The Scotsman

RBS battered again by blasts from the past

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R OYAL Bank of Scotland is seven years on from the disastrous hubris and overreach that saw it sag discredite­d into taxpayer ownership and, at £24 billion, the biggest UK corporate loss in history.

Recovery has been a marathon, not a sprint. And the latest loss of not far off half a billion pounds for the first three months of 2015 shows it is not there yet.

RBS’S latest results share a theme with some others in the senior division of the UK banking sector. That is one of an underlying trading picture and the capital strength of the organisati­on getting better, but the more positive impression being spoilt by ongoing litigation and misconduct charges from both before and since the financial crash. It creates a curious impression of the banks both getting better and still being mired in problems simultaneo­usly.

In RBS’S case, there is something of a continuati­on here of the theme of the recovery stewardshi­ps of both current chief executive Ross Mcewan and his predecesso­r Stephen Hester.

With Hester, there would be regular updates on how he was clearing RBS’S bloated balance sheet from the bad old Fred Goodwin days, flogging off businesses as if they were going out of fashion, a major financial reconstruc­tion job. But then legacy issues and charges would come back to bite the bank, overshadow­ing the major improvemen­t in its financial health that was taking place.

With Mcewan, it is more about progress in restoring RBS’S customer service reputation, Hester having done a lot of the heavy financial restructur­ing work.

But, again, as with this quarter’s disappoint­ing loss, Mcewan is also getting used to his good work under the radar on customer service being undone by those pesky exceptiona­l items. It is unlikely that will change much in the next year or two.

But as the boss indicated yesterday, RBS will only be fully recovered as opposed to convalesce­nt when it is making decent statutory, rather than underlying, profits; the dividend is restored; and the government starts selling down its stake in the bank.

The way things are looking, and with further litigation and misconduct hits likely to be waiting in the wings for a while year, it is not a case of holding one’s breath.

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