The taxpayer owns 85% of RBS. The Government want US Libor fines to come from bonuses and back bonus payments. The RBS bonus pot this year is £250,000,000 and bonus payments are now below industry standards.
What is the right course of action?
1) fuck them and make them pay. Meanwhile top RBS talent has already moved on to more lucrative employment and this will no doubt create a bigger exodus and a tax payer owned bank becoming worth less and less on a day to day basis.
2) bank (ie taxpayers) pay the fines and get RBS salaries and bonuses back up to industry standards to attract talent and get the bank performing so that it can be sold on at a profit for the benefit of the taxpayer.
No idea. Do you want a taxpayer owned liability or a profitable company staffed by top people.
A bit of a conundrum really.
These so called talented high fliers have not moved on....they have been moved on !!! These are the people that gambled and lost our invested money, and could have left RBS bankrupt. You can find plenty of those sort down the bookies on a saturday, and I am sure they would come and work for a lot less.
Having said that, I am all for rewarding profit and the people that generate I do think profit sharing should also include those at the bottom as well as the top. The girls and boys at the front end, on the front desks are just as important. Lets reward good, hard work, wherever it is. Lets train and promote from within. I think you find that those that rise through the ranks, know how important every little cog in the business wheel is.
The idea that the ordinary banking arm be separated from the more risky business is a good one provided that the ordinary banking arm (the bit that joe public has access to) is ring fenced from the high risk gambling stuff.
But, on the other hand, joe public might have to accept that banks may start charging for their everyday ordinary banking services - including the simple 'ownership' of an account with monthly/annual charges.
While I agree with your prediction TH I must also agree with flowers fact. We can predict what may have happened, but we do not know for sure.
I'm not really into hanging bankers for being evil. They were doing a job and it was a job that we all benefited from when things went right. However, luck as a concept always fails at some time. The risk management appears to have been too slack.
I'll be the first to admit I am no financial wizkid, but even I know that mortgages over a 100 year term are a risky business, because not many people make it to 118.
The comment about some "bankers bonuses" being more than most people earn as a salary is completely irrelevant. All jobs in all industries have employee benefit packages unique and appropriate to that industry.
That maybe the case to you, but paying for failure is the problem that needs to be dealt with.
I think naive is the belief somehow the public will benefit in some way from returning the bank to profit and selling it on
as a taxpayer i will see absolutely no financial benefit what so ever
any monies will go back into the massive black hole the banks created in the first place
To hot......what I think most of us want is responsible banking. We know sometimes you have to speculate to accumulate but honestly would you put the value of your house on a red and black roulette spin !! No, what banks must do, is rationalise the risk. Banks can and do work in responsible manner, and without charging its customers. I am with the CO-OP bank. They offer me all facilities of any of the high street banks, and they promise their investment they make with my money, is ethical and responsible. They regularly send me details of the countries they are investing in, and ones they refuse to !! Perhaps they don't make the massive profits some of the others do, but equally they are not open to the massive losses either. It certainly didn't go un-noticed by me that the CO-OP bank was not one that was bailed out or one that asked for assistance, in the recent crash.
When most in the UK talk about UK Banks they don't really differentiate between the name on the High Street (provided they still have an outlet there, as loathe to call many of them branches given they have very little autonomy or no local managers) and the investment banking side of these multi-billion companies.
For many years the core business was the so called Retail Banking side, servicing personal and business customers, which overall is reasonably profitable for them, however the de-regulation started in the 80's led to the rise within the Investment Banking side, with the focus paid on the high profit and associated high bonus parts of this side of the Bank's business since them.
The 'banking crash' came about basically due to failings associated with the Investment Banking side of things, which in the main was the downfall of RBS leading to it's 'nationalisation', however whilst the sums involved may be vast that is not to say that their influence in creating 'financial products' (sic ) to be sold by the Retail Bank can't be underplayed and we are all seeing vast amounts becoming liable to pay out due to Payment Protection mis-selling and also Interest Rate Swap issues as well. As for LIBOR, whilst it's the London 'rate (s)' and many would expect it to have stayed within the traditional Retail Banking side of the business that's far from it and it's almost exclusively the Investment Banking side that operated this given it's links to so many other 'products' and 'deals'.
As for bonuses, a chalk and cheese policy existed and still does with Retail staff generally possibly getting bonuses within the couple of hundred £ (if lucky) whereas many within the Investment side had high figure bonuses as part of their contract and package. With the culture associated with that, the 90's and 00's saw the rise of the casino banking culture, with the opening credits/cartoon of Have I Got News For You summing it up very suctinctly.
So what to do about the 'Bank's and also what to do about the 'nationalised Banks' ?
For the former much tighter regulation and accountability is the theme, though partially openly reisted by them whilst more privately staunchly resisted and lobbied against. We shall see whether HMG will actually do anything meaningful about this, particularly as they seem opposed to many of the ideas that other nations are considering.
Regarding the latter, here's the rub. Yes they are being seen to be paying back the money 'loaned' to them as part of the bail-out and yes Northern Rock was 'off-loaded' to Virgin at a discounted rate......however look in the background and you'll see that a lot of the bad debt and associated costs/liabilities that were associated with the 'bail-out' have been transferred off their balance sheets and are now 'owned' by the Taxpayers.
The call is to get RBS, Lloyds, etc. off the public books and repay their direct loans. So yes they are profitable and if some people are doing a very good job then they might expect a bonus of some kind for doing that.
However at the end of the day, when do we 'let them go' as a business and what arrangements should be put inplace so that they continue to 'pay back' the Taxpayer on the 'toxic' side taken off their balance sheets, but added to our's as a country ?
Personally given the number of Banking industry secondees to various Government Depts etc. I've no real confidence that we'll ever see the true amount paid back either under the current coalition or whichever individual part (or 'arrangement') exists after the next General Election.
fortunately for bankers there is absolutely no understanding of banking, credit creation or downright fraud whatsoever in these preceding threads, as if there were, there would be a revolution by morning.
I'v never trusted Banks..... I keep my at home where it's safe!