MPs raise doubts over bank sales

















A parliamentary committee has said the Treasury’s sale of Northern Rock in 2011 was “fortunate”, and Lloyds and RBS may not be sold “for many years”.













A Public Accounts Committee report noted that while the Rock’s sale was “well-handled”, taxpayers were still set to lose £2bn on the bank’s rescue.


MPs were not convinced that a profit would be made on the £66bn rescue of the two bigger banks any time soon.


A Treasury aide said it aims “to get the best possible value for taxpayers”.


“This government is putting right the catastrophic regulatory failings of the last decade that led to the biggest bank bailout in the world,” the Treasury aide added.


The government currently owns 40% of Lloyds, and 82% of RBS.


Lucky timing


Northern Rock was rescued in February 2008 by the previous government.


The sale of Northern Rock to Virgin Money in 2011 was carried out by the current government under time pressure, as EU state aid rules required the Treasury to dispose of its holding by 2013.


The committee said that UK Financial Investments (UKFI) – the state-owned body that manages the Treasury’s investments in the banks it rescued during the financial crisis – was lucky that Virgin was so keen to buy, given that there were only ever two bidders for the bank.


“The Treasury was fortunate that one of them had a strategic interest in purchasing a small retail bank at the end of 2011,” the committee’s report said, noting that current market conditions are less favourable than they had been at the time of the sale.


“The low level of competition does not give us confidence that the taxpayer will make a profit on the sale of RBS or Lloyds,” it added.


Continue reading the main story

September 2007 The run on Northern Rock


February 2008 Northern Rock nationalised


September 2008 Lloyds announces takeover of Halifax Bank of Scotland


October 2008 Government part-nationalises RBS and Lloyds-HBOS


January 2010 Northern Rock split into good and bad banks


December 2010 FSA clears RBS management of wrongdoing


November 2011 RBS agrees branch sale to Santander


November 2011 Northern Rock sold to Virgin Money


December 2011 Northern Rock sale to be investigated by NAO; FSA releases RBS report


September 2012 NAO releases Northern Rock report


October 2012 RBS branch sale to Santander collapses; RBS taken off Asset Protection Scheme



While the Treasury invested £1.4bn in Northern Rock shares, this was small in comparison to the £66bn invested in RBS and Lloyds.


“It seems inevitable that their ‘temporary public ownership’ will last for some time, if getting value for our investment remains the most important objective for government.”


The £2bn price tag for bailing out Northern Rock is not definite, and was drawn by the committee from a report provided to the committee by the National Audit Office (NAO) earlier this year.


The actual losses will depend on whether and how much profit UKFI is able to make from the Northern Rock assets that it did not sell to Virgin, and continues to own.


‘Lessons learnt’


Like the NAO, the committee was critical of the Treasury and UKFI – which took over ownership from the Treasury in 2010 – for being too slow to override the Rock’s management following the bank’s 2008 rescue.


“Northern Rock PLC still lost money in 2011, and its strategy should have been challenged sooner,” the report claimed.


The bank also failed to hit a £15bn government lending target during its time in public ownership, achieving only £9.1bn.


The report said that the government should have been more critical of the “optimistic” plan put forward by management for how to split the Rock up into a “good bank” that was sold to Virgin, and a “bad bank” with billions of pounds of problem mortgages that was retained in state ownership.


“The Treasury should ensure that lessons it learns from the sale are captured and can be applied to future disposals, including any sale of RBS or Lloyds.”


Margaret Hodge MP, chairman of the PAC, said the rescue of Northern Rock was made more complicated because the Treasury was unable to respond promptly to the banking crisis as “it lacked the right skills and understanding. It was slow to nationalise the bank and that made a loss difficult to avoid.


“The Treasury had spent five months trying to find a private sector buyer before giving up. After nationalisation, it then failed to effectively challenge the optimistic business plan put forward by the bank’s management to split the bank.”


She predicted that this would not be the last banking crisis, so the “Treasury must ensure it retains the right staff with the right skills to understand the risks and respond effectively.


“It needs to learn the lessons from the creation and sale of Northern Rock and make sure that these are applied in future, including to any sale of RBS and Lloyds.”


BBC News – Business



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