Royal Bank of Scotland has reported a
£2bn loss for the first six months of the year, which the chief
executive blamed on "legacy issues".

It compares to a £179m loss last year and includes £1.3bn of litigation and conduct costs.
RBS also confirmed that it would no longer separate and list its Williams & Glyn business.
It will now sell the 300-branch High Street bank with Santander UK understood to be a potential buyer.
PPI costs
Chief
executive Ross McEwan told the BBC that he had tried to sort out as
many legacy issues as possible over the past two years, although he
admitted that there would be "some hangover" in 2017.
The legacy
issues include mis-selling payment protection insurance (PPI) to
customers and litigation related to a £12bn rights issue in 2008 during
the financial crisis.
Over the six months, RBS set aside a further
£450m to compensate customers who were mis-sold PPI, taking its total
costs related to the scandal towards £5bn.
Mr McEwan said: "This is the issue when you do have difficulties of
this nature some of them do date back 10 years. Some of the PPI issues
are dating back to 1993 that we're having to resolve, as is the
industry.
"The core thing for me is that we've got a very strong bank here that can take these shocks."
Banks
have so far paid out £24bn in PPI compensation, while the five biggest
banks in the UK have set aside about £33bn to deal with the total
compensation bill.
'Startlingly bad run'
Shares in RBS fell 3.75% to 184.8p in early trading.
Neil
Wilson, markets analyst at ETX Capital, said: "RBS just moves from one
disaster to the next. This time it's 'legacy issues', but after eight
and a half years since being bailed out, it's time to move on.
"The
£2bn loss in the first half comes after eight straight years of annual
losses. It's now very much odds-on to make that nine in a row - a
startlingly bad run of results for any company, let alone a bank."
RBS,
which is still 73%-owned by the taxpayer, said restructuring costs
totalled £630m in the first half of the year and are expected to reach
more than £1bn for 2016 as a whole.
RBS spent £345m
restructuring Williams & Glyn, which it had intended to carve out
and float on the stock exchange. The bank had been told by Europe to
divest the business in return for receiving billions of pounds in state
aid in 2008.
It is understood that Santander UK is in talks about
buying Williams & Glyn, which marks a return for the Spanish-owned
bank after it pulled out of deal more than four years ago following
issues with the IT system.

Mr McEwan said: "At the end of last year I said with interest rates
being lower for a lot longer, we needed to look at not just whether we
could separate this bank and put it onto the market through an IPO
[initial public offering].
"We have had a bit of interest in
people who want to buy this bank and it is quite clear that this bank
standing alone would not be as viable as it would be with somebody else.
So we've had interest and we're pursuing that interest at the moment."
Mortgage rates
Mr
McEwan said that RBS was reviewing its rates after the Bank of England
cut the interest rate to a historic low of 0.25% on Thursday.
Barclays
and Santander have said both said that they will pass on the cut to its
mortgage customers. Barclays said its savings rates were under review
while Santander said the rate on existing accounts would not be reduced
by more than 0.25%.
Mr McEwan said: "We are in review now about all of our rates given the announcement... yesterday."
However,
he added that RBS had "very, very few people" who had mortgages on a
standard variable rate and argued that the bank charged a lower rate
compared to its rivals.
No comments:
Post a Comment