Rainbow Rare Earths Phalaborwa project shaping up to be one of the lowest cost producers globally. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksLloyds Share News (LLOY)

Share Price Information for Lloyds (LLOY)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 55.56
Bid: 55.54
Ask: 55.58
Change: -0.52 (-0.93%)
Spread: 0.04 (0.072%)
Open: 56.22
High: 56.32
Low: 55.50
Prev. Close: 56.08
LLOY Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Virtuous veterans hard to find in British banking

Fri, 29th Nov 2013 13:51

By Matt Scuffham

LONDON, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Calling all senior, experiencedBritish bankers with a clean charge sheet and political nous.There might be a chairmanship role awaiting.

With three of Britain's four major banks expected to hirenew chairmen - and they are all likely to be men - within thenext two years, headhunters and industry insiders say there isan acute shortage of suitably qualified candidates.

Perhaps only six to 12 credible figures could fill the postslikely to be on offer at Lloyds, Barclays andRoyal Bank of Scotland, making it tough to lure theright person to positions which are crucial not just to thebanks themselves but the economy as a whole.

Lloyds is on the verge of appointing Norman Blackwell,chairman of its Scottish Widows insurance arm, as its newchairman, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday.

An ex management consultant with banking experience,political contacts and free of scandal, Blackwell fits the bill.

But for the other banks, finding a virtuous industry veteranis likely to prove difficult, particularly in the wake of thefinancial crisis.

"There are probably less than a dozen individuals globallythat have the right experience to do it," John McFarlane, 66,chairman of insurer Aviva, told Reuters. "I do think thata chairman of a bank should ideally have relevant bankingexperience because of the complexity involved."

McFarlane has been linked to the chairmanship of RBS, wherehe was an independent director until 2012. But the former bankersaid he was not interested.

INDUSTRY BACKGROUNDS

The dangers of employing a bank chairman without an industrybackground have been highlighted by problems at the Co-op Bank,a customer-owned lender which nearly collapsed due to propertylosses during the tenure of Paul Flowers.

Flowers' banking experience amounted to four years workingas a cashier after leaving school. The Methodist reverend hassince become embroiled in a drugs scandal, days after anembarrassing grilling in front of lawmakers at which he betrayeda lack of understanding of some of the bank's key financialnumbers.

In the last few years, Britain's financial regulators havesought bank chairmen with industry backgrounds, a trend thatwill be accentuated following criticism of their role inapproving Flowers to be Co-op Bank chair in 2010.

Bank also often lack industry experience among their ranksof non-executive directors (NEDs) who might be able to providebackup to an underpowered chairman.

"The real issue is the lack of high quality NEDs," a seniorregulator said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Lloyds Chairman Win Bischoff, 72, said in a speech thismonth that banks should ensure up to half of their independentdirectors have industry expertise.

A Reuters analysis of the boards of Britain's biggest bankshas shown only a third of independent directors, excluding thechairmen, have direct banking experience.

SANCTIONS AND QUALIFICATIONS

Banking expertise is not in short supply in Britain, acountry where the financial services industry employs over 1million people and accounts for around 10 percent of economicoutput.

Peter Hahn, a lecturer at London's Cass Business School,said banks and headhunters did not cast the net wide enough whenlooking for independent directors.

"They look at a very shallow pool," said Hahn, a formerbanker. "The requirement seems to be largely based on yourexperience of boards rather than (industry) expertise. Until wecan get over that and decide that your expertise is what mattersmore, then we are going to have this problem."

An additional headache is trying to find someone untouchedby the welter of scandal that has led to some of the biggestnames in British banking being forced into taxpayer-fundedbailouts and left the sector nursing huge bills for misconduct.

Since the crisis, scrutiny of senior bankers has increasedwith Britain preparing to introduce annual competency tests andjail terms of up to seven years for reckless behavior.

Such restrictions could make it even tougher to sourcechairmen and other independent directors.

"The more qualifications you require and the sanctions thatnow hang over people, the harder it is going to be," said oneformer bank board member, who declined to be named.

Barclays appointed City grandee David Walker as chairmanlast year, when the bank was shaken by mass resignationsfollowing its indictment by regulators over rate manipulation.

Walker, 73, is not expected to remain chairman beyond 2015.Barclays said it had succession plans in place for all of itssenior executives.

"You're looking at a very narrow pool of people who havereal banking experience and seniority and are untainted," onetop London headhunter told Reuters.

POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE

Recruiters have got around the whiff of scandal when hiringchief executives by looking overseas. RBS appointed NewZealander Ross McEwan and Lloyds hired Portuguese banker AntonioHorta Osorio as CEOs.

But candidates for chairmen roles are more likely to beadvanced in years and may be less likely to uproot.

For Britain's state-backed banks Lloyds and RBS, a knowledgeof British politics and regulation are also seen as key, makingoverseas hires less likely.

Blackwell, who is set to replace Bischoff early next year,headed up the then prime minister John Major's policy unit from1995 to 1997 and is a Tory life peer

Philip Hampton, who has been chairman at RBS for nearly fiveyears, had previously said five to seven years was the typicaltenure. Industry sources say he is expected to relinquish hisrole in the next 18 months, although one source with knowledgeof the matter emphasised his departure was not imminent. RBSdeclined to comment.

Elsewhere, customer-owned lender Nationwide has said it islooking for a successor for incumbent Geoffrey Howe, who willretire in 2015.

Possible candidates for the RBS or Barclays positions giventheir banking backgrounds include John Stewart, 64 chairman ofinsurer Legal & General, Richard Broadbent, 60,chairman of retailer Tesco and Donald Brydon, 68,chairman of the Royal Mail. None of them could bereached for comment.

John Nelson, 66, chairman of the Lloyd's of London insurance market, and Gerry Grimstone, 64, chairman of insurerStandard Life, both have banking backgrounds and are alsoseen as contenders. They declined to comment.

Gus O'Donnell, 61, who was head of Britain's civil service,is the one non-banker cited as a realistic candidate by industrysources. He couldn't be reached for comment.

Martin Taylor, 61, a former CEO of Barclays in the 1990s,had been linked to the Lloyds chairmanship, but said he was nottalking to anyone about a new job at the moment.

In an email to Reuters, Taylor said: "I am happy as anexternal member of the Bank of England's Financial PolicyCommittee, which both keeps me busy and pretty much rules outdalliance with the financial sector."

More News
18 Jul 2023 08:59

SSP completes bank refinancing with new GBP300 million four-year loan

(Alliance News) - SSP Group PLC on Tuesday said it has completed the refinancing of its syndicated banking facilities, including a new GBP300 million four-year loan and undrawn GBP300 million revolving credit facility.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 17:14

European shares jump as cooling US inflation boosts rate pause bets

STOXX 600 up for fourth straight session

*

Read more
12 Jul 2023 12:08

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 boosted by banks ahead of US inflation

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 in London was lifted by banking stocks heading into Wednesday afternoon, after the Bank of England's latest stress test showed the sector to be "resilient".

Read more
12 Jul 2023 11:04

Bank of England stress test finds top 8 UK banks have enough capital

LONDON, July 12 (Reuters) - Britain's eight largest lenders have enough capital to ride out a worse economic crisis than that seen in 2008, the Bank of England (BoE) said on Wednesday, as the sector faces sharply rising interest rates pummelling consumers and businesses.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 08:45

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 higher as UK banks pass BoE stress tests

(Alliance News) - European markets were trading higher on Wednesday, in a sign of cautious optimism ahead of US inflation data.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 08:39

TOP NEWS: Major UK banks "resilient" in BofE's annual stress test

(Alliance News) - The Bank of England on Wednesday said the major UK banks were "resilient to a severe stress scenario", in its latest cyclical stress test results, with all eight surveyed lenders passing.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 08:26

UK bank shares rise after BoE stress test

MILAN, July 12 (Reuters) - A gauge of British banking stocks surged on Wednesday after the Bank of England said its annual stress test of eight major lenders showed each could cope with rising interest rates in a stressed environment.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 07:21

UK bank pass annual stress tests, says BoE

(Sharecast News) - Eight major UK banks have passed annual capital stress tests and were well positioned to support households and businesses through a period of rising interest rates, the Bank of England said on Wednesday.

Read more
12 Jul 2023 07:15

Stress test shows top 8 UK banks have enough capital, says Bank of England

LONDON, July 12 (Reuters) - The Bank of England said on Wednesday its annual stress test of eight major lenders showed that each could cope with rising interest rates in a stressed environment, and none would need to submit a revised capital plan.

Read more
7 Jul 2023 11:13

British lender OSB shares slide on mortgage hit warning

LONDON, July 7 (Reuters) - British financial services group OSB's shares fell by more than 20% on Friday after it said it would take a net income hit of up to 180 million pounds ($229 million) as mortgage customers switched from higher rate products.

Read more
6 Jul 2023 19:14

Banks recognise savers need help accessing best rates - UK regulator

(Alliance News) - The City regulator said it had held a "constructive" meeting after summoning UK banks to discuss concerns surrounding interest rates for savers lagging behind the cost of mortgages.

Read more
6 Jul 2023 18:45

UK banks must accelerate rate rises for savers, says watchdog

LONDON, July 6 (Reuters) - British regulator the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Thursday that banks need to accelerate rate rises for savers, but said it was not up to the watchdog to dictate pricing.

Read more
6 Jul 2023 16:41

Banks must provide value to savers, says UK watchdog

LONDON, July 6 (Reuters) - Britain's Financial Conduct Authority said on Thursday that banks need to ensure they are providing value to savers, but said it was not up to the regulator to dictate pricing.

Read more
6 Jul 2023 07:43

LONDON BRIEFING: FTSE 100 to fall as more US rate hikes expected

(Alliance News) - Stocks are called lower in London on Thursday, after hawkish minutes from the US Federal Reserve once again gave rise to interest rate fears.

Read more
6 Jul 2023 06:19

UK FCA to discuss savings rates concerns with bank chiefs

(Alliance News) - Bank chiefs are meeting Financial Conduct Authority officials on Thursday to discuss concerns surrounding interest rates for savers lagging behind the cost of mortgages.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.