British government-owned lender Northern Rock reported a half-year loss of £724.2 million today.
The Newcastle-based company also said the share of its mortgages in arrears had risen to 3.92 per cent by June 30th, from 3.67 per cent three months before.
Northern Rock - which was taken into public ownership in February 2008 - said it incurred an impairment charge on its loans of £602.2 million and expected that figure to be similar in the second half.
Northern Rock was notorious for its Together loans which lent up to 125 per cent of home values.
As the recession bites and house prices fall, it is these loans that are responsible for its soaring rates of mortgages more than three months in arrears. When these loans are stripped out the share falls to 2.85 per cent.
The lender said the number of properties repossessed as of June 30th were 2,522, compared with 3,620 at the end of 2008.
Chief executive Gary Hoffman said the lender might continue to see a small increase in the three-month arrears rate, but added that the share increases were slowing.
The Rock was at the centre of the first bank run in 140 years in September 2007 as the credit crunch exposed its
over-reliance on money markets.
The crisis forced it to turn to the Bank of England for £26.9 billion in emergency funding before being nationalised when sale attempts fell through.
Northern Rock now owes the British government £10.9 billion after paying back the loan with mortgage redemptions as it encouraged borrowers to seek deals elsewhere.
But this has drained money from the mortgage market and in a change of plan earlier this year the bank is now
increasing lending and delaying the repayment of the loan.
Today it said the British government loan would increase after its planned restructuring.
PA