £11 billion.[1] It is the largest building society in Wales and the sixth largest[2] in the United Kingdom.

Principality Building Society is a mutual, which means it is owned by its members rather than shareholders. It serves clients through the internet and telephone as well as at high street branches. It is a member of the Building Societies Association.

History

1860-1960

The society was formed in Cardiff in 1860 under the lengthy name of the Principality Permanent Benefit Building and Investment Society; the “Benefit” was dropped in 1876 when it incorporated under the Building Societies Act 1874, and to its present name in 1913. The trustees were local dignitaries and the directors largely tradesmen and merchants. It did not have its first office until 1870 and although it had an early agency, it remained a small local society. Despite this, the Principality was able to claim to be “the largest by far in Wales and the West of England” when it gave evidence to a House of Commons Committee in 1893. By 1910, the Society had some 6,000 accounts and was large enough to have its own office in 1914. It was not until the 1930s that the society appeared to make any significant move away from Cardiff, when branches were opened in Swansea and Barry in 1934. Given the boom in private housing and the subsequent impact of inflation, the society’s asset growth remained modest – from £2m in 1932 to £3m in 1947. Expansion from the 1930s appeared to come mainly from agencies and by 1960 these totalled around 50.[3]

Post 1960

From 1960 the pace of expansion appeared to increase. Important branch openings were Chester in 1960 and London in 1963. The Principality also began to acquire smaller Welsh societies, three between 1959 and 1968. During that decade assets grew from £9m to £34m. In the 1970s there were a further five acquisitions but a much greater emphasis on organic expansion through new branches – over 20 in the decade. Branch openings continued through the 1980s and in 1991 assets reached £1billion. By then, the branch network was established and although there was the occasional new opening, the asset growth came from its existing structure, with private mortgage lending supplemented by the formation of a commercial lending division in 2002. Today, those assets stand at £11bn.[4]

Diversification

Principality acquired Parkhurst and Peter Alan estate agents in 1987, and the merged entity was later sold to Connells Group for £16.4m in 2014.[5] A site for a new head office to accommodate the expanding business was acquired in 1989 and Principality House in The Friary was opened in 1992.[6] [7]

The company acquired Loan Link Limited in 2004. This gave Nemo Personal Finance Ltd, a subsidiary, the opportunity to launch in 2005. In 2013 the company acquired Mead Property Services (covering Buckinghamshire, Berkshire and Oxfordshire) and Thomas George (covering Cardiff and south Wales).

On 8 September 2015, Principality Building Society announced that they had purchased the naming rights to the Millennium Stadium in a 10-year deal. Since 1 January 2016 it has been known as the Principality Stadium.[8] Since 2023, it is also the headline sponsor of the Principality Cardiff Half Marathon.

Mergers and acquisitions

The following building societies merged into the Principality Building Society:[9]

Operations

It has 53 branches and 18 agencies across Wales and the English border, and employs around 1,100 people. In 2005 it expanded into personal loans with the creation of a new company called Nemo Personal Finance Ltd. In the same year as launching Nemo Loans, Principality revamped its image. It won the 2005 'Business of the Year' award for Wales and the West Country. The assets of the group increased to £4.4bn in the same year and to £6.7bn in 2012.

References

  1. Web site: 18 February 2024. Principality Building Society Annual Report and Accounts 2022. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20230412041028/https://www.principality.co.uk/-/media/PBS/About-Us/Financial-Reports-PDFs/ARA2022.pdf. 12 April 2023. 18 February 2024.
  2. https://www.principality.co.uk/en/About-Us/Media-Centre/20130731-Principality-grows-to-sixth-largest-building-society-in-the-UK.aspx
  3. Audrey Noakes, Principality Building Society 1860-1960, 1960, London
  4. Principality website https://www.principality.co.uk/about-us/your-principality/our-history
  5. Web site: Peter Alan Poised for Growth Under new owner. Newsco Insider Limited. 27 September 2015. 28 August 2014.
  6. Web site: Mergers and Name Changes. Extract from BSA Yearbook 2013/14. Building Societies Association. 2 December 2013. 4 October 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131109054139/http://www.bsa.org.uk/docs/consumerpdfs/yearbooknamechangepart1.pdf. 9 November 2013. dmy-all.
  7. Web site: Our History. www.principality.co.uk. 2016-03-27.
  8. Web site: Millennium Stadium to be renamed Principality Stadium in historic naming rights deal with WRU. 8 September 2015. Wales Online. 27 September 2015.
  9. BSA Merger list https://www.bsa.org.uk/BSA/files/92/929551d7-df58-4495-ac6b-3b034d2c1c0f.pdf

External links