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After the bailout, a new management team was put in place and unveiled a sweeping restructuring and announced plans to dump hundreds of billions of pounds of toxic assets into a government insurance program. One of the first decisions of Hester's board was to split the bank's operations into two divisions
-- core and noncore -- to separate out its bad businesses. The core division, which contains businesses the bank intends to retain, made a 6.3 billion pound operating profit in the first half. The noncore division, comprising assets it plans to wind down over the next three to five years, posted an operating loss of 9.6 billion pounds. Hester added that RBS had shrunk in size by around 26 percent, or 574 billion pounds, so far this year to put the bank on a firmer footing. While he was confident of returning the bank to standalone strength, Hester remained cautious about the outlook, forecasting weaker investment banking earnings in the second half after the strong above trend rise in the first half. "While we are positive about the end result, the journey will be an arduous one," he said. "This will be a marathon, not a sprint." Hester was keen to stress the bank's new focus on transparency, evidenced by the unusually lengthy earnings report
-- compared to its peers -- that it presented to the London Stock Exchange on Friday. Even after the October bailout, the bank continued to court controversy when anger erupted over a 16 million pound pension pot bestowed on its disgraced former chief executive Fred Goodwin, who led the overly aggressive expansion drive of recent years. Hester told reporters that the package for Van Saun, who was a vice chairman and chief financial officer at Bank of New York Mellon until last July, was in line with other banking groups.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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