Pre-tax losses for the first six months of the year were £204.2m,
compared with losses of £77m a year earlier. The figure was slightly
better than expected.
It said it was now in better shape to withstand economic stresses.
The bank almost collapsed in 2013 after a huge black hole was discovered in its accounts.
The
Co-op Bank was owned by the 150-year old Co-operative Group until it
had to be rescued in 2013 following the discovery of a £1.5bn black
hole.
In that year, it contributed £2.1bn of losses of £2.3bn - the largest in the Co-operative Group's 150 year history.
The
group had to seek outside investors to prop up the bank, which is now
80% owned by hedge funds, with the remainder held by the Co-op Group.
No profits
One option under consideration is to float shares on the stock market in an initial public offering (IPO).
But
its chief executive, Niall Booker, said it was unlikely to embark upon a
stock market listing until it was closer to making profits.
But
he said that was not something that would happen in the near future: "We
won't be profitable in 2015 and we won't be profitable in 2016 either."
In the first half of 2015, the bank set aside £49m to cover
misconduct and legal charges, lost £38.2m on sales of assets needed to
reduce the bank's overall levels of debt, and spent an extra £33.1m on
improving "systems and processes".
Troubled
Last
week, a regulatory report criticised the bank for misleading investors.
The bank escaped a fine, however, because the regulator said it needed
all the money it has to strengthen its balance sheet.
At the end
of last year, the bank failed a Bank of England stress test, designed to
test banks' ability to withstand another financial crisis.
The
black hole discovered in 2013 has been linked to losses on commercial
property loans, stemming from Co-op Bank's 2009 merger with the
Britannia building society.
A number of top executives then left
the bank, including former chairman Paul Flowers who left the bank
following a drugs scandal.
Before the discovery of financial
problems, Co-op Bank was being lined up by the government to take over
more than 600 branches of Lloyds Bank, a plan that was then abandoned.
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