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Alex Brummer

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

Opinion

Villains, scapegoats and the real bank-breakers

July 2, 2015 16:21
Money minder: Sir John Bond
4 min read

Scarcely a week passes without disclosure of fresh scandal for Britain's banks. The image of the lenders has been battered and the reputation of those that ran them tarnished. The current management of Britain's largest bank, HSBC, was seriously damaged by disclosures of tax avoidance and evasion on a grand scale at its Geneva private bank. Lloyds Bank is still cast as a villain over its takeover of the deeply flawed Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) in 2008. Two new studies, one a history of HSBC and the other on the Lloyds-HBOS deal, cast fresh light on how the harm was done.

At HSBC, the can of worms that was opened earlier this year is traced back to the late Edmond Safra, a scion of the renowned Sephardi banking dynasty. At Lloyds, we get a clear inside view of the role that Anglo-Jewish business leader Sir Victor Blank played in engineering the contentious HBOS transaction.

In February 1999, Sir John Bond, chairman of HSBC received a visit from a City intermediary who informed him that Safra, founder of the Republic Bank of New York, was in ill-health and wanted to sell. The Safra family hailed from Aleppo in Syria and had been bankers for generations. Among its clients were the leading Sephardi Jewish diaspora as well as wealthy Arab potentates.

Republic was the third largest retail bank in New York but, more significantly, was one of the world's best-known private banks offering wealth services to clients across the US and in Switzerland, Luxembourg, France, Germany, Gibraltar and Monaco. It had $56bn of assets under management. After a series of meetings and cursory due diligence a $10.3bn price was offered and Safra, the sole shareholder, accepted with alacrity. HSBC, with its rich client base in Hong Kong and Asia, saw Republic, with its private banking base, as an ideal fit. At the time, it was the biggest overseas acquisition in British banking history. So keen was HSBC to complete the deal that it all but brushed aside a revelation that Republic had breached securities laws in Tokyo and was under investigation for perpetrating an alleged fraud on Japanese investors.