EU approves RBS competition plan, lifting state aid curbs
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European Union regulators have given the nod to a British plan allowing bailed-out Royal Bank of Scotland to help smaller alternative banks with funds totaling around 835 million pounds (1.1 billion US dollars) to promote competition.
The British government struck a deal with the European Commission in July for the plan, after RBS was unable to sell business banking unit Williams & Glyn and failed to meet one of the conditions of its 45-billion-pound bailout.
The deal is significant for RBS as it ends the bank’s state aid commitment which is considered a major milestone on its path to recovery as well as its ability to pay dividends again.
An RBS logo outside the office of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) in central London on August 4, 2017. /VCG Photo
An RBS logo outside the office of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) in central London on August 4, 2017. /VCG Photo
“The package targets a transfer of a 3-percent market share in the UK small- and medium-sized banking market from RBS to challenger banks,” the EU competition enforcer said on Monday.
It said the plan involves setting up a “capability and innovation fund” and an “incentivized switching scheme”.
RBS said the funds will open in the first half of next year and Chief Executive Ross McEwan welcomed the EU approval, saying it will bring clarity for customers and staff.
The state-owned lender had tried and failed to sell Williams & Glyn in efforts to meet EU conditions for its bailout at the height of the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.