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HBOS chief delivers passionate defence



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Published Date: 20 March 2008
ANDY Hornby last night mounted a passionate defence of his speculation-hit bank as he sought to reassure the markets that HBOS was fundamentally, financially sound.
In a forthright intervention, the chief executive of the Edinburgh-based bank maintained that the rumour and innuendo were completely unfounded. His response came after the bank's shares took a pounding early yesterday amid fevered speculation that
HBOS had serious financial problems.

In a febrile market, worried by the collapse of Bear Sterns in the US and concerns that some UK institutions faced a liquidity crisis, Hornby moved to quash the rumours, which hit HBOS the hardest of all the banks.

Speaking after an extraordinary day in which both the Financial Services Authority and the Bank of England were forced to issue statements to calm speculation, Hornby struck a defiant note. The HBOS chief executive told The Scotsman: "Our trading is absolutely in line with expectations.

"We have had no cause to issue a statement saying there has been any significant change in trading conditions since the publication of our results. Indeed, we are not allowed to hold information that is not available to the whole of the market."

HBOS slumped as much as 17 per cent to a record low of 398p yesterday morning as speculation swept through dealing rooms. However, the share price recovered to close just over 7 per cent, or 34p, lower at 446.25p last night after the intervention by the FSA and the Bank. Reinforcing his message, to the still nervous markets Hornby added: "We have 23 million customers, and 2.1 million small shareholders – more than any other company. We are the biggest mortgage institution. So we are right at the heart of the banking system."

Hornby was forced to take the unusual step of speaking out after the FSA launched an inquiry into potential stock-market abuse, saying traders may have been profiting from spreading false rumours. The FSA warned it would not tolerate traders starting rumours and dealing off the back of them.

In what appeared to be a co- ordinated move, the Bank of England also took the unprecedented step of denying rumours that HBOS had turned to it for emergency funding.

Last night, Hornby's reassurance that the bank was fundamentally sound was echoed by City brokers and analysts, though there were still fears that HBOS, which relies heavily on mortgage business, is exposed to the credit crunch. David Williams, banking specialist at broker Fox-Pitt Kelton, said: "What has happened to HBOS's shares is because the market is a very nervous place.

"Given what happened to Bear Stearns, they are nervous about any rumour. But I think it is significant that the FSA, which as the banking regulator would know the financial position of HBOS, was more concerned yesterday to warn about unfounded rumours than saying anything (negative] about HBOS".

Williams said he would be "very surprised" if it turned out HBOS had liquidity issues.

Keith Bowman, a banking analyst with Hargreaves Lansdowne, said: "You have to be guided by what the company itself says. HBOS has come out and denied the rumours. They are obliged (under Stock Exchange rules] to highlight any difficulties that might affect profits. They haven't done."

However, Alex Potter, analyst at stockbroker Collins Stewart, said it believed the share-plunge by HBOS was "on fears surrounding write-downs and liquidity". He maintained: "We believe its exposure level of exposures to UK consumers' 'toxic' debt investments, gearing to private-equity gains within revenues and potential impact from rising wholesale funding costs mean the bank will under-perform the UK banks sector on a 12-month view."





The full article contains 612 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

The Genuine Mario Antoinette,

20/03/2008 11:33:20
In a previous job i had to deal with "overdrafts" to these sorts of banks of everysday. I'm going to find out what went on last night.
2

Toots - Sheila,

Canada 20/03/2008 17:20:35
#1 Us cynics out here in the real world are pretty dam confident we know what is going on! The "lads" are selling large bundles of their own shares which they will buy back cheaper and pocket the difference. (Bonuses will be lower this year so what's a guy to do right!)
It's called "market manipulation" , it's happening around the globe and they should ALL be locked up!!!!!!
3

J R Hartley-Fly,

Fishing 20/03/2008 23:29:59
It's "The Emperor's New Clothes" on an almighty scale!

The banking world is full of prats with degrees whose primary talent is "talking a good game".

They can't speak or write the native language in anything like a grammatically correct manner but they are expert in buzzwords and three letter acronyms.

Anything to make this year's bonus.

I've seen them come and move on before they have to live with the consequences of their questionable contributions to business.

Senior management people need to "walk the floor" and listen to the proles.

The reassurance from the Mound is welcome. The silence from Gogarburn and Melbourne is deafening!
4

I eat cookies wrapped in scotch tape,

under "shred"'s snowdrop 20/03/2008 23:48:36
The London Stock Exchange looks sleazier than a kipper on Edwina and The Secret Diarist(age 47 & 3/4)'s room service breakfast platter.

We also serve who only criticise from well-informed positions.

5

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 21/03/2008 12:48:03
was it an EMU moment? No I mean ERM.

If the BofE can't stop Soros making a mint out a faulty exchange rate mechanism what hope does one bank have when panic is created by a few rumours and depositors want their money out?

And the next one please...

 

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