Friday, 30 August 2013

Co-operative Bank reports £709m loss amid uncertainty over bad debts plan

Co-op boss says alternative to meeting regulatory requirements to cover £1.5bn shortfall is to put banking arm into administration
A thwarted attempt to become a major player in the banking industry earlier this year continued to haunt the Co-operative Group on Thursday as its bank reported a £709m loss and raised the prospect of a Northern Rock-style rescue if bondholders failed to back a £1.5bn restructuring bid.
The group, which has operations spanning funeral services to supermarkets, said there would be no quick fixes as directors conceded that shoring up the bank, which has 4.7 million customers, would involve job losses and significant restructuring of the wider group.
Richard Pym, the bank chairman, said that without new capital the banking unit "will not be a going concern".
The Co-op group's new chief executive, Euan Sutherland, said there was no plan B. The only alternative to meeting regulatory requirements to fill a £1.5bn shortfall in the bank's reserves would be a government takeover similar to the bailout of Northern Rock in 2008. Sutherland reported that losses at the bank of £709m sent the wider group into a £559m loss, compared with £18m of profits in the first half of 2012.
He blamed £496m of previously undiscovered bad debts and a £150m write-off on IT systems for the deterioration in the bank's financial situation. "It's inevitable in a restructuring of this size that there will be some jobs at risk," he said, predicting that the bank would be diminished from its current scale of 10,000 staff and 320 branches.
Sutherland said a new management team would devise a turnaround strategy with the management consultancy Oliver Wyman. Sutherland indicated that executives would receive bonuses next year despite the group's travails, saying that a remuneration plan will be announced in March that will reflect the need to retain experienced senior staff.
The Co-op's plunge into loss follows a difficult year that started with an audacious bid by its bank to buy 632 branches from Lloyds Banking Group and ended with the banking regulator insisting it abandon the deal and find £1.5bn to cover previously undisclosed bad loans.
The debacle stems from the Co-op bank's purchase of the Britannia building society in 2009, which had joined several other banks in making indiscriminate loans to corporate customers, many involved in overvalued commercial property deals.
Sutherland said the Co-op bank's bad loans were mostly accounted for by Britannia, with half of all its poorly performing retail loans and three quarters of its roughly £440m corporate bad debts blamed on over-zealous loan agreements sold by the building society.
The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), the City regulator, said on Thursday that the scale of the losses did not alter its demand that the Co-op plug the £1.5bn hole in its balance sheet.
A rescue of the bank has the support of the Co-op's board, which is made up of 20 non-executive directors, 15 of whom are elected from regional boards and five from Independent Co-operative Societies. Sutherland said the board had considered all the options and agreed to commit £1bn of the Co-op group's funds to cover bad debts in return for a debt for equity swap by bondholders.
Bondholders ranging from pensioners to hedge funds will have to take a loss on their investment under plans for a "bail-in" in coming months.
They will be forced to contribute £500m through an "exchange offer", which will result in a stock market listing for the bank. Some 15,000 holders of Co-operative Bank bonds have written to the Bank of England's financial policy committee seeking an intervention in rescue of the bank.
Mark Taber, representing retail bondholders who believe they should be spared a haircut on their investments, said there was a "disgraceful" lack of detail in the Co-op's offer. He said: "The PRA should not allow this and should make a direction to the Co-op Bank [to alter the restructuring] accordingly."
While the Co-op's board has agreed the deal, there is likely to be much debate inside Britain's largest mutual organisation about the cost of the rescue, the prospect of running a business with a large number of shares owned by non-mutual institutions and the potential for another banking crash to wreck the wider Co-operative Group.
Sutherland, who replaced Peter Marks in May, said: "We are sorry but we are a new team and grasping the nettle and getting on with fixing the situation."

If a rescue fails

Should the Co-op fail to secure a rescue of its banking division it will fall to the government to step in.
There are several options for ministers and which one they choose will depend on the state of the Manchester-based bank.
A Northern Rock-style takeover would be the most draconian. The government purchased all the Rock's shares and made it a wholly-owned state enterprise.
A bailout of the bank would involve a large injection of cash to cover bad loans in return for partial ownership. The state owns 83% of Royal Bank of Scotland and 39% of Lloyds. In the case of Lloyds, following a £20.6bn injection of funds.
Another option was pursued in the case of Dunfermline building society, which like the Britannia building society began offering loans on risky property deals at the height of the housing boom.
Dunfermline, which was unable to raise extra funds from its members to cover bad debts, was absorbed into the Bank of England on a Friday and transferred on the following Monday to the Nationwide.
In each case the first £100,000 of individual savings are protected.
New tougher rules agreed in Brussels are due to take effect later this year, though no date has yet been set. The Recovery and Resolution Directive will force investors that lend to banks to sacrifice some of their assets as part of any rescue plan. It will also force banks to offload profitable divisions to cover losses under a so-called "living will".
The Co-op has in effect adopted the strategy put forward in the directive before it has become law, telling bondholders to sacrifice around a third of their holdings to pay a third of the £1.5bn bailout package. The Co-op group will also sell its insurance arm.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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US economy expands at stronger rate in second quarter, figures show

Rate of GDP growth more than double the pace clocked in prior three months and stronger than the 2.2% economists forecast
The US economy expanded at a stronger rate in the second quarter than previously estimated, according to figures released on Thursday.
After a boost to figures for exports and business investments, the Commerce Department revised its measure of the nation's gross domestic product (GDP), the broadest measure of goods and services produced in the economy, to an annual rate of 2.5% in the second quarter, up from an initial estimate of 1.7% reported last month.
The rate of growth was more than double the pace clocked in the prior three months and stronger than the 2.2% that economists polled by Reuters had forecast.
US stock markets reacted positively to the news, which was released as the Labor Department reported another slide in the number of people claiming unemployment benefits for the first time. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits slipped 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 331,000 for the week ending 24 August, the Labor Department said.
The report comes as the Federal Reserve appears close to cutting back on its $85bn a month bond-buying stimulus programme, known as quantitative easing. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has indicated that the programme could be scaled back as early as later this year but has as yet not specified a date.
Bernanke has tied a cut in QE to the unemployment rate. Next Friday the US releases its monthly tally of employment figures, the non-farm payroll report. The continued fall in initial claims helped push the unemployment rate to 7.4% last month, its lowest level since late 2008.
However, economists warned that problems remained in the US economy and the revision in GDP also highlighted some of those weaknesses. Consumer spending remained unchanged in the quarter and state and local government spending fell in the quarter as compared to being up in the initial estimate.
Gus Faucher, senior economist at PNC Financial Services, said the rise was good news. "But it's still a 1.6% rise year over year, and that's soft. We are still down 2m jobs and we are seeing significant drag from tax increases and spending cuts."
Faucher said growth should pick up in the second half of 2013 and into 2014. "Consumers are adjusting to higher taxes. Business investment will continue to improve as profits are at a record high and borrowing costs are still very low, despite the recent increase in rates," he said.
Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist with broker BTIG said: "With the revisions, our original estimate calling for 1.5% growth in the first half was a bit under what has actually occurred. That's a positive but of course what matters now is not what has happened but what will happen. In that regard, the consensus still expects roughly 2.5% growth in the second half but that may prove to be too optimistic."
The GDP figures come amid a looming clash in Washington over the "debt ceiling" – the limit set by Congress on the US's ability to borrow. Treasury secretary Jack Lew warned earlier this week that if Congress fails to act soon, the US would hit its debt limit by mid-October.
Failure to reach a new agreement would risk "irreparable harm" to the US economy and leave the government struggling to make the 80m payments a month it sends out, including military salaries and social security cheques, he said.
Faucher said failure to raise the debt ceiling would be "disastrous – worse than a government shutdown." But he said ultimately he expected Congress would act to see off the crisis.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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Amazon can be undercut by small traders in UK after OFT intervention

Retailer agrees to drop clause banning third-party traders from selling products cheaper elsewhere
Amazon has agreed to drop a clause which banned third-party traders from selling products cheaper elsewhere, following the intervention of the Office of Fair Trading.
Currently, third-party traders are forced to charge the same amount on any other platform as they do on Amazon but independent and rival websites can now undercut it, according to the consumer watchdog.
After numerous complaints from traders using the amazon.co.uk Marketplace platform the regulator opened a formal investigation into the price parity policy in October last year. Amazon says on its website that the rule is "critical to preserve fairness for Amazon customers" who expect to find low prices. The clause meant that a trader could not sell a product, including the delivery charge, for a lower price on its own website or another site such as eBay or play.com. Amazon can suspend sellers who break the rules.
The OFT welcomed Amazon's decision and said it would end the investigation prematurely and would not be drawn on whether or not the company had broken the law. The watchdog had become concerned that the policy was affecting prices and was potentially anti-competitive.
There are 2m third-party traders using Amazon throughout the world, although the company does not break this down by region or country. In the runup to last Christmas, almost two in five items bought on the site were sold by small traders.
A similar investigation has taken place in Germany, and the inquiry by its Federal Cartel Office remains ongoing.
Cavendish Elithorn, the OFT senior director of goods and consumer, said: "We welcome Amazon's decision to end its Marketplace price parity policy across the EU.
"As Amazon operates one of the UK's biggest e-commerce sites, the pricing on its website can have a wide impact on online prices offered to consumers elsewhere. We are pleased that sellers are now completely free to set their prices as they wish, as this encourages price competition and ensures consumers can get the best possible deals."
It is understood that the rule will still stand for US users and traders. Amazon's website said: "We believe that price is an important factor in customer buying decisions. Accordingly, we ask sellers who choose to sell their products on amazon.co.uk not to charge customers higher prices on Amazon than they charge customers elsewhere. Customers trust that they'll find consistently low prices and other favourable terms on amazon.co.uk and we think this is an important step to preserve that trust."
Amazon's Marketplace has faced a backlash from traders in the past.This year the Guardian revealed that the company had imposed fee rises on third parties selling consumer electronics, automotive parts and other goods. Some of the busiest traders in the UK saw the cut they paid to Amazon soar from 7% to 14%, and in Germany fees for tyre sellers lifted from 7% to 10%.
The OFT said it would continue to monitor the online retail sector to see if price parity rules were used by other online businesses and revealed it had 14 cases open under the Competition Act.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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