The Star Early Edition

RBS posts loss, pulls out of 25 nations

- Matt Scuffham

ROYAL Bank of Scotland (RBS) will drasticall­y shrink its investment banking operations, pulling out of 25 countries across Europe, Asia and the Middle East and allowing the state-controlled lender to refocus on lending in Britain.

RBS is seven years into an unpreceden­ted corporate diet, shedding over £1 trillion (R17.7 trillion) in assets as it retreats from the acquisitio­ns that once made it the largest bank in the world and an enormous financial burden for British taxpayers when the credit bubble burst in 2008.

The bank reported a 2014 loss of £3.5 billion yesterday, hit by a write-down on the value of its US business citizens and new charges relating to foreign exchange investigat­ions and mis-selling.

Last year’s loss was a big improvemen­t on the £9bn deficit chalked up in 2013, but RBS has yet to turn an annual profit since the financial crisis. It has lost £49.5bn over that period, more than the £45bn taxpayers paid to bail it out in 2008.

To bolster capital and generate better returns, chief executive Ross McEwan said the bank’s investment banking division would reduce its presence in Asia significan­tly and withdraw from central and eastern Europe, Africa and the Middle East, cutting swathes of jobs and 60 percent of assets.

“Let me be quite clear this marks the end of the standalone global investment bank model for RBS,” McEwan said.

Rory Cullinan, RBS’s highly regarded restructur­ing chief, will be made chairman of the corporate and institutio­nal banking (CIB) division to oversee the retrenchme­nt.

Donald Workman, currently the chairman of CIB, has been appointed the executive chairman of RBS’s private banking franchise, Coutts.

Cutting back on expensive investment banking activities will reduce the amount of capital RBS has to set aside, raising its capacity to potentiall­y return some money to shareholde­rs.

The bank said by next year it hoped to be able to start discussion­s with UK regulator the Prudential Regulatory Authority about resuming dividends.

Finance director Ewen Stevenson said for those talks to happen the bank would need to be past the peak of litigation costs associated with a US probe into the sale of mortgage-based bonds, which he said would probably happen this year.

“We need to have confidence and sustainabl­e profitabil­ity at that point which we believe we’ll have,” Stevenson said.

A poster child for what went wrong in British banking, RBS is under pressure to focus on lending to local businesses and consumers and to ensure that it does not return to the swashbuckl­ing, big bonus days of the past.

In a letter to Howard Davies, confirmed yesterday as the new chairman of RBS, Britain’s finance minister spelled out what he wanted.

“My priorities for RBS are these: it is a British bank focused on the British economy, with lower bonuses and with a plan to get the taxpayers’ money back,” George Osborne wrote. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: EPA ?? Pedestrian­s pass a Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) bank branch in central London yesterday. RBS reported a loss for 2014 for the seventh year in a row.
PHOTO: EPA Pedestrian­s pass a Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) bank branch in central London yesterday. RBS reported a loss for 2014 for the seventh year in a row.

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