RBS India unit sale to HSBC falls through
Related
Top Stories
- UPA-2 anniversary today, to showcase achievements of UPA-1
- 1993 Mumbai blasts: Sanjay Dutt shifted to Pune's Yerwada Jail
- Sreesanth spent Rs 1.95L on clothes, bought friend BlackBerry, paid in cash: Police
- BCCI cashes Pune guarantee, Sahara walks out of IPL
- BSE Sensex opens in green, up 91 points in early trade
Royal Bank of Scotland's sale of its Indian retail and commercial banking operations to HSBC has fallen through more than two years after it was struck, leaving RBS to wind it down.
RBS agreed to sell the business to HSBC in July 2010. It has 31 branches, 400,000 customers and was profitable, with assets of £190 million ($305 million) and revenues of £42 million in the first nine months of this year.
The collapse is further evidence of the difficulties of completing banking deals amid changing strategies, stricter regulation and complex IT issues. RBS's $2.7 billion sale of 316 branches to Santander also fell apart last month after more than two years of talks, which the Spanish bank blamed on IT issues.
RBS and HSBC declined to specify the reasons for the breakdown, other than a failure to complete all the details by Friday, the so-called long stop date by which issues such as data and customer transfers and regulatory approvals should be resolved.
India's regulator has strict rules on branch ownership by foreign banks and that had caused complications with the deal, local reports have previously said.
HSBC was due to pay a premium of up to $95 million over the tangible net asset value of the businesses, although the price could have been reduced if bad debts rose or there were other changes, and the deal could have ended up costing RBS.
The business had shrunk significantly in the last two years — it had 1.1 million customers in March 2010.
RBS, 82 per cent owned by the UK government, said on Friday: "Consistent with RBS's strategic objective to reduce or exit its non-core assets and businesses, it will begin to wind down its retail and commercial banking business in India, whilst meeting all customer obligations."
HSBC said it "remains committed to pursuing growth in India" through its existing operations, saying it is a key strategic market.
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Fixing probe now reaches Bollywood, son of Dara Singh held
- BCCI cashes Pune Warriors guarantee, 'disgusted' Sahara walks out of IPL
- Sreesanth spent Rs 1.95L on clothes, bought friend BlackBerry, paid in cash: Police
- Delhi firm with MoD as client is linked to Pak cyberattacks
- After Infosys, iGATE sacks Phaneesh Murthy for sexual misconduct
- 2 weeks after harassment, Haryana schoolgirls return, cops in tow
- UPA-2 anniversary today, report card to outline work done in last 9 years


After lull, highway projects see aggressive bid offers
PM: Govt initiating more measures to attract investments
Cautious RBI cuts repo by 25 bps, says little space for more easing
‘Govt mulling stronger laws to block Ponzi schemes’




















