RBS Investors Accept GBP200 Million Settlement from Bank
A group of Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC investors Monday said they had accepted a GBP200 million settlement from the bank to end a protracted legal fight over allegations the lender misled them in the lead-up to an emergency rights issue during the financial crisis.
The dispute relates to a GBP12 billion cash call just before RBS was bailed out by taxpayers in 2008. Investors alleged they weren't informed of the RBS's teetering finances before plowing more cash into the sinking bank. A trial was due to get under way imminently.
Organizers of the RBoS Shareholders Action Group, which includes 9,000 retail investors, said in a letter it had accepted an 82 pence-per-share settlement with the bank. This is well below the GBP2 to GBP2.30 per share investors paid during the 2008 rights issue. An RBS spokeswoman declined to comment.
The settlement may spare RBS the prospect of seeing former chief executive Fred Goodwin cross examined in court. The Scot, who led the bank to a taxpayer bailout, hasn't spoken about the debacle for years.
Executives at RBS wanted to keep it that way. In the lead-up to a trial they doubled their offer to the RBoS action group. Despite the organizers of the RBoS group accepting the renewed offers some shareholders may still seek to pursue the case, one person familiar with the matter said. Late in 2016, the RBS set aside GBP800 million after settling with three-quarters of the shareholders suing the bank.
For RBS the case is an unwelcome distraction to a drawn-out restructuring plan. The bank, which remains more than 70% government owned, said it would make its first profit in nearly a decade next year. The turnaround has come at a steep price. RBS burned through the GBP45.5 billion of taxpayer money pumped into it during the crisis, paying off fines, firing staff and writing down bad loans.
Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 29, 2017 14:35 ET (18:35 GMT)