Bangkok Post

First Direct tops Britain’s quality survey

- HUW JONES

LONDON: First Direct, Metro Bank and Nationwide Building Society came top in Britain’s first mandatory sector-wide customer surveys to help people choose the best bank, with Royal Bank of Scotland at the bottom of the list.

A review of retail banking in August 2016 by the Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA), ordered lenders to publish biannual measuremen­ts of how customers rate their services.

An independen­t survey of banks’ customers conducted by GfK UK asked how willing they were to recommend their services to friends and family.

In the first survey published yesterday, 85% of customers at First Direct, HSBC’s telephone banking unit, said they would recommend their lender in terms of overall service quality.

Metro Bank and Nationwide Building Society came second and third with 83% and 73%, respective­ly.

The “Big Four”, Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland, whose branches have long dominated Britain’s high streets, scored lower.

RBS was at the bottom of the list in joint 15th place with Clydesdale Bank. Just 49% of their customers would recommend the two lenders.

“For the first time, people will now be able to easily compare banks on the quality of the service they provide, and so judge if they’re getting the most for their money or could do better elsewhere,” said Adam Land, senior director at the CMA.

Britain and its regulators are trying to boost competitio­n in banking by making it easier to switch accounts and encouragin­g new “challenger” banks to enter the market, but so far the Big Four continue to dominate.

“Giving consumers more informatio­n about the service personal current account providers offer will help encourage customers to shop around and find the best account to suit their needs,” said Eric Leenders, managing director of personal finance at UK Finance, a banking industry body.

Barclays came joint fifth with Santander UK, with 64% of its customers recommendi­ng the bank. Lloyds was joint ninth with Natwest, an RBS unit, and TSB.

HSBC was joint 13th at 55% with the Co-operative bank.

For business banking surveyed by BDRC, Sweden’s Handelsban­ken came top, followed by Metro Bank and Santander.

The results must be displayed prominentl­y in branches, and for customers to see when they bank online or on smartphone­s.

The survey is one of several measures imposed by the CMA to improve available informatio­n. Customers were also asked about service quality in online and mobile banking, branches, and overdraft services.

But lawmakers have called such measures a “derelictio­n of duty”, saying they rely too

much on advances in technology and transparen­cy to boost competitio­n.

They have called for radical measures to prise open the sector, such as ending free in credit banking to stop hefty overdraft fees from subsidisin­g wealthier customers who can stay in the black.

The Financial Conduct Authority is due to publish initial findings from its own review of retail banking business models later this year.

Banks will have to publish figures on how long it takes to open current accounts and replace debit cards from February next year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A woman walks past a branch of the Nationwide Building Society in London.
REUTERS A woman walks past a branch of the Nationwide Building Society in London.

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