Wednesday 2 March 2016

The Co-operative Bank (United Kingdom,)



The Co-operative Bank

The Co-operative Bank plc is a retail and commercial bank in the United Kingdom, with its headquarters in Balloon Street, Manchester.




The bank markets itself as an ethical bank, and seeks to avoid investing in companies involved in certain elements of the arms trade, fossil fuel extraction, genetic engineering, animal testing and use of sweated labour as stated in its ethical policy. The ethical policy was introduced in 1992 and incorporated into the Bank's constitution in 2013.In 2002, the parent company Co-operative Group Limited brought the bank and the Co-operative Insurance Society under the control of a newly incorporated holding society, Co-operative Financial Services, which became the Co-operative Banking Group in 2011.

As Britain's seventh biggest lender, the majority of the bank's revenue is made from interest charges on loans.

In 2013-14 the bank was the subject of a rescue plan to address a capital shortfall of about £1.9 billion. The bank mostly raised equity to cover the shortfall from hedge funds, while the Co-operative Group became a minority shareholder holding a 20% stake in the bank.


History


The Stockport Pyramid building provides administrative services, including a call centre for Smile and the Co-operative Bank.
The bank was formed in 1872 as the Loan and Deposit Department of the Co-operative Wholesale Society, becoming the CWS Bank four years later. However, the bank did not become a registered company until 1971 In 1975, the bank became the first new member of the Committee of London Clearing Banks for 40 years and thus able to issue its own cheques.

In 1974 the Co-operative Bank offered free banking for personal customers who remained in credit. It was also the first clearing bank to offer an interest-bearing cheque account, in 1982.


The Co-operative in Balloon Street, Manchester
Following the UK Government's acquisition of 43.4% of Lloyds Banking Group in 2009, the Co-operative Bank entered into negotiations with Lloyds Banking Group to purchase over 600 of its branches. European Commission laws restricting state aid required the sale of the branches in a divestment known as Project Verde. In February 2012, press reports suggested that the Financial Services Authority (FSA) might intervene to block the purchase due to concerns about the Co-operative Bank's ability to integrate IT systems. It was rumoured that the FSA was particularly concerned that the Co-operative bank was still behind schedule in the integration of its IT systems with those of the Britannia Building Society, despite the fact that the merger took place in 2009.

The purchase was publicly announced in July 2012 and it was revealed that the branches would be initially split from Lloyds under the resurrected TSB brand. On 24 April 2013 the Co-operative bank announced that it had decided against proceeding with the deal. The reasons given were the poor economic outlook in the UK and an increase in financial regulation requirements.[14] The Financial Times had previously reported that the Co-operative would require a £1 billion increase in capital to support enlarging the bank.


2013 financial crisis


The Co-operative Bank branch in Ealing, West London
In March 2013 the bank reported losses of £600m. In May Moody's downgraded its credit rating by six notches to junk (Ba3) resulting in the chief executive Barry Tootell's resignation.

Over the weekend of 15–16 June 2013 negotiations between the Co-operative Group and its regulator the Prudential Regulation Authority culminated in reports  that the Bank had a shortfall in its capital of about £1.5 billion, and that this would be filled by a procedure known as a "bail-in" scheme. Bank Chairman Paul Flowers resigned shortly before the announcement of the shortfall. A press release by the bank issued on 17 June 2013 explained that the scheme would compel subordinated (also known as junior) bondholders to convert some or all of their assets from debt instruments to ownership (“equity”) shares of uncertain value which would be listed on the London Stock Exchange and a new fixed income instrument. The scheme contrasted with the rescues of other British banks in 2008 and 2009 when central government introduced new capital into the failed institutions. Details of the outcome for small retail investors in the Bank were uncertain at the time of the June announcement, but it should be noted that there was no suggestion that ordinary deposits in the Bank would be put at any additional risk by the rescue, as they would continue to be covered by the existing compensation scheme. The bondholders had the opportunity to seek to reject the restructuring proposed, and an alternative option of the Bank of England taking over the ownership of the bank under the Banking Act 2009 special resolution regime was considered.

In September it was discovered that there was a £3.6bn funding gap between the value the Co-operative Bank placed on its loan portfolio and the actual value it would realise if forced to sell the assets.[21] In October it was reported that the Co-operative Group had been forced to renegotiate the bank's £1.5bn rescue with US hedge funds Aurelius Capital Management, Beach Point Capital Management, and Silver Point Capital that owned its debt. As a result, the Group would lose majority control of its banking arm with the proportion of the bank's equity remaining under its ownership dropping to 30%, less than the 75% proposed in the original rescue plan.[7] The plan passed a creditor vote and on 18 December 2013 a judge on the UK high court allowed the plan to move forward.

An independent review commissioned by the bank, published in April 2014, concluded that the root of the bank’s problems lay in its 2009 takeover of the Britannia Building Society and poor management controls.


2014–15 rehabilitation

The bank's current chief executive Niall Booker, a former banker at HSBC who nursed HSBC's sub-prime lending business back to health,[24] was appointed in 2013.[25] Since then he has been attempting to refocus the bank's strategy as a retail and SME lender.

Flotation on the London Stock Exchange was planned for 2014[26] but the plans were abandoned in March 2014 when a rights issue was announced to raise an additional £400 million.[28] In May 2014 the bank finalised the £400 million fundraising plan and obtained shareholder approval, which reduced the Co-operative Group's ownership of the bank to just over 20%.
The Co-operative Bank lost 38,000 current account customers in the first half of 2014 after suffering what it called a “hurricane of negative publicity” following the lender’s near collapse.However, this loss was partly offset by 9,700 who switched to the bank – double the number who joined six months earlier,resulting in a net loss of 28,199 customers (around 2% of the bank’s total).[30] The rate of loss slowed significantly in 2015, resulting in a loss of 2,250 current account customers between January and August of that year.

Nevertheless, the bank reported progress in its rehabilitation, as its losses sharply narrowed and it strengthened its capital position. Figures released by the bank in August 2014 for the first half of the year showed a pre-tax loss of £75.8 million was identified, compared to £844.6 million for the same period in 2013. Co-op Bank also said its core Tier 1 capital ratio, a key measure of financial strength, stood at 11.5 percent at the end of June and was expected to be significantly above the previous guidance of 10 percent at the end of 2014.[4] However the bank, as expected, was unable to meet the new Bank of England financial stress tests in December 2014.

In late 2014 the bank sold its repossessed properties business for £157.5 million, and its ATM operating business for £35 million. It also outsourced its mortgage servicing operation to Capita, transferring about 660 staff to Capita.

The narrowing of losses was driven largely by a faster-than-expected reduction in unwanted assets, including significant parts of the portfolio of sub-prime mortgages the bank inherited from its merger with Britannia Building Society. Non-core assets reduced by £1bn, and credit impairments improved. In August 2014 the bank said it had cut staff numbers by 21 percent (about 1,560 workers) in the previous year and that there were more job losses to come. The bank had also closed 46 branches, reducing its branch network by 16 percent since the start of 2014. Another 25 would close in the remainder of the year, it said.[4] In August 2015 the bank said that it had closed 62 branches over the previous year, taking the total down to 165. This was partly due to a 28% drop in in-branch transactions resulting from a change in demand from branch to internet banking. By that point staff reductions had exceeded 2000 workers.

In December 2014 a Bank of England assessment measured the bank's core capital ratio (a measure of financial strength) at minus 2.6%. As a result, the bank appointed Bank of America Merrill Lynch to help sell £6.6 billion of mortgages.

The bank is not expected to make a full-year profit until 2017 at the earliest.[34] In August 2015 Booker said that he expected the bank would be "part of the consolidation of some of the country’s smaller banks", and that stock-market floatation would remain an option for the future. He said that there had been "no meaningful discussions" concerning the suggestion that the hedge funds which own 80% of the bank's equity were looking at buying up the Co-operative Group’s remaining 20% holding.

Membership prior to financial crisis

Despite its name, the Co-operative Bank was not itself a true co-operative as it was not owned directly by its members. Instead it was part-owned by a holding company which was itself a co-operative – the Co-operative Banking Group. Its customers could, however, choose to become Co-operative Group members and hence indirectly acquire an ownership interest in the bank, earning dividends on their account holdings and borrowing with the Bank.

The bank also had approximately 2,500 preference shareholders, which were irredeemable fixed-interest shares. These shareholders could attend the bank's general meetings, but only had speaking and voting rights if the dividend is in arrears, or on any resolution varying their rights or winding up the bank.

Unlike other co-operative banks, such as the Dutch Rabobank, the Co-operative Bank did not have a federal structure of local banks, instead being a single national bank.

In 2015 the campaign group Save our Bank (which has 10,000 supporters) proposed a plan for customers to directly own part of the bank. A "Union of Co-op Bank Customers" would be created along with a mutual fund that would buy a minority stake in the bank.

Ethical policy


A statue of cooperative pioneer Robert Owen stands in front of the bank's head office in Manchester. The statue was removed in May 2013.
The Co-operative Bank operates an Ethical Policy[44] and has an ethical code of conduct as part of its constitution. The Ethical Policy is overseen by a values and ethics committee chaired by an independent director.The Ethical Policy excludes the provision of any banking services to businesses which take part in certain business activities or sectors. These include a commitment not to finance "the manufacture or transfer of armaments to oppressive regimes" or "any business whose core activity contributes to global climate change, via the extraction or production of fossil fuels". The bank estimates that it has declined finance totalling in excess of £1bn since the policy was introduced in 1992. The Policy is based on a regularly renewed customer mandate in the form of a survey. In the 2005/06 financial year, whilst making profits of £96.5 million, it turned away business of nearly £10 million.

The Policy only applies to the balance sheet of The Co-operative Bank and never applied to other Co-operative Group businesses such as The Co-operative Asset Management, the Group's asset management business. Nevertheless, this business received criticism in 2009 for not following the Bank's Ethical Policy and in 2013 it was sold to the Royal London Group.

In June 2005, the bank closed the account of a Christian evangelical group (Christian Voice) because of its standpoint on homosexuality, specifically the group's "discriminatory pronouncements on grounds of sexual orientation". They said the group was "incompatible with the position of the Co-operative Bank, which publicly supports diversity and dignity". Christian Voice said the bank was discriminating against it on religious grounds. Gay Times subsequently selected the Co-operative Bank for its Ethical Corporate Stance Award.

In late 2014 the bank undertook an advertising campaign to promote its Ethical Policy. The Co-operative Bank brand subsequently came top in YouGov's survey of the most improved brands of 2015.

Divisions
Smile
Main article: Smile (bank)
The bank launched a separate internet-only operation known as Smile in 1999, which, according to surveys, has the highest satisfaction ratings among UK banks and has received many awards in recent years for customer service and online banking. It has around half-a-million customers. Smile has its call centre based at a unique pyramid building in Stockport.

Britannia[edit]
Main article: Britannia (former building society)

A high-street branch of the Britannia in Gloucester
In October 2008, it was reported that Co-operative Financial Services was in talks with Britannia Building Society with a view to sharing facilities and possibly a full merger.

Such a venture was facilitated by the passing of the Building Societies (Funding) & Mutual Societies (Transfers) Act 2007 although further secondary legislation was required before such a merger could take place.

On 21 January 2009, Co-operative Financial Services and Britannia Building Society agreed to a merger, with the new 'super-mutual' being brought under the stewardship of The Co-operative Group. The proposed merger was subject to a vote by Britannia's members at their AGM at the end of April 2009.

On 29 April 2009 Britannia's members voted overwhelmingly in favour of the merger.

In the short term, both Britannia Building Society and the Co-operative Bank continue operating their own products, branch networks and systems. All Britannia branches were due to be rebranded under the Co-operative name by the end of 2013, but this has been abandoned in the wake of the financial crisis, with a great many simply closing and only a smaller number being retained and converted.

Independent financial advice
The Co-operative Bank withdrew its CIFA network in October 2011, and this was replaced by the Co-operative Banking Financial Planning Service, which is provided by AXA Wealth. AXA Wealth was also withdrawn, in April 2013. The Co-operative Bank has not replaced AXA Wealth.

Technical problems
In 2009, the Co-operative Bank received considerable public criticism from business customers for problems with the bank's internet banking service. It subsequently emerged that the service crashed when more than 130 users logged on simultaneously, and some customers were left unable to access their accounts for days.

In 2011, some Co-operative Bank customers were left temporarily unable to use their debit cards as a result of IT problems.

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REBO BANK - NEDERLAND

History
We emerged from small agricultural cooperative banks, founded by farmers and horticulturists beginning in the late nineteenth century. Formed to provide credit for their members. This cooperative foundation and the philosophy of cooperation underpinning it have remained our guiding principles throughout our over 115-year history.
The founding father of cooperative agricultural credit is Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen, a German rural mayor in the latter half of the nineteenth century. In the 1860s, he founded an agricultural credit union that extends local farmers credit from savings collected from local communities. Raiffeisen's concept of the credit cooperative soon takes root in the Netherlands and the first agricultural cooperative banks in this country appear in 1895.

From agricultural cooperative bank to Rabobank

The ideal of standing stronger together catches on in the Netherlands and across the Dutch countryside farmers and horticulturists begin establishing their own local agricultural cooperative banks. They become owners, members and managers of the bank, sharing responsibility accordingly. Rather than paying out the profits to the members, they are added to the reserves year by year, gradually building up a solid foundation for hard times and lean years.
Following Raiffeisen's model, by the end of the nineteenth century the first Dutch local banks established two umbrella organisations: the Coöperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Bank in Utrecht and the Coöperatieve Centrale Boerenleenbank in Eindhoven. These two organisations become the central bank for the local banks and play a facilitating role in a number of areas. The two merge in 1972 to become Rabobank, a cooperative in which all local Rabobanks are members and shareholders. They remain so to this day.
In 1900, the two central institutions had a total of 67 affiliated agricultural cooperative banks. At its high point in 1955, there were 1,324. From that point on, local mergers reduced the number of local banks dramatically and within a few years from now the organisation will consists of approximately one hundred local Rabobanks.

Move to digital brings new customers

Over the course of the 20th century, the originally small credit cooperatives of farmers and horticulturists are rooted in village and town. But gradually, the changing economy increases the demand for banking services in all sectors of society. 
In the latter half of the century, the bank begins welcoming an increasing number of (non-agricultural) businesses and later also private individuals, as customers. It is advancements in computing technology and ICT that make this possible. Giro payments, an early form of electronic payment, become hugely successful, initially in the form of larger employers paying salaries by direct deposit instead of in cash. Smaller employers soon followed.
Subsequently, private individuals more commonly began paying cashless. Banks, meanwhile, introduce new products, such as payment cheques and giro collection forms. Alongside savings and loans, customers could now also go to their banks for home mortgages, payment services, investment and insurance. For business clients, the banks expand their range of services, adding business financing, leasing, payment transactions and insurances.

Trusted name on the street and online

In the 1960s, as the banks' customer portfolios swell, the Raiffeisen and Agricultural Cooperative Banks opened more and more branch offices in the big cities and new housing estates. With the advent of the ATM in the 1980s, the payment terminal in the 1990s and internet banking at the turn of the century, customers come in to the bank less and less and the number of branch offices declines.
The continued rise of the internet drives new changes and for both business and private banking customers Rabobank is consistently a leader in offering banking products and services through the virtual channels that we now take for granted.

Subsidiaries and associates

In the second half of the 20th century, specialised subsidiaries and associates take on new activities, among them Interpolis (insurances), De Lage Landen (leasing) and Robeco (asset management). These business units offer their products and services through local Rabobanks, but from a legal perspective are subsidiaries or associates of Rabobank. Gradually, the Rabobank Group is born.

Active internationally

The group's first international activities begin in the early 1980s, initially for business clients doing business internationally. The growth and expansion of the 1980s sees the bank opening offices in major financial centres and taking over retail banks in agricultural areas such as Australia and the US state of California. In 2002, Rabobank launches International Direct Banking (IDB), to tap into the new opportunities the internet offers for savings and banking services.

Big in food & agri

We have developed from a purely Dutch bank into an international financial services provider for our Dutch customers. Today, we are also made up of international clients and our network covers the world. But we still focus primarily on the food & agri business in which we began and in which our vast experience offers the greatest added value. This is what has enabled us to grow into an international leader in this sector.

Sources archive

In Rabobank's digital sources archive you can search our collection of old magazines and annual reports , published by Rabobank and her predecessors, the Coöperatieve Centrale Boerenleenbank (CCB) en de Coöperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Bank (CCRB).
We emerged
 from small agricultural cooperative banks, founded by farmers and horticulturists beginning in the late nineteenth century. Formed to provide credit for their members. This cooperative foundation and the philosophy of cooperation underpinning it have remained our guiding principles throughout our over 115-year history.
The founding father of cooperative agricultural credit is Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen, a German rural mayor in the latter half of the nineteenth century. In the 1860s, he founded an agricultural credit union that extends local farmers credit from savings collected from local communities. Raiffeisen's concept of the credit cooperative soon takes root in the Netherlands and the first agricultural cooperative banks in this country appear in 1895.

From agricultural cooperative bank to Rabobank

The ideal of standing stronger together catches on in the Netherlands and across the Dutch countryside farmers and horticulturists begin establishing their own local agricultural cooperative banks. They become owners, members and managers of the bank, sharing responsibility accordingly. Rather than paying out the profits to the members, they are added to the reserves year by year, gradually building up a solid foundation for hard times and lean years.
Following Raiffeisen's model, by the end of the nineteenth century the first Dutch local banks established two umbrella organisations: the Coöperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Bank in Utrecht and the Coöperatieve Centrale Boerenleenbank in Eindhoven. These two organisations become the central bank for the local banks and play a facilitating role in a number of areas. The two merge in 1972 to become Rabobank, a cooperative in which all local Rabobanks are members and shareholders. They remain so to this day.
In 1900, the two central institutions had a total of 67 affiliated agricultural cooperative banks. At its high point in 1955, there were 1,324. From that point on, local mergers reduced the number of local banks dramatically and within a few years from now the organisation will consists of approximately one hundred local Rabobanks.

Move to digital brings new customers

Over the course of the 20th century, the originally small credit cooperatives of farmers and horticulturists are rooted in village and town. But gradually, the changing economy increases the demand for banking services in all sectors of society. 
In the latter half of the century, the bank begins welcoming an increasing number of (non-agricultural) businesses and later also private individuals, as customers. It is advancements in computing technology and ICT that make this possible. Giro payments, an early form of electronic payment, become hugely successful, initially in the form of larger employers paying salaries by direct deposit instead of in cash. Smaller employers soon followed.
Subsequently, private individuals more commonly began paying cashless. Banks, meanwhile, introduce new products, such as payment cheques and giro collection forms. Alongside savings and loans, customers could now also go to their banks for home mortgages, payment services, investment and insurance. For business clients, the banks expand their range of services, adding business financing, leasing, payment transactions and insurances.

Trusted name on the street and online

In the 1960s, as the banks' customer portfolios swell, the Raiffeisen and Agricultural Cooperative Banks opened more and more branch offices in the big cities and new housing estates. With the advent of the ATM in the 1980s, the payment terminal in the 1990s and internet banking at the turn of the century, customers come in to the bank less and less and the number of branch offices declines.
The continued rise of the internet drives new changes and for both business and private banking customers Rabobank is consistently a leader in offering banking products and services through the virtual channels that we now take for granted.

Subsidiaries and associates

In the second half of the 20th century, specialised subsidiaries and associates take on new activities, among them Interpolis (insurances), De Lage Landen (leasing) and Robeco (asset management). These business units offer their products and services through local Rabobanks, but from a legal perspective are subsidiaries or associates of Rabobank. Gradually, the Rabobank Group is born.

Active internationally

The group's first international activities begin in the early 1980s, initially for business clients doing business internationally. The growth and expansion of the 1980s sees the bank opening offices in major financial centres and taking over retail banks in agricultural areas such as Australia and the US state of California. In 2002, Rabobank launches International Direct Banking (IDB), to tap into the new opportunities the internet offers for savings and banking services.

Big in food & agri

We have developed from a purely Dutch bank into an international financial services provider for our Dutch customers. Today, we are also made up of international clients and our network covers the world. But we still focus primarily on the food & agri business in which we began and in which our vast experience offers the greatest added value. This is what has enabled us to grow into an international leader in this sector.

Sources archive

In Rabobank's digital sources archive you can search our collection of old magazines and annual reports , published by Rabobank and her predecessors, the Coöperatieve Centrale Boerenleenbank (CCB) en de Coöperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Bank (CCRB).