RBS (The Royal Bank of Scotland ) Has Record Loss Of £28 billion

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After hearing the news that the Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) is proving to be the Lloyd’s Banking Group Albatross, you might not be surprised to see that the other UK banking shoe is falling, if you don’t mind the mixed metaphor. 

We now see that RBS is to sell off £300bn worth of assets.

RBS (RBS) is set to embark on a major restructure which will see it sell off at least 20% of its business worth around £300 billion.  The bank is due to announce its full-year results on Thursday and is expected to report a £28 billion loss – setting a record in UK corporate history.  Newly-appointed chief executive, Stephen Hester, is to unveil details of the plans this week, which will also see the bank split into a “good bank” and “bad bank”.

RBS is almost 70% owned by the taxpayer and received an injection of £20 billion last autumn to prevent it from collapse.

It is no surprise to see that the UK PM Gordon Brown calls for a return to prudent banking.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown called on Sunday for a return to traditional savings and mortgage banking in Britain as he prepares to insure banks against billions of pounds of toxic assets. He has asked the Financial Services Authority watchdog to look into how it should control new mortgages for more than 100 percent of a home’s value.

Brown’s Labour government is working out the details of a scheme in which banks including Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds would put billions of pounds of troubled assets into a structure that will ensure they are only liable for a proportion of any losses. The government hopes the insurance scheme will give banks the confidence they need to reopen lending lines frozen by the credit crisis.

One can only hope that the very expensive recent banking lessons both in the UK and the USA will bring in an entirely different banking culture around the world.

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Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS), the Lloyd’s Banking Group Albatross

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As far as the title goes it should be clear that the word albatross here is not following its American usage as a term for a double eagle, or 3-under par on any one golf hole.  Rather we intend the British usage where it means an encumbrance, or a wearisome burden as in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

This blog was not intended as only a record of the gyrations of the UK banking meltdown.  However today’s headline almost passes belief.  Pressure on Brown as Lloyds ‘to lose £26bn’.

LLOYDS Banking Group could suffer additional losses of £16 billion, analysts warned as they downgraded the firm’s credit rating. The withdrawal of the triple-A rating by Moody’s Investor Services follows the banking group’s profit warning of a £10 billion loss.  But according to analysts, Friday’s predictions, blamed on the risky acquisition of Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) by Lloyds, will be just the beginning of even deeper losses during the downturn.

This puts into even greater contrast the kind of headline we all saw only six days ago: Lloyds chief executive Eric Daniels ‘won’t take bonus’ for last year.

Lloyds Banking Group is 43% owned by the taxpayer and his decision emerged hours before he and other bank chiefs were due to face a grilling from MPs.  Tory MP Michael Fallon, vice-chairman of the all-party Commons Treasury committee, stressed that publicly owned banks should cut back dramatically on the special payments.

Further Stop Press Item: Chancellor sets RBS bonus limits

Chancellor Alistair Darling has announced that the government is limiting bonuses paid out to staff by the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS).  Mr Darling said bonuses at RBS would be cut from the £2.5bn paid last year to £340m. There would be “no reward for people who have failed,” he added.  And bonuses will no longer be paid in cash, but in shares.  The bank would pay “the minimum it can with regard to its legal obligations,” the chancellor said, referring to the fact that some employees are contractually obliged to receive bonuses.

Alistair Darling was quoted as saying, “What you’re now seeing is a cultural change”.  Hopefully this is the start of much more realism in the way the UK Government is tackling this whole sorry mess.

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