No action will be taken against bosses at failed bank HBOS after nearly seven years of investigation
The Bank of England (BoE) and the City watchdog have decided not to take action against former bosses at failed bank HBOS after investigating them for nearly seven years.
Officials said they will not take any enforcement action against senior managers, including ex-chief executives James Crosby and Andy Hornby and past chairman Lord Stevenson, who were criticised for the bank’s failure in a 2015 report.
The BoE would not reveal if it had concluded that there was no wrongdoing, or simply lacked the evidence to prove it.
It means that just one former HBOS executive, Peter Cummings, was ever fined over the widely-publicised saga, which saw HBOS bailed out with £20.5billion of taxpayer money in 2008.
In a joint statement, the Bank’s Prudential Regulation Authority and the Financial Conduct Authority said they had ‘conducted rigorous and forensic investigations’, combing through two million documents since launching the probe in January 2016.
Investigators also interviewed former managers and analysed evidence of their roles at HBOS before it failed in 2008.
The BoE and the City watchdog have decided not to take action against former bosses at failed bank HBOS, including ex-chief executive James Crosby (pictured)
A 2015 report by Andrew Green QC said that the Financial Services Authority, the body that was later replaced by the FCA and the PRA, should have considered investigating former HBOS senior managers including ex-chief executive Andy Hornby (left) and past chairman Lord Stevenson (right)
The joint statement read: ‘Evidence was gathered in order to assess whether or not each individual may lack fitness and propriety to hold certain senior roles within the financial services industry in the future.
‘In the course of these investigations, the authorities gathered more than two million documents, interviewed former HBOS senior managers, engaged extensively with the parties, and undertook substantial analysis of contemporaneous documentary evidence considering those senior managers’ roles and responsibilities at HBOS prior to its failure in 2008.’
They added: ‘In line with standard practice, the authorities’ independent decision-makers reviewed the matters under investigation and have each determined that no enforcement action should be taken against these former HBOS senior managers.
‘These investigations have therefore been closed.’
The probe had been launched after a 2015 report criticised how the Financial Services Authority, the body that was later replaced by the FCA and the PRA, handled enforcement action after the HBOS collapse.
The report, by Andrew Green QC, criticised as ‘materially flawed’ the FSA’s decision not to investigate ten former managers, including chief executives James Crosby and Andy Hornby and chairman Lord Stevenson.
Mr Crosby had once been the deputy chairman of the FSA.
The 2015 report blamed a lot of the bank’s problems on its strategy and business model, which focused on growth without considering the risks.
The bank’s former executives were accused of pursuing a ‘flawed and unbalanced strategy’ which culminated in the bank’s destruction.
HBOS, which was formed from the merger of Halifax and Bank of Scotland in 2001, was given a £20 billion bailout and had to be rescued by Lloyds TSB during the height of the financial crisis, after racking up £45 billion in bad debts.
The 400-page report by the FCA and the PRA focused on reckless lending before the financial crisis, and the ‘light touch’ approach of the bank’s regulators.
The authors said the board pursued a ‘flawed and unbalanced strategy’ reliant on lending huge amounts of money, most of which was borrowed on fickle short-term money markets, which left the bank ‘extremely vulnerable’.
The report said ‘ultimate responsibility for the failure of HBOS rests with the board’, adding that its members ‘lacked sufficient experience and knowledge of banking’.
Nine of the 12 members did not have proper banking experience, including former actuary Mr Crosby and Mr Hornby, a former Asda executive.
Mr Green’s report focused on the FSA’s decision to punish just one former executive, Peter Cummings – then head of Bank of Scotland’s corporate lending – who was fined £500,000 and banned from the City in 2012.
The FSA said that Mr Cummings had ‘failed to take reasonable steps to assess, manage or mitigate the risks involved in the aggressive growth strategy which the Corporate Division’.
Today’s announcement means he remains the only former director at the bank to have been penalised by the FSA.
The BoE and the City watchdog have decided not to take action against former bosses at failed bank HBOS, meaning just one past executive Peter Cummings (pictured), was ever fined over the widely-publicised saga, which saw HBOS bailed out with £20.5billion of taxpayer money in 2008
He previously complained that he was ‘singled out’ and made a ‘scapegoat’.
Andrew Bailey, who is now the Governor of the BoE but in 2015 was Deputy Governor, said after the report was published that the investigation would be completed ‘as soon as possible’.
‘It’s not the intention to have a lengthy investigation,’ he added, at the start of what would be a six-and-a-half year process.
The publication of the 400-page PRA and FCA report and separate 100-page document by Mr Green had already been delayed by more than a year due to lengthy legal wrangling.