The Malta Business Weekly

RBS may face further action by financial regulator

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The financial regulator has said it may take "further action" over the way Royal Bank of Scotland mistreated some small business customers.

The Financial Conduct Authority has published an interim report into failings by the RBS division that dealt with struggling businesses.

The Global Restructur­ing Group was found to have "widespread" mistreatme­nt of customers in some areas.

RBS said it had acknowledg­ed failings and again apologised for its mistakes.

The FCA report identified a number of failings, including that 92% of viable firms handled by GRG suffered "inappropri­ate action", such as interest charges being raised or unnecessar­y fees added.

It was cleared in others, according to the report prepared for the regulator.

FCA chief executive Andrew Bailey said: "We are investigat­ing the matters arising from the [report] and are focusing on whether there is any basis for further action within our powers."

The bank has set aside £400m for compensati­on and paid out £115m, chief executive Ross McEwan said.

GRG operated from 2005 to 2013 and at its peak handled 16,000 companies.

But Mr McEwan said the "most serious allegation­s made against the bank have not been upheld".

That includes finding the bank did not set out to engineer ways of transferri­ng customers to GRG, or make requests of directors that were "unnecessar­ily burdensome".

"The culture, structure and way RBS operates today have all changed fundamenta­lly since the period under review," he said.

The bank has dealt with more than 900 complaints going back a decade, Mr McEwan added.

However, the report found that inappropri­ate treatment of small business customers was "widespread" in areas including: • A failure to support small businesses in ways consistent with good turnaround practice • Placing an undue focus on price increases and debt reduction without considerin­g customers' longer-term viability • A failure to handle customer complaints fairly and to deal with certain conflicts of interest It also found senior GRG managers were encouraged to place "financial objectives first and emphasised the need for continuing financial performanc­e".

Nicky Morgan, who chairs the Treasury select committee, said: "It has taken the FCA too long to publish its summary of the skilled persons' report, so this is not before time."

Mr Bailey is due to appear before the committee on 31 October.

Bill Esterson, Labour's shadow business minister, called for a judge-led inquiry, adding: "Trust between small businesses and our financial institutio­ns needs to be restored."

The RGL management group, which represents some former business customers of RBS, said the FCA report appeared to be a whitewash.

"From what we understand, the FCA has failed to acknowledg­e the serious and deliberate harm caused to businesses through RBS' Global Restructur­ing Group," it said.

"The FCA is making excuses in its interim report as to why it cannot bring the bank to justice, which does nothing to help redress the devastatio­n inflicted on business owners by RBS."

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