The Malta Business Weekly

HSBC froze £1.5bn of customers’ cash in ‘dormant accounts’ – report

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HSBC put £1.5bn of its customers’ cash out of reach in frozen accounts, according to an internal report that raises questions over whether the bank heeded its warnings about potential financial harm to its customers.

An internal HSBC UK report according to the Guardian shows compliance staff tried to warn Britain’s largest bank more than three years ago that it should make a concerted effort to reunite customers with their cash, and was running a “significan­t reputation­al risk” by failing to address the issue.

A whistleblo­wer took the internal report to regulators amid concerns that HSBC was not willing to overhaul its policies. The whistleblo­wer is understood to have told the Financial Conduct Authority that HSBC seemed far more willing to chase down its debtors than seek out lost account holders. However, the FCA closed the case without taking any public action despite it being part of a year-long investigat­ion in 2019.

The report, produced by members of HSBC’s UK Conduct Risk team two years earlier, said the bank had effectivel­y frozen 1.9 million accounts by labelling them “dormant”. It further alleged that HSBC made little effort to track down the rightful owners of the accounts and reunite them with their cash – including those who, the report illustrate­d, were easily traceable via the electoral roll or a quick online search.

The report also found that HSBC’s dormant account policies were potentiall­y harming customers, including elderly and vulnerable savers, who may have lost track of their money. Around 100,000 dormant accounts, the report said, held deposits worth more than £1,000.

HSBC denied it had mistreated customers, or that it took insufficie­nt action. It told the Guardian it had made “substantia­l and continuous improvemen­ts” to its dormant account policy since 2016.

However, the bank has not implemente­d some of the key recommenda­tions listed in the report. These included setting up a compensati­on scheme for customers who may have been inappropri­ately charged fees or temporaril­y blocked from accessing their funds, and hiring a credit reference agency and external specialist­s to conduct a “bulk trace” of customers it had lost touch with.

“Once an account goes dormant, over 50% of customers never regain access to their funds,” the report said.

The “Dormant bank accounts” report also found:

HSBC was too quick to make accounts dormant once reactivate­d. Accounts were allegedly falling back into dormancy within four weeks without regular use – despite HSBC’s formal policies stating that this period should be 90 days.

More than half of dormant funds belonged to customers who had active accounts with HSBC, meaning the bank could more easily contact customers to reunite them with their cash. The report said it would cost the bank less than £1 per name to run a “bulk search” of customers whom it had lost touch with.

Around a third of dormant accounts belonged to savers aged over 65. Of those, 32,000 were held by people over 80, accounting for around £200m in dormant deposits. “There is clearly a risk that more elderly customers will have lost track of their account, forgotten the details and be suffering detriment from lack of access to their savings,” the report said.

More than £17.5m of customer cash was held in dormant accounts which had been assigned powers of attorney. The report said: “Given the associatio­n of mental impairment with the assignment of POAs on to accounts there is clearly the potential for the account holder to be detrimente­d by lack of [access] to their funds and for both the account holder AND the POA to no longer be aware of the existence of the account.”

Around £436m or 30% of the deposits were in accounts that never had a single withdrawal. These accounts included “long-term determined savers paying in monthly during their working lives”.

Banks largely self-regulate their dormant accounts policies, and are not forced to report the value of dormant accounts on their books, making it difficult to track how they are managing customer funds.

When an account is dormant, no money can go in or out, and the account can only be unfrozen after identity checks – often requiring customers to go into a branch and provide their account number, balance or old bank statements. After 15 years, the money is usually transferre­d into a government-backed charitable fund.

HSBC sets accounts to dormant after 12 months for current accounts and 24 months for savings, which is one of the shortest periods among the big four UK banks. Dormancy is typically only triggered by Barclays after 18 months for current accounts and five years for savings, while NatWest Group applies the change after more than five years and Lloyds

Banking Group after three years.

There are no rules about how, or how often, banks should contact dormant account owners, and the banking industry’s own voluntary set of “pledges” merely states that banks should send a single letter before the account is frozen.

While the dormancy process is meant to protect against fraud, the HSBC report found the accounts were less likely to be hit by fraud, based on data covering the 12 months before accounts were frozen. “We should consider not using this as a justificat­ion for our policy in communicat­ions with customers,” the report said.

A series of 12 anonymous and randomly selected cases contained in the report illustrate how easy it could have been for the bank to find customers who may have lost track of their accounts.

In one case, HSBC failed to track down a south London woman who had £3,973 of her savings frozen and then transferre­d to the government-backed Reclaim Fund. It sent letters to a non-existent home address that was probably mis-recorded due to a language issue. But the report suggested “customer B”, who had a Vietnamese surname, was living about a mile and a half from the postcode originally recorded by HSBC.

“It took a couple of minutes to find the customer … she was the first hit of that Google search. The customer’s uncommon name makes it easy,” the report said.

Another customer had £9,969 transferre­d into the Reclaim Fund after his account was deemed inactive for a total of 15 years. The report’s authors said the father of six was found via a search of Google and the electoral register and that he lived in the same home listed on HSBC’s database. “It should not be difficult to reunite this customer with their funds,” the report said.

In its response to the Guardian, HSBC said the recommenda­tions in an initial report into dormant funds – which was produced in 2016 – were the “opinion of a single individual and were not submitted to any governance committee for considerat­ion”. However, the Guardian understand­s that the conduct team tried to escalate the issue by expanding the report in 2017, assigning at least two staff to the project, which was later reviewed by two superiors.

HSBC also said some of the circumstan­ces described in the case studies, which were in the 2017 version of the report seen by the Guardian, were “based on unverified data” and it questioned their accuracy.

The bank insisted it tries to contact customers – via annual statements in the post or electronic­ally – even after their accounts are made dormant. It said customers may also receive text messages and can see their dormant accounts through online banking, where the majority of customers can reactivate accounts without providing extra informatio­n.

The report raised concerns that HSBC was depriving some customers of funds in frozen accounts while simultaneo­usly earning fees and interest through other accounts and credit cards that were kept active. Over 10 years, HSBC had charged those customers around £153m, which the report said could have been covered by cash in customers’ own dormant accounts.

The report urged HSBC to make sure customers were aware of their dormant accounts before approving loans, in order to cut down or cover their borrowing needs. It also recommende­d HSBC consider using dormant account deposits to cover defaults on the customers’ own loans.

HSBC said: “We strongly refute any assertion that we have mistreated customers or have taken insufficie­nt action to reunite customers with funds.”

It said the figures outlined in the 2017 report were “either inaccurate or materially out of date and do not reflect HSBC’s current processes”. It did not disclose how much money it currently holds in dormant accounts, but said publicly available informatio­n from the Reclaim Fund shows that in 2019 it transferre­d £7.46m to the scheme.

It is not clear why the bank’s head of UK regulatory compliance or other executives did not pursue the allegation­s further. “HSBC is absolutely committed to helping customers avoid losing track of both their accounts and the funds in those accounts,” the bank said.

The FCA said: “Dormant accounts is an area we have looked into and are keeping under review. If ever we discover an issue, we will work to ensure no customer loses out financiall­y and require the firm in question to improve their processes. That is what happened in this instance. After becoming aware of the issue, we discussed our concern with the bank, which changed how it handled dormant accounts and is reviewing old accounts to ensure customers received their money.”

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