Filed by The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.
                       Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933 and
     deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

                                     Subject Company: Riggs National Corporation
                                                   Commission File No. 000-09756

     The following is the transcript from an investor presentation that took
place on April 21, 2005 in connection with the announcement of the earnings and
business for the quarter ended March 31, 2005 by The PNC Financial Services
Group, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation ("PNC"). The press release and
supplementary information referred to in the following transcript were
previously filed on April 21, 2005 by PNC pursuant to Rule 425 under the
Securities Act of 1933 and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and this transcript should be read in
conjunction with those materials.

                             Beginning of Transcript

Bill Callihan:      Thank you, Operator. Good morning, everyone.

                    Welcome to today's conference call for The PNC Financial
                    Services Group. Participating in this call will be PNC's
                    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Jim Rohr, and Bill
                    Demchak, the Company's Vice Chairman and Chief Financial
                    Officer.

                    As a reminder, the following comments contain
                    forward-looking information. Actual results or future events
                    could differ - possibly materially - due to a variety of
                    factors, including those described in this call and today's
                    earnings release and the Supplementary Financial Information
                    and our 2004 10-K and other SEC reports. These statements
                    speak only as of April 21, 2005 and PNC undertakes no
                    obligation to update them. The following comments also
                    contain discussion of non-GAAP financial measures, which to
                    the extent not so qualified in the document, is qualified by
                    GAAP reconciliation information included in today's earnings
                    release, Financial Supplement, 2004 Form 10-K, and other
                    documents available on our website at www.pnc.com in the
                    "For Investors" section. Now, I'd like to turn the call over
                    to Jim Rohr.

Jim Rohr:           Thank you, Bill. Good morning. And thanks for joining us 

                    today. You've seen the numbers that we've published, and
                    we're encouraged by this quarter's results and we're
                    optimistic about the rest of the year. We outperformed our
                    expectations, and yours, and we're pleased about that.

                    On the revenue side, net interest income was
                    better-than-expected, because we saw solid loan and deposit
                    growth, and our yields on securities increased
                    substantially. Loans were up 11% on an annualized basis and
                    deposits were up 12% annualized, while securities yields
                    increased 28 basis points over the last quarter. Bill will
                    give you some further insight on how we achieved this NII
                    growth in a few minutes.




                    On the fee side, we saw strong growth in non-interest
                    income, particularly in asset management, fund servicing,
                    equity management, and trading. So we continue to experience
                    meaningful growth in customers in all of our businesses.

                    Shifting to the expense side, the expenses came in better
                    than we expected also. In fact, excluding BlackRock's
                    expenses, our non-interest expense was down compared to last
                    quarter. We earned that business growth even though asset
                    quality continued to improve at very good levels and we
                    maintained our risk discipline. These important factor -
                    indicators of success bode well for the future. In fact, we
                    expect net interest income to continue to increase through
                    the year and we expect continued growth in our customer
                    franchise.

                    All that said, I'm encouraged by this quarter, but we know
                    that we still have room for improvement. To perform at the
                    level to which we aspire, and that means to consistently
                    outperform our peer group, we need to raise our expectations
                    and we're in the process of doing that. We're making good
                    progress in terms of revenue growth and our credit quality
                    and risk management are in excellent shape. Now our
                    challenge is to make cost control a core competency. And in
                    a few minutes I'll tell you how we intend to do that.

                    But let me start by giving you a brief review of the results
                    by major line of business. Before I get into each business,
                    I'd like to point out that if we just exclude after-tax
                    gains from the institutional loans held for sale, a process
                    that really was completed last year, that is, the $19
                    million in first quarter of last year gains and the million
                    dollar in this year's first quarter, our banking business
                    earnings are up almost 10% year-over-year.

                    But first, the Regional Community Bank continues to grow its
                    customer base and its balance sheet, while maintaining our
                    company-wide risk discipline. While we realized growth in
                    deposits, the increase came from the interest-bearing side
                    as our pricing strategy helped us gain customers. Now we're
                    working to tilt that balance back towards non-interest
                    bearing deposit growth. But we're pleased with how we
                    rounded out our customer relationships.

                    On the loan front, consumer and small business loans
                    increased on an average over a year ago by 20% and 12%,
                    respectively. The Community Bank increased consumer and
                    small business relationships by 20,000 during the quarter,
                    which represents 33% more growth than we saw in the first
                    quarter of 2004, excluding the United accounts, and 54% more
                    growth than two years ago.

                    Now you should keep in mind as you're looking at the
                    Community Bank performance that some of the
                    quarter-over-quarter comparisons for the Community Bank are
                    typically impacted by several seasonal factors in the 


                                      - 2 -


                    first quarter. For example, we tend to realize much higher
                    consumer-related transaction fees during the holiday season,
                    and in the first quarter people in our primary banking
                    region tend to be a little less active because of the winter
                    weather.

                    Moving on to Wholesale Banking, which also had a solid
                    quarter, they had strong asset quality, which contributed to
                    the negative provision for the quarter. Earnings were down
                    compared with a year ago primarily because as expected we
                    only had minimal gains from the institutional loans held for
                    sale that I mentioned before. But the fundamentals in the
                    business continue to be positive.

                    While we managed our loan growth to a less-than-expected
                    growth rate, we still achieved an 8% increase in average
                    loans over a year ago, and average deposits grew 30%, driven
                    by an increase in customer relationships.

                    Now, we saw a substantial increase in commercial mortgage
                    servicing portfolio, as well as stronger treasury management
                    performance. In fact, the treasury management unit processed
                    a number - a record number - of lockbox checks for the month
                    of March, which indicates that our technology is allowing us
                    to take market share.

                    Moving to the Wealth Management business, which earns as you
                    know very high returns on capital, we produced strong
                    earnings growth despite the flat-to-down market conditions.
                    In fact, excluding the $7 million Hawthorn gain from the
                    sale in last year's first quarter, earnings were up 17%,
                    driven by strong expense discipline and improved operating
                    leverage.

                    Our localized relationship management approach, which was
                    developed over the course of 2004, is paying off and now
                    that we have the right framework to serve the clients, the
                    challenge is simply getting more advanced with potential and
                    existing clients, and that's working well.

                    PFPC - this continues to be a real success story. Despite
                    market and pricing pressures, PFPC produced record earnings,
                    which is a testament to their strong sales culture and
                    excellent cost control. Fund servicing revenue increased 8%
                    over a year ago, while operating expense increased only 4%
                    over the same period. I think if you were to look at PFPC's
                    competitors, you would find our growth in earnings to be
                    exemplary.

                    Finally, BlackRock had another excellent quarter highlighted
                    by the very successful acquisition of State Street Research
                    and Management. That transaction brought approximately $49
                    billion in assets under management to BlackRock and is
                    expected to be 30 cents accretive to their 2005 earnings. A
                    run rate we expect to achieve in 2006.


                                      - 3 -


                    I'd like to note that on January 31st, the day the
                    transaction closed, BlackRock converted all of State
                    Street's fixed income funds to its platform and our PFPC
                    unit did the work to convert all of State Street's mutual
                    funds to a common form - common platform with BlackRock's
                    funds. It's really a good example of how we're working
                    together with BlackRock.

                    All of these business successes are underpinned by two
                    important disciplines. First, we maintained our risk and our
                    balance sheet discipline. And second, our cost control
                    improved significantly with non-interest expenses, as I
                    mentioned, ex-BlackRock, coming in below our original
                    expectations and below last quarter.

                    Now, I'd like to turn to two matters that represent a great
                    opportunity for us. First, I'd like to discuss the
                    efficiency initiative, which is called One PNC. The
                    overarching goal of the program is to help us move closer to
                    our customers, to speed up our processes, reduce bureaucracy
                    in order to respond more quickly to customer demand.

                    This program will largely reshape our culture, and it will
                    develop cost control and efficiency as a lasting core
                    competency. I want you to understand that this is the most
                    complete review of our businesses we've ever done. Over a
                    16-week period, which began in January, a large number of
                    our key people with assistance in developing and executing
                    the process from an outside firm, are reviewing everything
                    we do, from staffing, management structures, pricing of
                    products, vendor relationships, everything. One PNC teams so
                    far have generated more than 6,500 ideas for expense savings
                    and revenue opportunities, and the steering committee, which
                    I am chairing, has already spent a considerable amount of
                    time reviewing these ideas. Once the review process reaches
                    its conclusion in June, we will immediately begin to
                    implement the ideas.

                    I've been very encouraged by the early work on One PNC. I am
                    confident that we will realize meaningful enhancements to
                    our profitability. While we intend to cut expenses
                    substantially we will also identify opportunities to
                    increase revenue. I've taken some heat for not giving you an
                    expense target number, and I'm still not going to do that,
                    and here's why. I really don't want our people to stop when
                    they get to a certain number. I want them to complete this
                    review process to really identify the most efficient way for
                    us to deliver high-quality customer service. I want them to
                    find everything that needs to be found.


                                      - 4 -


                    When the process is complete, we will report the savings we
                    plan to achieve and you should know that this initiative
                    will have a significant and lasting effect on our culture
                    and performance.

                    The second opportunity I'd like to discuss is the Riggs
                    acquisition. We're getting fairly close to completing the
                    transaction now, and we can give you an update. While
                    there's still more work to be done before the transaction
                    can close, including regulatory and Riggs shareholder
                    approval, we're pleased that many of the legal issues
                    regarding the Riggs franchise have been settled.

                    Obviously, these items have been reported in the press, so I
                    won't dwell on them. But it's worth noting that the Spanish
                    litigation was settled. The Court has accepted their plea
                    and settled the DOJ case. In addition, there's an agreement
                    in principle to settle the Riggs Delaware derivative and
                    class-action litigation, which of course remains subject to
                    Court approval and other conditions.

                    Riggs has successfully exited most of its international
                    relationships and we expect to receive, or hope to receive,
                    regulatory approval in the next week. And we performed a
                    highly successful mock conversion of the Riggs systems.

                    Our Greater Washington management team, to be led by Mike
                    Harreld, the former head of our Kentucky and Indiana market
                    is ready to go in. So we're prepared and excited to compete
                    in this high-growth market and we're going to be highly
                    visible there.

                    For starters, we've been named the "Official Bank" of the
                    Washington Nationals, and we've got a very aggressive
                    marketing strategy ready to roll out, including free use of
                    ATMs for customers who use our package accounts, longest
                    banking hours in the region, including Sundays, easy switch
                    tools to help customers move from other banks to PNC. I
                    should note that significant investments were factored into
                    our thinking from the beginning. We have every intention of
                    becoming a leading player in this new market, but we
                    understand that there's significant investment involved.

                    It's also worth looking that what we're going to acquire in
                    this deal, because I think the value of the Riggs franchise,
                    and the market opportunity for us, has been largely ignored
                    in the light of the media attention to Riggs's regulatory
                    problems.

                    Under our revised agreement, we will acquire solid retail
                    banking franchise at a fair price with other deals across
                    the country, and especially in the Washington region. So we
                    think we're getting an excellent platform on which we can
                    build. Remember, Riggs is not in a lot of the businesses
                    we're in. We intend to bring the full scope of our franchise
                    to the small business and the affluent in this rapidly
                    growing market.


                                      - 5 -


                    In summary, I'm pleased by the first quarter results. Our
                    businesses are realizing solid growth in loans, deposits,
                    and customers. And we're getting exemplary performance from
                    our treasury team, as Bill will discuss. And we're
                    maintaining our risk discipline. I'm also pleased with what
                    the horizon holds for PNC. We stand at a good time in our
                    development. Over the past several years we've done hard
                    work to create a moderate risk profile and a sound balance
                    sheet. And we did it without sacrifice to the customer
                    franchise.

                    Now, with this strong platform, we're ready to go full speed
                    into an exciting new market, and we're preparing to
                    transform PNC into a much more efficient and even more
                    customer-focused organization. I'm confident that all of
                    these positive trends will produce strong results through
                    the rest of '05.

                    With that, I'll ask Bill to give you some detail on the
                    quarter and the positioning of our balance sheet. Bill?

Bill Demchak:       Thanks, Jim. It was a good quarter for us. As Jim said,
                    the 354 million in earnings we reported today clearly beat
                    the expectations we shared with you in January. I'd like to
                    help you understand why that happened, and then I'd give you
                    some insight into the state of our balance sheet and our
                    positioning relative to the flatter yield curve.

                    I know that you were expecting the one-time items in the
                    first quarter results, so I won't spend a lot of time on
                    them. Obviously, the principal item which we disclosed last
                    quarter, is the 16 cents per share benefit from the
                    restructuring of our ownership in BlackRock, which resulted
                    in the reversal of deferred tax liabilities. And why - by
                    the way while I'm on the subject of one-time items - I
                    should note that we expect to record charges of
                    approximately 11 cents per share through the course of the
                    Riggs integration for one-time expenses, and most of this
                    will occur in the second quarter.

                    Now I'll move on to the factors that contributed to our
                    performance in the first quarter, and let's start with the
                    revenue side. Net interest income was up slightly from last
                    quarter. And as you know, we expected it to decrease due to
                    several seasonal factors. We achieved this strong net
                    interest income results both because we had a higher level
                    of earning assets and because we managed to increase the
                    yield on our securities book by 28 basis points during the
                    quarter.

                    Average earning assets were up three and a half billion over
                    last quarter, which looks like a large increase, but if you
                    break the earnings - the increase in earnings assets down,
                    you'll see that we added around 900 million of loans, 800
                    million of securities, and 1.8 billion of trading assets,
                    including resale agreements to fund some short positions.


                                      - 6 -


                    Within the securities book on a spot basis, we added 1.9
                    billion of floating rate securities, then reduced our fixed
                    rate securities position by about 300 million through
                    purchases, net of sales and paydowns.

                    At the same time we added roughly a billion to our received
                    fixed swap position. Sales with a fixed rate position gave
                    raise to a $9 million securities loss for the quarter, but
                    left us better provision - position for the future. Net/net,
                    when you dig all through that, and this is important,
                    virtually all of the increase in our earning assets came
                    from floating rate assets. Our duration of equity remains
                    negative and we continue to have substantial investment
                    flexibility.

                    I'm sure you noticed as well that our net interest margin
                    dropped 10 basis points for the quarter. Well, here's what
                    happened. The decline is almost entirely the result of
                    increased balances in our trading book, which include
                    hedges. The combination of trading assets, fed funds sold
                    and resale agreements increased 1.6 billion on average
                    compared with the fourth quarter. And as you can see, if you
                    dig through the financial supplement, the net annualized
                    margin on this position is only around 40 basis points. And
                    this in turn had a dramatic effect on the overall balance
                    sheet margin.

                    And we had excellent trading results this quarter, both in
                    our client-related books and in our portfolio positioning
                    books where we used trading strategies to protect both
                    against the yield curve flattening and rate increases.
                    Assets in the trading book obviously bring down the net
                    interest margin, but on balance we like the earnings and the
                    flexibility that give us the managing of our overall
                    exposure to interest rates.

                    We told you last quarter we expected net interest income to
                    increase from fourth quarter 2004 levels beginning in the
                    second quarter, and we still expect those increases,
                    assuming we continue to see loan growth and the forward
                    curve comes to fruition. And if that happens, we'd also
                    expect the net interest margin to stabilize.

                    Perhaps the biggest driver of the pace of net interest
                    income increases and margin expansion is the shape of the
                    yield curve. There's no question that a high-steep yield
                    curve is best for the banking industry. Unfortunately, what
                    we've been seeing is the flattening of the curve due to the
                    sell-off in the front end, with virtually no movement in the
                    long end, which is Greenspan's conundrum.

                    The back end of the curve, doesn't - the back end of the
                    curve, however, doesn't concern us so much. We have no
                    intention of adding a lot of long-dated paper. It's the
                    rising front end that requires our attention, and we're


                                      - 7 -


                    well-positioned for the flatter curve to the extent that
                    it's possible given the nature of our business. And there's
                    a couple of reasons for this.

                    The first thing is that rates on the front end of the curve
                    are clearly rising. For example, two-year swaps have gone
                    from 2% to 4% over the last year, and in fact, if you look
                    at the yield curve from Fed Funds to two year swaps over the
                    same period it actually steepens slightly.

                    Now, the reason this is important for us is that our
                    securities book is short-dated, relative to our peers. So
                    our roll-off is faster. And we've been able to redeploy our
                    assets at higher rates. As you'll see this quarter we
                    managed to increase the yield on our securities book by 28
                    basis points. And absent the effect on trading assets we've
                    managed to keep our net interest margin fairly constant. Now
                    this would not have been possible had the securities book
                    not been short-dated.

                    The difference between PNC's balance sheet and the bulk of
                    our peers is that our faster - with our faster roll-off we
                    can invest at higher yields. Because -- and this is kind of
                    the important part -- we never went off the curve to begin
                    with. We just to have to beat the old rate at the front end
                    of the curve and that's what we've been doing.

                    We also have not been anywhere close to being fully
                    invested, which means we have preserved and continue to
                    preserve substantial flexibility to take advantage of
                    short-term market changes. Combination of a short-dated book
                    and substantial dry powder has created a balance sheet that
                    can remain sound across a wide range of yield curves.

                    On the fee side, non-interest income continued to grow this
                    quarter. The bulk of the increase came from the asset
                    management line, which was obviously bolstered by
                    BlackRock's State Street acquisition. But also came from
                    equity management gains. Those positive effects were
                    partially offset by lower service charges on deposits, which
                    is a seasonal effect, and by lower net gains from sales on
                    commercial mortgages, which accounts for the lower number in
                    the corporate services line.

                    Expenses were well-controlled this quarter. Most of the
                    increase over the previous quarters was due to increases at
                    BlackRock, which were mostly from the State Street
                    acquisition. As Jim said, if you just take out BlackRock's
                    expenses for the relevant periods, non-interest expense was
                    actually down slightly quarter-over-quarter, was only up
                    moderately over a year-ago.

                    Now, I'd like to give you some insight into the provision,
                    which was down from the prior periods and which was lower
                    than what we'd expected. There are two simple factors at
                    work here. First, asset quality improved even further, 


                                      - 8 -


                    and second, market-wide loan growth has been somewhat more
                    muted than what we had expected.

                    You can see all the asset quality statistics in the press
                    release and financial supplement, including the very low
                    level of net charge-offs, so I'll focus on the loan side.
                    Jim mentioned our discipline. And that's the issue that has
                    restricted our loan growth. We're seeing solid economic
                    growth and demand for financing for that growth is strong in
                    most sectors of the market. But we're also experiencing a
                    very high level of competition, and the competition is often
                    driving prices and terms down to levels that just don't make
                    sense for us.

                    We told you last quarter that we saw hints of irrational
                    prices. And I'll tell you this quarter we've seen more than
                    hints. And we're just not willing to play the game. So we're
                    not winning as many deals as we'd like to at the prices and
                    structures we want.

                    That said, we did achieve solid loan growth this quarter.
                    While the rate of loan growth did not meet our expectations
                    for the first quarter, it did match the overall industry
                    growth in C&I loans, as published by the Fed. I've told you
                    in the past that across the cycle we expect net charge-offs
                    to come in at 40 to 50 basis points alone.

                    And at this point in the cycle with asset quality very
                    strong, we're seeing much lower level of charge-offs, and we
                    expect asset quality to remain strong. So the combination of
                    low charge-offs and slower-than-anticipated loan growth is
                    keeping provisions lower than we had expected. I should also
                    note that the provision will be impacted in the second
                    quarter by a significant loan recovery, as a result of a
                    litigation settlement.

                    Finally, I'd like to spend a moment on our deposit pricing
                    strategy. We've been aggressive. We've offered free consumer
                    and business checking. We've offered incentives to open new
                    business checking accounts. We've advertised competitive
                    rates on CDs and money markets. These offers have led to
                    strong increases in client relationships, particularly in
                    the fast-growing New Jersey market. They've also led to
                    growth in deposits, especially interest-bearing deposits.
                    And while we're paying higher rates for this funding then we
                    did six months ago or a year ago, we've been able to lock in
                    long-term deposits at rates that are even more profitable in
                    today's rate environment. Again, because the front-end of
                    the yield curve is rising.

                    Our balance sheet positioning has allowed us to be
                    aggressive in customer acquisition at a time when many of
                    our peers can't afford to be. And I should note that while
                    we initially raised prices at a faster rate, we had a long
                    way to go from our prior very conservative pricing several
                    months ago.


                                      - 9 -


                    It made sense for us to pay clients more for their money at
                    the beginning stages of Fed tightening when we could invest
                    the money at greater spreads as time went on. Now, our
                    pricing is only slightly above the median of our peers, so
                    we're not paying more for deposits than a lot of our
                    competition. And given the current market dynamics, we are
                    not likely to reprice deposits as aggressively going forward
                    as opportunities to earn outside returns on the money
                    diminish.

                    I'd like to conclude by reiterating Jim's optimism about the
                    future. Our first quarter results were strong. And they
                    reflect much of the progress we've made on both the customer
                    front and on the balance sheet. The better news is that PNC
                    is growing organically and expanding and we're working very
                    hard to re-engineer this Company through the huge commitment
                    we've made to the One PNC initiative. We want to become a
                    highly efficient and more responsive organization. And I
                    believe that One PNC will have a strong positive impact on
                    our future earnings. With that, we'd be happy to take your
                    questions.

Bill Callihan:      Kelly, if you could give our participants instructions, 
                    please.

Operator:           As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question please 
                    press star, then the number 1, on your telephone keypad.
                    We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster.
                    Your first question comes from John McDonald of Bank of
                    America.

John McDonald:      Hi, Good morning.

Jim Rohr:           Hi, John.

John McDonald:      Saw some pretty good improvement in the efficiency ratio
                    this quarter. Could you give us some color on what happened
                    there? I assume there's no benefit yet from One PNC in that?

Jim Rohr:           No, there's no real benefit from One PNC.  I think we've 
                    just, we've taken a hard line on expenses. I think was - we
                    signaled that, as you know John, at the Goldman conference
                    last fall. We started building it into our plans when we did
                    the budgets for this year. And I think that discipline has
                    showed up for us in the first quarter. We expect it to be
                    continuing.

John McDonald:      Okay. Second question was on Riggs. Could you remind us of 
                    the expected EPS dilution in 2005 and 2006, and has that
                    changed at all?

Jim Rohr:           We're going through the numbers.


                                      - 10 -


Bill Demchak:       Everybody's doing hand signals here, John. We had the .11
                    one time and then we had basically .06 run rate through '05
                    and then in the course of '06 we had another .05 in total.

John McDonald:      Okay. So kind of operating EPS, 6 cents dilution this year 
                    and 5 next year?

Bill Demchak:       Yes. And remember, that's with everything priced in right?
                    The branch expansion, the hard entry into that market with a
                    big presence.

John McDonald:      All that is included in that?

Jim Rohr:           Yes.  Biggest part of that is really the branch expansion. 
                    As we said we were going to build 30 branches, so.

John McDonald:      Okay.

Jim Rohr:           And that's -- much of that -- a significant portion of that 
                    is underway already.

John McDonald:      Okay. And last thing was, just on commercial loan growth, 
                    how would you character your outlook on commercial loan 
                    growth right now?

Jim Rohr:           I would say commercial loan growth should continue to be 
                    good. Our customers - we did an economic survey that we
                    published in the March time frame and the middle-market and
                    small business customers were pretty optimistic. I was kind
                    of surprised about the economic numbers that came out a
                    couple of weeks ago, but then this morning's numbers in
                    terms of unemployment were better. I think the economy is
                    good, I think loan growth will be good. The real question is
                    how much we're willing to take out in terms of the risk
                    profile that some of these transactions are being bid out.

Bill Demchak:       I ought to tell you though John, that even in the last
                    couple of weeks this sort of mini panic that we've seen in
                    the market, credit spreads I guess driven off the autos,
                    we've seen some deals get pulled and people back off, so
                    that's kind of encouraging. Maybe we'll get some rationality
                    back here.

John McDonald:      Okay, Thanks, guys.

Bill Callihan:      Next question please.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Mike Mayo of Prudential.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning, Mike.

Michael Mayo:       Morning. What inning are you in releveraging the balance 
                    sheet? I know you've kept your powder dry, but how much is
                    left?


                                      - 11 -


Bill Demchak:       We haven't moved it. I mean the important thing, if you
                    look at the growth in the securities book, it's all
                    floating-rate stuff. Where, in effect, we're earning a
                    spread on, what I'll call a very low risk or not riskless,
                    but low risk asset. There's no duration mismatch. So what
                    you see in the growth and securities hasn't affected our
                    balance sheet positioning at all.

Michael Mayo:       What's the duration of your securities portfolio and how did
                    that change from the fourth quarter, and what do you think
                    is kind of a normal rate for the industry?

Bill Demchak:       You know, you could write a thesis on the last part of that 
                    question, but I would tell you that the duration of the
                    securities book increased slightly by the end of the first,
                    from the fourth, because you remember we had the big backup
                    in rates during that period of time, so to the extent we
                    owned any mortgages and we own some, it extended. Now having
                    said that, we rallied back. So I actually don't know off the
                    top of my head. I've compared today versus the fourth, but
                    it's not a huge change. What duration you should own can
                    only be answered in combination with how much you should
                    own. So that's probably something we take off-line and as
                    you know, I can talk forever about it.

Michael Mayo:       And then lastly, just a follow-up to the other questions, 
                    the Riggs dilution, so should we think about 1 cent hit next
                    quarter and maybe like 3 and 2? I was wondering how much
                    noise or negative impact you might see from the up-front
                    dilution in the next quarter or so.

Bill Demchak:       The one-time next quarter assume somewhere around .08 out
                    of the .11 with -- right now we've modeled sort a run rate 
                    3 and 3. Could you switch a penny one quarter to the other?
                    Sure.

Michael Mayo:       And then the One PNC initiative, you said we'll get some
                    details when the process is complete. Did you mean the
                    review process or the - actually, get all the savings and
                    certain synergies and what metric are you looking at to
                    measure your progress?

Jim Rohr:           We'll have all of the recommendations.  It's a very tight 
                    schedule. The recommendations, we've had two reviews of the
                    recommendations so far, there are two more. The fourth
                    review will be the concluding review, and that will take
                    place in the end of May. The decisions will be concluded in
                    June and we will then come to the - we'll tell you exactly
                    what's been decided and what metric we're going to use to
                    implement over the course of the following year.

Michael Mayo:       I guess we'll hear by July or sooner, then?

Jim Rohr:           Yes.


                                      - 12 -


Michael Mayo:       Okay, thanks.

Bill Callihan:      Next question, please.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Nancy Bush of NAB Research.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning Nancy.

Nancy Bush:         Good morning, guys. Just a question for you on PNC Advisors.
                    For any of us who kind of know people in Philadelphia, it's
                    become pretty well known that you didn't pay bonuses there
                    this year. I think the bonus payments were stopped a couple
                    of days before they were supposed to be paid and the reason
                    given was some compliance issues in the unit. Can you just
                    kind of tell us what's going on there?

Jim Rohr:           That's technically not correct. We paid bonuses in PNC 
                    Advisors. There were some people that were impacted based
                    upon some compliance, not violations - we had no violations
                    - but we didn't have as good a compliance program as we
                    wanted to have there last year. That's all been fixed. But
                    we did reduce some bonuses, as you would expect us, to for
                    people who didn't implement the compliance programs as fully
                    as it should have been.

Nancy Bush:         Well, I mean...

Jim Rohr:           There were bonuses - significant bonuses were paid to PNC 
                    Advisors last year.

Nancy Bush:         Can you just kind of clarify what your expectations are as
                    far as improvement in the unit, because I thought that was
                    sort of one of the areas of focus, you've been doing a lot
                    of surveys and a lot of other things there, and what do you
                    expect out of that unit?

Jim Rohr:           We expect solid growth.  I think we've seen - we changed the
                    program to an open architecture program a year and a half
                    ago. In the course of last year we rationalized some of the
                    expenses in the business. And I think you saw the
                    performance in the first quarter this year was a good first
                    quarter performance. We were pleased with the customer
                    growth, as well as the expense management in the first
                    quarter. I think it will have a - I think it will have a
                    good year this year. If you take out the gain on the sale of
                    Hawthorn, which was recorded in the first quarter of a year
                    ago - just quarter earnings over quarter earnings were up
                    17% in the first quarter.

Nancy Bush:         Okay. Thanks.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Jason Goldberg of Lehman 
                    Brothers.


                                      - 13 -


Jim Rohr:           Good morning, Jason.

Jason Goldberg:     Morning. I guess in your comments you used the term
                    "irrational pricing" to describe the lending environment.
                    And a lot of your peers kind of using the term competitive,
                    just instead. I was wondering if you could expand on that in
                    terms of I guess who - not specific names, but maybe more
                    broader bigger banks, smaller banks, other financials - in
                    terms of who you've seen irrational pricing from, any
                    particular segments or concentrations?

Bill Demchak:       We can't really point a finger at any one suspect.  It 
                    depends which line of business you're in. But some examples,
                    we're seeing sort of unsecured financing go through the
                    price of where we're willing to do secured. Our asset-based
                    lending group they had a run of, what was it, Jim, eight or
                    nine or ten sort of misses, not against other asset-based
                    lending groups, but against people going unsecured.

                    And you know, at that point you just back off. The spreads
                    you're getting off of those assets don't nearly pay you for
                    the risk that comes with it. But it's - look, everybody's
                    struggling with the same issue, right? Everybody wants to
                    show net income interest growth and do so through loan
                    growth, and there's X amount of loans coming out and people
                    are fighting for them.

Jason Goldberg:     Fair enough.  And then just secondly, any chance you could 
                    size the potential loan recovery you're getting next 
                    quarter?

Jim Rohr:           In the agreement we're not supposed to - we agreed not to 
                    use the name of the place that we're getting the recovery
                    from or the amount. So - we do have the money, so we're
                    pleased about that. We'll be fully disclosing it in the
                    second quarter, obviously. But it's a significant recovery.

Jason Goldberg:     Great. Thank you.

Bill Callihan:      Next question, please?

Operator:           Your next question comes from Gerard Cassidy of RBC Capital 
                    Markets.

Gerard Cassidy:     Good morning, Jim.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning, Gerard, how are you?

Gerard Cassidy:     Well, thank you. A couple questions on credit quality. The
                    industry you guys as well have seen outstanding credit
                    quality. When do you sense that the cycle may start to
                    change where provisions will have to come to a more
                    normalized level?


                                      - 14 -


Jim Rohr:           That's very difficult to say, because you're asking us to 
                    comment on other people's portfolios. I mean, the credit
                    quality situation as an industry is very good, and ours is
                    extraordinarily good and right now, of course, you always
                    say that, right now I would expect that I think Bill said in
                    his comments, for it to remain stable. I think it's a
                    remarkably good time for credit quality and particularly for
                    us. We're very pleased with where we are. It'll change, I
                    mean it will change. But when it does, and how it does, is
                    very difficult to predict.

Gerard Cassidy:     Do you think the irrational pricing in some of the
                    underwriting standards will be the catalyst that you guys
                    are seeing today that there may be credit issues, 12 to 18
                    months from now?

Jim Rohr:           It's hard to say the timing, really. But it'll come home to 
                    roost at some point in time. One of the things that I'm
                    pleased that we've done is we've maintained a very strong
                    discipline on making sure that we don't have large
                    exposures. Because whenever it turns, we'll have some credit
                    issues as well. But hopefully we'll have credit issues in
                    smaller buckets than historically.

Bill Demchak:       There's also two different issues, right? The spread issue
                    doesn't necessarily imply that the loans are risky. It's
                    just you're not getting returns compared to what you'd get
                    historically. The structure issue is more problematic and
                    you've probably seen all the statistics on the percentage of
                    the high yield market and leveraged loan market that's going
                    out sort of rated sub, single B minus and that keeps
                    growing. And that will ultimately be the thing that drives
                    the default statistics that you get out of Moody's and S&P.
                    It's just a percentage of the market that's going out real
                    low sub-investment grade.

Gerard Cassidy:     I see. The other question was on the equity management
                    gains. What's the size of the portfolio that's remaining
                    there and should we see this elevated - should we expect it
                    elevated level to continue?

Jim Rohr:           We're at about $500 million in equity portfolio. We
                    usually target mid-teens kind of return for that. So I think
                    the first quarter was probably a little better than we would
                    normally expect. But a lot of it depends on the market. Keep
                    looking at the Dow and hopefully that will do a little
                    better. We would expect mid teens performances out of that
                    book over time.

Gerard Cassidy:     One final question. With your expansion of the Riggs
                    franchise, as you know, Commerce Bancorp is also expanding
                    into that territory at the same time that you guys are. Is
                    there any outside metrics that we can look at, as investors,
                    to see how successful that expansion is going in the D.C.
                    area?

Bill Demchak:       You can look at how many branches we've built there relative
                    to them.

Gerard Cassidy:     Okay. Thank you.

Bill Callihan:      Next question, please.


                                      - 15 -


Operator:           Your next question comes from John Kline of Sandler O'Neill.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning, John.

John Kline:         How are you guys doing?

Jim Rohr:           Great, thanks. How are you?

John Kline:         All right. Great, thanks. Question on PFPC - really good
                    quarter in terms of revenue growth. Just curious what's
                    driving that. If it's a mix change or number of customers
                    that you've been growing, kind of what the effect is there,
                    of both items.

Jim Rohr:           I think we've been talking about PFPC for a period of time 
                    in terms of how they turned the sales around of the company.
                    I think it's kind of a cumulative effect. Year before last
                    was the first year they had a good sales year in quite some
                    time. And there's a lag in terms of how soon some of those
                    customers come on. A number of those customers came on last
                    year. Last year, their sales were probably double the year
                    before. And so they had a whole series of customers. We
                    announced two or three of them, I think, that came on, and a
                    number of those conversions took place in the second half of
                    the year and into the first. Then you had the State Street
                    Research came on stream at the very end of January. So the
                    revenue side was building for PFPC. And then you had the
                    continued takeout. We've taken 1,600 people out of PFPC, I
                    believe the number is, in the last two and a half years. So
                    it's both a revenue and expense game.

John Kline:         It's - you've really turned that around.

Jim Rohr:           Bill Demchak has done a spectacular job there.  We'd love 
                    for the market to turn around and then it would really be
                    special.

John Kline:         Yes. Question for you on State Street Research. Looks like 
                    it was accretive right out of the chute. Any sense for what
                    the contribution could be for that going forward in terms of
                    additional accretion?

Jim Rohr:           I don't think - I think Larry said in his comments that it
                    would be 30 cents, I believe. And we can't disclose really
                    anything more than what BlackRock disclosed on that call.

John Kline:         You're sure of that 70%?

Jim Rohr:           Not a bad thing.  It's a good thing every day.


                                      - 16 -


John Kline:         Yes.

Bill Callihan:      And John, that's higher than the original thought, that
                    BlackRock had that they mentioned on their call. Thirty
                    cents is actually a number they had expected in 2006.

Jim Rohr:           Right.

Bill Demchak:       That's 4 to 5 cents to PNC.

John Kline:         Got it. Thank you very much.

Jim Rohr:           Thank you, John.

Bill Callihan:      Next question, please.

Operator:           Your next question comes from David Hilder with Bear
                    Stearns.

Jim Rohr:           Hi, David.

David Hilder:       Good morning. Bill and Jim, I think you both made several
                    references to the 28 basis point sequential increase in
                    yield on your securities portfolio. You didn't mention the
                    33 basis point sequential increase in your funding costs. I
                    just wondered what kind of increase both in yield and
                    funding costs you'd expect if the Fed continues its pattern
                    of raising the Fed Funds target rate by 25 basis points at
                    each meeting.

Bill Demchak:       It ought to - as a percentage of the funds increase,
                    decrease slightly. As we said before, we had some catch up
                    to do in terms of sort of being the low-priced player out
                    there. So as a percentage of whatever the Fed does, we'll be
                    slightly less sensitive on the liability side.

David Hilder:       But would you expect to see the spread between your overall
                    funding costs and the yield on the securities portfolio
                    continue to narrow sequentially?

Bill Demchak:       Yes. We ought to go back to the comment where we basically
                    said the margin at this point ought to stabilize, and
                    depending on you get a little steepness out of the front
                    end, it could go up. It would be unlikely that we could
                    continue to reprice the securities book equal to raw changes
                    in floating rate liabilities, if that's what you're asking.
                    We're pleased that it's rolling off and repricing as quickly
                    as it is. But at the end of the day the bulk of it is fixed
                    rate and it carries duration.

David Hilder:       Ok, thanks very much, Bill.


                                      - 17 -


Bill Demchak:       Yes.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Ed Najarian with Merrill 
                    Lynch.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning.

Ed Najarian:        Good morning, guys.  I guess this question is for Bill, 
                    sort of a follow-up on Mike Mayo's question. You talked a
                    lot about dry powder. Any sense of how fast you'll grow the
                    securities book? We kind of got some insight on rate
                    relative to the liabilities side...

Bill Demchak:       Yes.

Ed Najarian:        ...but how fast do you expect to increase the size of the 
                    securities book?

Bill Demchak:       Well, I think the better way to answer that is how would we 
                    cover some of the negative duration of equity and what would
                    we invest in. Remember, a big chunk of our securities book
                    today is floating rate. Right? So we could simply remove the
                    floating rate and fix rate and not grow it at all but use
                    some of this dry powder increase our margin, make more
                    money, blah, blah, blah.

                    The speed at which we do that is something we spend a lot of
                    time talking about. And to be honest, we probably missed a
                    bit of an opportunity with the backup just at the end of the
                    first quarter. We didn't act on it, probably should have.
                    But it's something that we're going to do incrementally.
                    We're not going to take one shot and try to get back to
                    flat. Something we talk about every day. And what we know
                    for sure is that sort of the end of this cycle we want to be
                    fully invested and that that will have - afford us
                    meaningful earnings opportunities.

Ed Najarian:        So from the outside looking in, it's best for us to think
                    about the securities book as sort of growing steadily over
                    the balance of this year.

Bill Demchak:       I don't think you can do that. Because - I think you've
                    got to look at the margin and the notion that we said
                    interest income would go up. Because we could replace
                    floating rate assets with fixed rate, have the book go down
                    but earnings go up, right, just because the fixed rate would
                    carry more than the floating.

Ed Najarian:        Right.

Bill Demchak:       We also have the opportunity to use received fixed swaps,
                    which we did some of in the first quarter. We could do a lot
                    more than we currently have on the books, so focusing
                    exclusively on the securities book size is a little bit
                    misleading in terms of thinking of how we are using the dry
                    powder.


                                      - 18 -


Ed Najarian:        Okay. Then just as a quick follow-up, you might have
                    mentioned this, but I missed it, were there any noticeable
                    non-recurring items in the 129 million other fee income?

Bill Demchak:       The one that's been disclosed.  Recovery that we talked 
                    about before on PFPC of about 10 million. And I guess that's
                    it.

Ed Najarian:        Okay, thanks.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Jennifer Thompson of
                    Oppenheimer.

Jim Rohr:           Good morning, Jennifer.

Jennifer Thompson:  Hi, good morning.  I had a couple of questions.  I'm sorry 
                    if I missed this earlier. In the "Other Expense" line that
                    seemed to jump a little bit as well, was there anything
                    unusual in that number?

Jim Rohr:           It was mostly related - mostly related to the State Street
                    acquisition. If you take out - if you take out the BlackRock
                    expenses, the PNC expenses were down quarter to quarter.

Jennifer Thompson:  Okay. And okay, so that gets to my second question.
                    Understanding that you can't really talk about - potentially
                    the impact of State Street going forward, can you give us a
                    sense of how much that impacted revenues and expenses to
                    your numbers this quarter?

Jim Rohr:           No.

Jennifer Thompson:  No?

Bill Demchak:       A couple of things. We've got some questions offline on 
                    this, I guess. We haven't broken out State Street
                    explicitly, because they're fully converted. We had
                    overlapping clients. The notion it would take 500
                    accountants to sift and track the individual revenues and
                    expenses of old State Street versus old BlackRock. What you
                    do know, though, is that on an operating basis State Street
                    was neutral to BlackRock in the first quarter and BlackRock
                    independent of that had extremely strong growth - over 20%
                    operating fourth to first. So they're clearly doing
                    exceptionally well.

Jennifer Thompson:  Okay. Just trying to get a sense - but it basically impacted
                    two of the quarters, two of the months of this quarter?
                    Thinking about a run rate going forward?

Bill Demchak:       Yes.


                                      - 19 -


Jennifer Thompson:  Okay.

Bill Demchak:       Yes.

Jennifer Thompson:  And in the - looking at PNC Advisors assets under
                    management, we're down a little bit, obviously overall
                    conditions are impacting that. But can you talk a little bit
                    about maybe customer wins or trends in anything that might
                    be offsetting the market impact?

Jim Rohr:           I'm not certain about $1 billion on PNC Advisors, so - I 
                    mean, that can happen as a result of just about anything,
                    including a trust paying out at the end of the quarter. So
                    when you look at PNC Advisors, I think you really have to
                    look at the trends in the bottom line of the business. And
                    if you take out the Hawthorn sale, which was in the first
                    quarter of last year, the gain there, the PNC Advisors was
                    up 17% year-over-year. So we're very pleased with the
                    progress they're making.

Bill Callihan:      Next question.

Operator:           Your next question comes from Claire Percarpio of Janney 
                    Montgomery Scott.

Claire Percarpio:   Good morning. Couple of questions. If you could give more 
                    color on where you're achieving the good commercial loan
                    growth and have there been any loan purchases on the
                    commercial or consumer side in the quarter? And then two
                    other things. Any guess as to the timing of when you might
                    resolve this potential restatement for cross-border
                    leveraged leases? And third, any thoughts about the tangible
                    common equity level being lower?

Jim Rohr:           The first one is kind of long. The loans really came from
                    across the board growth. There were no real significant
                    purchases at all in the quarter

Bill Demchak:       Some small purchases of home equity on stuff that we
                    already serviced for the client out of our home equity
                    servicing shop. Growth across middle market, business
                    credit, muted growth in real estate largely driven by
                    utilization rates kind of, actually, falling. So kind of
                    across the board. No purchased stuff. We're certainly
                    staying out of the notion of go out and buy loans to grow
                    the balance sheet. That's not in there.

                    Tangible, we have been, as you know, sort of warehousing
                    capital for the Riggs close. We've used some capital up with
                    the balance sheet growth and also with the backup in rates
                    that occurred late in the first quarter through OCI and
                    marking down the security books. Some of that will come back
                    because of the recent rally. But as we've said all along, we
                    have obviously communicated with rating agencies, we're
                    comfortable, they're comfortable with where we are. We're at
                    a point now where we're going to be very 


                                      - 20 -


                    conservative in share repurchases as we build back up to
                    levels post-Riggs over the 5% level. Then we'll go from
                    there. There was one other question.

Jim Rohr:           Cross border lease.  When we might resolve the cross
                    border lease.

Bill Demchak:       I guess there's a couple of different things hanging out
                    there. One is the IRS and where they come out on different
                    things. And the other one is what FASB does in relation to
                    any potential settlements with the IRS. I just don't even
                    want to try to predict the outcome of either one of those
                    things. As we say in the notes, we're reserved for any real
                    economic impact that we have. There will be potentially,
                    depending on where FASB comes out, some prior period
                    accounting changes, things that we would do. But the whole
                    net of this is sort of an economic difference in the timing
                    of tax deductions that isn't a huge amount of money for us,
                    so we're sort of covered for it.

Claire Percarpio:   I was calculating that it could be a restatement
                    cumulatively of 100 to 600 million.

Bill Demchak:       One hundred to 600?

Claire Percarpio:   That was where my stab I came out. Am I way high?

Bill Demchak:       That's a big bid offer.

Claire Percarpio:   Okay. Good. That's good to know.

Bill Demchak:       No.  I said that's a big bid offer.  Not a good one.  I 
                    don't know that we'd put that number out at this point. But
                    it would be something sort of a prior period issue and
                    doesn't, again whatever it is, will be recaptured over the
                    remaining years of the leases.

Claire Percarpio:   But wouldn't it affect '05 and '06 as well?  Some prior 
                    years?

Bill Demchak:       Yes.

Claire Percarpio:   Right.  I'm sorry, just to get clear on my stab, you're 
                    saying that's far too large a number, my 100 to 600 range?

Bill Demchak:       Yes, that's too large. But then don't try to narrow me down.
                    I don't want to get into -

Claire Percarpio:   Okay.

Bill Demchak:       - there's so many nuances on what they may come out with, 
                    it's too hard to guess. But 5 or 600 is way too big.


                                      - 21 -


Claire Percarpio:   Okay. And just to back up to the loan growth answer real 
                    quick...

Bill Demchak:       By the way, I want to go back to that one just for a second.

Claire Percarpio:   Okay.

Bill Demchak:       We - it's kind of interesting. We've put out everything we
                    kind of knew to date in our disclosures on this. And as near
                    as we can tell, we probably have more disclosures out than a
                    lot of other people who we know compete in the business. So
                    I don't think - this is certainly not a PNC isolated
                    incident at all. This is - we just saw it happening, so we
                    told you, which is our practice.

Claire Percarpio:   Right.

Jim Rohr:           And you want to make the comment again how we're reserved 
                    economically in this case.

Bill Demchak:       Yes. And we are, to the best of our knowledge, fully 
                    reserved economically.

Claire Percarpio:   Okay.  Okay.  Back to this - wait, you're fully reserved 
                    economically, but it could still impact '05 and '06?

Bill Demchak:       We could have a timing issue with respect to GAAP earnings. 
                    But PV the value to PNC shareholders we're flat. That's kind
                    of what we're saying.

Claire Percarpio:   Although people have been thinking of the revenue 
                    recognition differently, so it could impact what people's 
                    thoughts are for your earnings level?

Bill Demchak:       Potentially. But we're dancing around on something here
                    that it's kind of a can of worms. Because we're presuming
                    something coming out of FASB that may or may not be the
                    case. We just have no idea. There was just something put out
                    so we commented on it. I think we're going too far down a
                    dangerous path on something that will hit the whole
                    industry, not just PNC. That we were just, I think, probably
                    more forthright in sort of putting it out there than a lot
                    of our competitors.

Claire Percarpio:   But didn't Wachovia already settle for what looked like
                    a pretty big number where you guys look like you're going to
                    duke it out?

Bill Demchak:       They had a - I shouldn't comment on them. To my 
                    understanding they had a settlement across a broad range of
                    different issues related to tax. But they would still be
                    subject to whatever would come out from accounting. Again,
                    go back to the beginning, right? You've got an IRS issue and
                    then you got whatever the accountants - whatever FASB is
                    going to do. They are still subject to that. They'll have
                    the same issue.


                                      - 22 -


Claire Percarpio:   Okay. Last thing, sorry to get back to the loan growth,
                    are there certain markets and are they western markets?
                    Where are you getting - are there certain geographic markets
                    that are driving more of the growth, particularly middle
                    market business credit?

Jim Rohr:           No I think the geography - the business credit is a national
                    business for us. Real estate is a national business for us.
                    And so there really aren't any particularly hot geographies
                    in either one of those businesses. And the middle market
                    business, as Bill said, utilization rates are slightly
                    higher but nothing particularly exciting. The real estate
                    business, we have utilization rates up a little bit in the
                    REIT side. But the loan growth really is a little bit across
                    the whole franchise.

Bill Demchak:       The one thing that's very positive, though, although it
                    doesn't show up in huge numbers, is the growth in business
                    banking in the eastern part of our franchise. The percentage
                    growth there I think is north of 20%. Again, not off of a
                    huge base. But that's really encouraging, because it's very
                    granular, high-yield, nice risk profile against that book of
                    business.

Bill Callihan:      As Jim mentioned, small business loan growth was up 13% for 
                    the whole unit. So as Bill mentioned, higher in the eastern
                    part of the franchise.

Claire Percarpio:   Thanks.

Bill Callihan:      Next question, please?

Operator:           Your next question comes from Denis Laplante of Keefe, 
                    Bruyette, Woods.

Jim Rohr:           Hello, Denis.

Denis Laplante:     Hi, good morning. I guess congratulations on breaking that 
                    dollar, right? Elaborating on your trading activities, if
                    you could, you've had two quarters in a row of $50 million
                    worth of trading. Previous to that you have been running
                    around 25. Any change in your value at risk or could you
                    elaborate on what you're doing there?

Bill Demchak:       Sure. No real change over the last couple of quarters in
                    value at risk. There's been an increase if you track back,
                    going over a year or more. The client-related income has
                    just picked up. While we do it on very small size, the same
                    sort of business trends you see from the big Wall Street
                    shops, we see with our clients, just a lot smaller.

                    But the other side of that and the part is, and will be,
                    more volatile is the positioning we do against the value of
                    the balance sheet. And we have become more active in using
                    the trading books to preserve the pure value of the balance
                    sheet given that with hedge accounting the way it is today,
                    our 


                                      - 23 -


                    ability to overtly get accrual hedging for derivative
                    instruments or other securities, you can't do it. We just
                    put it in the trading book. And that's been very positive
                    for us over the last couple of quarters. But I think to your
                    point, it's above trend by some amount.

Denis Laplante:     If you were to look at the $50 million, and I don't want to 
                    just isolate this to one quarter, but how much of that is
                    coming from client-related stuff, versus kind of more
                    positioning?

Bill Demchak:       The majority of it is coming from client-related stuff.
                    Depending on whether - we're dancing on the head of a pin.
                    The majority is coming from client-related stuff.

Denis Laplante:     Okay. What was the starting point - starting spread on your 
                    fixed rate, the received fixed swaps you put on?

Bill Demchak:       Oh, I don't know off the top of my head.

Denis Laplante:     Okay. If I get to pricing on deposits, maybe differentiate 
                    between some of the markets, New Jersey, Philly, western PA,
                    Ohio, do you have a sense of which market is a little more
                    competitive than others?

Bill Demchak:       You know, I guess there's been a lot of writing about the
                    competitive midwest or something. When I look at our own
                    pricing and deposits against some of the peer banks, the
                    banks we compete with out here, we're kind of in the pack
                    with them. Interestingly, our growth in our deposits is all
                    coming from the eastern part of our franchise. So we
                    differentiate by market, but as a practical matter, we have
                    fairly uniform practices across our geography and we are
                    seeing the growth on the eastern part of the franchise.

Denis Laplante:     Does that mean that your competitive position relative to
                    others in the east is you're at less of a disadvantage
                    compared to the Midwest is that what that's saying?

Bill Demchak:       I don't think we're at a disadvantage to anybody.

Denis Laplante:     No, no, I mean from a pricing standpoint that you've, even 
                    though you have moved them up, you have kind of suggested
                    that you have been below kind of in the middle...

Bill Demchak:       I'm looking at something here that I'm sure you could
                    recreate on rate paid on interest bearing deposits, where if
                    I go back a year, we were always sort of (inaudible). We
                    were always the lowest paying guy out there. Now we're in
                    the upper quartile against the people you would think of as
                    our competitors. We're not the highest, but we're up there,
                    and it's bringing in money.


                                      - 24 -


Jim Rohr:           We said, we made the comment that during declining interest 
                    rates it wasn't all that profitable to be putting on a lot
                    of time deposits, so we purposely let that money run off.
                    There was some question as to whether you would lose
                    relationships and you couldn't get it back in a rising
                    interest rate environment, and we clearly found that's not
                    the case. We are adding customers as well as deposits. I
                    guess the other observation in the east, is there's a lot
                    more money in the east. We've got a major franchise there.
                    So I think you've got to go where the money is.

Denis Laplante:     Last question, if I may, on the principal investing.
                    Could you differentiate between the actual cash gains versus
                    mark-to-market?

Bill Demchak:       Sorry.  The realized versus unrealized private equity book?

Denis Laplante:     Yes, right.

Bill Demchak:       I can't off the top of my head and I don't know that, we -
                    disclose it. The reason that's a bit of a complicated
                    question, I can tell you that within our own invested
                    portfolio, the problem is that we have more than half of
                    that money out in third party funds. And so some of their
                    gains were realized and unrealized. It's something we can't
                    follow up with offline. We'll try to provide disclosure
                    perhaps down the road on that sort of thing.

Denis Laplante:     Okay. Thank you.

Jim Rohr:           Thank you, Denis.

Operator:           At this time, there are no further questions.  Mr. Callihan,
                    are there any closing remarks?

Bill Callihan:      No. I think we're - Jim, I don't know - have you got 
                    anything else?

Jim Rohr:           No.  Thank you for joining us.  We're very pleased with the 
                    quarter and optimistic about the rest of the year.  Thanks 
                    for your support.

Bill Callihan:      Thank you.

                                End of Transcript


                                      - 25 -


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT THIS TRANSACTION

The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. and Riggs have filed a proxy
statement/prospectus and other relevant documents concerning the merger with the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"). WE URGE INVESTORS
TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS AND OTHER DOCUMENTS FILED WITH THE SEC IN
CONNECTION WITH THE MERGER OR INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE IN THE PROXY
STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS, BECAUSE THEY CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Investors may
obtain these documents free of charge at the SEC web site (http://www.sec.gov ).
In addition, documents filed with the sec by the PNC Financial Services Group,
Inc. are available free of charge from Shareholder Relations at (800) 843-2206.
Documents filed with the SEC by Riggs are available free of charge from
http://www.riggsbank.com.
 
The directors, executive officers, and certain other members of management of
Riggs may be soliciting proxies in favor of the merger from its shareholders.
For information about these directors, executive officers, and members of
management, shareholders are asked to refer to Riggs's most recent annual
meeting proxy statement, which is available on Riggs's website
(http://www.riggsbank.com ) and at the addresses provided in the preceding
paragraph.