RBS shareholders absolutely lost it at the AGM
Earlier this week, outgoing RBS chairman Philip Hampton told the Financial Times: "Most AGMs are a roasting. It is a richer roast for the banks."
He wasn't wrong.
Judging by the prolific tweets from the AGM in Edinburgh, Scotland today, Hampton and CEO Ross McEwan faced a number of SMEs and representatives from a 12,000-strong group of shareholders that were not interested in hearing about the group's turnaround plans and instead tried to use the AGM as a platform to voice their anger.
Hampton quoted author Charles Dickens at the AGM to summarise the turbulent time at RBS has gone through over the last few years - that probably didn't help either.
"I think Dickens captured recent years perfectly in his famous quote from A Tale of Two Cities: 'It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity…' As Chairman of RBS I have certainly had more than one occasion to relate to all those sentiments in addressing the financial crisis at this bank."
Over 2008 and 2009 the government pumped £45.4 billion ($70.1 billion) into RBS, buying shares at 500 pence ($7.88) each as part of an emergency bailout per share. The government still owns around 81% of the bank,
Unlike its part state-owned rival Lloyds, RBS is going to lose taxpayers money when it does eventually get sold by the government. Last week, UK Chancellor George Osborne revealed that the government will sell its stake in the RBS at possibly a £7 billion ($10.8 billion) loss to the taxpayer. This is because the share price is dramatically lower than when it was bailed out - it's currently around 359.50 pence ($5.66) per share.
This is only exacerbating anger amongst a distinct group of shareholders.
RBS still faces major lawsuits from shareholders that invested in the bank before its 2008 rights issue. In that rights sale, investors were offered £12 billion ($18.8 billion) in new, additional shares. Investors who bought them lost over 90% of their money.
The 12,000-strong RBS Shareholder Action Group launched a £4 billion ($6.3 billion) lawsuit in 2013 against RBS and former RBS executives Fred Goodwin, Tom McKillop, Johnny Cameron, and Guy Whittaker. The group accused RBS and the former executives of "misrepresenting the underlying strength of the bank and omitting critical information from the 2008 Rights Issue prospectus."
Meanwhile, politicians have say hundreds of UK businesses were "decimated and destroyed" by RBS and a number of Britain's other biggest banks, who sold the companies questionable, complex interest-rate swap derivatives.
The financial products in question were mainly interest rate swap agreements (IRSA).
IRSAs were touted by banks as a simple form of "insurance" for small- and medium-sized businesses taking out the kind of loans that would have funded a new shop or bought new equipment. Banks said these IRSAs would protect them from rising interest rates.
Effectively, if interest rates went up, the bank would pay them a sum of money. However, if interest rates went down, they would owe the bank thousands of pounds in cash. These products are appropriate for some businesses that look to hedge their interest rate exposure on large amounts of debt. But small- and medium-sized business were sold this product even when they didn't understand them.
Many businesses claimed to have not known about the downside of the deal, when interest rates started to fall following the 2008 credit crisis.
According to a study by independent lobby group Bully-Banks in 2013, so many businesses were driven under by sudden, unexpected demands for IRSA payments that Britain's economy lost £1.7 billion ($2.68 billion) in revenues to the Treasury. About 400,000 jobs disappeared too, the group says.