This post is also available in: Japanese
I was surprised to receive a letter from my bank, NatWest, a couple of months ago, offering me £4,000 to switch my business account to another bank. It turned out that this was not a scam, but a consequence of the bank having been rescued by UK government funds during the Lehman Shock. In return for the £46bn bailout, NatWest has to encourage competition in the UK business banking sector.
Various new internet-only “challenger” banks were offered to me such Starling but in the end I chose the Co-operative Bank, which was established in 1872. This was partly due to my concern that there were likely to be technical issues with transferring to somewhere new and untested with no physical presence. It helped that I was called almost immediately by someone from the local branch, inviting me to come and meet them face to face. But I also liked the Co-operative Bank’s customer-led values and ethics.
This clearly defined corporate culture was the result of the Co-operative Bank’s own past problems. In 2013 it reported losses and a funding gap between how it valued its loan portfolio and the actual value it would realise from it.
An independent review concluded that the root of the problem was in its takeover of the Britannia Building Society in 2009 and poor management controls. The non-executive chairman of the bank resigned and was later banned by the Financial Conduct Authority from working in the financial services industry for taking illegal drugs and using his work email and phone improperly.
In the five years since, the Co-operative Bank has strengthened its management controls and ethos, as well as undergoing restructuring, including reducing the numbers of branches from over 370 to 50.
My old bank NatWest also hit further problems after the Lehman Shock. Its problems in 2008 were a consequence of management arrogance and overreach, but its involvement in the LIBOR (London Interbank trading system) interest rate fixing scandal in 2012 was found to be the result of a corporate culture of greed. The investigation into the LIBOR scandal by the Financial Conduct Authority resulted in a new regime emphasising corporate culture and conduct in financial services.
A Japanese manager who had been in the London branch of his bank in the early 2000s and had recently returned for a second posting remarked to me how much tougher the environment in the City of London is as a result. He and other managers have to undergo training not just on complying with regulations, but also on how to identify and deal with problematic conduct, both their own and their teams.
The Co-operative Bank has just received a takeover approach from a US private equity firm. SMBC and other Japanese financial institutions are investing in London’s fintech and start up banking sector. Any investors in British financial firms will need to ensure that their own corporate culture and values are robust enough to ensure further scandals do not occur.
This article originally appeared in Japanese in the Teikoku Databank News on 13th January 2021
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