Royal Bank of Scotland has reported a
£469m loss for the July-to-September period as "legacy issues" continue
to overshadow its performance.
The bank received a £45.5bn bailout during the financial crisis and has been tackling a range of problems.
But
once restructuring costs and provision for litigation were excluded,
the bank made an adjusted quarterly operating profit of £1.3bn.
It said it could not sell its Williams & Glyn bank by the end of 2017.
RBS
has been ordered by the European Commission to sell Williams & Glyn
in order to prevent the group from having too dominant a position as
the UK's largest lender to small businesses.
Earlier this week, Clydesdale Bank confirmed that it had made an offer for Williams & Glyn after Santander abandoned plans to buy the business.
RBS declined to comment on Clydesdale's statement, saying only that it was "talking to a number of interested parties".
However, RBS said it did not expect to expect to sell off the business by 31 December 2017, as the Commission requires.
RBS
has already missed an earlier deadline for the sale, of November 2013,
without incurring any punitive action by the Commission.
Litigation costs
RBS is still 73% owned by the government following its emergency bailout in 2008.
Its
latest attributable or "bottom-line" loss was widened by restructuring
costs of £469m and conduct and litigation costs of £425m, as well as a
deferred tax write-off of £300m.
The third-quarter loss compares
badly with the same period last year, when RBS posted a profit of £940m.
But that was flattered by proceeds from the sale of US bank Citizens.
Unlike
Lloyds and Barclays earlier this week, RBS has made no new provision
for costs arising from mis-selling of Payment Protection Insurance
(PPI).
The new litigation costs have been set aside in readiness
for expected liabilities in the US, where the bank faces charges in
relation to the sale of mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the
financial crisis.
'Noisy' results
RBS said these were among "a range of uncertainties in the external environment".
RBS
chief executive Ross McEwan said: "We've said that 2015 and 2016 would
be noisy as we work through legacy issues and transform this bank for
customers. These results reflect that noise.
"Our core business results were good, with a £1.3bn adjusted operating profit, our best quarter since 2014.
"The core business has now delivered on average over £1bn in adjusted operating profit for the last seven quarters."
RBS
said it had achieved cost reductions of £695m in the first nine months
of the year and was on target to meet its target of an £800m reduction
by the end of this year.
"RBS has yet to emerge from the weight of
misconduct fines, restructuring costs, the distraction of the sale of
the Williams & Glyn unit, the spectre of the government stake and
the lack of a dividend payment," said Richard Hunter, head of equities
at Wilson King Investment Management.
"Meanwhile, the bank's longer term targets have also been temporarily shelved in the face of its ongoing challenges."
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