channelnewsasia.com - Royal Bank of Scotland reports sharp quarterly loss of US#dollar;3b
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Business News
  Smaller Text Size Larger Text Size

 
 

Royal Bank of Scotland reports sharp quarterly loss of US$3b
Posted: 06 November 2009 1827 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

LONDON: Royal Bank of Scotland reported on Friday a net quarterly loss of 1.8 billion pounds (2.0 billion euros, 3.0 billion dollars) and said it expected a slow recovery, despite massive state support.

The announcement comes just days after the British government increased its stake in RBS to 84 per cent, having decided to pump billions more pounds into the bank, making the rescue the world's biggest bank bailout.

The net loss during the three months to September 30 was compared with profit after tax of 871 million pounds during the third quarter of 2008. Bad debts stood at 3.279 billion pounds in the July-September period.

Looking ahead, RBS chief executive Stephen Hester said that the bank's recovery would be slow, closely mirroring the global economy's return to strength after recession.

"Economic recovery is likely to be slow and the pain of economic adjustment will take years to subside. Our business will reflect these issues," said Hester.

RBS, meanwhile, reported a third-quarter operating net loss of 1.525 billion pounds.

Royal Bank of Scotland has been ravaged by the credit crunch and the 2007 takeover of Dutch group ABN Amro at the top of the market.

The troubles at RBS have meanwhile led to a boardroom shake-up with Hester replacing disgraced former chief executive Fred Goodwin, who last year led the bank to Britain's biggest annual corporate loss of more than 24 billion pounds.

Earlier this week, the British government said it would force RBS and another state-rescued bank, Lloyds Banking Group, to sell assets in a massive shake-up for Britain's banking sector.

The state also agreed to pump an extra 25.5 billion pounds into RBS, which in turn said it would place 282 billion pounds of high-risk debts into the government's toxic-asset insurance scheme.

As a result of the move, the state's economic interest in RBS is climbing to 84 per cent from 70 per cent.

Britain expects new banks to be born as a result of the break-ups which are the result of pressure from EU competition authorities.

The parts being separated from the parent groups add up to about 10 per cent of Britain's troubled retail banking market, which on Tuesday suffered further casualties as global giant HSBC said it was axing 1,700 posts.

In return for more state aid, Lloyds and RBS will have to cut bonuses paid to top staff and increase lending to businesses and individuals in recession-hit Britain.

Lloyds, meanwhile, said it would launch a record 13.5-billion-pound rights issue, representing the biggest-ever sale in Britain of new shares to existing shareholders.

The week's announcements come soon after the European Commission approved the state aid used in plans to break up and sell Britain's nationalised bank Northern Rock.


- AFP/so

 

 
Bookmark and Share



Other business News
Malaysia plans 4.0% pct GST in 2011
Taiwan approves massive infrastructure plan
Plans to force British banks to reveal millionaire staff
US consumer spending jumps 0.7% in October
Dollar at lowest level against yen in 14 years
US new home sales rebound in October
Toyota to repair accelerator pedals on 3.8 million US vehicles
US new weekly jobless claims fall to 14-month low
Ecuador, China to create oil joint venture
Alarm over asset bubbles returns with recovery
BHP insists Rio joint venture on track
Chinese tourists to Taiwan up 500%
Euro hits US$1.50; gold sets record high of US$1,180.50
Fed's zero rate policy sparking growing complaints
Comcast bid for NBC Universal could be sealed next week
Reliance bids to be global player with LyondellBasell offer
China Minsheng Bank makes weak debut in Hong Kong
Wall Street ekes out pre-Thanksgiving gains
US dollar weakens after Fed comments, gold spikes to record
Oil prices surge on signs of US demand
Govt stimulus measures are causing systemic risks to build up: analysts
China unlikely to let yuan appreciate in next 12 months

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions