Khaleej Times

COMPANIES/UK TO SELL RBS SHARES THIS MONTH

Taxpayers were on course to lose £7b on the RBS rescue

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london — Britain will start selling stake in Royal Bank of Scotland in the coming months, finance minister George Osborne said on Wednesday, giving up on his previous intention to only sell the shares for a profit.

Osborne said he had received independen­t advice from the Bank of England and from investment bank Rothschild that it was in the interests of taxpayers to start selling the shares in the bank which was rescued at the height of the financial crisis.

“In the coming months we will begin to sell our stake in RBS. It’s the right thing to do for British businesses and British taxpayers,” Osborne said in an annual speech to financiers in the City of London.

The announceme­nt represents a milestone for Osborne, who is trying to move on from the aftermath of the financial crisis.

In the same speech, he said he will seek to bind future government­s to his vision of permanent budget surpluses, something rarely achieved in modern Britain. And Bank of England Governor Mark Carney, speaking at the same event, said “the age of irresponsi­bility is over” as Britain announced a clamp-down on abusive practices in financial markets after a string of scandals.

Rothschild said taxpayers were on course to lose more than seven billion pounds on the RBS rescue although they would make a profit from the full bailout plan which included other banks.

RBS, Britain’s fourth-biggest bank by market value, was saved from collapse by former prime minister Gordon Brown’s Labour government during the 2007-09 financial crisis at a cost of £45.8 billion to taxpayers, leaving the government holding an 80 per cent stake.

It also paid £20.5 billion to rescue Lloyds Banking Group.

“From bailing out the banks to bringing them back from the brink, now is the time for RBS to rebuild itself as a commercial bank no longer reliant on the state, but serving the working people of Britain,” Osborne

said.

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney backed the sale, saying in a letter to Osborne that it was in the public interest to return RBS to private ownership.

Carney said the move will “promote financial stability, a more competitiv­e banking sector, and the interests of the wider economy” while avoiding “considerab­le net costs to taxpayers of further delaying the start of the sale”.

Osborne said it will take “some years” to sell the entire stake.

Reuters reported last week that the government was planning an initial sale of RBS shares to financial institutio­ns such as pension funds and insurers in September. Private retail investors are expected to be involved in later sales.

“With such a complex investment case, we have to start with institutio­ns, but I see no reason why ordinary investors - in other words members of the public should not take part in due course,” Osborne said.

Bankers say there is significan­t interest from institutio­ns willing to overlook ongoing issues relating to past misconduct at RBS and uncertaint­ies over Britain’s continued membership of the European Union.

 ?? AFP ?? RBS, Britain’s fourth-biggest bank, was saved from collapse by former prime minister Gordon Brown’s Labour government during the 2007-09 financial crisis. —
AFP RBS, Britain’s fourth-biggest bank, was saved from collapse by former prime minister Gordon Brown’s Labour government during the 2007-09 financial crisis. —

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