Britain risks EU clash
over RBS bailout terms
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[February 21, 2017]
By Andrew MacAskill and Francesco Guarascio
LONDON/BRUSSELS
(Reuters) - Britain's plan to free Royal Bank of Scotland from an
obligation to sell more than 300 branches risks a clash with the
European Commission weeks before the government is due to start formal
talks to leave the trading bloc.
European regulators originally told RBS to sell the branches by 2013 to
prevent the state-backed bank, Britain's largest small-business lender,
from having an unfair advantage. The sale was one of the conditions
attached to RBS's 45.5 billion pound ($55.87 billion) state bailout in
the financial crisis.
RBS has spent more than 1.5 billion pounds and seven years trying to
spin-off the branches - which were to be branded Williams & Glyn - but
has struggled to separate them from its IT system.
Now British finance minister Philip Hammond is pushing for RBS to be let
off the EU's demand to sell the branches in return for providing around
750 million pounds ($931.73 million) to help to boost competition in
banking.
For the plan to work, the EU would have to approve changes to the terms
of RBS's government bailout, which included the sale of the branches and
other divestments.
The British government and the European Commission say they have had
"constructive" discussions over the matter.
RBS shares surged to a one-year high on Monday as investors bet the
proposals would be accepted. An end to the bank's state aid commitments
is seen as a big milestone on the path towards the bank's recovery and
the restoration of dividends.
But the plan still needs to be vetted by the European Commissioners, who
may reject the British government's proposals and seek to impose tougher
conditions on RBS to free it from the branch sale obligation, according
to sources familiar with the matter.
The Commission will have to assess whether the measures that RBS will
take are equivalent to selling the branches, a process likely to take at
least several weeks.
On paper, analysts said the proposals looked to be very much in the
bank's favour, given it was expected to have had to sell Williams & Glyn
with a hefty writedown.
The 750 million pounds RBS is proposing to spend on alternative measures
to help so-called challenger banks and boost competition is
substantially less than the charge that many had expected it would have
to book for a distressed sale, Sandy Chen, an analyst at Cenkos
Securities, said.
EU officials said on Monday that they were still waiting for formal
notice of RBS's plan, but that it would go through thorough vetting.
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A woman uses an ATM at a Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) branch in
London, Britain, February 25, 2010. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
"In order to gather information on this proposal, the Commissioner
responsible for EU competition policy, Margrethe Vestager, will in the
coming weeks propose to the college of commissioners to open
proceedings," a spokesman said on Monday.
The Treasury said in a statement the plan provided a blueprint to
increase competition and any final decision about what RBS must do would
be made following the Commission's investigation and reaction to the
plan from smaller banks.
RBS declined to comment.
The British government will argue that the new plan would deal with the
state-owned bank's EU obligations more quickly and with more certainty
than selling off the branches.
The government will also say that the current plans would boost
competition to a larger number of smaller banks, according to government
officials.
The Treasury began working on an alternative plan in the autumn soon
after RBS abandoned an idea to build an independent technology platform
for Williams & Glyn, according to people with knowledge of the talks.
It hired investment firm Rothschild and law firm Slaughter and May to
help find alternative ways to meet the state aid requirements, according
to sources.
Rothschild and Slaughter and May declined to comment.
If a deal is reached it would remove one of the two remaining
uncertainties hanging over RBS - the sale of the branches and an
expected multi-billion dollar fine in the United States for claims that
RBS mis-sold mortgage bonds in the run-up to the global financial
crisis.
Peter Hahn, a professor of banking at the London Institute of Banking &
Finance, said RBS had endured almost a decade of losses since it was
bailed out in 2008 and the EU should show RBS some mercy.
"The days of arrogant RBS are in the past," he said. "Now when you
mention their name there is nothing but sympathy."
($1 = 0.8055 pounds)
(Additonal reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Jane Merriman and Jason
Neely)
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