Showing posts with label lending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lending. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Deutsche Bank fined over lending

22 February 2011 Last updated at 13:10 GMT Deutsche bank building in London The bank would have been fined £1.2m if it had not co-operated with the FSA Deutsche Bank has become the first financial company in the UK to be fined for "irresponsible" mortgage lending.

It has been fined £840,000 by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) and will have to pay £1.5m in compensation to up to nearly 8,000 borrowers.

The FSA said the bank had been guilty of "irresponsible lending practices and unfair treatment of customers in arrears".

The bank said it would contact the borrowers and arrange payments.

The FSA said that the bank's staff:

failed to check if some customers would be able to afford their mortgage repayments if their loan lasted into retirementfailed to offer cheaper mortgages to some customers who asked for self-certified mortgagesfailed to check if some customers had considered where they would live if they planned to sell their homes to pay off their interest-only mortgages.Arrears

Deutsche bank's home loans had been sold exclusively through mortgage brokers to people with a poor credit history, in 2006 and 2007.

The FSA said 7,967 mortgages were arranged by the bank during this time, of which 4,211 are still on its books.

When some of the mortgage customers fell into arrears, Deutsche Bank repeatedly hit some of them with unfair charges which bore no relation to the actual cost of administering their account, the FSA said.

"This is the first time that we have taken enforcement action against a firm for irresponsible mortgage lending," said Margaret Cole of the FSA.

"Firms which fail in their obligations to customers should expect not only a substantial fine but also that they will have to pay back customers who have been disadvantaged by their failings," she added.

Deutsche Bank explained that it stopped lending mortgages in 2008.

"Following the identification of the issues raised by the FSA in an industry-wide review started in 2008, DB mortgages immediately commissioned a third-party review into its lending and arrears collection processes," said a bank spokesman.

"As a consequence, DB mortgages has improved its oversight of mortgage servicing activities."

The bank is the fourth lender since the autumn of 2009 to be fined by the FSA for mistreating mortgage customers in arrears.


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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Banks sign lending and bonus deal

9 February 2011 Last updated at 20:15 GMT Osborne: 'We are determined to bring responsibility and restraint'

A long-awaited agreement with the largest UK banks on lending, pay and bonuses has been announced.

Under Project Merlin, banks will lend about £190bn to businesses this year - including £76bn to small firms - curb bonuses and reveal some salary details of their top earners.

The Bank of England will monitor whether loans targets are being met.

Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Lord Oakeshott resigned after the agreement was announced.

The peer branded the deal as "pitiful".

Chancellor George Osborne also formally ruled out imposing a bonus tax, despite pressure from Labour.

'Retribution to recovery'

On Tuesday, the government increased a levy on banks to £2.5bn this year - raising an extra £800m.

Shadow chancellor Ed Balls accused the chancellor of "putting politics ahead of economics".

"For the chancellor who talked so tough in opposition... this is a pitiful outcome and an embarrassing climbdown," he added.

Continue reading the main story
On paper at least, the UK will have the most transparent regime for bankers' remuneration in the world”

End Quote image of Robert Peston Robert Peston Business editor, BBC News Mr Osborne acknowledged that the package would not be enough to assuage public discontent with the banks' role in the financial crisis, saying: "The anger will remain".

Treasury sources said that the time had come to move on from "retribution to recovery" - focusing on the lending boost from banks rather than issues over bonuses.

However, groups representing small businesses said that despite the increased lending, they feared the cost of borrowing would remain prohibitively expensive for many firms.

Bonuses Continue reading the main story

Rolfe Pearce, Stafford.

I had orders and a growing client base, I approached my bank for an overdraft of only £2000 and was refused.

I was offered a loan for the business only if I was prepared to put my family home up as collateral.

The rate that I was being offered was extortionate considering the base rate at the moment is 0.5% - they were asking over 13%.

I decided to collapse the business and wait until the market re-balances.

I believe the banks will lend but only on their own terms, which are historically sky high. The banks are re-filling their coffers from the hard working businesses of this country. They are grinding the face of the businessman onto the grindstone at a time when they need a lift and some support.

HSBC, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and Lloyds Banking Group have signed up to the Project Merlin agreement, while Santander has agreed to the lending parts of the deal.

Other pledges include providing £200m of capital for David Cameron's Big Society Bank, which is supposed to finance community projects.

However, while banks have also been asked to show restraint in bonus payments, these are expected to total more than £6bn this year.

On Wednesday, RBS said its investment bankers would share in a bonus pool of about £950m while chief executive Stephen Hester would get £2m in shares as a bonus.

And Lloyds Banking Group's outgoing chief executive Eric Daniels is in line for a £1.45m shares bonus.

As part of remuneration commitments under Merlin:

RBS, HSBC, Lloyds and Barclays have agreed to publish the pay of their five highest paid executives below board level - but this will exclude top-earning traders without managerial responsibilityThe four banks will cut the amount provided for bonuses in 2010, after negotiations with ministersLloyds and RBS repeated their 2010 commitment that the cash element of any bonus will not be more than £2,000 From 2012 it will be law that all big UK banks publish the pay of their board members plus the eight highest paid executives below board level. This will apply to the UK operations of overseas banks such as Goldman Sachs and UBS.

BBC business editor Robert Peston said that "on paper at least, the UK will have the most transparent regime for bankers' remuneration in the world".

'Business concerns'

Banks loaned £179bn to businesses last year and the government wanted a commitment that this would increase.

They are also going to be providing £1bn of risk capital over three years for small businesses in parts of the UK worst hit by spending cuts.

The government said that the measure of whether banks were providing the promised credit to business would be among the performance targets used to determine bonuses of bank chief executives.

Bank lending chart

The £76bn to be loaned to small business is up 15% from 2010 levels.

However, the provision of credit to UK businesses will be on commercial terms.

And representatives of small companies have expressed concern that this means the lending pledge by the banks is "academic".

"The vast majority of businesses are not going to the banks and seeking finance at the moment," said Andrew Cave from the Federation of Small Businesses.

"And those that do are telling us that the cost of borrowing - both existing and new borrowing - is increasing and those issues are not going to go away with today's announcement."

The British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) said that small business lending was a separate and "far more important and long-standing challenge" than the debate over bonuses.

Ed Balls: 'This negotiation has turned from Project Merlin into the Wizard of Oz'

Firms had seen relationships with lenders strained, added the BCC's director general, David Frost, who said "poor or opaque decision-making, over-centralised processes and a lack of good relationship managers on the ground" had caused a crisis of confidence between business and the banks.

"While the big banks' renewed commitment to small business lending is welcome, ministers and the banks need to focus their energy on improving frontline services for small and medium-sized firms," he added.

"Without clear lending processes and more sensible decision-making at a local level, many businesses will still be reluctant to ask for loans and big net lending targets won't be met."


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