RBS exits UK Government’s Asset Protection Scheme

23-10-2012 — /europawire.eu/ — RBS is pleased to announce that it has agreed with HM Treasury to exit the UK Government’s Asset Protection Scheme effective 18 October 2012.

The exit comes at the earliest date consistent with the minimum contractual APS fee. RBS will have paid £2.5 billion for its participation in the APS, without having made a claim, in addition toaround £1.5 billion it paid to HM Treasury for liquidity support received during the financial crisis.

The APS is the mechanism through which HM Treasury provided backstop credit insurance for a portfolio of RBS assets and derivative exposures, in support of the new Board’s turnaround plans for the Bank. It played an important role in stabilising market perceptions of RBS after the impact of the financial crisis became clearer and the Bank’s share price fell to a low of 10 pence1 in February 2009. This gave time for the Bank’s new Board and management to put its recovery plan into effect.

The Bank’s exit from the APS demonstrates the progress RBS has made in transforming a balance sheet that had become dangerously large and unstable into one that is more conservative, resilient, and sustainable. The Government agreed to insure £282 billion2 of assets when RBS formally entered APS in November 2009. Those assets have since fallen to around £105 billion, a reduction of 63%.

FSA approval has also been received for the exit of APS. RBS continues to discuss with the FSA its capital plans and actions for ensuring a balanced transition to Basel III.

Stephen Hester, Group Chief Executive, The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, said: “We all want a system in which banks will never again need to seek credit support from Government in a financial crisis. Huge progress has been made towards that goal and our exiting the APS is a significant milestone in RBS’s recovery.

The APS has played a valuable role, buying time for the Bank as we implemented change from the worrying days of 2009 to create the much stronger institution it is today. RBS’s capital, liquidity, and funding positions have been transformed in the past three years, so the time is now right for us to exit this scheme.

The Bank remains wholly committed to supporting its customers in the years ahead. Despite the scale of the Group’s overall risk reduction and balance sheet shrinkage, RBS has actually grown its UK loan book for core retail and corporate customers by four per cent overall since 2008.

The changes RBS needed to make after 2008 were truly radical. Much progress has been made along that road. There is much work still underway. But RBS and all who rely on us are better off for the strong progress already made.”

ENDS

Notes to editors:

·      The Group outlined its intention to participate in the APS in February 2009.

·      The Group signed an accession agreement to the APS on 26 November 2009.

For further information please contact:

Investor Relations
Richard O’Connor – Head of Investor Relations
+44 (0) 20 7672 1758

RBS Group Media Relations
+44 (0) 131 523 4205

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1 Historical price unadjusted for June 2012 share consolidation. Equivalent post consolidation price would be £1.
2 The covered assets of £282 billion were calculated as at 31 December 2008. By the time the APS was formally signed in late 2009, these exposures had already been reduced to around £230 billion.

 

This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
RNS news service provided by Hemscott Group Limited.

 

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