UK to set up code to break up bad banks

UK to set up code to break up bad banks

LONDON - Reuters
British banks that fail to guard their day-to-day banking from risky investment activities will face being dismantled, finance minister George Osborne said yesterday.

Britain is shaking up its system of bank regulation following the 2008 financial crisis, when the government poured 65 billion pounds ($102 billion) of taxpayers’ money into rescues of Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds.

Banks were already expected to have to “ring-fence” activities such as standard bank accounts and payments from riskier investment banking, something which will hit major players such as Barclays, HSBC, and RBS.

But Osborne said he is prepared to go further. “If a bank flouts the rules, the regulator and the Treasury will have the power to break it up altogether - full separation, not just a ring-fence. In the jargon, we will ‘electrify the ring fence’, he said in a speech.

The breakup of banks which fail to keep to the rules was demanded by lawmakers who reviewed government plans late last year. Under the new rules, the Bank of England will monitor whether banks ensure that risks taken by their investment banking arms do not endanger their retail sides.

Close watch on directors

If the central bank finds a breach, the government will make the final politically-sensitive decision on whether to impose a “nuclear option” of forcing banks to sell one of the two arms.

Osborne said the government could strengthen sanctions against directors of failed banks to prevent them from working in the industry. “I want to see how we can strengthen the sanctions regime for senior bankers - for example, should there be a presumption that the directors of failed banks do not work in the sector again?” he said.

Britain’s banks have been dogged by scandals including the misselling of insurance and complicated hedging products, the rigging of global benchmark rates and breaches of anti-money laundering rules.

RBS is expected to be fined for attempted manipulation of benchmark interest rates this week.

Osborne repeated his call for fines to be paid out of money that would have funded bankers’ bonuses
Banks have come to accept the idea of a ring-fence, having initially resisted it. A source close to one of Britain’s biggest lenders said the industry’s main concern had been to have clarity over what future regulation will involve.

The source said that, with lenders already under intense scrutiny, Osborne’s decision was a longer term move designed to prevent banks letting standards drop when attention is less focused on the industry.

Antonio Horta-Osorio, chief executive of Britain’s biggest retail bank, Lloyds, had previously welcomed the ring-fencing proposals, saying it would lessen the chances of taxpayers’ money having
to be used again to bail out UK banks.