Gulf News

Lloyds could move if Scots leave the UK

Bank has finalised contingenc­y plan ahead of vote and is considerin­g a number of options

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Lloyds Banking Group is considerin­g having its registered office in London rather than Edinburgh should Scots vote for independen­ce, banking industry sources told Reuters.

Lloyds, which owns Bank of Scotland, has finalised contingenc­y planning ahead of the September 18 vote. The chances of secession have increased with support for Scottish independen­ce rising dramatical­ly in August.

Banking industry sources said Lloyds executives are considerin­g having the group’s registered office in London, with Bank of Scotland operating from Edinburgh as a foreign division of the business.

Most of Lloyds’ senior executives are based at the company’s headquarte­rs in London but the bank’s registered office, its official legal address, is in Edinburgh, meaning it would be classed as a Scottishba­nk in the event of independen­ce.

Lloyds has warned that Scottish independen­ce would impact its cost of funding, taxes and compliance costs.

Scottish- based banks have assets worth 12- andahalf times the country’s economic output and economists question whether an independen­t Scotland would be big enough to host Lloyds and rival Royal Bank of Scotland.

If Lloyds were to stay in Scotland after independen­ce, Westminste­r- based lawmakers have warned that the Bank of England would no longer be the so- called lender of last resort, to provide a backstop were Lloyds to run into trouble.

Lloyds required a £ 20.5 billion ( Dh124 billion) bailout during the 2008 financial crisis, which left the British government with a 40 per cent stake.

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