By Max Colchester 

LONDON-- Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC on Thursday warned it wouldn't be paying dividends until at least 2017 as the once global bank continued its retreat to the U.K.

The bank, which is 78% owned by the British government, said net profit for the second quarter of the year came in at GBP293 million ($457.2 million), compared with GBP230 million in the same period last year, helped by a growing demand for mortgages. But RBS Chief Executive Ross McEwan warned that it would be "a noisy year" with the bank continuing to push through with an expensive restructuring program while digesting a slew of litigation charges.

Earlier this year RBS said it would accelerate its plan to shrink, exiting a raft of countries and dismantling large parts of its investment bank.

On Thursday the bank said that it was making good progress in boiling down unwanted asset. RBS remains on track to sell down its interest in U.S. retail lender Citizens and run down its "bad bank" by the end of the year.

Analysts welcomed the better-than-expected results and shares rose 2% in early trading in London.

But investor hopes that RBS would quickly hand back the proceeds of the sales were dashed. RBS said it plans to return excess capital to shareholders through dividends and share buyback but not before the first quarter of 2017. "We felt it was important to be transparent with people," said RBS Chief Financial Officer Ewen Stevenson.

RBS still faces a series of fines, notably over allegations that it misled investors over the quality of U.S. mortgage backed securities it sold. The bank said it had yet to begin settlement discussion with U.S. authorities over the allegations. On Thursday it put aside another GBP459 million mostly to pay the potential penalties. So far RBS has provision GBP2 billion to cover the U.S. fines.

The bank is also wading through a multiyear restructuring which will cost around GBP5 billion to complete. In the second quarter operating expenses rose 14% year-over-year on the back of the restructuring and conduct costs.

Mr. McEwan denied that the continued uncertainty over the bank would dent U.K. government's plans to start shedding its stake in RBS soon. In June the U.K. Chancellor George Osborne announced that the government would start selling down its holdings in RBS at a loss. The government spent GBP45.5 billion bailing out RBS during the financial crisis, in early June it valued its stake at GBP32 billion. The Treasury expects to raise at least GBP2 billion from share sales by April next year, and to have sold at least three quarters of the existing stake by 2020.

For many analysts RBS's results were stronger than expected, notably in parts of the bank that the lender intends to focus on. "These are good results," Citi analysts said, noting that the bank's core businesses did well and the lender wrote back some loan provisions into profit. Adjusted operating profit, which strips out restructuring and other one-off costs, was GBP1.8 billion, down 7% on the year before as income from the RBS's investment bank dropped away. Revenue fell to GBP4.3 billion from GBP4.9 billion over the year.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

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