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#1Second quarter 2023 results do your thing ING posts net result of €2,155 mln Steven van Rijswijk, CEO of ING 3 August 2023 do your thing#2Delivering strong value in 2Q2023 Continued primary customer growth +227,000 versus +106,000 in 1Q2023 High share of mobile-only customers¹) 60% versus 57% in 1Q2023 Growing volume mobilised²) to finance the transition €25.0 bln versus €21.9 bln in 1Q2022 Strong total income growth 23% year-on-year Increasing return on equity³) 11.7% 4-quarter rolling Attractive shareholder return €4.5 bln distributed YTD4) 1) Retail customers who used the mobile channel at least once in the last quarter 2) Volume mobilised for WB clients; includes loan products, capital markets, derivatives and advisory propositions that support clients by financing their sustainable activities and in the transition to a more sustainable business model. In case of an ESG lead role the pro-rata share of the transaction is included, otherwise our final take is included 3) ING Group return on equity is calculated using IFRS-EU shareholders' equity after excluding amounts reserved for future distribution 4) Based on payment date, including announced interim dividend over 1H2023 and the total amount of the ongoing €1.5 bln share buyback 2#3We are executing our strategy Our purpose Empowering people to stay a step ahead in life and in business Our strategic priorities Superior customer experience Straight-through-processing of Retail customer journeys improved to 69%1) 2Q2023 highlights 63% digital onboarding of new customers in the Netherlands Sustainability Organised our first internal Global Sustainability Week Launch of an eco-renovation loan for Business Banking clients in Belgium 1) Average of straight-through-processing (STP) rates of 291 Retail customer journeys; STP rate is the percentage of a customer journey that is handled without manual intervention 3#4ING's strengths are amplified in a positive rate environment Total income excluding incidental income items (in € bln) ¹) Low rate environment Positive rate environment 11.4 10.1 8.9 9.1 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.5 1.2 8.7 8.8 9.1 1.1 0.6 8:4 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.2 0.5 1.8 0.5 0.5 U.4 0.5 0.6 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.5 1.8 1.5 1.5 1.7 1.8 1.8 4.1 4.3 4.5 4.5 4.2 4.7 4.6 4.6 4.6 4.7 4.4 3.6 2.1 2.2 2.1 1.9 2.5 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.4 1H2018 2H2018 1H2019 2H2019 Liability NII 1H2020 Lending NII 2H2020 1H2021 2H2021 1H2022 2H2022 1H2023 ■Fees Financial Markets²) Treasury & Other²) Focus on income diversification has resulted in structural fee income growth and resilient total income during a low rate environment Attractive funding structure with 61% of the growing balance sheet funded by customer deposits ~55% of our replicating portfolio is reinvested longer than 1 year, creating a long-term support of our liability NII ■ Return of loan demand and improved asset margins will be a catalyst for future income growth 1) Incidental income items (corresponding with 'other volatile income items' as presented on slide 18) excluded: €198 mln in 1H2019; €-42 mln in 1H2020; €-230 mln in 2H2020; €388 mln in 1H2021; €141 mln in 2H2021; €-223 mln in 1H2022; €-824 mln in 2H2022 (including €-288 mln to unwind a hedge in Belgium); and €-75 mln in 1H2023 2) Excluding fees 4#5Well on track towards our 2025 targets Financial target 2Q2023 2025 target Drivers Primary customer growth 5-10% Fee income ¹) 2.7% annual growth Total income 1,2) +19.2% 4-5% CAGR Cost/income ratio³ 3) 54.4% 50-52% CET1 ratio 14.9% ~12.5%5) ☐ Increasing package and service fees in daily banking to better reflect cost of service Growing base in investment products, both in number of accounts as well as AuM Global footprint to capture loan growth Continued tailwind from a positive rate environment on the replicating portfolio Liability NII growth depending on central bank rate increases, deposit tracking and customer behaviour Lending NII growth depending on demand and pricing discipline in the market ■ Fee growth ☐ Total income growth ■ Costs including full-year inflationary effects and continued investments in our business for growth Lower regulatory costs once funds required for the DGS and SRF are filled 4) ■ ■ Intention to converge to our target level in roughly equal steps through pay-out ratio of 50% of resilient net profit and additional distributions The next steps to converge to our ~12.5% CET1 ratio target will reflect the strong capital generation and capital discipline and we will update the market with the 3Q2023 results Continued income growth and cost control Improved income / risk-weighted assets in Wholesale Banking Return on equity³) 11.7% 12% Strong diversified asset book and low Stage 3 ratio protects P&L ~12.5% CET1 ratio target level 1) Year-on-year comparison 2) Total income excludes net TLTRO impact and hyperinflation accounting in Türkiye 3) Based on 4-quarter rolling average. RoE is calculated using IFRS-EU shareholders' equity after excluding amounts reserved for future distribution 4) Formal build-up phase of several local Deposit Guarantee Schemes (DGS) and European Single Resolution Fund (SRF) are scheduled to be completed by 2024 5) Implies management buffer (incl. Pillar 2 Guidance) of ~180 bps over fully loaded CET1 requirement of 10.70% 5#62Q2023 results Full P&L overview on slide 17 6#7Continued strong NII development Net interest income (in € mln) Lending and deposit margin (in bps) Net interest margin (in bps) 3,545 4,012 4,061 135 3,465 76 3,332 71 129 127 128 129 159 156 121 114 137 3,389 3,860 3,604 4,012 4,061 135 136 94 145 140 136 134 71 128 52 -343 -315 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Polish mortgage moratorium Net TLTRO impact -Average lending margin. ―Average deposit margin -NIM NII 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 -4-quarter rolling average NIM NII, excluding the impact from TLTRO, increased 19.8% YoY, primarily driven by a strong increase of the interest margins on liabilities. NII from mortgages decreased slightly, as higher volumes and margins in Germany and the Netherlands were more than offset by lower income in Belgium and Retail Other. Treasury benefited from favourable market opportunities through money market and FX transactions¹). NII in Financial Markets declined as rising rates led to higher funding costs, while other income rose significantly Sequentially, NII increased 1.2%. Higher net interest income on liabilities more than compensated for a decline in net interest income in Financial Markets and from FX ratio hedging NIM decreased by 3 bps to 156 bps, as the increase in NII was more than offset by a higher average balance sheet total 1) Impact on NII 1Q2023 €-234 mln, 2Q2023 €-225 mln; Impact on Other Income 1Q2023 €+267 mln, 2Q2023 €+261 mln; negligible impact in 2Q2022 7#8Continued loan growth and significant deposit inflow Customer lending (in € bln) Net core lending growth €2.8 bln 639.5 0.7 0.3 0.4 1.9 2.2 0.3 0.9 643.2 -2.5 -0.2 -0.2 1Q2023 Retail Retail Retail Netherlands Belgium Germany Retail Other WB Lending WB DB&TF¹) WB Other¹) Treasury FX Other 2) 2Q2023 Net core lending growth was €2.8 bln ■ Retail Banking was €3.3 bln higher. Mortgages grew by €2.7 bln, primarily reflecting growth in Australia, the Netherlands and Germany. Other lending increased by €0.6 bln ■ Wholesale Banking decreased by €0.6 bln. Growth in Lending was offset by lower volumes in Trade and Commodity Finance and in Working Capital Solutions, reflecting lower commodity prices and economic activity ■ Net core deposits growth was €17.2 bln Growth in Retail Banking was €18.9 bln, mainly driven by inflows in Germany, following successful promotional campaigns ■ Wholesale Banking was €1.7 bln lower 1) DB&TF is Daily Banking & Trade Finance; WB Other includes Financial Markets 2) Other includes run-off portfolios (Lease, WUB and Retail France) 8#9Fee income growth supported by Wholesale Banking Lending Net fee & commission income per business line (in € mln)¹) Net fee & commission income per product category (in € mln) 888 876 888 896 912 888 876 888 896 912 92 96 105 106 131 280 295 318 323 346 226 194 201 217 206 247 238 258 244 253 610 583 573 575 569 323 349 324 329 322 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Retail Banking Wholesale Banking ■ Income from fees grew by 2.7% YoY, driven by Wholesale Banking 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 ■Daily Banking ■Lending Investment Products Other²) ■ Fees were up in Retail Benelux, driven by increased fees for payment packages in the Netherlands, which more than offset higher commissions paid to agents in Belgium. Outside the Benelux, fee income was down as a result of subdued trading activity in investment products, fewer mortgage transactions at Interhyp and ING's exit from the French retail market Fees in Wholesale Banking rose by 23.4%, reflecting an increase in deal flow in Lending and Global Capital Markets Sequentially, fees increased 1.8%, mainly driven by higher fees in Wholesale Banking, with growth in Corporate Finance, Global Capital Markets and Lending. Fees were stable in Retail Banking 1) Totals including Corporate Line 2) Other includes insurance products and Financial Markets 6#10Lower operating expenses despite continued investments Expenses (in € mln) 3,071 2,888 2,738 2,629 525 2,626 291 214 96 82 91 159 85 4 2,365 2,448 2,515 2,541 2,528 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Regulatory costs ¹) 6 Expenses excluding regulatory costs and incidental items were 6.9% higher YoY ■Main driver was higher staff expenses, reflecting the impact of indexation and CLA increases across our markets We also continued investing in the growth of our business These higher expenses were partly offset by savings from exiting the retail markets in France and the Philippines Sequentially, expenses excluding regulatory costs and incidental items were 0.5% lower, despite higher staff expenses The previous quarter had included €27 mln of legal provisions and €17 mln of restructuring costs 2Q2023 includes €22 mln restructuring provisions ■Regulatory costs were seasonally lower and declined compared to 2Q2022, which had included a €92 mln contribution to the Institutional Protection Scheme in Poland Incidental cost items in 2Q2023 were €6 mln for hyperinflation accounting in Türkiye (IAS 29) Incidental items 2) Expenses excluding regulatory costs and incidental items 1) Formal build-up phase of several local DGS and SRF are scheduled to be completed by 2024 2) Incidental expenses as included in volatile items on slide 18 10#11Low risk costs reflecting high quality and resilience of the loan book Risk costs per business line (in € mln)¹) Stage 2 ratio²) Stage 3 ratio 403 11.2% 1.5% 10.8% 1.5% 10.2% 1.5% 128 1.4% 269 8.9% 1.4% 152 202 65 88 98 274 88 6.6% 7.0% 7.1% 7.2% 6.9% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 203 242 5.3% 1.3% 1.4% 1.3% 1.3% 113 113 5.8% 5.5% 5.2% 5.1% 1.2% -15 -90 4.5% 1.2% 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Retail Banking Wholesale Banking ING Retail Banking Wholesale Banking -ING Retail Banking 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 ■ Risk costs were €98 mln, or 6 bps of average customer lending, well below the through-the-cycle average of ~25 bps -Wholesale Banking ■ €39 mln was added to management overlays, mainly reflecting the current inflation and interest environment, as well as some regular model adjustments. At the end of 2Q2023, the total amount of management overlays was €560 mln In Wholesale Banking, risk costs related to a few individual files were more than offset by a further release of Russia-related provisions as we continue to reduce our exposure. In Retail Banking, there were limited additions to risk costs in Poland, Spain and Belgium In Stage 3 we saw modest inflow of individual files with no clear trends identifiable, the Stage 3 ratio remained low at 1.4% The Stage 2 ratio decreased to 6.9%, as Stage 2 outstandings declined by €2.5 bln, mainly reflecting deleveraging in Russia and movements in the Watch List portfolio 1) Totals including Corporate Line 2) Comparative 1Q2023 numbers have been adjusted, including an IFRS 9 scope change after the adoption of IFRS 17 11#12CET1 ratio improved to 14.9% CET1 capital ratio development (in %) 14.8% -0.5% 14.4% +0.3% +0.2% 14.9% ~12.5% -0.0% 10.7% 1Q2023 CET1 ratio Announced share Pro forma 1Q2023 buyback CET1 ratio Profit added to CET1 Other capital movements RWA Capital ratio CET1 developments 2Q2023 CET1 ratio Basel IV CET1 ratio target Fully-loaded SREP requirement Management buffer (incl. P2G) ■ CET1 ratio improved to 14.9%, driven by strong capital generation and capital discipline leading to lower RWA in Wholesale Banking ■ The addition of €1.1 bln of quarterly net profit to CET1 capital was offset by an additional €1.5 bln distribution ■In line with our distribution policy, 50% of the 2Q2023 resilient net profit has been reserved outside of CET1 capital for future distribution. In total, €1,917 mln remains reserved for distribution ■RWA decreased by €4.5 bln, including €+0.2 bln of FX impacts ■ Credit RWA excluding FX impacts decreased by €5.6 bln, driven by model updates, a better overall profile of the loan book and disciplined capital management in Wholesale Banking Operational RWA were flat. Market RWA were slightly higher, mainly due to increased Stressed Value-at-Risk for the trading portfolio ■ We will pay a 1H2023 interim dividend of €0.35 per share in cash on 14 August 2023 12#13Wrap up and Q&A 13#14Appendix 14#15Attractive and growing shareholder return Increasing earnings per share Attractive shareholder return Based on (announced) payment date 15.3% 12.5% 10.7% 9.4% YTD 1.28 1.24 11.2% 9.4% 6.7% 5.4% 9.2% 1.01 0.50 7.2% 0.70 2.07 0.67 0.68 0.41 4.8% 1.21 1.23 1.27 1.02 Dividend 0.74 0.64 0.60 0.58 ban 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 annualised ¹) 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 YtD²) Earnings per share (in €) Return on equity Regular dividend per share (in €) Additional distribution per share (in €) Return³3) Growing earnings per share and strong return on equity on elevated capital levels ■ We have returned over €18 bln to shareholders since 2018, including the interim dividend 2023 of €0.35 per share (to be paid out on 14 August 2023) and the ongoing €1.5 bln share buyback We intend to converge the CET1 ratio to our target level of ~12.5% by 2025. The next steps to converge to our target ratio will reflect the strong capital generation resulting in a >100% pay-out ratio 1) 1H2023 EPS multiplied by 2, divided by the average number of shares in 1H2023. 1H2023 ROE 2) Amount based on average number of shares in 1H2023, return including the 1H2023 interim dividend and the total amount of the ongoing share buyback and based on the average share price in 1H2023 3) Based on average market value (share price * number of shares outstanding at the end of each quarter) 15#16Long-term benefit from replicating portfolio Drivers of liability NII Liability income is driven by replicating portfolio, deposit pass-through and volumes ■ Retail eurozone replicating portfolio of €~480 bln ■ ~45% is <1 year, which has helped to quickly restore liability margins once interest rates turned positive ~55% is >1 year and will continue to reprice in the coming years, providing a prolonged tailwind to NII Pass-through dependent on market developments Actual average pass-through during 2Q2023 was ~20% (~65 bps) Every 10 bps of pass-through has a ~€-350 mln impact on NII Continued tailwind from a positive rate environment with ~55% of the replicating portfolio repricing at higher rates 16#172Q2023 results overview In € mln Net interest income Net fee and commission income Investment income Reported P&L 4,061 912 Volatile items P&L excluding volatile items 2 4,059 0 911 1 -0 2 Other income 785 -23 807 Total income 5,759 -21 5,779 Expenses excl. regulatory costs 2,534 6 2,528 Regulatory costs 91 0 91 Operating expenses 2,626 6 2,620 Gross result 3,133 -27 3,160 Addition to loan loss provisions 98 0 Result before tax 3,035 -27 98 3,062 Taxation 818 Non-controlling interests Net result 62 2,155 17 17#18Volatile income and expense items Volatile items (in € mln) 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 WB/FM - valuation adjustments 90 -15 -2 -10 33 Capital gains/losses 8 -3 0 15 -0 Hedge ineffectiveness¹) -31 -431 -71 35 -46 Other items income²) -155 -218 -319 -69 -6 Total volatile items - income -89 -668 -392 -29 -21 Incidental items - expenses³) -159 -85 -82 -4 -6 Total volatile items -247 -753 -473 -34 -27 1) 3Q2022: includes €-288 mln to unwind a macro fair value hedge of deposits in Belgium 2) 2Q2022: €76 mln TLTRO III benefit and €-231 mln due to hyperinflation accounting in Türkiye 3) 3Q2022: €71 mln TLTRO III benefit, €-343 mln impact Polish mortgage moratorium, €+100 mln from the transfer of our investment business in France, €-31 mln hyperinflation impact and €-15 mln impairment on our equity stake in TTB 4Q2022: €-315 mln net TLTRO III impact, €+14 mln from the transfer of our investment business in France and €-17 million hyperinflation impact 1Q2023: €-69 million hyperinflation impact 2Q2023: €-6 million hyperinflation impact 2Q2022: €97 mln restructuring costs in RB Belgium and €18 mln in Retail OC&GM and €43 mln hyperinflation impact (o.w. €32 mln impairment) 302022: €75 mln for adding interest-on-interest to compensation for certain Dutch consumer credit products and €10 mln hyperinflation impact 4Q2022: €43 mln restructuring costs, €30 mln energy allowances for employees and €9 mln hyperinflation impact 1Q2023: €4 mln hyperinflation impact 2Q2023: €6 mln hyperinflation impact 18#19Hyperinflation accounting in Türkiye Application of IAS 29 to consolidation of ING in Türkiye ■ We applied IAS 29 ('Financial Reporting in Hyperinflationary Economies') to the consolidation of our subsidiary in Türkiye, effective as of 1 January 2022, as cumulative inflation in Türkiye over the preceding three years had exceeded 100% ■ The application of IAS 29 resulted in a negative accounting impact on ING net result in 2Q2023 of €-14 mln, reflecting the adjustments for changes in the general purchasing power of the Turkish lira Resilient net profit and shareholders' distribution has not been affected as the total quarterly P&L impact of €-14 mln was treated as a significant item not linked to the normal course of business, in line with ING's distribution policy Impact on results (in € mln) 1Q2023 2Q2023 Profit or loss Net interest income Net fee and commission income Investment income Other income Total income 1 2 0 0 0 0 -70 -9 -69 -6 Expenses excl. regulatory costs 4 6 Regulatory costs 0 0 Operating expenses 4 6 Gross result -73 -12 Addition to loan loss provisions 0 0 Result before tax -73 -13 Taxation -6 1 Net result -68 -14 19#20Accounting asymmetry impacting net interest income Treasury interest rate differential (in € mln) WB Financial Markets (in € mln) 33 36 359 443 47 349 18 282 287 267 261 26 184 120 346 452 43 176 345 215 -102 -137 19 27 -234 -225 78 50 47 -141 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 NII Other 1Q2023 2Q2023 2Q2022 3Q2022 NII 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Fees I Investment & Other Treasury benefited from favourable market opportunities through money market and FX transactions ■ These activities had a negative impact on net interest income, which was more than offset by a positive impact in other income ■ The magnitude of this accounting asymmetry depends on the volume of trades and the interest rate differential between euro and other currencies (mostly US dollar) Financial Markets benefited from good client flow and market volatility, supporting total income Increasing interest rates led to higher funding costs, resulting in a reduction in net interest income, while other income, related to the opposite position, rose significantly This accounting asymmetry is more pronounced in a positive rate environment and is also influenced by product mix developments 20 20#21Developments in our strategy enablers Seamless digital experience Scalable Tech & Operations Safe & secure bank Our people 4Q2022 2Q2023 2025 targets Workload on (private) cloud 52% 57% >70% Customer online traffic using Touchpoint 61% 61% >90% Adoption of shared engineering platform. 48% 55% >90% Digi index score¹) 67% 69% >75% Inbound call reduction (versus 2021) 12% 14% >30% KYC workforce in hubs 49% 54% ~60% Operations workforce in hubs 32% 34% ~50% Women in senior management 29% 30% >30% 1) Average of STP rates of 291 Retail customer journeys; STP rate is the percentage of a customer journey that is handled without manual intervention. The Digi-Index has been "re-baselined" to enhance the consistency and comparability of the Digi Index, including only global processes 21 21#22Well-diversified lending credit outstandings" by activity ING Group Retail Banking Wholesale Banking 32% €810 bln 17% 19% €550 bln 4% 68% 5% 12% 21% 2% 14% 6% €550 bln €259 bln 22% 16% 60% 17% 8% 12% 65% Retail Banking Wholesale Banking Residential mortgages Consumer Lending Business Lending ■Other Lending²) Mortgages Netherlands Other lending Netherlands ■Mortgages Belgium Other lending Belgium ■Mortgages Germany Other lending Germany Mortgages Other Other lending Other Lending Daily Banking & Trade Finance Financial Markets Treasury & Other ■ING has a well-diversified and well-collateralised loan book with a strong focus on own-originated mortgages and senior loans 1) Lending and money market credit outstandings, including guarantees and letters of credit, excluding undrawn committed exposures (off-balance sheet positions) 2) Other includes €87 bln Retail-related Treasury lending and €5 bln Other Retail Lending 22#23Wholesale Banking lending credit outstandings" Loan portfolio is well diversified across geographies... Wholesale Banking ...and sectors Wholesale Banking Real Estate, Infra & Construction Commodities, Food & Agri TMT & Healthcare Transportation & Logistics Diversified Corporates Financial Institutions Other 1% 13% NL 13% 2% 10% Belux Germany Other Challengers €259 Growth Markets 16% bln 8% UK 1% European network (EEA)²) 14% 8% 8% 6% North America 2% 9% 30% 11% €259 bln 8% Energy 10% European network (non-EEA) 18% 12% Americas (excl. North America) Wholesale Banking Asia 17% 15% 2% 11% 10% €34 bln 24% 21% Asia Africa ■ Japan China³) I Hong Kong ■Singapore ■South Korea ■India Rest of Asia Selected countries/sectors Russia ■ €1.7 bln offshore exposure), of which €0.6 bln with ECA or CPRI cover Equity-at-risk Russian subsidiary €0.3 bln ■ ~€0.9 bln has already been included in CET1 capital to cover for expected and unexpected losses through LLP (~€0.3 bln) and RWA (€0.6 bln equivalent of €4.7 bln CRWA at 12.5%) 1) Lending and money market credit outstandings, including guarantees and letters of credit, excluding undrawn committed exposures (off-balance sheet positions) 2) European Economic Area 3) Excluding our stake in Bank of Beijing (€1.6 bln at 30 June 2023) 4) Lending credit outstandings, money market, investment and pre-settlement, including guarantees and letters of credit, excluding undrawn committed exposures (off balance positions) 23#242Q2023 provisioning per Stage Stage 1 provisioning (in € mln)¹) Stage 2 provisioning (in € mln) 1,2) Stage 3 provisioning (in € mln) 2) 42 407 52 48 37 318 21 98 2 86 23 33 239 230 16 -50 -39 35 -78 177 197 31 6 17 -117 -48 43 -194 11 1 6 -45 161 124 8 -31 -15 167 141 155 116 -14 -190 70 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Retail Banking Wholesale Banking Retail Banking Wholesale Banking Retail Banking 2Q2022 3Q2022 4Q2022 1Q2023 2Q2023 Wholesale Banking Main drivers Stage 1 mainly driven by overlays and an update of the macro-economic forecast Main drivers Main drivers Release on our Russia-related portfolio, mainly reflecting lower Russia-related exposure ■ Collective Stage 3 provisions, primarily in Retail Banking Limited additions to individual files in Wholesale Banking 1) Stage 1 includes off-balance sheet provisioning; Stage 2 includes modifications 2) Wholesale Banking provisioning includes Corporate Line 24#25Important legal information ING Group's annual accounts are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union ('IFRS-EU'). In preparing the financial information in this document, except as described otherwise, the same accounting principles are applied as in the 2022 ING Group consolidated annual accounts. All figures in this document are unaudited. Small differences are possible in the tables due to rounding. Certain of the statements contained herein are not historical facts, including, without limitation, certain statements made of future expectations and other forward-looking statements that are based on management's current views and assumptions and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results, performance or events to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Actual results, performance or events may differ materially from those in such statements due to a number of factors, including, without limitation: (1) changes in general economic conditions and customer behaviour, in particular economic conditions in ING's core markets, including changes affecting currency exchange rates and the regional and global economic impact of the invasion of Russia into Ukraine and related international response measures (2) ongoing and residual effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and related response measures on economic conditions in countries in which ING operates (3) changes affecting interest rate levels (4) any default of a major market participant and related market disruption (5) changes in performance of financial markets, including in Europe and developing markets (6) fiscal uncertainty in Europe and the United States (7) discontinuation of or changes in 'benchmark' indices (8) inflation and deflation in our principal markets (9) changes in conditions in the credit and capital markets generally, including changes in borrower and counterparty creditworthiness (10) failures of banks falling under the scope of state compensation schemes (11) non-compliance with or changes in laws and regulations, including those concerning financial services, financial economic crimes and tax laws, and the interpretation and application thereof (12) geopolitical risks, political instabilities and policies and actions of governmental and regulatory authorities, including in connection with the invasion of Russia into Ukraine and the related international response measures (13) legal and regulatory risks in certain countries with less developed legal and regulatory frameworks (14) prudential supervision and regulations, including in relation to stress tests and regulatory restrictions on dividends and distributions (also among members of the group) (15) ING's ability to meet minimum capital and other prudential regulatory requirements (16) changes in regulation of US commodities and derivatives businesses of ING and its customers (17) application of bank recovery and resolution regimes, including write down and conversion powers in relation to our securities (18) outcome of current and future litigation, enforcement proceedings, investigations or other regulatory actions, including claims by customers or stakeholders who feel misled or treated unfairly, and other conduct issues (19) changes in tax laws and regulations and risks of non-compliance or investigation in connection with tax laws, including FATCA (20) operational and IT risks, such as system disruptions or failures, breaches of security, cyber-attacks, human error, changes in operational practices or inadequate controls including in respect of third parties with which we do business (21) risks and challenges related to cybercrime including the effects of cyberattacks and changes in legislation and regulation related to cybersecurity and data privacy (22) changes in general competitive factors, including ability to increase or maintain market share (23) inability to protect our intellectual property and infringement claims by third parties (24) inability of counterparties to meet financial obligations or ability to enforce rights against such counterparties (25) changes in credit ratings (26) business, operational, regulatory, reputation, transition and other risks and challenges in connection with climate change and ESG-related matters, including data gathering and reporting (27) inability to attract and retain key personnel (28) future liabilities under defined benefit retirement plans (29) failure to manage business risks, including in connection with use of models, use of derivatives, or maintaining appropriate policies and guidelines (30) changes in capital and credit markets, including interbank funding, as well as customer deposits, which provide the liquidity and capital required to fund our operations, and (31) the other risks and uncertainties detailed in the most recent annual report of ING Groep N.V. (including the Risk Factors contained therein) and ING's more recent disclosures, including press releases, which are available on www.ING.com. This document may contain inactive textual addresses to internet websites operated by us and third parties. Reference to such websites is made for information purposes only, and information found at such websites is not incorporated by reference into this document. ING does not make any representation or warranty with respect to the accuracy or completeness of, or take any responsibility for, any information found at any websites operated by third parties. ING specifically disclaims any liability with respect to any information found at websites operated by third parties. ING cannot guarantee that websites operated by third parties remain available following the publication of this document, or that any information found at such websites will not change following the filing of this document. Many of those factors are beyond ING's control. Any forward looking statements made by or on behalf of ING speak only as of the date they are made, and ING assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information or for any other reason. This document does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to purchase, any securities in the United States or any other jurisdiction. 25

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