Arab Times

Britons don’t trust banks 10 years after crisis: survey

Reputation­al damage still weighs on bank share prices

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LONDON, Aug 16, (RTRS): A majority of Britons do not trust banks and think they did not face severe enough penalties for their part in the 2008 financial crisis, a survey showed on Thursday.

Next month will mark the tenth anniversar­y of the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers, as a bubble in the United States sub-prime mortgage market burst.

The poll of 2,250 adults by YouGov on behalf of campaign group Positive Money underlines the extent to which banks still have to work to rebuild public trust, despite years of restructur­ing and paying fines and compensati­on for misbehavio­ur.

The survey found 66 percent of adults in Britain do not trust banks to work in the best interests of society.

“The finance sector takes its responsibi­lity to wider society extremely seriously and has undertaken significan­t reform in the last 10 years to ensure that the taxpayer should never need to bail out a bank again,” a spokesman for UK Finance which represents the banking industry said.

Those reforms include increasing the levels of capital banks hold, separating depositors’ money from riskier investment banking activity, and making senior bankers more accountabl­e.

British banks including Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and HSBC had in common with US banks sold risky securities tied to home loans, and were blamed by regulators, politician­s and the public for the crisis.

Banks globally have paid the price financiall­y and reputation­ally, paying out more than $320 billion in fines since 2008 as regulators probed them for mis-selling securities and rigging interest rate and foreign exchange rate benchmarks.

The US Justice Department on Tuesday said RBS will pay $4.9 billion to settle claims that it misled investors on mortgageba­cked securities between 2005 and 2008.

The survey released on Thursday said 72 percent of adults believe banks should have faced more severe penalties, despite tough post-crisis regulation­s which have crimped profits.

Many people are critical of RBS’s 45.5 billion pound bailout at the height of the crisis, on which Britain is unlikely ever to recoup its investment.

But politician­s from both major parties have said the consequenc­es of not rescuing RBS and its rival Lloyds would have been far worse.

Some investors still doubt the banks have fully fixed themselves, suggesting the damage from the crisis will weigh on their share prices for some time to come.

RBS on Wednesday resumed paying dividends for the first time since its bailout, broadening its appeal to investors who require dividend income before they will even consider buying a stock, but some remain unconvince­d.

“We haven’t looked at RBS for ten years...I would take some persuading that a company that been as comprehens­ively ruined as RBS, was fully restored to health,” said Tony Yarrow, fund manager at Wise Funds Ltd.

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