Daily Mail

HBOS chief ‘knew his bank mis-sold PPI to millions of customers’

- By James Salmon Banking Correspond­ent j.salmon@dailymail.co.uk

To order your own print of this or any other Mac cartoon, or a Pugh cartoon, visit Mailpictur­es.newsprints.co.uk or call 020 7566 0360 THE disgraced former boss of failed lender HBoS has been accused of ignoring warnings about the mis- selling of PPI years before the scandal broke. A whistle- blower who worked at the High Street giant claims Andy Hornby was informed by staff that millions of payment protection insurance policies may have been completely worthless four years before the bank’s collapse in 2008.

Mr Hornby, now a senior executive at gambling giant Gala Coral, is also said to have admitted that PPI sales ‘kept him awake at night’.

Senior MPs last night demanded an investigat­ion into the ‘ serious allegation­s’, made by former HBoS senior executive Paul Moore.

The damning evidence was presented in an internal report conducted by Halifax Bank of Scotland’s retail division in 2004, which Mr Hornby, now 48, ran until his promotion to chief executive two years later.

It showed that up to 17 per cent of PPI policies had been sold to customers who would have been disqualifi­ed from claiming on the insurance because they were selfemploy­ed. Despite this, HBoS continued to sell PPI for years.

In his new book ‘Crash, Bank, Wallop’, Mr Moore – the lender’s former head of risk who was sacked in 2004 after raising concerns about its toxic sales cul- ture – describes a key meeting with Mr Hornby in May 2004.

‘I asked Hornby ... “So, Andy, what keeps you awake at night around here?” Without hesitation, Hornby told me that what worried him the most was sales of payment protection insurance policies’, he said. Mr Hornby is also said to have expressed concerns about an internal report showing that ‘many of the customers sold PPI were not actually covered by the policies’.

Mr Moore added: ‘It is perfectly clear that Andy Hornby knew that the bank was mis-selling to a large group of people.’ Lloyds Banking Group, which rescued HBoS in 2008, has so far been forced to set aside £13.4billion to compensate customers. Much of this stems from policies sold by HBoS.

Mr Moore said he was also informed by Mr Hornby that the 2004 report revealed customers who repaid their loans early were not given a refund on their PPI premiums, which meant ‘cus- tomers were paying premiums for the insurance cover from which they could never benefit’.

A senior Conservati­ve MP last night urged the City watchdog to investigat­e the claims against Mr Hornby. Andrew Tyrie, chairman of the Treasury Select Committee, told the Mail: ‘These are very serious allegation­s. Parliament will expect the regulator to get to the bottom of them. I will be writing to ... the [Financial Conduct Authority] about them in due course.’

Labour MP Barry Sheerman said he would refer the allegation­s to the Justice Committee, adding: ‘The executives who led our banks ... to destructio­n should by now already have been prosecuted and they should be looking at long sentences.’

Mr Hornby did not respond to requests for comment, but speaking on his behalf a Gala Coral spokesman said the firm ‘declined to comment on events related to another organisati­on that are alleged to have happened over ten years ago’.

Lloyds said it could find no record of the HBoS PPI report.

‘Worthless policies’

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 ??  ?? Accused: Andy Hornby
Accused: Andy Hornby

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