LONDON (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Scotland
RBS, 82-percent owned by the taxpayer, has faced criticism over a deferred bonus of 780,000 pounds ($1.2 million) that Hester is set to receive in March. But Hampton told lawmakers on Monday that Hester's pay was modest by the industry's standards.
Hampton said Hester's pay was well below the average in world banking. "Relative to other people doing these jobs his pay has been modest," he told the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards.
Hester, who receives a basic salary of 1.2 million pounds, chose to give up his bonus last year after a computer systems meltdown affected millions of customers. This year he was set to receive a share-based payment of 780,000 pounds deferred from three years ago.
Some lawmakers have said Hester should not accept the payment after RBS was fined $612 million by British and U.S. authorities last week for its role in a global interest rate-rigging scandal.
RBS has said it would slash bonuses for its investment bankers to help pay fines to U.S. authorities and ensure that taxpayers do not suffer as a result of the penalties.
But Andrew Tyrie, the commission's chairman, was skeptical whether that would be the case.
"We were not given sufficient confidence today that the arrangement for funding the fines from bonuses will do what it says on the tin," Tyrie said. "This must be more than an exercise in creative accounting."
Hampton said the bank was considering writing to former executives to claw-back past bonuses to help pay the fines but had not yet done so. He said there was no guarantee such a move would be successful.
"We have no contractual right. It would just be putting pressure on their good nature."
The 87.5 million pounds due to the Financial Services Authority will stay in the UK and be donated to charitable causes, including supporting soldiers and their families.
More than a dozen banks and brokerages, including Citigroup
The head of RBS's investment bank told the commission that RBS management had failed to spot the wrongdoing because they were focused on keeping the bank alive.
"When we took control of the bank it had a cardiac arrest. We had to prioritize dealing with the existential threat to the bank," John Hourican, who is leaving RBS in the wake of the Libor interest rate scandal, told the panel.
Hourican said it was important the bank learnt its lessons from the affair. "I have told people who are prepared to listen that they should not waste my death."
Peter Nielsen, head of RBS's markets division, said the bank was unlikely to have made money out of manipulating Libor and also said it had been slow to respond to the wrongdoing.
He said he had discussed resigning with Hourican in the wake of the affair, but decided to stay on.
Hourican said he had told Hester that Nielsen should stay, arguing: "The bank is better served by Peter remaining at RBS."
The commission also interviewed Johnny Cameron, who ran RBS's investment bank under former CEO Fred Goodwin. Cameron said while the bank had tried to impose ethical values on its traders, it could not control their behavior.
"You cannot impose moral standards on those that do not wish to be moral," he said, adding Libor manipulation had not been seen as a potential danger for banks. "It just did not occur to anyone that this was a rate that could be fiddled."
Hester told the commission that, during the boom years, "hubris" had set into the banking industry, resulting in "an extremely selfish and self-centered culture."
He said there had been significant failings in RBS's control processes. The CEO also said there were "three or four ringleaders" among the 21 people identified in regulatory documents relating to the issue.
Taxpayers are currently sitting on a loss of 14.6 billion pounds after Britain pumped in 45.5 billion to keep RBS afloat at the height of the 2008 financial crisis.
(Editing by Dan Lalor and Jane Merriman)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rbs-execs-focused-cardiac-arrest-not-libor-161211842--finance.html
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