The Scotsman

RBS boss: ‘Can I say crisis will never happen again? I can’t’

● But bank’s chief executive says it has taken steps to ‘minimise any issues’

- By KAYLEENA MAKORTOFF

Royal Bank of Scotland’s chief executive has warned he cannot guarantee that financial scandals at the taxpayerow­ned lender will not happen again under his watch.

Ross Mcewan stressed that efforts to “rethink the business” and take customers into considerat­ion in “every change we make” have reduced the chance that RBS will be hit with further conduct and litigation issues.

However, he stopped short of promising that the bank would have a clean record during his tenure.

“Can I say this will never happen again? I’m sorry, I can’t,” he said.

Since the financial crisis, RBS has been dogged by several scandals, including the misselling of payment protection insurance (PPI), mortgageba­cked securities and the mistreatme­nt of small businesses.

“We still employ 70,000 people, we still have a very large balance sheet and business and it’s much simpler. It’s not a simple bank like many others, but I think we’ve put things in place now that we minimise any of those issues,” the New Zealander added.

His comments raise concerns over the chief executive’s handle on potential scandals which could see senior staff

0 Ross Mcewan said RBS had made efforts to ‘rethink the business’

held responsibl­e for any misconduct under the new Senior Managers and Certificat­ion Regime (SMCR). Mr Mcewan has been in his post since 2013.

He said: “I think there is a much lesser chance that we will have any of those big issues that we’ve dealt with like PPI, which is an industry issue, and GRG [Global Restructur­ing Group]. We didn’t manage our customers at a time when they needed to be looked after and managed. We did a very bad job.

“But today our organisati­on is very focused on the customer and we did put things in place and had the conversati­ons before we made those changes, and so I think there’s a much lesser chance.”

The RBS chief was speaking after the ten-year anniversar­y of the bank’s £45 billion government bailout in 2008, which contribute­d to a financial crisis which still haunts the UK financial sector a decade on.

The taxpayer still owns 62 per cent of RBS.

One thing Mr Mcewan said he could guarantee is that another financial crash is coming, but this time banks and regulators will more prepared.

He said: “The 2008 crisis was enormous and it was a buildup of probably a decade plus of debts being built up, and bank acquisitio­ns that were poorly funded, and a whole raft of issues.

“But I think of course there will be another financial stress in some point in time, be it a crisis or a recession of sorts.”

He said banks are now better protected against a full-blown crisis, having been forced by regulators to build up capital cushions to levels well beyond what they were before the financial crash.

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN STILLWELL/PA ??
PICTURE: JOHN STILLWELL/PA

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