CEO Nigel Terrington pointed to a difficult confluence of rising interest rates and stagnant house prices, which triggered a £21.5 million impairment charge on development finance loans. While the bank expects to reach a margin of 300 basis points for the 2026 fiscal year, the path remains uneven. Paragon has relied on cheaper wholesale funding to bolster these figures, a strategy that analysts at Jefferies suggest may become increasingly difficult to replicate as deposit market pressures intensify.
Investors reacted sharply to the mixed results, sending the company's shares down by as much as 7.5% following the report of a 2.5% decline in underlying profit for the six-month period ending March 31. Despite these headwinds, analysts noted that the bank’s leadership appears willing to actively manage funding challenges, even if the broader economic environment remains stubbornly unpredictable for landlords and business customers alike.





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